Atlanta, GA
How South Korean kicker overcame a language barrier to thrive in the NFL
Now, Koo is the second-highest paid kicker within the league having signed a five-year contract extension with the Atlanta Falcons earlier this 12 months.
Nevertheless it hasn’t all been clean crusing for the South Korean native.
Regardless of a collegiate profession with Georgia Southern through which he transformed a crew report 88.6% of his subject aim makes an attempt and was a finalist for the Lou Groza Award for the nation’s finest kicker, Koo went undrafted in 2017 and signed a free agent contract with the Los Angeles Chargers shortly after.
He rapidly impressed, successful the beginning function in preseason over incumbent kicker Josh Lambo, however a long-term place within the crew proved elusive.
It was this second early in his profession that taught the then-23-year-old rookie about life within the NFL.
“It taught me that is by no means over. You gotta compete each single day. You gotta produce; it is a manufacturing enterprise. That is what the pinnacle coach informed me after I was getting launched. That was an enormous studying expertise for me.”
With nowhere else to go, Koo was compelled to show to moderately acquainted environment — someplace he didn’t suppose he would ever discover himself once more.
“Once I ran out of cash with the Chargers, I moved again dwelling to my mother and that is if you’re simply ready for a cellphone name, ready for a exercise,” he says.
“And when it comes it is like: ‘Oh yeah, good. I am able to go.’ Then there goes [the] offseason [and] two or three months go by [and] no cellphone name comes: ‘What am I doing with my life?’”
Soccer gamers, and athletes basically, are significantly conditioned to all the time having their day by day actions deliberate for them, whether or not it’s movie examine, meals or coaching. With out that, Koo misplaced his sense of path.
“I assume my soccer profession, like highschool, faculty after which attending to the Chargers, I all the time had one thing to do, on a crew. You virtually really feel empty as a result of [when] you get up, no person’s telling you something,” Koo says.
Connecting with fellow NFL free brokers helped him to regain that sense of crew ethos and construction he missed.
“I discovered so much. I wasn’t the one one going via it. It was virtually therapeutic for me to go to exercises [with] guys which might be going via the identical stuff and we’re competing but in addition sharing our journeys,” Koo explains.
He credit these moments of early adversity with serving to him turn out to be an expert and an excellent higher scholar of the sport, though he says he nonetheless has much more to study as his profession progresses.
“Popping out of school, I felt like I knew every thing, however [in] actuality, I did not know something,” Koo says.
“I made a decision to drop that ego [and] ask questions. I needed to study, I needed to see what went unsuitable, and really quickly after that, I noticed I used to be a pet on this enterprise. I needed to preserve asking questions. I bought so much to study and an extended option to go, clearly.”
‘Robust’ beginnings
Koo lived in South Korea till the age of 12 earlier than shifting to the USA to attend sixth grade.
“I grew up enjoying soccer for the varsity crew. That was actually my major focus. I wasn’t actually nice at school,” he says.
He describes the transition to the USA as “robust,” an expertise that was additional compounded by his lack of English. Koo cites sports activities as a catalyst to studying the language and making pals in an unfamiliar nation.
“I really feel like I picked up English so much faster as a result of I performed sports activities,” Koo says. “I used to be compelled to throw myself on the market and socialize with totally different buddy teams and meet totally different folks. It positively bridged that hole for me.”
Koo first discovered soccer by way of his pals, who seen his soccer expertise and needed him to punt or kick off of their video games.
“And that is when everyone noticed my leg power as a result of [of] soccer, so kicking got here naturally for me. That is after I was requested to enroll in soccer and I signed up that summer season.”
Koo remembers particularly sitting in a automobile with teammates heading to follow sooner or later not even realizing the best way to talk with them.
“I did not know the best way to ask, like: ‘Hey, what do you guys do on the weekends?’ I did not know the best way to phrase that and even kind a sentence at the moment,” Koo explains.
Regardless of a worry of sounding “silly,” he was in a position to muster a phrase that modified his fortunes.
“I bear in mind simply saying, ‘I am bored,’ and so they have been simply asking [me] questions like: ‘Now? Within the automobile going to follow?’ I used to be like: ‘No, no, no, on the weekends.’ So then that weekend they known as me to hang around.”
