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<UID>
9101040406
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
910124
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, January 24, 1991
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
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<PAGE>
1D
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo MARK DUNCAN Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
James Lofton sits with attorney Stephen Glynn during Lofton's
sexual assault trial in 1986 in Green Bay.    "I am innocent, I
was innocent, I was always innocent," he says today.
Buffalo's James Lofton beats the Raiders' Lionel Washington in
Sunday's AFC championship  game.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1991, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CATCH ME IF YOU CAN
THE RECEIVER: LOFTON PATTERN
OF DECEIT MAKES HIM PUZZLE
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
TAMPA, Fla. --  When the coffee turned cold and the fruit plates were
empty, the announcement came that the morning interviews were over. All around
the huge ballroom, the Buffalo Bills headed for  the exits. James Lofton
stayed where he was, sitting at a table, surrounded by reporters. He answered
more questions -- about his age, about his years in Green Bay. Soon the room
was half-empty, and  the kitchen staff was collecting plates and clanging
silverware. Lofton stayed, answering more questions -- about being cut  by the
 Raiders, about catching passes now from Jim Kelly, about how it feels  to
reach a Super Bowl after all these years.

  Finally, with most of his teammates gone and the chairs being collected by
the cleanup crew, Lofton rose.  "Thank you," he said. He then reached over
and shook hands with every reporter at the table. He went around, he didn't
miss anyone. Some smiled, some nodded. All seemed surprised. He's shaking our
hands?  In a world where athletes would rather  kiss a snake than acknowledge
a sports writer, such a move is cause for curiosity.

  But so, too, is James Lofton. You must make up your mind about him,
because he will play with it. On the surface, Lofton is the best story in this
Super Bowl: He gave his youth to the Green Bay Packers and never came close to
the Big Game, despite making the Pro Bowl seven times, despite setting all
sorts of pass-catching  records. He seemed doomed to retire without
championship glory, great stats, no ring, a receiver's answer to  O.J.
Simpson. But now, suddenly,  he's here, on the big stage, with a different
team, a team  he had to try out for, a last chance, a gamble. And at age 34
he's a starting wide receiver again; who knows, he could even make the big
play and win the game Sunday. To top it off, he's a terrific guy when you meet
him, a Stanford graduate, extremely articulate, funny, polite.
  So it's great, right? You want to  dive, unblinking, into his football
fairy tale. Except this sexual assault thing keeps coming up. Two charges.
Both with women he met in bars. Both while he was married. 
  Yes, he was cleared, nothing was ever proved in court. But he admits the
sex, he admits the cheating in a darkened stairwell -- this, despite his
golden boy image and seemingly wonderful marriage. So you have this  big
contradiction. You have a guy who can lie. And you have to wonder.
  This is a story about James  Lofton at his first Super Bowl and it is
either the story of a man who has grown up and is finally getting what he
deserves --  or the story of a man who has everybody fooled.
 The one advantage of  being as old as I am," James Lofton is saying, all
smiles, "is that you can lie to the rookies. You can say to them, 'Yeah, I was
in a Super Bowl. With the Raiders. I caught two touchdown passes, don't  you
remember?' And they'll say,  'Uh.  . . . Oh, yeah!' "
  He laughs. You laugh. This is Lofton at his best, witty, wise, terrifically
engaging. He has a whole monologue of age jokes now; you might,  too, if you
were the first NFL player to score a touchdown in the  '70s '80s and '90s. 
  James, how does a veteran like you handle Buffalo's no- huddle offense?
  "It's tough. Once in a while you  see me bending over, trying to catch my
breath. I'm actually yelling to my teammates, 'Hey, guys. How about if we
huddle up for once?' "
  James, what do you think of playing alongside guys who are 10 years younger
than you?
  "Well, I see where some college sophomores might come into the draft this
year. If we take any, I'll be playing alongside guys young enough to be my
son!"
  Hey, James,  what do you do  better now than you did when you were younger?
  "Change diapers."
  More laughs. This part was always easy for Lofton. The talking. The
personality. Back in Green Bay, when he was  the biggest star in a football
crazy state, the interviews were non-stop, people were delighted with his
ability to charm, to schmooze, to boast. OK. At times he seemed cocky, maybe
too cocky. But after  all, he made the Pro Bowl as a rookie, he graduated
Stanford with an engineering degree, he nearly made the 1976 Olympic track
team and two years later, he had the world's best long jump. So there were  a
few things to brag about, right?
