Where Was the Pat Tillman Story on NFL Sunday?
In 2004, President George W. Bush appeared
on the Jumbotron at Arizona’s Sun Devil stadium to address the combat
death of former NFL player turned Army Ranger, Pat Tillman.
Bush said:
“Pat Tillman loved the game of football. Yet, as much as Pat Tillman
loved competing on the football field, he loved America even more.…
Courageous and humble, a loving husband and son, a devoted brother and a
fierce defender of liberty. Pat Tillman will always be remembered.”
But Sunday—while NFL teams around the country commemorated the tenth
anniversary of the 9/11 attacks—Pat’s name was mentioned only before the
game in Arizona. In stadium after stadium, in pregame show after
pregame show, as the NFL’s 9/11 commemoration strategy was rolled out
with lockstep discipline, Tillman’s name was conspicuously absent.
George W. Bush certainly got his moment in the spotlight, receiving a
standing ovation by 70,000 fans at the Meadowlands. On other football
fields, massive flags were unfurled, “official NFL/9/11 logos” were
unveiled, soldiers were cheered, Reebok’s “We Will Never Forget” 9/11
gear was worn, and yet it was as if Pat Tillman had never existed.
The NFL’s media man, Brian McCarthy, vigorously contested this when
we called for comment.
“Yesterday was a day to remember to those who
lost lives on 9/11.... We did not single out any NFL player that had
been in the military. We saluted all military members around the country
and the world. Pat means so much to the NFL. We have funded the ‘Pat
Tillman USO Center,’ a USO center in his name in Afghanistan at Bagram
[Airfield]. We also worked with his wife Marie on the creation of the
NFL scholarship. The first thing you see in the NFL [New York] building
is Pat’s jersey. He is very dear to the NFL family. We salute him every
day. If [you are] trying to create controversy, there is none.”
I respectfully disagree. I don’t contest that Tillman’s jersey is in
the NFL office, or that “he is honored every day.” But I think it’s
worth asking why the NFL paid so little attention to Pat. It’s worth
asking because the answer says a great deal.
Pat Tillman is the only
NFL player—or professional athlete—to die in the theater of war since
September 11, 2001. He walked away from millions of dollars to join the
US Army because of the way 9/11 shook his system. On 9/12/01, Tillman
gave an interview where he said, “My great-grandfather was at Pearl
Harbor and a lot of my family has gone and fought in wars, and I really
haven’t done a damn thing.”
Twenty-two months after enlisting, Pat Tillman was dead. His memorial
service was aired on national television. The Army awarded him a Silver
Star for his “gallantry in action against an armed enemy.” They said
Tillmanʼs convoy had been ambushed in Afghanistan. They said Tillman
charged up a hill to protect his men but was shot down by the Taliban.
Responding to this heroic story, the NFL, as they are quick to mention,
created statues and memorials in his honor.
Why didn’t we hear Tillman’s name on Sunday? It’s because the
Pentagon’s official story, the very story the NFL initially embraced, is
an awful lie. Tillman actually died in friendly fire, a fact that was
criminally hidden from his family, his fans and the greater public.
Tillman also began to turn against the war before his death, telling
friends in the Rangers that he believed the war in Iraq was “illegal.” A
voracious reader, he started reading antiwar authors in an attempt to
wrap his head around how he had become the most famous solider in an
endless conflict.
After the Bush administration finally revealed the truth, Tillman’s
shocked family and friends did the only thing they could do: fight to
find out the real facts of his death. They went public with the
narrative of a Pat Tillman that was inconsistent with the Bush
administration and NFL’s. They put forth a Pat Tillman that was an
intensely iconoclastic atheist, turning against war.
The misrepresentation of Pat Tillman’s death speaks to the lies used
to sell war, and to the way people’s rage and grief was exploited in the
wake of 9/11. But thanks to the tireless work of his family, and the
creators of the documentary The Tillman Story, his true story is now public knowledge. As Pat’s mother Mary said in The Tillman Story,
“I think they just thought, if they spun the story and we found
out…we'd just keep it quiet because we wouldn't want to diminish…his
heroism or anything like that…. but, you know, nobody questions Pat's
heroics. He was always heroic. What they said happened, didn't happen.
They made up a story, and so you have to set the record straight.”
In one respect their effort saved Pat Tillman’s name this past
Sunday. In the least it saved his family and friends the pain of knowing
that Pat was being displayed in a way he would have found, in the words
of fellow Ranger Jade Lane, “criminal.” But the NFL’s exclusion of
Tillman in their commemoration is a statement of its own. They could
have discussed Tillman’s service in all its complicated, messy glory.
They could have respected his sacrifice as well as his inner conflicts.
They could have interviewed the eloquent and elegant Mary Tillman on all
the pregame shows. The country could have learned not just about Pat
Tillman but that the former commander in chief being cheered at the
Meadowlands had committed a felony in falsifying the facts of Tillman’s
death. It’s an awful story, but it’s real. It's also far from finished.
As The Tillman Story director Amir Bar-Lev said:
“This is an unsolved mystery; nobody has ever really paid a price for
what was done to the Tillmans. No one has taken accountability or made
an admission for a deliberate attempt to conceal the truth. This story
is not over yet.”