AMERICAN
FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION TO HONOR NEW YORK FIREFIGHTERS AT 2002 HALL
OF FAME INDUCTION DINNER
In
March the AFA announced the names of those to be inducted into
the AFA’s Semi-Pro Football Hall of Fame* as the “Class of 2002”.
Among those selected for the honor was Danny Suhr, a veteran linemen
of over a decade for the Brooklyn Mariners and the New York’s
Bravest football teams - both member teams of the American Football
Association. AFA PRESS RELEASE: (June 05, 2002) Media - contact
Dave Burch at AFA National Office (877)624-4485 or (941)388-3510
(e-mail) amerfoot@aol.com (or) usafoot@aol.com www.americanfootballassn.com
AMERICAN FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION TO HONOR NEW YORK FIREFIGHTERS AT
2002 HALL OF FAME INDUCTION DINNER In March the AFA announced
the names of those to be inducted into the AFA’s Semi-Pro Football
Hall of Fame* as the “Class of 2002”. Among those selected for
the honor was Danny Suhr, a veteran linemen of over a decade for
the Brooklyn Mariners and the New York’s Bravest football teams
- both member teams of the American Football Association. Danny
Suhr will be inducted posthumously as a member of the “Class of
2002” on Saturday, June 22nd in Canton, Ohio - as he was among
those firemen killed in the tragic World Trade Center disaster
on September 11th, 2001. Suhr was one of the many New York firefighters
that loved football so much that he played not only on the Brooklyn
Mariners semi-pro team but on the New York City Fire Department’s
team, the NY Bravest, as well. Killed in the WTC tragedy were
22 members of the Bravest, seven who played last season and 15
retired Bravest alumni. According to published reports, Danny
Suhr was the first firemen to die that day. Accepting Suhr’s AFA
Hall of Fame plaque, in Canton will be several members of the
NY Bravest/Brooklyn Mariners squads as well as close family members.
Sponsoring Suhr for HOF nomination was his long time coach, for
both the Mariners and the NY Bravest, Robert ‘Pudgie’ Walsh. Pudgie
is a legendary coach of more than 4 decades of experience (46
years) in the semi-pro football circles, one of the all-time winningest
coaches on our level (470 wins) and a member of the AFA’s Hall
of Fame - ‘class of 1987’. Walsh was the founder and head coach
of the FDNY’s Bravest for the organizations first 28 years and
a retired NY firemen with 38 years of service. In addition to
enshrining Danny Suhr, the American Football Association will
present the attending members of the New York Bravest/Brooklyn
Mariners football team with a ‘Special Plaque’ for their firehouse
with the names of all 22 members of the firefighter team who perished
in the World Trade Center disaster. Alumni Lost: 15 Firefighter
Stephen Belson - Battalion 7 Firefighter John Bergin - Rescue
5 Firefighter Peter Biefeld - Ladder 42 Firefighter Brian Bilcher
- Squad 1 Firefighter Sal Calabro - Ladder 101 Firefighter Michael
Cawley - Ladder 136 Firefighter Andre Fletcher - Rescue 5 Firefighter
John Florio - Engine 214 Lieutenant Daniel O'Callaghan - Ladder
4 Captain Thomas Haskell Jr. - 15th Division Lieutenant Charles
"Chuck" Margiotta - Batallion 22 Firefighter Thomas Mingione -
Ladder 132 Captain Timothy Stackpole - 11th Division Firefighter
Daniel Suhr - Engine 216 Lieutenant Chris Sullivan - Ladder 111
Active Players Lost : 7 Firefighter Tarel Coleman - Squad 252
Firefighter Thomas Cullen III - Squad 41 Firefighter Thomas Foley
- Rescue 3 Firefighter Keith Glascoe - Ladder 21 Firefighter William
Johnston - Engine 6 Firefighter Patrick Lyons - Squad 252 Firefighter
Durrell " Bronko" Pearsall - Rescue 4 The following is a story
written by Rick Reilly (AOL Exclusive/Sports Illustrated) that
appeared on-line and is worth repeating for semi-pro football
players, coaches, executives, officials and fans worldwide. It
epitomizes the AFA’s national slogan of “Semi-Pro and Proud”.
On the semi-pro (senior amateur) level it’s all about the ‘love
of the game’ and the camaraderie of teammates for those who chose
to continue playing the sport they love so much after their high
school and college playing days are over. The Real New York Giants
Talk about a rebuilding year. The New York City Fire Department
football team starts its National Public Safety League season
next week missing seven starters, 12 alumnus and two coaches.
