This Seattle Seahawks Player Made the Super Bowl Sound Sweeter to These Hearing-Impaired Twins

The story is enough to soften the hearts of even the most diehard Denver Broncos fans (this writer included). Derrick Coleman, the Seattle Seahawks’ hearing-impaired and tough-as-nails fullback, received a letter recently from 9-year-old Riley Kovalcik, who along with her sister Erin, shares his disability. “I know how you feel.” Riley wrote. “I also have hearing aids. Just try your best. I have faif [faith] in you Derrick.” The girls’ father tweeted the heartfelt letter to Coleman on January 21st. The next day, he tweeted his own letter back. “I want you to know that I always try my best in everything I do and have faith in you and your twin sister too,” Coleman wrote. “Even though we wear hearing aids, we can still accomplish our goals and dreams.” He ended the letter with a wish to meet the girls sometime to “play some sports or games.”
DON’T MISS: Charity Bowl: Which Super-Bowl Bound Team Wins the Title of Most Philanthropic?
Well, he did a lot more than that. On Thursday morning, the girls appeared via video stream from their home in New Jersey on Good Morning America, where they were visited by Derrick Coleman himself. The trio took a selfie (naturally), and then Coleman delivered them an even bigger surprise: tickets to the Super Bowl for the whole family. The girls’ reacted with huge smiles and an even bigger hug.
Coleman is the first legally deaf player in the NFL and recently became a bit of a spokesman for people with disabilities after starring in a Duracell commercial that has been viewed almost 14 million times on YouTube. The ad told the story of how Coleman was bullied growing up and that he was told to give up his dream of playing in the NFL. Not surprisingly, this resonated with the Kovalcik twins. “The first time I saw it, we were actually tearing a little bit,” Riley told GMA. “We were so happy that there was actually somebody that was good and could understand everything about hearing aids and that could help you.” Needless to say, this heartwarming Super Bowl story is not soon to be forgotten.
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The Super Bowl Is 60 Minutes Long, But Its Impact Lasts a Lot Longer

Football fans might be disappointed on Sunday when the season ends and the NFL goes on hiatus for seven months. But for communities that host pro football teams, the action doesn’t stop with the final whistle.

This year, programs coordinated by the NFL and the NY/NJ Super Bowl host committee pumped $11 million into afterschool programs. Their donations, managed through the Snowflake Youth Foundation, have financed new turf for fields, new floors for gyms, and other improvements that make after school youth programs possible. Organizers launched fifty different projects throughout the region, including many that are rebuilding and repairing facilities damaged by Hurricane Sandy.

“We know that Super Bowl XLVIII will thrill the thousands of fans watching in MetLife Stadium, but we want to ensure that the game impacts many more people in the surrounding communities,” Roger Goodell, NFL commissioner, said when announcing the program last year.

Just like the coin toss, philanthropy efforts are a Super Bowl tradition. Here are some of the people who win, thanks to the efforts of the NFL.

  • Heads Up Football: Launched last year by USA football with NFL support to address player health and safety issues in youth and high school football, this program helps educate and certify coaches, raises awareness of the dangers of concussions, and teaches proper tackling techniques that keeps players safe.
  • NFL PLAY 60: This program is aimed at tackling childhood obesity by encouraging kids to be active for 60 minutes each day. Launched in 2007, the NFL has so far given $200 million through the campaign.
  • Salute to Service: In 32 games this season, for each point scored, the NFL Foundation donated $100 each to the USO, Pat Tillman Foundation, and the Wounded Warrior Project. This year, the NFL donated $455,700 to these organizations. In addition, the NFL donates tickets to military families for the Pro Bowl game and regularly honors them at games.
  • Crucial Catch: This program seeks to promote regular breast cancer screenings for women. The pink apparel worn by players and coaches is auctioned off at the end of the month, with the proceeds benefiting the American Cancer Society’s Community Health Advocates National Grants for Empowerment program, which provides outreach and breast cancer screenings to women in under-served communities.
  • Pro Bowl Community Grant:Every year, the Pro Bowl is held in Hawaii and the NFL gives grants to local non-profits. This year, the NFL Foundation is awarding a combined $100,000 to 40 non-profits.
  • Youth football Camp Grant: The NFL Foundation financially backs current and former NFL players and coaches who host non-contact youth football camps in the summer.
  • Grassroots Grant: Since 1998, the NFL has given $35 million to 273 projects in 70 cities that help non-profit, neighborhood-based organizations to improve the quality, safety, and accessibility of local football fields.
  • Foundation Grants: Many NFL players and coaches have their own foundations and philanthropies, and the NFL helps them out by providing financing.

