Rich Saul
- Share via
Bryce Alderton
For 12 years Rich Saul banged shoulder pads with fellow grown men
in the NFL. Now the former Los Angeles Rams’ center, who was an
All-Pro six times in his 12-year career, and five-year Corona del Mar
resident bangs the occasional golf shot at one of the charity golf
tournaments he participates in yearly to help raise money for abused
children or for cancer research.
Saul is the big guy with a big heart -- a 6-foot-3, 250-pound
54-year-old man who has spent the last 16 years working with Fidelity
National Title Insurance Co.
But he prefers to speak about the charities he’s involved with
that include an honorary chairman position on both the American
Cancer Society, which he’s been the chair for 12 years, and Childhelp
USA, dedicated to the prevention and treatment of child abuse and
neglect. Saul has been an honorary chairman for three years with
Childhelp USA.
He also donates time with The Boys and Girls Club, Children’s
Hospital of Orange County, the Orange County Youth Foundation and the
Orangewood Children’s Foundation.
“It’s a blessing when I see somebody smile that needed to be
helped out,” Saul said. “I sit here and say, ‘God allowed me to live
on this earth for 50 years so I ask myself, Did I make a difference?
Did I help somebody out, or was it all about me and what can I do for
myself?’”
When Saul heard from a doctor in April 1995 that he had stage 3
colon cancer, which he said the doctors at the time only gave him
five to 10 years, he began soul searching and came to some
conclusions.
“I wasn’t as devastated as much as looking at (the cancer) as just
another training camp,” Saul recalled. “I realized the only thing God
gives you is today. The key is, ‘What are you doing while you are
alive?’ I try and make the world a better place, try to help people
out and be kind to them. I have to answer to a higher authority and
it’s not graded on a curve. I think we lose sight of that every once
in awhile.”
Now married for 33 years to his high school sweetheart, Eileen,
and raising two grown children, Jamie and Josh, Saul said he valued
watching his children grow up.
Josh just graduated from Northwestern University in Evanston,
Ill., while Jamie lives in Chicago working for Morgan Stanley.
“I love spending time with Jamie and Josh and I have a great wife
in Eileen,” Saul said. “I have no regrets. We’ve built a lot of
memories and had a lot of fun times.”
Instead of sprinting full speed at tackling dummies like he used
to, Saul now likes to spend his free time fishing, hunting and
golfing.
He participated in the Orange County Chapter 20th Annual Celebrity
Golf Classic at Pelican Hill Golf Club in Newport Coast May 21 for
Childhelp USA, and on Sept. 30 will be at the American Cancer
Society’s 14th annual Corporate Challenge Cup golf tournament at
Santa Ana Country Club, which will help raise money for cancer
research, specifically prostate and colon cancer.
In addition to the golf tournaments, Saul’s work with the Orange
County Youth Foundation includes raising money to give scholarships
to Orange County scholar-athletes and volunteering with the
Orangewood Children’s Foundation, an emergency facility for abused
and neglected children.
Saul currently isn’t going through chemotherapy and takes each day
as it comes.
“I’m just glad that I can look back on my life and not make any
apologies such as could have spent more time with my kids or helped
some people out.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.