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NFL Bullying Sees Intellectuals as Prey, Ex-Patriots Tackle Says
By Eben Novy-Williams 
Bloomberg News
Nov 6, 2013 

Brian Holloway said he was one week into his National Football League career 
when he learned that his Stanford University education and academic interests 
would make him a target.

To cope with verbal abuse from his New England Patriots teammates that often 
took a racial turn, Holloway set aside his true character to become a better, 
more enraged football player, he said. It was a person he didn’t particularly 
like.

“I tapped into a dark side,” Holloway, 54, said yesterday in a telephone 
interview. “The command to contain your anger and aggression, that dam broke 
for me. And as an intellectual, it feels extremely uncomfortable allowing that 
side of human nature to come out.”

His experience from 1981 has made Holloway an admirer of Miami Dolphins 
offensive lineman Jonathan Martin, 24, who showed a different response to 
bullying when he walked out of the team’s practice facility last week. After 
Martin’s representatives told the Dolphins of alleged workplace misconduct, 
Miami suspended offensive lineman Richie Incognito and asked the NFL to conduct 
a review of the workplace.

Martin’s departure and Incognito’s suspension show that bullying can occur even 
in an environment where 300-pound men are paid millions of dollars to impose 
their physical strength, sports psychologists said.

“His status as a football player and adept athlete does not make him immune to 
needing treatment to overcome the trauma of abuse,” Leah Lagos, a New 
York-based sports psychologist, said in a telephone interview. “He’s human.”

Holloway said he was fined about $1,500 during his rookie season with the 
Patriots for reading a legal textbook that the team said was a distraction. He 
was also ridiculed by teammates for typing LSAT notes during plane rides.

The offensive tackle, who listened to opera for pregame inspiration, said there 
is an alliance that forms in locker rooms to ostracize players with elite 
academic backgrounds or eccentric interests.

“When they sense an intellectual is present, they will see that as prey,” 
Holloway said.

To avoid becoming the hunted, Holloway said he made a conscious change.

“I discovered that I could use that anger and that aggression on the field,” he 
said. “What was difficult was saying to myself, ‘If this is how and who I need 
to be in this business, should this business really be part of my future?’”

The Patriots are now under different ownership. Spokesman Stacey James did not 
respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

Isaiah Kacyvenski, a former Harvard linebacker who played seven NFL seasons, 
said he also can relate to Martin through events from his own pro career.

The 36-year-old, who played for the Seattle Seahawks and St. Louis Rams, said 
he worked to avoid confirming a “preconceived notion of what a Harvard grad 
was,” and often angered teammates by raising his hand during meetings to ask 
questions about the way things were being done.

“In no way should a Stanford or Harvard degree get held against you,” said 
Kacyvenski, who now directs sports business at the biomedical technology 
company MC10 Inc. in Cambridge,Massachusetts.

The son of two Harvard graduates, Martin left the Dolphins practice facility on 
Oct. 28 after other offensive linemen stood up and walked away from the lunch 
table when he sat down with his food, according NFL.com.

ESPN reported that Incognito, 30, asked Martin to contribute financially last 
summer to an unofficial team trip to Las Vegas that Martin did not attend. The 
network also said the Dolphins and the NFL have a copy of a voice message from 
April in which Incognito used a racial slur and threatened Martin’s life.

David Dunn, Incognito’s agent, has not responded to multiple e-mails and a 
message left at his office seeking comment on the ESPN reports.

The league has not commented outside of saying it is reviewing the matter. The 
NFL players’ union said it will insist on a fair investigation for all involved.

The reaction around the NFL has varied. New York Giants safety Antrel Rolle 
told WFAN, a New York sports radio station, that Martin could have done more to 
prevent the bullying.

“Was Richie Incognito wrong? Absolutely, but I think the other guy is just as 
much to blame as Richie, because he allowed it to happen,” he said. “At this 
level, you’re a man. You’re not a little boy. You’re not a freshman in college.”

Other former players, such as ESPN analysts Tim Hasselbeck and Cris Carter, 
have said that while hazing is a part of any locker room, the alleged 
harassment in Miami went too far.

“What they must understand is that hazing, while often portrayed as harmless 
and a rite of passage, creates a culture and hierarchical system of power that 
promotes bullying,” Greg Dale, a professor of sports psychology and sports 
ethics at Duke University, said in a telephone interview.

Incognito withdrew from the University of Nebraska in 2004 after being kicked 
off the football team for repeated violations of team rules. The Omaha 
World-Herald reported that Incognito, who had several fights with teammates and 
opposing players while at Nebraska, in 2003 received anger management treatment 
at a psychiatric and behavioral hospital in Topeka,Kansas.

After leaving Nebraska, Incognito transferred to the University of Oregon and 
was kicked off the team after one week. Former Indianapolis Colts General 
Manager Bill Polian and former Patriots executive Scott Pioli said this week 
that they took Incognito off their draft boards due to character concerns.

Martin’s decision to walk away enhances the power of his message, according to 
Dan Lebowitz, executive director of the Center for the Study of Sport in 
Society at Northeastern University in Boston. The group uses sports as a way to 
begin conversations about social justice, and three years ago assisted the NFL 
with workplace conduct training.

“Had Martin simply started a fight, a lot of people would have dismissed it as 
just a locker room isolated incident,” Lebowitz said in a telephone interview. 
“This is a watershed moment where someone who has made his living in what is 
considered a sports battlefield, as a gladiator, is saying that emotional abuse 
matters.”

Holloway now heads a brand consultant company and said he has worked with more 
than 350 Fortune 500 companies, including Apple Inc. (AAPL), Wal-Mart Stores 
Inc. (WMT) and PepsiCo Inc. (PEP) He was in the news recently after his New 
York home was vandalized by partying teenagers.

Holloway said that while he often contemplated quitting the NFL, he now regrets 
making the choice to keep playing with added aggression. He said the transition 
from football player to husband and father was difficult after his final season 
in 1988.

“Jonathan is not allowing that side of his humanity to come out because he has 
more class and character than I had,” Holloway said. “He’s going through a very 
important dialogue with himself. It has nothing to do with soft or weak, it has 
everything to do with how he wants his future to be defined.”
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