Pat Tillman has a place in Canton with Hall of Famers

In a mosaic of football cards at the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Pat Tillman’s card is included, the only player in it who is not a Hall of Famer.

There is a unique display at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio, that includes former Arizona Cardinals safety Pat Tillman.

The tale was told during a discussion about Tillman on the Pro Football Hall of Fame radio show on SiriusXM NFL Radio Wednesday.

Alex Garwood, co-founder of the Pat Tillman Foundation and Pat’s Run that will take place for the 20th time on April 13, was on the show co-hosted by me and Rich Desrosiers, the chief communications and content officer at the Hall.

Desrosiers relayed how a Tillman football card wound up on a large display on a wall of the Hall along with many Hall of Famers.

He explained, “A display of football cards that probably totals at least 500 cards is this mosaic of what is supposed to be exclusively members of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. And we learn after this wall of 500 cards is put together there is a singular card in this collection. How it came to be, how it came to be inserted in the pack it was pulled from I’m not exactly sure. I’m not sure our staff is exactly sure. But it’s Pat Tillman.”

Desrosiers then told Garwood, Tillman’s brother-in-law, what happened next.

“It’s on the wall and a couple of people step back from the wall and they have a decision to make,” Desrosiers said. “Do they pull the card down and replace it with a Hall of Famer or do we leave it up there to tell a different story? And we have decided since this display went up a couple of years ago to leave the card up.”

That leads to some interesting moments as Desrosiers noted, “We challenge people, ‘Hey find the card on this wall that isn’t a Hall of Famer’ and whether they do or don’t, eventually we point it out to them and it gives us an opportunity to not just tell Pat’s story in the singular aspect, but to tell Pat’s story as we have here today in the context of there are Hall of Fame values beyond running, blocking, tackling and passing that will outlive the football message that will endure.”

That prompted Garwood to thank Desrosiers for telling the story and saying, “What an honor for him to be included in that wall and then the flip side, for those men to be included next to him.”

Photo by Rich Desrosiers

While Tillman doesn’t have a bust in the Hall, there’s no question that the words “Hall of Fame” describe Pat Tillman in terms of the mission of the Hall and how he is a Hall of Famer in so many other ways.

As the Hall’s mission statement succinctly says:

“Honor the greatest of the game. Preserve its history. Promote its values. Celebrate excellence together.”

Tillman surely lived those words.

The show on SiriusXM will air again Arizona time from 2-4 am Saturday, and Sunday from 5-7 am and 3-5 pm. It can also be heard on demand on the SiriusXM app.

The segment begins at about the 35-minute mark and here is the link for the entire show.

Here is the clip about the football card:

Audio Player

Visit the Pat Tillman Foundation site for more information about it and the annual Pat’s Run. 

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Spotify.

 

Pat Tillman’s legacy lives on 20 years after death

Howard Balzer and Rich Desrosiers check in Alex Garwood, the co-founder of the annual Pat’s Run and the Pat Tillman Foundation.

Twenty is a significant number this year for the legacy of Pat Tillman.

The former Arizona Cardinals safety was killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan 20 years ago on April 22, 2004. The following year was the first Pat’s Run for the Pat Tillman Foundation, which was co-founded by Alex Garwood, who was also the co-founder of the run, which takes place for the 20th time on April 13 and will draw an estimated 30,000 people.
Garwood is Tillman’s brother-in-law and said, “It’s interesting when people talk about 20 years because on the one hand, it’s great that we’re still talking about him and that’s a huge part of our job with our foundation so that people, especially younger people in particular, understand the great example that someone like Pat puts forth and it’s also remarkable that that much time has passed is shocking. It seems like yesterday you were having a cup of coffee with him.”

Garwood said that today as a guest during the taping of the Pro Football Hall of Fame radio show on SiriusXM NFL radio with me and Rich Desrosiers, who is the Hall’s chief communications and content officer. The show begins at 7 pm Arizona time tonight and will also air from 2-4 am Saturday and on Sunday from 4-6 am and 3-5 pm and can be heard on the SiriusXM app.

“My wife and I are very fortunate,” Garwood added. “We’ve got three sons and our oldest is 23, our middle guy is 21 and our youngest is 18. So I’m not super great at math, but I have two boys that Pat met and one that he never met. So something for us is kind of a selfish thing is how do we keep Pat’s memory alive. How do we share who he was with our boys?

“He’s been ever-present in their lives and it’s just something that we work on, quite frankly, daily. And then how do you then translate that from a small little world just our small family, but how do we translate that into a foundation. How do we share it with 30,000 of our closest friends at Pat’s Run next weekend? It’s an interesting balance.”

But one that has had a significant impact on many.

For more information, go to Building The Next Generation Of Leaders | Pat Tillman Foundation

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Spotify.

