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Tim Tebow

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The Taiwanese have had their say on the issue, and it's as spectacular as we could have hoped:

[youtube=m5OAGHXc1ZU]Steelers Get Tebowed[/youtube]
 

Udog

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No, he's fundamentally worse than most NFL quarterbacks in this respect. Before he was drafted, he was projected by many people to not even be an NFL quarterback. They thought he would be a tight end or H-back. I still think that's where he'll end up. Many players have had fabulous rookie seasons only to see everything go downhill from there (Vince Young being one of those guys). I think Tebow will get destroyed next season, once teams start game-planning to stop him.

Agree that for the most part, he's below mediocre outside of his ability to make big plays and inspire his team. However, I think Tebow has a legitimate shot next season. Tebow is one of, if not the, hardest working player in the NFL. I read about a respected NFL quarterback coach talk about how, after reviewing Tebow, he has what it takes to be a 60% passer. One of the reasons he's still so rough around the edges is because McDaniels quit working with him last year and he had no time with the coaches during the off season because of the lockout. This year, you can pretty much guarantee that he'll be working his fool butt off on improving, and with people like John Elway personally teaching him, he *will* get better.

Will it be enough? Who knows. Will he become a good enough passer to have a career after he quits being such a threat on the ground? Who knows. What I do know is that, as a Denver fan, I'm legitimately excited to see what he'll do next year. Denver was at the bottom of the trash heap after last season, and even though the Broncos are pretty much middle-of-the-grade this year, he's managed to bring new life into the franchise.
 

iwakar

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Make him go away. I'm sick of seeing him on my RSS feed.
 

Udog

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Conan recreates the final play in OT:

[YOUTUBE="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E7A-z_Olo94"]Conan Peanut Players[/YOUTUBE]
 

Zarathustra

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Why I Root For Tim Tebow

Is he not just a guy who runs and throws a ball better than others?

No.

http://espn.go.com/espnradio/play?id=7458761

Originally Published: January 13, 2012

I believe in Tim Tebow
By Rick Reilly
ESPN.com

espn_tebow_jacob_576.jpg

Tim Tebow Foundation
Tim Tebow with Jacob Rainey, one of the many people dealing with health problems Tebow hosted at Broncos games this season.
I've come to believe in Tim Tebow, but not for what he does on a football field, which is still three parts Dr. Jekyll and two parts Mr. Hyde.

No, I've come to believe in Tim Tebow for what he does off a football field, which is represent the best parts of us, the parts I want to be and so rarely am.

Who among us is this selfless?

Every week, Tebow picks out someone who is suffering, or who is dying, or who is injured. He flies these people and their families to the Broncos game, rents them a car, puts them up in a nice hotel, buys them dinner (usually at a Dave & Buster's), gets them and their families pregame passes, visits with them just before kickoff (!), gets them 30-yard-line tickets down low, visits with them after the game (sometimes for an hour), has them walk him to his car, and sends them off with a basket of gifts.

Home or road, win or lose, hero or goat.

Remember last week, when the world was pulling its hair out in the hour after Tebow had stunned the Pittsburgh Steelers with an 80-yard OT touchdown pass to Demaryius Thomas in the playoffs? And Twitter was exploding with 9,420 tweets about Tebow per second? When an ESPN poll was naming him the most popular athlete in America?

Tebow was spending that hour talking to 16-year-old Bailey Knaub about her 73 surgeries so far and what TV shows she likes.

"Here he'd just played the game of his life," recalls Bailey's mother, Kathy, of Loveland, Colo., "and the first thing he does after his press conference is come find Bailey and ask, 'Did you get anything to eat?' He acted like what he'd just done wasn't anything, like it was all about Bailey."

More than that, Tebow kept corralling people into the room for Bailey to meet. Hey, Demaryius, come in here a minute. Hey, Mr. Elway. Hey, Coach Fox.

Even though sometimes-fatal Wegener's granulomatosis has left Bailey with only one lung, the attention took her breath away.

"It was the best day of my life," she emailed. "It was a bright star among very gloomy and difficult days. Tim Tebow gave me the greatest gift I could ever imagine. He gave me the strength for the future. I know now that I can face any obstacle placed in front of me. Tim taught me to never give up because at the end of the day, today might seem bleak but it can't rain forever and tomorrow is a new day, with new promises."

I read that email to Tebow, and he was honestly floored.

"Why me? Why should I inspire her?" he said. "I just don't feel, I don't know, adequate. Really, hearing her story inspires me."

It's not just NFL defenses that get Tebowed. It's high school girls who don't know whether they'll ever go to a prom. It's adults who can hardly stand. It's kids who will die soon.

For the game at Buffalo, it was Charlottesville, Va., blue-chip high school QB Jacob Rainey, who lost his leg after a freak tackle in a scrimmage. Tebow threw three interceptions in that Buffalo game and the Broncos were crushed 40-14.

"He walked in and took a big sigh and said, 'Well, that didn't go as planned,'" Rainey remembers. "Where I'm from, people wonder how sincere and genuine he is. But I think he's the most genuine person I've ever met."

