The Draft (2 page)

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Authors: Wil Mara

BOOK: The Draft
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Except …

The clock ran down and the game ended. Feeling somehow detached from it all, Pressner followed his teammates back onto the field to shake hands with the enemy. Some of them passed along comments that he certainly wouldn't be sharing with his young son. But most were valiant enough in their defeat, wishing him well in the battles ahead.

As Pressner headed into the tunnel, he spotted the three men standing off to the side, their backs to the wall. They were smiling pleasantly enough in their tailored suits, three sanctimonious agents of righteousness who moved in a little pack as if sharing one mind. They watched him as he entered the darkened corridor. At first he pretended not to notice. Then he made eye contact and, unable to resist, flashed the “V” sign. Their smiles fell as if on cue, and the smallest of the them looked like he was capable of homicide. No one else noticed the exchange, but for Pressner it would be his last great victory.

Nearly four hours later, when the full moon was glowing like a pearl in the clear northern sky, Pressner walked alone to his car. He opened the door and tossed his bag in the passenger seat, then paused. He looked back at the stadium, its lights glowing majestically around the rim, and he was suddenly fully aware of the magnitude of what was happening to him. This time the tears broke free, streaming down either side of his young face. He took a long, hard look at the world that he wanted so desperately to conquer—one that he would no longer be part of in a few brief weeks—then got into his Cadillac and sped away.

At that moment, the legend that eventually evolved into myth began.

1

April 2006

Seventy-nine-year-old Phyllis Smith knew it was dangerous for her to be driving. The medications had robbed her of the privilege. She was frequently tired, and her reaction time was slow. Nevertheless, she
had
to get to the supermarket. If that new caregiver—the one with the two kids and the sleazy-looking boyfriend—had come early this morning like she'd been asked, this wouldn't be necessary. Nearly a year had passed since she was last behind the wheel. She still had the hulking black Mercedes Don bought her. She knew she should've surrendered her license at some point, but she couldn't bring herself to do it.

The images in the street were fuzzy at best. She could see colors and make out most shapes, but details were impossible. It was fairly busy already, the sun coming up, people moving about. All that really mattered, she had convinced herself, was the car ahead of her. She could more or less make out where it was since her depth perception wasn't too bad. She simply kept back a good distance and drove slowly.

The dizziness began as she approached the intersection where Light Street met Pratt. At first it felt similar to the pleasant numbness associated with being slightly drunk. Then it heightened to a gentle swirling sensation. After that, she would say later in a deposition that precluded a sizable payout from her insurance company, she couldn't remember a thing. It all happened so quickly.

There was only one vehicle sitting at the intersection that fateful morning—a blue Jaguar XJ6. A beautiful machine but unremarkable in this affluent Baltimore suburb. The driver wasn't looking in his rearview mirror. If he had been, perhaps he could've reacted in time. Instead he was fingering through his CD collection, trying to decide whether to go with Randy Travis or Clint Black. Maybe even some of that Bruce Springsteen stuff everyone around here liked so much.

Meanwhile, Jack Harris, a carpenter from nearby Glen Burnie, was on his way back from Home Depot, where he'd picked up a load of railroad ties. He had the window down, elbow out, and was whistling to Johnny Cash's “I Walk the Line.” He'd come down Pratt hundreds of times. He knew the intersection was dangerous, knew there'd been dozens of accidents there. But that didn't make him slow down as he approached it today. Seeing that the light was green, he didn't give it another thought.

Phyllis Smith's tiny body slumped over the wheel when she lost consciousness. The Mercedes swerved crazily for a moment, but not sharply enough to avoid the Jag. Upon impact it lurched into the intersection, giving Harris no time to react. On pure reflex he tightened his grip on the wheel and jammed the brake. The tires screamed, burning on the pavement. His truck swung to the left, and the back end began to drift forward. But the distance required to avoid the collision just wasn't there. In fact, Harris would realize with great irony much later on, the accident probably wouldn't have been half as bad if he'd just stayed on course. He would have smacked the Jaguar in the rear, spinning it sharply but probably leaving the driver relatively unharmed. As it turned out, the bulk of the impact delivered by a payload of railroad ties was absorbed by the Jag's door and, unfortunately, by the person on the other side of it.