 

40 days till the Cardinals’ 2022 season opener vs. Chiefs

Pat Tillman was the last player to wear No. 40 more than 20 years ago. It was retired after he was killed in action in Afghanistan.

On this fine Tuesday, the Arizona Cardinals are one day closer to the start of their 2022 regular season. They will take the field in their home stadium to take on the Kansas City Chiefs in Week 1.

The Cardinals have not had a player wear No. 40 in two decades, as it is was retired after Pat Tillman was killed in action in Afghanistan when he was serving as an Army Ranger after he enlisted, turning down a contract from the Cardinals to serve his country after the 9/11 attacks.

A few players wore No. 40 before him.

Tillman and some of those players are below.

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Spotify.

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Jack Coan wins Pat Tillman Award

Jack Coan did Notre Dame proud this week

Before his strong showing in Thursday night’s East-West Shrine Game, former Notre Dame quarterback Jack Coan received the game’s Pat Tillman Award.

The Pat Tillman Award goes to a competing player in the game that represents some of the same qualities as Tillman: intelligence, sportsmanship, and service.

Coan started for the West and completed 10 of 13 passes for 91 yards and a touchdown in the game as he continues to work to try and impress NFL scouts ahead of the draft.

Related:

Notre Dame’s all-time Super Bowl team

Super Bowl points scored by each college all-time

J.J. Watt, Maxx Williams, Chandler Jones honor Pat Tillman in Week 10

Jones has cleats with Tillman on it while Watt and Williams, both on IR, wore Tillman’s No. 40 to watch the game.

The Arizona Cardinals will not have tight end Maxx Williams or defensive lineman J.J. Watt on the field against the Carolina Panthers. Both are on injured reserve. Williams’ season is over with a knee injury and Watt’s season could be after a shoulder injury.

However, they are doing their part as part of the team’s Salute to Service game to honor the military. On the field, linebacker Chandler Jones is as well.

Williams is doing it from home. Watt is doing it from the sideline, while Jones will play.

All three are honoring former Cardinal Pat Tillman, who was killed in action in 2004 in Afghanistan. He enlisted as an Army Ranger after the September 11 attacks.

Jones is wearing cleats that honor Tillman.

Watt rolled into the stadium wearing Tillman’s No. 40.

Williams is doing his thing from home again. Watching the game on television, he also is donning a Pat Tillman No. 40 shirt.

It is always great to see.

[listicle id=461405]

Listen to the latest from Cards Wire’s Jess Root on his podcast, Rise Up, See Red. Subscribe on Apple podcasts or Spotify.

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Brett Favre Calls Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Brett Favre Calls
Colin Kaepernick a ‘Hero’.
The legendary former QB said Kaepernick’s
protests against racial injustice deserve praise.
He added that Kaepernick is similar to Pat Tillman in
that both sacrificed NFL careers for their beliefs.
Tillman left pro football in 2002
to enlist in the U.S. Army after the
terrorist attacks on September 11.
He was killed in Afghanistan
in 2004 at the age of 27.
It’s not easy for a guy his age — black or white, Hispanic, whatever — to stop something that you’ve always dreamed of doing, and put it on hold, maybe forever, for something that you believe in, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
I can only think of right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman is another guy who did something similar. And, we regard him as a hero. So, I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well, Brett Favre, via TMZ Sports.
Kaepernick has not played since 2016 after
he began kneeling during the National Anthem.
Questions regarding his future in the NFL
have risen during nationwide protests
against racial injustice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell even admitted that
the league had not done enough to address the issue.
San Diego Chargers coach Anthony Lynn has said
that the team would put Kaepernick on
their emergency workout list.
No other NFL squad has
publicly expressed interest
in signing the quarterback

Former Vikings QB Brett Favre says that Colin Kaepernick will have hero status like Pat Tillman

“I can only think of, right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman’s another guy who did something similar, and we regard him as a hero,” Brett Favre told TMZ. “I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well.”

Colin Kaepernick, a quarterback who kneeled during the national anthem to protest police brutality and racial inequality, hasn’t been in the NFL since 2016.

Recently, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell released a video where the league apologized for not allowing players to protest, letting everyone know they now support it.

Former Vikings quarterback Brett Favre told TMZ that he thinks Kaepernick can’t be that far out of shape or that far out of touch with football to the point where he doesn’t deserve a shot. Here’s what else he said:

“I can only think of, right off the top of my head, Pat Tillman’s another guy who did something similar, and we regard him as a hero,” Favre told TMZ. “I’d assume that hero status will be stamped with Kaepernick as well.”

The Vikings have recently been listed as a team that should consider Kaepernick, by both former White House press secretary Joe Lockhart and The Athletic’s Mike Sando.

Based on his interview with TMZ, Favre clearly thinks Kaepernick hasn’t lost too much of his stride.

“He’s still young and hasn’t been hit in several years, so there’s no reason to think that he’s lost that much of a step,” Favre said about Kaepernick.