
Steve Kiner, Patriots linebacker who was open about drug use, dies at 77
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After a 41-14 rout of the University of Alabama in 1969 -- during which Mr. Kiner had eight unassisted tackles and an interception -- Alabama coach Bear Bryant told reporters, 'I don't think I've ever seen two finer linebackers on one team as Kiner and Reynolds.'
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By then, Mr. Kiner said, he was already using drugs.
'I was doing acid every day, 365 days a year, or coke or mescaline, anything I could get my hands on,' he told The New York Times in 1974. 'I didn't care what people thought of me -- if my hair was down to my butt, if my eyes were so glazed I couldn't see 2 feet in front of me.'
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Mr. Kiner was drafted in the third round of the 1970 NFL draft by the Dallas Cowboys. He didn't start for Dallas, but he made a strong impression.
'He was the team hippy -- shaggy hair, groovy mustache, delighted grin belying the fact he was the headhunter on the Dallas kickoff team,' Gary Cartwright wrote in Texas Monthly in 1973, adding, 'Kiner's first act on moving to Dallas was to find a Black roommate.' He shared an apartment with star running back Duane Thomas, an enigmatic personality who feuded with the team over his contract.
Thomas had called Tom Landry, the Cowboys' stoic coach, a 'plastic man,' and Tex Schramm, the team's president, 'sick and dishonest.' (Thomas died last year.)
Mr. Kiner backed Thomas. 'Duane is beautiful,' he said, 'because he's only telling the truth.'
Dallas traded Mr. Kiner to the New England Patriots before the 1971 season. His free-spirited ways ran head-long into the disciplinary tactics of head coach John Mazur, a former Marine.
Mr. Kiner came to training camp with his hair down to his shoulders. In response, Mazur ordered all players to cut their hair to prevent it from flowing out the back of the helmet. 'Everyone knew this was in direct retaliation to Kiner,' Globe columnist Will McDonough later related, describing the first day of the rule change. 'There was great anticipation that night in the dining hall. Kiner had been wearing an Amish-style hat around camp, and lo and behold, when he entered the dining room that night his long hair was nowhere to be seen. The players gave him a standing ovation.
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'But as they stood and cheered, Kiner lifted the hat, revealing his hair tied in a big bun on top of his head. Kiner was fined.'
Nonetheless, Mr. Kiner's talent overcame the tensions with his coach. He would start all 14 games that season and had four interceptions. He earned NFL Defensive Player of the Week once during the season.
Mr. Kiner had two stints with the New England Patriots, in 1971 and 1973.
A.E. Maloof/Associated Press
'He had a terrific first year, but the warning signs were there,' Upton Bell, then the Patriots' general manager, said in an interview. 'I was aware that he had some trouble with drugs.' He added: 'What has to be understood is that it was the era of drugs, and a lot of young people were experimenting with them.'
The Patriots traded Mr. Kiner to the Miami Dolphins in 1972 for defensive lineman Bill Griffin, but they released him before the season. He was then signed by the Washington Redskins (now the Commanders), but he never played for them. He returned to the Patriots in 1973 and reclaimed his starting job, but he was dealt after the season to the Houston Oilers (now the Tennessee Titans).
By then, he said, he had been off drugs for a couple of years.
Steven Albert Kiner was born on June 12, 1947, in Sandstone, Minn., and later lived at Fort Benning, Ga., and in Tampa, Florida. His father, George, was captured by the Japanese during his Army service in World War II and survived the Bataan Death March; he later worked for Sears. His mother, Gertrude (Willie) Kiner, managed the home.
Steven played quarterback and safety at Hillsborough High School, but he was quickly converted to a linebacker by his coaches in college.
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After his time at Tennessee -- which earned him induction into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1999 -- and three active seasons in the NFL, Mr. Kiner had his best years in Houston, after Bum Phillips was named coach in 1975.
The Oilers had winning records in four of the five seasons Mr. Kiner played for Phillips, who was defensive coordinator the first season. At one point, Phillips said, 'Steve Kiner has got to be the best the Houston Oilers ever got for a ninth-round choice.' Phillips also credited Mr. Kiner with helping turn the Oilers into winners.
Before a game between the Oilers and the New York Jets in 1974, Mr. Kiner reflected on his past drug use -- and how it had disappointed his younger brother, Kelly.
'He asked why I was doing drugs; is it fun? I didn't have an answer for him,' he told the Times. 'I thought about what he was saying. He was telling me the truth, and it was hard for me to swallow.'
When Mr. Kiner was released after the 1978 season, he was upset. He told The Knoxville News Sentinel that if the Oilers asked him to return, he would refuse, 'unless they kiss me in front of a sellout crowd at the Astrodome.'
He soon began a career in health care. He had studied psychology in college and earned master's degrees in clinical psychology from West Georgia College (now the University of West Georgia) in 1988 and 1990. He worked for a hospital run by HCA Healthcare in Atlanta and then became director of emergency psychiatric services at Emory University Hospital, also in Atlanta, where he helped ensure that individuals received the mental health care they needed.
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In addition to his wife and brother, Mr. Kiner leaves three daughters, Stacey Buckley, Hailey Weiner, and Christine Kiner; five grandchildren; and two sisters, Kathleen Ritch and Karla Newby.
For years, Mr. Kiner exhibited symptoms associated with chronic traumatic encephalopathy -- a brain disease that can be caused by repetitive head injuries -- including memory loss and anger. In 2010, he told the Houston Chronicle that he had probably suffered a dozen concussions every season.
'As long as my skull wasn't cracked, I figured it was OK to keep playing,' he said. 'They'd stick some ammonia under your nose and ask, 'How many fingers I'm holding up?' If you guessed right, they'd send you back out for the next play.'
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