ESPN.com - TVLISTINGS - Show 19 transcript: Facing the future

weekly OTL logo
Network Listings
ESPN
ESPN2
ESPN Classic
ESPNEWS
ESPN Latin America
ESPN Pacific Rim
ESPN GamePlan
ESPN Full Court
ESPN Regional TV
MLS/ESPN Shootout
ESPN Extra
ESPN Now
Programs
SportsCenter
Up Close
Outside the Lines weekly show
Baseball Tonight
NFL 2Night
NHL 2Night
RPM 2Night
ESPN Outdoors
ESPN's Great Outdoor Games
 Wednesday, August 16
Outside the Lines: Facing the future
 
 Outside the Lines - Facing the Future, How Teams and Individuals Address the Passing of Teammates.

Announcer - August 6, 2000

Mark Schwarz, host - Every time the Charlotte Hornets leave practice, they pass the spot where Bobby Phils was killed in a car crash. Each lap NASCAR drivers take around New Hampshire International Speedway, they must negotiate the very turn around which Adam Petty and Kenny Irwin each lost their lives.

Now, the Kansas City Chiefs have returned to a locker room void of the uplifting banter from the team's biggest personality, Derrick Thomas. The Oakland Raiders camp is a more somber setting also in the absence of Eric Turner.

When Irwin died in New Hampshire, qualifying continued within an hour after the track was cleared. Phils died on a Wednesday. Two days after that, the Hornets were on the floor battling the Knicks without him. Is that appropriate? That's debatable, but it is harsh reality. As Charlotte coach Paul Silas put it, "The players can rally around each other or else we can disintegrate."

Athletes have performed reMarkably in the face of crushing tragedy. A year ago, the Houston Comets claimed their third consecutive WNBA championship days after point guard Kim Perrot succumbed to cancer. We'll speak with Perrot's coach later in this program.

But first, Shelley Smith and her report on how the Chiefs and Raiders are coping without Derrick Thomas and Eric Turner.

Shelley Smith, ESPN correspondent (voice-over) - Derrick Thomas was a raging force with the Kansas City Chiefs for 11 seasons. The nine-time pro-bowler was the cornerstone of the team. When training camp began this season, the Chiefs were reminded almost immediately that he was gone.

Donnie Edwards, Chiefs linebacker - On the airplane, you know, we'd see Derrick coming in, you know, making a little noise, let you know that he's coming.

Gunther Cunnningham, Chiefs head coach - He would always come to me and say, "I look better than you do today." And this year, when we went to camp and I got on that airplane, it hit me like a ton of bricks - This is it, this is the end.

Smith - For the Oakland Raiders, who lost defensive back Eric Turner to cancer in May, the reminders were more subtle.

Charles Woodson, Raiders cornerback - You know, you'd see someone who may have the same type build as Eric, and it's kind of like, that's Eric, you know what I'm saying? You got to get back to reality and realize that he's not around anymore.

Darrell Russell, Raiders defensive tackle - When certain things go down, when certain things occur, when we're in a meeting and someone says certain things, you wait for that reply that he would make or you wait for something that he would do.

Smith - Losing a teammate, especially a close teammate, is as traumatic to many as losing a relative. For some, it is even more so because of the dynamic of what they do.

Eric Allen, Raiders cornerback - Our occupation is a little different from 99 percent of the rest of the world because although he's, you know, another guy at the workplace, we spend nine hours a day with each other for seven months, you know. And it's like -- it's almost closer than family sometimes.

Russell - It's almost, like, you know, you have this brick wall. And to lose a brick is a really big thing. And the better the brick, most likely it's going to be somewhere in the middle. And, you know, he was one of our more valuable bricks. So, you know, you have a hole somewhere in the middle of the wall and that's big.

Ken Manges, Psychologist/Trauma Specialist - There is a void, there's a vacuum for them. So they have a problem in being able to readjust emotionally to the absence of the person.

Some instances, the athlete will experience a reverie or daydreaming about how that person was there with them. And they may be emotionally caught up in that reverie, in that thinking about them.

Charles Peterson, Chiefs president - Some of the players didn't want to face it initially. Donnie Edwards didn't want to, period, and didn't want to accept it.

Smith - Edwards wasn't alone in his heavy sorry over losing Thomas, the team's emotional leader.

Elvis Grbac, Chiefs quarterback - We went out there for the first time to stretch as a team. It was very, very quiet; there wasn't a guy saying a single word out there. And usually, the first day, you're excited to be out there and getting ready for the season, and getting going, but it was dead silent out there.

Smith - Chiefs coach Gunther Cunnningham was close to Thomas as well and was struggling with his own feelings. Cunnningham had to balance his pain with that of his players.

