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05-13-2007, 08:31 PM
It's all over the news when a Bengal gets in trouble with the law, but hardly ever are the good things mentioned. Well heres a little positive pub for the side of the Bengals you DON'T hear about.
http://www.bengals.com/news/news.asp?story_id=6045
Hand in hand
By GEOFF HOBSON
May 13, 2007
Posted: 6:45 a.m.
Williams
Mike McArtor showed up at the HealthPlex in Anderson Township wearing a Madieu Williams jersey. Jennifer Vitt has had his number a lot longer than that.
âFootball is something heâs blessed with, but it will never define him,â Vitt says as she watches him fit in with the crowd instead of work it. âItâs not who he is. He is defined by his friends and family.â
His friends on this day are Vitt, who runs his foundation, McArtor, an 18-year-old McNicholas High School senior, a small boy fresh from his karate class carrying a football, the kids who work in the locker room getting him to sign big white towels, and assorted others either curious about the milling in the lobby or crazed about the Bengals.
âItâs good just to get people into the building,â Williams says. âJust for the awareness. Diabetes is the kind of disease where people just donât get tested, or they donât know much about it.â
The Bengals start voluntary practices this week, but Williams has been volunteering much of this offseason already. He spent last week touring the Mercy Hospitals for the free diabetes screenings that the Madieu Williams Foundation is pushing and maybe itâs just coincidence that the calendar is turning up Motherâs Day.
Itâs a day the Bengals donât observe lightly. This weekend Rudi Johnson is hosting his annual extravaganza complete with entertainment and dinner that honors some Bengals mothers. Last year Williamsâ mother was honored posthumously.
âI donât know. Hindsight is 20-20. She didnât know about it growing up. You never know,â Williams says.
Williams is talking about his mother, Abigail Butscher, just 45 years old when a diabetic stroke killed her a couple of years ago and left Madieu to raise his younger brother Michael.
She was a registered nurse but maybe if her diet had been better growing up â¦
âHe thinks so much of it is education,â Vitt says. âKids just donât know what is healthy, or they donât have the opportunity to eat healthy.â
Itâs why Williams is leading the effort to supply nutritional foods to the Avondale Boys and Girls Club.
Itâs why when he hosts a free football clinic for 400 kids in Avondale this upcoming weekend on May 19 the parents will be offered a free diabetes screening.
Itâs why Vitt isnât surprised this is the same guy she met at Towson University when they were freshmen.
They have stayed friends through Williamsâ transfer to Maryland, his selection by the Bengals, and Vittâs stint working in the public relations department of the St. Louis Rams.
And, sheâs as much a hardened NFL veteran as Williams. Howâd you like to be working for a team where your dadâ28 years as an assistant in the leagueâis the interim head coach, which Joe Vitt was for the Rams in the last 11 games of the 2005 season before becoming Sean Paytonâs assistant head coach in New Orleans?
âHer brother was my quarterback in college. Her dad is a close friend of mine,â Williams says. âI still keep the same people close.â
Vitt decided to leave the Rams to run the foundations of Isaac Bruce and Williams, in part because she knew how real Williams would keep it all. One of the projects in the planning stages is building a playground in Avondale during October.
âI never had that kind of stuff around growing up,â Williams says of the clinics. âI basically learned football from playing in the neighborhood. I donât remember anybody ever doing something like that.â
Giving back has been easy for Williams. His father is still involved in the health care industry and he worked in a hospital while he was getting his degree in family studies at Maryland.
âWeâd like to get kids to have a better idea of what it means to take care of their bodies,â he says. âItâs more prevention than anything.â
On this night, about as many people show up to run an obstacle course on the basketball court against Williamsâ leisurely time of 1:05 as get a screening. Maybe between 10 and 20. In the land of health care, any number greater than absolute zero is a success.
âIt runs in my family. Iâve been tested before,â McArtor says as he waits for Williams so he can sign his jersey. âMy grandmother. I guess itâs a good idea to keep up with it.â
Williams got him in the building, though.
