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Interesting, yet somewhat sad article about former players...
Rich Hofmann | Former players blast pension plan
MIAMI - There are few things more eye-opening than shaking hands after meeting an old football player, and then watching him walk away. Time gets to everyone, not just NFL players, and that is all true enough. But their hands, especially the linemen's hands, are these enormous masses of flesh with fingers pointing every which way. And their knees and hips and ankles and feet, they just don't work as well as when their picture is frozen in your mind's eye.
A group of them held a
press conference yesterday - Jerry Kramer and Mike Ditka and Lem Barney and Joe C. Amazingly, the NFL gave them a room in which to hold the conference in the
Super Bowl media center.
Amazingly, because these former stars of the game came to bury former commissioner Paul Tagliabue and, especially, NFL Players Association executive director Gene Upshaw. Some of them tried to talk nice, but DeLamielleure, for one, could not.
"I played next to a guy who's in a homeless shelter," he said. "Our pensions suck, plain and simple. I think Gene Upshaw and Tagliabue are responsible for this. They've been in power for 20 years and did nothing about it."
It is the side of the NFL that nobody likes to talk about but which everyone who has ever played knows is the reality.
The physical brutality takes an awful toll and they all know it. They ignore it during their
careers because they love the money and the fame and the competition. But when it is over, they reach the age of 45 and worry about seeing their grandchildren.
It has hit home for anybody who has followed the Eagles, with the deaths in the last couple of years of Reggie White and Andre Waters. White died from being too big, plain and simple. Waters, according to a doctor in Pittsburgh who examined his brain tissue, died from getting hit on the head so much when he played, his brain was like that of an 85-year-old.
The science isn't there yet, and that is all true enough. We do not know anything with medical, scientific certainty. But all of these players make a bargain, a real-life deal with the devil, when they sign an NFL contract and button their chin strap. The trade is simple: now for later. They know it and they do it anyway, and they live with it.
Today's players will end up with a decent pension and with so much earnings in their career that only a lunkhead will be able to mess it up. The old guys, though, they get hammered both ways: They didn't have the earnings when they played and their pension is a pittance.
After a recent raise, DeLamielleure says he is getting $1,212 a month. (Admittedly, he started taking his pension at age 45.) Other players, though, have much lower benefits.
"It's a tragedy when we see what's going on with our comrades," Barney said.
"I'm not trying to bust anybody's back or embarrass anybody," said Ditka, who went on to reference the story of the late Mike Webster, the Steelers' great center who suffered from dementia and was homeless for a period of time.
"I can't tell you if Mike Webster would have been alive today or not," Ditka said. "But I know he wouldn't have been a damn street person."
Ditka has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars over the years for indigent former NFL players. An auction of memorabilia and solicitation of donations at JerryKramer.com will hopefully raise $500,000 for the cause, Kramer said.
But where is the union?
Where are the current players?
Upshaw sighs when he hears the questions. So does union president Troy Vincent, who says that he has even been asked about it by a former player/current coach: "Hey Troy, when are you going to increase the benefit?"
Upshaw detailed the current efforts being undertaken for struggling old-timers and says that it would take an annual contribution from current player contracts of a staggering $800 million to bring the old-timers' pensions to parity with current players. But that isn't what they want. They just want some more. They just want some dignity. They just want
a financial recognition of one simple fact.
As Ditka said of the current players, "They are not the makers of the game. They are the keepers of the game, period."
As DeLamielleure said, "This is for the guys who built this league on their back, on their knees."
It is for the men, older now, who played when the game offered only minor fame and even less fortune, who drove beer trucks in the offseason and who were told they had headaches, not concussions.
Big hands, crooked fingers, tired gaits; they loved those days and they deserve to enjoy these. Amid all of the Roman-numeraled opulence, there has to be more.
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Send e-mail to hofmanr@phillynews.com. For recent columns, go to http://go.philly.com/hofmann.
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