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Atlas
08-13-2007, 05:01 AM
Let's not forget about this gentleman.


Paralysis no "Pacman" game



By Woody Paige

Tommy Urbanski was shot in Las Vegas in an incident for which "Pacman" Jones is facing charges. (Post / Karl Gehring)Adam "Pacman" Jones will be featured Sunday night in a contrived pay-per-view wrestling show labeled "Hard Justice." Tommy Urbanski, a former wrestler, will not be watching from his hospital room in Englewood. He has paid enough and understands that justice is too hard.

Jones would give anything to play pro football again. Urbanski would give anything to walk again.

Jones, a prized cornerback, has been suspended from the NFL for this season as the result of multiple conflicts with the law. The most serious involved a triple-victim shooting incident that rendered one man a paraplegic during the NBA All-Star Weekend in Las Vegas. Jones was charged with felony coercion.

Urbanski, an innocent bystander, was shot three times in the sordid episode. One of the bullets remains lodged in his spinal column. "It took away everything from me as a man, except my hope," Urbanski says.

While Jones prepares for his performance - following approval by a Tennessee judge that he can appear at the event, but can't wrestle - Urbanski, who also was wounded in his left wrist and broke his right wrist as he fell, prepares to play guitar in Craig Hospital's talent show Wednesday.

Urbanski was channel-switching last week when "I happened to see him (Jones) doing an interview. It was the first time I ever saw or heard him....He is a disturbed person, and I'm sure he knows the man who shot me, but I can't focus on him or what went on."

Tommy, his wife Kathy and his wheelchair rode a bus, then the light rail to downtown Denver for lunch on the 16th Street Mall and a visit to the Museum of Natural History on Saturday afternoon. Finally, Urbanski can escape his suffering for a little while.

The 44-year-old Urbanski is going home to Las Vegas on Aug. 25, but he and Kathy might return permanently to Denver.

"I love this city. The people here have been so incredible. And if I hadn't come to Craig Hospital (in March), I believe I wouldn't be alive today."

The Tennessee Titans obtained an injunction preventing Jones from actually wrestling tonight, but the judge declared that he can attend.

In another interview on ESPN, Jones said: "I don't know what you all want me to do. Just sit in the house and be miserable all day?"

Urbanski lies in a hospital room at Craig (world-renowned for treatment of spinal cord and head trauma injuries), and he is beyond miserable a lot of days while undergoing constant, intense therapy, taking painkillers every four hours and being hooked up to a tube in his stomach and a catheter.

"I admit that I have mood swings and feel sorry for myself, but I've got my wife, who

Tommy Urbanski and his wife, Kathy, enjoy a sunny Saturday on the 16th Street Mall. Urbanski is undergoing treatment at Craig Hospital. (Post / Karl Gehring)is my best friend, the rest of my family, my doctors and my friends, and they help me get through this," said the native New Yorker.
Jones said on TV that he had been arrested twice, not five times. Police records indicate he has been arrested six times and charged three times for various offenses. Tommy and Kathy have contempt in their voices and hearts for Jones, but, on advice from their attorney, wouldn't talk about their feelings, or any personal interaction, on the record. Urbanski did say: "He (Jones) wouldn't like being in a wheelchair."

Urbanski has been described in most media accounts as "a bouncer." He actually was a real estate salesman who worked part-time as a manager at Minxx, a Las Vegas "gentlemen's club," to pay law-school tuition for his wife, an elementary school teacher.

Life is about timing. Urbanski arrived 15 minutes early for his job at the strip club on Feb. 19 and was told there had been a major disturbance, with Pacman throwing money ($81,000, police claimed) at a dancer, demanding the cash back, slamming the woman's head against a wall and being told to leave with his entourage (five other men and a woman.) The club's owner asserts that Jones threatened to kill a bouncer.

According to Kathy Urbanski, "there was a metal detector at the front door of the club. We've been told by the authorities that one of the men left, went to a car, got a gun and came back to the outside of the club" to confront the bouncer. "I went to the scene, saw where Tommy and the shooter were, and I don't know how my husband survived."

