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#61 |
Beyond the Rapids
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Langley, VA
Casino cash: $-370000
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Wilson finally had a good game. Good for him.
Doesn't explain why he made the team or is still on it, but it's nice to see improvement. |
Posts: 80,659
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#62 |
pie is never free
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: the drivers seat
Casino cash: $-152225
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Props to Big Al, if he can have more performances like this I'd be ok keeping him around next year
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Posts: 98,466
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#63 | |
Still Got The Blues (For You)
Join Date: May 2013
Casino cash: $10014178
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yeah, big showing for Albert.. good on ya, kid.
more games like this, and you will be out of the doghouse for many fans.
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#64 |
I've Made a Huge Mistake
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: NJ
Casino cash: $4500423
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First, he deserved all the negative comments he was getting. Not only his play, but his effort. You don't really deserve praise for performing better than the low standard you set for yourself. However, the past few weeks he has at least stepped up when we needed him to and full credit for that.
We still need to upgrade his position, but we sure needed this while Maclin was/is out. |
Posts: 12,495
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#65 |
Super Bowl LVIII Champions!
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Baton Rouge, LA
Casino cash: $-425364
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And someone posted a week or so ago to get rid of this piece of SHIT!
PAY BERRY.COM!!! |
Posts: 6,532
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#66 |
BAMF
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Your Face
Casino cash: $9998710
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I still wouldn't care if he was cut tomorrow. Anyone could have scored on that fake punt.
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Courage is not the absence of fear but rather the judgment that something is more important than fear. The brave may not live forever but the cautious do not live at all. |
Posts: 27,207
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#67 |
pie is never free
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: the drivers seat
Casino cash: $-152225
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Posts: 98,466
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#68 |
Don't Tease Me
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: KS
Casino cash: $11047037
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I’m a Foster Kid in the NFL
DEC 5 2016 ALBERT WILSON WIDE RECEIVER / KANSAS CITY CHIEFS Growing up in the foster system can make you feel like you’re living life at a disadvantage. I know because I’ve done it. I was in Florida’s foster system twice — for a year starting when I was six, and then for six years starting when I was 12. My girlfriend asks me all the time how I dealt with spending so much time in foster care. And I always tell her that I just didn’t know there was any other way. To me, all of it — foster care, my parents being in jail, moving from house to house to house to house — was normal. And you know what? I was lucky. Some foster kids don’t know their parents. Some have parents who want nothing to do with them. And some have already lost their parents. Mine were in jail, but they were both still part of my life. They helped raise me — I talked with them regularly on the phone or through the mail. I’d had family right by me all along, I just didn’t know it. This allowed us to have a unique relationship. It was like I could tell them anything. I also learned from them their example very early on. People make mistakes — and there are consequences for those mistakes. I was also lucky because of two amazing foster families: the Baileys and the Browns. ![]() COURTESY OF ALBERT WILSON I went to live with the Baileys when I was in the 10th grade. They had eight children, all adopted. Two of them, Josh and Chelsea, were right around my age, and over time I grew so close to them that I began calling them my brother and sister. We did all the small, silly things siblings do. Back then I was rocking some really long hair, and Chelsea would braid it. I’d sit on the carpet while she sat above me on the couch and braid my hair. That was one of my favorite things — simple, but meaningful. It made me feel like I was at home. The Baileys were my family. Their house was a place I felt safe — even happy. They showed me a side of family I hadn’t seen before, one where everyone was living at the same pace — and in the same place. With the Baileys, an adult was always waiting for us at home whenever we got back from school. And there was structure to life. We had to get our homework done before we could do anything else. We all watched TV together and ate meals together. It wasn’t picture-perfect, but at least we all seemed to be living in the same time zone. Then there were the Browns. One of my best friends in high school was a kid named Moe Brown. I had spent the night at his house a bunch of times and grown pretty close to his family. One winter break his mom, Sherri, who knew my situation, invited me to go to Orlando with the whole family for Moe’s younger brother’s soccer tournament. I immediately agreed. Two days before we left, Moe and I were coming back from the grocery store when he started talking about South Carolina. I said, “Dude, you’ve never been to South Carolina, you don’t know nothing about it.” “Boy, my whole family is from Maysville,” he said. My eyes widened. Maysville is a really, really small town where everybody knows everybody. My dad’s entire family is from Maysville. I told Moe, and he started rattling off the names of people he knew, including members of his family. Some of those names were really familiar, because they were also the names of members of my family. Wait a second. If your cousins are my cousins, too, that means…. Yup. The Browns were my cousins. I’d