Minutes before last year's game against the Detroit Lions, Jared Allen ran onto Mall of America Field to thunderous cheers as he waved a large American flag in a pregame NFL salute to veterans.
The Vikings Pro Bowl defensive end has made helping veterans his biggest priority, and he seldom passes on a chance to talk about his charity — Jared Allen's Homes 4 Wounded Warriors.
But the job of starting a charity — even when your name is Jared Allen, and thousands of fans wear your jersey — can be a struggle, and it can be easy for the publicity to outpace the results. Even Allen acknowledges he began the nonprofit without much knowledge of how to go about things, and is only now beginning to learn how to access the corporate help that he said he needs.
Though the charity announced in June that it would be helping three more soldiers move into homes, it had up until now remodeled just two homes since it began nearly four years ago.
"It's definitely not an uncommon story," said Jon Pratt, the executive director of the Minnesota Council of Nonprofits, referring to the problems facing well-intentioned nonprofits that are begun with fanfare but then struggle to gain traction. "It's the rare one that makes it past five years."
The problems have not been because of a lack of publicity generated by Allen, a media-savvy personality whom the charity's president jokingly refers to as "One Take" because of Allen's smoothness before a camera. In the past half-year, Allen has held another of his military-themed "Night Ops" golf tournaments in Arizona to raise money, a black-tie fund- raiser in Minnesota attended by teammate Adrian Peterson and auctioned off a painting of himself with bids starting at $1,200. Appearing on a large video screen, Allen even addressed a country music jam near Walker, Minn., in 2011 asking for donations.
Denise White, his marketing agent and the founder of EAG Sports Management in Los Angeles, said promoting Allen goes hand-in-hand with promoting the charity. "If you stop putting him in the public eye," people will stop donating to the charity, she said.
At times, it can be difficult to find the line between Allen's charity work and the marketing of Allen. The charity's first fundraising gala at a downtown Minneapolis hotel was filmed by a crew from Fox Sports. For much of the week leading up to it, a Fox camera followed Allen in an attempt to take viewers "inside an athlete's life" as part of a national telecast. At the fund- raiser, attended by Vikings quarterback Christian Ponder, a Marine in full dress uniform guarded the 15 Kevlar military helmets — on loan to Allen from the Marines — that were used as centerpieces on the banquet tables.