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| Ricky Williams #34 | Height:
5-10 Weight: 228 Born: 05/21/1977 College:
Texas NFL Experience:6
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Errick
Lynne Williams (Ricky) and his twin sister, Cassandra (Cassie), were born on May
21, 1977, in San Diego, California. Their parents, Sandy and Errick, were young
and hardly ready for the responsibilities of raising a family. They argued often,
sometimes right in front of Ricky and Cassie. The situation became even more tense
when the couple gave birth to their third child, Nisey.
Errick and Sandy
went through a messy divorce in 1983. They signed the settlement four months after
Ricky's sixth birthday. Errick contended that Sandy had been unfaithful. She accused
him of abusing the kids. That charge swayed the court in her favor. Sandy was
awarded custody of Ricky and his sisters, and Errick was granted only limited
visitation rights. Eight months later he was convicted on misdemeanor charges
that he mistreated his children. Errick denies his guilt to this day, claiming
his former wife lied about his relationship with his kids. It took years, but
Ricky began to rebuild his relationship with his father as a teenager. Errick
has since remarried, and now has four children with his second wife. Ricky has
pledged to help finance their college educations. Without question, Ricky
was affected by his toxic homelife. Even when Errick left and the fighting stopped,
the family still had to scrape by. Sandy and her three kids lived in a cramped
San Diego apartment. A move to La Mesa, about 15 miles northeast, helped matters,
but the kids were sometimes the target of racial taunts. In his new suburban surroundings,
Ricky experienced a new kind of frustration. He felt "too black" for his white
friends and "too white" for his black friends back in San Diego. Ricky
was an intelligent young man who scored well on standardized tests. This got him
into his school's accelerated program, but his inability to control his anger
constantly landed him in hot water. He was a bully who picked on smaller kids,
and Sandy was told he needed help. Ricky began seeing a counselor at school, but
by seventh grade his grades began to drop. When he was removed from the accelerated
program and placed back in the mainstream, he lost interest in his studies entirely.
His mother met with school officials and they agreed to transfer him to a new
junior high and re-enroll him in the accelerated program. The fresh start was
exactly what Ricky needed, and his academic career got right back on track. |
Ricky entered San Diego's Patrick Henry High School in the fall
of 1992. An excellent athlete throughout his childhood, he was now coming into
his own on the baseball and football fields. A friend, Chad Patmon, had been instrumental
in this process. He showed Ricky how to channel the energy from his pent-up anger
into sports. Ricky played football and baseball, ran track, and wrestled for the
Patriots. Initially, it appeared his future was brightest on the diamond. An All-State
outfielder, he emulated Tony Gwynn of the Padres. As a junior, Ricky batted .331
and stole 31 bases. The following spring he upped his average to .340.
Ricky,
a halfback and linebacker, was also the star of the football team. College coaches
were most intrigued by his potential as a runner, and the recruiting calls began
during his junior year. As a senior, Ricky gained 2,099 yards and scored 25 touchdowns.
His postseason honors included being named "Best of the West" by the Long
Beach Press-Telegram and Offensive Player of the Year by the San Diego
Union-Tribune . Competition to sign Ricky became intense, with Stanford,
California and Texas at the top of the list. In the spring of 1995, the
Philadelphia Phillies made Ricky their eighth-round draft pick. He was undecided
between a career on the diamond or gridiron, but knew he could sign with the Phillies
and still play college football. When Philadelphia offered a $70,000 signing bonus
and multi-year contract, Ricky said hello to pro ball and good-bye to minimum-wage
jobs at fast-food restaurants. He banked the money, then joined Philadelphia's
rookie-level affiliate in Martinsville, Virginia. For an
athlete who had known nothing but success, playing in the minors was an eye-opening
experience. Against Appalachian League pitching, Ricky managed a meager .239 average
with just 11 RBIs. He took heart, however, that teammate Reggie Taylor-a first-round
pick-hit .222. Taylor would go on to make the majors, as would another teammate,
pitcher Dave Coggin. | |
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