  The fact is, for the first six years in Green Bay, James Lofton, stud
athlete, was a king. He had a  big house, a beautiful wife, his own TV show,
he chaired more  charity events than Ted Turner and Jane Fonda put together.
March of Dimes, Boys Club, Special Olympics, Urban League. Kids adored him. 
  Women adored him, too. Maybe more than was healthy. And here is where you
take the leap of faith with James Lofton.
  In 1984, he and teammate Eddie Lee Ivery were accused of sexually
assaulting an exotic dancer in her dressing room. And while the case never
came to trial, the district attorney made a point of telling the press: "We
believe the conduct of the two men to be reprehensible, shameful and
depraved."
  That was the first swipe at Lofton's halo.  His TV show was canceled. Fans
were stunned. It didn't help that the Packers continued to lose and lose, with
forgettable players shipping in and shipping out. Still, Lofton might have
survived that first incident. He had two more outstanding seasons, he made two
more trips to the Pro Bowl. He was dusting himself off.
  But then came 1986.
It was three days before the season ended. Lofton and  two teammates went to a
place called the Top Shelf Lounge, where they encountered three women from
northern Michigan in town for some Christmas shopping. They talked. They
flirted. Eventually, Lofton  and one of the women, a 30-year-old housewife,
took an elevator downstairs and entered a stairwell,  where the woman
performed oral sex  on him. This much, Lofton admits. But later, after she had
left  the bar and was back at her hotel, the woman claimed she was forced,
that Lofton had grabbed her by her hair. She told a security man. Lofton was
booked on a sexual assault charge.
  This, he denies.
  "I am innocent, I was innocent, I was always innocent," he says today.
  It didn't take the jury long to agree with him. About two hours, in fact.
One of the jurors would later say, "It's a case that should never have been
brought to court."
  By that point, however, it didn't matter. Lofton was finished in Green Bay.
For all his numbers, for all his Pro Bowls, two strikes were  still one  too
many in a conservative place like Wisconsin. Lofton was traded to the  LA
Raiders before the second case even came to trial.
  And suddenly, the king was just another fish in the pond. "Kids would  come
running up to me in LA and say,  'Where's Marcus Allen? Where's Bo Jackson?'
It taught me a lot about being normal again. It taught me that, no matter what
I was thinking in Green Bay, the game  will go on without me when I leave, it
will go on quite  healthily without me."
Y ou want to believe that. You want to believe that Lofton just took a spin
off the road, that he's got it back together.  You want to believe that all
these wonderful statistics he has thrown together this season for Buffalo,
leading the AFC  in average yards per catch  (20.3),  grabbing seven passes in
the playoff win  over Miami, moving up to third place on the NFL's all-time
receiving yardage list -- you want to believe that all that is the result of a
new focus, a better focus, out of the bars and back to a good  life. His wife,
Beverly, has stuck with him through all the bad stuff, the trial, the local
jokes, the humiliation. She recently gave birth to their third child. And it
helps that Lofton, now in his  13th season, is willing to address his past.
  "People forget that I was found innocent," he says. "They overlook that for
some reason. As an athlete in this country, once you're charged it seems
you're  guilty until proven innocent. It should be the other way around.  . .
. 
  "My life has changed. I don't want those incidents to follow me around. Bad
things happen to good people. You can either quit  or you go on.
  "The funny thing is, in Buffalo, they write about how my character is
helping to pull this team together."
  He is asked if he were writing a term paper about his career, how he would
handle the sexual assault charges.
  He pauses for a moment. "I'd put them in the footnotes -- and then I'd lose
them."
  Should it be that easy? Are we being too cynical? Perhaps. Everyone, after
all, is entitled to a second chance (in the case of athletes, it seems more
often a third or fourth). Sexual assault is not to be taken lightly. But there
have been no reported problems since Green Bay.  Lofton has found a calmer
stardom in Buffalo. And on Sunday, he will give the world a chance to see him,
finally, in a game that really matters. He is not the speedster who was once a
one-man track team  at Stanford. "If I used to go 150 m.p.h., now I go 130,"
he says, "but I get better gas  mileage."
  And everyone laughs. And James Lofton is in good graces again, smiling,
being charming, shaking  hands with reporters when he leaves. You try not to
think that he did the same thing back in Green Bay. You try not to think how
someone with brains can easily fool the press and the public, hosting  charity
events and fathering children and then taking a strange woman downstairs in a
bar.
  You try not to think about that. You watch the cleanup crew take the
napkins and tablecloths from yet another  Super Bowl press conference and you
try to think of football and football only. Because sometimes, it's just
easier that way.
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