Daniel Rodriguez was the only player at Rams Park with a Purple Heart

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  • #24329
    Avatar photozn
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    War hero has Rams tryout

    By Jim Thomas

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/war-hero-has-rams-tryout/article_a67faff5-af20-5031-a01d-f73edc81e9c2.html

    Added by me:

    http://www.cbssports.com/nfl/draft/players/1860927/bradley-marquez

    Marquez is average in the size, strength and speed categories, but he shows natural route acceleration to change gears well with toughness to work over the middle and do damage in contested situations.

    You can debate whether the smallest player on the practice field Friday has the biggest heart. But this cannot be disputed: Former Clemson wide receiver Daniel Rodriguez, 5-8, 180, was the only one at Rams Park with a Purple Heart.

    Rodriguez, 27, was in the Army from 2006-10, reaching the rank of sergeant and serving in Afghanistan and Iraq. At the battle of Kamdesh in Afghanistan on Oct. 3, 2009, 300 Taliban insurgents battled with 38 U.S. soldiers. Eight Americans lost their lives, and Rodriguez was one of 22 Americans wounded.

    He took a bullet to the shoulder and shrapnel in his legs and neck from a rocket-propelled grenade. The leg wounds slowed him down for a while.

    “Until I got all the shrapnel out,” Rodriguez said after Friday’s rookie minicamp practice. “Whatever. I have friends without legs, so I don’t really complain much.”

    He was awarded a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star for his valor, and then … he decided to give college football a try.

    Originally a walk-on, Rodriguez spent four seasons at Clemson, playing mainly on special teams. In 39 career games, he had one start from scrimmage, 11 catches for 39 yards and a touchdown, a 5-yard carry, and six punt returns for 57 yards.

    Modest stats to be sure, but he did get an invitation to one of the college all-star games, the Medal of Honor Bowl on Jan. 10 in Charleston, S.C. Rodriguez remembers talking to some Rams scouts during the practice week there, and then last Sunday the Rams called and said they were inviting him to this weekend’s rookie minicamp on a tryout basis.

    “It’s pretty surreal,” Rodriguez said. “You kind of hope for an opportunity as a kid to say you got a chance to play in the NFL. For me it’s no different, coming back for more (after his time in the Army) and having the opportunity to play Division I football. I just felt, why give up there? So I just kept working.”

    Since he’s here on a tryout basis only, Rodriguez basically has three days to make enough of an impression to get signed to the 90-man offseason roster. The Rams currently have 88 players either signed or drafted.

    So there are a couple of spots open, and Rodriguez and Harvard long snapper Tyler Ott are the only players here on a tryout basis this weekend.

    Rodriguez is under pressure to get noticed. Certainly not the kind of pressure faced when getting attacked by Taliban insurgents. But pressure nonetheless.

    “For me, that’s how it’s been,” he said with a shrug. “I was a walk-on at Clemson. And I had to show out at camp just to make the … roster. And it’s no different here. Obviously, this is a top-caliber paid environment with freaks of nature.

    “But you know, I feel that I can compete and I’ve worked my (butt) off to get to where I’m at. Even if it’s a three-day trial and they say ‘thank you for coming,’ I can’t say anything but ‘thank you’ back. Because this is all I’ve ever wanted — this is a chance to try to do it.”

    It seems safe to say that Rodriguez has an ally of sorts in Rams coach Jeff Fisher, who has been very active in the Wounded Warrior Project.

    Fisher visited troops in the Persian Gulf in 2009 and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro during his year off from coaching (2011) to raise funds and awareness for Wounded Warriors. Every year at the end of training camp, the Rams have a light practice with service men and service women at Scott Air Force Base.

    Rodriguez was vaguely aware of Fisher’s involvement in Wounded Warriors before getting the call from the Rams. He’s since looked into it.

    “I’m just so very appreciative from my standpoint of being a wounded veteran and having friends that are part of the Wounded Warrior program,” Rodriguez said. “I think that’s awesome of him. To be in his position and to give back means a lot to me.”

    But Rodriguez knows his tryout isn’t some kind of gimmick. He’ll have to earn an offseason roster spot from Fisher to make it to training camp.

