Wednesday, December 26, 2018

News for CougGroup 12/26/2018


While with the Seahawks, WSU Coug Dan Doornink studied at UW medical school — but he’s ‘fully a Cougar’

Originally published December 26, 2018 at 7:00 am

Dan Doornink went from eighth-string quarterback to running back at WSU before ending up going to med school at UW while becoming a Seahawks fan favorite. Now 62, "Dr. Dan" is an internist in Yakima.

By Scott Hanson
Seattle Times staff

Dan Doornink looks back and wonders how he did it.

After four excellent seasons as a running back at Washington State (1974 to 1977), Doornink spent eight years in the NFL, including the final seven with the Seahawks while also going to medical school at the University of Washington.

It allowed the Wapato native to accomplish two dreams: playing football at the top level and following in the footsteps of his father, who was a family doctor in Wapato.

Not that it was easy for the man they call Dr. Dan, now 62 and an internist in Yakima.

“I was competing against guys who didn’t have to study all the time,” Doornink said. “It was hard and challenging and I didn’t get much sleep those years.”

Classes began at 8 a.m., football practice was in the afternoon, then he would study past midnight. That would repeat itself day after day.

But Doornink had overcome bigger challenges — like finding a way onto the field as a WSU freshman.

“I started out as a quarterback for the first two weeks,” Doornink said. “Jack Thompson (who went on to set NCAA passing records) and I were seventh-string quarterback or eighth-string quarterback — sometimes I would be eighth and he would be seventh. We never got our pants dirty for the first two weeks.”

But when a bunch of running backs got hurt, Doornink was moved to running back because as a quarterback, he knew all the plays.

“So I got in there and ran over the first-team cornerback, a senior cornerback, and I didn’t know you weren’t supposed to do that,” said Doornink. “A couple weeks later, I was starting. In those days, it was unheard of to have freshmen start.”

Doornink, who could play both tailback and fullback at 6 feet 3 and 210 pounds, finished his career second on WSU’s all-time rushing list with 1,739 yards and first all-time in running-back receptions with 105 (and it is still fourth best).

Doornink played for three coaches in his last three seasons — Jim Sweeney, Jackie Sherrill and Warren Powers — and while he said it was difficult at the time having to earn a spot each year, it proved to be a good thing.

“It was, because I learned how to compete against other guys,” he said. “The other thing I learned in college was how to catch balls. A lot of the running backs that got drafted, they hadn’t caught 10 balls in their whole careers, and I caught a lot of balls.”

That experience proved invaluable in the NFL. He was drafted in the seventh round by the New York Giants, and after one season there, was traded to the Seahawks. He became a fan favorite in his seven seasons with the Seahawks, playing mostly as a third-down back and catching passes for first downs time and time again.

“It was great because in those days they would try to cover the running back with a linebacker and there were no linebackers around who could cover a good running back,” Doornink said. “Those were fun days.”

Doornink finished his NFL career in 1985 with 1,836 rushing yards and 209 receptions. Those numbers don’t include the biggest game of his career, when he rushed for a career-high 126 yards in a playoff win over the Oakland Raiders in 1984.

He was just six months from finishing his medical degree when he retired from the NFL. His teammates called him “Doctor.” He even once diagnosed a teammate’s illness.

“One of our offensive lineman was losing weight and nobody could figure out what it was,” Doornink said. “I questioned him a lot, and I told him I thought he had giardia (an intestinal disease), and lo and behold, he had giardia. So I gained a lot of respect because I had figured out that he had giardia when there were other doctors who couldn’t figure it out.”

The football stadium at Wapato High School is named after him. Doornink settled in Yakima and raised four children. Son Tyler followed in his father’s footsteps and is a medical resident at UC Irvine.

Although he went to medical school at UW, Doornink remains “fully a Cougar” and a Seahawk.

“I never wear purple and gold,” he said. “At the Doornink family reunion, we randomly pick different colors, and this year we’ve got purple. I’ve decided to not even wear it.”

