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Hines Ward
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Hines Ward
Hines Ward in Super Bowl XL.
Pittsburgh Steelers ― No. 86
Wide receiver
Date of Birth: March 8, 1976 (1976-03-08) (age 31)
Place of Birth: Seoul, South Korea
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight: 205 lb (93 kg)
National Football League Debut
1998 for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Career Highlights and Awards
Pro Bowl (x4)
2002 Steelers co-MVP
2003 Steelers MVP
2005 Steelers co-MVP
Super Bowl XL MVP
Steelers Record for Career Receptions

Career History
College: Georgia
NFL Draft: 1998 / Round: 3 / Pick: 92
Teams:
Address: [go: up one dir, main page]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hines Ward
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Hines Ward
Hines Ward in Super Bowl XL.
Pittsburgh Steelers ― No. 86
Wide receiver
Date of Birth: March 8, 1976 (1976-03-08) (age 31)
Place of Birth: Seoul, South Korea
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight: 205 lb (93 kg)
National Football League Debut
1998 for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Career Highlights and Awards
Pro Bowl (x4)
2002 Steelers co-MVP
2003 Steelers MVP
2005 Steelers co-MVP
Super Bowl XL MVP
Steelers Record for Career Receptions

Career History
College: Georgia
NFL Draft: 1998 / Round: 3 / Pick: 92
Teams:

Pittsburgh Steelers (1998-Present)

Stats at NFL.com

Hines E. Ward, Jr. (Korean: ??? ??/Kim Hyun-ae) (born March 8, 1976 in Seoul, South Korea) is a football player who currently plays wide receiver for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers. He was voted MVP of Super Bowl XL. Born to a Korean mother and an African American father, he has become an advocate for ethnic minorities in South Korea.

Contents
1 High school years
2 College career
3 Professional career
4 Personal
4.1 Business and media enterprises
4.2 As a figure for social change
5 References
6 External links



[edit] High school years
At Forest Park High School in Forest Park, Georgia, Ward showcased his athletic skills as a quarterback and was a two-time Clayton County Offensive Player of the Year. He earned All-American honors from Super Prep, Blue Chip Illustrated & USA Today, as well as All-State & Super Southern Top 100 honors. Ward was also an excellent student and graduated with a 3.81 GPA [1]


[edit] College career
As a wide receiver for the University of Georgia Bulldogs (1995�1998), Ward's 144 career receptions for 1,965 yards placed him second in team history. He also played tailback and quarterback, and totaled 3,870 all-purpose yards, second only to Herschel Walker in Bulldogs history. In 1996, Hines had 52 receptions for 900 yards, and also ran 26 times for 170 yards. In 1997, Hines hauled in 55 passes and scored six TDs, getting All-SEC honors in the process.

When he came out of college it was discovered that Ward was missing an ACL in his right knee. [2] This may well have affected his position in the NFL draft. He received his bachelor's degree in consumer economics from UGA, where he became a member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity.


Ward attempts to break Sammy Knight's tackle during a game against the Kansas City Chiefs in 2006.

[edit] Professional career
Ward's versatility has served him well as a professional wide receiver. Since being drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round of the 1998 NFL Draft, he has earned three team Most Valuable Player (MVP) selections. He is also a five-time consecutive NFL Pro Bowl selection (2001�2005). He also had a streak of 4 consecutive 1,000 yard seasons, which likely could have been extended in the 2005 NFL season if he had not missed a game due to injury. In 2002, he set a Steelers franchise record for receptions (112), and touchdowns (12), and was named to his first of two consecutive All-NFL teams. He is widely considered the best blocking receiver in the NFL.

In 2005, Ward missed the first two weeks of training camp in a holdout for a contract extension that would increase his salary. Ward had considered holding out before camp in 2004, but had been persuaded by the Steelers that they could work out an extension during the year. Ward eventually showed up on August 15, 2005 and was on the sidelines for Pittsburgh's first preseason game against the Philadelphia Eagles that night, though he did not play in that game. On September 5, 2005, the Steelers announced that they had reached an agreement on a four-year contract extension with Ward.

On November 27, 2005, Ward became the Steelers all-time leading receiver with his 538th catch against the Browns on Sunday Night Football. The Steelers won 34-21.

