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Subject Topic: Chris Henry
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Bobby Gobble
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Posted: December-18-2009 at 1:51am | IP Logged Quote Bobby Gobble  

I am a diehard Cincinncati Bengals fan and last night I got a phone call that wide receiver Chris Henry had been killed in a car accident. This is tragic especially since Chris was just coming around as a person, staying out of trouble, the Bengals enjoying there best season in several years, its close to christmas, and he leaves 3 young children behind too. Chris was 26 years old. R.I.P Chris

 

 



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Bobby Gobble
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Posted: December-18-2009 at 1:55am | IP Logged Quote Bobby Gobble  



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BugMan
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Posted: December-18-2009 at 7:06am | IP Logged Quote BugMan  

Bobby,

Long time fan here too, ever since they became a franchise back in the late 1960's.

I'm not sure that Chris Henry himself realized his level of talent. It appeared he was turning things around and becoming a better person...

...definitely a sad day in "WHO DEY"! land.

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Van_84
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Posted: December-18-2009 at 12:38pm | IP Logged Quote Van_84  

I'll have to agree with BugMan that Henry never realized his true potential. The young man had a huge upside, but personal problems kept him and trouble and left him suspended for a good portion of his career. As Bobby mentioned, Chris was beginning to turn his life around and working on getting things back on track.

I've always been a big Ohio sports fan, both the Bengals and the Browns. I wouldn't be surprised to see Chad Ochocinco break out the No.15 jersey, as I know that he and Chris were close.


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BugMan
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Posted: December-18-2009 at 3:17pm | IP Logged Quote BugMan  

Didn't know that you were such an Ohio sports fan Shawn.

If Chad puts on the jersey (why did I just think of Warren Sapp, LOL) AND changes his name back to Johnson, it would be a perfect day IMO, LOL!

Back before Cincinnati got the Bengals franchise, I watched the Browns religiously...you'd think after Brown left they'd take a step back, but not with Leroy Kelly and Bo Scott in the backfield. I remember Gary Collins was the tight end and Bill Nelson was the QB...Ole Bill Nelson...I think he invented the hand to the mouth and crotch routine. My dad had no answer when I asked him why he did that

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Bobby Gobble
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Posted: December-19-2009 at 12:17am | IP Logged Quote Bobby Gobble  

I agree that Chris never got to fullfil his true potential. Shawn I am also a Ohio sports fan but NOT Cleveland. I dont like the Browns at all. I am also a dedicated Cincy Reds fan to



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Posted: December-19-2009 at 9:09am | IP Logged Quote BugMan  

Ahhhhh the BIG RED MACHINE!!!! I was there when the Reds came back from 11 1/2 games to the Dodgers. In a double-header just before the All-Star break, they sent a little-known catcher into the game...down by 2 in the bottom of the 9th, he homered, the Reds won the game and the 2nd game of the double-header, and the rest is history...

...can anyone name that catcher? I believe he had 4 HR's in his first 7 at bats for the Reds. Crazy eh?

and oh BTW...I love, love, LOVE the Reds! (DUH)

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RW
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Posted: December-22-2009 at 9:50pm | IP Logged Quote RW  

Hey "BugMan," the Big Red Machine was always my late father's favorite baseball team, too. I liked the Reds, but since I was a young boy back in the 1960s, my favorite baseball team has always been the Baltimore Orioles.

"Big" Boog Powell, Bobby Grich, Mark Belanger, Brooks Robinson, Andy Etchebarren, Dave Johnson, Paul Blair, Frank Robinson, Jim Palmer, Dave McNally, Mike Cuellar, and other Orioles ... that was my team from many years ago.

The Orioles haven't been very good for several years now, but I still pull for the Birds. I've also always pulled for the Atlanta Braves, because they were the first team I ever got to see play in person and I guess I've probably seen around 25 Braves games over the years. I have family (on my dad's side) who live all around the north Georgia region (Gainesville, Cornelia, Clarksville, Toccoa, Mt. Airy), and during summer when my family would go down to Georgia visiting, we'd usually always attend a Braves game if they were playing at home.

Hey "BugMan," while I wasn't a big Cincinnatti Reds fan, they did have some players I really liked. I was a huge Johnny Bench fan, and I got to meet him back in late 1980s. He was very nice, talked with me like he knew me. I also liked Pete Rose (and yes, I believe he should be in the Hall of Fame), and I liked hard-throwing lefty Don Gullett. One of my good friends, his father and mother owned a tour-bus business here in the Tri-Cities, and one summer I rode up on a bus to catch a weekend Reds series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

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RW
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Posted: December-22-2009 at 9:54pm | IP Logged Quote RW  

Indeed, the passing of Chris Henry is a very sad situation. You truly hate it for his kids he leaves behind.