had family right by me all along, I just didn’t know it. It wasn’t long after that that the Browns got certified as foster parents and I moved in with them. It was tough saying goodbye to the Baileys, but since they already had eight kids in the house, and since the Browns were my family, I thought this would be easier on everyone. Besides, I still saw Chelsea and Josh all the time, and I still consider them family today. I don’t know what I would have done without them. To this day, I still look to the Browns as much as to my own parents and to the Baileys for guidance. I just bought a new car, and the first person I called afterward was Sherri, who helped me with my insurance paperwork. ![]() COURTESY OF ALBERT WILSON And when things got tough — no matter where I happened to be living — I could always turn to football. As soon as I was old enough to run — like two years old — my dad had put a football in my hands. My dad loved football, and he wanted to make sure his son, Albert Jr. (most people just called me “Junior” growing up), loved it too. He did it because of more than just his love of the game, though. My dad also saw sports as a way for his kids to have a better life. He was right. I mean, it’s an older brother’s job to take care of his younger sisters. But I couldn’t — I didn’t have the money. Football became my refuge. When I was on the field, everything else melted away. I poured everything I had into the sport. That dedication paid off on the field and in the newspapers, where my name started popping up in game recaps. My dad collected every one of those newspaper clippings and kept them with him throughout his prison sentence. And by the time I graduated high school, I had received a scholarship to play football at Georgia State. Hard work and luck. It’s amazing what those two things can get you in life. Together, they helped get me to the NFL. But not everyone in the foster system is so lucky. My younger sisters weren’t. One day when I was a sophomore at Georgia State, I was on the phone with my sister, and I asked her about college. She was about to graduate from high school, and I wanted to know what colleges she had applied to. “Albert, I’m not even sure I can go to college,” she said. That stunned me. “What do you mean?” I asked. “What about the scholarships?” ![]() COURTESY OF ALBERT WILSON In Florida, kids in the foster system can get scholarships to in-state schools. What I didn’t know — and what my sister had to explain to me — was that if a kid leaves the foster system before graduation, he or she is no longer eligible for those scholarships. My younger sisters, Albertina and Porchea, spent years in the foster system when they were both in high school — before they went back to live with my parents. The moment they left foster care, they were no longer eligible for scholarships from the state. That’s messed up, right? All those years they had spent in the system — it was almost like they were being punished for being reunited with their parents. I wanted more than anything to help them. I mean, it’s an older brother’s job to take care of his younger sisters. But I couldn’t — I didn’t have the money. That really hurt. Porchea eventually went to an art institute. Albertina didn’t go to college. They both deserved better. ![]() COURTESY OF ALBERT WILSON When I signed with the Chiefs as an undrafted free agent two years later — and then had early success on the field — I suddenly had the resources to give back. I saw the impact my teammates were making with their charitable organizations, and I wanted to do the same. I thought of my sisters. I hadn’t been able to help them, but now I suddenly had the ability to help the countless others like them. That’s why, this year, my foundation is launching a scholarship program for kids who spent at least two years in foster care but didn’t age out of it. I have the chance, even the obligation, to show kids that where you come from doesn’t have to determine where you end up. I’m a little nervous, because I’ve never done anything like this before. But I know how much just a little bit of help — and a little bit of luck — can turn someone’s life around. ALBERT WILSON / CONTRIBUTOR ![]()
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#69 |
In Search of a Life
Join Date: Jul 2009
Casino cash: $-705936
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I mean, I dont' think he'll ever be a centerpiece to an offense, but considering he's an UDFA ..... I dunno. He's not as bad as billed here I don't think.
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Posts: 84,223
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#70 | |||
Mindful Taoist German
Join Date: Aug 2000
Casino cash: $6501662
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He's not flashy, he doesn't shake or burn anyone, but he makes the play...
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#71 |
Supporter
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Liberty
Casino cash: $-1760000
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Congrats to him....nice game.
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Posts: 17,347
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#72 | |
sorta mod-ish
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: KC North
Casino cash: $-178384
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Credit to him, he showed up big when we needed a spark with the fake punt and the third down catch to ice the game. I need to see more of that and less of the disinterested looking guy that looked like he was going through the motions the first ten games of the year. |
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#73 | |||
Mindful Taoist German
Join Date: Aug 2000
Casino cash: $6501662
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#74 |
MVP
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: East Jabip
Casino cash: $4593807
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![]() I had no idea Albert Wilson's sister was Tank Tyler. I thought Tank was older than Albert. ![]() |
Posts: 11,058
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#75 | |
MVP
Join Date: Sep 2013
Casino cash: $10035212
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So he's at least Dwayne Bowe level. ![]() |
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Posts: 12,727
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