Ward is also renowned as a terrific post-season receiver, accumulating 57 receptions, 761 yards, and 8 receiving touchdowns in 10 post-season appearances (including his Super Bowl XL appearance, in which he was named the MVP).

On February 5, 2006, Ward was named MVP in Super Bowl XL as the Pittsburgh Steelers won 21-10. Ward scored a 43 yard touchdown in the 4th quarter, thrown by fellow wide receiver Antwaan Randle El. Overall, Ward had five receptions for 123 yards, one TD and one rush for 18 yards.

Immediately following Super Bowl XL, Ward was videotaped for the latest "I'm Going to Disney World!" TV commercial, adding "...and I'm taking The Bus!" Ward and Steelers teammate Jerome "The Bus" Bettis appeared in a victory parade at the Magic Kingdom theme park on February 6 along with Emmitt Smith.


[edit] Personal
Ward resides in Atlanta, Georgia with his wife Simone and his son Jaden. On his right arm is a tattoo of his name in Hangul, the Korean alphabet, and below that a tattoo of Mickey Mouse carrying a football. [3] Ward is well known for flashing a nearly constant smile. [4] [5]


[edit] Business and media enterprises
Ward co-owns a bar in Pittsburgh's South Side called "The Locker Room". [6] The bar sustained serious water damage in February of 2007, due to flooding from a malfunctioning boiler, and it was closed for repairs until June of that year.[1] The bar received an insurance settlement of $500,000, which subsequently became an issue during a legal dispute between the bar's owners.[1]

On September 11, 2007, co-owner Thomas Lettieri withdrew the entirety of the bar's funds, approximately $19,000, from a corporate account, causing it to miss a large number of scheduled payments.[1] The company filed suit for the return of the money, and Lettieri subsequently justified his actions by claiming that the money was owed to him, also voicing the belief that the other co-owners, Ward and Kimberly Pitts, as well as Pitts's husband Korry Pitts, had falsified invoices and diverted company funds to their own bank accounts.[1] Company attorney Thomas Castello dismissed Lettieri's allegations as "baseless, ridiculous and unfounded," and the matter is currently before the court.[1]

In September 2006, Ward began hosting the "Hines Ward Show" on Pittsburgh CBS affiliate KDKA [7]


[edit] As a figure for social change
Ward's mother (Kim Young-hee ???) is Korean and his father (Hines Ward, Sr.) is African-American. In 2006, Ward became the first Korean-American to win the Super Bowl MVP award. This achievement threw him into the media spotlight in South Korea, where racially-mixed people often face discrimination.[2]

From April 3 through May 30, 2006, Ward returned to his birthplace of Seoul for the first time since his parents moved to the United States when he was one year old. Ward used his celebrity status to arrange "hope-sharing" meetings with multiracial Korean children and to encourage social and political reform. Ward cried when describing the discrimination he faced. At one hope-sharing meeting, he told a group of children, "If the country can accept me for who I am and accept me for being a Korean, I'm pretty sure that this country can change and accept you for who you are."[3] On his final day in Korea, he donated $1 million USD to create the Hines Ward Helping Hands Foundation, which the AP called "a foundation to help mixed-race children like himself in South Korea, where they have suffered discrimination."[4]


[edit] References
^ a b c d e Kerlik, Bobby. "Steelers' Ward, associate accused of taking money", The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, published September 19, 2007, accessed September 19, 2007.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Ward kicks off his new charity", Associated Press, May 30, 2006

[edit] External links
Official Website of Hines Ward
2006 "Hines Ward - Trip Of A Lifetime", Associated Press, January 31, 2006
"NFL Body Art", Sports Illustrated, January 10, 2006 (with photo of Mickey Mouse tattoo)
"Living the Dream: Hines Ward's return to Korea", Malcolm Beith, Newsweek (International Edition), March 27, 2006
"Ward spins biracial roots into blessing", Paul Wiseman, USA Today, April 9, 2006
Hines Ward page at:
NFL Players' Union
Pro Football Reference
Database Football
Preceded by
Deion Branch NFL Super Bowl MVPs
Super Bowl XL, 2006 Succeeded by
Peyton Manning
Preceded by
John Stallworth (537) Pittsburgh Steelers Career Receptions
November 27, 2005 - present, (657) Succeeded by
Current Record Holder




Persondata
NAME Ward, Hines E., Jr.
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American football player, wide receiver for the Pittsburgh Steelers
DATE OF BIRTH March 8, 1976
PLACE OF BIRTH Seoul, South Korea
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

