Growing Up Gronk: A Family’s Story of Raising Champions Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  Photo of Gronkowski Boys

  Copyright

  Gronk Lineup

  Introduction

  A Star Is Born

  Gordy: Papa Gronk

  The Evolution of Training

  Gordie Jr.: Doesn’t He Know the Rest of the Family Plays Football?

  Mental Toughness

  Dan: The Talented Workhorse

  Competition and Physical Play

  Chris: Brains and a Pedigree

  A New Generation of Tight Ends

  Rob: The Superstar

  Rob Explodes

  Goose: Greatness Expected

  Get Gronked!

  Acknowledgments

  About the Authors

  The Gronkowski boys exhibited a love of sports from an early age. Top, from left, Dan, Chris, and Gordie. Seated, from left, Rob and Goose.

  First Mariner Books edition 2014

  Copyright © 2013 by The Gronkowski Family with Jeff Schober

  All rights reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.

  www.hmhco.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

  Gronkowski family.

  Growing up Gronk : a family’s story of raising champions / Gronkowski family with Jeff Schober.

  pages cm

  ISBN 978-0-544-12668-8 (hardback) ISBN 978-0-544-33458-8 (pbk.)

  1. Gronkowski, Gordon, 1959– —Family. 2. Athletes—United States—Biography. 3. Football players—United States—Biography. 4. Fathers and sons—United States—Biography. 5. Gronkowski, Chris, 1986– 6. Gronkowski, Dan, 1985– 7. Gronkowski, Rob, 1989– I. Schober, Jeff . II. Title.

  GV697.A1G73 2013

  796.092'273—dc23

  [B]

  2013019374

  eISBN 978-0-544-12635-0

  v3.0814

  Gronk Lineup

  Proudly sporting Patriots caps at Rob’s draft day in 2010. From left, Gordie, Chris, Rob, Goose, and Dan.

  Rob, Dan, Goose, Gordie, and Chris, 1994.

  Introduction

  The Day the Dream Turned Real

  “I have three sons playing in the NFL . . .”

  —GORDY GRONKOWSKI

  ON THE FIRST SATURDAY in September, 2010, Gordon Gronkowski sat unobtrusively in the top row of bleachers at Riverside Stadium in Buffalo, New York, wearing sunglasses and a New England Patriots sweatshirt. Considering his location, this was a daring fashion statement. The Patriots had beaten the hometown Bills for fifteen consecutive games, twice a year every year dating back to 2002. But Gronkowski had a good reason for donning that sweatshirt. One of his sons had just made the Pats’ roster as a rookie tight end.

  “Unobtrusive” is not a word normally used to describe the fifty-two-year-old Gronkowski. With a light brush cut beginning to fleck gray, he is a big man, standing six feet three inches, with a wide chest, hands the size of salad plates, and biceps like snow tires. On that afternoon, he alternately leaned forward and reclined, his back against a cyclone fence, then stood to pace, expression stoic to observers. His mind tumbled with possibilities.

  It was opening day for high school football season in Western New York. On the field below, his youngest son, Glenn, nicknamed Goose, had just begun his senior year playing for Williamsville North, a suburban high school. As Gordy watched, Goose lit up the turf, catching a twenty-two-yard touchdown pass, returning an interception fifty-five yards for another score, and kicking four extra points en route to a 34–16 victory. It was a good start, another step along the way in the push toward a college scholarship. Although his name carried a pedigree, the kid still needed to perform.

  Accompanying Gordy was his second son, Dan, who had driven home from Detroit to fill time during his weekend off. Sporting a backwards baseball cap and zip-up jacket, Dan checked the clock often, concealing his nerves behind sunglasses that matched his father’s. At the far end of Lake Erie, the Detroit Lions’ brain trust was making final cuts to shape its regular-season team. A second-year tight end, Danny lingered on the bubble. Through 2009 he had bounced between the practice squad and active roster. This summer, he had competed hard during training camp, hoping his efforts on the field would be rewarded. Still, not knowing was difficult. Sitting, waiting, watching the clock . . . Being with Dad at his little brother’s game provided a temporary distraction.

  A newspaper reporter wandered by, shook hands with Gordy and Dan, and asked how things were going.

  Gordy smiled and said there was no news on Danny’s future just yet. But he boasted about his eldest son, Gordie (who spells his name with an “ie” to distinguish himself from his dad), the one family member who had chosen to pursue a baseball career while the others thrived in football. Gordie had hit a home run for the Gateway Grizzlies of the Frontier League the day before. Twenty-seven, he had been a star at Jacksonville University and former major-league prospect before a back injury hampered his big-league dreams. Dad proudly recited the son’s statistics: forty-five games, sixteen home runs, forty-nine RBIs, and a .318 batting average while playing first base and driving toward the playoffs.

  “An inspiring story,” Gordy nodded. “Determination has got this kid everywhere.”

  What about Rob and Chris?, the reporter asked. Have you heard anything from either of them?

