The
link for the full article and photos is: http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/021205/neR_17932238.shtml
Last
modified Sat., February 12, 2005 - 01:17 AM
Originally created Saturday, February 12,
2005
Players
get tips from legends
'Field
Generals' instruct black prep quarterbacks
By CLENNON KING
River City News correspondent
Jacksonville
resident Albert Evans remembers watching Doug
Williams become the first black NFL quarterback
to start and win a Super Bowl.
Marlin
Briscoe (left) the first black starting quarterback
in the NFL, coaches area high school football
players at a youth clinic Feb. 5 at Ribault
High School. Briscoe was a member of two Super
Bowl-winning teams.
CLENNON KING/special
He
remembers NFL quarterback Warren Moon throwing
more career passes than anyone in the league
except Dan Marino and John Elway.
That's why he can't believe both legends were
coaching his son on Ribault High School's
football field in front of him Feb. 5, about
24 hours before Super Bowl XXXIX.
"I didn't realize I would see them in
person," he said. "I'm excited 'cause
I'm from the old school."
Evans' son, First Coast High School wide receiver
Jamire Williams, was among about 40 African-American
quarterbacks and receivers from Northeast
Florida-area high schools invited to participate
in the second annual youth clinic, sponsored
by The Field Generals: The African American
Quarterback Club.
"It ain't just about football,"
said Williams, the 1988 Super Bowl MVP and
current vice president of player personnel
with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He said he
wanted to teach the participants not to let
anyone tell them they couldn't do it.
Despite being considered "a dinosaur"
by some at the clinic, Williams, a founding
member of the Field Generals, put players
through the paces, speaking their language
and taking aim at a popular pastime.
"You got to get out of the air-conditioning,"
he said. "You can't throw the ball with
a PlayStation."
Doug
Williams, most valuable player in the 1988
Super Bowl, gives some pointers to a high
school player at the youth football clinic.
CLENNON KING/special
Evans'
son wasn't even born when Williams led the
Washington Redskins in a 42-10 victory over
the Broncos.
"I never heard of him, but I heard of
Warren Moon when I was little," said
the 16-year-old. "I saw him on TV."
Even before Saturday's practice began, Moon
called players to a huddle, ordering them
to pull their pants up around their waists.
"We wear tight pants in the NFL,"
he said. "Not loose ones."
It was two years ago that a core group of
black former NFL quarterbacks launched the
idea of The Field Generals, a non-profit group
dedicated to teaching youths and preserving
the history of the black NFL quarterback.
"We were at a funeral of a fellow black
NFL player who we felt didn't get his due,"
said Marlin Briscoe, the first black starting
NFL quarterback. "So we decided to do
this."
James
Harris, former Los Angeles Rams and Buffalo
Bills quarterback and now vice president of
player personnel for the Jacksonville Jaguars,
checks ball-handling drills.
CLENNON KING/special
NFL
quarterback Jay Walker, who played for the
Minnesota Vikings and New England Patriots,
lauded the pool of local quarterback talent,
but said "the receivers were even more
impressive."
After the 2 1/2-hour clinic, former Los Angeles
Rams and Buffalo Bills quarterback James Harris
had players return to the huddle, giving them
marching orders.
"I want you to learn these things and
do them quicker," said Harris, now vice
president of player personnel for the Jacksonville
Jaguars. "Take it home and work on it
with an urgency."
Not all the players were from Duval County
or came with their parents.
Damon Pifer's father had to go to work Saturday,
so the 16-year-old quarterback from Clay County
High School drove himself from Green Cove
Springs to participate.
"It was about fundamentals," Pifer
said, sharing what he gained. "I learned
a lot more about the mental part of the game."
Some coaches from area high schools also came.
"Our players need to meet people like
these guys who are positive role models,"
said Fred Culver, First Coast High School
football coach, who is black. "There
are a lot of athletes out there, but not all
of them are giving back to the community,
like these guys."
In addition to Saturday's youth football clinic,
the Field Generals announced they'll hold
an essay contest and award four college scholarships
totaling $10,000 to the winners. Those interested
can visit www.fieldgenerals.com.
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