âI always liked the toughness Madieu brought to it,â he says about what brought him here. âIt seems like he has more big hits than any other free safety. I like how he just doesnât play the pass. He comes up to the line and stops the run.â
This is a good fit, Williams and Cincinnati. Both are big league but not caught up in it. He knows it. You never see him wearing gold chains and heâs got one tattoo. On his shoulder for his mother.
âI like to think it goes hand in hand. Cincinnatiâs been great to me. I donât think I could have asked for a better situation,â Williams says.
Williams lives downtown, maybe a five-minute drive from Paul Brown, which means he spends a good deal of time in the car. Michael is in high school at Country Day and participating in track. Williams figures he drives him to 90 percent of wherever he needs to be.
âHeâs always with Michael,â Vitt says. âIf heâs not, he makes sure somebody is.â
For a lot of reasons, starting with Michael and the Bengals, Williams would like to stick around. His deal is up after this year and there has been no talk yet of a new contract. But, like Vitt says, it doesnât define him.
âI know that Iâm an employee of an organization called Cincinnati Bengals Incorporated,â he says. âIâd like to stay. Iâve made no secret about that. But all I can control is what I do on the field. They have to make business decisions.â
He also could have added he can control what he does off the field. With Vittâs help.
âHe hasnât changed at all from then,â she says of the freshman year at Towson. âOf course, heâs more responsible now but thatâs just from growing up. But heâs the same guy. You canât tell heâs a pro football player. Heâs just Madieu. He wanted to make sure that the most important part of this was the screening and not the fact he was going to be here.â
They have to wrap up the event at 8 p.m. pretty much on the dot because Michael is waiting for a ride. Williams and Vitt know the roads because they had just come from another screening at Mercy over in nearby Clermont County.
âIâll drive,â he says as if this was another weekend at Towson.
They would get Michael, stop at Brioâs for some takeout, and call it a day.
âYeah, Iâm just a guy,â Williams says when told it sounds so normal. âJust a guy that happens to play football.â
http://www.bengals.com/news/news.asp?story_id=6045
Hand in hand
By GEOFF HOBSON
May 13, 2007
Posted: 6:45 a.m.
Williams
Mike McArtor showed up at the HealthPlex in Anderson Township wearing a Madieu Williams jersey. Jennifer Vitt has had his number a lot longer than that.
âFootball is something heâs blessed with, but it will never define him,â Vitt says as she watches him fit in with the crowd instead of work it. âItâs not who he is. He is defined by his friends and family.â
His friends on this day are Vitt, who runs his foundation, McArtor, an 18-year-old McNicholas High School senior, a small boy fresh from his karate class carrying a football, the kids who work in the locker room getting him to sign big white towels, and assorted others either curious about the milling in the lobby or crazed about the Bengals.
âItâs good just to get people into the building,â Williams says. âJust for the awareness. Diabetes is the kind of disease where people just donât get tested, or they donât know much about it.â
The Bengals start voluntary practices this week, but Williams has been volunteering much of this offseason already. He spent last week touring the Mercy Hospitals for the free diabetes screenings that the Madieu Williams Foundation is pushing and maybe itâs just coincidence that the calendar is turning up Motherâs Day.
Itâs a day the Bengals donât observe lightly. This weekend Rudi Johnson is hosting his annual extravaganza complete with entertainment and dinner that honors some Bengals mothers. Last year Williamsâ mother was honored posthumously.
âI donât know. Hindsight is 20-20. She didnât know about it growing up. You never know,â Williams says.
Williams is talking about his mother, Abigail Butscher, just 45 years old when a diabetic stroke killed her a couple of years ago and left Madieu to raise his younger brother Michael.
She was a registered nurse but maybe if her diet had been better growing up â¦
âHe thinks so much of it is education,â Vitt says. âKids just donât know what is healthy, or they donât have the opportunity to eat healthy.â
Itâs why Williams is leading the effort to supply nutritional foods to the Avondale Boys and Girls Club.
Itâs why when he hosts a free football clinic for 400 kids in Avondale this upcoming weekend on May 19 the parents will be offered a free diabetes screening.
Itâs why Vitt isnât surprised this is the same guy she met at Towson University when they were freshmen.
