Franklin Pierce Athletics Hosts Chris Herren As Part Of Pierce Pride

Former All-American spoke openly to student-athletes about drug addiction
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RINDGE, N.H. (September 7,
2009) – The Franklin Pierce University Department of
Athletics welcomed former Boston Celtic Chris Herren to campus as
part of the university’s “Pierce Pride”
initiative on Monday night. The former All-American spoke openly
and candidly with a standing-room-only crowd of Ravens
student-athletes in the Franklin Pierce Fieldhouse about his rise
through Massachusetts high school basketball and his eventual fall
out of the NBA as a three-time convicted drug felon.
Herren chronicled his transition from Durfee High School to
entering Boston College on a full athletic scholarship. He spoke of
being featured on the front page of the Boston Globe and the Boston
Herald at 18 years old due to his failed drug test and subsequent
dismissal from Boston College. He described his journey to play for
legendary coach Jerry Tarkanian at Fresno State.
From there, he spoke of his journey to the NBA as a 1999
second-round pick (30th overall) by the Denver Nuggets, of his time
with the Boston Celtics and of his journey through myriad European
countries playing basketball and abusing drugs, as well as speaking
to his eventual recovery. Herren has now been sober for 13
months.
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Herren’s emotional tale was
followed by a spirited question-and-answer session with the
assembled crowd which delved further into the psychology, the
emotion and the relationships which led him, first into his drug
abuse and, later, out of it.
Now in its second year, the "Pierce Pride" program is an effort by
the Department of Athletics to foster campus- and community-wide
support for both Athletics and Franklin Pierce University as a
whole. The program seeks to help connect the campus and the
community with the university's 17 intercollegiate athletics
programs and, in turn, allow the athletics programs to give back to
the community.