Deaf football player pens account of rock bottom and the climb back

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Leader Call - Deaf football player pens account of rock bottom and the climb back

Football gave so much to Eric Thunander.

In high school, it gave the deaf young man a way out of a tough childhood and some normalcy despite his disability. In college, it gave him identity, pride, a sense of belonging and a huge, diamond-encrusted ring from his gridiron contribution to the University of Oklahoma’s 2000 National Championship team.

But when it took away his dream, it almost took away his life.

The former OU defensive end remembers what it was like to hit rock bottom.

After a head injury that ended his promising football career, and a painful divorce, Thunander downed much of a fifth of Jack Daniels, put a single bullet in a revolver, put the gun barrel to his head and pulled the trigger.

Click.

There was no bullet in that first chamber. But if Thunander had pulled the trigger just one more time, it likely would have been fatal. And he realized how far he had fallen.

Thunander called his friend and the man who recruited him, co-defensive football coach Brent Venables, who had believed in and encouraged the young man who has 95 percent hearing loss in his left ear and 92 percent loss in his right. With hearing aids, he calls himself “very hard of hearing.”

And about a week later, OU’s head coach Bob Stoops called back.

“Hey Thundercat! How have you been?” Thunander remembers Stoops asking, using the nickname Stoops gave him from an old cartoon strip.

Stoops inquired as to what he was doing the next semester and offered Thunander a chance to return to OU on a football scholarship, a rarity in college sports for an injured player.

“I have a second chance and a second lease on life and I almost threw it away,” Thunander said.

Thunander tells his story of despair, hope, tenacity and resilience in his new autobiography, “Silent Thunder,” about how he created success for himself despite a childhood of chronic abuse and bouncing among multiple foster homes. And he talks about turning points and how his OU “family” saved his life.

Stoops and OU President David Boren wrote the forewords.

“You may not appreciate just how great a victory he has won until you read the story, but trust me; he has endured tribulations that would have devastated many of us,” Stoops wrote. “College coaches are often cited for the way they motivate others. Truth be told, it is often these same young men that motivate coaches. Eric was that kind of player for me. He has impacted my life in a positive way and I know he does the same for so many others.”

Thunander said he penned “Silent Thunder” for himself.

“I was caught in the past and I thought maybe if I write it down and read it and put it inside so I can start moving forward … because I was kind of hanging here in limbo,” he said.

But along the way, he found when he spoke to individuals and groups, they would draw inspiration from his experiences. And it gave him a goal of becoming a motivational speaker. He now has a bachelor’s degree from OU in communications.

“Being a motivational speaker to me is when I’m in my element," he said. "Even though it’s really strange, with me being deaf, I always have this urge to talk.”

As a child, his hearing mother didn’t want to learn sign language. She wanted Thunander to read lips and speak.

“She would force me to talk,” he said. “You know, it kind of gave me a connection with the hearing world, but growing up with the environment I was in didn’t help much either.”

He went to mainstream schools in California and later in Lee’s Summit, Mo.

But he also was a victim of abuse from two of his mother’s three husbands, he said. He was moved from foster home to foster home.

When he was 13, he saw a story about Kenny Walker, a deaf football player for the University of Nebraska, who went on to play for the Denver Broncos in the 1990s. And he thought football might be something he could be good at.

So play football he did, priding himself on working “five times as hard as any other player.” Thunander was ranked in high school as the 58th-best player in the Midlands by SuperPrep magazine. He registered 242 career tackles, with 90 tackles, two interceptions and two fumble recoveries as a senior at Lee’s Summit. He was part of Lee’s Summit’s mile relay team that set the state record.

He was recruited by almost three dozen college programs — until they would learn he was deaf and somehow forget him.

OU was the exception. Thunander was offered a scholarship and found a new home, something that surprised his Lee’s Summit teammates, some of whom said he didn’t deserve it.

But Thunander didn’t believe them. He knew he’d outworked almost everybody for the opportunity to play university ball.
 
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