Windsor Star

Blue Bombers receiver finds hope in Grey Cup

Bailey gets chance to live football dream

- STEVE SIMMONS ssimmons@postmedia.com

This is who plays in the Grey

Cup. Football players who keep running into dead ends. American kids who don’t ever think of leaving their country.

Men who can’t stop chasing their dreams — big dreams, personal dreams, small dreams even — when suddenly playing in a place like Winnipeg for a championsh­ip they’d never heard of becomes the most important sporting moment of their lives.

Rasheed Bailey never saw himself as a Blue Bomber, or in Canada.

He’s a football player who grew up in Philadelph­ia worshippin­g the Eagles during the days of Donovan Mcnabb, Brian Dawkins and Andy Reid. He played his high school ball there, played his Division III college ball just outside the city, and playing for the Eagles was all that ever mattered to him.

Then it happened.

“I signed to my home team and it was one of the most amazing feelings I’ve ever felt in my life. I grew up loving the Eagles, always loving them, and I had a chance to be part of that team. It was like no other feeling,” said Bailey.

“Drafted, undrafted, I didn’t care how I did it. I just wanted the phone call, the opportunit­y. And I knew once I got my foot in the door there was no turning back.”

It didn’t exactly work out that way in 2015.

He got his foot in the Eagles’ door and was cut at the end of his first training camp.

“I was upset, emotional,” said the thoughtful Bailey.

“My mind was messed up for a while. I had a workout in Jacksonvil­le, a workout in Cleveland. I thought I did well. Neither team signed me. Then I had workout in Kansas City. That didn’t work out, either.”

His agent, Joe Linta, is a big-timer in the NFL. Among others, he represents the hugely paid Joe Flacco. Linta told Bailey to try the CFL. That was four years ago. He went to the B.C. Lions, lasted a couple of weeks and was never happy there.

“I called my agent. I said ‘Get me out of here.’ And just about that time, Jacksonvil­le called. The Jaguars wanted another look.”

They took a long look. He spent a season on the practice squad.

“I got my first big cheques in Jacksonvil­le,” Bailey said.

“Bought my first car there, got my first apartment.”

And he got released again. On waivers, both Philadelph­ia and San Diego put in claims.

The Chargers, being lower in the standings, got to sign Bailey.

“Things were going well. I was having a great camp with the Chargers and then wound up getting hurt in the last pre-season game,” he said.

Bailey was released and told he would be signed back when he was healthy.

No offer ever came.

After that, lots of thinking and not much football.

“I do motivation­al speaking. I like to give back to the kids in my community. I did some coaching. I did some speaking. I kept pretty busy.”

And then, guess who, the

Eagles called again. How could he resist that?

“They won the Super Bowl that year.”

He was released long before that happened.

“I wound up in Cleveland for training camp.”

That didn’t work out.

And then Carolina.

“They had no intention of signing me, but I killed the workout,” he said. “I wound up there for almost a year.”

He never played a regular-season game for the Panthers.

He never did play a regular-season game in the NFL, but he signed a lot of contracts.

Wherever Bailey tried to play, he always wound up hearing from Ryan Rigmalden when it didn’t work out. Rigmalden was a scout with B.C. and now the director of college scouting for the Blue Bombers.

“Every time I got released, Ryan would text me. ‘Are you thinking about coming to the CFL? Are you ready?’ I’d been giving him the runaround for all these years and finally I gave in. He never stopped chasing me. And I’m here and extra happy with the decision I made and I wish I had done it sooner.”

Bailey has played just five games for the Bombers. The Grey Cup will be his sixth game. He wants to matter on Sunday and in future years. He has never scored a touchdown.

“I want to make a name for myself, I’ve always wanted to do that,” said Bailey. “I always thought, I want to inspire kids, I want to motivate little girls and boys and moms and dads and grandparen­ts, that no matter what you do in life, never give up. And when I say that, I get emotional. I didn’t give up.

“And I’m here and playing in the Grey Cup. And honest, I didn’t used to know what the Grey Cup is.”

 ?? KEVIN KING/FILES ?? Journeyman receiver Rasheed Bailey says he’s enjoying his stint with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and is excited about the prospect of winning a Grey Cup on Sunday.
KEVIN KING/FILES Journeyman receiver Rasheed Bailey says he’s enjoying his stint with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and is excited about the prospect of winning a Grey Cup on Sunday.
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