What football has done to me and for me

There are several places on social media that advise future college football players; this is one of them. Much of their advice is of the following variety: “not everyone can be a Big Ten/SEC player, or even D1” and “remember this is a cold blooded business.” It is interesting.

But I’ll talk about things from my perspective: I was someone who didn’t have snowball’s chance in hell of playing at ANY level; not even D3, NAIA, etc.

From the time I was in grade school to high school, I lived and breathed football. By the time I got to junior high: I was lifting weights, running wind sprints, etc. In high school: weights (extra), stadium steps, ALL of the recommended summer workouts plus..every frigging day.

I trained HARD. What it got me: 2 years starting on JV, 1 year starting on varsity (small school), 1 year of playing just enough to letter on the varsity (larger school in Texas).

The cold blooded numbers: all that running got me to a….5.8 40 (not a misprint..just under 6 seconds). Ok, it got me to a 5:54 mile..not bad for a lineman but that wasn’t helpful for football. I didn’t hit 300 lb in the bench until I was 26.

Simply put: the genetics were not there.

I didn’t exactly shine at the other sports either, though I did win a few wrestling matches vs small school competition

So…first year in college, I was in the stands. And frankly, it hurt. The game had progressed without me and I felt discarded. That I did not measure up hurt. I remember seeing a photo of a famous freshman playing (Hugh Greene of Pitt) playing and I was insanely envious.

To this day, at times, I *still* feel like a major failure. Yes, I KNOW what an “outlier” is and I know that it is unreasonable to feel robbed because I wasn’t the outlier that I lusted after being. But emotions are illogical things.

Just because you want something and put in the work does not mean you will get it.

So, would I have been better off had I never cared about football or sports?

Side note about college: I was accepted by Annapolis, West Point, University of Texas, Rice University and Yale, and had financial aid to the latter 3 schools. I went to Annapolis and graduated on time, served in the Navy, and went on to get a Ph. D. in mathematics at the University of Texas. Oh, and none of the schools were interested in my football abilities. 🙂

So, what did this have to do with football and sports?

Ok, let’s talk about the Ph. D. I took that on 4 years after my math degree, and I started my program with an astonishing amount of ignorance. Let’s put it this way: in my graduate algebra class, I did not remember what a “normal subgroup” was. I am not making this up.

Needless to say, my first year of graduate school was very rough. I failed a few exams, felt like a complete idiot in class and, frankly, was intimidated by the smarter, better prepared students. To say that my first semester grades were lackluster would be an understatement. I sure looked as if I were to be one of the 70 percent that washed out.

But here is where football (and other sports) came in: I remembered what it was like to be intimidated…to be assigned to block someone who was too quick for me. I had missed tackles, missed blocks, gotten screamed at by coaches. But I did NOT quit then, and I didn’t quit in graduate school either.

The difference is that, in graduate school, I had the intellectual ability to rise to the challenge. I had to overcome my lack of preparation: I did that by studying insanely hard. I had to overcome being intimidated: this time I was in an arena that I was better suited for.

In sports, I had gotten off the deck numerous times. In my first wresting match, I got pinned in 19 seconds and those on the other team were openly laughing at me! But I learned to either tune out the naysayers or even use it as motivation to keep at it.

And so, I really believe that the resilience that I learned on the football field (and in other sports) served me well, especially in an endeavor where I had at least a little bit of natural ability.

And there was a secondary benefit: in preparing for football, I grew to love working out and pushing myself. I still do that to this day. And the I see the inevitable injuries or “chronic condition flare ups” as normal obstacles to overcome. So, I think that I am healthier because of it. And I still enjoy low key competitions such as neighborhood 5k races (though I now power-walk these).

So, while I regret that I had somewhat of a bad attitude when I played (too selfish) and I wish I had accepted the verdict that I simply didn’t “have what it took” to be a featured football player at a large high school (never mind the higher levels), I do not regret trying and giving it my all. It was a part of my overall “education in life” that I feel served me well later on down the road.

January 2 catch up

December 30: got on the road in Austin. Before leaving:

weights: hotel gym. 3 sets of dumbbell exercises: high incline (40s), curls (20s), bench (50s) 3 sets of 10. Then machines: 3 sets of 10: curls, rows, pull downs, flies. Then a slowish walk (2.2 miles on mostly crushed gravel 34:55).

Drove north; along the way I stopped at a rest area and got 30 dreadful reps on a pull up bar (sets of 5, one 4+1).

Later: I got to Newport, Arkansas, and stayed at a Days Inn. I took a 2.1 mile stroll (in 40 degree temperatures; it was in the 70s in Texas) and finished with McDonald’s pancakes. It is really a decent breakfast.

Drove north to Illinois; I was able to listen to the first 3 quarters of the Illinois Citrus Bowl victory and watched the final quarter at home. Got to hand it to the Illini: they did not blink. They FINISHED the game; 5 of their 10 wins were decided in the closing moments of the 4’th quarter or in overtime.

Jan 1 in Illinois: Got to watch Texas hold off a spirited Arizona State team and Ohio State’s 41-21 destruction of a good Oregon team. I was expecting BOTH games to be close.

But I got my workout in first: 2 miles of walking over halftime of the first game, and a morning weight workout:

pull ups: 10 (kind of sloppy), 5, 5, 10, 10 (plus 3 penalty reps), 5, 5. Overall: ok

bench: 10 x 134, 3 sets of 6 x 150

trap bar dead (4 inch) 10 x 134, 10 x 184, 10 x 234
6 inch: 10 x 280

high incline: 2 quick sets of 10 x 84

Today: I tried my 4 mile lower Bradley course; I wanted to test my knee on hills. Total: 4.12 in 1:03:23 (15:23 pace); I was 15:15 at the park entrance and the exit to the house was also about 15:15. (very close to 15 min miles; like in Austin). I was disappointed in the pace, but it was about 27 F..and nothing hurt during the walk. And I’ve yet to touch my pain pills.