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| Former All-Pro football player
Otis Sistrunk has fashioned a second successful career as an Army
civilian employee. Sistrunk runs Cowan & Memorial Stadium at Fort
Lewis, Wash. U.S. Army photo by Bob Reinert. |
FORT LEWIS, Wash., Feb. 11, 2005 ? Fort Lewis
isn?t necessarily where one would expect to find a former All-Pro defensive
tackle, a guy who earned a Super Bowl ring, someone who knows John Madden
better as his coach than as a network football analyst.
It?s been a quarter-century since he traded his No. 60 Oakland Raiders
jersey for civilian clothes, but Otis Sistrunk looked comfortable as
he sat at his desk in the stadium he manages on post. The memorabilia
on the wall behind him recall his glory days with the Raiders.
Sistrunk, who never played college football, was a 1974 All-Pro selection
and was an integral part of the Madden-coached Oakland team that dispatched
the Minnesota Vikings, 31-14, in Super Bowl XI, Jan. 9, 1977, at Pasadena,
Calif.
All that is behind him now.
?In the NFL, we think we can play forever, but we can?t,? said Sistrunk,
60. ?When I got out of football ? I?ll be honest with you ? I didn?t
know what I was going to do.?
Sistrunk lasted seven years in the NFL and spent a couple more as a
beer salesman. One day when he was at Fort Benning on business, a lieutenant
colonel asked if he?d be interested in coaching the post football team.
His government career was born.
?I didn?t know I was going to be here 20-something years,? said Sistrunk,
now approaching his 22nd anniversary as an Army
employee. His second career required no bigger jump than the one he
made from high school to the Raiders via semi-pro football.
?My whole thing was to go overseas and work,? said Sistrunk of his early
motivation with the Army. ?My grandmother was sick and my mother was
sick, so I couldn?t go away.?
Instead, he spent a dozen years at Fort Benning, attending to the sports
and fitness needs of soldiers.
?It was a challenge to me,? Sistrunk said. ?It was very interesting.
I got a chance to know a lot of people.?
When the opportunity presented itself, he transferred to Fort Lewis.
He?s been here ever since.
?I enjoy working at Fort Lewis,? Sistrunk said. ?I had opportunities
to go overseas ? and different places, but I love Fort Lewis. When I
go out of town, that?s the first thing I tell people ? I work at Fort
Lewis.?
Sistrunk does travel frequently to appear at charity golf events and
to speak with school children. He had started going to Oakland area
schools with Raider linebacker Phil Villapiano when both were still
active players.
?We would go to the schools and talk to the kids about staying in school,
don?t do drugs, turn yourself into a lady or a man,? Sistrunk said.
A decade later, when he was working in the gym at Fort Benning, Sistrunk
was approached by a young, female second lieutenant who said she wanted
to thank him. She told him that she was in one of those Oakland classrooms
that he and Villapiano had visited. She wound up going to
Former All-Pro football player Otis Sistrunk has fashioned a second
successful career as an Army civilian employee. Sistrunk runs Cowan
& Memorial Stadium at Fort Lewis, Wash. U.S. Army photo by Bob Reinert
college, getting into ROTC and joining the Army.
?I?ve never seen her since,? Sistrunk said. ?We know we saved one person.
There?s probably more.?
Sistrunk still uses his NFL background as
currency at Fort Lewis. Some soldiers just want to sit
on his office couch and talk football. Others
have more pressing matters on their minds.
?Sometimes it helps if you sit here and talk to a young kid,? Sistrunk
said. ?I tell young soldiers, ?If you?ve got a problem, come in here
and talk to me. Try to stay out of trouble.? The longer you stay out
of trouble, the longer you?ll stay in the military.?
?Otis has really shared his knowledge and experience with all,? said
Lonnie Meredith, head coach of the Army flag football team that defeated
Navy in early December at Cowan Stadium on Fort Lewis. Sistrunk served
as one of Meredith?s assistant coaches.
?He?s a true role model, one that you can access daily,? Meredith said.
?He has always helped everyone that approaches him with guidance and
direction. He shares his ideas and thoughts with others.?
?Otis has been a plus to the program not because of his playing football
in the NFL, but because of his ability to work with a variety of people,
from privates to generals,? said Jerry Weydert, sports director at Fort
Lewis, who lauded Sistrunk?s ?willingness to do what is needed to get
the job done.?
If the Oakland Raiders were once like a family to him, Sistrunk now
is part of another one ? the Army.
?I just love the military,? Sistrunk said. ?I look forward to coming
here every day. It?s been rewarding for me. You can?t make everybody
happy, but I try to do my best.
?We try to do the best we can to serve the soldiers. It?s a challenge
to me every day.?
© 2005 Defend
America. All opinions expressed in this article are the author's
and do not necessarily reflect those of Military.com.
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