Which also goes to say, don't go to the hospital in Mississippi.

 

Oliver Barry CRS,GRI

Real Estate Broker

Bob Parks Realty

1517 Hunt Club Blvd

Gallatin TN 37066

Phone: 615-826-4040

Fax: 615-822-2027

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Darlene Goodfellow
Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 1:19 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two
Lives Forever

 

I happened in the Miss St game played in Orlando. I believe some blood
marrow in his blood stream caused an embolism. Tragic accident. 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Oliver Barry <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: [email protected] 

Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 2:16 PM

Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two
Lives Forever

 

Didn't Mississippi State have a player break his leg in a game against us
just before Chucky Mullins?

Seems he got an infection and died.  

Am I just dreaming that?

 

Oliver Barry CRS,GRI

Real Estate Broker

Bob Parks Realty

1517 Hunt Club Blvd

Gallatin TN 37066

Phone: 615-826-4040

Fax: 615-822-2027

Mobile: 615-972-4239

 

 


  _____  


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Arthur Polhill
Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 12:25 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two
Lives Forever

 

I'm Fedexing Kleenex, badone..
 

A. Leon Polhill, Gator
Friends are the family that we choose for ourselves. 

 

 


  _____  


From: Gatornet Admin <[email protected]>
To: GatorTalk <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, October 31, 2009 8:32:00 PM
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: [gatornews] Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two
Lives Forever


Sniff, sniff! Choke... :(

Randy (I'm becoming a "softie" in my old age)

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "JNene" <[email protected]>
To: "GatorNews" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, October 31, 2009 6:05 PM
Subject: [gatornews] Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two Lives Forever


>
> (SEC topic, not Gator-related, but I thought it would be of interest.)
> Twenty Years Ago, One Hit Changed Two Lives Forever
>
> Posted Oct 28, 2009 12:00PM By David Whitley (RSS feed)
>
>
> Brad Gaines will do it again early Wednesday morning. He'll grab some
> Clorox and glass cleaner, toss them in the trunk of his Buick and head
> to a little cemetery 175 miles away.
>
> His long, strange trip actually began 20 years ago today.
>
> "I'll be doing it until I die," Gaines said.
>
> He goes to visit a friend he never really knew. Then one crazy
> football play bound them forever. On a Homecoming afternoon, he
> collided with Chucky Mullins.
>
> Gaines, a tailback for Vanderbilt, got up and headed back to the
> huddle. Mullins, a safety for Mississippi, never moved again.
>
> His neck was shattered. He died less than two years later.
>
> We read about such things, wince and move on. It's nobody's fault.
> It's just football.
>
> Gaines knew that on Oct. 28, 1989. He knows it on Oct. 28, 2009.
>
> It doesn't matter.
>
> "I know it was part of the game," he said, "but it doesn't change the
> fact, you know ..."
>
> He's tried to explain it a million times why he drives from Nashville
> to Russellville, Ala. three times a year. If it's the date of the
> accident or the date Mullins died or Christmas, Gaines has to make it
> to the grave that's marked simply:
>
> Chucky, Man of Courage.
>
> So what force drives Gaines? Why has he has skipped out early every
> Christmas or left home at midnight to get back for a morning meeting
> or barely beat the clock and found himself cleaning Mullins' grave by
> the light of the moon?
>
> "There have been times I have had to hitchhike because I ran out of
> gas, had blown out tires, my car's broken down," Gaines said. "But I
> always make it."
>
> Everybody from his wife to total strangers has worried and wondered.
> Perhaps the only person who could truly understand is Mullins.
>
> "It's almost like it was fate," Gaines said.
>
> He was a white kid from hoity-toity Vandy. His brothers had played in
> the NFL. He was a stud running back, the leading receiver in the SEC,
> a kid whose idea of hardship was getting turned down for a date.
>
> "There have been times I have had to hitchhike because I ran out of
> gas, had blown out tires, my car's broken down. But I always make it."
> -- Brad Gaines Mullins was a skinny black kid from a nowhere town. His
> mother died when he was in sixth grade. He wasn't particularly fast or
> strong or talented, but Ole Miss coaches loved his attitude. Mullins
> would do anything to win.
>
> So it wasn't surprising that he lowered his helmet and buried it in
> No. 44's back. Gaines had gone up to catch a pass. The force from
> behind knocked the ball loose before he hit the ground..
>
> Gaines scrambled to recover it, but the refs called it an incomplete
> pass. He didn't even notice No. 38 wasn't moving. Before long, the
> number would literally mean everything to him.
>
> Gaines couldn't sleep after the accident. He no longer cared about the
> sport he was raised to love. He didn't even play his senior season.
>
> He did try to get to know the source of his pain. The first time they
> formally met, Gaines walked into the hospital room and tried not to
> visibly shake. Mullins was in a halo contraption with all sorts of
> tubes attached to his body.
>
> A ventilator was rhythmically hissing at his bedside. Gaines shuffled
> near the bed, bent over and strained to make out what Mullins said.
>
> "It wasn't your fault."
>
> That was Chucky. His spirit never inspired people far beyond the
> South. Walter Payton visited him. So did Janet Jackson and George H.
> W. Bush.
>
>
> More than $1 million was raised for his trust fund. Ole Miss built him
> a specially equipped house, and he was back in class the next year.
> Then a blood clot formed in his lung.
>
> Gaines read about it and drove to the hospital in Memphis . Mullins
> was in a coma, but his friend got there in time to say goodbye. Then
> doctors removed the life-support system. Gaines went to the hospital
> roof and wept.
>
> Ole Miss started the Chucky Mullins Courage Award, given each year to
> a senior defensive player. The winner used to wear No. 38 until the
> school retired it in 2006.
>
> "You say 'Chucky,' and everybody knows what you mean," Gaines said.
>
> You say Brad, and everybody wonders what that means.
>
> "As I get older I've gotten even more emotional about it," he said. "I
> don't know, maybe raising my own kids and how fragile life can be."
>
> He has four of them now, three girls ages one to 11, and a five-year-
> old boy. Gaines is a successful businessman but he still drives a 20-
> year-old Buick his kids hate.
>
> "I wish your car would die," they tell him all the time.
>
> If it does today, he'll just start hitchhiking. Gaines has lost count
> of the trips he's made to Russellville, but it's at least 60. None of
> his kids have ever gone with him. They just know their father has
> something he has to do.
>
> "When I leave to go to the cemetery, they know why I'm going," Gaines
> said. "They see the importance of that, the importance of having love
> for your fellow man."
>
> Mullins is buried next to his mother, who died when she was only 32.
> Gaines will pluck the weeds then clean the dirt and grime off the
> brown granite headstone.
>
> Then he'll just sit and talk and pray.
>
> It may seem odd that Gaines carries a picture of Mullins in his
> wallet. That his phone number still ends with the number 3800. That he
> just can't let go.
>
> Why?
>
> "He's a person I love," Gaines said, "and I miss."
>
> It's as simple as that.
>
> So what will Gaines' headstone read one day? Is he a Man of Guilt or
> Craziness or Courage or Compassion?
>
> Whatever it is, Mullins would be proud to clean it.
>
> > 








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