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From WSU Sports Info

Women’s Basketball WASHINGTON STATE (5-6) at Washington (7-5)
Seattle
Sun., Dec. 30 | 2 p.m.
  Live Stats | WSUCougars.com
  Watch | Pac-12 Network (Elise Woodward & Layshia Clarendon)
  Listen | WSU IMG Radio Network

OPENING FIVE
> Pac-12 play begins with rivalry week as the Cougars head to Seattle to take on the Huskies. The Boeing Apple Cup Series matchup marks the 95th all-time meeting between the two sides. Last year the two teams held home-court with the Huskies winning 56-49 in Seattle in the last meeting.
> The Cougars enter conference play at 5-6 after splitting their two games at the Duel in the Desert prior the holiday break. In the last matchup, WSU dominated Wichita State, 8559, thanks to a huge day behind the arc and 79 points from the big-four.
> Borislava Hristova, a Cheryl Miller Watch List nominee, sits third in the Pac-12 in scoring at 21.8 ppg having scored double-figures in all 11 games including two 30-point efforts.
> Alexys Swedlund, posted a career effort against Wichita State in the last game for WSU, scoring 27 points with 7 three-pointers, tied for the second-most in a single game. Swedlund is 32 points shy of 1,000 career points.
> WSU's big-four of Hristova, Molina, Swedlund, and Kostourkova are averaging 58.6 ppg or 83% of the Cougars' scoring on the year.

GAME INFORMATION - AT WASHINGTON
WSU tips off Pac-12 play with rivalry week as the Cougars are in Seattle to take on Washington in the first of two in the Boeing Apple Cup Series. The matchup marks the 95th all-time between the two sides. Washington has controlled the overall series at 73-21 overall including winning four of the last five. The two teams split last season, each winning at home with the Huskies taking the last contest in Seattle, 56-49. The Huskies enter the week 7-5 overall but dropped their final two nonconference games before the break. The Cougars and the Huskies share a common opponent in Boise State who beat UW, 73-69, right before the holiday break. The Cougars dominated the Broncos, 95-71, to start the month of December.

LAST TIME OUT
The Cougars split their final two games of nonconference at the Duel in the Desert, falling to Kansas, 71-63, before defeating Wichita State, 85-59. Against the Jayhawks, the Cougs fell behind early and could not recover while against the Shockers WSU dominated behind the arc with 14 three-pointers to come away with the win.  Chanelle Molina earned all-tournament honors for her play at the tournament, averaging 19.0 ppg, 6.0 rpb, 4.0 apg on 53% shooting.

NONCONFERENCE AT A GLANCE
The Cougars finished the nonconference schedule 5-6 overall including posting a 3-3 record at home. After a slow start WSU went 4-2 in the final six games heading into Pac-12 play including picking up a big win over Boise State, 95-71. In addition to a win over BSU, the Cougs grabbed yet another win over Nebraska, defeating the Huskers in overtime to hand coach Ethridge her first win at WSU. Both Boise State and Nebraska were tournament teams last season.

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James Williams has a story to tell
Coug running back learns football isn't his only talent

By DALE GRUMMERT
Lewiston Tribune
Dec 26, 2018

SAN ANTONIO - As practice broke up and players began drifting toward the locker room at Benson Stadium here, Washington State running back James Williams walked purposefully to the sideline and greeted a group of young visitors who'd been watching the entire workout.

They were members of the Ellison High football team of Killeen, Texas, and they had traveled 160 miles to watch the Cougars conduct their first San Antonio practice Monday, ahead of their Alamo Bowl date with Iowa State on Friday night at the Alamodome.

Their coach, Todd Wright, had received an invitation to the practice from his friend Eric Mele, the WSU running-backs coach, who then arranged for Williams to have a word with the eight or nine Ellison Screaming Eagles.

Williams shook hands with the athletes and began telling his story: the rugged childhood in Toledo, Ohio., the periods of homelessness in Burbank, Calif., the years of being relegated to special education, simply because general education had failed him.

