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Javon Walker didn't spray champagne and get into trouble in Green Bay. |
| By Jason Wilde Special to OnMilwaukee.com E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Jason Wilde |
| Published June 27, 2008 at 5:05 a.m. |
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GREEN BAY -- I am worried about Javon Walker. And I'm not the only one.
I know Donald Driver, the Packers' two-time Pro Bowl wide receiver and Walkers' former teammate, is worried about him. I know Dallas Cowboys receivers coach Ray Sherman, who held the same position with the Packers in 2002 when Walker was the team's first-round draft pick, is worried about him. And I know Mike Sherman, who as the Packers' coach/GM at the time traded up to draft Walker, is worried about him.
I just hope the people who are closest to Walker -- closer than any of us -- are worried enough about him to get him some much-needed help.
Perhaps you're unfamiliar with what's happened to Walker since the affable, effusive, likeable ex-Packers first-round draft pick went to the Pro Bowl in 2004, when he had 89 catches for 1,382 yards and 12 touchdowns.
On the field, he suffered a season-ending torn ACL in his right knee in the 2005 regular-season opener at Detroit -- after spending the off-season complaining about his contract and threatening to hold out -- and missed the rest of the year. The Packers dealt him to Denver for a second-round pick (essentially replacing him with second-round pick Greg Jennings) and Walker spent two up-and-down seasons with the Broncos before being released and signing a surprising six-year, $55 million contract with the Oakland Raiders this spring, a deal that included $16 million in guaranteed money.
However, it's off the field where Walker, sadly, has gained the most notoriety. The June 16 incident in which he was found beaten and unconscious on a Las Vegas street corner, the victim of a robbery, was simply the latest.
Walker reportedly suffered a fractured orbital bone (eye socket) and concussion in the incident, which occurred after a weekend of partying, including spraying the crowd at Tryst nightclub inside the Wynn hotel with a few of the 15 bottles of Dom Perignon he bought at a $15,000 price tag two nights earlier.
This, in the aftermath of the New Year's Day 2007 shooting death of Broncos teammate Darrent Williams, who died in Walker's arms after the limousine in which they were riding was sprayed with bullets in a drive-by shooting.
While his teammates attended Williams' funeral in Fort Worth, Texas, Walker went to Las Vegas. Later, Walker said the shooting occurred after Broncos wide receiver Brandon Marshall and his cousin sprayed partygoers with champagne, which infuriated the alleged shooters, leading to Williams' death.
ESPN.com's Bill Williamson, who used to cover both the Packers and the Broncos, points out in a column this week that Walker could've avoided the Las Vegas mess had he not opted to again pass on a Williams-related event. The inaugural Darrent Williams Foundation fundraising gala and parade were the same weekend, and although Williams' mother had asked Walker to be there, Walker had said he was busy.
The story also took a bizarre twist before the arrest of one of Walker's alleged abductors, Arfat Fadel, as Walker claimed he was beaten when he answered his hotel room door and was dragged out of the hotel.
Bellagio surveillance video contradicted that claim, and Las Vegas Police Lt. Clinton Nichols said earlier this week Walker had spent several hours club-hopping late June 15 and early June 16 before "willingly" getting into Fadel's black Range Rover with Fadel and the other alleged assailant.
"The suspects knew who Mr. Walker was. He did not know who they were," Nichols said Tuesday, and added that Walker "probably had a little too much to drink."
Before the Packers played the Broncos in Denver last season, the State Journal sent me there early to do a story on Walker. Out following his third knee surgery, Walker wasn't at the Broncos' facility that week, but I did randomly run into him at a bar following Game 4 of the World Series the Saturday before the teams met in a Monday night game.
He seemed genuinely happy to see a familiar face from his "old days" in Green Bay, and we talked for about 15 minutes. (Unfortunately, the last edition of the State Journal, with my story sans quotes from him, had already gone to press, or I would've taken advantage of the opportunity to call in a few quotes to improve the story.)
While he acted like the same jovial kid I remember him being in 2003 and '04, he was also seemingly partying harder than he ever did in Green Bay, where the nightlife is considerably tamer. I'd met him out on several occasions during his time with the Packers, and he never behaved the way he did that night in Denver.
When I mentioned the story on my Wisconsin State Journal Packers blog, the reaction was mixed. Some wondered why they should care. Some, being Packers fans that still hold a grudge for the way Walker forced his way out of town, were considerably harsher in their reactions.
From where I sit, Javon Walker seems like a good person who's lost his way after a traumatic life-changing event. Here's hoping he gets the help he needs.
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2 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by Malosoomar on June 27, 2008 at 10:38 a.m. (report)
Thanks for not being yet another jounalist who is just going to take shots at Walker. I grew up in South Central Los Angeles during the 70's and 80's. and I remember the drug and gangs wars that ravaged my comminity. I had alot of my "homeboys" including my oldest brother murdered and went to a whole lot funerals, my first funeral was at the age of 9. I too have seen people shot and have been shot at a number of times myself thankfuly never got hit. What I am getting at is that I grew up with undiagnosed and untreated Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as a result of my childhood experiences. We all need a chance to heal and to grieve but because of the "homies" and that whole macho thing I didn't and I got myself into a whole lot of emotional trouble until I was diagnosed and started to recieve treatment. Its hard to see one of your friends die as in Walkers case, and being a "tough" football player in the NFL he is probably too ashamed or just in a whole lot of pain that he is unaware of that there might be soemthing going on with him, hence the irrational behavior. Hopefuly soemone like yourself can somehow reach out to him and get him to seek the help that he needs. I too missed my brothers funeral by choice, just like Walker missed Williams funeral. I understand how painful seeing your loved one die in a casket can be. I didn't know how to cope with the death, it doesn't make him a bad guy. I, by no means am co-signing his bad behavior but I understand, as he will too when he starts to pay consequences for his behavior. I was made to be fully responsible for my actions as should he but somehow he needs to be made aware that there might be a bigger problem than he thinks.
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Posted by rnzh102 on June 27, 2008 at 10:10 a.m. (report)
I feel bad for Javon Walker for only one reason; no one deserves to get beat down like he did that night in Las Vegas. I have never and will never wish or revel in the physical harm of another human being but seriously; he is one of the dumbest people I have ever heard of. Anyone remember the joke about going to the doctor and saying that when you stick your arm behind your back and stand on your head, then your shoulder really hurts; and the doctor replys "Well, then don't do that!" I don't think Javon ever heard that one. Who in the right mind goes to Las Vegas and attempts to reenact the events that lead to the shooting death of his best friend? Somone who is not right in the head. I know that if someone gave me $16 million, I wouldn't attempt to go down the same path that led to my friends untimely death in 1996, when he was murdered by being in the wrong place at the wrong time. And to put the icing on the cake, Darrent Williams mother asked Javon to attend an event that same night honoring his fallen friend? I really hope Javon hears the wake up call that Darrent arranged for him because if he continues down this path, the results will only get worse. One last point, when are NFL owners going to require a clause in a player's contract that prohibits them from entering the city limits of Las Vegas? Has anything EVER happened in that city concerning a professional athlete that was regarded as positive?
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