Bill
Pierce meets a player who settled for life with the Lions.
The
day Bill Roffey met JR's double was the day that almost changed his life
and made him a dollar-loaded star of the American gridiron.
Instead
Millwall's left-back turned tail on Texas and headed. home to choose
between life with the Lions or a return to Brentford, their Third
Division rivals with whom he finished last season.
Tomorrow,
in place of the sunshine Superbowl style he might have picked, Roffey
will get to grips again with a more familiar scenario of a London soccer
derby at The Den - between Millwall and Brentford.
Big
Bill, 30, a Strapping flame - haired defender who played 11 years at
Orient after opening his career, in 1972 at Crystal Palace has no
regrets over his decision.
But
he admits: “I could have been a rich man if I'd become a goalkicker in
American football like a lot of people wanted me to.”
The
gridiron moguls sat up when two seasons ago they saw Stepney-born Roffey
putting the full power of his 13 stone frame into long-range shooting at
a soccer training camp he now part-owns in Dallas.
They
reckoned he'd make an ideal kicker-not a dirty player, like it
sounds-but the man who makes brief, yet significant on-field appearance
to thump long-distance kicks for vital points before being hit by a mass
of muscle bound tin helmeted opposition.
Roffey
says: “I’ve always been able to hit a ball and although I’ve
only scored only 10 League goals in my career, they've all been from
around the 30-35-yard mark. I just don’t get any other kind.”
“At one stage there was queue of American football clubs after me -
names like the Cleveland Browns, Dallas Cowboys and Buffalos Bills. But
the one who