Categories: 1976 births | American Conference Pro Bowl players | American football wide receivers | African American football players | Asian American sportspeople | Civil rights activists | Georgia Bulldogs football players | Korean Americans | Living people | Pittsburgh Steelers players | Super Bowl MVPs

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Discussion
Edit this page
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In other languages
Deutsch
Fran?ais
???
Suomi


This page was last modified 01:27, 22 October 2007.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia? is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

Privacy policy
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Address: [go: up one dir, main page]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hines Ward
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Hines Ward
Hines Ward in Super Bowl XL.
Pittsburgh Steelers ― No. 86
Wide receiver
Date of Birth: March 8, 1976 (1976-03-08) (age 31)
Place of Birth: Seoul, South Korea
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight: 205 lb (93 kg)
National Football League Debut
1998 for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Career Highlights and Awards
Pro Bowl (x4)
2002 Steelers co-MVP
2003 Steelers MVP
2005 Steelers co-MVP
Super Bowl XL MVP
Steelers Record for Career Receptions

Career History
College: Georgia
NFL Draft: 1998 / Round: 3 / Pick: 92
Teams:

Pittsburgh Steelers (1998-Present)

Stats at NFL.com

Hines E. Ward, Jr. (Korean: ??? ??/Kim Hyun-ae) (born March 8, 1976 in Seoul, South Korea) is a football player who currently plays wide receiver for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers. He was voted MVP of Super Bowl XL. Born to a Korean mother and an African American father, he has become an advocate for ethnic minorities in South Korea.

Contents
1 High school years
2 College career
3 Professional career
4 Personal
4.1 Business and media enterprises
4.2 As a figure for social change
5 References
6 External links



[edit] High school years
At Forest Park High School in Forest Park, Georgia, Ward showcased his athletic skills as a quarterback and was a two-time Clayton County Offensive Player of the Year. He earned All-American honors from Super Prep, Blue Chip Illustrated & USA Today, as well as All-State & Super Southern Top 100 honors. Ward was also an excellent student and graduated with a 3.81 GPA [1]


[edit] College career
As a wide receiver for the University of Georgia Bulldogs (1995�1998), Ward's 144 career receptions for 1,965 yards placed him second in team history. He also played tailback and quarterback, and totaled 3,870 all-purpose yards, second only to Herschel Walker in Bulldogs history. In 1996, Hines had 52 receptions for 900 yards, and also ran 26 times for 170 yards. In 1997, Hines hauled in 55 passes and scored six TDs, getting All-SEC honors in the process.

When he came out of college it was discovered that Ward was missing an ACL in his right knee. [2] This may well have affected his position in the NFL draft. He received his bachelor's degree in consumer economics from UGA, where he became a member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity.


Ward attempts to break Sammy Knight's tackle during a game against the Kansas City Chiefs in 2006.

[edit] Professional career
Ward's versatility has served him well as a professional wide receiver. Since being drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round of the 1998 NFL Draft, he has earned three team Most Valuable Player (MVP) selections. He is also a five-time consecutive NFL Pro Bowl selection (2001�2005). He also had a streak of 4 consecutive 1,000 yard seasons, which likely could have been extended in the 2005 NFL season if he had not missed a game due to injury. In 2002, he set a Steelers franchise record for receptions (112), and touchdowns (12), and was named to his first of two consecutive All-NFL teams. He is widely considered the best blocking receiver in the NFL.

In 2005, Ward missed the first two weeks of training camp in a holdout for a contract extension that would increase his salary. Ward had considered holding out before camp in 2004, but had been persuaded by the Steelers that they could work out an extension during the year. Ward eventually showed up on August 15, 2005 and was on the sidelines for Pittsburgh's first preseason game against the Philadelphia Eagles that night, though he did not play in that game. On September 5, 2005, the Steelers announced that they had reached an agreement on a four-year contract extension with Ward.

On November 27, 2005, Ward became the Steelers all-time leading receiver with his 538th catch against the Browns on Sunday Night Football. The Steelers won 34-21.

Ward is also renowned as a terrific post-season receiver, accumulating 57 receptions, 761 yards, and 8 receiving touchdowns in 10 post-season appearances (including his Super Bowl XL appearance, in which he was named the MVP).

