SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — "Keep pounding."
Nobody on the current roster played with or was coached by Mills. Yet, rookies and new free agents all know his story. They're told of his legacy by longtime employees like equipment manager Jackie Miles, head athletic trainer Ryan Vermillion or Proehl, now the team's wide receivers coach.
"I can walk through the streets and people yell 'Keep Pounding,'" said safety Kurt Coleman.
"Regardless of the things that are going on in your life on the football field or off,
Cheap NFL Jerseys, you never give up — you just keep pounding," fullback Mike Tolbert said.
Eventually he got a tryout with the USFL's Baltimore/Philadelphia Stars and quickly became one of the team's best players under coach Jim Mora. When Mora joined the New Orleans Saints in 1986, he took Mills with him. Mills became the team's rock at middle linebacker and would become a four-time All-Pro.
Mills' father Sam, a Panthers linebacker from 1995-97 and then an assistant coach, uttered the phrase "keep pounding" at a downtown Charlotte hotel on Jan. 2, 2004, the night before the Panthers started a run to their first Super Bowl. It has been become the team's rallying call.
Before every home game, someone is selected to bang a giant black drum on the field with the words "keep pounding" on it.
The words have become synonymous with the NFC champion Carolina Panthers.
Second-year wide receiver Philly Brown: "No matter what the circumstance is, no matter what the situation is,
Cheap Nike Shoes From China, no matter what the score is, you continue to just keep working and keep pounding. You don't give up."
There, Mills delivered an emotional message akin to Jim Valvano's "Don't Give Up" speech, say those in attendance. There were no microphones on hand to record the words, no TV cameras to capture the moment. But the message was clear: No matter how hard things get, no matter how bleak things look — keep pounding.
Ricky Proehl, a Panthers wide receiver at the time, said the speech was so powerful that grown men were weeping.
His father never gave up.
A way of life.
Mills, the team's linebacker coach at the time, was dying of intestinal cancer when he gathered players together in a meeting room before they would beat the Dallas Cowboys in a wild-card playoff game.
Mills talked about how he could have given up on fighting in the face of terminal cancer, but refused.
The Panthers continue to keep Mills' legacy alive.
Stephen Curry has hit it. So has 8-year-old cancer survivor Braylon Beam.
The message has been carried over to the fan base as well.
An undrafted rookie out of Montclair State, Mills tried time and time again to make a career out of football but nobody would sign him. He went to work as a high school teacher, but kept working out in his free time chasing a dream.
Ask anyone, they know the story.
They're on the walls of the stadium's weight room, on the tunnel leading to the field and even stitched into the collar of every Panthers jersey.
The speech, his son said,
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Said former Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme: "Everybody had goose bumps. It gave you chills. The speech, it was much bigger than football — it was about life. It was like something out of a Hollywood movie."
When Mills revealed he had intestinal cancer in the summer of 2003, it sent shockwaves throughout the organization. Mills continued to coach the Panthers and far exceeded the three months doctors had given him to live. He died on April 18, 2005, at 45.
"It takes time for some to learn the Panther way and (team owner) Mr. (Jerry) Richardson's expectations of the Panther characteristics he expects," Mills said. "Once you learn that,
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There is a statue of him outside of the team's downtown Charlotte stadium.
"It's a way of life around here," said Panthers assistant defensive line coach Sam Mills III.
"Just keep pounding — that's where it all started,
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Defensive end Charles Johnson: "It means you never quit — never."
Added Proehl: "Unbelievable. The hair on the back of your neck stood up."
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