The Record (Troy, NY)

Netflix series examines ‘perfect storm’ that felled NFL star

- By William J. Kole Associated Press

BOSTON » More than two years after he killed himself in his prison cell, former NFL star Aaron Hernandez’s story still fascinates — and now it’s heading back to the small screen.

Netf lix is releasing “Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez” on Jan. 15. The three-part documentar­y examines the meteoric but troubled — and violent — rise and fall of the late New England Patriots tight end.

A teaser for director Geno McDermott’s film opens with chilling audio of a collect call Hernandez made to his fiancee, Shayanna Jenkins. Hernandez can be heard saying: “My whole body’s shaking right now.” Jenkins asks, “What happened?” and Hernandez responds: “You know my temper.”

In July, Hernandez’s estate settled a wrongful death lawsuit brought by the families of two men he was acquitted of killing. Prosecutor­s alleged Hernandez fatally shot Daniel de Abreu and Safiro Furtado in 2012 after a confrontat­ion at a nightclub. Hernandez killed himself in prison in 2017 while serving a life sentence for the 2013 murder of semi-profession­al football player Odin Lloyd.

Hernandez’s death came just a few days after he was acquitted of most charges in the double murder case. After his death, doctors found the 27-year- old Hernandez had advanced chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, a degenerati­ve brain disease linked to concussion­s and other head trauma commonplac­e in the NFL.

Transcript­s the Bristol County sheriff released last year of more than 900 jailhouse telephone conversati­ons Hernandez had with family and friends showed he expected to be released from jail and resume his football career shortly after his arrest for Lloyd’s killing. Hernandez had a five-year, $40 million deal with the Patriots at the time of his arrest.

McDermott and producer Terry Leonard say the latest film will feature some of those phone calls as well as courtroom footage and interviews with those closest to Hernandez and Lloyd. The project, they said in a statement, “examines the perfect storm of factors leading to the trial, conviction, and death of an athlete who seemingly had it all.”

Filmmakers and authors have had no shortage of material to work with in recounting the story of the handsome, polite athlete from Bristol, Connecticu­t, who was a high school standout and an All-American at the University of Florida before his three seasons with New England and subsequent fall from grace.

A state police report of the investigat­ion into Hernandez’s death said the player wrote “John 3:16,” a reference to a Bible verse, in ink on his forehead and in blood on a cell wall. The verse says: “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlastin­g life.”

A Bible was nearby, open to John 3:16, with the verse marked by a drop of blood. And authoritie­s said Hernandez was a member of the Bloods street gang and had been discipline­d for having gang parapherna­lia in prison.

Hernandez’s story has already inspired a documentar­y aired on Oxygen, a “48 Hours” special and books by bestsellin­g author James Patterson and Hernandez’s defense lawyer, Jose Baez.

OZONEPARK, N.Y. » When it came time for Anth SARRAC-Spring to the Sky 1222 ony McCarthy to name a horse he bought at Saratoga’s 2010 Fasig-Tipton Select Yearling Sale, the owner mulled over many options. But one thing was for certain: McCarthy was going to choose a name to honor his father, whose health at that time was rapidly declining due to pancreatic cancer.

“When my father was in his last days, my brother, John, and I were deciding upon a name for the Langfuhr yearling whose mother was Seek to Soar,” McCarthy said. “[John] was adamant we do something that reminded us of our father. We probably passed around 20 names between us in emails and Spring to the Sky was the one that stuck.”

Spring to the Sky, who was purchased for $55,000 and earned $710,905 during his robust nine-year campaign on the New York Racing Associatio­n [NYRA] circuit, did a fantastic job of honoring the memory of Anthony McCarthy Sr.

The gelding raced until the age of 10, and following his 55th career start this past summer, he was retired. And now the multiple stakes-winning Spring to the Sky is a resident of ReRun, a Thoroughbr­ed Aftercare Alliance [TAA] accredited facility in East Greenbush, New York.

The NYRA and its horsemen are committed supporters of the TAA, which accredits, inspects, and awards grants to approved aftercare organizati­ons to retrain, retire, and rehome Thoroughbr­eds using industry-wide funding. One of NYRA’s newest avenues of support for the TAA was created in collaborat­ion with the New York Thoroughbr­ed Horsemen’s Associatio­n [ NYTHA]. With the start of the 2019 Saratoga Race Course meet, NYRA began placing a 1.5 percent assessment fee on all claimed horses at its tracks with the proceeds going to the TAA and the NYTHA-administra­ted retirement program, TAKE THE LEAD. NYRA-based trainer Rick Schosberg, who oversees the TTL, was instrument­al in finding Spring to the Sky a home at ReRun.

McCarthy, who grew up a stone’s throw from Saratoga Race Course, said he owns horses because of the “joy and thrill” his runners provide him with, not because he views them as a money- making enterprise. He had zero interest in running Spring to the Sky in lower-level claiming races, because he said he wanted to be in control of the horse’s future after his racing days were over. When the Kentucky-bred began showing signs of needing the perfect set-up in his races to be competitiv­e, McCarthy and Bruce Brown, Spring to the Sky’s trainer throughout his career, decided it was time for retirement.

“Spring to the Sky treated us well. He was so very, very good to us,” McCarthy said. “From age two, right through age 10, he raced every year. He didn’t always run his race, but he came to race. He loved to race. We treated him well and didn’t over-race him and he returned the favor by giving us a lot of thrills.

“It was important to retire him to a home where he would be happy,” he continued. “A lot of people knew Spring to the Sky because he was around for so long. He’s not like Forego, or some of these legendary horses, but he had a base of people who knew who he was and liked his fieriness and his gameness.”

The original plan had been to retire Spring to the Sky to a new branch of Old Friends - a place where Thoroughbr­eds find themselves in a forever home and visitors can meet-and-greet the former racehorses. A second New York branch of Old Friends was to open its doors near Saratoga Springs this year. While waiting for the newest edition of Old Friends to launch, Brown sent Spring to the Sky to Mike Schrader’s In Front Training Center in Ghent, New York.

“Mike said Spring to the Sky actually was acting like he was kind of bored in the field, said he was chewing on the fence and acting like he wanted to do something,” Brown said. “The Old Friends facility was delayed in opening, so we decided to let him be retrained [at ReRun] and have another job to keep him happy. Sometimes these old racehorses are so used to being at the track, you would think they would like to be retired and not do anything and live out their days, but some need something to keep them busy.”

Not surprising­ly, given the length of time he spent in Brown’s shedrow, the trainer and his family and his employees became very fond of Spring to the Sky, and it was an emotional day when he departed his longtime home at Belmont.

“He has a big fan club and is part of the family for us. He and my son, Nicholas, are the same age, so they kind of grew up together,” Brown said. “My son is always at the barn, so Nicholas and [Spring to the Sky] have always been there together. It was tough when he left.”

But Spring to the Sky is already bonding and creating memories for the people in his new life at ReRun, which operates as a non-profit organizati­on for the rehabilita­tion, retraining and adoption of offtrack Thoroughbr­eds, as well as serving as a sanctuary for horses who don’t get adopted. Lisa Molloy, ReRun’s executive director, estimates 80 to 90 horses have been adopted through her program in 2019, and another 100 were accepted into the program. The majority of the horses who fill ReRun’s 45 stalls are from NYRA tracks.

Spring to the Sky, who is diminutive in size but has a big personalit­y, has a been a hit with visitors at ReRun, including a group of employees from a local pharmaceut­ical company who recently held a volunteer day at ReRun to paint fences.

“[Spring to the Sky] is awfully sweet and really good-natured,” Molloy said. “He loves when visitors come. We had a pharmaceut­ical company come and also a couple of high school classes have been here. He always patiently stands and poses for photos and then the visitors stuff him with carrots.”

While Spring to the Sky has yet to be ridden at ReRun, he has been enjoying his turnout time in the snow - Greenbush was blasted with two feet of the white stuff recently - and Molloy plans to get him under tack soon. She said it’s possible he could be retrained for adoption, or become a permanent member of ReRun, joining Saratoga Snacks and West Hills Giant, among other wellknown NYRA competitor­s, who have found their forever home there.

“Once we get him back in tack, we will see what he does. In the meantime, he’s pretty happy with his lot,” Molloy said with a hearty laugh. “If he sees you or hears you, he will start calling out because he wants alfalfa. He’s awfully spoiled.”

Even as a youngster, Spring to the Sky had a personalit­y that demanded attention. One of McCarthy’s earliest memories of the horse was when he received an email from trainer Eddie Woods, who was overseeing the yet-to-be-named yearling’s early conditioni­ng in Ocala, Florida.

“Probably within a month of him being in Ocala, Eddie told me he called him ‘ The Little Bull.’ He said he was bossing around all the other horses in the field,” McCarthy recalled. “Eddie saw attitude in him. We kind of knew we had something [special] even then.”

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Sept. 5, 2012file photo, New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez speaks in the locker room at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.
ELISE AMENDOLA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Sept. 5, 2012file photo, New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez speaks in the locker room at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.
 ?? NYRA ?? Spring to the Sky, trained by Bruce Brown with jockey Javier Castellano up wins the 2014 installmen­t of the Troy Stakes at Saratoga Race Course, Aug. 13. 2014.
NYRA Spring to the Sky, trained by Bruce Brown with jockey Javier Castellano up wins the 2014 installmen­t of the Troy Stakes at Saratoga Race Course, Aug. 13. 2014.

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