On February 5, 2006, Ward was named MVP in Super Bowl XL as the Pittsburgh Steelers won 21-10. Ward scored a 43 yard touchdown in the 4th quarter, thrown by fellow wide receiver Antwaan Randle El. Overall, Ward had five receptions for 123 yards, one TD and one rush for 18 yards.

Immediately following Super Bowl XL, Ward was videotaped for the latest "I'm Going to Disney World!" TV commercial, adding "...and I'm taking The Bus!" Ward and Steelers teammate Jerome "The Bus" Bettis appeared in a victory parade at the Magic Kingdom theme park on February 6 along with Emmitt Smith.


[edit] Personal
Ward resides in Atlanta, Georgia with his wife Simone and his son Jaden. On his right arm is a tattoo of his name in Hangul, the Korean alphabet, and below that a tattoo of Mickey Mouse carrying a football. [3] Ward is well known for flashing a nearly constant smile. [4] [5]


[edit] Business and media enterprises
Ward co-owns a bar in Pittsburgh's South Side called "The Locker Room". [6] The bar sustained serious water damage in February of 2007, due to flooding from a malfunctioning boiler, and it was closed for repairs until June of that year.[1] The bar received an insurance settlement of $500,000, which subsequently became an issue during a legal dispute between the bar's owners.[1]

On September 11, 2007, co-owner Thomas Lettieri withdrew the entirety of the bar's funds, approximately $19,000, from a corporate account, causing it to miss a large number of scheduled payments.[1] The company filed suit for the return of the money, and Lettieri subsequently justified his actions by claiming that the money was owed to him, also voicing the belief that the other co-owners, Ward and Kimberly Pitts, as well as Pitts's husband Korry Pitts, had falsified invoices and diverted company funds to their own bank accounts.[1] Company attorney Thomas Castello dismissed Lettieri's allegations as "baseless, ridiculous and unfounded," and the matter is currently before the court.[1]

In September 2006, Ward began hosting the "Hines Ward Show" on Pittsburgh CBS affiliate KDKA [7]


[edit] As a figure for social change
Ward's mother (Kim Young-hee ???) is Korean and his father (Hines Ward, Sr.) is African-American. In 2006, Ward became the first Korean-American to win the Super Bowl MVP award. This achievement threw him into the media spotlight in South Korea, where racially-mixed people often face discrimination.[2]

From April 3 through May 30, 2006, Ward returned to his birthplace of Seoul for the first time since his parents moved to the United States when he was one year old. Ward used his celebrity status to arrange "hope-sharing" meetings with multiracial Korean children and to encourage social and political reform. Ward cried when describing the discrimination he faced. At one hope-sharing meeting, he told a group of children, "If the country can accept me for who I am and accept me for being a Korean, I'm pretty sure that this country can change and accept you for who you are."[3] On his final day in Korea, he donated $1 million USD to create the Hines Ward Helping Hands Foundation, which the AP called "a foundation to help mixed-race children like himself in South Korea, where they have suffered discrimination."[4]


[edit] References
^ a b c d e Kerlik, Bobby. "Steelers' Ward, associate accused of taking money", The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, published September 19, 2007, accessed September 19, 2007.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Ward kicks off his new charity", Associated Press, May 30, 2006

[edit] External links
Official Website of Hines Ward
2006 "Hines Ward - Trip Of A Lifetime", Associated Press, January 31, 2006
"NFL Body Art", Sports Illustrated, January 10, 2006 (with photo of Mickey Mouse tattoo)
"Living the Dream: Hines Ward's return to Korea", Malcolm Beith, Newsweek (International Edition), March 27, 2006
"Ward spins biracial roots into blessing", Paul Wiseman, USA Today, April 9, 2006
Hines Ward page at:
NFL Players' Union
Pro Football Reference
Database Football
Preceded by
Deion Branch NFL Super Bowl MVPs
Super Bowl XL, 2006 Succeeded by
Peyton Manning
Preceded by
John Stallworth (537) Pittsburgh Steelers Career Receptions
November 27, 2005 - present, (657) Succeeded by
Current Record Holder




Persondata
NAME Ward, Hines E., Jr.
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American football player, wide receiver for the Pittsburgh Steelers
DATE OF BIRTH March 8, 1976
PLACE OF BIRTH Seoul, South Korea
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

