Everyone has that one distinct trait or talent that defines them as the person they are. Some people are intelligent and others can just have a certain look or passion that makes them who they are. Mine is football, and it may not seem like much, but football can teach a lot more than just athleticism. From some point of views, football seems like a meaningless sport where a bunch of idiotic brutes try to see who can hit the hardest. But behind all of that, football can teach very good personality traits and characteristics. The coaches aren’t always just about winning, most would rather teach their players right from wrong and how they should live their lives and want them to always do the right thing. They teach discipline, hard work, and …show more content…
The reason why I chose this topic to represent what defines me is because most of these aspects you can learn from this sport reflect on me. I have learned discipline, of course I learned it growing up, but I learned a whole new meaning of the word due to football. With my job discipline is the one of the main things that keeps me working, if I didn’t have the discipline I have then I would not be working at all. Hard work is another one of the reasons why I have the life I have today. Everything I do, whether I like it or not, I work hard and do my best. Sometimes I will admit I fall behind on things or I will procrastinate and not do something, but anytime that happens I try my best to make it up. Determination is a characteristic that everyone should have. Determination and drive is what will make anyone successful. I use it not only in the sport of football, but also in everyday life. Anything I start I am determined to finish and make it the best it can be. These three main personality traits and with the help of a couple more can make a bright future for
Imagine being member of a football team on the field while the crowd is cheering for their favorite team. You are probably wondering, “WOW, I never thought that I will be part of this team.” Football is not for everyone and being part of a football team does not mean that you are going to be in the spotlight. A person can learn much from playing football. Football teaches strength, discipline, and how to be a team player.
Despite the fanfare that comes with the game of football, I consider myself to be very lucky to have been exposed to the game at such a young age. Football is all about teamwork, where as some sports are more individual based. It is not like baseball where a player can hit a homerun and save your chances. In order for a football team to work, not only do all 11 players on the field have to work together, but the team must prepare to be successful well before the ball is first snapped. You always hear how football teaches young men to have a work ethic or to be better teammates, and while this true, for me football was about becoming a better person.
I feel the game is more of a mental sport. A players must be extremely smart at all times on the field. We play the game like a bunch of wolves but at the same time we are extremely educated on the field. I had many things that I valued while playing football with my team. A few things I really valued were the friendship with all my brothers, valued the team, the atmosphere during the game, and the game itself. This was important to everyone because we all felt the same way. Since we all had a lot of the same values it brought us closer as teammates. Because of this it made our team strong and there wasn’t anyone who could break us down. We were a family and a brotherhood and we all knew that. Even though sometimes during practice there would be scuffles and fights we always had each other’s backs no matter what the situation was. We all had great pride in the team we were the eagles and we would always be an eagle.
American football player and coach Vince Lombardi once said that "football is like life. It requires perseverance, self-denial, hard work, sacrifice, dedication, and respect for authority." Football can be a hard sport to play, but what makes it even harder can be the pressure and expectations that the players receive. All athletes can be expected to excel in the sport they play in, which can have extremely damaging effects.
Something that ticks me off is that people think football is hitting people with the ball and to beat the other team. There is more to football than that. It is about brotherhood and having each other's backs and making sure that when one of them does their job wrong you can help them out because you won't let one of your teammates fail. It is about waking up and doing intense workouts and finishing it with your teammates and getting better while everyone else is still sleeping.
“Football is an honest game. It’s true to life. It’s a game about sharing. Football is a team game. So is life.” This quote by Joe Namath, shows there are many life lessons in football, but the parents aren’t getting the value of it. They are also not thinking of how it is safe or safer by new helmets, coaches, and certified referees.
Football provides them with the ability to learn how to focus. Without focus in a sport like football. where it is a team sport and you need all eleven players, it’s hard to win. Along with becoming physically tough there's also the factor of being mental though too. Football is as much a mental game as it is a physical game.
Stories throughout time have often illustrated a type of evil. Most often, the root of evil is money. “The Pardoner’s Tale”, a story that is part of the Canterbury Tales written by Geoffrey Chaucer, clearly demonstrates that money is the root of all evil. The exemplum tells the story of three rioters who are on the search for a criminal named Death who murdered their friend. However, on their way to find him, they discover gold that they believe is rewarding. Unfortunately, things do not turn out the way they had hoped when the rioters turn their back on each other. Eventually, all three men find Death. This tale is notably ironic because the Pardoner is a man of the Church, yet he sells fake relics to others, including the pilgrims. Although
Ancient Greek Gender Roles vs Modern Times Gender Roles Over the year’s people have changed their views and beliefs about Gender roles. For the most part society, today have most of the same gender roles as back then in ancient Greek time but, there are still things people look at differently from back then. In today’s world gender roles is a huge aspect of how things are running in society. Women today have tried to find ways to change the different gender roles that woman portrays.
Brian Pham Lyon English ERWC, Period 3 23 September 2014 Personal Statement On March 21st, 2014, I came into my high school football coach’s room, preparing to talk to him about joining his team. Being in his presence at first was extremely nerve wrecking.
Football is a game of passion, a time when nothing else matters and the only thing that matters is going out there having fun and fighting for the guy next to you. Football has always been something that I loved and had a wild passion for. I’ve made friendships and memories to last a life time and I can always be grateful that football did that for me. Now of course I’ve had some bad memories during football as well, I remember walking out of the film room on the last day of spring ball and having Coach Antle grab me and say “Gage, I think I want to try you at a new position, I want to put you at defensive end. We need you more there and we think you can really excel there.” I remember being so furious, I had played linebacker ever since I could remember and now the last day of spring ball my senior year everything was about to change.
It all started when I was about three years old when my good friend Anthony Williams and I became friends when he ran his bike into my sand box. Football has been an event in my life since I was three years old and it still is today. “The key to life is not what life gives to you but what you take from life. It’s not how life treats you but how you treat life. You have a choice in life. You can either thrive or survive.”_ Coach London. Football has made me into the person I am today, hard working, and determined.
In football, our coaching staff drilled into our minds that it [football] is nothing more than a stepping stone. Furthermore, it helped me to develop characteristics that will benefit me all throughout my adult life. It taught me to be honest, patient, loyal, dedicated, decent, and how to work hard. It showed me that in order to perform at the best that I could be, I would need to choose what offered the best result. That result may not have shown immediately, but it always came. It showed me that much was required of me, such as sufficient grades and following training policies, before I could be given my chance to
For as long as I can remember football has been a part of my life in some way, shape, or form. When I was first born my grandfather said that I was solid and built to play football. I used to throw the football with my mother when I was a toddler and she always told me that when I tried to tackle her I hit really hard. My first organized football experience was when I was five. I had just moved to Manassas, VA from Washington, D.C. in 1994. It was around fall and that was right at the beginning of football season in the area. I remember telling my mother that I wanted to play, so she looked for a local organization for children. She came across the Greater Manassas Football League (GMFL) and that is where I began to play the game I
“Brook! You will never guess what I saw at the state park in Arkansas with my family.”