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Delgado was humble
Photo
by Ray Stubblebine- Reuters
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while
Ocho Cinco was anything but
Photo
by Ned Dishman - Getty Images |
Shawn Merriman had some big trouble
with his knees. ACL, MCL, whatever….it was
serious. Merriman had been feeling pain in
his knees
since 2006. Yet the man still wanted to
play. He was panned far and wide for his
decision, by players, coaches, former coaches, TV analysts,
doctors….the whole
gamut of people and professions who’d have anything to say on the
matter. I say “Good for you, Shawn”. At least you tried to keep playing.
Billy Wagner, upon being questioned as to how his son
Will
felt about his Dad not playing ball anymore, broke down a bit, trying
to hold
back the tears for not being able to provide that same cool Dad he had
always
been, at least not for a while.
Jerry Manuel confronted Jose Reyes in
his coaching debut, he
changes ineffective pitchers, he threatens established players with
“rest”, he
plays the guys who produce while giving everybody every opportunity
that he can
to do just that.
Carlos Delgado refused another curtain call for another
two
homer day, saying it’s not the right time, this after smacking about a
bazillion home runs since the middle of July, not to mention the
singles and
doubles he’s had with the game on the line.
Carlos Beltran worried about his knee
but still played on in
centerfield. David Wright worked with
his batting coach when his production fell off and went 2 for 4. Ryan Church shook off his concussion and his
slow start after his return by smacking a home run.
LaDainian Tomlinson had the nerve in last year’s playoffs
to
sit when he knew his knee would not allow him to be an effective player
in the
biggest game of the year, this despite knowing the heat he’d take for
sitting.
Jake Delhomme came back from his
injury to throw a dart for
a TD pass with zero seconds on the clock. Willie
Parker came back from his injury to wipe out
the Texans in his
first game back. Larry Fitzgerald
practiced his blocking to make way for his running backs.
Okay…enough.
But
these are real men.
They try as hard as
they can.
They try to get better.
They have the courage to take the big
hit.
They have the humility to turn down
any unseemly adulation.
They use their
brains to the fullest. They maximize their resources.
They motivate.
They
have human feelings.
They also have human
failings but overcome
them.
What they don’t do is whine. What they don’t do is say, “look at me, please
look
at me some more, let
every camera be focused on me”. They
either don’t brag or, in very few cases, they back up a brag. They play hurt if they think they can be
effective, or they sit if they know they can’t produce, damn the
consequences. They have the confidence
through practice to produce when the game is on the line.
Then there are the weaknesses in men and organizations,
only
too easy to pick out.
Chad Johnson is a perfect example, a
borderline lunatic…. I
don’t really care that he changed his name, but the reason was bad. Muhammad Ali had his reason.
Anthony Dorsett had a reason too, even if it
was specious reasoning. Any reason other
than focusing all eyes on himself would have suited me.
And yes, I know the team ignored his contract
demands.
Then there are group weaknesses, specifically team
weaknesses, that persist year after year.
It’s
frustrating as a fan of football to watch the
Detroit Lions fail
year after year to do
anything to
improve their situation, and not just the Lions, but also the Oakland
Raiders,
the Houston Texans, and those Chad-full Cincinnati Bengals.
It has to be assumed that for these
teams that consistently
fail, there is a group lack of character, and it is easy to infer from
this that
the weakness is right at the top of the organization.
In the Lions’ case, it’s the Ford family, stubbornly
refusing to change an obviously blundering joke of a General Manager,
who for
years drafted only wide receivers, then changed coaches on both sides
of the
ball.
Never though has he thought to
pick up any offensive linemen.
Then of course there is Al Davis, who
drafts skill players
year after year and has a penchant for glitz, more glitz and
cornerbacks. Lately they’ve drafted the
best quarterback
and then the best halfback in the draft. But
Al’s team has been an embarrassment for a few
years now. This team couldn’t block the
Rutgers Newark
boys choir. (I don’t know that there is
one. If there is, there may be some
tough singers on it).
They say the game has passed Al by.
I’d
have to agree.
Gene Upshaw’s death
reminded me that the
Raiduhs used to have a
GREAT
offensive line.
Former long-time Raider
coach and current TV personality John Madden has consistently expounded
on the
significance of the offensive line in books and on the air.
C’mon Al, take a hint.
Then there are the Houston Texans. They made a veritable basket case out of
David Carr. Only now as the Giants
backup QB are we able to see what Carr could have been if he hadn’t
developed
the happiest feet since Fred Astaire. A
number of prognosticators actually like their chances this year. But after their frightfully inept performance
against the Steelers, it’s hard to see them contending for anything. Ever.
All may not be lost though.
I mean, look
at the Chicago Cubs.
They haven’t won the
pennant since 1945!
But now, led by sweet
Lou Piniella, they’ve got some
real men of their
own.
Derrek Lee, Aramis Ramirez, Alfonso
Soriano and others almost too numerous to mention.
All that and pitching too.
I think we’ll all be seeing the Chicago real men
meet the Mets real men in
October. These are two teams that
shucked the obstacles standing in their way. If
they can just get there, they’ll both be
ready to go.
