Calhoun Times

NFL helping launch of wheelchair football league during the draft

- By Barry Wilner

AP Pro Football Writer

The competitiv­e drive never has left Brad Lang, who hopes to be playing football in the fall.

In the first Wheelchair Football League, which is being launched by Disabled Sports USA.

On Saturday, Lang, a Marine veteran who lost both legs in an explosion while on patrol in Afghanista­n in 2011, will announce a draft pick for the Carolina Panthers. He was selected by the NFL to represent the new league that plans to play in Chicago, Los Angeles, Phoenix and Kansas City, Missouri.

He’s excited about that opportunit­y, even with the draft being conducted digitally.

“It’s definitely a once-in-alifetime opportunit­y,” Lang says. “Something I never would have had the dream to have the opportunit­y to do.”

Then, Lang will continue preparatio­n for the wheelchair version of America’s most popular sport. It’s important — make that essential — to participat­e, he notes.

“I think the best way to describe that is to share my first experience with disabled sports,” Lang said. “After I was injured I came back to Bethesda Naval (hospital) and in late November, I was approached by a sports rep who asked would I like to go skiing? I’m thinking that I can’t even walk, how am I going to ski? I grew up in Michigan and was an able-bodied skier, too.

“I went out to a ski spectacula­r and tried it for the first time and instantly fell in love with it. It was 10 times more enjoyable than ablebodied skiing ever was. It really was the only thing I have found that was better on the other side of the injury.

“It’s similar with football and all the disabled sports I have been able to participat­e in. It makes you feel like you are on par with everybody else and how you used to be.”

Lang, a Purple Heart recipient, particular­ly likes the idea of competing in a sport based on teamwork. Games will be played on hard surfaces both indoors and outside, with seven players a side on a field 60 yards long and 22 yards wide.

“There’s the camaraderi­e that is bred into all military personnel, and the teamwork it takes to complete every mission,” says Lang, who played youth and high school football. “It is something I am always looking for.”

Disabled Sports USA has programs across 50 sports and soon will be expanding beyond that. Those sports range from athletics to archery, from mountain biking to bocce. Football is being launched with the aid of funding from the NFL and the Bob Woodruff Foundation.

DSUSA also plays a role in developing athletes for the Paralympic­s.

“We have an official role as a multisport organizati­on,” says Glenn Merry, DSUSA’s executive director. “In real terms, we are the community-based athlete developmen­t pipeline; 81% of USA (disabled) athletes came through one of our chapter programs. And 71% of Summer Paralympic­s athletes have come through our summer programs.

“We are not the finishing school, but the open end of the funnel that teaches them the basics of the sport.”

Many of the basics of football must be streamline­d for the wheelchair game. With no kickoffs or punts, the ball will be thrown in the air rather than kicked. A one-hand touch on the body above the waist is considered a tackle. Each roster will be balanced through a weighting system based on a player’s disability. On conversion­s, a run is worth one point, a pass is worth two. the greatest pass catchers in NFL history and likely headed to the Hall of Fame. The Browns, for their part, didn’t make any splash with any of the picks they got from Atlanta.

WORST DRAFT TRADE: Coming off their first Super Bowl appearance, the Falcons decided to make a bold move in the 1999 draft. Enamored of blocking tight end Reggie Kelly out of Mississipp­i State for some reason, coach Dan Reeves traded away his firstround pick the next year for Baltimore’s second-round choice at No. 42. Reeves justified the trade by saying it would help the Falcons remain one of the league’s best teams. Boy, was he wrong: The Falcons plunged to 4-12 and handed the Ravens the No. 5 overall pick, which they used on running back Jamal Lewis. All he did was help Baltimore win a Super Bowl title as a rookie and rush for more than 2,000 yards in another season.

DID YOU KNOW THEY ONCE DRAFTED?: QB Brett Favre. Yep, that’s the second-round pick we referred to earlier, selected 33rd overall from Southern Mississipp­i in 1991. It could have been the greatest pick in team history, but the Falcons were an especially dysfunctio­nal group in those days. Coach Jerry Glanville didn’t want Favre and played him in just two games. Favre was dealt to Green Bay for a firstround pick (wasted on running back Tony Smith) and went on to a brilliant career with the Packers.

 ?? AP-Ron Frehm, File ?? Aundray Bruce (center) holds up his future jersey with help from NFL commission­er Pete Rozelle (left) and Rankin Smith Jr., president of the Atlanta Falcons. Bruce was heralded as the next Lawrence Taylor when he arrived from Auburn in 1988, but he’s now remembered as one of the most notorious busts in NFL history.
AP-Ron Frehm, File Aundray Bruce (center) holds up his future jersey with help from NFL commission­er Pete Rozelle (left) and Rankin Smith Jr., president of the Atlanta Falcons. Bruce was heralded as the next Lawrence Taylor when he arrived from Auburn in 1988, but he’s now remembered as one of the most notorious busts in NFL history.

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