    “I don’t want to say that it’s an all feel-good story,” he said. “I like to think that me training in the offseason, and getting into EXOS (performance center), and doing the full-time grind, and going to my pro day and putting up the numbers that I did, gave me an advantage.

    “But whatever gets your foot in the door is what can solidify where you go in your future. If it doesn’t work out, at least I know I came out here and competed with the best of ’em, and made the most of the run that I had.”

    If it doesn’t work out, Rodriguez already has a very good start on life after football.

    His autobiography “Rise: A Soldier, A Dream, and a Promise Kept” reached best-seller status. His story has been told all over television, radio, and the cable networks. Sony TriStar Entertainment purchased the book rights and plans a movie on Rodriguez’s life.

    Rodriguez has moved to Los Angeles, where he’s already working as a consultant on the movie projejct, and has been on the public speaking circuit as well. While in LA, he did his pre-draft training at the EXOS athletic training center there.

    That training helped those legs that once contained shrapnel run a 4.58 in the 40 at Clemson’s pro day. He also caught everything thrown his way that day.

    But he didn’t return to football to draw attention to himself. He was almost reluctant at times Friday to talk about his time in the military. Of the 25 other Rams rookies on hand for the weekend minicamp, only Georgia Tech fullback Zach Laskey knew who he was.

    (Georgia Tech and Clemson are rivals in football.)

    At Rams Park this weekend, and as long as this opportunity lasts, Rodriguez says, “I just want to be another football player.

    #24589
    Avatar photozn
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    Rams’ Marquez is giving football his best shot

    By Joe Lyons

    http://www.stltoday.com/sports/football/professional/rams-marquez-is-giving-football-his-best-shot/article_c0caeb18-30eb-524c-ba45-e1730e35579c.html

    Baseball or football? It is a debate that has dominated the life of Rams wide receiver Bradley Marquez over the last few years.

    “Right now, I’m 100 percent focused on football and on doing what I can to make this team,” the undrafted rookie free agent said following a workout over the weekend at Rams Park. “Growing up, I basically went from one sport to the other as the seasons changed. I loved the challenge that each sport provided and really enjoyed the competition.

    “Over the years, I’ve had plenty of people tell me I should go one direction or the other, but the people who really matter, my family, have always been great about supporting the choices I’ve made.”

    Marquez, 22, has shown plenty of promise in both sports. A record-setting running back at Odessa High in Texas, he earned a football scholarship to Texas Tech University and was good enough in baseball to be drafted by the New York Mets in the 16th round of the 2011 draft.

    He signed with the Mets after working out a deal that allowed him to continue playing football as well. The 5-foot-10, 196-pound outfielder spent the summers of 2012 and 2013 playing rookie-level ball with the Kingsport Mets of the Appalachian League.

    Limited to just nine games by a quadriceps injury in 2011, he batted .267 with a double, a triple, a steal and two RBIs. The following summer, coming off a football knee injury that limited his sophomore season to just six games, Marquez played in 27 games and hit .250 with five doubles, three steals, a homer and nine RBIs.

    But in 2013, he elected to step away from baseball and put his full effort in preparing for his senior football season with the Red Raiders. With that decision, he also forfeited $250,000 of his $325,000 signing bonus with the Mets.

    “I didn’t fulfill my obligation, so I wasn’t entitled to the money,” he said. “It wasn’t an easy decision because I enjoy both sports and because I’ve been playing both for so long. But at a certain point, I knew I had to make a choice. I had to put my all into something and go full throttle, just to give myself a chance to reach my potential.

    “My goal from the start was to compete at the highest possible level, and I’m excited about the possibilities here with the Rams.”

    And baseball?

    “Technically, I’m still under contract,” he said. “The Mets could’ve released me, but they’ve been supportive of my decision. I guess they’re willing to wait and see how thing play out. For me, though, the complete focus is on football.”

    At Texas Tech, Marquez made the transition from running back to receiver and made an immediate impact in Lubbock. He caught 25 passes for 240 yards as a freshman and had 16 catches for 172 yards before a knee injury cut short his sophomore campaign.

