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David Edwards (football player and motivational speaker) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Edwards (football player and motivational speaker)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Edwards (March 1, 1987 - February 27, 2008) was an American high school football player whose paralysis following an injury suffered during play led to work as a motivational speaker.[1][2]

Contents

[edit] Biography

Edwards was born in Austin, Texas. As a young child, he showed little interest in sports, but as the son of a former All-City running back from Austin's Reagan High School and a cousin of former University of Texas running back Shon Mitchell, the sport of football was in his blood.

[edit] Accident

When he was ten, his family moved to San Antonio, Texas, and at the encouragement of a new friend he began playing football at the Pop Warner level. After his junior season of varsity high school football in 2003, he was selected a Unanimous First-Team All Area Class 5A defensive back by The San Antonio Express-News. That season would be his first and only season playing varsity football for San Antonio's James Madison High School. ln the final minutes of the first round play-off game in Austin against Westlake High School, he collided face down with the crown of his helmet to the chest of Westlake receiver Coy Aune.[3] The impact of the collision left him paralyzed from the shoulders down after shattering the C-4 and C-5 vertebrae in his neck. Over 9,000 people were on hand to witness his devastating hit resulting in the injury.

His injury had a profound effect on many that were in the stadium. One of those people in attendance was filmmaker Peter Berg, who had followed Westlake's season as part of his own research on Texas high school football prior to filming the movie version of Friday Night Lights. Seeking a way to help Edwards, Berg eventually came up with the idea of having a benefit concert for him and other young men in similar circumstances, and in April 2004 that concert took place in Austin. The concert was produced by Friday Night Lights cast member and country music star Tim McGraw. McGraw and his wife Faith Hill headlined the concert along with Friday Night Lights star and musician Billy Bob Thornton and his friend, rock legend Alice Cooper. The concert raised $28,000, to be divided evenly between the David Edwards Trust and the Gridiron Heroes Spinal Cord Injury Organization.

[edit] Post-accident life

Edwards' injury and rehabilitation also inspired Berg to create the character of Jason Street (played by Scott Porter) in the TV-series Friday Night Lights, which premiered on NBC in fall 2006. Another person who witnessed the injury was Madison alumnus and former defensive back Shawn Wayne Jones, an award-winning screenwriter. After following Edwards' recovery through media accounts, he was inspired to produce a documentary film about Edwards and other young men who have been paralyzed while playing high school football; from the 1999 season through the 2006 season, at least 14 high school football players have been paralyzed in Texas alone. The media attention received by Edwards' story helped the organization Gridiron Heroes raise public awareness and support for these young men who face very costly lifelong care not always covered by insurance and government subsidies. Filming began in April of 2005, just prior to Edwards' graduation, and the feature length documentary called Beyond the Lights, is expected to premier at the Sundance Film Festival when completed.

The Austin Westlake community through their athletic booster program would go on to raise over $100,000 for David in a fairly short period of time. In doing so, the money would be used to help offset insurance deductibles and pay for other necessities that are not covered by insurance and social security. Two years later, his $1 million dollar health insurance policy through his stepfather's work had completely been exhausted and the school district's $5 million dollar catastrophic policy took over with one catch. That policy had a one time $20,000 deductible. Again the Westlake community would come to David's aid and raised another $20,000 in just two-weeks time.

In 2004, KB Homes built and donated a new single-story home custom designed for Edwards' needs in the same neighborhood where his parents had purchased a new two-story home just a year before his injury. The home was built in about one month's time, and most of the labor was provided by his Madison teammates and friends.

Following his injury, Edwards become an inspiration to many including young children in elementary schools whom he spoke to about facing life's challenges with a positive attitude. He also mentored youths who faced similar physical challenges and befriended those who faced terminal disease.

Edwards also became an active participant in the Gridiron Heroes Spinal Cord Injury Foundation's mission to bring hope, information, and financial assistance to other injured athletes and their families. He became very close friends with Chris Canales, the co-founder of Gridiron Heroes, who like Edwards was an all-district defensive back who suffered a spinal cord injury while making a tackle playing for San Marcos Baptist Academy in 2001. They were frequently seen together on the field at numerous high school and college football games, continuing to support the sport that brought their physical demise. Edwards would frequently join Canales and his father Eddie Canales at fundraising events throughout the state of Texas.

[edit] Death

David Edwards died of pneumonia related complications at the age of 20 on February 27, 2008, at Northeast Methodist hospital in San Antonio, Texas.[4] He was three days shy of his 21st birthday.[5]

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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