Marshawn Lynch, one of the best running backs in the NFL, moseys through the door of the San Francisco Bay Area's Albany Bowl early Friday evening wearing all black: jeans, low tops and an oversized sweatshirt, hood up and tightly fastened with a bow over a backwards black hat. Printed on his hoodie in bright red are big, arced letters reading "LIFEGUARD" with a sizable red cross below them, followed by the large words "OAKLAND," and "CALIFORNIA" underneath in smaller text.
"It is! It is him!" a waist-high little boy shrieks to his father before running toward Lynch. Others flock to him to offer hugs, dap and handshakes. The Oakland Tech and Cal product, still basking in the glow of February's Super Bowl victory, disappears momentarily before returning to casually post up on a barstool. A handheld camera and boom mic have since picked up Lynch's trail and a queue also takes shape so he can fulfill the individual photo requests. A young girl is beside herself, in a daze at standing mere feet from the 28-year-old.
"Growing up out here, it's kind of an enigma to think that you can do what we're doing right now."
(Seahawks.com/Godofredo Vasquez) The bowling night is part of a now four-day annual event put on by Lynch's Fam 1st Family Foundation, a fundraiser to build a youth learning and development center in Oakland. He started the nonprofit with his cousin and high school teammate, fellow NFL player Josh Johnson of the San Francisco 49ers, the same year he elected to leave college a season early and was selected by the Buffalo Bills with the 12th pick of the 2007 NFL Draft.
"We're just trying to empower our inner-city youth," Lynch explains to a few members of the media the next afternoon, "not just in our community, but communities around the world. We take the approach with ... our foundation with just giving the best opportunity, putting our best foot forward with trying to give back to our community, to give opportunities to these kids that they don't have. Just the opportunity for them to see us is really big."
"Growing up out here, it's kind of an enigma to think that you can do what we're doing right now," adds Johnson. "A lot of people don't think it's possible for them because they don't see it everyday. But part of us coming back and being at home is for them to understand that, Oakland kids, we did the same stuff ya'll did, we made mistakes. And then we learned from them while we tried to improve to strive toward our goals. It's a reality, it's not a distant thing, that you can do what you want to do if you really work for it. And we just try to [be] examples that they can relate to, guys that they can communicate with."
Delton Edwards, the two's high school coach at Tech, has seen their development since the very beginning.
"We implanted that into them: Give back something somebody's given you," he said. "Your job is to come back and give something, make it better for kids after. And Marshawn never dreamed that it would get to this level, but he got it there, so he's in a position to really make this thing really explode, get an opportunity for the kids."
So on this night, between satisfying numerous appeals for selfies and group shots, taking part in a raffle for memorabilia, and the occasional frame of fingerless rolls down a lane, Lynch persists in giving fellow Oaklanders a kick in the pants — sometimes literally when prodding all of the doting children — with an eye toward the future.
But like the tough-exteriored backdrop, Lynch can't seem to shed the past or stereotypes about him.
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There's an old saying in the Bay Area about the one-way toll of the bridge that connects San Francisco to Oakland: You pay to go to San Francisco; you never pay to go to Oakland.
This old chestnut notwithstanding, Oakland remains an especially gritty, difficult town. It's part of its understood charm — a tough city that hardens those who claim roots there.
"Oakland, it done taught me a lot," says Lynch. "I mean, Oakland has really just taught me about life, and I feel that I'm proud of my city and I feel like [without it] I wouldn't have been the man who I am today. I'd had ups and downs and I've been able to overcome 'em, just because I feel like being from Oakland I had to overcome so much. The reason I feel I've been able to bounce back from that is because of the strong backbone that I have, and that I represent Oakland."
Oakland consistently ranks in the top 10 major American cities on lists for violent crime (which includes homicide and robbery) and income inequality. In the last few years, the city has had a revolving door of police chiefs and owns one of the lowest officers-to-population ratios in the entire country. Some studies have even pointed to all of the death and trauma leading many inner-city youth to show signs of a form of post-traumatic stress disorder, most often diagnosed in soldiers returning from war.
"Oakland has really just taught me about life, and I feel that I'm proud of my city."
And yet, it's this same setting that was named No. 5 on The New York Times' list of 45 "Places to Go" in 2012. Online real estate company Movoto followed that up by dubbing Oakland its "Most Exciting City in America" in 2013, and Forbes ranked it No. 12 on its 2014 list of "America's Coolest Cities." For one extreme or the other, Oakland continues to receive plenty of editorial ink.
In similar fashion, no matter what he does — and in many cases because of precisely that — Lynch can't seem to stay out of the press, despite his apparent aversion for it. Most recently, Lynch caught flak for marking off his parked white Lamborghini Aventador Roadster with velvet ropes on an Oakland public street as he came off a holdout from Seahawks training camp. Word came later from the director of a biopic on Lynch's life that it was actually a staged scene for the film, and not Lynch's doing. Still, initial headlines always capture more attention than any clarification.
Lynch's distaste for the media, already well documented, became the national story of interest in the weeks leading up to last year's Super Bowl when he juked and stiff-armed his way past mandatory availability until the NFL eventually threatened a hefty fine. He finally submitted, sort of, by making an appearance practically backstage at Media Day and providing now prized gems to interviewer Deion Sanders. Quotes like "I'm just 'bout that action, boss," and "Laid back, kick back, mind my own business, stay in my own lane," only added to the Marshawn Lynch mystique.
Lynch reinforces his stance at his Fam 1st Football Camp when asked by an interviewer why he avoids reporters "I ain't worried about that, talk to me about something that matters," briskly followed by, "Thank you."
"I don't know why he didn't want to do nothing at first or talk to the media or none of that," says his mother Delisa Lynch. "I don't question him about it. We just keep everything positive in our circle, so if he feels media is a negative thing, then we just don't talk about it. Marshawn's just always been really unique, really quiet. I've always said, 'Don't talk about it, be about it,' and I guess that means you don't always have to put out there what you're gonna do, you just go out there and show them what you can do, so to speak."


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