This weekend, the Super Bowl will be played in Atlanta. And
it just happens to be that my beloved favorite football team is getting a
chance to avenge the loss that they suffered to the New England Patriots back
in 2002.
Over the years, I’ve been asked thousands of times how
someone from Jersey City ends up rooting for the Los Angeles, then St. Louis,
then back to Los Angeles Rams as a favorite team.
Just last week, sportswriter supreme Dave Caldwell, a friend
and colleague for many years and someone who I admire as a brilliant hard working
wordsmith in our rapidly dying chosen field of work, reminded me that not a lot
of people know the real reason why I became a Rams fan as a little boy. And it’s
a good story, one that deserves to be told this week as the Rams prepare to lock
horns with the Hoodie Genius and Joey Cleft Chin in Atlanta.
It was the summer of 1972 that I put my horns up for good.
And I had good reason to do so.
On New Year’s Eve of 1971, I lost my father, Jack Hague, to
cancer. He was sick, then diagnosed with stomach cancer, operated on and died
in the span of three weeks. He was 54 years old. I was 10.
Still to this day, losing my father at such an early age was
the most traumatic and devastating event that happened to my family. He was my everything. He was a friend, a
coach, a teacher, a mentor. He was funny and entertaining and loving and
respected by everyone.
In fact, my father was so well respected by the neighborhood
that he was the long-time Democratic committeeman for my neighborhood. If
someone needed a turkey on Thanksgiving, then Jack Hague received a call. If
someone needed to have their sidewalk shoveled after a snowstorm, Jack Hague
was called. If an elderly person needed a trip to the grocery store, they
called Jack. A ride to the doctor’s appointment? If Jack was home, he was
driving Miss Daisy, minus the cap.
So with his passing, the Greenville neighborhood and St.
Paul’s Parish didn’t know where they would go to call. In fact, no one was
tabbed to replace my father with the Democratic Party committee for almost a
full year.
But someone wanted to do something to honor Jack and what he
did for the neighborhood. So money was raised in order to send Jack Hague’s
young son to the National Football League Players’ Association Camp that was
held at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
It was an expensive gathering of about 50 of the NFL’s top
players, who served as instructors and clinicians. I have no idea what the cost
was, but I’m willing to guess that it was at least $2,000, probably more. It
was a time where the players could really use the extra cash that came with the
work at the camp. In the early 1970s, NFL players weren’t getting seven-figure
contracts, so it they received $5,000 or so for the week in Easton, it was
quickly gathered.
I never found out who was behind the fundraising efforts,
but I have strong beliefs that the mastermind behind the efforts was my grammar
school football coach Bill DeFazio. As I grew older and the relationship
between Billy and I morphed into a very close friendship.
Billy had the ability to squeeze money out of a beggar on
Kennedy Boulevard, so if he saw a chance to get the neighborhood together and
raise some cash to pay tribute to a pillar of the parish, a devoted Little
League coach and daily St. Paul’s Courtyard monitor during the hours before the
first bell and during lunchtime while helping develop one of his learning and
burgeoning football players, then he was going to do it.
I asked him many times before he died in November of 2010
whether he was behind the fundraising efforts to send me to the NFL Players
Camp that summer and he never did admit to it. He would just smile, tilt his
head to the side like he always did and shrug his shoulders like a little boy
who had his hand caught in the cookie jar. Billy must have made a pact with the
Devil not to spill the beans, because he never truly did. But I think he was
the one who did it. And if someone knows for sure, they haven’t told me in all
these years since.
So in any case, I was handed all the information to go to
the camp. There was only one problem. My mother didn’t drive. She had my father’s
pristine Chevrolet Impala, but no driver’s license. She eventually got her
license later that year after failing the driver’s test an astounding four
times. If anyone saw my mother drive, it wasn’t hard to figure out why she
failed four times. She was clearly the worst driver to ever grace the roads of
New Jersey. I never could understand how she was able to pass the test in the
first place.
To get me to Bethlehem, my mother went with me on the No. 99S
bus to Port Authority and watched as I climbed aboard a bus to Bethlehem. When I
got to the bus station in Easton, there was a shuttle bus for campers going to
the camp.
It was the first time I was away from home without one of my
parents. Later that summer, I went on a trip to
Lake George, N.Y. with Father
George, the chaplain at St. Ann’s Home near my house. I got to know Father
George from being an altar boy. He also liked my father and took me and another
altar boy to Lake George for the week.
Can you imagine something like that happening now? I can
also assure you that Father George Mader did not touch me or try anything with
me. I think Father George was fine with the other altar boy who went on the
trip with us.