When it was over, a horn was blaring and someone was screaming. Harris looked up but couldn't see anything because of the white smoke blowing from his radiator. He checked himself quickly and found no signs of injury. His arms were already aching—the punishment for the understandable reaction of tightening his muscles—but there didn't appear to be anything broken or otherwise out of place.

There was no way the other driver could have been as lucky.

Trembling, he got the door open and stepped outside. He was faintly aware of a crowd beginning to form along the fringes. He could feel their eyes on him and suspected that some of them were already forming their judgments. Big guy, plaid shirt, swollen belly.
Probably a drunk. Typical.

He started toward the crumpled Jag, then stopped. The tinted window was gone and the driver was nowhere to be seen. But the blood was there—a dark red stain down the side like cranberry juice.

“Oh Christ…”

Now the
real
terror came. Harris hadn't been in an auto accident since he was a teenager, driving his father's sky blue Chevelle in the rain. The tires lost touch with the road, and the car fishtailed into a pair of garbage cans. He wasn't hurt and no one was with him. But he was petrified at the thought of what his father would do. As it turned out, the old man was pretty teed off but mostly thankful.

Many years had passed since then, and Jack Harris had developed the common assurance that auto accidents happened only to
other
people. You saw them on the news when they were particularly bad, read about them in the paper, or heard of them at the local diner. But they didn't happen to
him.
They were part of a different reality, nothing to do with his. He was fifty-four, after all. Far too old and too wise to get into that kind of a mess.

The blood running down the wrinkled metal, however, transmitted a different truth.
My God,
Harris thought,
this is really happening.
That's someone else's blood trickling down the side of the damn door like rainwater. Something about the
movement
of it made it all the more unbearable.

He willed himself forward, determined to do something useful. As he got to the door he saw the driver for the first time. It was a fairly large young male dressed in a jogging suit. He lay on his side across the front seats. He sort of looked like he was sleeping. His clothing sparkled with bits of glass.

Harris was faintly aware of sirens in the distance. For some reason it made him think that he shouldn't move the victim. He went around to the other side, where he found more blood, spattered on the inside of the window. At this point he began crying—something else he hadn't done in ages—and reached for the door handle. To his surprise it released, albeit with a protesting creak. He brought the door back gently, took one look at the driver's face, and froze.

Any of the other people standing nearby would have recognized the guy just as quickly. Now the situation shifted from unreal to surreal.
This can't be right,
Harris thought. But of course it was—some people really did win the lottery, whereas other got hit by lightning. Those were the extreme ends of reality's spectrum. No explanations, no sense or significance. Sometimes things just
happened.

And for whatever reason, on this bright and chilly morning in April, Jack Harris, master carpenter and father or three, drove his beloved Ford pickup into the side of a dark blue Jaguar occupied by Michael Bell, the starting quarterback of the Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens.

*   *   *

Ironically, the same day began very quietly for Jon Sabino, the Ravens' general manager. He awoke at the usual 5:00
A.M.
, showered, shaved, put on khaki slacks (almost standard for NFL front-office personnel) and a polo shirt bearing the Ravens' logo. He moved about quietly so as not to wake Kelley, his wife of eight years. Then he went in to check on their two-year-old daughter, Lauren. She was lying peacefully on her side, wearing a tiny Ravens T-shirt and hugging a stuffed tiger. Her blanket, a hand-knitted gift from one of Kelley's college friends, lay nearby; Lauren had a habit of uncovering herself during the night. Sabino pulled it over her and brushed away the soft brown hair that had spilled onto her face.

