What I Have Learned From Tim Tebow
Jets fans take heart. If you ignore the mechanics and look at the results, Tebow did lead a 1-4 team to the playoffs and did throw for 316 yards in a playoff game against a stingy defense.
My father always says, “Whether you can or you can’t, you have to do it, so do it!” the premise behind that thinking is that if you don’t dwell on thinking that something can’t be done, you will spend time thinking on how to get it done. I see a lot of that in Tim Tebow. He is hardly accurate throwing the ball and people question his ability to compete in the NFL. He runs a lot for a quarterback, but he’s not very fast. Despite these glaring shortcomings, he keeps winning. But how?
I have been looking through Denver Broncos highlights and I watched the last couple games. Here is what I have learned:
- He doesn’t give up – He is a firm believer of “It’s not over until it’s over,” “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again,” and countless other cliches that coaches tell their players.
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He also engineered a defeat of my mighty Steelers to boot! Good one, Ahmnodt!
The “316 words” was just a coincidence. I did not count how many additional words were in the post.
“It isn’t over until it’s over.” Why is it every time I hear that I think a tree is falling in the forest?
Red.
Maybe because you are wondering if it makes a sound. I don’t think about that too often because I am still calculating how much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.