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View Full Version : Former First Overall Draft Choice Adam Braidwood Rebuilds His Life



jerrym
02-24-2017, 06:45 AM
Another fallen CFLer, Eric Tillman, helped him change his life.



During the salad days of Adam Braidwood’s professional football career, the former first-overall draft choice of the Edmonton Eskimos earned $90,000 as a rookie. And when he recovered a Henry Burris fumble for a touchdown that season during a September 2006 game, everything seemed possible.
Braidwood squandered that money and every last bit of salary he earned from the Eskimos. The defensive end missed two seasons with knee injuries, got addicted to painkillers and was out of the Canadian Football League by 2011. He also spent two years in prison for sexual assault and a firearm violation.
“I think I crashed and burned and took a lot of people down with me. It was ugly,” Braidwood, 32, said on Wednesday. “I don’t make excuses. I made some bad choices. Not only did I ruin my career, I ruined a big part of my life.
“I thought the money would keep coming in. It definitely didn’t. Whatever potential I had, I flushed down the toilet.” ...

Braidwood, now a heavyweight boxer with a 6-1 record, including five knockouts, has a 12-round bout Friday night at Centre Vidéotron against Quebec’s Eric Martel-Bahoeli (11-6-1, 7 KOs) for the vacant World Boxing Union title — an obscure sanctioning body based in the United States. The bout’s on the undercard of the 12-round main event between former world super-middleweight champion Lucian Bute and Eleider Alvarez. It’s an elimination bout, with the winner scheduled to eventually meet World Boxing Council light-heavyweight champ Adonis Stevenson.
Braidwood, an imposing 6-foot-4 and 250 pounds, has no difficulties discussing his past. ...

The knee injuries and subsequent surgeries resulted in Braidwood taking painkillers, to which he became addicted. His cocktails of choice were Valium, Xanax and Benzodiazepines, a tranquillizer that serves as a muscle relaxant — high doses of which can cause amnesia and dissociation. Braidwood believed he required the drugs to manage his emotions. But then, because he was constantly tired, he began taking cocaine as a stimulant. “If you don’t like who you are, you start to self destruct,” said the Victoria, B.C., resident. ...

“There wasn’t a game or practice I wasn’t messed up, 100 per cent. And my judgment was messed up because of the painkillers.” Following his third surgery in 2009, Braidwood said he sat on his couch for six months, barely mobile. He was spiralling out of control, quickly on a path to self-destruction. In December 2010, he was arrested following a disturbance in Edmonton. He and his former girlfriend were involved in a dispute that quickly escalated. According to testimony, Braidwood threatened to kill her, producing a firearm during the argument. He choked and sexually assaulted her, the court heard. ...

“I take responsibility for everything that I did,” he said. “Whatever people think … it doesn’t matter. I put myself in that situation. I wasn’t functioning properly. I made some really, really bad choices. “I have guilt about the whole thing. A lot of other people have to live with the damage (he inflicted). I hurt a lot of people, people I care about. I’ll never really be proud of myself.” ...

In April 2013, Braidwood pleaded guilty to sexual assault and was sentenced to 4 1/2 years. He also received six months for careless storage of a firearm. The sentences were served concurrently at a medium-security facility in Agassiz, B.C. ....
Braidwood was out on parole two years later, but had no house, car or money — nothing more, he said, than the clothes on his back. He lived in a homeless shelter for two years and turned to boxing, a sport he admired from his youth.
Eric Tillman, the Eskimos’ former general manager who came to Braidwood and advised him to retire, remained in touch after the player’s release and has continued to support him, realizing people make mistakes. “Life isn’t a straight and perfect ride,” said Tillman, now Hamilton’s GM. “Young people deserve fresh starts and second chances instead of being cast aside like disposable razors. “He was embarrassed and very uncertain what the future might bring. He didn’t want that mistake to be his defining moment.”
And now, Braidwood might become a champion, completing the redemption story, although his opponent is vastly more experienced.




http://montrealgazette.com/sports/former-top-cfl-pick-adam-braidwood-vies-for-redemption-in-boxing-ring

jerrym
02-25-2017, 11:03 PM
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Former <a href="https://twitter.com/EdmontonEsks">@EdmontonEsks</a> defensive-end Adam Braidwood has just captured the WBU heavyweight title, stopping Eric Martel-Bahoeli in 5th round.</p>&mdash; Herb Zurkowsky (@HerbZurkowsky1) <a href="https://twitter.com/HerbZurkowsky1/status/835325318886010880">February 25, 2017</a></blockquote> <script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

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