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Homeschooler Snaps Up Heisman Nomination
USA Daily ^ | 12/6/2007 | Isabel (Izzy) Lyman

Posted on 12/06/2007 9:31:40 AM PST by cinives

The December 3rd 2007 issue of Sports Illustrated will be of special interest to education reformers.

Next to the cover photo of Chase Daniel, the University of Missouri’s plucky quarterback, is a smaller photo of Tim Tebow.

Tebow is also a QB, but he conducts his business, not on the plains but in “the Swamp,” the football stadium at the University of Florida in Gainesville. All of 20 years old, he is a serious contender for this year’s coveted Heisman Trophy, the annual award given to the most outstanding collegiate football player in the nation.

If the strapping 6’3” 235 lb. lad wins the Heisman, he’ll be making history on several counts. First, he’s only a sophomore. Second, he is the only player in NCAA history to run and pass for at least twenty touchdowns each in one season. Third, this son of missionaries to the Philippines was homeschooled in grades K through12. The last fact, no doubt, prompted Sports Illustrated to opine that Tebow is “hardly the typical college athlete.”

Delightfully, so. Of his unique educational background, Tebow states, "I come from a large family (last of 5 children), and all my brothers and sisters were home schooled. My parents were tremendous role models throughout the process, and there were never discipline issues for us. By the time I came to the University of Florida, I felt I had great study habits and felt comfortable making the transition to classes. I think that being home schooled offered me an opportunity to also learn some life lessons, and those experiences help me while I'm on the field."

Those role models - Pam and Bob Tebow - encouraged athletics and combined farm chores with Scripture memory in their household. Mom and Dad are former University of Florida students, yet one wonders what they make of the monikers that the baby of the family (who was recruited by 80 schools) has been saddled with - “chosen one,” “the great white hope,” “Tom Cruise,” “a walking freight truck,” and “Superman.” There is even a ‘Tim Tebow Bill’ in the Alabama legislature which would afford home scholars equal access to public school sports programs and extracurricular activities.

Admittedly, the 1950s television series “Adventures of Superman” does seem to capture the spirit of Tebow Nation. Off the field, he’s the mild-mannered Clark Kent who says “Yes, Sir” to reporters, smilingly poses with orphans, talks to prison inmates, wears jorts (jean shorts), and maintains a high GPA.

But put him in a Gator uniform, sans cape, and watch out Tennessee, Kentucky, Ole Miss, South Carolina, and Florida State. During a memorable gridiron confrontation with the Seminoles, Florida’s archrival, the left-handed Tebow even played with a broken right hand. A broken hand! Superman indeed.

Whenever he appears on television, sophisticated commentators gush like groupies when the camera zooms in on the T-Man, and his legion of fans are fast becoming famous for their creativity. One fella painted himself gold, sporting a #15 on his chest (Tebow’s jersey number), and struck a Heisman-like pose at a game, and the Miami Herald couldn’t help but notice the “Tim Tebow Can Stop Global Warming” sign.

Which goes to show – and without downplaying the physical stamina, commitment, and world-class talent needed to compete in Division I sports – it’s all thoroughly ridiculous. Hype in high def. But Americans have always been rather ridiculous about their football heroes, crowning those who can throw and run and catch with god-like status, and just as casually marginalizing, to the sidelines, the stars who end up in rehab or who run a dog fighting ring in their spare time.

For Tebow and his ilk, the kryptonite is hubris. From all reports, the accolades – which also include a Manning Award finalist, Davey O’Brien finalist, Academic All-American, SEC offensive player of the week – haven’t gone to Tebow’s head. But this young man, like others before him and others after him, will have to guard against the temptations that Fame dispenses like tic-tac mints. Fortunately, his parents remain involved in his life, as do his siblings, including a sister who ministers in Bangladesh. As the Rattler Gator blogger J.B. White sagely observed last year, “Luckily, he's (Tebow) the product of some fantastic home training, because his premature celebrity could have been a disastrous distraction ... ”

Since he’s a professing Christian, Tebow may have to frequently turn to another missionary - the Apostle Paul – for a pep talk. Paul, writing to another Timothy, his disciple, advised: “Let no one look down on your youthfulness, but rather in speech, conduct, love, faith and purity, show yourself an example of those who believe.” Try fitting that on a placard.

Meanwhile, Tebow’s Bunyanesque accomplishments are just another feather in the cap of the modern home education movement which, by now, has a headdress of phenomenally accomplished graduates. But if there was one canard about homeschoolers left standing, despite the plethora of evidence to the contrary, it’s the one about them being non-athletic nerds.

Tim Tebow has sacked that stereotype with Samson-like gusto.

