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Players Broncos Picks Injuries Projections Rookies Blogs SuperbowlPublished: July 12, 2009
Hot Georgia nights are typical in the southern state. People want to stay indoors on those balmy nights. Not in Folkston, Georgia, however.
The families would gather together on Friday nights and watch their High School football team play.
Charlton County High School turned out some great athletes, almost 50 Division 1 gridiron stars. Names like Larry Smith, Joe Hagins.
But none have made a mark as much as one special player.
His name is Champ Bailey.
Roland Bailey Jr. was born June 22, 1978 and raised in the small town of Folkston (3 stoplight town) throughout his life before college. In 1989, I drove through Folkston. Who would have known that there was an 11 year old football star in the making?
Champ was born of Elaine and Roland Sr.. He was also the 2nd oldest brother of 3. Ronald and Rodney and one sister, Danielle.
His younger brother was Rodney. Mom nicknamed them, though. Roland was called “Champ” while his little brother was named “Boss.”
When Champ was still in his teens, his mother separated from Roland Sr. and gained custody and raised the 4 kids on her own. They were great students and athletes which made her job much easier, even though she still was forced to work 2 jobs and raise her children at the same time.
Champ was a gifted athlete in High School. But even at an earlier age, 7th grade to be exact, fans were already dropping word to the University of Georgia about this future prodigy.
Champ went to High School in 1992 and started as the teams quarterback and also as a free safety. He dominated both sides of the ball. He also played basketball in High School for the Indians. He had a 43″ vertical leap. He also ran track in the spring. When he was a junior at Charlton, he became Georgia’s high jump champion.
When Champ became a senior at Charlton, his coach, Rich McWorter moved Champ to tailback and his little brother Boss, to quarterback.
It didn’t take Champ long to gain notice.
In his 1st game as a tailback, Champ ran for over 300 yards and scored 5 touchdowns. Next game, more then 400 yards and 6 touchdowns. He finished the year with 1,858 yards and an incredible 28 touchdowns.
Champ and Boss led the Charlton Indians to an 11-1 record and a regional championship but lost in the state quarterfinals.
Champ went on to play at the University of Georgia with his older brother Ronald in 1996. They played together for the Bulldogs for one year.
Champ played sparingly during his freshman year, mainly on special teams and at the defensive back position. He started his 1st game against Ole Miss (Georgia lost). They finished the season 5-6.
Georgia had players like Terry Hoage and Scott Woerner. They were the names spoken of. Champ was going to make his own mark.
In 1997 he won the starting cornerback spot and never looked back.
Champ was spectacular. He was known for making great open field tackles and had 3 interceptions in 11 games. 1 of those was for a touchdown. He also played wide receiver, catching 12 passes for close to a 20 yard average. He also had kickoff return duties.
Georgia finished the year 9-2, a great improvement over the the previous season. It helped that they had other big names to play for the team. Names like Hines Ward, Orlandis Gary and Matt Stinchcomb.
In 1998 Champ finished the year with 100-yard receiving games against Wyoming, LSU, and Vanderbilt, all victories. He also caught eight passes for 99 yards in a loss to Florida. He ended up with 47 catches, 744 yards and five TDs on offense and three interceptions on defense. He was voted 1st-team all-SEC and was a unanimous All-American. He also won the Bronko Nagurski Trophy.
Bailey also set a school indoor long jump record in 1998 of 25-10 3/4 feet to finish 3rd at the SEC Indoor Track and Field Championships.
At his combine, he ran a 4.28 in the 40. That, my friends, is fast. He also had a 44″ vertical jump.
He went on to to get drafted by the Washington Redskins in 1999 in the 1st round (7th overall). He was the 1st player to ever be drafted out of Folkston. Nice job, Champ.
He signed a 5 year, $9.64 million deal with the Redskins, including a $5.2 million signing bonus. Champ had a chance to learn from the best, Deion Sanders and Darrell Green.
