I
never thought I’d write this column. I never knew I’d feel this way. A teammate
has passed on and I can’t stop thinking of him. Our journey together brought us
a long way. Because we accomplished
great things on the football field 40 years ago, the sports media named us,
“The Amazins.” As we grew older, had families, and matured, learning to love
each other along the way, we coined our own phrase, “Teammates for Life.”
That’s
how I feel about David.
David
Langner, died Saturday April 26, 2014. He was one helluva football player. A
little guy, I often said he was crazy on the football field but if I had the
first choice, I’d take David. I’d rather have him on my side than be against
him.
David
and I traveled a long way in our journey to friendship. I knew him before he
knew me. We played against each other in High School. He was a star at Woodlawn
High in Birmingham. They were very good. The night we played them they dressed
nearly a hundred guys. They came out of their locker room, cocky and proud and
ready to feast on the 40 or so players we had from the small Catholic school
who had no business on the field with them. David, his brother, his cousin, and
their teammates blanked us 39-0 and it wasn’t that close. David, a winner of
all kinds of honors, became a highly touted signee of Auburn University.
I
walked on at Auburn. One of three blacks on the practice fields of over a
hundred players and the only black walkon. David and I didn’t start out as
friends.
Walkons
have it tough. David didn’t care for the fact that I had dared to walk on to that
hallowed ground that he had already earned a spot on. To further confuse
things, we had both grown up in Birmingham in the 1960’s when legal segregation
meant we could not play ball with or against each other. Friendship was out of
the question.
We
didn’t get along. David had further to go than I did. We fought often on the
field. But we were ballplayers and together we won many games. I won a
scholarship and in 1972, we shocked the Southeastern Conference by winning 10
games, losing only once and finishing #5 in the nation. David was a hero that
year with his two touchdowns against Alabama in the now famous “Punt Bama Punt”
(look it up if you don’t know) game against Alabama. He also led us in
interceptions, made All-SEC as a defensive back, and instigated many of the
fights we had with other teams. He was a bad ass and we were glad we had him.
We always knew he would make a big play.
As
we won games, he and I tolerated each other the way teammates will do when they
are not friends. Winning does that.
When
we were done, he went his way and I went mine. Many years later in Nashville,
while filming a Legends of Auburn video, we sat across from
each other at dinner. We talked and laughed. He’d already had some health
issues and discussed them freely with me. It was a great night for me and, I
believe for him. After those many years, we were learning to be friends.
Later,
at the thirty-year reunion of “The Amazins,” David came up and gave me a hug.
Not one of those quick man hugs but a real hug. He wouldn’t let me go. I hugged
him back. I remember standing there in the middle of the floor hugging. Hugging
for what seemed like a very long time. That is my favorite memory of my friend
David.
Since
I heard of his death, I can’t stop thinking of him. I’m proud that we overcame
society to be friends.
David
will be celebrated for the touchdowns against Alabama, and the great career he
had at Auburn. There’s talk that David belongs in the Alabama Sports Hall of
Fame. You will get no argument from me on that. But most importantly, I will
fondly remember the impact we had on each other’s lives. We are teammates for
life, and now beyond.
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