Two-sport legend Bo Jackson doesn't miss the playing field
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BY AL HAMNIK
ahamnik@nwitimes.com
219.933.4154
| Thursday, May 31, 2007 | (6 comment(s))

GARY | A nattily-dressed Bo Jackson is sitting in the Genesis Center ballroom, looking like he could still smack a baseball 450 feet or take it to the house on an 80-yard touchdown run up the middle.

And he's 45 years old.

Jackson was the first pro athlete ever to be named an all-star in both Major League Baseball and the National Football League. Wednesday afternoon, he was in town to speak to scholarship winners at the Don Barden Gary Foundation luncheon.

Bo knows how to inspire, too.

Football and baseball almost simultaneously. How did he ever pull that off?

"I didn't 'pull anything off.' I just did what I had been doing since I was 2. That was the way I stayed out of trouble as a kid," Jackson said during an exclusive sitdown with The Times. "For me, that was a way of life growing up.

"You guys always thought I spread myself thin. I never spread myself thin. I didn't worry about injuries. You can get injured playing chess. Injuries are just a speed bump in the road of life. I never intended to play football all my life or had dreams to be in the baseball Hall of Fame. I used sports to further my business career, like sports used me to put people in the stands."

Bitter? Certainly not. Sports were never the center of his universe, according to Jackson.

"So it was easy for me to walk away when I did," he said. "You don't see me trying to get a coaching job. You don't see me doing sports commentating. You seldom see me at a sporting event, and I live in Chicago."

But, oh, the memories he could share and the tales he could weave after eight years of baseball and four seasons in the NFL. If only it mattered as much to him.

Like hitting 20 homers in 25 games his senior year at McAdory High School in Alabama; or winning the Heisman Trophy at Auburn in 1985; or playing for the Kansas City Royals and Oakland Raiders from 1987 through 1990; or rushing for 221 yards against Seattle on Monday Night Football -- just 29 days after his first NFL carry -- or belting three home runs (412 feet, 464, 400) in a game at Yankee Stadium; or just 53 minor-league games before his callup to the majors and getting his first four-hit effort in only his fifth game.

"I find business just as exciting as I did sports because I'm learning the art of being a schooled business person. Sports, I know how to do, so why should I stay in it?" said Jackson, who played briefly with the White Sox. "It's been fun learning how to be an employer instead of an employee."

Jackson currently runs a food company that supplies the military and Indian casinos throughout the country. He will soon become part owner of a bank and has several warehouse storage sites in the Midwest.

Born with a chronic stuttering problem as the eighth of 10 children, Bo had no choice but to gradually cure himself and to this day still carefully picks his words.

"I'm always going to try to do what everybody else can't, not to show anybody else up, but that's just me," Jackson said. "Don't go through life being a follower. Be a leader."

Jackson returned to Auburn in 1995 and graduated with a degree in family and child development. He had promised his mother that he would do so before she died of cancer.

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Joe wrote on Jun 3, 2007 3:36 PM:

" Bo knows best. Bo was the best. Glad Big Al could talk him into playing for the Raiders for a few years. Those were exciting years, especially when he ran thru Brian Bosworth in that remarkable game. He was definitely the best at that time and most likely could be at age 45. I wish him the best. "

Original Raider Fan wrote on Jun 2, 2007 9:43 PM:

" Bo was the man! But don't disrespect Marcus. Bo would have gone down (and still is in my mind) the greatest athlete btwn 1950 and 2000. Bo knows. He should be a HOF in both sports because he was productive and a top story and draw. "

paul wrote on Jun 1, 2007 6:18 PM:

" Bo Jackson made me a Raider fan... he's still the man... I just wish he could be talked out of retirement. I'd take a 45 year old Bo over any back in the league. "

Matt wrote on Jun 1, 2007 4:48 AM:

" Bo Jackson is a class act and always has been. In my eyes he would have been the greatest running back in not only Raider History, but maybe even the NFL if that injury would not have happened!! Hardest hitting running back EVER!!! I hope Michael Bush can fill just one of Bo's shoes. The NFL has not seen a RB of Bo's caliber since he left the league!! "

jamie "hitman" lewis wrote on May 31, 2007 3:30 PM:

" Bo is a class act and a shining example in SIlver and Black God save the queen "

Dave wrote on May 31, 2007 1:39 PM:

" BO, thanks for the memories!! I miss Bo Jackson everyday as a Raider Fan!! What an outstanding athlete...More over, what an oustanding Human Being!! "

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