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Tillman
Eulogized As Hero, Overachiever
SAN JOSE, Calif. - Pat Tillman was
remembered Monday as an honorable man who overachieved on the football field
then became a war hero when he died in Afghanistan after walking away from a
multimillion-dollar contract to join the U.S. Army.
"While many of us will be blessed to live a longer life, few of us will ever
live a better one," said Sen. John McCain. R-Ariz., who spent 5 1/2 years as a
prisoner of war in Vietnam. "He was a most honorable man."
Friends, family and others gathered to mourn Tillman in his hometown _ to remember a man so moved by the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks that he walked away from a fortune with the Arizona Cardinals to fight for his country.
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Tillman, 27, died April 22 in a
firefight near the Pakistan border as he was leading his team to help comrades
caught in an ambush. The Army gave few details of how Tillman was killed, but
said he was fatally shot while fighting "without regard for his personal
safety."
NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue and Hall of Famer Gene Upshaw, executive
director of the players' union, were among those who attended Monday's public
memorial at a municipal rose garden. About 3,000 people attended the ceremony.
"The underlying thing was his courage and selflessness on the athletic field, in
his community and now as a soldier," Tagliabue told reporters before the
service.
Tillman was eulogized by politicians, celebrities, former coaches and family
members. Tillman's brother, Kevin, who served in the same battalion, was also at
the ceremony.
California's first lady, Maria Shriver, read a letter from her husband, who was
visiting soldiers in Germany on Monday.
"I was told he admired me but it's the reverse ...," the letter said. "Pat's
journey, that's the American dream and he sacrificed that. That to me is a real
hero."
Shriver said Tillman epitomized the message her uncle, John F. Kennedy delivered
in his presidential inauguration 43 years ago.
"My uncle once said, 'Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can
do for your country.' You, Pat, have lived those words," she said.
Last week, the military posthumously promoted Tillman, a member of the Army's
elite Ranger unit since 2002, from specialist to corporal. He also was awarded a
Purple Heart and Silver Star.
Tillman attended San Jose's Leland High School and was drafted by the Cardinals
after starring at Arizona State University. He became the Cardinals' starting
safety and broke the franchise record for tackles in 2000.
"It was an honor to coach Pat," former Cardinals assistant Larry Marmie said. "I
learned a lot from him. Players often look for the respect from their coaches. I
found myself trying to earn Pat's respect."
Though he never publicly offered reasons for his decision to join the Army,
several friends have said the terrorist attacks affected him deeply.
"He wasn't interested in headlines," Upshaw said. "But he was interested in
giving everything for a cause, whatever the cause may be."
Tillman was assigned to A Company, 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, and was
based at Fort Lewis, Wash.
He was one of about 100 U.S. soldiers to have been killed in Afghanistan since
the United States invaded in 2001. He is the first NFL player killed in combat
since Buffalo offensive tackle Bob Kalsu died in the Vietnam War. Nineteen NFL
players were killed in World War II.
"I came to pay my respects," said Joel Cascio, a San Jose resident who served
two years in the Navy during the mid-1960s. "He put his career aside. That's a
courageous thing to do, no matter what walk of life."