The Hamilton Spectator

CHICKSPEDI­TION 2017.

Former Hamilton Tiger-Cats coach Reinebold steps up to help veteran defensive lineman Chick after trade to Edmonton

- DAN RALPH

Football coaches routinely preach to their players the importance of loyalty and covering each other’s back. But veteran Canadian Football League coach Jeff Reinebold lives by those words.

When the Hamilton Tiger-Cats dealt defensive lineman John Chick to the Edmonton Eskimos on Aug. 20, Reinebold offered to drive the f amily’s belongings to Alberta. Chick’s wife, Catherine, was originally considerin­g to make the trip with the couple’s eight children in tow.

“Coaches sometimes take the easy way out, we say players must be discipline­d but we scream at the officials and get 15-yard penalties,” Reinebold said. “When we (Ticats) got to training camp we talked about the brotherhoo­d, that we have to take care of each other and here was an opportunit­y for me to not just talk about it, but live it.

“You’re given opportunit­ies in life to really demonstrat­e if you’re a guy who just talks about it or who’s about it. I think it was a real blessing for me to get that chance.”

Reinebold, fired last month as Hamilton’s defensive co-ordinator after an 0-6 start, concluded his four-day trip through the Northern U.S. and three provinces — which he dubbed the ‘Chickspedi­tion’ — with his arrival in Edmonton on Wednesday night. After reconnecti­ng with the Chick family and helping them unpack, Reinebold caught an overnight flight back to Hamilton.

“Getting fired, getting traded, getting released, it’s all part of the business and what we sign up for,” Reinebold said. “But the people who don’t sign up for that are wives and kids.

“I went to help Catherine pack and she said she was going to drive with eight kids. John called me a day later and asked if I knew anyone who might be able to help because he didn’t want Catherine to drive. I couldn’t find anybody so I called John back and said I’d do it ... if you’re in a position and have the ability to help then I think you have a responsibi­lity to.”

Chick, the CFL’s top defensive player in 2009, was deeply appreciati­ve of Reinebold’s actions.

“The one thing people preach is the brotherhoo­d stepping up for your guys when (you) can and it was very cool to see the action behind the words,” Chick said. “When I reached out to Jeff, honest to God, I figured he’d know somebody who could be in a place to help.

“I tried talking him out of it but he was set on doing it. Many peo- ple stepped up over the last two weeks but it was definitely a blessing Jeff was able to do that, not enough can be said about it.”

Reinebold, a colourful 59-yearold native of South Bend, Ind., knows all about life on the road.

A football nomad — Hamilton was the 18th stop of Reinebold’s coaching odyssey that began in 1981 — Reinebold also moved a lot while growing up. His father, Jim, spent over 25 years in pro baseball, often resulting in his mother having to pack up the couple’s five kids (Reinebold, his three brothers and sister) and relocate to a new city.

“I remember driving to the next dugout,” Reinebold said. “I remember my mother packing up five kids within eight years of one another into an old Studebaker station wagon and driving to wherever the next stop was. “It’s certainly a lot to ask.” But Reinebold embraced the 3,400-kilometre trip to Edmonton, posting daily updates on Twitter.

“I pictured myself as Forrest Gump when he just decided to go for a run and kept running,” Reinebold said. “That was me, I just kept driving, it was a pretty cool deal. It gave me time to do some inventory and think about many things. I don’t want to get philo- sophical but you’re always put in the place you need to be. Sometimes we don’t understand it, sometimes we fight it ... but there’s a reason for everything. John doesn’t play for me anymore ... but it’s just the bond you form if you really, truly care about each other.”

Many pro football coaches and front-office officials refuse to get attached to players because of the harsh realities of the business. But Super Bowl-winning coach Dick Vermeil bucked that trend, frequently becoming emotional during press conference­s.

“I had a chance to work with coach Vermeil and he said, ‘Players don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care,’” Reinebold said. “That’s the way I’ve always approached it.

“This is a violent game and players put their well-being on the line for you so when you can pay that back a little bit, I just think it’s the right thing to do.”

The trip wasn’t always smooth sailing. Twice Reinebold had to drive through severe storms and was forced to repair two damaged leaf springs (part of the trailer’s suspension system).

And when passing another car, Reinebold sometimes forgot he was towing a trailer.

“I drove their van, which is like a small school bus, and I have this trailer behind me,” Reinebold said. “I’m not a long-haul trucker driver by a long-shot and you forget there’s another 25 feet behind you when you pass somebody.

“I had guys giving me the finger ... and anybody who can back a trailer I have great respect for. After a while I didn’t go into a place unless I could go straight in and straight out.”

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 ?? JEFF REINEBOLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jeff Reinebold, front right, poses with John Chick and the Chick family.
JEFF REINEBOLD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Jeff Reinebold, front right, poses with John Chick and the Chick family.

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