
Be
The Best You Can Be!
About Rocky
Bleier
Rocky Bleier was not very big
and not very fast, but he was an incredibly determined athlete
when the Pittsburgh Steelers picked him late in the 1968 draft.
Before he could prove himself as a rookie, he was drafted
again—this time, for combat duty in Vietnam.
A few months later,
crippled by enemy rifle fire and grenade wounds in both legs,
Bleier faced his biggest challenge. He could barely walk...he
certainly couldn't run. To ever play professional football
seemed impossible.
But Rocky Bleier did
the impossible. The story of his agonizing two-year battle to
overcome his injuries and return to the Pittsburgh Steelers is
described in the book Fighting Back, and was recreated in the
1980 ABC-TV movie of the same name. The rest of his exciting
12-year career is history...how he pressed on to become one of
the Steelers' top leading ground-gainers...how he passed the
1,000-yard rushing mark in one season...how he contributed to
four Super Bowl victories...how he consistently made the big
play during important games with uncanny predictability.
Bleier's ability to
inspire effort and commitment from others continues. He has been
active in the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and the
International Special Olympics. As a board member of the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial Fund, he helped make possible the erection of
the Washington, DC, Memorial.
Bleier's special
qualities have been recognized by colleagues as well as others
who have honored him with awards too numerous to list in detail.
Among them are the Whizzer White Humanitarian Award, the Vince
Lombardi Award, and the Most Courageous Athlete of the Decade
Award. He was also chosen as one of the Ten Outstanding Young
Men of the Year by the U.S. Jaycees.
He is in demand as a
motivational speaker, motivating audiences in a wide variety of
organizations, corporations, and universities. Bleier sees
parallels between the challenges he faced in the past and the
challenges all business people face in today's crowded,
competitive marketplace.
His speech, "Be
the Best You Can Be," motivates audiences to keep on
striving for greater accomplishments. He employs a dynamic style
with real-life stories and brings it together with a warm,
self-reflective humor that audiences can relate.
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