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Trophy talk

Raiders want to win title for their late teammate

Click here for more on this story
Posted: Wednesday January 10, 2001 2:08 AM

  Eric Turner The Raiders have established an award in Turner's memory, given annually to the team's best defensive player. Otto Greule Jr./Allsport

ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) -- Eric Turner was a friend and a mentor as well as a teammate to Oakland Raiders cornerback Charles Woodson.

Turner died of abdominal cancer in the offseason, and memories of him are flooding back to Woodson now that the Raiders are playing in the AFC title game against the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday.

Turner should be there, Woodson said.

"It was all love, all the time. Me and T, man. It was hard," Woodson said. "I'm going to try and go out there and get it done for him."

Woodson recalled how the veteran safety showed him around the San Francisco Bay Area, his way around the team and the business of football.

When Woodson headed to the showers without shower shoes, Turner made fun of him. He handed Woodson a pair of his.

"He said, `Hey, you can't go into the shower without shoes. Here's mine.'" Woodson said, looking at his shower-shoed feet. "As a matter of fact, it's these shoes right here, he gave me."

Turner's locker remains at the Raiders' training facility in Alameda. His helmet is still there, as is a framed photo.

Originally drafted by the Cleveland Browns with the second overall pick in the 1991 draft, Turner signed with the Raiders in 1997 after making his second Pro Bowl in 1996 with the Baltimore Ravens.

Turner led the Raiders with 111 tackles in 1997, but was limited to six games in 1998 and 10 games in 1999.

Woodson, a Heisman Trophy winner out of Michigan, was a rookie in 1998. Turner quickly became his mentor.

"This is the NFL. It's a different level. But it's still football -- so just go out and play the game like you know how to play it," Woodson said Turner once told him.

Woodson was in Mexico when he got the phone call last May. Turner had died at age 31.

Turner kept his illness quiet, not even mentioning it to Woodson the last time they talked -- a couple of months before his death.

"He kind of kept that private," Woodson said. "I talked to him about a month before, and he just didn't sound like himself. He sounded kind of drained.

"But I never really knew what was going on. Then it happened, and reality set in that it was something more serious than we all knew about."

Woodson never got to say goodbye.

The Raiders started an annual award this season in Turner's name for the team's best defensive player, as determined by the players. Cornerback Eric Allen, who reinvigorated his career with three interception returns for touchdowns, was the first recipient.

"[I made] a pact with myself after the funeral saying I'm going to play to my utmost and always keep him in mind and try and do things that would make him proud," Allen said. "We talked a lot during our years together, talked about the backbone of the team, and about doing things the right way."

And the players dedicated their season to their former teammate. He'll be on their mind Sunday.

"The people who knew Eric know what he's left here, and the kind of mark he's left on this team," center Barret Robbins said. "We certainly miss him a lot. We really want to get that trophy for him."


 
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