Don Rogers' life transcended football. His death spawned Congressional hearings that changed our nation's drug laws, doubled the nation's prison population almost overnight, and led to drug testing, not only in sports, but in the workplace. His death changed how professional sports leagues and colleges deal with agents, and even reached all the way to the Colombo Crime Family and the mob.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

One Moment Changes Everything: The All-America Tragedy of Don Rogers


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Don Rogers was a three-sport phenomenon who energized a forgotten corner of the world (North Sacramento). He could run, jump and tackle better than anyone in California. A role model to children, he became both an honor student and a consensus All- American football player for UCLA, where he dominated two Rose Bowls and was a favorite of fans and sportswriters alike. Rogers went on to become a first-round draft pick of the Cleveland Browns and was voted rookie of the year in 1984. Then it fell apart. Just one week after the overdose death of basketball star Len Bias, and only one day before his marriage to his college sweetheart, while in the upstairs bedroom of his mother’s home Rogers made the incomprehensible decision to use cocaine, and died just hours later. This All-American story is about a good man whose life transcended sports, and whose death continues to spur important debate about burden, love, addiction, responsibility, and what constitutes happiness in the material world.

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