CB Rejzohn Wright Leaves Saints Practice Immediately Upon Hearing His Mentor – His Second Father, John Beam – Has Passed Away Unexpectedly. What He Did Next Left the Entire NFL in Tears
CB Rejzohn Wright Leaves Saints Practice Immediately Upon Hearing His Mentor – His Second Father, John Beam – Has Passed Away Unexpectedly. What He Did Next Left the Entire NFL in Tears
New Orleans, Louisiana. 11/15/2025
In the middle of Thursday’s practice, New Orleans Saints cornerback Rejzohn Wright received a phone call he never could have prepared for. Within seconds, he removed his helmet, glanced at his teammates, and walked off the field without saying a word. The reason no one saw coming: John Beam – his mentor, his guiding figure, his second father – had passed away suddenly after being shot on the Laney College campus.

Wright never returned to practice. He didn’t stop to gather his things or speak with the coaching staff. He quietly left the facility and headed straight to the airport, determined to reach Oakland as fast as possible. Witnesses said he moved with a heavy, distant look, as if every step carried the weight of years of memories.
To Wright, Beam was far more than a football coach. He was the man who helped him find belief in himself, the one who saw potential in him when everyone else only saw a kid full of mistakes. That is why, after receiving the devastating news, Wright’s only thought was to stand beside the family of the man who had changed his life forever.
When Wright arrived at Laney Field House — the place Beam had dedicated much of his life to — he quietly placed his Saints gloves at the doorway, a symbol of gratitude and love, right where Beam walked in every morning. There were no cameras, no media, no spotlight. Only a grieving young man saying goodbye to the person who shaped him.
“He was the first person to see value in me, even when the world only saw a kid full of mistakes and failures. If it weren’t for Coach Beam, I would have never reached the NFL – I probably wouldn’t have even dared to dream about it. He didn’t just teach me football. He taught me how to stand up, how to be a good man. I owe him everything – and there are things he did for me that I don’t think I’ll ever be able to put into words.”
Shortly afterward, Wright gathered Beam’s former players for a vigil. They lit candles along the practice field and stood together in a silent circle, honoring the man who had built so many dreams and transformed so many lives. Videos of Wright embracing Beam’s family and breaking down in tears quickly spread across social media, touching the entire NFL community.
On that day, football no longer mattered. What remained were the bonds between a teacher and his students, the love of a family, and a legacy too profound to measure. John Beam may be gone, but through Rejzohn Wright’s tears, his influence lives on — in every dream he sparked and every life he lifted.