  Rob was a lock to make the New England Patriots, so long as his back injury did not flare. Through training camp so far, it had not. He’d performed well and impressed the coaches in spite of his youth. The fourth son, twenty-one, Rob had played tight end for two years at the University of Arizona before back surgery wiped out his junior year. Once recovered, he chose to forgo his senior season and leap into the National Football League draft, where the Patriots selected him in the second round, forty-second overall. Rob had speed, blocking ability, and size enough to provide a big target in the end zone for quarterback Tom Brady.

  Gordy wasn’t worried about Rob’s chances. But Chris and Danny . . .

  He checked his phone. No new updates. No text messages.

  Chris, the middle son, was biting his nails in Dallas, waiting to learn his fate with the Cowboys. Chris had played two years of football at the University of Maryland before transferring to Arizona and finishing his college career, displaying enough brains and athleticism to make the NFL. But he was a fullback, a position that was becoming obsolete. Gone from Texas were the days of Daryl Johnston plowing a hole for a star running back like Emmitt Smith. Now tight ends were employed in an H-back formation. Not many teams kept a pure fullback on the roster. The odds of making the roster were long.

  While Gordy paced and fretted, pondering his sons’ futures, he had no idea that fringe players from the Cowboys’ training camp were being herded into an office in Dallas. Names were called, and men split into two groups. One went through the near door, while others stayed seated. When the list had been recited, those remaining were congratulated for making the roster. After being handed a playbook, they were instructed to prepare for the season opener in eight days.

  At 2:00 P.M., Chris texted his father the good news.

  Gordy’s chest swelled with pride. Two of his boys would play in the NFL. But he couldn’t celebrate yet, not with Danny’s uncertain fate.

  Gordy leaned forward and whispered to the son sitting on the bench below him. “You’re going to make it somewhere,” he said, as much to soothe h
is own nerves as Danny’s. “So what if the Lions bump you to their practice squad? You’ve been there before. If that happens, you’ll get picked up by another team. The Jets need a tight end. So do the Bills.”

  Dan nodded, not saying anything, eyes trained on Goose’s game. What was there to do but wait? One way or another, he would know by 4:00 P.M., the mandated deadline for final rosters.

  Near three-thirty, Dan’s phone rang. Gordy clenched his jaw, watching his son answer the call. Dan didn’t talk much, but listened. A mixture of surprise and excitement crossed his face. He hung up, then turned around and looked at his dad.

  “The Lions knew I wouldn’t clear waivers,” he said. “So I’ve been traded to Denver. I’m signing with the Broncos.”

  Gordy exhaled, patting Danny’s shoulder. His son had made it. But the Broncos? That caught him off-guard. No one had expected Denver. They began to talk about logistics, flights to the Mile High City, renting a moving van and transporting everything farther west.

  In the three hours that Gordy sat in Riverside Stadium watching a high school football game, his sons’ futures had solidified.

  Later, after the excitement died down and hours stretched toward evening, Gordy sat at his kitchen table, recognizing the day for what it was. All five of his boys were athletes, all of them great kids, and he was a proud father. Strangers had approached him over the years, watching his family succeed at sports.

  “Good genes,” he was told, or “lucky breaks.” Gordy, however, knew the effort expended, the physical and mental commitment needed to succeed at an elite level.

  “You’re good,” he had told the boys as they grew up. “But so are lots of other people. What’s going to take you to the next level is training and commitment.”

  Exact numbers are difficult to find, but recent estimates are that 4.8 million children between six and thirteen play organized football in the United States. In 2009–10, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) reported 65,648 Division I college football players. The number expands when other divisions are considered. Each NFL team carries a fifty-three-man roster, with more included on injured reserve and practice squads. Statistics show that with each higher level of play, the number of competitors sharply decreases.

  That night, Gordy did not comprehend the odds, was not aware that it had been eighteen years—almost a full generation—since three brothers had played in the NFL at the same time. Then it was the Baldinger brothers, Gary, Rich, and Brian.

  ESPN.com would later calculate the Gronkowski brothers’ odds at one in thirty-one million. A person had a better statistical chance of winning the lottery than seeing three members of the same family play professional football. But Gordy was aware of none of that. All he knew was that their hard work was being rewarded.

  He looked down at his Patriots sweatshirt. Now, he thought, I’ll have to get matching ones that read “Cowboys” and “Broncos.”

  “Unbelievable,” he said to himself. “Three of my sons are playing in the NFL.”

  Rob visits his former high school gym while preparing for a photo shoot in 2012.Photo by Jeff Schober

  Gordy, Diane, the boys, and a giant yard stork welcome baby Rob to the family home, 1989.

  1

  A Star Is Born

  Gronked: To throw something down to the ground with great force, like football player Rob Gronkowski does after each touchdown. After I finished my exam, I Gronked my pencil in a show of exuberance.

  —URBAN DICTIONARY

  IN SEPTEMBER 2009, twenty-year-old Rob Gronkowski lay in bed, eyes directed at the sterile hospital ceiling. Just out of surgery, he felt like an anchor was strapped to his back. Movements were limited and tentative. A sudden shift drew sharp daggers raking against his spine. Pain had never been something he feared. Growing up in a house with four brothers, physical contact was a daily routine. As the starting tight end at the University of Arizona, he had both received and delivered major hits over the years. But this moment, coming out of surgery, was one of the most uncertain in his life.