    Marquez caught 49 passes for 633 yards and six touchdowns as a junior and followed up with 65 catches for 821 yards and 10 scores last fall.

    “I’m a guy who’s going to work hard and do whatever the coaches ask me to do,” he said. “I can play inside or outside and I have experience on special teams, too. I’m excited to be here, to learn the playbook and show the coaches what I can do.”

    Another benefit to bypassing baseball for Marquez was the degree in exercise and sports science he received from Texas Tech.

    “That’s something that means a lot to me, my mom and my whole family,” he said. “If nothing else, it means I’ll be able to stay involved in sports. That’s important to me, obviously, because sports have always been such a big part of my life.”

    Marquez said he was “a little disappointed” about not being drafted.

    “I’d heard I might be a late-round choice — I think everybody wants to hear their name called — but I believe things like this happen for a reason,” he said. “The Rams showed interest in me early in the draft process and, after going over some things with my agent, I ended up signing within probably 20 minutes of the draft wrapping up. I just felt like St. Louis would be a good fit for me.”

    #25196
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    The Daniel Rodriguez Story

    Myles Simmons – Rams Insider

    http://www.stlouisrams.com/news-and-events/article-1/The-Daniel-Rodriguez-Story/f90335f1-ad91-41b3-8484-a558503f8db0

    During rookie orientation at Rams Park a few weeks ago, one wide receiver was with the team on a tryout basis. And after that weekend, the Rams signed the WR to their roster, a fact that still feels surreal toDaniel Rodriguez.

    “It’s been incredible, honestly,” Rodriguez said in a recent interview with stlouisrams.com. “Coming here has been something that’s really opened my eyes — being surrounded by elite athletes and an organization that’s incredible. And I’m just trying to make the most of it.”

    At 5-foot-8 and 180 pounds, Rodriguez may look like someone who lacks a receiver’s ideal size. But as general manager Les Snead often says, football is much less about positional designations than it is about the individuals playing them. And that is especially true when it comes to Rodriguez.

    His story has been well documented — from an ESPN feature to his own autobiography — but it bears repeating. He enlisted in the Army following his high school graduation, a decision in part spurred by his father’s sudden death. Rodriguez served two tours — a 15-month deployment in Iraq, and a 12-month tour in Afghanistan.

    During that second tour, Rodriguez was one of approximately 60 Americans who fought in the Battle of Kamdesh on Oct. 3, 2009 — one of the bloodiest incidents in the Afghanistan conflict. Eight American soldiers were killed and 22 more were wounded in the battle; Rodriguez was one of them. With bullet fragments lodged in his shoulder and shrapnel in his neck and legs, he continued to fight for more than 12 hours. Rodriguez was given a Purple Heart and Bronze Star Medal with Valor Device for his actions that day.

    But that’s far from where Rodriguez’s story ends. Following his discharge from the Army in 2010, he began working toward another goal: Playing college football.

    “After my second deployment in Afghanistan, I had made a promise to a friend that I was going to get out and try to play,” Rodriguez said.

    Unfortunately, that friend was killed in combat.

    “It was just one of those things where I felt that if I had any purpose in life, I needed to make sure that I kept my word to a friend, and live my life in a way that honored those who had died,” Rodriguez said. “I needed to make sure that I represented myself well on behalf of my friends who were killed. And that was just trying to live through a promise.”

    Rodriguez says that sticking to his word helped him overcome a number of challenges — from substance abuse to issues in personal relationships. A significant part of that came from his strenuous training regimen.

    “As soon as I got in the weight room, it was just an addiction. It just changed my life,” Rodriguez said. “I stopped doing everything detrimental to my body — changed my eating. I just devoted everything to it.”

    He was also attending community college at the time, getting his grades up to a point where he could transfer to a bigger university with a football program. Rodriguez says he spent most of his savings to make a recruitment video, which he put on YouTube. At that point, the wide receiver was working out three times a day for a total of six hours.

    The video went viral helped Rodriguez gain the attention of myriad college programs, and the wide receiver says he received a few offers from big-name schools to be a preferred walk-on. One of those was Clemson University.