‘Bulletproof’
As a South Korean immigrant in the USA, Koo says he seen racism rising up however selected to not “reply to it or react to it.” He did not take any racist feedback to coronary heart, realizing everybody has their very own opinions, whether or not legitimate or invalid.
“All people has one thing to say. All people can say one thing in the event that they need to. It is not likely my accountability to soak that each one in and take up [it]. I select what I need to take note of [and] what I do not need to take note of. I believe that is the mindset that I had after I was youthful as effectively,” Koo says.
As for the way he offers with negativity now as one of many NFL’s top-earning kickers, Koo likens it to a food plan the place he chooses which feedback he desires to eat and digest. He says his mindset have to be “bulletproof” when he takes the sphere; adversity from exterior may damage his efficiency.
“Whether or not it is coping with racism or whether or not it is coping with adversity, we shank a ball … we gotta go on the market and subsequent time, we bought to now give attention to the subsequent snap. That may’t stick with me as a result of it should have an effect on my subsequent kick,” Koo says.
“My dad taught me from a younger age [that] should you’re ok, your expertise speaks for itself,” he provides.
And when the kick is within the air, all that issues is the end result.
“You are White, Black, Asian or no matter. [The] soccer does not know who’s kicking it. And when the ball’s flying, they do not know who kicked it and so they simply see the outcomes and so they see the ball and so they’re like, ‘Alright, that kick’s good,’” Koo says.
‘Arrange a plan and go after it’
Koo understands the place soccer can play on the planet and what his story can imply for the subsequent era of Asian athletes eager to play within the high American league.
“It is [something] we talked about so much. It is a very numerous group of individuals in that locker room. All people comes from totally different locations, backgrounds, households, however all of us have one widespread aim, and we work in direction of that collectively and that sacrifice to work onerous for not just for your self, [but] for one thing that is larger than you,” Koo displays.
“I believe illustration is massive as a result of, rising up for me in soccer, there was no person that regarded like me. It was more durable for me to visualise, [if] he is doing it, I can do it.
“For those who have a look at my story, I did not converse English, I did not know what soccer was. I used to be struggling to say: ‘What are you doing this weekend?’ I believe anyone, if they’ve a dream and simply chase it and work onerous, can arrange a plan and go after it.”
Atlanta, GA
‘Put the guns down’: Atlanta dad mourning teenage son killed in Austell apartment shooting
EAST POINT, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – On Monday, hundreds of people crowded into an East Point shopping center for a candlelight vigil to mourn the death of 17-year-old Kenneth Collier Jr.
Cobb County police have launched a homicide investigation after receiving an initial 911 call on Jan. 9 for gunshots at the Residence at Riverside Apartments in Austell.
In a news release, police officials said they found the teenager with multiple gunshot wounds.
Collier’s family said the body was that of the 17-year-old who was an 11th grader at Eagle’s Landing High School in McDonough.
“Kenneth didn’t deserve to be killed that way. Nobody deserves to be killed that way,” said Kenn Collier, Kenneth’s dad.
Kenn said Kenneth went to see a friend at the Austell complex. He does not know what the circumstances were leading up to the shooting.
“Nobody ever imagines getting a call that your son has been murdered. Your son has been shot, is hurt,” Kenn said. “As a parent, the hardest thing ever to go through. Kenneth was a good kid.”
Kenneth’s death comes roughly seven years after the death of Kenneth’s mother, Tamika Trimble, who also died of gun violence.
17-year-old shot to death at Austell apartment complex, police say
In December 2017, Trimble was shot and killed in her car, with her daughter in the backseat.
“I sat on this same couch and did this interview. Talked about my son’s mom, about his mom being murdered through gun violence. Now, (I) sit here again, without my son, talking about gun violence,” Kenn said.
After that deadly shooting, Kenn said Kenneth acted out and began bullying before channeling his anger.
By 11, Kenneth had written a book advocating against bullying.
He was awarded a proclamation from the City of Atlanta after publishing the book titled “Button Buddy Stops Bullying: And So Can You.”
Kenn said his son got off track and eventually was pulled back into a rough crowd.
“Unfortunately, when you’re still in a situation around your friends and environment, and that’s all you see a lot of times, you can fall back into it,” he said. “As a parent, of course I did everything I can, we did everything we can do.”
Kenn said they recently moved Kenneth away from southwest Atlanta to McDonough where he enrolled at Eagle’s Landing High School. He said his son’s death shows the complexity of the gun violence epidemic.
“We really need to put the guns down,” Collier said.
Cobb County police is asking anyone with information surrounding the shooting incident to call police at (770) 499-3945.
Copyright 2025 WANF. All rights reserved.
Atlanta, GA
The Kyle Pitts Question Continues to Vex Atlanta Falcons
Atlanta Falcons fans will remember when the multi-million dollar acquisition of veteran quarterback Kirk Cousins was going to set misfiring tight end Kyle Pitts on the road to career redemption.
For a while, that looked to be the case. Through the Falcons’ first-eight games, Pitts had 29 catches for 419 yards and three touchdowns. That number included a goose egg he had Week 4 against the New Orleans Saints.
After his Week 8, 91 yard, two-touchdown performance against the Buccaneers, Pitts went MIA.
He had just 183 yards and a touchdown during the final-nine games.
Isn’t it funny just how quickly things can implode and go south?
When Falcons general manager Terry Fontenot offered up his assessment of his team’s failed season on last week, it came as no surprise that he unashamedly pointed the finger at Pitts’s lack of production. This seems to be an annual conversation with regards to Pitts.
“When you take a player that high in the draft, obviously you expect a certain level,” Fontenot said of the highest drafted tight end in NFL history. “We understand Kyle had a really good rookie year, and he hasn’t equaled or exceeded that production since then. There’s no excuses we’re making about it.”
Even given Fontenot’s sleuth-like observations, and for as cathartic as it might also have felt for him personally, it did little to lay out a map of the road ahead with regards to a Pitts future in Atlanta.
The Falcons picked up his fifth-year option before the season. They’re on the hook for $10.9-million guaranteed in 2025. Beyond that, Pitts is scheduled to be an unrestricted free agent.
Considering the hot water Fontenot was already in for the Cousins failure and losing a draft pick in the process, the subsequent double whammy of Pitts having another subpar season is particularly depressing.
Fontenot also finds himself with only four picks in the upcoming NFL Draft. All of which begs the imminent offseason conundrum of deciding whether or not it’s time to simply cut ties and firesale the former 4th overall selection.
Of course, some kind of value can always be found out there, especially if a host of tight end hungry teams really believe they can resuscitate the former 1,000 yard Pro Bowler’s beleaguered reputation. However, the Falcons will be selling low, and the return won’t come close to matching the fourth-overall selection or the $33-million the Falcons have already sunk into Pitts.
Quite clearly, the entire future of the Falcons franchise now rests squarely on the powerful left arm of quarterback Michael Penix Jr., but therein lies the inherent issue.
Pitts inability to develop into a more sure-handed pass catcher doesn’t immediately appear to mesh with the fast ball type of passer Penix Jr. actually is.
Having said all of that, Fontenot is well aware that he needs to do his level best to give Penix as many explosive receiving options as he can as they move ahead with his development.
Throwing the baby out with the bath water with Pitts must ultimately resonate strongly with Fontenot. Plus, running the risk of seeing Pitts resurrect his career elsewhere would presumably be catastrophic for Fontenot’s own future in Atlanta.
Atlanta would obviously like to see a return on Pitts, but how much longer can they ultimately wait?
Decisions, decisions.
Atlanta, GA
Atlanta police looking for people involved in shootout at convenience store
ATLANTA, Ga. (Atlanta News First) – Atlanta police are seeking the public’s help looking for two people involved in a shootout at convenience store on Campbellton Road.
Police said officers responded to the Big H Food Mart at 2900 Campbellton Road SW around 9 p.m. on Dec. 19 after an argument escalated into gunfire. No one was injured, but there was property damage to the store.
Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers Atlanta at 404-577-8477 or Atlanta police at 470-707-4338. There is a reward of up to $2,000.
Copyright 2024 WANF. All rights reserved.
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