In 2004 Champ was traded to the Denver Broncos, along with a 2nd round draft pick (turned out to be Tatum Bell) for Clinton Portis. After the trade he was signed to a $63 million, 7 year contract.
In 2006, Champ and the Broncos played the New England Patriots. Bailey broke the record for the longest non-scoring play in NFL history. With the Patriots ready to score, Bailey intercepted a pass thrown by Tom Brady and ran it back 100 yards to the 1 yard line where he was tackled by TE Ben Watson and fumbled out of bounds. Denver went on to score and knock the vaunted Patriots out of the playoffs.
In December of 2006, Denver played the Seahawks and Hasselback never threw to Champ’s side, not once during the 1st half. In the 2nd half, Matt tried his luck and paid for it by way of an interception. Nice job again, Champ.
In 2007 he went to the Pro Bowl again, the 8th time in his career. He went from 2000-2007.
In 2008 he was injured with a groin pull that cost him the majority of the season. When he did come back, he made some devastating hits on opposing quarterbacks. Before the injury he was still playing like the shutdown corner we all know. He was shutting down Randy Moss till the injury.
Now everyone is heralding Nnamdi Asomugha as the best corner in football? The guy is great, no doubt. I mean no disrespect though, when I state that you shouldn’t lose a spot to injury.
Champ would have made the Pro Bowl again, I am confident, if not for the injury. Suddenly he is no longer considered the best at his position because he got hurt? I think not.
I say he still has what it takes. I say that he will make the Pro Bowl again. I say that he will play at the high caliber play that we expect from him. Play with that chip on his shoulder.
I say he has something to prove.
Published: July 4, 2009
Once upon a time there was a young couple in the city of Jacksonville, Fla. who gave birth to a son, on October 13, 1973. At first glance, he looked no different then any other baby.
Nobody was to know that this little baby was destined for greatness.
Born was Brian Patrick Dawkins.
From the day that Brian Dawkins started playing Pop Warner football in Jacksonville, FL (in which he also donated over $50,000 to Forest View Pop Warner for footballs and equipment) his family knew he was going to be something special.
Brian went to William M. Raines High School in Jacksonville, Fla. He began to make his mark by becoming an All-State selection and helping to lead his team to 30 consecutive victories.
While in high school, he met a young girl named Connie. Like a fairy book story, he married her. He went to college and had two children, Brian Jr. and Brionni.
Brian went to college at Clemson University and played the strong safety position as a three-year starter. He had 247 tackles and 11 interceptions. He was a Second Team All American selection when his team-high six interceptions tied him for the conference lead. He was named the first-team strong safety on Clemson’s all-centennial team in 1995 and was selected to their Athletic Hall of Fame in 2009.
In 1996, Brian was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the second round. As a rookie in 1996 he started 13 of the 14 games he played in, recording 75 tackles, a sack, and three interceptions. During his career Dawkins has been elected to seven Pro Bowls (1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2008).
In 2002 in a game versus the Houston Texans, he became the first player in NFL history to record a sack, an interception, forced fumble, and touchdown reception in a single game.
If any are curious as to why Brian missed the Pro Bowl in 2007, maybe this will help to explain this man’s remarkable journey and struggle.
When Brian Jr. was 11 and his sister Brionni was 8, they were greeted with twin sisters, Chionni and Cionni on April 26, 2007. This was a difficult and risky pregnancy for Brian’s wife, Connie.
The twins were born two months premature and one was thought to run the risk of having Down’s syndrome when she was still in the womb. Doctors wanted to perform a procedure to verify it, but there was a risk of losing one of the babies. Brian and Connie said no.
The babies turned out not to have Down’s, thank God for that.
However, the pregnancy was not without trouble. Connie suffered from bleeding much of the time.
Brian had to stay at home to care for and watch after his brave and loving wife. Not an easy thing to do if you are a football player in the NFL. She almost delivered three months early, but the doctors stopped the early pregnancy.
