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The Hero and the Unknown Soldier: (Rick Reilly Barf Alert)
Sports Illustrated ^ | May 03, 2004 | Rick Reilly

Posted on 05/03/2004 7:29:29 PM PDT by O.C. - Old Cracker

All day, in San Jose, the parents of late NFL star Pat Tillman were seeing their son get the kind of attention he would've hated: his face on CNN, teddy bear memorials, a tribute from the White House.

All day, in Bellaire, Ohio, the grandmother of former high school football star Todd Bates was living with a solitary ache she can barely describe: The boy she raised as her own came back from Iraq in a box, and nobody broke into a newscast to announce his death to the nation.

Since 9/11, all Arizona Cardinals strong safety Pat Tillman wanted was to fight for his country. He took a potential $1,182,000 annual pay cut to jump from the NFL to the Army Rangers in 2002, and he refused all attempts to glorify his decision. He told friends that he wanted to be treated as no more special than the guy on the cot next to him. ("He viewed his decision as no more patriotic than that of his less fortunate, less renowned countrymen," Arizona senator John McCain said.) Tillman even forbade his family and friends from talking to the press about him. News crews begged for photos, mere shots of him signing his induction papers or piling out of a truck at Fort Benning, Ga., or getting his first haircut -- anything. They got nothing.

Since he was a kid, all Bellaire High linebacker Todd Bates wanted was "to be somebody," his football team chaplain, Pastor Don Cordery, told the Associated Press. When you grow up poor and without your parents around, you get hungry to make your mark. He wasn't a good enough player to get a scholarship, yet he desperately wanted to go to college. So in 2002 he took the only road available to him -- he left home and joined the Ohio Army National Guard. Nobody wanted to take a picture of him getting his haircut.

Tillman, 5'11" and 200 pounds, joined the only team tougher than the NFL -- the 75th Ranger Regiment. He served a tour of duty in Iraq, then went to Afghanistan. He was killed last Thursday in an ambush in the remote eastern Afghan province of Khost. His younger brother Kevin, also a Ranger, escorted his body home.

Bates, 6 feet and 250 pounds, walked eight miles a day with a 50-pound backpack to lose enough weight to join the Army, recalls his grandmother Shirley Bates, who raised him from a baby. He made it to Baghdad and was on a boat patrolling the Tigris River when his squad leader lost his balance and fell overboard. Without a life jacket Bates dived in to rescue him. Both men drowned. It took 13 days to find Bates's body, on Dec. 23, one month before his unit returned home.

Tillman's death shook the country like no other in this war. Makeshift memorials sprang up at his alma mater, Arizona State, and at the Cardinals' offices in Tempe. The club announced that the plaza around its new stadium will be named Pat Tillman Freedom Plaza. At the NFL draft in New York, commissioner Paul Tagliabue wore a black ribbon with Tillman's name on it. Some people talked about retiring his number, 40, league-wide.

Only friends and family grieved for Bates, but deeply. It so tormented Shirley's companion, 61-year-old Charles Jones -- the man who helped her raise Todd -- that he refused to go to the funeral. "If I don't go, then Toddie can't be dead," he kept saying. He refused to leave the house. He refused to talk much. He refused to eat. Four weeks later he dropped over dead without a word. "He died of a broken heart," says Shirley. She buried them in the cemetery up the hill from her home, side by side.

Tillman died a hero and a patriot. But his death is a wake-up call to the nation that every day -- more than 500 times since President Bush declared "Major combat operations in Iraq have ended," more than 800 times since the invasion of Afghanistan -- a family must drive to the airport to greet their dead child. The only difference this time is that the whole country knew this child.

In the little house in Bellaire, any patriotism was swallowed up by sorrow. "There was no reason for my boy to die," says Shirley. "There is no reason for this war. There were no weapons found. All we have now is a Vietnam. My Toddie's life was wasted over there. All this war is a waste. Look at all these boys going home in coffins. What's the good in it?"