Cunnningham - I had a friend who's in psychiatry who I asked, you know, "These are my feelings. How do you convey that to the team and how do you control the team?" And he says, "Hey, share your feelings with those guys. And they see a 54-year-old guy shedding tears and they need to see that." It was really tough. I think it really tested me probably to my limits to handle the football team.

Daver Szott, Chiefs guard - Gunther had to be the strong guy throughout the whole thing and he shared about how there was times, you know, it got too much for him. And he had to, you know, release some of the emotions he had.

Smith - Pro Bowl quarterback James Hasty had his own way of coping.

James Hasty, Chiefs cornerback - The only way I could really deal with it was just crying, you know. All I did was cry pretty much for the most part.

Smith - For him, getting back on the field and being physical was cathartic.

Hasty - I think that's got to help, because there'll be times when I might take an extra shot at a receiver or -- and you know, again, it's something -- I'm just getting it all out. You know, I'm getting it off my shoulders and I'm moving on. But the bottom line is I'm not going to forget, you know, and I'm going to play. Every time I take a step out on that field, I'm going to play with that focus in mind, that basically, I'm playing for my guy.

Smith - Cunnningham urged his team to embrace that concept, to think about Thomas when they stepped on the field.

Edwards - For a second, I stopped to think, you know, I hear Derrick in my head, "Come on, amigo. Come on, amigo." He's always around, like his spirit is still alive around the team and it really makes me smile sometimes.

Smith (on-camera) - Does it help?

Edward - Yeah, yeah, it does. You know, instead of like thinking about, you know, that we lost him, just think about like how Derrick was and how funny he was, and you know, little things that he'd do, like, it just makes you laugh.

Smith (voice-over) - The Raiders like the Chiefs are still coming to grips with their loss, remembering Turner in different ways.

Woodson - I really don't try to talk about it too much, you know. I kind of -- you know, you might not notice it -- people may not notice it but I kind of take it kind of hard. But when the conversation comes up, you know, about Eric, I just kind of, you know, say his name and then just, you know, just kind of try to go into another conversation. I try not to dwell on it.

Russell - If we're on the sidelines and during practice, it was a drill where two people would grab the ball with one hand and see who could snatch it out of the other person's hand, and that was an ongoing battle between Eric Turner, Eric Allen, Charles Woodson and myself. And, you know, other players participated in and out, but it came down more or less to ET, EA and Wood and myself.

Smith (on-camera) - Have you guys done it yet, this training camp?

Russell - No, not once.

Smith - Do you think you will?

Russell - I don't know.

Smith (voice-over) - Chiefs management recognizes that Thomas' loss goes beyond the game.

Peterson - It will be difficult when we don't announce number 58 but we'll get through it.

Smith (on-camera) - Both teams know that grieving is a process, that such profound pain cannot be easily dismissed or forgotten. The initial feelings of shock and despair may have passed, but there will be a lot of tough times ahead.

For OUTSIDE THE LINES, I'm Shelley Smith.

Schwarz - In a moment, we discuss how athletes work through death with a NASCAR driver, an athletic counselor and a coach who has steered a team through the loss of its floor leader.

Schwarz - Welcome back to OUTSIDE THE LINES. Our topic - Facing the future, how teams and individuals cope with the passing of teammates.

And joining us from Charlotte, North Carolina, Winston Cup driver Geoffrey Bodine, voted one of NASCAR's 50 greatest drivers; from Chicago, Dana London, director of a nonprofit group that helps athlete focus on their profession while navigating the chAllenges of personal and family issues; and from Sacramento, California, Van Chancellor, three-time WNBA Coach of the Year, who has led the Houston Comets to three consecutive WNBA championships.

And while we are so glad to have all three of you with us this morning, we are particularly glad to have Geoffrey Bodine with us because of something you experienced in February, Geoffrey, at Daytona during a truck event. And if we could, with no further delay, let us take a look at a near-death experience for Geoffrey Bodine on the track this February.

Announcer - Look out, we got trouble. This is going to hurt. Oh-oh, oh my. Oh my. Keep your fingers crossed.

Schwarz - And Geoffrey, as close as you came to not being here, how disturbing was that? And do you think about how close that call was?

Geoffrey Bodine, Winston Cup driver - I really do. Yeah, that was an unsurvivable accident but I did survive it. And it's through the grace of God; he saved me that day, and you know, I understand that. And watching that video -- and I actually have the remains of what you saw there that was on the racetrack in my shop. And, you know, I go in there and look at that and, yeah, it bothers me knowing that I came so close to dying. But it also makes me feel really good knowing that I was saved and I did survive that accident and, you know, that God did bless me that day. So it's kind of a two-fold thing. Yeah, it's terrible, it's kind of scary to watch again, but I'm here, I did survive it.