Come to think of it, he’s also given that collegiate athlete party animal thing a rest, too.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: christianstudents; college; collegefootball; education; football; heisman; homeschool; tebow
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To: cinives

Yes!

This is Bob Tebow’s mission work website.
http://btea.org/index.asp


101 posted on 12/07/2007 2:05:41 PM PST by tutstar (Baptist Ping list - freepmail me to get on or off.)
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To: kms61
But it will be a shame if McFadden doesn’t win the Heisman. I’ve never seen anyone like him. He will dominate at the next level... OTOH, Tebow will have to develop a new style of play if he wants to survive the NFL. He won’t be able to take off and run over people like he does now.

McFadden is a great one, no doubt, but I think Tebow deserves the Heisman. His NFL prospects are not supposed to have anything to do with; after all, they gave the Heisman to Jason White in 2003 while all the time acknowledging that he wasn't good enough to go pro. Utterly stupid IMHO; if you're not good enough to go pro, how can you possibly be the best collegiate football player?

Waxing nostalgic, Herschel Walker remains the most incredible college running back I've ever personally watched live.

MM (in TX)

102 posted on 12/07/2007 2:24:40 PM PST by MississippiMan (Behold now behemoth...he moves his tail like a cedar. Job 40:17)
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To: robomatik

I hope to be their first born.


103 posted on 12/07/2007 2:52:20 PM PST by fish hawk (The religion of Darwinism = Monkey Intellect)
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To: thefactor

I noticed it said “We” are Florida State :0)


104 posted on 12/07/2007 3:02:45 PM PST by Cowboy Bob (Real men don't vote Democrat.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
When was the last time the Heisman went to a 9 and 5 QB?

Tebow is a 9-3 quarterback of the #12 ranked BCS team. UF played the 8th toughest schedule in the country according to the NCAA. Tebow, a sophomore and first year starter; was the #2 ranked passer in the country while becoming the first quarterback in 138 years of college football to score over 20 TD's rushing & 20 TD's passing

105 posted on 12/07/2007 4:24:19 PM PST by yuleeyahoo
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To: tutstar
like I guess homeschoolers can’t excel academically in a university...

Like I guess that question was a valid one, regardless if you think so or not.

106 posted on 12/07/2007 4:26:54 PM PST by ShadowDancer ("To succeed in life, you need three things: a wishbone, a backbone and a funny bone.")
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To: ladyjane

Yes, she does, but on the bright side, it would seem impossible for her to ever drown. Those are some water wings.


107 posted on 12/07/2007 4:39:18 PM PST by Pining_4_TX
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To: Positive
Matt Lienert was a junior also.

Yes, that's why he's the next to last on my list at post 84.

108 posted on 12/07/2007 5:26:25 PM PST by PAR35
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To: MississippiMan
Tebow doesn't deserve the Heisman over McFadden. You could take most any mobile QB, put him in Florida's system, and he'd have good stats.

Notice that McFadden has been winning awards from former players and coaches, while Tebow has been getting his from media members. Says it all.
109 posted on 12/07/2007 7:43:59 PM PST by Uncle Ivan (FredOn: Apply Directly to the White House)
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To: Uncle Ivan

Oh pullleeezzzzz.
See my post 92. What records did McFadden tie or break during the football season?


110 posted on 12/08/2007 4:34:03 AM PST by tutstar (Baptist Ping list - freepmail me to get on or off.)
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To: tutstar
Darren McFadden's 2007 Accomplishments:

• Doak Walker Award Winner (Repeated, College Football Running Back of Year)
• Walter Camp Award Winner (College Football Player of the Year)
• SEC Offensive Player of the Year (Coaches, Repeated)
• All- SEC First Team
• Sporting News Player of the Year
• Walter Camp National Offensive Player of the Week
• Maxwell Award Finalist
• First Team All-American;
• SEC Offensive Player of the Week (Twice)

And those were just this season. If I listed previous accomplishments, it'd literally print you off about four single-spaced pages.

Records set in 2007:

• Single-season school record (broke his own);
• All-time career leader in rushing at UA;
• Third on all-time SEC rushing list;
• Tied SEC single-game rushing record with 323 yards.
• Only one of two SEC players in history to rush for over 1,000 yards freshman, sophomore, and junior seasons;
• Nine out of twelve 100 yards or more rushing games, UA record;
• UA record in all purpose yardage in game (three times);
• UA record for total yardage in season;
• 166 yards away from breaking SEC Single-Season Rushing Record (currently 4th);
• SEC Career Leader in Single-Season All-Purpose Yardage;

2007 Statistics:

• Rushing: 304 carries, 1725 yards (1st)
• Rushing Average: 5.7 yards (2nd)
• Rushing Touchdowns: 15 (1st)
• Rushing Long: 80 (T-1st)
• Yards Per Game: 143.8 (1st)

• All Purpose Yardage: 181.0 (1st)

• Passing Efficiency: 268.47
• Completion Rate: 54.5
• Scoring (Pass TD's): 4

• All Touchdowns: 20


All without a system helping him do it, no quarterback, little defense, and a total idiot for a playcaller and head coach, but still near single-handedly beat #1 LSU by himself. That same LSU that will roll Ohio State in NOLA after the new year.