The details were fresh in Williams' mind, because he had furnished a longer version of the same speech three weeks before at Deary High in rural Idaho, 35 miles east of Washington State.

It played well in both towns.

Williams, a WSU junior who leads all college running backs in receptions for the second straight year, is beginning to realize that youngsters of all ages, ethnic backgrounds and levels of academic prowess can glean something from his experience, unique though it be may.

If he doesn't break through to them with his disarming sincerity, he does so with his his sneaky bursts of streetwise wit. Cougars receiver Kyle Sweet, when asked of his first impressions of Williams, said, "I remember thinking, 'This dude is probably one of the funniest dudes I've met in my entire life.'"

Williams' talents as a communicator first began to dawn on him last year when he paid frequent visits to special-education classes at Camelot Elementary in Lewiston. They were taught by his fiancee, Rye Hewett, 26, a former Lewiston High and Lewis-Clark State tennis standout who's been a big part of Williams' life for three years. They live in Lewiston with Hewett's 7-year-old daughter, Breezy.

"I think he's a lot more comfortable now when he goes to talk to those kids," Hewett said by phone recently. "He knows how meaningful it is. I think he can connect on so many levels - being homeless, how school is a struggle, just a lot of different backgrounds. Whereas with a lot of other people, who just take things for granted, I don't think it really sticks with those kinds of kids. But he's relatable and personable, and that was something I was drawn to when I met him."

Williams speaks quickly during these sessions, improvising the whole way, with a fluid combination of Ebonics and standard English. It's reminiscent of his elusive moves on the football field, which helped produce a combined 1,112 yards and 16 touchdowns this season through rushing and pass-receiving.

In an informal, no-microphone speech to members of the Deary High girls' and boys' basketball teams at the school gym, he concisely noted what he called the irony of being engaged to a special-ed teacher.

"Some people, when I say I've got a teacher fiancee, they're like, 'Oh, she taught you?' I'm like, 'No.'"

The last word was uttered emphatically, and the kids laughed right on cue.

Williams spoke for an hour, then fielded questions and signed autographs in the hallway for another 40 minutes.

"We have a small school - I was surprised to hear he was coming," said a member of the Deary boys' team, sophomore point guard London Kirk. "His talk really lifted our team up, and changed a lot of what we thought about how everything worked. He's super nice. I feel like he cares about people, and wants to change people's lives, like some people changed his."

That talk was arranged by Deary boys' assistant coach Mike Morey, a longtime friend of Hewett's mother, Renee.

"We've had some struggles with some grades and some attitudes on our team," Morey said. "I'd read a little about James, and I thought, what an opportunity. I'll reach out to Renee, his future mother-in-law, and 'What are the chances of having him come?' It was less than 15 minutes before he got back to me and said, 'I'd love to do it.'"

In his more condensed speech this week to a diverse bunch of young Texans, Williams omitted many details of his Deary talk and inserted certain others, acknowledging how close he'd come to being swallowed by the streets of Toledo.

"I'm a product of my environment," he said. "So whoever I'm hanging out with, that's what I'm going to be like. I was like that in Ohio. I was damn near a Blood. In my city, that's literally how you survive."

That wasn't his only problem. Athletically gifted and bursting with energy, Williams was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), a label he would carry a long while, for better or worse. In any case, as Williams describes it, teachers were so overwhelmed by chaos in the classroom that they were ineffectual at best. He says he learned virtually nothing.

His parents, James and Genise Williams, grew increasingly aware of these issues and thought they could provide better opportunities for their three children out West. So, eight years ago, they invested all their money in a drive to Southern California, where, alas, their plans to reside temporarily with relatives fell through.

So they wound up living in their sport utility vehicle, "for probably seven months," the younger James Williams told the Deary kids. "We sat in a park. We kept ourselves occupied - you'd never know we were homeless. We didn't act like it at all. We were in the park playing basketball, or me and my brother would throw a football around."

By fits and starts, the family improved its situation and found permanent lodging. But James, their eldest child, hampered by the Ohio experience, struggled to keep up academically.

He was placed in special education in the eighth grade and stayed there for years. Embarrassed, he made a show of comparing class schedules with his friends at the start of each term, knowing full well he shared no classes with them.

But in some ways he thrived at Burbank High, which is academic-minded and ethnically diverse, though Williams was one of just a handful of blacks. The school wasn't known for producing NCAA Division I football athletes, but Williams looked like he could become one.

The attention he began drawing from Pac-12 coaches gave him extra incentive to master his academic troubles. His social skills had never been questioned, and he now used these to develop closer bonds with teachers, inviting them to give him the one-on-one attention he seemed to need.

His final semester of high school, it was a race to the finish. If he was to become eligible to accept a scholarship offer from Washington State, he needed A's in all his classes and a higher score on his college aptitude test. He managed both, saying the latter was the more difficult. You can't reason with an SAT.

"I'm not going to sit here and lie to you," Williams told the Deary athletes. "School is hard. I don't like school. I still don't. I'm not going to sit here and try to be a robot and say school is this and this and this. It's hard. And there's no avoiding it."

Williams seems to have mixed feelings about having been sidetracked into special education. It didn't prepare him for the places he eventually wanted to go. But he admits that his Ohio experience had left him unprepared for general education.

His fiancee, too, has complicated feelings about these subjects. Hewett said she adored her work at Camelot but has since left the Lewiston school district and is now working for Imagine Behavioral Services, where there's less paperwork and more one-on-one work with children with disabilities.

When she hears Williams' story, she wonders if teachers always took the right approach with him.

"They saw him as a football player, this athletic person - 'Oh, he just can't sit still.'" she said. "Everybody learns differently. Education is not just diagnosing kids with a certain category. Education should be available to every kid, in the way they're able to learn. With James, he is someone who needs a lot of repetition - look at him with football and reps. 'Practice makes perfect.' And it does. He's really good at real-life scenarios, and I think that's something that as a society - not just in Lewiston or Ohio or wherever - people and teachers and special education really need to work on."

On the field, Williams' progress this year has been indisputable. Cougars coach Mike Leach gives some of the credit to his first-year position coach, Mele, who uses video footage to try to persuade the running back, a master of the spin move and always tempted to pop outside, to be more direct in his running when necessary. He eventually saw the wisdom of the advice.

"He started doing it that way, and he's punching touchdowns in," Mele said. "He's running downhill and his pads look forward and he's running through contact and that sort of thing. So it was one of those things - he had to see some results. He saw them, and we kept feeding the fire with that stuff."

Williams' father, now a personal trainer in Southern California, sees his son's improvement on the field. In a recent phone interview, he said he hadn't yet seen him in his new role as a public speaker. But he's not surprised.

"He's overcome everything, he's stayed humble," the elder James Williams said. "He's not letting what we went through define him. He could have been bitter and standoffish, but he wasn't. He was open and he was fun. We got really lucky with that. He was a really good kid."

Rye Hewett said the Williamses "are probably one of the closest families I've ever seen," and James makes frequent allusions to his father, mother and siblings.

Have a good support group, he told the Deary Mustangs. Play together. Be ready for adversity. If you have naysayers, prove them wrong.

Three weeks later, he delivered the same message to the Ellison Screaming Eagles.

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WSU Football Coach Mike Leach a '70s hater? Not so fast

WSU coach has a soft spot for some of that era's artists

By DALE GRUMMERT of the Lewiston Trib Dec 26, 2018

SAN ANTONIO - Seemingly every time his quarterback makes an allusion to the 1970s, Washington State football coach Mike Leach takes the opportunity to disparage that decade.

Or at least one aspect of it - disco music.

The latest example came Sunday, when Gardner Minshew donned an over-the-top Cougar-themed leisure suit for the team's flight to San Antonio, where the Cougs face Iowa State on Friday (6 p.m., ESPN) in the Alamo Bowl.

"I grew up in the '70s and was glad when they ended, because the music improved," Leach said. "It took them about a decade, but it got better after that."

But the fact is, many of Leach's favorite musical acts either became popular in the '70s or were going strong in that decade.

What follows are a few of his faves, as listed during a recent multi-topic news conference in Pullman, in seemingly no particular order. He led with the Doors, for example, because he'd just heard them on the radio.

Leach's accompanying comments on the acts were extracted hastily after the Cougars' practice Tuesday at Benson Stadium in San Antonio.

Interestingly, 10 of the 13 acts are American, the exceptions being Bad Company and Jethro Tull, who are English, and Neil Young, who is Canadian.

Leach's mention of Texas A&M refers to his days as Texas Tech coach. And he alludes to Wyoming because that's where he grew up.

The Doors
Years active: 1965-73

Leach says: "Dark, mysterious."

Lynyrd Skynyrd
Years active: 1960s-2010s

Leach says: "It's a very Wyoming type of band, even though they probably never went to Wyoming. Country rural high-school Southern."

Jimmy Buffett
Years active: 1960s-2010s

Leach says: "Relaxed paradise."

Neil Young
Years active: 1960s-2010s

Leach says: "Music that talks to you."

Grateful Dead
Years active: 1960s-2010s

Leach says: "Consistent, very consistent. There's no bad songs by the Dead. I can't say that any of them are my favorite, but none of them are bad."

Bob Dylan
Years active: 1960s-2010s

Leach says: "Again, music that talks to you. You definitely listen to the words."

Bad Company
Years active: 1970s-2010s

Leach says: "Just good classic rock with energy."

Jethro Tull
Years active: 1960s-2010s


Leach says: "More rare, harder to find. But again, rock with energy with a unique approach. And the electric flute is outstanding."

The Eagles
Years active: 1970s-2010s

Leach says: "Eagles was an oasis during the 70s in the midst of disco. The Eagles allowed people to persevere disco."

The Marshall Tucker Band
Years active: 1970s-2010s

Leach says: "Outstanding. They were, throughout the state (Wyoming) when I grew up there, an extremely popular band. One, they would tour and do concerts in Wyoming. Even though they're from Virginia or something (actually South Carolina), it was very western music, but still rock."

Radney Foster
Years active: 1990s-2000s

Leach says: "Before we used to play A&M every year, we would play "Texas Back in 1880," and it would inspire our entire team. And we always played well against A Robert Earl Keen

Years active: 1980s-2010s

Leach says: "He would be like Bob Dylan for country music."

Toby Keith
Years active: 1990s-2010s

Leach says: "Good solid country, almost country rock. Toby Keith is just solid energy and makes you feel good."

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From football to full-time father: Former WSU star Keith Millard embraces being stay-at-home dad

Originally published December 25, 2018 at 7:00 am Updated December 25, 2018 at 8:30 am

The former Washington State star with the bad-boy reputation spent decades playing and coaching but now finds “the responsibilities are endless" on the homefront — and he is content.

By Scott Hanson  Seattle Times

Keith Millard a stay-at-home dad?

It would have been hard to picture two decades ago when Millard, the former Washington State star with the bad-boy reputation, was terrorizing NFL offenses with off-the-chart intensity as a defensive tackle for the Minnesota Vikings and was the 1989 NFL defensive player of the year.

But after decades of football, Millard, a father of six, has found happiness at home. Two of his kids are still at home in Dublin, Calif., and he tends to them while wife Paula works.

“The responsibilities are endless,” said Millard, who has kids ranging from 13 to 31 and two young grandsons. “It’s a seven-day-a-week job. My wife is eight years younger than me and is still finishing her career, so when I retired I took over her duties. It was an adjustment for sure. I do everything that anyone else would. I wash clothes, I cook and I try to do everything I can to keep things normal and going as smoothly as possible.”

Millard, 56, wanted it to be different for his kids than it was for him, as one of nine kids in a dysfunctional mixed family that was filled with tension.

He eventually found an outlet in football.

“I didn’t start playing football until my junior year of high school,” he said. “Nobody in my family went to college, and I never imagined I would go to college. I loved the sport, but my mom would not let me play as a kid.”

Millard played tight end for Foothill High School in Pleasanton, Calif., as a junior, showing good hands. He said he was 6 feet 4 and about 190 pounds, “and was always pretty good at catching the ball, and worked my way to first team.”

But things at home weren’t going well, and Millard moved in with a brother. A new football coach was hired at Foothill, and he and Millard did not get along. A few games into his senior season in 1979, Millard was kicked off the team.

“I had an attitude and I definitely contributed to it,” Millard said. “I only played in three or four games at the most my senior year, but they were really good and stood out. But when recruiters came, the coach was bad-mouthing me.”

That could have been the end of Millard’s football career. But one day a Washington State football recruiter was at his school to look at another player. One of Millard’s teachers, George Baljevich, intercepted the recruiter before he could speak to the coach.

“He told him my story and said, ‘You need to look at film of this guy,’ ” Millard said. “They brought the film to coach (Jim) Walden and everything kind of took off from there.”

Walden wanted to visit with Millard’s family, so Millard made a call to his mom and stepdad.

“I said. ‘I need to be in the house so they will think I have a normal family life,’” Millard said, laughing at the recollection. “So when they came, it was a little intense to say the least, but I think we pulled it off pretty well.”

Later, Millard learned that Walden had been aware of his situation.

“His mom remarried, and that did not go well with him,” said Walden, 80, who coached WSU from 1978-86, and later became a longtime analyst on WSU football radio broadcasts. “I am not going to get into all of that, but it was very disconcerting with him and his new stepfather. … There was some anger, and it took him some time to work through that.”

The move to Pullman changed everything for Millard, and he credits Walden “for saving my life.”

“It was the opportunity of a lifetime and I was taking it seriously,” Millard said. “I knew what I wanted to do, and I was going to do whatever it took to get there. Thank God we had great leaders that set great examples. And coach Walden — I can’t tell you enough about that guy.”

Still, there were pitfalls. Millard got a reputation as a bad boy. He spent 17 weeks in jail during the summer after his junior year for a case in which he was convicted of simple assault in the fourth degree.

“His reputation at Washington State far exceeds what he actually did,” Walden said. “I think people sometimes have a tendency to embellish when kids get into trouble. Keith was pretty full of himself. But he was never as much of a problem for me as a lot of people thought he was. Actually, he was pretty fun to coach. He had a little streak in him, but he was a good guy.”

Millard’s football life change when he switched from tight end to defensive line as a sophomore.

Millard said, “I considered myself a pass-catching tight end,” but there was no need for a pass-catching tight end at Washington State, which ran the run-heavy veer offense.

At 215 pounds by then, Millard was built like a linebacker, but there was no need for another linebacker. He would need to be a defensive lineman.

“I said, ‘I will do it,’” Millard said. “The spring of next year I was moved to defensive line.”

He got himself to about 240 pounds and for the next two years he terrorized offenses, with two of the greatest seasons by a WSU defensive player.

As a junior and senior, he combined for 39½ tackles for loss, fifth most in school history, and had 21½ sacks, sixth in school history. He helped WSU to two consecutive victories in the Apple Cup in 1982 and 1983, and won the Morris Trophy as a senior in 1983 as the Pac-10’s top lineman.

Not bad for a converted tight end.

“Right away, some of the coaches said it was the best thing that ever happened to me,” Millard said of making the switch. “They thought I had a good future at it. That was encouraging, but I never thought more than that. Once I got into the groove and found my niche … I don’t want to sound conceited, but I was pretty much unstoppable at that point.”

To his surprise, the pro scouts were paying attention. He was drafted in the first round, No. 13 overall, by the Minnesota Vikings, and in the first round of the United States Football League, where he began his pro career.

“My thought process, even in my senior year, was all I wanted was a shot in the league and I would take it from there,” he said. “I never thought in a million years I would get drafted, let alone in the first round. That was a shock to me.”

After finishing second in the USFL in sacks with 12 in 1984, he joined the Vikings in 1985 and his career continued to ascend. He was up to 260 to 265 pounds, and among the most feared players in the league. He had no trouble getting around bigger players with his superior quickness and immense desire.

“I worked hard, was focused, studied hard and was a student of the game,” said Millard, who set the NFL record for sacks by a defensive tackle with 18 in 1989, and his record lasted almost 30 years before the Rams’ Aaron Donald broke it Sunday. “I was an absolute dedicated, hard-working, hungry, goal-oriented type of player.

“I just wanted to keep going and see how far this thing was going to take me.”

It seemed that would be the Pro Football Hall of Fame. But then, in the fourth game in 1990, he blew out his knee, including tearing his ACL, and underwent reconstructive knee surgery. He was never the same.

Millard missed the 1991 season, and then the Seahawks traded a second-round draft choice for Millard in 1992, hoping he could regain the form that made him the 1989 NFL defensive player of the year.

He was released after two games with Seattle, then suffered a broken hand with Green Bay after signing with the Packers.

“It was cool at first,” Millard said of joining the Seahawks. “But I think it was a mistake, because, No. 1, I don’t think I was as ready as I thought I was. And No. 2, I lived in Seattle in the offseason, and I had a lot of friends that were a distraction to me. And my knee was still very problematic, trying to get confidence on it. I was in the training room a lot, getting treatment on it. It was very frustrating.

“Those were some tough years for me, I’m telling you. Tough years, man, going from being at the top of my game to the rug being pulled out. I had always come back from injuries and I just couldn’t come back from this one. My thought process in the past had been I will work through it. I will work harder than anybody and do whatever it takes. But it was never right, and I could not do what I did before. Not even close.”

Millard was ready to retire but was talked into signing with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1994. He played but his heart was not in it, finishing with four sacks, including a sack against the 49ers in his final game.

“I knew I was done,” he said. “I never looked back.”

He figured he was done with football, and headed to his ranch in Arizona. But one day, the local high school football coach knocked on Millard’s door, wanting to know if Millard would help out with the defense. He did, he enjoyed it and he excelled.

A coach was born. Millard quickly worked through the ranks from college to the NFL, getting a job as the defensive line coach with the Denver Broncos in 2001. That was followed by stints as an assistant with the Oakland Raiders, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Tennessee Titans, with an interruption to get the first of two hip replacements at age 38.

His growing family stayed in California during his final two NFL jobs, and when the staff at Tennessee was fired in 2013, Paula had a talk with Keith.

“She said, ‘You really need to quit. You are getting old, your kids are getting older, you’re missing a lot of time with your family. You need to stop,’ ” he said. “So I did. I started getting back into my kids’ lives and feeling pretty good about it.”

Coaching was limited to helping with his kids’ teams.

“I help where I can, to be with my kids,” he said.


In addition to the hip replacements, Millard also has had a knee replacement and now needs to get his neck fused. But he doesn’t let that cut into his duties at home. It’s where he is staying, even if the football temptation never leaves for good.

“There is a huge adjustment from 14 hours every day and the pressure of the game that you get used to, then go to nothing,” he said. “It took me a couple of years to get used to it. Every year I think about getting back but reality kicks in. I can’t do it anymore.”

Watching from afar with great pride is Walden.

“He’s one of my biggest accomplishments in a sense of I’m proud of what he became because I know from where he came,” Walden said. “I know how hard the journey was. And I know what a commitment he has made over the years to get where he is and to make decisions that he’s making. I love how much he loves his family, raising them, and how much he is enjoying them. It just makes me feel that’s what coaching is all about. I am very proud of Keith Millard. Really, really proud.”

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