His second time standing in a confetti storm had just come and gone. His Giants had just experienced another Super Sunday, again against the Patriots. Kareem McKenzie was one happy right tackle.
And then the football joy was over for a 32-year-old Jersey guy — born in Trenton, raised in Willingboro and played in East Rutherford, competing for four years with the Jets and then seven with the Giants.
He soon learned that the Giants didn’t want him back for the 2012 season. McKenzie found that to be a very disappointing news flash. There were other teams that wanted him to come in and try out, but he admitted that “a bit of my ego” blocked that prospect.
“From my own personal perspective, I just played 24 games in an NFL season and was a Super Bowl champion,” McKenzie said. “I think that body of work could’ve spoken for itself. And playing for another team, realizing that you just won a Super Bowl and cannot defend that title, was a little distressful.”
So his NFL days were done, just like that. What was he going to do next?
“It’s depressing because you really don’t have an idea of what it is that you can actually do, because the skills that we have on the football field don’t translate into the work environment,” McKenzie said. “There’s no profession out there besides the armed services where you are basically putting your body on the line in the most existential sense and in the armed services putting your life on the line for a cause and/or a belief system.”
McKenzie ultimately decided to become a counselor to try to help the cause of former players in a similar situation, to listen and assist them in coping and handling the transition game to the next chapter of their lives.
Denne historien er fra December 2016-utgaven av NY Jets Confidential.
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Denne historien er fra December 2016-utgaven av NY Jets Confidential.
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FIRST DOWN- A lot of potential, but a lot to learn
There is a lyric in an old song by the rock group Chicago that sums up where Zach Wilson is right now:
IN HIS OWN WORDS WITH DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR JEFF ULBRICH - Ulbrich breaks down Jets' defensive personnel
(Marcus Maye) can do it all. I would feel comfortable with him (at free or strong safety). He’s a guy that, to me, he can play deep, he can play the half field, he can play the middle third, he can do that and you feel comfortable with it. I think he’s got range, speed and athleticism. I think he’s got ball skills and instincts to be a deep safety. But I think he’s got enough size and girth and want-to and courage to play in the box. It’ll be fun to utilize all the things that he does. He can cover tight ends; he can cover some of the wide receivers in this league.
Dan's Minicamp Diary
Becton bombarded with weighty questions
Saleh calls Wilson ‘relentless' as a worker
QUESTION SESSION WITH QB ZACH WILSON
Jets hope initiatives will increase winning edge
Aside from adding as many good players as possible to help the Jets improve, coach Robert Saleh and GM Joe Douglas are trying to turn over every stone to find extra ways to give their team a winning edge, and two examples of this were announced over the course of the offseason, with the additions of a game management coach (Matt Burke) and the installation of an Athletic Care and Performance Department. Let’s take a closer look at these two moves and how they might help the Jets:
Dan's Spring Camp Diary
This time of year for learning, experimenting, not stats
AUDIBLES-Saleh doesn't cave on offseason work
Tom Brady might be wrong about this one.
SAFETIES
Justin Simmons, Broncos 6-2 • 202 pounds • 27 years old
OFFENSIVE TACKLES
Trent Williams, 49ers 6-5 • 320 pounds • 32 years old
LINEBACKERS
Lavonte David, Buccaneers 6-0 • 226 pounds • 26 years old