  There were legitimate questions about whether he would ever play football again. Rob never let those fears take root. Doctors had been optimistic, but there were no guarantees. And if not football, then what would he do?

  The sport had defined Rob’s life. His father had been a college football player who briefly played in the United States Football League (USFL) in the early 1980s. His other brother Dan, a fellow tight end, had been drafted by the Detroit Lions, while another brother, Chris, transferred from the University of Maryland after two years to play fullback alongside Rob at Arizona. The sport ran through the family’s veins.

  Even at a young age, Rob displayed freakish size and physical talent. He ended his senior year of high school as a six feet six SuperPrep All-American, developing blocking skills to complement eight receptions for 152 yards and four touchdowns. College-scholarship offers flooded his mailbox. In two years at Arizona, he set the school’s single-game, single-season, and career records as a tight end for receptions, yards, and touchdowns.

  His personality was goofy, fun-loving. It was rare to see the big boy angry or depressed. He went through each day with a smile on his face, eager to be on the field where he could line up and hit someone. There was one dream, one goal, and he had been groomed for it since he was just a little kid. Rob planned to star in the NFL.

  It couldn’t possibly be over, could it?

  “Robbie hurt his back in the weight room doing a dead lift,” his father Gordy explained. “It was the off-season after his sophomore year in college. He knew he was hurt, but thought it was just a sore back. He kept working out and running routes but was getting slower.”

  Back issues were not without precedent in the Gronkowski family. Rob’s oldest brother, Gordie, an All-American baseball player, had suffered a herniated disk a few years earlier when in college. Once a promising major-league prospect, his injuries caused many teams to reconsider selecting him in the draft. The second brother, Dan, experienced occasional back spasms.

  “I was definitely scared,” Rob recalled. “Pain started in April and kept getting worse and worse. I didn’t know what was going on, but I kept grinding harder because the harder you went, you didn’t feel the pain for that hour. Eventually, one day, it cut off my whole nervous system going into my legs. I couldn’t jump more than three inches. I kept going, but it was half-speed. I got it checked out and doctors discovered bulging and herniated disks.”

  Having watched one son’s career veer off course because of this, Gordy wanted to be sure his other boys were protected. He had planned ahead for such a contingency.

  “I took out a four-million-dollar insurance policy on Rob,” Gordy said. “The insurance company believed Rob had value because he was projected to be a first- or second-round NFL draft pick. I tried to get a policy for Chris, but I couldn’t. The company didn’t believe he had value.”

  Rob’s injury occurred in the L5 vertebra, located in the lower back between the hips. In addition, an MRI revealed a closing of the spinal chamber. When Rob did not work out, the affected area settled and did not bother him. But how could a football player have a career in which he didn’t work out?

  “Some doctors told us he shouldn’t play,” Gordy said. “Others said if the swelling goes down, he should be OK. And Rob at first tried to bluff and say he was fine before the surgery. But it reached a point where I could tell he was hurting, so I shut him down. He was done playing college football until this got fixed. I wasn’t making many friends in Arizona, but this is my kid, you know?”

  No one was quite sure how to proceed, because when Rob relaxed and did not work out, the pain lessened. The injury was not debilitating. If Rob stopped training and playing football, he could live a comfortable life. But the professional opinion was that eventually, as he aged, Rob would need surgery to repair the spine.

  Gordy searched for the best back specialist around. One name kept recurring: Robert Watkins, a doctor fr
om California who’d performed surgery on athletes with injuries similar to Rob’s. The doctor laid out options.

  “We went around and around about Rob’s surgery,” Gordy said. “He had choices. One was to not have surgery and never play football again but get four million dollars. The other was don’t collect the money but have surgery and hope that everything comes out right. It wasn’t an easy choice. It’s a serious operation. One slip down there and you’re dealing with the vertebrae and spinal cord.”

  The insurance policy was both a blessing and a curse. If Rob elected to walk away from football, he would be financially set for life at only twenty years old. Even though he had played only two years of college football and sat out his junior year because of the injury, Rob was talented enough that the NFL was still interested. Could he forgo his junior year of college and make a leap to the pros despite surgery?

  “Four million dollars is a lot of money,” Gordy mused. “With investments, I knew he could get five percent back in tax-free bonds. If he took the insurance policy, he could collect two hundred thousand tax-free every year. But if you have the operation it’s like rolling the dice.”

  Rob ultimately made the decision: he didn’t want to become wealthy from an insurance policy. He preferred to earn it. Rob agreed to back surgery, knowing it was a perilous path: his body needed to remain straight and avoid sideways moves for six weeks afterward. Recovery would be difficult, with no guarantees.

  “The money was not a consideration at all,” Rob said. “We were confident because of the doctor and his background. We knew he was the best. I never looked at the money option one bit. I just wanted to keep playing football, and that’s what I did.”