The Charity Bowl: Which Super Bowl-Bound Team Wins the Title of Most Philanthropic?

As football fans count down the final days until the Denver Broncos and Seattle Seahawks face off in Super Bowl XLVIII, NationSwell is pitting the powerhouse teams against each other to find out which is the most philanthropic. Read on for just a small sampling of the many community programs each franchise supports.

Denver Broncos

Denver Broncos Champions in the Community Programs
Throughout the year, the Denver Broncos take part in a wide range of programs that fall under a dozen philanthropic categories, all of which strive to improve the lives of Coloradans. These charitable efforts range from hosting Drive for Life, the Broncos annual community blood drive in partnership with Bonfils Blood Center; and funding the Denver Broncos Youth Center at The Crossing Facility at the Denver Rescue Mission; to the Hometown Huddle, a league-wide community service day spearheaded by the Broncos and Mile High United Ways. In 2012, the Broncos also started the “Be a Champion in the Community Week”, an annual roster-wide community service effort in which team members work alongside citizens at various charitable events.
The Denver Broncos Boys and Girls Club
The Denver Broncos opened their namesake Boys and Girls Club in Northeast Denver in August 2003. In 2008, the club was expanded with the addition of the Darrent Williams Memorial Teen Center. For a minimum of 10 years, the Denver Broncos committed to funding the operating budget of the center — a $2.4 million investment. The club’s membership has reached capacity, with over 1,400 members, and an average nightly attendance of more than 200 kids. The Broncos players consistently visit and host programs at their Boys and Girls Club, as well as the 13 other branches throughout the Denver metro area.
The PeyBack Foundation / Omaha Peysback Campaign
Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning started his personal charity, the Peyback Foundation, in 1999 to support disadvantaged youth through programs that provide leadership and growth opportunities. To date, the PeyBack Foundation has donated more than $6.5 million to youth organizations in Indiana, Tennessee, Louisiana and Colorado. During the playoffs, a group of companies led by the Omaha Chamber of Commerce, joined together to donate $800 to the PeyBack Foundation every time the standout quarterback yelled his now-famous prompt “Omaha!” before the snap. In the AFC Championship game, Manning yelled the magic word 31 times, raising $24,800. For the Super Bowl, this collective (now 15 businesses strong) is nearly doubling their efforts, promising $1,500 per “Omaha!” It’s safe to say that we’ll be hearing that word quite a few times on Sunday.
MORE: This Seattle Seahawks Player Made the Super Bowl Sound Sweeter to These Hearing-Impaired Twins

Seattle Seahawks

Seattle Seahawks Charitable Foundation
The Seattle Seahawks Charitable Foundation was created in 1995 to promote the social, emotional, intellectual, and physical health of the area’s youth by enhancing opportunities to participate in sports and fitness. The SSCF hosts various NFL Charities programs throughout the year, such as Hometown Huddle and PLAY 60 Challenge, which encourages kids to play for 60 minutes a day. In fall 2004, the SSCF unveiled the Spirit of 12 Partners Program, a collaboration between the franchise, the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation and local youth service organizations. At each home game, representatives from one of these organizations raise funds by selling the Seahawks Gameday Magazine to fans, keeping 100 percent of the proceeds. The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation then matches that amount. In 2012, more than $250,000 was raised through the Spirit of 12 Partners Program, and more than $2 million has been raised overall since 2004.
A Better Seattle / A Better LA
Head Coach Pete Carroll started A Better Seattle as a community initiative to reduce youth gang violence by working with local partner organizations — the YMCA of Greater Seattle and the Seattle Youth Violence Prevention Initiative — to create opportunities for at-risk youth to take control of their lives. The organization tries to build a culture of peace and connect these youths to community programs that can help them through trained outreach teams, in hopes of creating a safer overall environment. Carroll also started A Better LA in 2003, a sister organization that aims to reduce gang violence in inner-city Los Angeles by empowering change from within the community.
Fam 1st Family Foundation
The Fam 1st Family Foundation was launched by Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch in partnership with Joshua Johnson, quarterback of the Cincinnati Bengals, in 2011. This organization is dedicated to empowering underprivileged youth by mentoring them on the importance of education, literacy and self-esteem. The foundation plans to open a youth center in Oakland, Calif., where Lynch and Johnson are from, which will host workshops for vulnerable communities on literacy, athletic and vocational training, after school tutoring and more.
So, you tell us: which Super Bowl team wins the title for most philanthropic?
MORE: The Super Bowl Is 60 Minutes Long, But It’s Impact Lasts A Lot Longer