Categories: 1976 births | American Conference Pro Bowl players | American football wide receivers | African American football players | Asian American sportspeople | Civil rights activists | Georgia Bulldogs football players | Korean Americans | Living people | Pittsburgh Steelers players | Super Bowl MVPs

Views
Article
Discussion
Edit this page
History
Personal tools
Sign in / create account
Navigation
Main page
Contents
Featured content
Current events
Random article
interaction
About Wikipedia
Community portal
Recent changes
Contact Wikipedia
Donate to Wikipedia
Help
Search


Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link
Cite this article
In other languages
Deutsch
Fran?ais
???
Suomi


This page was last modified 01:27, 22 October 2007.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia? is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

Privacy policy
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Address: [go: up one dir, main page]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hines Ward
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Hines Ward
Hines Ward in Super Bowl XL.
Pittsburgh Steelers ― No. 86
Wide receiver
Date of Birth: March 8, 1976 (1976-03-08) (age 31)
Place of Birth: Seoul, South Korea
Height: 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) Weight: 205 lb (93 kg)
National Football League Debut
1998 for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Career Highlights and Awards
Pro Bowl (x4)
2002 Steelers co-MVP
2003 Steelers MVP
2005 Steelers co-MVP
Super Bowl XL MVP
Steelers Record for Career Receptions

Career History
College: Georgia
NFL Draft: 1998 / Round: 3 / Pick: 92
Teams:

Pittsburgh Steelers (1998-Present)

Stats at NFL.com

Hines E. Ward, Jr. (Korean: ??? ??/Kim Hyun-ae) (born March 8, 1976 in Seoul, South Korea) is a football player who currently plays wide receiver for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers. He was voted MVP of Super Bowl XL. Born to a Korean mother and an African American father, he has become an advocate for ethnic minorities in South Korea.

Contents
1 High school years
2 College career
3 Professional career
4 Personal
4.1 Business and media enterprises
4.2 As a figure for social change
5 References
6 External links



[edit] High school years
At Forest Park High School in Forest Park, Georgia, Ward showcased his athletic skills as a quarterback and was a two-time Clayton County Offensive Player of the Year. He earned All-American honors from Super Prep, Blue Chip Illustrated & USA Today, as well as All-State & Super Southern Top 100 honors. Ward was also an excellent student and graduated with a 3.81 GPA [1]


[edit] College career
As a wide receiver for the University of Georgia Bulldogs (1995�1998), Ward's 144 career receptions for 1,965 yards placed him second in team history. He also played tailback and quarterback, and totaled 3,870 all-purpose yards, second only to Herschel Walker in Bulldogs history. In 1996, Hines had 52 receptions for 900 yards, and also ran 26 times for 170 yards. In 1997, Hines hauled in 55 passes and scored six TDs, getting All-SEC honors in the process.

When he came out of college it was discovered that Ward was missing an ACL in his right knee. [2] This may well have affected his position in the NFL draft. He received his bachelor's degree in consumer economics from UGA, where he became a member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity.


Ward attempts to break Sammy Knight's tackle during a game against the Kansas City Chiefs in 2006.

[edit] Professional career
Ward's versatility has served him well as a professional wide receiver. Since being drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round of the 1998 NFL Draft, he has earned three team Most Valuable Player (MVP) selections. He is also a five-time consecutive NFL Pro Bowl selection (2001�2005). He also had a streak of 4 consecutive 1,000 yard seasons, which likely could have been extended in the 2005 NFL season if he had not missed a game due to injury. In 2002, he set a Steelers franchise record for receptions (112), and touchdowns (12), and was named to his first of two consecutive All-NFL teams. He is widely considered the best blocking receiver in the NFL.

In 2005, Ward missed the first two weeks of training camp in a holdout for a contract extension that would increase his salary. Ward had considered holding out before camp in 2004, but had been persuaded by the Steelers that they could work out an extension during the year. Ward eventually showed up on August 15, 2005 and was on the sidelines for Pittsburgh's first preseason game against the Philadelphia Eagles that night, though he did not play in that game. On September 5, 2005, the Steelers announced that they had reached an agreement on a four-year contract extension with Ward.

On November 27, 2005, Ward became the Steelers all-time leading receiver with his 538th catch against the Browns on Sunday Night Football. The Steelers won 34-21.