During the pregnancy, Brian didn’t get to work out as he normally did during the offseason and this inactivity began to show by way of injuries on the field.
Many thought he was “over the hill” because of the injuries, but nobody bothered to take into consideration the fact of what he and his family went through. He wasn’t in peak shape.
Brian couldn’t spend the time doing his 12-hour-a-week workout to get ready for the upcoming season. No, he was a father and husband first and a football player second.
“I’d drop the kids off at school, go see her, then take an hour to try to work out, then come right back to the hospital to be with her, then go pick the kids up from school, then get dinner ready,” Dawkins said. “I got a chance to walk in her shoes. I told her after all this was done how much I really appreciate her.”
When the babies were born they weighed only three pounds. Cionni, the younger twin, was suffering from relative bradycardia: for her age, her heart rate was too slow. Intermittent episodes of bradycardia are common among premature babies. Periods of apnea, the suspension of normal breathing, are often connected to it.
It is said that each condition contributes to the other. If a premature baby is not taking in enough oxygen, the heart will slow down. As the heartbeat slows, the baby has fewer opportunities to take a breath.
Chionni and Cionni spent 17 days in the hospital. They came home on Sunday, May 13, Mothers Day. Brian and Connie bought an electronic monitor to track Cionni’s breathing, and in those frightful moments when Cionni seemed to forget to breathe, Brian would have to stimulate her somehow; shake her gently, wiggle her foot until she’d let out a tiny noise, half-grunt, half-gasp.
“It was very terrifying,” Dawkins said.
Brian had a routine. He would stay up all night to feed, change, and care for the twins. Then he would go to bed at 6 a.m., wake up at noon, work out at 1:30, pick up Brian Jr. and Brionni from school, help Connie with dinner, take a nap until 10 p.m., then he would start all over.
He said he was a “walking zombie.”
“But you’ve got to have a positive outlook on things. My wife is going through what she’s going through. The kids are still going to school. Brian still needs to go to basketball practice. Brionni still needs help with homework. So I still have to be able to do all those things—and not with an angry attitude. It was taxing, very taxing.”
Give credit where credit is due. He was a fantastic father and husband. The children, we are happy to say, are now healthy and doing great.
When Brian hit the field in 2007, his injuries mounted and his stats fell. Many didn’t know what he went through, even those who claimed to be fans. I think he deserved a pass, don’t you?
In 2008, Brian turned it around and became the player on the field that everyone remembered. It was a good enough season to deserve another trip to the Pro Bowl.
During the 2008 season he became the 10th member of the 20/20 Club and broke the Eagles record for games played, surpassing Harold Carmichael who had 180. He finished his career with the Eagles starting 182 of 183 games, recording 898 tackles, 34 interceptions, and 21 sacks.
Now you have some insight as to what this great man, this great human being, went through. You also now know how strong and equally great his wife Connie is.
After the 2008 season, Brian became a free agent. It was time to move on from the Philadelphia Eagles.
Denver Broncos, here I come.
Denver signed Brian to a contract on February 28, 2009. It is for five years and $17 million ($7.2 million guaranteed). There is a termination clause that says that if he is released after two seasons, he will receive an additional $1.8 million.
Brian will bring to the Broncos something that has been sorely missed since the days of Al Wilson. Leadership.
If you look in his locker, you will see a Wolverine figurine that the fans of Philly gave him. It represents ferocity. The killer instinct on the field should you cross his path. Another “silent assassin” in the safety position.
He brings heart and future glory to the organization. He brings professionalism. He shows that he is not only a great player, but a great family man, as his “Father of the Year” award that he has won shows.
Brian Dawkins, like Wolverine, is a superhero. Maybe not in the literal sense, but rather in the way that he carries himself. The way that he shows his love for his family, God and the game.
He is without a doubt, a brave and great human being. He is a class act.