And, you know, I was blessed in many ways. I mean, I can still drive a race car. I just came back from Indy yesterday and, you know, so it's really amazing that I did survive and it's amazing that I'm able to drive race cars again.

Schwarz - Geoffrey, does NASCAR handle this issue sensitively enough? We pointed out earlier that Adam Petty and Kenny Irwin died in practice laps, and within an hour, they were back on the track. Is that appropriate?

Bodine - Well, you know, we all have our opinions but I really think it is. You know, it's hard. I'm not going to tell you it's easy to go out there. And in auto racing, you know, we can see skid Marks, we can see Marks in the wall where the car made an impact. So we're constantly reminded of what happened. And it's very hard to go back on the racetrack. And like a lot of them, we had to go out there and qualify and get ready for a race. And every time I went in to turn three, you know, I was reminded that Kenny lost his life right there.

You know, but I think it's appropriate because that way, we can honor whoever we lost, we can show our respect. The race fans can do that by coming to the track, and the drivers, we all talk about it, we remember the person. So I don't think it's a bad thing that we -- the show continues. It's always been that way in auto racing and other types of sporting events. And I think it's the right thing to do. It gives us all time to get together and remember that person and grieve. And, you know, the winner, whoever it might be, gets in victory lane, dedicates the race to that person. I mean, a lot of the really good things that occur, even though it's really only a day or hours after their death, it still is a good, positive time for everyone.

Schwarz - Geoffrey, you're involved in an individual sport. Let's talk to Van Chancellor, who is involved in a team sport, the WNBA.

Coach, you lost Kim Perrot, your point guard. She battled cancer for six months before finally succumbing. But even though she battled it, was that enough time for your team to adjust and prepare for the shock and pain of the news?

Van Chancellor, WNBA Houston Comets coach - It was not. It was just very tough. When you keep, when you have cancer and you're sick, you're thinking that persons going to get well. Well, she never did. And when she passed away, that was the toughest four or five hours I've ever had to deal with the team. We were in a hotel in Los Angeles, California.

Schwarz - That's right. And you had to play a game 24 hours after you got news of her death. Was that right? Should the WNBA have said, "You don't have to do this. You don't even have to make this trip"?

Chancellor - Well, let me tell you, that's the toughest call we've ever had, I think, as a coach. The WNBA talked to us and we had an opportunity to either play or to cancel. But her family wanted us to play in her memory, and we decided because it had playoff implications, we didn't want to sit around in a motel room and mope. We played the game the next day and it was the hardest time getting them on the floor. As I look back, is it right or wrong? I can't answer that.

Schwarz - Dana London, you have worked extensively with both individual and team sports athletes. What is unique to athletes as far as the way they are forced to confront the death of a co-worker?

Dana London, Professional Athlete Counselor - Well, I think that the main thing that we have to address is that the death of a teammate, it's not a sports issue -- it's a human issue. And as long as we are not expecting these teammates -- male and female -- to go out and not be affected I think that sometimes we put -- we do a tribute before the start of a game or a black band or numbers on a shoe and expect that the players cannot -- can just go on and act like nothing else happened. I think that we just have to have the compassion and get a little bit beyond the actual sport.

Schwarz - We're going to take a short break. We will return with our guests, Geoffrey Bodine, Dana London and Van Chancellor, as OUTSIDE THE LINES continues right after this.

Schwarz - And we're back with former Daytona 500 winner Geoffrey Bodine, Dana London and Houston Comets coach Van Chancellor.

Eight years ago, a football player by the name of Jerome Brown died in a car accident. He was a Philadelphia Eagle. His teammate on that team, Mike Golic, now works for ESPN. Mike told us that it was very awkward in some ways that the Eagles tried to use Jerome Brown's death as a rallying point throughout the season. They set up his locker both at home and on the road. Here's Mike Golic.

Mike Golic, ESPN Correspondent - Very superficially, you could tell, you know, this happened, let's use this. You know, let's go off this emotion. But I almost sit there and think about it sometimes and I think to myself, god, I'm using the death of a friend of mine to pump me up for a game. You know, sometimes that seems almost, you know, nonreal, you know, like, I can't do this, you know, that's not right.

Schwarz - Dana London, people do have various reactions to the death of a loved one or a teammate. What is the right way for a team to conduct business after the death of a prominent member of its community?

London - I think that we have to do it at least respectfully, you know. I think that we kind of expect the athletes to, just as was stated in the piece, just kind of remove themselves, rally around and act as though nothing happened. And I don't think that that's really feasible. When things happen in our school system, a kid brings a gun to school, we have -- the grief counselors converge upon the school and they address each and every kid, and if you have nightmares about it, if you have thoughts about it.