    “I didn’t even know where Clemson was,” Rodriguez said. “But I took a trip down there, and fell in love with it.”

    He cited his meeting with head coach Dabo Swinney as one of the deciding factors.

    “Coach Swinney was amazing,” Rodriguez said. “It was just one of those things where he wanted to invite me to the 105-man camp and I knew that I just had to work and put myself in a position to try to make the team. And it all worked out.”

    As a walk-on, Rodriguez played in 37 consecutive games for the Tigers, which is a clear point of pride for him. While he appeared primarily on special teams, he scored a touchdown on a 2-yard end around against Citadel during Clemson’s 2013 Military Appreciation Day.

    During his time at the South Carolina university, Rodriguez also made time to write his autobiography, RISE. Released Oct. 7 of last year, it was featured on the New York Times best-selling sports books list.

    “It was kind of brought to my attention that people were starting to inquire if I would be interested in writing an autobiography, because at the time I didn’t realize that my life would be inspirational to others,” Rodriguez said, adding that initially he wasn’t sure he wanted to go through with it. “I never wanted to put myself in a position where people thought I was trying to capitalize off of the death of my friends and what I’d accomplished in combat.

    “I talked with some of the parents of buddies who were killed, and I asked them if they thought if it was wrong,” Rodriguez continued. “And every one of them told me that I was in a position to show veterans that it’s not the end of the world when they come home. And what you’ve accomplished is so motivational, and can be so inspirational to so many people that we want you to do it.”

    From that point on, Rodriguez says, he committed to the book. He teamed up with best-selling writer Joe Layden to help write it, composing the words through a series of interviews. The process was difficult at times because he had to re-live some particularly dark moments.

    “I didn’t want to write the book in a Disney context. I wanted it to be very raw and open,” Rodriguez said. “I wanted to show that was the side of who I was and what I’d gone through to where I am now.”

    Following his graduation in December 2014 — Rodriguez was a two-time academic All-ACC honoree — the wide receiver continued pursuing football by training at the EXOS performance center facility in Los Angeles.

    “As a kid, I used to sneak downstairs and watch Monday Night Football, and I was always jumping over the couch for that game-winning touchdown,” Rodriguez said. “I’ve always wanted to be in the NFL, and every time I saw it in college, I always told myself that I can play at that level.

    “There were many times when I said ‘college’ was that goal, but it was just that first step I needed to take. I wanted to be a football player,” Rodriguez added. “Being able to play it at the most elite level has been something that’s always been in the back of my mind. So when I had the opportunity present itself and knew that I was close to achieving it if I kept working out of college, I was going to take full advantage of it.”

    When the draft came around, he wasn’t expecting to be selected, but much like his mindset in his recruitment video, Rodriguez simply wanted an opportunity.

    “I was just hoping for a phone call, and it came the next day,” Rodriguez said.

    The Rams were on the other end of the line. Rodriguez had talked to a few of the team’s scouts during his time at the Medal of Honor Bowl — one of college football’s All-Star games following the conclusion of the season. He also spoke with team officials at his pro day. And receiving the invitation to come tryout during rookie orientation just provided him with another chance to take advantage of an opportunity.

    “When they invited me, I was like, ‘Heck yeah, I would love to tryout. I’ve got nothing to lose,’” Rodriguez said. “They flew me out here and I thought I was only going to be here for a two-day trial. And they said I had a pretty good workout, made some plays, and they offered to have me stay.”

    “It was one of those things that I couldn’t really believe happened, and it was all a whirlwind,” Rodriguez continued. “I didn’t know what was going to happen. I had invitations to other minicamps down the road, and I was just trying to take advantage of every one. And this one was the first one and it stuck. Honestly, it was a blessing in disguise.”

    But even as he progresses into a possible career in the NFL, as this Memorial Day Weekend illustrates, his past experiences are never far from his mind.

    “I lost 24 friends in the conflicts that I was engaged in, and I have a lot of friends who have military members in their family,” Rodriguez said. “For me, it’s a day of remembrance. I used to be able to go to Arlington Cemetery, and visit my friends who are buried there. It means a lot.”