Urbanski had gone outside to check the situation and immediately was shot in the stomach. A female customer and the bouncer also were shot. Both were treated at a hospital and released. Jones' attorney denies his client was present during the shooting or was a friend of the assailant. The shooter has not been arrested, but a "person of interest" has been identified by police, and his photo is on the Internet.

Urbanski spent two weeks in an induced coma, then was sent to Craig Hospital. He was in critical condition for weeks.

"Most of my ribs were broken. I couldn't move my wrists for weeks, and I thought I was a quadriplegic. They couldn't remove the bullet in my spine, and I have no sensation below my belly button," he says.

He was a 390-pound pro wrestler who occasionally filled in at World Wrestling Association matches and grappled with The Iron Sheik in South Africa, George "The Animal" Steele in Europe and Hulk Hogan in the U.S. He is now 270 pounds and, in a wheelchair, battled tight turns in an Italian restaurant Saturday.

"There is incredible irony," Kathy says, "that Tommy was a wrestler, and Pacman was hired by a wrestler promoter."

Urbanski said he was "hurt" that Total Nonstop Action would "sell its soul for a few bucks to bring in this guy. If I were a wrestler and this happened to someone else in the business, I would wish I could be in the ring with him (Jones)."

It was rumored in Nashville that the wrestlers taking part in the pay-per-view event intended to "rough up" Jones, which might have led the Titans to demand that the banished defensive back not become an active participant, even if the match is a farce. (The Titans have not released Jones, and he could play for them again. In another irony, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell will decide after the Titans play in Denver against the Broncos on Nov. 19 if Jones is to be reinstated for the final six regular-season games.)

Urbanski played football in high school on Long Island, but he really liked to make music. He played guitar in a rock band. Recently, two of his old bandmates presented Tommy with an electric guitar.

"When I was on the ground after being shot, my first thought was I was dead. My second thought was about Kathy. And my next thought, when my arms were covered in blood and I could move them, was I couldn't play the guitar ever again," Urbanski said.

After five months of rehabilitation, Urbanski can move his fingers, barely. And he is strumming the guitar.

On Wednesday evening at the hospital's patient and staff talent show, he will play "Plush" by the Stone Temple Pilots. Urbanski asked his principal doctor, Thomas Balazy, to join him in a duet.

Craig Hospital has done all it can for Urbanski, whose chances of regaining use of his legs has been estimated by doctors at 3 to 6 percent.

"We can only hope for a miracle, or scientific advancements in stem cell research somewhere else in the world," Kathy says.

The Urbanskis are not optimistic that Tommy will walk again, "but I've seen so many kids and others at the hospital who are in worse shape than me.

"I will play the guitar, and I will start a band, and I will record songs, and I will help those who are in similar situations like me, and I will live."

And he will ride an electrical stimulation bike, if the Urbanskis can raise the $15,000 to buy one while trying to make their small home handicapped-accessible. Workers' compensation is paying only a share of Urbanski's medical bills, which eventually could run into the millions of dollars. If you would like to assist, go to the Tommyurbanskifund.org website started by friends in Las Vegas.

The lives of two men are intertwined. One is only a Pacman. The other is a good man.

Atlas
08-13-2007, 05:01 AM
Ironic that this guy was a former wrestler.

HEAV
08-13-2007, 08:53 AM
As I mentioned in another thread... Pac Man action's and the people he surrounds himself with lead to this man's life being ruined.

Phobia
08-13-2007, 10:11 AM
I hope that Las Vegas works quickly in the coersion case and gains a conviction. That will help immensely in making sure this man has the evidence needed to win a civil lawsuit. Hopefully he'll be well taken care of with the millions of dollars Adam Jones has swindled from the NFL.

Atlas
08-13-2007, 03:47 PM
As I mentioned in another thread... Pac Man action's and the people he surrounds himself with lead to this man's life being ruined.

I agree. We can laugh at Pacman and what a loser he is, but he really is a bad guy.

Atwater His Ass
08-13-2007, 04:24 PM
This is just really sad. I can't imagine what it would be like to be in this guys shoes. I just can't comprehend that today everything is fine, but tomorrow I can't feel anything below my waist.