And so I think that we need to at least have -- remove ourselves from the schedule. I mean, these players are expected to grieve on schedule and it's just not feasible. And so if a guy is having a bad day, we have to at least let him a bad day. Most of us take off if we're grieving. These guys don't have that flexibility. So I think that a little bit more of an approach, a personal approach has to be taken.

Schwarz - And Van, I think you, having been through that Kim Perrot know as well as anybody what the dynamic is with a team. Cynthia Cooper was Kim Perrot's best friend and also your best player. We can look at something Cynthia Cooper wrote in the month of May. And she said that she had a difficult time. It took her a month and a half after the season ended to realize that she was in trouble because she had taught herself not to grieve or mourn the deaths of Kim or of her mother, and it wasn't until January that she started a full-fledged healing process. What she learned is she had to not try to put things behind her but just in the proper perspective. You were her coach, you were also a mentor of sorts. Which one did you pay more attention to - the player or the person?

Chancellor - I don't think there's any doubt -- as I listened to this show, I thought the comments in our whole organization, we put our players first as human beings. We never even thought about whether we won or loss. All we were concerned about was how they were reacting to this death, how they felt. We came together as human beings. Some people say we came together and won because of Kim. We came together because of our love and respect for her and for each other. And that's what -- we got through this thing because of our love for each other as human beings not necessarily as basketball players.

Schwarz - What advice would you give to coaches Gunther Cunnningham of the Chiefs or Jon Gruden of the Raiders as they deal with the deaths this fall of Derrick Thomas and Eric Turner?

London - I don't have any doubt. I think you had to show your emotions, how you felt about the player, how you felt about that situation. I think as a coach, you had to be a human being first, because I cried. Every time that this thing came up, yes, I did cry about it. But let me say this. I love Kim Perrot. I loved her family. And I think that these coaches, they have to address this issue. They have to admit it. You go to practice and there's nothing wrong with saying, "Hey, I miss Kim today," because you really do. I still miss Kim.

London - But coach, I think you have to acknowledge the fact, even on a minor level, that women and men deal with grief differently.

Chancellor- No question in my mind about that.

London - And so I think that society holds men so accountable to be in complete control of every emotion, that it's a lot more difficult for them to express those feelings. I mean, you know, Cynthia Cooper is an extraordinary athlete and probably even a more extraordinary person. So, I mean, the fact that she was able to function and even coming back another year, I think that's testimony of how extraordinary she really is. But a lot of these guys, you know, society is not going to let them cry.

Schwarz - Let me ask you, Danny, you were at Malik Sealy's funeral in the month of May. Kevin Garnett idolized Malik Sealy as a child; now he was a teammate. The Timberwolves are concerned about how Kevin will deal with his death. What have they done to address those concerns?

London - Well, I can't speak on behalf of the Timberwolves but I can say that Kevin is another extraordinary athlete and another extraordinary person. And I think that he is surrounded by some people that care enough about him to allow him to address it. You know, and I've extended myself to Kevin to offer that consoling ear for him as well but...

Schwarz - Should the Wolves be concerned about his reaction?

London - I think that the Wolves need to be concerned because Malik was a great guy. And I think that his loss will be felt but it will also be felt in the other teams that Malik played for. I mean, one of the reasons, in addition to paying my respects to the family, one of the reasons why I went was because there are so many other players that played with him that were there at the service that I wanted to offer my support to.

Schwarz - Geoffrey Bodine, is death a topic of conversation among NASCAR drivers, particularly in light of the two deaths this year?

Bodine - Well, you know, naturally, we all know that can occur in this business. We've seen several of our friends lose their lives in auto racing. And, you know, we're still grieving Adam's death, we're still grieving Kenny's death and we do remember. We have numbers we put under -- the side of our cars to -- in memorial of these two fellows. We have a motor racing outreach, MRO, as a church service for us, a counseling service that goes around to all our races. They're actually worldwide, are in many forms of motor racing, and they work off of donations so -- and race drivers, the racing community, race fans all do support that service.

Schwarz - Geoffrey, we're going to have to end it there. I want to thank you and I want to thank Van Chancellorand Dana London all for joining us this morning on OUTSIDE THE LINES. We'll return after this short commercial break.

Schwarz - OTL is online at ESPN.com. Type in the keyword, OTL Weekly, at our site. You can e-mail us, review our library of transcripts and prior shows and even watching streaming video of previous programs. Our address again - otlweekly@espn.com.
 



ALSO SEE
Weekly Outside the Lines show

Send feedback to the weekly OTL show

Transcripts, videos of weekly OTL show

Mission statement of weekly Outside the Lines show



AUDIO/VIDEO
video
 Mark Schwarz examines the uncomfortable, but all too real dilemma that athletes face when teammates pass on.
RealVideo: 28.8