I know all the signs were there. I was an impressionable
11-year-old going on a week’s vacation with a priest. I had just lost my
father. So did the other altar boy, who will remain nameless here. All I can
say was that I had a fantastic time on this trip. I learned how to fish in a
fresh water stream, even baiting the hook with a worm, and caught a pretty
reasonable sized bass that I brought home for the Polish lady who lived next
door to us to clean and cook. There was nothing felonious taking place on this
trip. It was fishing and baseball and laughter.
Father George died last year. I saw him a couple of times
when he was teaching and coordinating campus ministry at Ramapo College and
another time when he was teaching at Paramus Catholic. He was a wonderful man
and I couldn’t thank him enough for taking me on that memorable vacation.
Okay, back to football camp. At first, my mother was a
little reluctant to send me to this camp, but someone (probably DeFazio) told
my mother it was the chance of a lifetime and that I should go. So off I went
on the first journey without her. I let go of the apron strings long enough to
allow the Mama’s boy to go to play football with legends.
When I first got off the bus, there were people instructing
the kids to quickly break into groups separated by positions.
“OK, running backs go over there and receivers go in that
line,” someone bellowed. “Linebackers over here, quarterbacks over here,
linemen over here...”
Believe it or not, the first position I played when I was in
organized tackle football was quarterback. I kid you not. When I was from the
ages of eight through 10, I was a quarterback. The growth spurt didn’t come
until way later. At age 10, I was skinny, fairly scrawny and average height. I
was not gargantuan by any means.
So when the campers were heading off in different
directions, I was all set to take my rightful place with my fellow brethren
signal callers. Or so I thought.
“You’re a lineman, son,” the counselor who obviously had
impeccable foresight said. “You go with the linemen.”
I tried to explain that I was a quarterback and I was all
set to graduate from the Pee-Wees to the big boy team later that fall. I was
groomed to be a quarterback. I dreamed I was going to be the next Johnny
Unitas. I practiced throwing, signal calling and watching Unitas, idolizing
every movement, every step the man with the flattop haircut and high top shoes made.
But those words fell on deaf ears.
“Son, you’re a lineman,” the man insisted. “Get with the
linemen.”
So the really big kids set off to one dormitory and the
sleek skilled kids (trust me, I was never ever sleek) went to another dorm.
“But I’m a quarterback,” I reiterated. “I’m honestly a
quarterback back home.”
“Well, you’re a lineman here,” he said. “So get with the
linemen.”
I’m now 90 miles away from home for the very first time in
my life. I certainly can’t call my mother, because honestly, what was she going
to do? I thought about calling my brother, who lived in Hackettstown, which was
about 45 minutes away from Bethlehem. I knew my brother would come get me if I
really needed him.
Tears were flowing like a river. Trust me, I cried an awful
lot back then. I cry a lot now for someone 57 years old, but when I was 11,
especially within six months or so after losing the most important human being
in my lifetime, I cried all the time. Something would trigger a memory of my
father and the water works would just flow.
Now, I’m facing the most emotional moment of my life since
Dad’s passing and I really don’t know how to handle it. What should I do?
Should I call Jackie and have him come get me? Or should I suck it up and
become a lineman? I didn’t know a thing about blocking. I knew how to be
Unitas, the short choppy steps dropping back to pass, the release at
three-quarter arm’s length, not directly over the top, the two-minute drill.
Yes, I was 10 and practicing the two-minute drill, like what plays I’d call for
Tom Matte and John Mackey. I was nuts, but I was a quarterback through and
through.
Until that day, when that counselor told me for the last
time in a high-pitched shrill, “Son, I told you 37 times already. You are a
lineman. Now hurry up and get going with the linemen.”
More tears. Half Pint on Little House of the Prairie (perhaps
a little foreshadowing here?) didn’t cry as much as I did that day. Ricky
Schroeder in “The Champ” had nothing on me. Tom Hanks could have said,
“There’s
no crying in football,” but I didn’t care. The emotion poured down my red
cheeks and the sniffles were too ferocious to be stopped by a Kleenex.
I was so upset that I meandered over to an area away from
all the activities, buses or not. I was like Eric Carmen doing “All By Myself,”
but the song wasn’t released until three years later. As the sun began to set
in Easton, I sat myself on a log that was used to corner off the buses. I was
sure I didn’t want to be a lineman (more foreshadowing), but I thought about it
over and over about what my next line of defense would be.