Athletes are soldiers and soldiers are athletes. Uniformed, fit and trained, they fight for one cause, one team. They take ground and they defend it. Both are carried off on their teammates' shoulders, athletes when they win and soldiers when they die.

Pat Tillman and Todd Bates were athletes and soldiers. Tillman wanted to be anonymous and became the face of this war. Bates wanted to be somebody and died faceless to most of the nation.

Both did their duty for their country, but I wonder if their country did its duty for them. Tillman died in Afghanistan, a war with no end in sight and not enough troops to finish the job. Bates died in Iraq, a war that began with no just cause and continues with no just reason.

Be proud that sports produce men like this.

But I, for one, am furious that these wars keep taking them.

Issue date: May 3, 2004


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: pattillman; sportsillustrated
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Do you have a subscription to SI? I just cancelled ours.
1 posted on 05/03/2004 7:29:31 PM PDT by O.C. - Old Cracker
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
I read this last week and wanted to hurl. For every decent article Rick Reilly writes, he writes three that I totally disagree with.

This is over the top, though. Mega-projectile barf.
2 posted on 05/03/2004 7:32:56 PM PDT by Not A Democrat
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
I read this earlier, and it really ticked me off. Liberal crap.
3 posted on 05/03/2004 7:38:08 PM PDT by 68skylark (.)
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
Compare the subjects of the article to the author ... we have *some* great people in this country!
4 posted on 05/03/2004 7:38:56 PM PDT by Tax-chick ("Fear not, for those who are with us are more than those who are with them." (2nd Kings 6:16-17)
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
He [Todd Bates] wasn't a good enough player to get a scholarship, yet he desperately wanted to go to college. So in 2002 he took the only road available to him -- he left home and joined the Ohio Army National Guard. Nobody wanted to take a picture of him getting his haircut.

Nope, no one was there to record his haircut--not even his would-be champion Rick Reilly. Why not Rick? Why the sudden interest in Todd Bates? Oh, it's because you have something to sell. Todd Bates is more useful to you dead than alive.

Hypocrite.

5 posted on 05/03/2004 7:40:34 PM PDT by randog (Everything works great 'til the current flows.)
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
Email Rick Reilly at:

reilly@siletters.com

6 posted on 05/03/2004 7:42:16 PM PDT by O.C. - Old Cracker (When the cracker gets old, you wind up with Old Cracker. - O.C.)
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
I never got to meet Todd but after reading this story I will never forget his name. He is a hero and he put his life on the line to protect the american dream and did what he thought was the right thing to do. He is a hero in my book
7 posted on 05/03/2004 7:47:02 PM PDT by gworvis
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
"At least" he didn't take personal shots at either dead soldier.

I do resent him swooping down like a vulture to gather crummy quotes from grief-stricken family. Some day, when time has passed and the events that we expect have transpired and the Middle East is at least marginally a better place, they will look back proudly on their son's life, his service, and his heroism (he was a hero, he just wasn't successful).

I don't like the fact that Reilly has obviously swigged the far-left Kool-Aid, but I noted on the Rall thread that war has a way of bringing far-lefties out of the closet. It's also oh-so-easy to pretend to have the military expertise to opine that we don't have enough troops is Afghanistan. I think it's at least as likely that we have too many troops--from the other NATO and UN countries--and that our soldiers can't do their job correctly because of it.

It's useful to know for the purpose of perspective where Reilly is coming from if/when I read his past and future articles. I used to read him pretty regularly until they put him behind the subscriber section of the site.
8 posted on 05/03/2004 7:47:15 PM PDT by litany_of_lies
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To: litany_of_lies
Reilly has made a career of destroying reputations. Now he hopes to do it posthumously.
9 posted on 05/03/2004 7:51:24 PM PDT by gaspar
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
What crap...

Whenever someone dies many people stand up and claim it was for nothing. How shortsighted. My cousin Jean died on her 30 birthday from diabetes. Her kidneys failed and she was on dialysis for a year before she died. Was this for nothing?

