Beyond the Game: Former NFL player pens book about local student overcoming obstacles

Former NFL player Tim Green, now a bestselling author, has a new book that might resonate with students at a Central Arkansas school.

“When I met Brett, I thought, what a courageous story,” Green said.

A few years ago, he spoke at Central Arkansas Christian. There, he met Brett Bell, an eighth grader who was diagnosed deaf at birth. His disability doesn’t prevent him from playing basketball and baseball for the Mustangs.

“Obviously he has some incredible challenges that he’s worked hard to overcome and I just thought, what an inspirational story that could be, if I could have a character like that.”

In Left Out, which will be released Tuesday, September 27, a boy with cochlear implants dreams of playing football. Bell’s name is used for the boy who helps him do so.

“We really wanted to come up with a book that showed some of the things in Brett’s daily life [that] he goes through,” said Kristi Bell, Brett’s mom.

“It’s incredible. I held the book in my hand last night.”

Brett’s name isn’t the only one with special meaning on Mustang Mountain. Megan Nickell, a CAC student who died in 2015, also has a character that shares her name.

Green wouldn’t give away the ending, but added this: “Like the Brett Bell story in real life, the story in Left Out is an inspirational one.

Kristi hopes the book teaches valuable lessons to everyone that takes the time to read it.

“All people are the same on the inside,” she said.

By Kyle Deckelbaum


Whatever happened to: Ex-Falcon Tim Green

By I.J. Rosenberg – For the AJC

Tim Green has done it all. He graduated summa cum laude from Syracuse University, has a law degree, is a best-selling author and has been a commentator for NFL football games on Fox.

Oh, and he also played a little football for the Atlanta Falcons.

A first-round choice (17th overall) in the 1986 NFL draft, Green played during one of the franchise’s toughest periods, an eight-year stretch where the Falcons won only 45 games (six double-digit-loss seasons) and made just one playoff appearance.
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But always a fan favorite, the good looking kid from Liverpool, N.Y., Green was one of the club’s better players, a hard-working linebacker/defensive end who dropped more than a few quarterbacks on their back.

Green began playing at the age of 8, then going on to Liverpool High School as an offensive lineman. He switched to defense his sophomore year when his team won sectionals and he was named defensive MVP. The colleges came calling — Notre Dame, Penn State, Georgia — but he chose Syracuse, the school that told him he could play right away.

Green was a member of a Syracuse 1982 freshman class that began a resurgence of Orange football under coach Dick MacPherson. He did play right away but his freshman year, the team went 2-9. They upset Top 20-ranked Boston College and West Virginia to end his sophomore season at 6-5. Then the following year, Green and Syracuse pulled off one of the biggest upsets in history, beating No. 1 Nebraska 17-9 at the Carrier Dome and again finishing 6-5. In his senior season, Syracuse went 7-5 and played in its first bowl game (Cherry Bowl) in six years.

Meanwhile, Green was also killing it in the classroom, graduating at the top of his class (co-valedictorian) only a month after being taken by the Falcons in the draft.

Then it all got tough.

In 1986, Green played only in nine games as a rookie because of injuries while the Falcons finished 7-8-1. The following season the bottom fell out, the team going 3-13 under Marion Campbell and winning just 16 games over a four-year period.

Green, however, became one of the team’s better players, collecting five sacks in both the 1989 and ’91 seasons and a career-high six sacks in 1990. In ’91 under head coach Jerry Glanville, the Falcons went 10-6 and beat the New Orleans Saints (27-20) in a wild-card game before losing to Washington (24-7) in the divisional round.

All along, Green kept writing and, as the 1993 season approached, he was close to finishing his first novel. He also had begun law school at Syracuse during the offseason in 1987. Because of several knee injuries, the fact that he was about to graduate law school and that he felt good about being an author, Green retired after the 1993 season. Quickly, he was offered a commentator’s job by Fox.

He began his television and law career the next year and would stay with Fox for 10 years, while also doing a short stint as a host on “Current Affair.’’ He wrote 14 suspense novels before turning to nonfiction and also writing books for children. With 29 books published, he was named the winner of the 2011 NCAA Silver Anniversary Award, “given annually to six former NCAA student-athletes for distinguished career accomplishment on the 25th year of their college graduation.’’

Where he lives: He has been married to Illyssa for 27 years and they live in upstate New York on the Finger Lakes in Skaneateles. They have five children: Thane, Tessa, Troy, Tate and Ty.

What he does: Now 52, Green continues to write full time and is also part of two law firms, one that deals with energy, intellectual properties and reassurance and another one comprised of former district attorneys that offer criminal defense services.

On going to Syracuse: “I was recruited by about everyone. But I didn’t like the fact that I didn’t play a lot as a freshman in high school and didn’t want to go through that again and Syracuse told me I could play right away and I did.’’

On the reemergence of Orange football during his era: “I was glad to be a part of it. The big game was the one we beat Nebraska in where we were like a 48-point underdog. I had 10 tackles and a couple of sacks and was named the Sports Illustrated player of the week. I felt then I had a great chance of playing in the NFL. Then we went to the bowl game my senior year and from there Syracuse started getting players like Donavan McNabb.’’

On being drafted by the Falcons: “I was thrilled to be a first-round pick and excited about going to Atlanta because I had been in upstate New York all my life. But my agent told me, ‘That’s too bad.’’’

On his Falcons career: “For me, it was two very different experiences: the first four years and the second four years. The first four years were very difficult and nine days into my rookie camp, I tore my calf muscle. The first four years there wasn’t much of an expectation. That changed the second four. When Deion (Sanders) was drafted (1989), it was very exciting. I am grateful I had those years. You have to remember, for every 16-0 team there is an 0-16 team, for every team that gets a win, there is a team that loses.’’

On his decision to retire in 1993: “I think I probably could have hung in there for four more years but there were four major things: First, I didn’t have any more medial meniscus in my right knee from two operations. Second, there was the publication of my first novel which led to a three-book contract. Third, I had graduated from law school and fourth, Fox had offered me a contract. There is never a good time to leave but I was extremely fortunate to have those other things. I look at it like the story of the guy up to his neck in the river and a boat comes by and says to get in. He says, ‘God has got me.’ Then a canoe comes by and the guy says the same thing. Then a helicopter comes by and he says the same thing. Well, he drowns and gets to heaven and sees God and asks him what happened. God tells him, ‘You dummy, I sent you two boats and a helicopter.’ Lightning doesn’t strike the same place twice and I was on the decline.’’

On his connection with the Falcons: “It is really because of Arthur (Blank). He has been very generous to me and my family on a personal level. He also has been a huge proponent on what I am doing with reading. I am very grateful to him and I didn’t even play for him.’’


HOME RUN receives a JLG award for Spring 2016

Junior Library Guild is a book review and collection development service helping thousands of school and public libraries acquire the best new children’s and young adult books, saving them both time and money.

Junior Library Guild is a privately held company based in Plain City, Ohio. Founded in 1929, JLG provides the very best customer service in the industry. Our services help librarians with collection development and our members trust us to put only the best books into the hands of their eager young readers.

Season after season, year after year, their book selections go on to win awards, collect starred or favorable reviews, and earn industry honors. We send these books on a monthly basis to our members, who receive them hot off the presses.

JLG selects books with the same care and attention you use when building your collection. Our editors know the children’s and young-adult literature landscape like no one else. And this credibility gives us a unique advantage, which benefits our members every month. The JLG editorial team reads the best books of the year well before they’re published. Publishers large and small value the prestige that comes with having their books named JLG Selections. They allow us to read and review more than 3,000 of their most anticipated books in manuscript or in preproduction stages. After narrowing that group to the very best 828 titles, we place our orders well in advance of publication dates (all JLG books are first editions) to provide you with new-release titles soon after they are first released.

This is how JLG membership allows you to get tomorrow’s award winners today.

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Kid Owner receives a JLG award for Winter 2015

“We read thousands of books every year and select only the best”

The JLG editorial team reviews more than 3,000 new titles each year, in manuscript or prepublication stage. We’ve developed a keen sense for finding the best of the best. Over 95 percent of our selections go on to receive awards and/or favorable reviews. And, according to statistics provided by Collection HQ, from 2013 to 2014 JLG Selections circulated 81% more than other books published for children and teens.*

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Family Reading Night gets special speaker

‘Get in the Game’ with Hamburg School District’s upcoming Family Reading Night, 6:30 to 9 p.m. Friday, April 8.

The Hamburg Middle School tradition started in 2005, and more recently expanded to include the entire district, will be full of fun activities for kids of every age, and their families as well.

Librarians from every school in the district and community worked together to make an enjoyable event, starting off with guest speaker Tim Green.

Megan Moelbert, Hamburg Middle School libararian and founder of Family Reading Night, was very excited when she learned they landed Green as their guest speaker: “He’s an author, he’s out of Syracuse, he was an Atlanta Falcon, he’s a lawyer, he’s a writer, he’s a coach, he’s a dad and a husband, and he’s amazing…I’ve heard him before, he’s very inspirational and the kids just love him.”

Green will speak to the Hamburg community in the middle school auditorium for 45 minutes, signing books and being central to the event’s big prize for whoever wins the locker decorating contest, where students got to fashion their locker after the spine of their favorite book.

“Prizes will be books by Tim Green…he offered to do a ‘back-stage pass’ kind of thing, he said he’d come early and sit with anybody, any kid, and do a Q & A with them, photo shots with him, we can cord off the front row of the auditorium, they can be the first in line for his autograph…so we got a few awesome prize options, thanks to him,” said Moelbert.

The second part of the night will be a series of mini-activities for everyone to participate in, going on in many classrooms on the second floor of the middle school.

There will of course be the annual book swap, where kids can bring in a used book and trade it in for something else, or 50 cents for a book of their choice. Proceeds will benefit the Museum of disABILITY History, which has a connection to author Stephen Nawotniak, who will be presenting on his children’s book “Mubu the Morph.”

A Robotics Maker Space, provided by the Hamburg Library, Computer Coding, a Poetry Slam and Media Scavenger Hunt will be among the many games and literacy-based activities to check out during the second part of the event.

“Choices for them that are literacy-based for the most part, fun, interactive, hands-on…we did try to have a few that are geared for elementary and a few that are geared for secondary but most are for everybody,” added Moelbert.

Guests will be entered in to win door prizes like passes to the Albright Knox and tickets to see the UB Bulls when they walk in; a lot of the prizes will be sports-based to fit in with the theme of ‘Get in the Game: Read,’ thanks to the event’s guest speaker.

For Moelbert, it’s all about getting the community out for a night of fun to benefit a good cause, and maybe inspiring some young minds too. “Connecting with literacy, connecting families, and then just having a community event. With this one, I think Tim Green is going to be a huge component of the awe and inspiration, and some kids will come out of here and…they’ll want to be him, they’ll want to be an NFL player or they’ll want to be a writer, or a lawyer,” she added.

The event is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be provided by Hamburg’s PTSA.

Matthew Ondesko, The Sun Reporter