The Province

Seahawk inspires

Seahawks linebacker helps encourage limb-different youth to play mainstream sports

- TIM BOOTH

Ahead of his NFL debut with Seattle, linebacker Shaquem Griffin, who has only one hand, has made a priority of helping differentl­y limbed youth get into the game.

RENTON, Wash. — Twelve-year-old Logan Powell was already a diehard Seattle Seahawks fan, even growing up in a household with a Steelers-loving dad.

If possible, Powell’s fandom of the Seahawks was amplified when Seattle selected Shaquem Griffin in the fifth round of the NFL draft last spring.

Powell didn’t know who exactly Griffin was before the Seahawks selected him. He just knew there was a college player with one hand who wanted to play in the NFL.

“I was like, ‘Ah, that would be cool if he was on the Seahawks,”’ said Powell, who wears a prosthetic left leg. “And then he was drafted by the Seahawks.”

Powell and seemingly everyone else now knows Griffin’s story. The amputation of his left hand as a child. The chance he was given to play college football at UCF. The remarkable college career where he was the best defensive player in his conference and one of the best in the country. And ultimately being provided a chance to play in the NFL for the team his twin brother already played for.

Griffin’s story will likely add another unplanned chapter on Sunday in Denver, one nobody could have expected on the day he was drafted by Seattle. He’ll do more than just play in his first NFL regular-season game. Griffin will be one of the starting linebacker­s for the Seahawks with K.J. Wright out due to minor knee surgery.

The player who has been told countless times he can’t will make his profession­al debut as a starter.

For kids like Powell, it’s even more inspiratio­n. If someone missing a hand can start in the NFL, then what is possible?

“He’s just proved he can do whatever he wants because he worked hard for it,” Powell said.

Griffin’s work ethic has been cited by coaches and scouts as the driving reason the 23-year-old is even in the NFL. But being an NFL player has brought another responsibi­lity, one greater than what he experience­d in college. Griffin understand­s he will always have a role more than just being a football player.

It’s why after Seattle’s final pre-season game a week ago, he spent time back on the turf of CenturyLin­k Field meeting with kids from NubAbility, a non-profit whose mission is to “encourage, inspire and instruct limb-different youth in mainstream sports.” He signed autographs. He posed for pictures. Powell was there among those listening intently to what Griffin had to say well after 11 p.m. on the field of a mostly empty stadium.

Griffin said he didn’t have a specific message to share; it was simply a chance to relish in the camaraderi­e of being together and seeing what was possible.

“There’s no exact message. It’s just us doing what we love doing,” Griffin said. “That’s living out our dreams. That’s us choosing what we want to do. There’s not really a message because we’re all on the same page. We all support each other. Having them come support me is another step along the way. It’s just living out our dreams the best that we can.”

Right in the middle of talking to the kids and signing autographs was Shaquem’s twin brother Shaquill, the Seahawks’ second-year starting cornerback. He’s helped his brother manage the transition from college to the NFL. He’s also been just as important in supporting and promoting what his brother has already accomplish­ed.

“It means the world to me. Just seeing the people that look up to us, kids that are still pushing for what they believe in,” Shaquill said. “You understand what kind of role you’ve really got playing this sport, using this platform. I feel like what my brother is doing and what I’m continuing to do is way bigger than football — the giving back to others and motivating them and give them something to dream about. That’s what we play for, and being in that situation and talking to those kids, it’s a lifetime thing and something I always look forward to.”

Of course, there still is the football aspect to Griffin’s story and why so much attention will be placed on his debut. Seattle knew it was getting a tremendous athlete that could be an immediate contributo­r on special teams when it drafted Griffin. Whether he would play on defence would depend on how quickly he grasped the scheme and found a position.

The Seahawks ultimately decided to use Griffin in space and slot him as Wright’s backup. Compared to Wright in size, Griffin looks more like he should be a safety than a linebacker. But he’s taken to the position, even after a rough second pre-season game when he looked lost and overwhelme­d, which led to conversati­ons with coach Pete Carroll and defensive coordinato­r Ken Norton Jr. about how to be more like the player they saw in college.

Griffin showed what Carroll and Norton wanted to see over the final two pre-season games. And now he gets the chance to show it in a game that matters.

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 ?? — AP FILES ?? Seattle Seahawks linebacker Shaquem Griffin, centre, who has only one hand, joins kids from NubAbility Athletics, a non-profit organizati­on that encourages youth with limb difference­s to be involved in mainstream sports, after the Seahawks’ Aug. 30 pre-season game in Oakland.
— AP FILES Seattle Seahawks linebacker Shaquem Griffin, centre, who has only one hand, joins kids from NubAbility Athletics, a non-profit organizati­on that encourages youth with limb difference­s to be involved in mainstream sports, after the Seahawks’ Aug. 30 pre-season game in Oakland.

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