Ward is also renowned as a terrific post-season receiver, accumulating 57 receptions, 761 yards, and 8 receiving touchdowns in 10 post-season appearances (including his Super Bowl XL appearance, in which he was named the MVP).

On February 5, 2006, Ward was named MVP in Super Bowl XL as the Pittsburgh Steelers won 21-10. Ward scored a 43 yard touchdown in the 4th quarter, thrown by fellow wide receiver Antwaan Randle El. Overall, Ward had five receptions for 123 yards, one TD and one rush for 18 yards.

Immediately following Super Bowl XL, Ward was videotaped for the latest "I'm Going to Disney World!" TV commercial, adding "...and I'm taking The Bus!" Ward and Steelers teammate Jerome "The Bus" Bettis appeared in a victory parade at the Magic Kingdom theme park on February 6 along with Emmitt Smith.


[edit] Personal
Ward resides in Atlanta, Georgia with his wife Simone and his son Jaden. On his right arm is a tattoo of his name in Hangul, the Korean alphabet, and below that a tattoo of Mickey Mouse carrying a football. [3] Ward is well known for flashing a nearly constant smile. [4] [5]


[edit] Business and media enterprises
Ward co-owns a bar in Pittsburgh's South Side called "The Locker Room". [6] The bar sustained serious water damage in February of 2007, due to flooding from a malfunctioning boiler, and it was closed for repairs until June of that year.[1] The bar received an insurance settlement of $500,000, which subsequently became an issue during a legal dispute between the bar's owners.[1]

On September 11, 2007, co-owner Thomas Lettieri withdrew the entirety of the bar's funds, approximately $19,000, from a corporate account, causing it to miss a large number of scheduled payments.[1] The company filed suit for the return of the money, and Lettieri subsequently justified his actions by claiming that the money was owed to him, also voicing the belief that the other co-owners, Ward and Kimberly Pitts, as well as Pitts's husband Korry Pitts, had falsified invoices and diverted company funds to their own bank accounts.[1] Company attorney Thomas Castello dismissed Lettieri's allegations as "baseless, ridiculous and unfounded," and the matter is currently before the court.[1]

In September 2006, Ward began hosting the "Hines Ward Show" on Pittsburgh CBS affiliate KDKA [7]


[edit] As a figure for social change
Ward's mother (Kim Young-hee ???) is Korean and his father (Hines Ward, Sr.) is African-American. In 2006, Ward became the first Korean-American to win the Super Bowl MVP award. This achievement threw him into the media spotlight in South Korea, where racially-mixed people often face discrimination.[2]

From April 3 through May 30, 2006, Ward returned to his birthplace of Seoul for the first time since his parents moved to the United States when he was one year old. Ward used his celebrity status to arrange "hope-sharing" meetings with multiracial Korean children and to encourage social and political reform. Ward cried when describing the discrimination he faced. At one hope-sharing meeting, he told a group of children, "If the country can accept me for who I am and accept me for being a Korean, I'm pretty sure that this country can change and accept you for who you are."[3] On his final day in Korea, he donated $1 million USD to create the Hines Ward Helping Hands Foundation, which the AP called "a foundation to help mixed-race children like himself in South Korea, where they have suffered discrimination."[4]


[edit] References
^ a b c d e Kerlik, Bobby. "Steelers' Ward, associate accused of taking money", The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, published September 19, 2007, accessed September 19, 2007.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Ward kicks off his new charity", Associated Press, May 30, 2006

[edit] External links
Official Website of Hines Ward
2006 "Hines Ward - Trip Of A Lifetime", Associated Press, January 31, 2006
"NFL Body Art", Sports Illustrated, January 10, 2006 (with photo of Mickey Mouse tattoo)
"Living the Dream: Hines Ward's return to Korea", Malcolm Beith, Newsweek (International Edition), March 27, 2006
"Ward spins biracial roots into blessing", Paul Wiseman, USA Today, April 9, 2006
Hines Ward page at:
NFL Players' Union
Pro Football Reference
Database Football
Preceded by
Deion Branch NFL Super Bowl MVPs
Super Bowl XL, 2006 Succeeded by
Peyton Manning
Preceded by
John Stallworth (537) Pittsburgh Steelers Career Receptions
November 27, 2005 - present, (657) Succeeded by
Current Record Holder




