From: The Seattle Times, Letters to the Editor, May 30, 2001

"Teaching is not a job, it's a calling. For short-termers, it's a craft to be mastered. For the long-haulers, teaching becomes an art form. And like great art, it becomes priceless when the artist passes on."

FAS

Sunday, February 13, 2011

On a Lighter Note

In July of 1999 Seattle Seahawk receiver supreme Joey Galloway decided he wasn’t being paid enough four years into a five year contract. He had been a #1 draft choice from Ohio State, my alma mater. In those four years, newer draftees had supplanted Galloway’s place as highest paid wide receiver, so Joey decided to forego training camp and hold out for parity.  Instead of playing in the 1999 season, Galloway lost $5000 a day in missed practice fines and $93,000 a game in unpaid salary. On August 31, the Seattle Times and Ohio State’s Lantern posted the following letter of mine:

FAS



 Dear Mr. Galloway,

In the first eight days of your holdout, you paid more in fines than I earn after 28 years teaching.

Fire your current agent. He is stealing you blind and destroying your future.

Hire me for 1 percent (save 9 percent). We’ll sign ASAP.

The fans will still love you, and I can retire.

Who loves you, baby?


Fred Strine North Bend, WA
OSU, 1971



P.S.  After missing the entire 1999 season, Joey Galloway was traded to the Cowboys, Buccaneers, Patriots, Steelers, and Redskins.  The rest of his career never matched those first four years in Seattle.  Neither did his salary. 

No comments:

Post a Comment