Denver '78
08-13-2007, 05:20 PM
Crazy, do you think the punishment the NFL dished out was harsh enough?

smalltowngrll
08-13-2007, 05:40 PM
I'd think that the punishment the NFL will give him if he is convicted will be even more harsh than already given. Hopefully he'll have to spend some time behind bars if he is found guilty in this awful crime!

Atlas
08-13-2007, 06:07 PM
This is just really sad. I can't imagine what it would be like to be in this guys shoes. I just can't comprehend that today everything is fine, but tomorrow I can't feel anything below my waist.

Imagine the only reason this happened to him was because he showed up 15 minutes early to work.

I hope his wife is close to getting her degree so she can bring some money in.

Beantown Bronco
08-13-2007, 06:10 PM
Imagine the only reason this happened to him was because he showed up 15 minutes early to work.

We can all learn a valuable lesson from that.

JanaŽ
08-13-2007, 06:22 PM
I'd think that the punishment the NFL will give him if he is convicted will be even more harsh than already given. Hopefully he'll have to spend some time behind bars if he is found guilty in this awful crime!

If that happens, will he be perma-banned from the NFL? He should be, IMO.

broncos-rock
08-13-2007, 06:35 PM
I usually don't like Woody Paige but he did a heck of a job on this story. I wish Pacman would have to care for this guy now as far as everyday living, now that would be a fair punishment!!

Beantown Bronco
08-14-2007, 01:02 PM
More proof that PacMan just doesn't "get it":

Pacman to give his side in upcoming interview

Associated Press

Updated: August 13, 2007, 7:01 PM ET

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Suspended Tennessee Titans cornerback Adam "Pacman" Jones sees himself as an innocent bystander in the Las Vegas strip club fight that led to a triple shooting and left one man paralyzed, and he expects to be vindicated.

"And I'll tell you, 'I told you so,'" Jones said in an interview scheduled to air Tuesday night on HBO's "Real Sports."

Las Vegas police identified the Titans cornerback as the "inciter" of the fight around 5 a.m. on Feb. 19 at the Minxx Gentlemen's Club, and he was indicted in June on two counts of coercion.

Jones, who was interviewed on ESPN2 and appeared on another cable TV show last week to promote his new wrestling venture, has declined repeated interview requests from The Associated Press and spoken to local reporters only briefly at three court appearances this year. His attorneys have promised he would speak with reporters once his legal problems are resolved.

Jones told interviewer Bryant Gumbel that he never hit a stripper in the club or threatened to kill anyone. Asked why anyone would lie, Jones said, "I guess I'm the big fish in the little pond.

"I never touched anybody in that -- I never hit no girl. I never told any one of them that I was going to kill them."

In the interview, Jones was shown a photo of a man labeled by Las Vegas police as a person of interest in the shooting.

"I can't tell you who this person is in the world. I never seen this guy, he's never been around me. I don't even know who this is," Jones said.

"Well, if anybody know this guy, please turn him in to the Las Vegas Police. I would thank you for doing that," Jones said.

Gumbel also asks Jones about his friendship with Darryl Moore, a convicted drug dealer arrested last year by Nashville police 90 minutes after leaving the cornerback's house. The drug bust captured money, marijuana and cocaine.

Jones said he didn't know Moore was a convicted drug dealer and was surprised by the arrest. Asked if he felt betrayed, Jones said, "Yeah. Of course I do."

He currently is sitting out his season-long suspension from the NFL, hoping for an early return with his case not due for review until after the Titans' 10th game. Jones told HBO he didn't feel he "got a fair say" in his April hearing with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell.

Days after he dropped an appeal of his suspension, he was involved with police again. Georgia police were called to an early morning shooting between two cars following a fight at a strip club. Police said they wanted to talk to Jones, who was implicated in the fight at the club.

"I was kind of really upset, upset and I wasn't really thinking about, 'Well, should I do this, or?' My whole thing was like, 'I'm being treated unfairly,'" Jones said.

Asked if Jones cared what Goodell thought at that point, he said: "No, I didn't."

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press