But the firemen are playing. Hell, yes, they’re playing. Says
cornerback Mike Heffernan, whose brother John was among the Bravest
who died in the collapse of the World Trade Center Towers, "Somebody
said to me, ‘Probably not going to be a team this season, huh,
Mike?’ I told him, ‘We’ll. have a team if we only have 10 guys.
We’re playing.’" Most of the guys on the team have a nasty case
of the WTC cough, which is what you get from digging week after
week, up to 18 hours a day, and inhaling dust, smoke, glass particles,
asbestos and, indeed, microscopic remains of their fallen comrades.
But the guys are playing. "Damn right," says fullback Tom Narducci.
"It’s tradition." But how? Forget about replacing the players.
How do you replace the men? How does starting cornerback Danny
Foley replace the starting cornerback on the other side -- his
brother, Tommy? Last season, if it wasn’t Danny pulling Tommy
out of the pile, it was Tommy pulling Danny ut. "That was the
most fun I ever had playing football," says Danny, 28, the younger
of the two by four years. "We both played high school and college,
so we never got to see each other play. On this team, we were
always together." After 10 straight days of digging through the
rubble, it was Danny who found Tommy. One last time, Danny pulled
Tommy out of the pile. "When we found him," says Danny, "it was
kind of a relief. I promised my mom I wasn’t coming home without
Tommy -- and I didn’t. But a lot of families had nobody to bury."
Play football? How will they even get a play off? They lost their
No. 1 and 1A quarterbacks, Paddy Lyons and Tom Cullen. It was
Lyons who came into the game last May against the Orange County
(Calif.) Lawmen and rescued his teammates. They trailed 14-0,
but he led them to a 28-21 win. He was good at that kind of thing.
He was with Squad 252, along with cornerback Tarel Coleman, and
his friends believe those two rescued a lot of people that day
before the steel-and-concrete sky collapsed on them. How do you
replace tight end Keith Glascoe, who was so good only a bum shoulder
kept him off the New York Jets’ roster in the early ’90s? Or big
lineman Bronko Pearsall, who insisted on singing Wild Rover after
every game, win or lose? Who’s going to kick now that Billy Johnston
is gone? Everybody called him Liam because he looked so bloody
Irish. He was automatic on extra points, which was a luxury. Hell,
there were years when the Bravest had to go for two after every
touchdown just because they didn’t have a kicker. Then they found
Johnston. They found Johnston again three weeks into the digging.
Heffernan was there, and he helped carry his teammate out. Even
if you can replace the players who were lost, how do you replace
all the other guys who made the team so damn much fun? Tommy Haskell
was the tight ends coach and wrote the team newsletter. Mike Cawley
set up the after-game beer parties. Danny Suhr, the first fireman
to die that day, was the treasurer. Offensive coordinator Mike
Stackpole lost his brother, Tim. Linebacker Zach Fletcher lost
his twin brother, Andre. How do you go on when so many guys are
dead that you can’t even retire their jerseys because you wouldn’t
have enough left to dress the team? How do you play a game draped
in sorrow like that? Came the first team meeting, and the club
didn’t get anywhere near its usual 60 guys. It got 120. All the
lineup holes were patched. Guys who had retired signed up again.
Guys who’d been asked 10 times said yes on the 11th. You cry together
at enough funerals, you figure you can bleed together on a football
field, too. One thing about firemen, they don’t let each other
fight battles alone. Talk about a comeback year. "You’ve got to
understand," says the team’s president, Neil Walsh. "We all go
to each other’s weddings, christenings, graduations. I broke your
brother in, and your dad broke me in, and I carried your son out
of the pile. We’re all brothers." Not long ago a third-grade teacher
found the team’s water boy -- Walsh’s son Ryan -- sobbing uncontrollably
in the boys’ bathroom. "To him, all those guys were his uncles,"
says Walsh. "He couldn’t handle losing them all in one day." Some
holes are easier to patch than others. For more information about
the New York’s Bravest see www.bravestfootballclub.com * Not affiliated
with the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio AFA League
Membership: We would like to take this opportunity to congratulate
the leagues that have joined to date (to view click AFA Member
Teams). We would also like to thank the Midwest Football League,
Mid Continental Football League, Golden State Amateur Football
League and Mason Dixon Football League for posting the AFA's logo
on their websites; as a result these organizations will receive
award packages from our sponsors. If you haven't already done
so, make sure to post the AFA's logo on your website and include
it in your game program with our website address (www.americanfootballassn.com).
Show your players and fans that you are networking your organization
with the AFA for information, scores, ratings, etc For Additional
Information, Please Contact: Dave Burch AMERICAN FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION
http://www.americanfootballassn.com 877-381-6071 amerfoot@aol.com
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