logo
Former Arizona Cardinals LB Zack Walz reflects on the legacy of Pat Tillman

Former Arizona Cardinals LB Zack Walz reflects on the legacy of Pat Tillman

USA Today15-04-2025

Former Arizona Cardinals LB Zack Walz reflects on the legacy of Pat Tillman Zack Walz recalls his hero of a teammate
Pat Tillman's name is always embedded in the minds of the people of Arizona, but in April, it's especially poignant.
It was on April 19, 1998, that the Arizona State standout was selected by the Arizona Cardinals in the seventh round of the draft, 226 overall.
It was on April 22, 2004, that Tillman was tragically slain by friendly fire in Afghanistan.
And it's around those dates every year since 2005 that Pat's Run takes place to benefit the Pat Tillman Foundation, which now has close to 1,000 Tillman Scholars making differences in people's lives.
One of those is coincidentally April Krowell, an Army veteran with a PhD in psychology from Ball State, who spent time in Iraq and now specializes in the neuropsychological and psychological assessment of adults and older adults with a wide variety of neurological disorders, medical diagnoses, and psychiatric conditions.
When asked how life-changing being a Tillman Scholar has been, she says simply, '100 percent.'
That number would be an apt way to describe Tillman in every aspect of his life in and beyond football.
This year's run was on April 12 filling the streets of Tempe with more than 30,000 runners and walkers, and the night before at a welcome VIP event inside Mountain America Stadium, teammate Zack Walz reflected on the man Tillman was and what it was like to be around him.
A linebacker from Dartmouth, Walz was picked one round before him with the 158th overall choice in that '98 draft and he jokes (maybe) that it was an example of the team's poor personnel evaluations.
He and Tillman played high school football in northern California and were opponents in a senior-year all-star game.
Walz said it was immediately apparent how special Tillman was. He said, 'Pat set himself as a leader on that team in the first two weeks of our rookie training camp. That was undeniable. Everybody saw that. He was this intellectual leader. He's just tough as nails. He doesn't take (expletive) from anybody, right? But he's so likable and lovable. And he's always challenging the people around him to do better.
'Even the coaches. He'd argue with (defensive backs coach) Larry Marmie all the time. 'Larry, shouldn't we do this?' And I know the coaches love him, right? They know this guy's so invested that he's actually challenging him.'
The stories always come in cascades from people that knew Tillman and were close to him.
Walz recalled, 'He would come in after a two-hour practice, 115 degrees. We'd all be icing, getting ready for lunch and our meeting and going home. And we had this water tank with a treadmill in it. And it was up to your knees and it shoots jets at you. And it's like resistance running in water. It's harder than running outside. He would come in from practice and I'd see him in there an hour and half into lunch.'
Asked what he was doing, Walz said Tillman answered, 'I'm running a marathon as soon as the season ends. He was already working towards that. Those are the things that were unheard of. You didn't see that in people. I look at my experience; I tell my mom this all the time: I truly believe God's purpose for me was to be around him while his life unfolded so I could watch and I could learn.'
It's almost eerie that the duo's NFL careers both ended after the 2001 season when Tillman enlisted in the Army and Walz never played another down.
He said there was an epiphany when Tillman told him of his decision not long after 9/11.
'I will tell you, I was so hung up in the dollars and cents of where am I going to sign,' Walz said. 'Where am going to make my next million dollars? But I was so hung up on, am I going to sign? And when he called me and told me that, I remember my life, it came with such a calm, and things were instantly forced into perspective. Of course I still wanted to play football, but it was just like, my motivation to do it wasn't the same.
'Because I just felt there was so much else I could accomplish. The thing is, you're doing something and then you watch him doing it and you realize the way he's doing it typically was always better. And I say he was this indirect teacher where just watching him interact with, navigate people.'
Walz said there was something singular about that.
'He was always more interested in learning about you,' Walz said. 'People were waiting to talk to him and ask him questions. And he'd be like, no, we're not talking about me. Tell me what you do. I had a friend who was a plumber, and Pat talked to him for 30 minutes. And he's asking about all these things he's got going on. And he was trying to close some big contract. The next time Pat saw him, or that my friend saw Pat, was a year later.
'Pat went up to him and literally asked him how that deal went. He remembered. Those were the little details that he took from everybody. He was a genuine listener. He cared about people. He took something from everybody. And he was relatable, approachable. He always put himself on the same, I don't want to say playing field, but the same level. And that's just an art, right? Nowadays everybody's got cameras, right?
'You always question when somebody's doing something, are they doing it because they know they're on camera somewhere? Back then, there were no cameras. And Pat was doing these things when nobody was looking. He wasn't doing it for fanfare, he wasn't doing it for a conversation for people to say, 'Oh, he does this.'
'That's the way he was. That's what he embodied.'
Walz is non-stop talking about his friend.
Reflecting on playing in the NFL, even if it was only four years, he said, 'For all of us, it was like the pinnacle of our achievement. That's where my career ended. For him, it was just a stepping stone to do something higher and greater. And that's how he carried himself. Yes, he took it very seriously and he worked harder than most people I've seen working. He always had a chip on his shoulder. He was such an intellectual. He was a consummate learner. But it was like, that was not the end-all.
'And that's really what you come to appreciate with him. And it is important to carry on his story. When you talk about carrying the message on to our younger generations, I think parents, if they're not telling their children who he was and what he stood for and what he embodied, they're doing their kids a disservice.'
'He was a man of action. He was a man of example. And you think about all those little stories and the things that he was doing when nobody was looking. That's what made him great ... among a million other things.'
Walz goes to another level after being told about the mosaic at the Pro Football Hall of Fame that has about 500 football cards of Hall of Famers and ... one of Pat Tillman that the Hall decided to keep in the display because of what he represented.
Noting that Tillman was just coming into his own after four seasons, Walz said, 'He didn't have the speed of a natural starting NFL safety, but that guy outworked everybody. He played with a bigger chip on his shoulder than anybody. If he had played another four years, he'd be a perennial All-Pro. And I believe that. He was starting to turn the culture of our organization. Imagine if he played another five years. I mean he could have played 15 years for sure. No question about it.
'The intellect is undeniable. And then you put all that together with a little bit of extra experience. The guy would have been a legendary safety.'
However, Walz understands there was more to Pat Tillman. Infinitely more.
He said, 'But then you think about that guy and it just wouldn't fulfill him. It just wouldn't fulfill him. And I think about it like I missed out on it. But again, then you think at the end of the day, that's me. That's my dreams. That wasn't his. His were much loftier. And I want to just say: more service to the greater good.'
Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule
Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule

The Arizona Cardinals have their final week of the offseason program this week. Mandatory minicamp begins Tuesday. They have completed two weeks of Phase 1 strength and conditioning, three weeks of Phase 2 drills and now begin the third and final week of Phase 3, electing to have only nine practices over three weeks instead of the allowed 13 over four. Advertisement Here is what the schedule looks like this week. Arizona Cardinals mandatory minicamp schedule Monday, June 9: Media day Tuesday, June 10: Head coach Jonathan Gannon speaks to reporters at 9 a.m. Practice from 9:55-11:35 a.m. Wednesday, June 11: Gannon addresses the media at 9 a.m. Practice from 9:55-11:35 a.m. Thursday, June 12: Gannon again speaks with reporters at 9 a.m. Practice from 9:55-11:25 a.m. The players will then be off until the report to training camp. The Cardinals have not yet announced their training camp schedule, but based on NFL rules, they will report on July 25. Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts. This article originally appeared on Cards Wire: Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule

Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule
Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule

USA Today

time5 hours ago

  • USA Today

Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule

Arizona Cardinals minicamp schedule The Cardinals begin the final week of their offseason program. The Arizona Cardinals have their final week of the offseason program this week. Mandatory minicamp begins Tuesday. They have completed two weeks of Phase 1 strength and conditioning, three weeks of Phase 2 drills and now begin the third and final week of Phase 3, electing to have only nine practices over three weeks instead of the allowed 13 over four. Here is what the schedule looks like this week. Arizona Cardinals mandatory minicamp schedule Monday, June 9: Media day Tuesday, June 10: Head coach Jonathan Gannon speaks to reporters at 9 a.m. Practice from 9:55-11:35 a.m. Wednesday, June 11: Gannon addresses the media at 9 a.m. Practice from 9:55-11:35 a.m. Thursday, June 12: Gannon again speaks with reporters at 9 a.m. Practice from 9:55-11:25 a.m. The players will then be off until the report to training camp. The Cardinals have not yet announced their training camp schedule, but based on NFL rules, they will report on July 25. Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

CB Jaire Alexander released by Green Bay Packers: Should the Arizona Cardinals pursue him?
CB Jaire Alexander released by Green Bay Packers: Should the Arizona Cardinals pursue him?

USA Today

time9 hours ago

  • USA Today

CB Jaire Alexander released by Green Bay Packers: Should the Arizona Cardinals pursue him?

CB Jaire Alexander released by Green Bay Packers: Should the Arizona Cardinals pursue him? A look at whether the Cardinals might pull the trigger on trying to acquire recently released CB Jaire Alexander. An intriguing veteran cornerback option hit the free agent market on Monday. The Green Bay Packers released cornerback Jaire Alexander. Alexander is 28 years old and a two-time Pro Bowler with 12 career interceptions. He has made second-team All-Pro twice. However, he also missed 10 games in each of the last two seasons. The Cardinals have a lack of experience at cornerback currently. They lost Sean Murphy-Bunting for the season to an offseason knee injury that required surgery, and they placed him on the non-football injury reserve. It was reported that they could add a veteran cornerback to the roster. Could Alexander be that guy? Should the Arizona Cardinals pursue and sign CB Jaire Alexander? The talent is undeniable. Even in only seven games last season, he picked off two passes and broke up seven. He would definitely be better than Star Thomas, if healthy. Imagine having Alexander along with Garrett Williams, Max Melton and rookie Will Johnson. That would make for a formidable group. The problem is the other stuff. He is funny, but he can be a distraction. He once, when he was not a team captain, went to the middle of the field for the coin toss, made the call and then, after winning the toss, almost messed things up for the Packers when he didn't directly say they wanted to defer until the second half. It happened in Carolina against the Panthers. He said his teammates backed him up, but it wasn't endorsed by the coaches. If there is one thing that Cardinals head coach Jonathan Gannon has preached as the No. 1 tenet for players, it is to put team over self. Would the Cardinals risk investing in an oft-injured player with a selfish streak? It could pay off, but then it would mean pushing a player they like off the roster. A guy like Thomas would be pushed into a special teams role, pushing rookie Denzel Burke perhaps off the roster. While Alexander is talented and likely an upgrade over guys on the roster, it seems unlikely they would pull the trigger on him right now. Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store