There's not an ounce of artifice or phoniness or Hollywood in this kid Tebow, and I've looked everywhere for it.

Take 9-year-old Zac Taylor, a child who lives in constant pain. Immediately after Tebow shocked the Chicago Bears with a 13-10 comeback win, Tebow spent an hour with Zac and his family. At one point, Zac, who has 10 doctors, asked Tebow whether he has a secret prayer for hospital visits. Tebow whispered it in his ear. And because Tebow still needed to be checked out by the Broncos' team doctor, he took Zac in with him, but only after they had whispered it together.

And it's not always kids. Tom Driscoll, a 55-year-old who is dying of brain cancer at a hospice in Denver, was Tebow's guest for the Cincinnati game. "The doctors took some of my brain," Driscoll says, "so my short-term memory is kind of shot. But that day I'll never forget. Tim is such a good man."

This whole thing makes no football sense, of course. Most NFL players hardly talk to teammates before a game, much less visit with the sick and dying.

Isn't that a huge distraction?

espn_tebow_zak_300.jpg

Stephanie Taylor
Not everything Tim Tebow does on one knee is controversial. Ask Zac Taylor.
"Just the opposite," Tebow says. "It's by far the best thing I do to get myself ready. Here you are, about to play a game that the world says is the most important thing in the world. Win and they praise you. Lose and they crush you. And here I have a chance to talk to the coolest, most courageous people. It puts it all into perspective. The game doesn't really matter. I mean, I'll give 100 percent of my heart to win it, but in the end, the thing I most want to do is not win championships or make a lot of money, it's to invest in people's lives, to make a difference."

So that's it. I've given up giving up on him. I'm a 100 percent believer. Not in his arm. Not in his skills. I believe in his heart, his there-will-definitely-be-a-pony-under-the-tree optimism, the way his love pours into people, right up to their eyeballs, until they believe they can master the hopeless comeback, too.

Remember the QB who lost his leg, Jacob Rainey? He got his prosthetic leg a few weeks ago, and he wants to play high school football next season. Yes, tackle football. He'd be the first to do that on an above-the-knee amputation.

Hmmm. Wonder where he got that crazy idea?

"Tim told me to keep fighting, no matter what," Rainey says. "I am."
 

skylights

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he'd be a decent guy if it wasn't for all this religion and football crap.

kidding. clearly he has a compelling personality, regardless of my personal tastes. ENFJ? i haven't watched any videos of him. just suspicion.
 

Zarathustra

Let Go Of Your Team
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Interesting choice... I won't say no to it...

But I'm more with [MENTION=4722]Udog[/MENTION]. I'm between ISFJ and ISFP.

I originally thought ISFJ, but am leaning more towards ISFP every day.

Here are good interview to try and type him from:


 

Lateralus

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Down 42-7 in the 3rd quarter...ouch! He's going to need a lot of help from Jesus in the 4th quarter this week.
 

swordpath

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Sad to see the Broncos get slaughtered so badly, but it was inevitable. They really had no business beating the Steelers last week. In a sense, it's sad to see the end of the Tebow sensation that permeated the nation (mad, sick, dope-ass rhymes. I got 'em.). It won't be relived like that again.

As for the 49ers game (my team). Holy shit! Probably the best NFL game I've ever seen. Here's to hoping the Giants pull off a win tomorrow, so we don't have to play the Packers.
 

Lateralus

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Sad to see the Broncos get slaughtered so badly, but it was inevitable. They really had no business beating the Steelers last week. In a sense, it's sad to see the end of the Tebow sensation that permeated the nation (mad, sick, dope-ass rhymes. I got 'em.). It won't be relived like that again.

As for the 49ers game (my team). Holy shit! Probably the best NFL game I've ever seen. Here's to hoping the Giants pull off a win tomorrow, so we don't have to play the Packers.
Yeah...if the Packers are playing well, no one can beat them.
 

ZPowers

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I don't follow football, live in Denver, and am super excited to return to a world where 40% of all human speech must revolve around Tim Tebow by law.

Even if he is a good guy, there's no way he's that fucking good a guy. At least, I don't think they've scientifically reincarnated Ghandi, MLK, Jesus and Buddha into a single body, exposed that clone to nothing but Pixar films, heartbreaking documentaries about social issues, and audio books of Aristotle, Kant and Bentham, and then force him to play professional football.
 

Zarathustra

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I don't follow football, live in Denver, and am super excited to return to a world where 40% of all human speech must revolve around Tim Tebow by law.

Was this a Freudian slip, or am I missing something?

Even if he is a good guy, there's no way he's that fucking good a guy. At least, I don't think they've scientifically reincarnated Ghandi, MLK, Jesus and Buddha into a single body, exposed that clone to nothing but Pixar films, heartbreaking documentaries about social issues, and audio books of Aristotle, Kant and Bentham, [Rick Warren's 'The Purpose Driven Life',] and then[,] force him [for whatever reason, he really wanted] to play professional football.

Fixed.

(But they did.)
 
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