T
HE ROLE OF RICKY JERRETwas the
most diff icult part that veteran cast-
ing director Sheila Jaffe ever had to
f ill. Over the course of a year she auditioned
a thousand actors for the co-starring role on
the hit HBO seriesBallers. Most of the actors
captured the mercurial running backâs out-
size ego but in a way that was too macho
and too angry.
She needed someone who could come off
as a hothead and still be likable. She needed
someone who could be sympathetic while
bedding a teammateâs mother someone who
could remain charming while beating up a
fellow club patron who disrespected his alma
mater. Basically Jerret needed to be a more
eloquent Ricky Williams with all Dez Bry-
antâs f lair â and temper.
Unable to f ind the right actor she tried
for the real thing and began scouting former
players. Then she remembered hearing that
Denzel Washington had a kid who played
professionally. So she threw a Hail Mary
and called Denzelâs agent to inquire about
John Dav id who hadnât appeared onscreen
since he was nine years old when he stood
âI FELT LIKE RUDY IN
A WAY. I WAS THAT
TRY-HARD GUY
WHO WOULD DO
ANYTHING TO PLAY.â
up in a classroom and exclaimed âI am
Malcolm X!â at the end of his fatherâs film.
âIwashopingJohnDavidinheritedthe
acting geneâ says Jaffe. âClearly he did.â
John David Washington the oldest of
Denzelâs four kids not only scored the role
but he became one of the best things about
Ballers which kicked off its sophomore
season in July. âThis character he made me
giggle at f irst because I know guys with his
spiritâ John David says. âBut what really
attracted me to Jerret was the cultural mis-
understanding of a guy like this. A lot of
NFL guys are misunderstood. I felt like I
hadanopportunityto take amagnifying
glasstowhyheactslikethisbecauseof
what heâs dealt with and the kind of pres-
sures heâs under.â
The role put the 32-year-old under his own
kind of pressure. Heâd spent most of his life
running away from Hollywood because of the
very large shadow cast by his two-time Acad-
emy Awardâwinning father. Football became
a way for him to build his own identity.
âIâve had the acting bug since I was like
f iveâ Washington says. âBut growing up I
saw how people treated me differently when
they knew who my father was even the stuff
I did on the f ield. Sometimes Iâd rush for 100
yards and the headline would beDENZELâSSON
RUNS FOR 100 YARDS. Thatâs where the sup-
pression of that bug came from.â
As a 5-foot-9 200-pound running back
at Morehouse College in Atlanta Wash-
ington set a school record for career rushing
yards. In 2006 the Rams signed him as an
undrafted free agent. For two years he drilled
all week with the team but come Sunday
had to watch from the stands. Such is the life
of an NFL practice-squad player.
âI felt like Rudy in a wayâ Washington
says referring to the famous underdog player
at Notre Dame. âI wasnât the team mascot
but I was like that try-hard guy who was will-
ing to do anything to play because he genu-
inely and purely loved the game.â
The highlights of his NFL career came
in the preseason an eight-yard scramble
on his f irst carry and a catch on the game-
winning drive of an exhibition game. Dur-
ing his second season the backup running
back got hurt and coaches told Washington
to be ready to suit up. But the night before
the game the Rams signed a player from
Outrunning
Denzelâs Shadow
With his fatherâs outsize stature looming overhead
John David Washington stiff-armed Hollywood for the NFL.
Now heâs merged the two â and become the best thing
on HBOâsBallers.byMATTHEW KREDELL
NOTEBOOK
TV
MENâS JOURNAL 44 SEPTEMBER 2016
DOMINIC MILLER