Even though Henry, it seemed every way he turned got into trouble, it appeared he was turning his life around for the better. I believe he'd let his anger/temper get the better of him on many occasions, and that led to trouble he'd get involved in. But his natural God-given athletic talent was unreal. He had great speed and really good hands to catch the ball.

Just 26 years old, you sure hate seeing someone that young pass away.
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http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news?slug=ap-henry-funeral&prov=ap&type=lgns

Fiancee of late Bengals’ Henry: He changed my life

WESTWEGO, La. (AP) — Chris Henry’s fiancee wept as she spoke about the late Cincinnati Bengals receiver Tuesday, saying that while she often got credit for helping him stay clear of trouble, he changed her life as well.

Henry, 26, was killed after he fell out of the bed of pickup truck driven by his fiancee, Loleini Tonga, during what police called a domestic dispute. Police are investigating, but no charges have been filed.

Tonga, wearing large sunglasses, paused to gather herself repeatedly as she spoke to hundreds of mourners at his funeral—including Henry’s teammates—who filled the grandstands at a suburban New Orleans events center. Tonga professed eternal love for Henry and promised to raise their children the way he would want.

“Can’t nobody know the way I’m feeling right now. No one can explain the relationship that me and Chris had. In six years of knowing each other—through hard times, good times—we loved each other very much,” she said. “People say I helped change his life. No. He changed mine.”

Mourners clapped briefly as Tonga slowly made her way back to her front row seat.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, Bengals players, coaches and members of the front office, as well as other NFL players including New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush, were among those who attended. The Bengals wore black, round buttons on their lapels with Henry’s No. 15. Many from Henry’s hometown of Belle Chasse wore red ribbons with a small photo of Henry that read: “In loving memory” and “Chris ‘Slim’ Henry.”

Speaking before the service, Goodell said Henry’s legacy would be a good person who made mistakes, then sought to better himself. That his life was cut short just as he was turning it around made Henry’s story so tragic, Goodell said.

“His future as a husband and a father were important to him,” Goodell said. “He was a young man that struggled, made some decisions that he regretted, but he put himself on the right path. And I’m proud of that. I’m proud of him.”

Cincinnati quarterback Carson Palmer and head coach Marvin Lewis delivered eulogies. Lewis said before the service that Henry touched a lot of people in his very short life.

“It’s a bright story and one that didn’t get to get all the way to the end of it, which is the most unfortunate part,” the coach said. “We’ll miss Chris’ sparkling smile.”

Palmer made some chuckle as he remembered Henry’s friendly demeanor.

“He walked past my locker every day to shake my hand as I said, ‘Good morning,’ and every day he said, ‘What’s up, cuz,”’ Palmer said. “We’ve all seen and experienced different sides of Chris, and with every side he showed us, we saw just how kind and gentle his heart was.”

Henry grew up in the small, suburban community Belle Chasse, not far from the funeral site. Shane Shelley, 26, was Henry’s high school quarterback when they made it to the state title game in 2001, their senior year.

“We really lost a good friend, a brother, one of my best friends,” said a watery-eyed Shelley. “It’s hard. We lost one of us. We’re going to miss him. We love him.”

Henry died Thursday, a day after he fell out of the truck in North Carolina, where he had been recovering from a broken forearm that ended his season. Police said Henry and his fiancee got into an argument at the Tonga family home and she drove away on a curvy residential street near downtown Charlotte. Henry jumped into the truck’s bed.

A witness has said he heard Henry say, “If you take off, I’m going to jump off the truck and kill myself.” A 911 caller told a dispatcher she saw a shirtless man wearing a cast “beating on the back of this truck window.”

Police said Tonga stopped to assist Henry when he fell about a half-mile from the home.

Tonga and Henry had two children together, Chris Jr. and Demarcus, and they also cared for Tonga’s two other children, Seini and Denalya.

Henry’s football career was marred by off-the-field problems, beginning when he played college ball at West Virginia. His troubles continued during a five-year NFL career. He was suspended five times for arrests ranging from weapons charges to drugs.

The Bengals said Henry had turned his life around this season and showed a renewed focus on his football career. A thigh injury slowed him early in the season, but he had 12 catches for 236 yards. His 19.7-yard average per catch led the team before he broke his left forearm during a win last month over Baltimore.

Henry dreamed of playing in the NFL, but after he was ejected from a game and suspended for another at West Virginia, the Bengals were the only team to bring him in for a pre-draft visit in 2005.

Selected in the third round, Henry played a vital role as a speedy, deep threat as Cincinnati reached the playoffs in his rookie season. But in the final month of the season he was arrested for marijuana possession.

“The Chris Henry I knew was a good quiet young man, wasn’t a troublemaker,” said Shelley, his high school friend. “That’s what everybody needs to know. He was a good man, a good father.”

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