Only in America A Draft Story

April 30, 2010

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The wonderfully named Zoltan Mesko was born and raised in Timisoara, Romania, right on the Hungarian border.  Like his parents, Mihai and Elizabeta, Zoltan speaks both languages fluently.  

When the Berlin Wall came downin 1989, life improved dramatically for most people living behind the Iron Curtain – but not much for Romanians.  His parents, both engineers, could not leave the country until they won Romania’s Green Card lottery -– yes, they had one – in 1997, when Zoltan was ten.  

They quickly discovered Hollywood’s depiction of America didn’t quite match their apartment in Queens. It was dirty and cramped – even for just three people -- and too expensive,so they moved to Twinsburg, Ohio, right outside Cleveland.    

Zoltan learned English in about two months.  His parents took two years, but understanding American culture took a little longer.  

When Mesko’s eight-grade class played kickball inside the gym one day, he boomed the ball so high it shattered a ceiling light.  The teacher gave him a choice:“You’re either paying for that light, or you’re playing football.”    

It was an easy decision. At Mesko’s Thursday night soccer games, only the parents watched. But the Friday night football games were sold out, every time. And football had cheerleaders.  

During warm-ups for a game his first year, Mesko’s coach casually mentioned that the other team’s punter had just gotten a college scholarship.   

“Excuse me?” a mystified Mesko asked. “A scholarship -- for punting?” 

“Yeah, for punting,” thecoach said, like it was the most natural thing in the world. 

When Zoltan told his parents,they didn’t believe him.  Who’d heard of such a thing?   

But Mesko knew they couldn’t pay for college any other way, so he devoted himself to the singular skill of kicking a football as high and far as he could.  Before his senior season, he’d become him the nation’s top punting prospect. Indiana offered him a full scholarship, then Harvard, Yale and every other Ivy League school offered him admission and financial aid. It still didn’t make sense to his parents, but they were no longer goingto question it.   

Mesko grew up a Buckeye fan,but when his mom researched his options, they quickly dismissed the home state team.  The Columbia coach told him, “We can’t guarantee you the NFL, but we can guarantee you Wall Street.”  Mesko wanted a shot at both, so he enrolled at Michigan.   

He graduated from Michigan’s business school in four years with an A-minus average, and will be awarded a master’s degree in sports management tomorrow.  He also got the attention of NFL scouts, but almost blew it at the Senior Bowl in January, where he was distracted by the gifts and the interviews and the atmosphere, and kicked badly.   

A month later, at the NFL combine in Indianapolis, Zoltan focused on just one thing: Kicking the football. In a one-hour work out with four other punters, he re-established himself as the best prospect.       

On Saturday, he watched the NFL draft with his friends and his parents, who drove up for the day. During the fifth round, Mesko’s cell phone rang.  “Unknown Caller,” it said. When he picked it up, he found himself talking to the New England Patriots’ head coach, Bill Billichick, who’s won three Super Bowls, and the owner, Robert Kraft.  While they talked,ESPN announced that, “With the 150th pick, the New England Patriots select Zoltan Mesko of Michigan.”  The room erupted.   

This spring Mesko will sign a contract for the minimum wage.  But, in the NFL, that’s not $7.25 an hour, but $320,000 a year.  He will be the poorest player in the NFL, but probably the richest kid from Timisoara, Romania.  

Taking it all in, Mesko said,“What a difference a decade makes.”
 
 
Only in America.

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Comments

  • 4/30/2010 10:26 AM Ty Tessmer wrote:
    Hi John,

    Good article, I am surprised that he would be paid the minimum considering the impact he could have on a game! But i would take it!!!!

    Have a nice weekend. Go Blue!
    Reply to this
  • 4/30/2010 11:00 AM Jim wrote:
    Thanks John for a great story.
    I've had the pleasure of knowing Zoltan as a Ross School student. He's as good a person as he is a student and kicker. It's nice to have a positive role model. We're very proud of him!!
    Reply to this
  • 4/30/2010 2:35 PM Rajeev Batra wrote:
    John -- Could not agree more about Zoltan, I had the pleasure of teaching him last Fall. ALSO want you to know I love your Michigan Radio segments -- I think they are so good they ought to be on NPR nationally. Tell them I said that...
    Reply to this
  • 4/30/2010 4:00 PM Laszlo Varju wrote:
    I'm an American of Hungarian decent living in Budapest, Hungary, and I can assure all readers of this blog that Zoltan is a HUGE story here in Hungary. The kid is 100% Hungarian so I cringe every time I read that he's from Romania. For the historical record, Temesvar (where he was born) and the Translyvanian part of Romania is the home of a sizable Hungarian minority. It was a result of the 1920 Trianon peace treaty that that part of Hungary was handed over to Romania, along with its indigenous Hungarian population, which included Zoli's ancestors.
    Wishing him well in the NFL!
    Reply to this
  • 4/30/2010 4:18 PM Sven wrote:
    Great article, first time I had heard about Zoltan's background.

    I was hoping you could work in the fact that he is also known as the "Space Emperor (of Space)."
    Reply to this
  • 5/2/2010 5:07 AM Rick DeMuro wrote:
    Just to drop you a line from Shanghai, China. John U. Nancy is here with me in China, and it was great seeing your article about Michigan and Zolton. What a great Story, and Congratulations to Zolton a find young Michigan Man.
    Reply to this
  • 5/3/2010 12:10 PM Jason wrote:
    I had a business school class and did a couple of group assignments with Zoltan. I had a stereotype of football players being full of themselves but he's one of the nicest guys I know. He's very intelligent as well.
    Reply to this
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