I think Pat Tillman has inspired a lot of people...he died doing what he believed in. That's certainly not for nothing. The other young man in the article died trying to save a drowning friend...could have happened in any lake or river in Ohio...was that for nothing?

This author is the one who is destroying their memory not the circumstances of their deaths.

Sorry for the rant.

Jeff
10 posted on 05/03/2004 7:55:32 PM PDT by math=power
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To: litany_of_lies
"At least" he didn't take personal shots at either dead soldier.

No, Reilly's too clever a writer for that. But make no mistake, Reilly's more poisonous to our efforts against the enemy than a Rene Gonzalez or Ted Rall. His audience is sports enthusiasts all over the world, and he is well aware of the pulpit he commands.

11 posted on 05/03/2004 7:59:12 PM PDT by O.C. - Old Cracker (When the cracker gets old, you wind up with Old Cracker. - O.C.)
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To: math=power
I agree with you completely, and I didn't hear you rant.
12 posted on 05/03/2004 8:00:51 PM PDT by O.C. - Old Cracker (When the cracker gets old, you wind up with Old Cracker. - O.C.)
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker; gaspar
Points well taken, both as to destroying reputations and his outsized irresponsible influence.

I had forgotten what a hatchet job SI as a magazine and Reilly individually did on Marge Schott. Well, it turns out that the "old bat" (I say that with affection) died a few months ago and left $100 MILLION DOLLARS to various charities.

Any chance we'll see a kind word from Reilly or SI about this? Nah. Remember the $100 mil the next time someone makes a stupid comment and some hack uses it as an excuse to drag ol' Marge out of the grave.

14 posted on 05/03/2004 8:35:51 PM PDT by litany_of_lies
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To: math=power; O.C. - Old Cracker; litany_of_lies
Excellent points! The poor second fellow didn't even die in combat, and presumably his death might have come about that same way even if he never joined the service or left the USA. I gotta agree with OC, that was certianly not a rant, no offense, but you're going to have to get a lot louder and more hyperbolic than you did to qualify for rant-dom!

L-o-L, thanks for the update on Marge Schott, OF COURSE, I never heard that.

These press people really are nothing but hyenas.
15 posted on 05/03/2004 9:14:44 PM PDT by jocon307 (The dems don't get it, the American people do.)
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To: litany_of_lies
They never, ever show the GOOD side....
Just like they never reveal the bad side of their own stupidity....
In fact, they never reveal truth, period....
16 posted on 05/04/2004 10:53:24 AM PDT by TheSilverHair (For God, Honor, Faith, and Justice.)
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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
Do you have a subscription to SI?

Actually, never have done, and I probably couldn't name five NFL teams. But I was more offended by his brainless equation of soldiers with pro-sports athletes than by his brainless attempt to use the deaths of these men to further his politics. In a sports magazine... maybe he can't name five NFL teams either, he's too busy trying to run foreign policy. I'm sure that LtG Barno is glad to have Reilly's input, and will reevaluate his troop requirements now that an actual sportswriter has graduated from putting down athletes and coaches to insulting soldiers and generals. How did George Washington ever deat Cornwallis without Sports Illustrated's advice?

It was bad news about Bates, but Lord love a duck, that accident could have happened at home station. What the article doesn't mention, but other news stories did, is that Bates couldn't swim. Dude, if you can't swim, let someone else do the Baywatch rescues and just drive the boat or something. Or stay ashore and take pictures.

Y'know, if I was a sportswriter, I might suggest that the services could teach their men to swim and save a few lives every year. It wouldn't occur to the sportswriter me, to tell generals how to fight wars. I guess that's why Rick Reilly is in SI and I am not, huh!

d.o.l.

Criminal Number 18F

17 posted on 05/04/2004 5:09:04 PM PDT by Criminal Number 18F
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Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

To: myoung

Bite me, troll.


19 posted on 05/14/2004 8:37:13 AM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan (Count Petofi will not be denied!)
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