Persondata
NAME Ward, Hines E., Jr.
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American football player, wide receiver for the Pittsburgh Steelers
DATE OF BIRTH March 8, 1976
PLACE OF BIRTH Seoul, South Korea
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

Categories: 1976 births | American Conference Pro Bowl players | American football wide receivers | African American football players | Asian American sportspeople | Civil rights activists | Georgia Bulldogs football players | Korean Americans | Living people | Pittsburgh Steelers players | Super Bowl MVPs

Views
Article
Discussion
Edit this page
History
Personal tools
Sign in / create account
Navigation
Main page
Contents
Featured content
Current events
Random article
interaction
About Wikipedia
Community portal
Recent changes
Contact Wikipedia
Donate to Wikipedia
Help
Search


Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link
Cite this article
In other languages
Deutsch
Fran?ais
???
Suomi


This page was last modified 01:27, 22 October 2007.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia? is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

Privacy policy
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers

Pittsburgh Steelers (1998-Present)

Stats at NFL.com

Hines E. Ward, Jr. (Korean: ??? ??/Kim Hyun-ae) (born March 8, 1976 in Seoul, South Korea) is a football player who currently plays wide receiver for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers. He was voted MVP of Super Bowl XL. Born to a Korean mother and an African American father, he has become an advocate for ethnic minorities in South Korea.

Contents
1 High school years
2 College career
3 Professional career
4 Personal
4.1 Business and media enterprises
4.2 As a figure for social change
5 References
6 External links



[edit] High school years
At Forest Park High School in Forest Park, Georgia, Ward showcased his athletic skills as a quarterback and was a two-time Clayton County Offensive Player of the Year. He earned All-American honors from Super Prep, Blue Chip Illustrated & USA Today, as well as All-State & Super Southern Top 100 honors. Ward was also an excellent student and graduated with a 3.81 GPA [1]


[edit] College career
As a wide receiver for the University of Georgia Bulldogs (1995�1998), Ward's 144 career receptions for 1,965 yards placed him second in team history. He also played tailback and quarterback, and totaled 3,870 all-purpose yards, second only to Herschel Walker in Bulldogs history. In 1996, Hines had 52 receptions for 900 yards, and also ran 26 times for 170 yards. In 1997, Hines hauled in 55 passes and scored six TDs, getting All-SEC honors in the process.

When he came out of college it was discovered that Ward was missing an ACL in his right knee. [2] This may well have affected his position in the NFL draft. He received his bachelor's degree in consumer economics from UGA, where he became a member of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity.


Ward attempts to break Sammy Knight's tackle during a game against the Kansas City Chiefs in 2006.

[edit] Professional career
Ward's versatility has served him well as a professional wide receiver. Since being drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the third round of the 1998 NFL Draft, he has earned three team Most Valuable Player (MVP) selections. He is also a five-time consecutive NFL Pro Bowl selection (2001�2005). He also had a streak of 4 consecutive 1,000 yard seasons, which likely could have been extended in the 2005 NFL season if he had not missed a game due to injury. In 2002, he set a Steelers franchise record for receptions (112), and touchdowns (12), and was named to his first of two consecutive All-NFL teams. He is widely considered the best blocking receiver in the NFL.

In 2005, Ward missed the first two weeks of training camp in a holdout for a contract extension that would increase his salary. Ward had considered holding out before camp in 2004, but had been persuaded by the Steelers that they could work out an extension during the year. Ward eventually showed up on August 15, 2005 and was on the sidelines for Pittsburgh's first preseason game against the Philadelphia Eagles that night, though he did not play in that game. On September 5, 2005, the Steelers announced that they had reached an agreement on a four-year contract extension with Ward.

On November 27, 2005, Ward became the Steelers all-time leading receiver with his 538th catch against the Browns on Sunday Night Football. The Steelers won 34-21.

Ward is also renowned as a terrific post-season receiver, accumulating 57 receptions, 761 yards, and 8 receiving touchdowns in 10 post-season appearances (including his Super Bowl XL appearance, in which he was named the MVP).

On February 5, 2006, Ward was named MVP in Super Bowl XL as the Pittsburgh Steelers won 21-10. Ward scored a 43 yard touchdown in the 4th quarter, thrown by fellow wide receiver Antwaan Randle El. Overall, Ward had five receptions for 123 yards, one TD and one rush for 18 yards.

