Phil Williams
 

Phil Williams

I worked as an NFL agent for over 25 years after playing wide receiver at Florida State University, where I was twice named Academic All-American and also received the first ever NCAA Post Graduate Scholarship awarded to a Seminole football player. I didn’t use it, however, as I was a little bit, you know, tired of school at that point.

Instead I immersed myself in the financial services industry after graduation, which included becoming a CPA, before heeding the call to get back into the football world. Over the next twenty years or so I represented players drafted in each round of the NFL Draft, as well as numerous players who won Super Bowls, including Brad Johnson, who quarterbacked the Tampa Bay Bucs to their only Super Bowl victory, and Martin Mayhew, who started for the Washington Redskins at cornerback when they won the Super Bowl and later became General Manager of the Detroit Lions and Washington Commanders. 

Shortly after my first child, Hannah, was born, I decided to work from home because I loved being around her. I continued to do so throughout my agent career, choosing to spend as much time with my kids as possible (there were four in all).

I write from a heart that is passionate about all things real, I believe, and because I enjoy presenting a different picture to readers than they might normally receive. 

I have endured what many consider the most painful reality that one can experience while upon this earth, the death of my precious Hannah, and much of what I write about traces its way back to the legacy that her life and death evokes within me. I hold no punches when writing, choosing to lay it all out there with the same fearlessness as I displayed while playing football at Florida State.

Of course, it helps a bit to write from the sultry beaches of Costa Rica where I now reside, and where my most dangerous activity might be trying to make sure I’m not hit on the head by a falling coconut. 


Books currently in process

 
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Unwordable

“I had recently retired after almost three decades as an NFL agent and was in the middle of making plans to relocate to Costa Rica when I found out my oldest child was dying. Hannah was more than a daughter to me; in fact, she was what I would call my soulmate, the only person I knew who somehow truly knew me at the deepest level… I was not prepared for the journey that followed after she passed, but I was forced upon one, nonetheless. This is the story of our relationship, her illness and death, and my subsequent journey.”