I knew that the people of my neighborhood pooled their money
together to send me to this camp. How could I leave after a half hour? What a
disappointment I would be. I couldn’t show my face to those caring people ever
again. To my football coach DeFazio, who
I feared tremendously, but who I admired and respected immensely. I knew it
would be a gigantic disappointment to him. If I called my brother, he would
have come to get me, but it would have been a colossal embarrassment to him
that I cried my way out of a football camp.
The emotions were flowing, no doubt. So I just sat on the
log and cried.
At that time, I heard a booming voice that changed my life
forever.
“Son, I heard you don’t want to be a lineman,” the hulking
man said. “Get up, I’m going to teach you how to be a lineman.”
I had to look up at him, but couldn’t see a face because of
the setting sun. The sun was so bright that I couldn’t make out the face, just
the immense frame. He put out his humongous hand to help me up. I put my hand
in his and got to my feet. As I stood up, I recognized the face right away. I
couldn’t believe my eyes.
Merlin Olsen.
Yes, it was Merlin Olsen, yes, that Merlin Olsen, arguably
the best defensive tackle in the game, the upteen time All-Pro defensive
lineman from the Los Angeles Rams. MERLIN OLSEN JUST PICKED ME UP FROM A LOG
AND HELPED ME TO MY FEET. MERLIN OLSEN!!!!! THE GUY ON LITTLE HOUSE OF THE PRAIRIE AND THE GUY WHO BECAME FATHER MURPHY SELLING FTD FLOWERS ON TELEVISION!!! THE GUY ANNOUNCING GAMES ON NBC!!!! THAT MERLIN OLSEN!!!
Olsen then brought me over to the side and gave me some
quick pointers, like the three-point stance.
“I’m going to watch you all week to make sure you learn the
position,” Olsen said.
He not only taught me how to be a defensive lineman, but he
also taught me the basics of being a good offensive lineman. He brought his
brother, Phil, who also played for the Rams, over to work with me as well.
Every single day of the six days, Olsen took the time to
personally work with me.
“I’m going to make sure you are a good lineman, James,”
Olsen said.
The week was tremendous. Some of the other NFL stars in the
camp included John Mendenhall of the Giants, Rich Caster of the Jets, as well
as Harold Carmichael of the Philadelphia Eagles, Phil Villapiano of the Oakland
Raiders, Bruce Taylor of the San Francisco 49ers, Jim Kiick of the Miami
Dolphins, Ted Hendricks of the Baltimore
Colts, Pete and Charley Gogolak, who were placekicker brothers, John Mackey of the
Baltimore Colts. It was a great collection of players.
The dormitory counselors were prominent college players. The
guy who ran my bunk was Steve Davis, the quarterback at Oklahoma at the time.
At the end of the week, Steve and I became very close. He was teaching me all
the intricacies of the Wishbone offense. Because of my association with Davis,
I became a Sooner fan in college football. Davis had a great career at OU,
posting a 32-1 record as a starter from 1973 through 1975 and was the MVP of
the 1976 Orange Bowl, capping the Sooners’ national championship that year.
Unfortunately, Davis, who became a respected broadcaster,
died in a plane crash outside Notre Dame in 2013.
Steve and I were close throughout the week and then after.
He asked for my address, which of course I gave to him. I’ll never forget about
two weeks after the camp, my mother came around the corner to where I was playing
to tell me that I received a package from UPS. So I raced home to find this
huge box and it was filled with Oklahoma gear like pennants, hats, bumper
stickers, an autographed football from then superstars Joe Washington and Billy
Sims and the Sooners. I was hooked for life.
The same goes for my association with the Rams, all because
of that fateful day in Easton in July of 1972. If Merlin Olsen didn’t extend
his hand to me and teach me how to be a lineman, who knows who I would be
rooting for in the NFL? Maybe the Indianapolis Colts, because of my obsession
with Unitas.
But that’s not the case. I’m a Rams fan, right to the core,
right down to the blue and white of Roman Gabriel days to the blue and gold
days of Eric Dickerson and Jack Youngblood. Of course, Merlin wore both
uniforms. Unfortunately, we lost Merlin to cancer in 2010. So he’s the reason
why I root for the Rams for the last 47 years and will root Sunday when they
play in the Super Bowl. I’m proud to say this is the fourth time the Rams have
played in the Super Bowl since I’ve been a fan. We lost to the Steelers in
1980, beat the Tennessee Titans in 2000, lost to you know who in 2002 and now
this. And as Paul Harvey used to say, “Now, you know the rest of the story.
Good day.”
And one last thing: GO RAMS!!!!!
You can read the rest of my work at www.hudsonreporter.com and www.theobserver.com
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