Immediately following Super Bowl XL, Ward was videotaped for the latest "I'm Going to Disney World!" TV commercial, adding "...and I'm taking The Bus!" Ward and Steelers teammate Jerome "The Bus" Bettis appeared in a victory parade at the Magic Kingdom theme park on February 6 along with Emmitt Smith.


[edit] Personal
Ward resides in Atlanta, Georgia with his wife Simone and his son Jaden. On his right arm is a tattoo of his name in Hangul, the Korean alphabet, and below that a tattoo of Mickey Mouse carrying a football. [3] Ward is well known for flashing a nearly constant smile. [4] [5]


[edit] Business and media enterprises
Ward co-owns a bar in Pittsburgh's South Side called "The Locker Room". [6] The bar sustained serious water damage in February of 2007, due to flooding from a malfunctioning boiler, and it was closed for repairs until June of that year.[1] The bar received an insurance settlement of $500,000, which subsequently became an issue during a legal dispute between the bar's owners.[1]

On September 11, 2007, co-owner Thomas Lettieri withdrew the entirety of the bar's funds, approximately $19,000, from a corporate account, causing it to miss a large number of scheduled payments.[1] The company filed suit for the return of the money, and Lettieri subsequently justified his actions by claiming that the money was owed to him, also voicing the belief that the other co-owners, Ward and Kimberly Pitts, as well as Pitts's husband Korry Pitts, had falsified invoices and diverted company funds to their own bank accounts.[1] Company attorney Thomas Castello dismissed Lettieri's allegations as "baseless, ridiculous and unfounded," and the matter is currently before the court.[1]

In September 2006, Ward began hosting the "Hines Ward Show" on Pittsburgh CBS affiliate KDKA [7]


[edit] As a figure for social change
Ward's mother (Kim Young-hee ???) is Korean and his father (Hines Ward, Sr.) is African-American. In 2006, Ward became the first Korean-American to win the Super Bowl MVP award. This achievement threw him into the media spotlight in South Korea, where racially-mixed people often face discrimination.[2]

From April 3 through May 30, 2006, Ward returned to his birthplace of Seoul for the first time since his parents moved to the United States when he was one year old. Ward used his celebrity status to arrange "hope-sharing" meetings with multiracial Korean children and to encourage social and political reform. Ward cried when describing the discrimination he faced. At one hope-sharing meeting, he told a group of children, "If the country can accept me for who I am and accept me for being a Korean, I'm pretty sure that this country can change and accept you for who you are."[3] On his final day in Korea, he donated $1 million USD to create the Hines Ward Helping Hands Foundation, which the AP called "a foundation to help mixed-race children like himself in South Korea, where they have suffered discrimination."[4]


[edit] References
^ a b c d e Kerlik, Bobby. "Steelers' Ward, associate accused of taking money", The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, published September 19, 2007, accessed September 19, 2007.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Hines Ward scores big for social change", Chuck Finder, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Sunday, April 09, 2006.
^ "Ward kicks off his new charity", Associated Press, May 30, 2006

[edit] External links
Official Website of Hines Ward
2006 "Hines Ward - Trip Of A Lifetime", Associated Press, January 31, 2006
"NFL Body Art", Sports Illustrated, January 10, 2006 (with photo of Mickey Mouse tattoo)
"Living the Dream: Hines Ward's return to Korea", Malcolm Beith, Newsweek (International Edition), March 27, 2006
"Ward spins biracial roots into blessing", Paul Wiseman, USA Today, April 9, 2006
Hines Ward page at:
NFL Players' Union
Pro Football Reference
Database Football
Preceded by
Deion Branch NFL Super Bowl MVPs
Super Bowl XL, 2006 Succeeded by
Peyton Manning
Preceded by
John Stallworth (537) Pittsburgh Steelers Career Receptions
November 27, 2005 - present, (657) Succeeded by
Current Record Holder




Persondata
NAME Ward, Hines E., Jr.
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION American football player, wide receiver for the Pittsburgh Steelers
DATE OF BIRTH March 8, 1976
PLACE OF BIRTH Seoul, South Korea
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

Categories: 1976 births | American Conference Pro Bowl players | American football wide receivers | African American football players | Asian American sportspeople | Civil rights activists | Georgia Bulldogs football players | Korean Americans | Living people | Pittsburgh Steelers players | Super Bowl MVPs

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This page was last modified 01:27, 22 October 2007.
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