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OUDAILY
For 100 years, the student voice of the University of Oklahoma
A NEW CHAPTER FEMINIST ART FOR A CAUSE ⢠6
Striker returns to lead OU off football field GEORGE STOIA ⢠@GEORGESTOIA
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SPENSER DAVIS ⢠@DAVIS_SPENSER
ll Eric Striker has ever wanted to do was make a difference. A two-year captain at both Armwood High School in Florida and at Oklahoma, Striker was a standout linebacker. Heâs best known for leading the Sooners to an upset victory over Alabama in the 2014 Sugar Bowl and powering OUâs defense to a College Football Playoff appearance in 2015. But, now a year removed from the game, itâs his contributions off the field that continue to live on. Two years after the Sigma Alpha Epsilon video that rocked OUâs campus and nearly broke the football locker room, Striker sits in an office in the Oklahoma Memorial Union, still looking to make that difference.
âI want to leave the world with people knowing that I stood for something. But Iâm hoping that I truly inspire a lot of people, not just my voice but a walking example.â ERIC STRIKER, GRADUATE ASSISTANT IN OU STUDENT LIFE
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hat period sparked a passion for activism and social justice issues within Striker. âI want to leave the world with people knowing that I stood for something,â Striker said. âBut Iâm hoping that I truly inspire a lot of people, not just my voice but a walking example.â In January, Striker was hired as a graduate assistant in Student Life at OU and is working on his masterâs degree in adult and higher education â something he thinks will open doors for himself down the line. In the meantime, he hopes to foster communication among students on social justice issues. âObviously I want to get my masterâs, but also while Iâm here, I do want to bring the campus together,â Striker said. âBecause I do feel weâve come a way, but I feel like weâve got some more things to do as far as student life and campus life that can help better the whole environment.â Shortly after he was hired by Student Life, Professor Emeritus George Henderson â who has spent the last 50 years at OU as a racial pioneer and leader for the black community â spoke to Striker about his opportunity. âI told him, âitâs your turn now,ââ said Henderson, who established the Human Relations department at OU and was the first black man to own a home in Norman. âItâs (Strikerâs) turn to pick up the gauntlet and move the agenda forward if thatâs what (he wants) to do.â
Striker started on this path on March 8, 2015, the evening the SAE video became public. Just before midnight, Striker posted an expletive-laced video â he later apologized for his profanity â on Snapchat expressing his raw emotions, decrying the racial resentment he had felt on campus. Two days later, a more-subdued Striker appeared on CNN, representing all athletes at OU, regardless of sport or race. His poise caught the eye of his future boss, Quy Nguyen, who heads up Student Life at OU.
âItâs (Strikerâs) turn to pick up the gauntlet and move the agenda forward if thatâs what (he wants) to do.â GEORGE HENDERSON, PROFESSOR EMERITUS
âI think it came at a time when he could have remained quiet,â Nguyen said. âAnd I really appreciate him because he spoke up. He wanted to make himself heard. But then he also included people, it wasnât just âEric Striker.â I think what he did so incredibly well was getting the athletic department on board to where they felt unified, no matter what you look like or what you did.â For Striker, having people focused on his words and actions was
nothing new. âIt seems to be throughout my life, whether that was middle school, high school, or even here, for some reason I seem to be the guy that is the one to speak out,â Striker said. âI seem to be that guy that my peers and my classmates see as the guy to rally around and say, âHey you are the voice.ââ LEADERSHIP Nearly a decade ago, inside a Tampa, Florida, middle school, Striker first discovered he had a unique presence â whether he wanted it or not. It was his eighth grade language arts teacher, Ardra Daniels, who broke the news. âWe kept telling him, âYou can be a leader in so many ways,ââ said Daniels, who is in her 15th year of teaching at Progress Village Middle Magnet. Striker recalled the conversation vividly. ââWhen you come into class, if youâre loud and rowdy and youâre being a goofball, do you notice the whole class is doing that? But when you come in ready to focus, and really want to learn, you see the impact that you have on the class,ââ Striker recalled her telling him. âAnd before that moment, I never knew that.â âThat was the moment where I said, âI really am (a leader).ââ Striker utilized that gift to unify student athletes in the days and weeks after SAE. He decided to speak up not only as an athlete but
as a human being. âWeâre not going to be what people define us as athletes â play football, do your sport and keep your mouth shut,â Striker said. âThatâs kind of asinine to me. Weâre human beings too. We have family members. We have people back home, and we deal with these things on a daily basis all the time.â But even now that his football days are over, his message is still the same. âAt the end of the day, weâre all people and weâve all got love for each other,â he said. âI wanted to be defined as Eric Striker. I want you to get to know me for who I am. I didnât want for you to glorify me for the things I did on the field, because thereâs numerous guys who can do those great things on the field. But who am I off the field? Am I an A-hole to you? Define me by my character and not by what I do on the field. âAll Iâm saying is, Iâm just a human being. Iâm no better than the next person. But I realize the status that the football players have, this pedestal.â Striker has already left a lasting influence once before â his photo still has a place on the âWall of Fameâ in the Progress Village Middle Magnet guidance office. âHeâs been one of the great ones to come through,â Daniels said. But that wasnât her favorite memory of Striker, even if it was the most
STRIKERâS CAREER STATISTICS Individual tackles: 117 Total tackles: 191 Tackles for loss: 46.5 Sacks: 23 Career interceptions: 1 Source: SoonerSports.com
ABOVE LEFT: Then-linebacker Eric Striker celebrates with Oklahoma fans following a victory over Baylor Nov. 14, 2015 at McLane Stadium. (Scott Hiney/The Daily)
THANT AUNG/THE DAILY
Charles Tapper, Trevor Knight and Eric Striker walk out during what was scheduled to be an open practice March 9, 2015. Athletes walked out of practice wearing all black after the racist SAE video surfaced online.
ABOVE RIGHT: Graduate assistant Eric Striker poses for a photo in his office in Student Life Tuesday. Striker graduated with a bachelorâs degree in political science. (Siandhara Bonnet/The Daily)
impactful. âI think my favorite one was the day that he hugged me and just said, âThank you for believing in me and not giving up on me,ââ she recalled. âAnd that was right before he went to college. ... I think thatâs why Iâm in education. I can see further down the road sometimes, and young people donât always know. âIâm just proud of him.â LEGACY Itâs unknown where Strikerâs journey will head next â whether thatâs in Oklahoma or somewhere else â but his vision is clear. âI want to be in a position to help bring a change in a positive way, help educate kids, try to help give them what they need, the knowledge to have a understanding to be successful, I guess, as a long term goal,â he said. As Striker steps down from the âpedestalâ of being an Oklahoma football player, heâll get to practice what he preaches. âFootball was great and I love the game, but Iâm still a human being,â he said. âI just want people to see me as just like everybody else. Fighting for the same things ⌠Iâm not different because I put the Sooners (uniform) on on Saturday and go out there and ball out and Iâm on ESPN, so what? That donât mean nothing. I love the game, I played the game, but that donât mean that Iâm separate.â Striker is after something much greater than success on the gridiron â he aspires to leave a legacy that will be remembered for generations. âI would want people to say, âHe inspired a lot of us, he stood for something.â Kind of the ways I think about Muhammad Ali, Martin Luther King, all these great, great people that came before us that stood for people,â Striker said. âIâll be happy that my kids, when theyâre coming up, say, âDaddy stood for something.â With these issues going on, what did I do? Iâm just somebody whoâs trying to help. I want it to be known that I stood for something.â George Stoia
george.s.stoia-1@ou.edu
Spenser Davis
davis.spenser@ou.edu