Lawrence Taylor has come to trip the light fantastic. It only seems as though he is going to bash in your skull first. Many years removed from his cocaine-fueled fall from grace, the legendary Giants linebacker, considered far and wide the greatest defensive player in NFL history, still is enigmatic enough to consent to an interview, pick the spot -- a dance studio outside Miami -- then walk in 25 minutes late, look you dead in the eye and declare, "(Expletive) this. I'm not answering any (expletive) questions." Ah, well. It's only 6:25 a.m. -- an hour when the 50-year-old Taylor used to still be awake, not rubbing the sleep out of his eyes. There will be time after his Dancing with the Stars practice for this impasse to be resolved, much as there has been time since his rock-bottom arrest in October 1998 on crack cocaine charges for Taylor to turn his life around.
A few days after that arrest, Taylor was offered the chance to audition for the football film Any Given Sunday -- "with two drug counselors in tow," his manager, Mark Lepselter, recalls. A decade later, Taylor quietly celebrated 10 years of sobriety with his third wife, Lynette, and their newly adopted son, 3-year-old Malcolm. Football's real L.T. (sorry, LaDainian) spoke with Sporting News' Steve Greenberg.
A few days after that arrest, Taylor was offered the chance to audition for the football film Any Given Sunday -- "with two drug counselors in tow," his manager, Mark Lepselter, recalls. A decade later, Taylor quietly celebrated 10 years of sobriety with his third wife, Lynette, and their newly adopted son, 3-year-old Malcolm. Football's real L.T. (sorry, LaDainian) spoke with Sporting News' Steve Greenberg.