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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFormer Auburn TE Phil Lutzenkirchen died Sunday. He will be missed by many who didn't know him. Why?
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Those around the Auburn program knew best what kind of truly special person he was. Like the time in 2010 when he attended the prom at his alma mater Lassiter High in Marietta, Ga., with a young woman with Down syndrome.
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I can't say I knew Lutzenkirchen well. I think I interviewed him a few times over the years. But his heart and spirit had an impact on me, too. Last month, he and I traded about a dozen direct messages over Twitter. The exchange started after I praised him in a tweet for some of the comments he made in support of former Mizzou star Michael Sam during the NFL draft. Lutzenkirchen, a Christian who worked with the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, also had begun sparring with some fans, including many of his alma mater, who didn't approve of Sam. These were some of the tweets from Lutzenkirchen's timeline that day:
@Phil Lutzenkirchen
That was a moment America will never forget @MikeSamFootball Uncomfortable for some but changing. #bestofluck brother
@Phil Lutzenkirchen
If someone is in love with a person let him be in love. He doesn't judge you for loving a straight, cute, gay, fat, ugly, sexy, person.
Please read the rest:
http://msn.foxsports.com/college-football/story/auburn-philip-lutzenkirchen-car-accident-legacy-of-kindness-compassion-062914
RIP Phil Lutzenkirchen!
You could have remained on the sidelines and not said a thing. You stepped up at a crucial moment in a very conservative area. I will always wonder what you could have accomplished.
Eleanors38
(18,318 posts)Christianity is certainly in short supply. May his short life have a long-lasting impact on others.
Are_grits_groceries
(17,111 posts)Missed his Michael Sam tweets. We need many more like him.
hedgehog
(36,286 posts)Skittles
(153,251 posts)my condolences to his friends and loved ones