    “I’m very grateful that Memorial Day is so prominent and important in our culture as Americans to remember that day and acknowledge it,” Rodriguez added. “You can always kind of reflect back and put yourself in the position of others. So when people are thanking me for your service and they call me a hero, I always say, ‘No, my friends who were killed are heroes.’ And that’s what it always is for me. It reflects on what my friends did for this country.”

    #25200
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

    see the previous article too, last post

    Army vet Daniel Rodriguez trying to make most of chance with Rams

    Posted by Josh Alper on May 24, 2015, 10:56 AM EDT

    http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2015/05/24/army-vet-daniel-rodriguez-trying-to-make-most-of-chance-with-rams/

    Memorial Day weekend has its fair share of gatherings around the grill, swimming in sunny weather and other fun, but none of that should get in the way of remembering that the holiday honors those who have given their lives in service to the country around the world.

    Rams wide receiver Daniel Rodriguez doesn’t need that reminder. Rodriguez did tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, where he was wounded during the Battle of Kamdesh, while in the Army and his football career began with a promise to a friend who was killed in combat. Rodriguez went to community college, worked on his game and landed as a walk-on at Clemson.

    “It was just one of those things where I felt that if I had any purpose in life, I needed to make sure that I kept my word to a friend, and live my life in a way that honored those who had died,” Rodriguez said, via the Rams website. “I needed to make sure that I represented myself well on behalf of my friends who were killed. And that was just trying to live through a promise.”

    Rodriguez, who received the Purple Heart and Bronze Star Medal with Valor Device for his service in Afghanistan, wasn’t drafted, but met with Rams personnel at the postseason Medal of Honor Bowl and his pro day and got an invite to try out at the rookie minicamp.

    “When they invited me, I was like, ‘Heck yeah, I would love to try out. I’ve got nothing to lose,’” Rodriguez said. “They flew me out here and I thought I was only going to be here for a two-day trial. And they said I had a pretty good workout, made some plays, and they offered to have me stay. It was one of those things that I couldn’t really believe happened, and it was all a whirlwind. I didn’t know what was going to happen. I had invitations to other minicamps down the road, and I was just trying to take advantage of every one. And this one was the first one and it stuck. Honestly, it was a blessing in disguise.”

    Rodriguez has a long way to go to make the Rams’ 53-man roster, but he overcame long odds to get this far and it’s a safe bet that he’ll have plenty of people rooting for him to continue his stay in St. Louis well past this summer’s cutdown day

    #25234
    JackPMiller
    Participant

    http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000494003/article/rams-wr-army-vet-daniel-rodriguez-one-to-root-for

    Rams WR, Army vet Daniel Rodriguez one to root for
    By Conor Orr
    Around The NFL Writer

    This Memorial Day is the perfect time to recognize the ultimate sacrifice made by our veterans.

    It’s also a time to marvel at the accomplishments of people like Army vet Daniel Rodriguez.

    Rodriguez was signed after a rookie tryout with the Rams. As a Purple Heart and Bronze Star recipient, he has absolutely nothing left to prove and yet, he’s trying to prove he can make the Rams’ 53-man roster.

    “When they invited me, I was like, ‘Heck yeah, I would love to try out,'” Rodriguez told the team’s website. “I’ve got nothing to lose. They flew me out here and I thought I was only going to be here for a two-day trial. And they said I had a pretty good workout, made some plays, and they offered to have me stay. It was one of those things that I couldn’t really believe happened, and it was all a whirlwind. I didn’t know what was going to happen. I had invitations to other minicamps down the road, and I was just trying to take advantage of every one. And this one was the first one and it stuck. Honestly, it was a blessing in disguise.”

    The long read on Rodriguez is well worth your time. He made an emotional promise to a fellow soldier that he’d play college football, only to see that friend lost in combat. He fought in the Battle of Kamdesh, one of the ugliest conflicts in Afghanistan.

    On top of spending time around your grill today, be sure to give it a read and remember why we have this holiday in the first place.

    #25287
    Avatar photozn
    Moderator

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