Tim Tebow? Pulllleeezzzzz. Any mobile QB could put up good stats in that system. Alex Smith did well in that offense. Maybe they should've given him the Heisman in 2004, right?

If Darren McFadden does not get the Heisman, they should stop giving it out. No other player this year is more deserving.
111 posted on 12/08/2007 6:13:10 AM PST by Uncle Ivan (FredOn: Apply Directly to the White House)
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To: Uncle Ivan

LOL
Thanks for posting that!

Everyone has a favorite. We’ll see tonight...


112 posted on 12/08/2007 6:33:31 AM PST by tutstar (Baptist Ping list - freepmail me to get on or off.)
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To: Solson
Not in NC. The public schools adamantly refuse to let home schoolers get any services in the schools except resource, ie; speech or occupational therapy.
113 posted on 12/08/2007 7:39:24 AM PST by Millicent_Hornswaggle (Retired US Marine wife)
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To: Uncle Ivan
You could take most any mobile QB, put him in Florida's system, and he'd have good stats.

I've said the same thing about many previous Florida QBs who were touted as being fantastic (eg. Grossman) when in fact the Florida offensive machine was such that any mediocre QB would look great in it. Tebow, however, is different. VERY different. He is the kind of talent that comes along once every ten years or so, and he may be even rarer than that. When he started the year his first instinct was to run. Over the season he has turned into an excellent passer. He's a freakish talent with the brainpower to be an outstanding mental QB, as well.

He is incredibly special, and if he doesn't win the Heisman it will be because he's a sophomore and the voters will think he can win it as a junior or senior, thus leaving it open this year for someone else.

All that said, the Heisman is the penultimate manifestation of herd thinking and is often nothing more than a popularity contest.

MM (in TX)

114 posted on 12/08/2007 10:09:37 AM PST by MississippiMan (Behold now behemoth...he moves his tail like a cedar. Job 40:17)
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To: apocalypto

That’s a lot to pick out from a single picture. Lolz


115 posted on 12/08/2007 11:03:44 AM PST by Constantine XIII
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To: Millicent_Hornswaggle

That’s too bad! NC needs to “think outside the 1960’s box” and get in line with what most progressive States are doing and allow homeschoolers to participate in public school activities as the parents choose.


116 posted on 12/08/2007 11:31:02 AM PST by copaliscrossing (Where the heck is Copalis Crossing???)
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To: MississippiMan
All that said, the Heisman is the penultimate manifestation of herd thinking and is often nothing more than a popularity contest.

You couldn't be more right.
117 posted on 12/08/2007 6:17:45 PM PST by Uncle Ivan (FredOn: Apply Directly to the White House)
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To: JZelle

Adrian Peterson is a bad mofo.


118 posted on 12/08/2007 6:20:14 PM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist
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To: Non-Sequitur
Uhm, did you read anything in the post before making your ridiculous comment?

Tebow in the SEC Total Offense (330.8) 1st Passing Efficiency (177.85) 1st Completion Rate (68.5) 1st Total Scoring (130) 1st Scoring (TD’s) (11.0) 1st Rushing Touchdowns (22) 1st Touchdown Accountability (51) 1st Rushing (69.8) 9th Passing (261.0) 2nd

Tebow in the National Rankings

Rushing Touchdowns (22) 3rd Touchdown Accountability (51) 1st Total Offense (330.8) 7th Passing Efficiency (177.85) 2nd Points Responsible For (25.50) 2nd Completion Rate (68.5) 5th Scoring (TD’s) (11.0) T 3rd Rushing among QB’s (69.8) T5th Passing Yards Per Game (261.0) 22nd

119 posted on 12/08/2007 7:05:33 PM PST by ItisaReligionofPeace
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To: cinives

Ah, but saline is more dense than fresh water, so in a pool (where the “testing” was done), they don’t.

Who knew a show about answers to guys questions could be so...relevant?

(C8


120 posted on 12/08/2007 8:33:04 PM PST by Bat_Chemist (The devil has already outsmarted every "Bright".)
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