Sunday, December 13, 2009

Feature story on Jeff Ulbrich being a "Pro's Pro"

About something that Bill Walsh said to him after a practice after he had been with the 49ers for a few years (Walsh drafted Ulbrich in the 3rd round in 2000), Jeff Ulbrich said:
"He came up to me on the sideline and let me know he was proud of the way I'd become a pro. I grew up around here and understood his legacy, so that's one of the highest compliments I've ever gotten in football." (HA)


About how his 10-year NFL career went well beyond his initial goal of lasting 3 seasons in the NFL, Ulbrich said:
"I didn't foresee people wanting me longer than that, to tell you the truth." (HA)


HA Note: "He is the longest tenured 49er, having been drafted a day ahead of long snapper Brian Jennings. The 49ers put up plaques on a wall at their facility to honor such 10-year vets, and Ulbrich earned his with a hardworking, teammate-assisting style."


About playing for 4 coaches with the 49ers and four personnel regimes, Ulbrich said:
"I didn't play to assemble a bunch of memories about my glory. I played because I loved to go on the field and play, and I loved the relationships I made around the league. I could give a (expletive) if I remember hitting Steven Jackson on the goal line." (HA)


HA Note: "He is not scared about losing such memories from a series of concussions in his career, the latest of which reduced his sleep to two hours a night. Brain trauma has become the NFL's hot-button topic this season, bringing with it a more thorough evaluation process. But Ulbrich evaluated his career enough in recent seasons to know a future in coaching was calling."


About having to retire after his latest concussion, Ulbrich said:
"I've recovered from every injury, so hopefully this is next in line." (HA)


HA Note: "That conga line: shoulder in 2000, ankle in 2001, knee in 2002, ankle and thigh in 2003, biceps in 2005, hamstring in 2006."


About lasting 10 years in the NFL, Ulbrich said:
"There's a certain pride I have regarding 10 years. Every year I thought I was going to get cut. Ask my wife. I had to play well every training camp, every preseason. I'm fortunate there were enough people around who appreciated the way I played." (HA)


About a 2004 game against the NY Jets where he was hospitalized a couple nights earlier with a stomach virus and chest pains, drinking 5 cups of coffee before kickoff to combat fatigue, where a goal-line tackle was not his highlight but instead a hit on center Kevin Mawai that was:
"awesome. It was in the middle of the field, nothing in particular on the play. Those were the kind of plays I loved." (HA)


HA Note: "—Rivalry games with the St. Louis Rams, whether it was making a goal-line tackle of Jackson or shutting down Marshall Faulk on pass patterns.

—Inheriting Ken Norton Jr.'s spot as the "plugger" linebacker and serving as a fixture in the starting lineup from 2001-04. His guts served him well as a special-teams ace in recent seasons.

—Tipping a pass that Julian Peterson intercepted in the January 2003 49ers' playoff victory over the New York Giants, Ulbrich's only postseason win.

—Ripping the Pro Bowl voting process in 2004 — and rightfully so — when fellow 49ers linebacker Derek Smith got snubbed. (Said Ulbrich: "You've got to be kidding me. It's whoever is on 'SportsCenter,' whoever the media wants to pump up. It's absolutely ridiculous.")

—Walking off the University of the Pacific practice field at 2001 training camp in full uniform and pushing a baby stroller (the first of three children he's had with his wife of now 10 years, Cristina).

—Framing a picture of him standing over Cowboys star Emmitt Smith after a tackle. "I asked him to sign it a couple years later when he was with the Arizona Cardinals, and he wouldn't do it," Ulbrich said.

—Twice winning the team's Matt Hazeltine Award for being the most courageous and inspirational defensive player."


About how he appreciated teammates such as Bryant Young, Ulbrich said:
"One of my favorite memories, and it's kind of bittersweet, was carrying B.Y. off the day he retired. That was pretty amazing." (HA)


http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20091213/BREAKING02/91213006/NFL++Former+Hawaii+player+Jeff+Ulbrich+made+himself+into+a+pro+s+pro+

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