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To: Puliko
I got this story from a friend of mine. Now this is what I call a class guy!!!

Your friend sent you an urban legend, albeit with some truth in it. Here's the real story, from www.snopes.com:

Origins: Eeesh, what to do with such a glurge? The premise of the story -- that Kurt Warner of the Rams married the mother of two children, one of whom which had severe medical problems -- is true. On the other hand, most of the key details given in the now widely e-mailed story are wrong. (Which in itself is a crying shame because the real story about Kurt's and Brenda's path through life is far more inspiring than this factually incorrect one.)

Let's address the inaccuracies first:

Kurt and Brenda did not meet while both were working in a grocery store, so you can throw out all that bit about his mooning over her timecard. They met in 1992 at a country bar while he was Northern Iowa's starting quarterback. (After being cut by the Green Bay Packers in 1994, Kurt did find employment in a grocery store, though: He stocked shelves at a Hy-Vee in Cedar Rapids for $5.50 an hour.) The next morning Kurt brought Brenda roses and wanted to meet her youngsters. She'd told Kurt about her children the night before, so there was no dramatic surprise when she wheeled in a paraplegic son.

The Warners' was a lengthy courtship. They married in 1997 after meeting in 1992 (not "a year later," as the e-mail has it).

Brenda (who is four years older than Kurt) had two children by a previous marriage; however, the e-mail version has their birth order reversed. In real life, Zachary is three years older than his sister, Jesse Jo. (More on this seemingly picayune point later because it's pivotal to the real story of Brenda Warner's life before Kurt.)

Zachary Warner (now 12) does indeed have serious physical infirmities, but how he came by them is far more of a story than the Internet fiction lets on. He was a perfectly healthy infant, not a Down Syndrome child. When he was four months old, his father dropped him, and in the blink of an eye, this previously healthy baby was suddenly clinging to life, his grip slipping fast. He suffered severe brain damage, and both of his retinas were ruptured. At the time, few thought Zachary would live, and fewer still held out any hope he would ever see, sit up, read, walk, or talk.

Zachary's recovery has been long and arduous, but he now walks and talks. Though still legally blind, he can make out colors and shapes. No longer strictly a special-needs student, he is integrated for half-days in a regular seventh-grade class.

Kurt adopted Zachary and Jesse after his wedding to Brenda in 1997. The Warners have since added two more children to their brood: Kade in 1998, and Jada in 2001.

As for what sort of lad Zachary is and what kind of relationship he enjoys with his adoptive father, this anecdote should say it all: After the Rams victory in the NFC Championship game in 2000, 10-year-old Zachary presented Kurt with a homemade card done in Rams blue and gold. Inside, in childlike scrawl, it read: "You're as good a dad as you are a quarterback!"

Zachary's birth dad could hardly be described in similar fashion. An inability to come to terms with the injuries he'd visited upon his son led to the breakup of his marriage to Brenda. He left her when she was eight months pregnant with Jesse.

Over and above the numerous inaccuracies, the worst offence this particular e-mailed glurge is guilty of is omission. Not content with recasting the details of the Warners' lives (and the reality had the fiction beat, remember), it leaves by the wayside horrendously large chunks of a truly thrilling story of the sort one usually pays $9.00 to see at the movies:

All the heartbreak Kurt endured trying to get into the NFL, and the many setbacks he had to weather along the way. So many of our gridiron heroes go in as highly touted draft picks it's sometimes hard to realize some take a tortuous path to the pigskin paradise of the NFL. Kurt presented as a free agent to the Green Bay Packers in 1994, was signed, then cut by them that same year. In 1997 he had a tryout scheduled with the Chicago Bears which fell through when an injury sustained during his honeymoon rendered him hors de combat. (A venomous spider had bitten him on his throwing elbow.) He had to muck about in the Arena and European leagues before finally being taken on by the Rams in 1997 as their third-string quarterback. In 1999 he stepped in during the preseason in place of injured Trent Green and began almost immediately to rewrite Rams' history.

Brenda's battle to make a life for herself and her two children after her first husband deserted her. This former Marine had to return to her parents' home when she was eight months pregnant with her second child and with a brain-damaged child already in tow. She completed her nursing training during this period, getting by with the help of food stamps and student loans.

The death of Brenda's parents in Mountain View, Arkansas, in a tornado in 1996. They'd retired there just a year earlier.

Kurt's embracing of the Christian religion in 1996. (He'd been raised Catholic, but he dates his spiritual awakening to those dark days in the wake of the deaths of Brenda's parents.)

Kurt's throwing for a record 414 yards in his 23-16 Super Bowl XXXIV victory over the Tennessee Titans and being named that contest's Most Valuable Player. This new mark topped the previous record of 357 yards set by San Francisco's Joe Montana in Super Bowl XXIII and capped an astounding 4,353-yard, 41-touchdown regular season that won him league MVP honors.

As you can see, falling in love with and then marrying a gal who had two children, one of them a special needs child, was just part of this most remarkable story.

In Super Bowl XXXVI, Kurt Warner will again lead the St. Louis Rams in their quest for another victory, and perhaps on that day yet another chapter of triumph will be written in this man's life. But win or lose, Warner is already the stuff of legends. Deservedly.

Barbara "it's a warner-ful life" Mikkelson

Last updated: 29 January 2002

The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/glurge/warner.htm Click here to e-mail this page to a friend

4 posted on 02/01/2002 9:03:19 AM PST by kezekiel
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To: kezekiel
Kurt's embracing of the Christian religion in 1996. (He'd been raised Catholic, but he dates his spiritual awakening

Uh oh. Watch out for incoming.....

7 posted on 02/01/2002 9:11:05 AM PST by Charlotte Corday
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To: kezekiel
Zachary's recovery has been long and arduous, but he now walks and talks. Though still legally blind, he can make out colors and shapes. No longer strictly a special-needs student, he is integrated for half-days in a regular seventh-grade class

Thanks for pointing out the inaccuracies. I saw Kurt Warner and his family at Disney World two summers ago. Warner was the grand marshall of the parade that day. His son looked perfectly normal and happy...I didn't even know that he had any kind of problem.

17 posted on 02/01/2002 9:37:13 AM PST by DouglasKC
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To: kezekiel
I'm from Wi...you just converted me to bein' a Ram's Fan....GO RAMS And after you win the Super Bowl and Kurt Is MVP... Dodge will offer him a huge contract He will make Dodge Trucks super popular and I can finally sell mine....
19 posted on 02/01/2002 9:38:31 AM PST by joesnuffy
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