They have stayed friends through Williamsâ transfer to Maryland, his selection by the Bengals, and Vittâs stint working in the public relations department of the St. Louis Rams.
And, sheâs as much a hardened NFL veteran as Williams. Howâd you like to be working for a team where your dadâ28 years as an assistant in the leagueâis the interim head coach, which Joe Vitt was for the Rams in the last 11 games of the 2005 season before becoming Sean Paytonâs assistant head coach in New Orleans?
âHer brother was my quarterback in college. Her dad is a close friend of mine,â Williams says. âI still keep the same people close.â
Vitt decided to leave the Rams to run the foundations of Isaac Bruce and Williams, in part because she knew how real Williams would keep it all. One of the projects in the planning stages is building a playground in Avondale during October.
âI never had that kind of stuff around growing up,â Williams says of the clinics. âI basically learned football from playing in the neighborhood. I donât remember anybody ever doing something like that.â
Giving back has been easy for Williams. His father is still involved in the health care industry and he worked in a hospital while he was getting his degree in family studies at Maryland.
âWeâd like to get kids to have a better idea of what it means to take care of their bodies,â he says. âItâs more prevention than anything.â
On this night, about as many people show up to run an obstacle course on the basketball court against Williamsâ leisurely time of 1:05 as get a screening. Maybe between 10 and 20. In the land of health care, any number greater than absolute zero is a success.
âIt runs in my family. Iâve been tested before,â McArtor says as he waits for Williams so he can sign his jersey. âMy grandmother. I guess itâs a good idea to keep up with it.â
Williams got him in the building, though.
âI always liked the toughness Madieu brought to it,â he says about what brought him here. âIt seems like he has more big hits than any other free safety. I like how he just doesnât play the pass. He comes up to the line and stops the run.â
This is a good fit, Williams and Cincinnati. Both are big league but not caught up in it. He knows it. You never see him wearing gold chains and heâs got one tattoo. On his shoulder for his mother.
âI like to think it goes hand in hand. Cincinnatiâs been great to me. I donât think I could have asked for a better situation,â Williams says.
Williams lives downtown, maybe a five-minute drive from Paul Brown, which means he spends a good deal of time in the car. Michael is in high school at Country Day and participating in track. Williams figures he drives him to 90 percent of wherever he needs to be.
âHeâs always with Michael,â Vitt says. âIf heâs not, he makes sure somebody is.â
For a lot of reasons, starting with Michael and the Bengals, Williams would like to stick around. His deal is up after this year and there has been no talk yet of a new contract. But, like Vitt says, it doesnât define him.
âI know that Iâm an employee of an organization called Cincinnati Bengals Incorporated,â he says. âIâd like to stay. Iâve made no secret about that. But all I can control is what I do on the field. They have to make business decisions.â
He also could have added he can control what he does off the field. With Vittâs help.
âHe hasnât changed at all from then,â she says of the freshman year at Towson. âOf course, heâs more responsible now but thatâs just from growing up. But heâs the same guy. You canât tell heâs a pro football player. Heâs just Madieu. He wanted to make sure that the most important part of this was the screening and not the fact he was going to be here.â
They have to wrap up the event at 8 p.m. pretty much on the dot because Michael is waiting for a ride. Williams and Vitt know the roads because they had just come from another screening at Mercy over in nearby Clermont County.
âIâll drive,â he says as if this was another weekend at Towson.
They would get Michael, stop at Brioâs for some takeout, and call it a day.
âYeah, Iâm just a guy,â Williams says when told it sounds so normal. âJust a guy that happens to play football.â
05-13-2007, 08:57 PM
I saw this, too, and I wondered why the Bengals haters on here, one in particular, didn't find it necessary to comment on the positive things.
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05-14-2007, 02:07 PM
BFritz Wrote:I saw this, too, and I wondered why the Bengals haters on here, one in particular, didn't find it necessary to comment on the positive things.
I know what you are saying. It seems some people avoid the conversation unless there can be some bashing involved. If it's about the Bengals and it's not negative, they want no part of it.
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