Pubdate: Fri, 18 Nov 2005 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Dale Bass Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?135 (Drug Education) PLESS TACKLES DRUG ABUSE When Willie Pless talks about his mother, Mary, his voice changes. He's still the confident football legend who ran his way into the record books of the Canadian Football League - but the little boy who turned to his mom for guidance also starts to peek through. Pless said everything he became, all his successes and his many charitable works today, all stem from talking to his mother about what, at one point in his life, was starting to take it over: An overwhelming reliance on drugs and alcohol. It was an easy road to go down, Pless said, because his four older brothers and his father all drank. "But my mom didn't drink and she didn't smoke and she didn't do drugs," Pless told KTW. "And she said to me that if I was going to go down that path, I was going nowhere. She told me to get off that thing and I could be a success at what ever I wanted to be - a lawyer, a doctor, a football player. "She helped me turn my life around." Pless tells his stories to other gatherings because he believes in positive role-modelling for those who might be tempted to travel the same road he took for a while. "There are lots of kids who get on the wrong path, and if I can help in a small way to get them off it and get them headed in the right direction, then that's good." Being a football legend helps, he said, because often people who have only seen him on the field are unaware of the turmoil he went though to become the man who was inducted into the CFL Hall of Fame this year. The linebacker won the CFL most outstanding defensive player award five times, another league record, as well as being named West Division outstanding defensive player, East Division outstanding rookie, CFL all-star and member of the Grey Cup winning Edmonton Eskimo team in 1993. In addition to playing with the Eskimos, Pless, an Alabama native, was a member of the New Orleans Saints, Toronto Argonauts, Saskatchewan Roughriders and B.C. Lions. He was the featured speaker Wednesday night at Together Today for our Children Tomorrow, a drug awareness conference sponsored by a variety of agencies in Kamloops. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin