Chicago Sun-Times

FORMER BEAR RASHAAN SALAAM FOUND DEAD

- BY PATRICK FINLEY Staff Reporter

Dave Wannstedt was watching a Cubs game this past summer when a man walked up and handed him the phone.

On the line was the man’s friend, Rashaan Salaam.

The two hadn’t spoken in years. In five minutes over the Wrigley Field din, they teased each other and caught up.

“It was great to hear his voice,” Wannstedt said Tuesday.

The former Bears coach still couldn’t believe that the team’s first- round pick in 1995 was found dead in a Boulder, Colorado, park late Monday. The Boulder Daily Camera reported his death was being investigat­ed as a possible suicide. The University of Colorado, his alma mater, said there were no signs of foul play. He was 42.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to Rashaan Salaam’s family, friends and former teammates,” the Bears said in a statement.

The Bears drafted Salaam 21st overall after he ran for 2,055 yards as a junior, when he won the Heisman Trophy. The 20- year- old missed more than two weeks of training camp after holding out for a contract, though, and didn’t make his first start until Week 4. He finished the season with 1,074 rushing yards.

“NFC Rookie of the Year,” Wannstedt said.“We kind of thought he would be the next Walter Payton. Then he gets hurt, and he never really recovered after that.”

Salaam broke his leg in the third game of the 1997 season and was cut the next year. He later said marijuana use contribute­d to his troubles in Chicago, telling ESPN then that it “probably had me out there lackadaisi­cal instead of going out there 100 percent” and was “just as potent as cocaine.”

The former eight- man football player at La Jolla ( California) Country Day School was an eager learner, Wannstedt said. He remembers Salaam losing a fumble at Soldier Field— one of 14 as a pro — and talking with an encouragin­g, retired Payton on the sideline.

“He loved that,” Wannstedt said. “Anything he could do to become a better player when he came into the league, he was willing to do.”

Like Wannstedt, agent Mike McCartney remembers Salaam’s smile. The ex- Bears college and pro scout first met Salaam when he played for McCartney’s father, Bill, at Colorado. The day Salaam surpassed 2,000 rushing yards, Mike McCartney called the press box 10 times from an airplane for updates.

“I love Rashaan,” he said. “I’m heartbroke­n.”

“As far as having an injury where you’re going to miss considerab­le amounts of time and you can’t play, it affects different players different ways,” Wannstedt said.

“I don’t have an answer. I don’t know. It’s so sad. He was a so young. It’s just tragic.”

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 ??  ?? Running back Rashaan Salaam rushed for 1,074 yards and 10 touchdowns as a rookie in 1995.
Running back Rashaan Salaam rushed for 1,074 yards and 10 touchdowns as a rookie in 1995.

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