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jinelson
03-14-06, 11:36 AM
March 13, 2006

Former NFL player, Tillman teammate becomes a Marine

By Daisy Nguyen
Associated Press

SAN DIEGO — A former college teammate of Pat Tillman is following his footstep by leaving professional football to join the military. Pfc. Jeremy Staat, a former NFL defensive lineman who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers and the St. Louis Rams, graduated from the San Diego Marine Corps Recruit Depot on Friday.

Enlisting “is probably one of the best decisions I’ve made in my life,” Staat, 29, told The Associated Press after his graduation ceremony.

Tillman, who played defensive back for the Arizona Cardinals, was killed by friendly fire near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in April 2004. The Defense Department is investigating allegations of a cover-up, including failure by the Army to tell Tillman’s family for several weeks that he had been killed by gunfire from his fellow Army Rangers, not by enemy fire as they initially were told.

Staat, who also played for the Los Angeles Avengers Arena Football team in 2004, said he was compelled to join the military after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks but Tillman advised him to stay with professional football until he qualified for retirement benefits.

“He told me, ‘You’re a good player, you need to get good play.’ Then four months later, at his wedding, I learn he’s going to the Army,” Staat said. “I joked to him, ‘You stole my idea,’ and he said it had been in the process for a while.”

Tillman’s death gave him “more motivation” to enlist, said Staat, who was born in Bakersfield but resides in Scottsdale, Ariz.

“I should have been there for him,” he said, adding he was disappointed that Tillman’s enlistment drew wide attention because he gave up a $1.2 million NFL contract to join the Army Rangers.


“People missed the whole concept. It wasn’t about the money,” he said. “He was there to help liberate a country.

“I never felt right about making the money I was making,” Staat continued. “We pay millions of dollars to professional athletes and entertainers, yet we pay military service people pennies to a dollar, and they’re the ones risking their lives.”

To enlist, the 6-foot-5 player said he dropped from 310 to 260 pounds. He said going through three months of rigorous, boot camp training gave him a deeper appreciation for team camaraderie.

“It’s about looking out for your fellow Marine, and being ready to take a bullet for someone,” he said.

Congratultions Marine and thank you for your service

Semper Fi
Jim

Osotogary
03-14-06, 01:04 PM
Pfc. Jeremy Staat was on the television this last sunday on one of those Washington DC/New York based shows like Meet the Press, This week in Washington, etc. He handled himself very well. He used Mame when speaking to the female correspondent and got in what he was trying to say. He said something that caught my attention when answering a question about if the United States should be over in Iraq, or something to that affect. He said (loose quote here),"If I have to lose my life so that one Iraqi child can experience freedom then so be it." Personally, I think the correspondent was trying to goad him into saying something, perhaps controversial, in regards to the Tillman investigation, but he stood his ground and said what he wanted to say. He did pretty good.