It was still dark when he stepped outside. Dark and cool, but not cold like April could sometimes be in Maryland. The moon was full, casting everything in an eerie neon glow, and the North Star shone brightly. After he locked the door and reset the alarm, he paused for a moment, as he did every morning, to admire his neighborhood. It was an American paradise—a world of castles and glistening lawns and BMWs.

Jon had earned a scholarship to the University of Maryland, where he majored in business administration with a minor in sports management. He also played football and baseball, but he was realistic enough—even though the admission was a bitter one—to know he did not possess the natural skills required to be a pro in either.

Nevertheless, upon graduation with honors, his love of sports led him to seek a position with a pro team. The general manager of the Washington Redskins admired his determination and gave him an entry level position assisting the scouting staff. Jon worked like a dog over the next four years and eventually became a full-fledged scout in the northeastern region. The logistics of the job could be brutal—eighteen-hour days, traveling for weeks on end, living in hotel rooms, eating in restaurants, watching one talented-but-not-quite-talented-enough player after another while trying to maintain focus and freshness.

In spite of the strain, it was at this phase of his career that his true gifts began to emerge—it didn't take long for the Redskins to realize he was a natural at judging and evaluating others. The players he recruited weren't flashy or dramatic, but the steady and reliable quality was there. An unusually high percentage of his recommendations ended up being drafted and making starting squads. Two even became Pro Bowlers. Jon's philosophy of placing such a high value on character was somewhat uncommon, but his reasoning was irrefutable—football skills are easier to teach than integrity. As a result, his recruits were more mature, more disciplined, and more driven, and thus hurdled the kind of barriers that stopped most “flash-in-the-pan” talents cold. Coaches liked working with Jon's picks, administrators liked dealing with them, and the fans loved them.

Jon moved through the ranks quickly, becoming Washington's head scout when he was only thirty-four. The politics within the non-public side of the NFL, he quickly learned, were brutal, but he learned how to play that game, too. It was all part of the competitive nature of the league. He made few enemies and had a knack for knowing when to be invisible. He fit in and became part of the greater dynamic. Soon other teams were scouting
him.
He was eventually offered the position of vice president of player personnel with the newly ordained Ravens. The Ravens' leadership was looking to fill some key roles with youthful, energetic individuals. It was not only a step up but an opportunity for him to return to his hometown. Since the Redskins didn't have a similar position to offer, they reluctantly let him go.

The Ravens weren't exactly a new team, but in fact the transplanted incarnation of the Cleveland Browns. In 1984, the Baltimore Colts moved to Indianapolis in the middle of a snowy March night. Then, in 1996, Art Modell, the Browns' owner at the time, was offered a sweet deal from the city of Baltimore. Modell uprooted his organization and headed for the East Coast, rechristening his club after the classic poem “The Raven” by Baltimore resident Edgar Allan Poe.

Hopes ran high until it became obvious the former Browns, who had struggled through the '90s thus far, didn't fare much better as the Ravens. In their first season they won only four games, suffering from overall mediocrity and the oppression of not one but two powerful rivals—the Broncos and the Jaguars. They didn't show much improvement the following season, either, winning only six games as they landed in last place in the AFC Central.

During those inaugural years, two keys developments took place—Jon displayed tremendous ability as an evaluator of talent and as an administrator, and the Ravens' current general manager, Harry Colby, displayed tremendous ability as an incompetent idiot. He was a petty, power-crazed bureaucrat who insisted on having final decision over all personnel matters even though his experience in that area was minimal. He rarely heeded the advice of his underlings and even ignored the recommendations of his coaches, some of whom were veterans. The fact that most of the staff couldn't stand him didn't help much, either. So, at the end of three straight losing seasons, Modell showed Colby the door. His replacement, it was decided, would be the popular forty-two-year-old Sabino.

Jon inherited a bitter, war-weary group of players, front-office personnel, fans, and local sportswriters. The latter crucified him even before he made his first decision. And those who had toiled in the organization for years and were hoping to take the next step up the ladder began circling like vultures, watching for signs of vulnerability, waiting for a huge screwup so Jon would make a quick exit.

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