Skip to main content

Athletes: Get a life outside sports

We are all Johnny Football.

I could hear your indignation as you read that, but let me explain.

First, I am a former professional football coach who has seen the game at three levels — high school, college and the National Football League. And I teach a university class that includes freshmen student-athletes. In that class, I preach the same thing I once preached to players at the professional level: personal responsibility.

Johnny Manziel was recently indicted on domestic violence charges, and let me be clear: If Manziel is found guilty, then he deserves the full weight of the law.

But this unfortunate saga is like a Greek tragedy. If Manziel plays the role of Icarus (who didn’t heed his father’s warning) and the Earth represents reality, then we — the fans of this sport — are the sun.

Then-Cleveland Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel talks with the media in 2014 at the NFL football team's training camp, in Berea, Ohio. Johnny Manziel was indicted by a grand jury on Tuesday on misdemeanor charges stemming from a domestic violence complaint by his ex-girlfriend.© Tony Dejak /Associated Press Then-Cleveland Browns quarterback Johnny Manziel talks with the media in 2014 at the NFL football team's training camp, in Berea, Ohio. Johnny Manziel was indicted by a grand jury on Tuesday on misdemeanor charges stemming from a domestic violence complaint by his ex-girlfriend.

We have created a toxic environment that strips premiere athletes of perspective and accountability. We want our touchdowns, and we want them now. We crave wins and despise losses. What we have deemed soft skills, the ability to cope with adversity, empathize and lead with integrity, is now second on our depth chart for life.

Consider this: Of the 10 largest stadiums in the world, eight are American college football stadiums. The combined capacity of those stadiums stands at roughly 830,000.

Rest assured, we will top the 1 million mark as rival schools double down in the infinite game of “construction dare.” And the schools have the money to do it — the 128 teams of the Football Bowl Subdivision have a combined value of $20 billion.

These holy sites serve as a home to our irrational exuberance. Unfortunately, they are also the trading floor for the lucrative capital markets also known as college football.

According to the NCAA, 52 percent of the young men who play college football believe they will reach a professional roster. The stark reality is that 1.6 percent of them will make it. And before we make a collective nod of disapproval, a study conducted by Harvard and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation found that 26 percent of all parents hope their children become professional athletes.

Now, combine that anticipation with the college football recruiting process and the result is a tropical storm of delusion. Just last year Rivals.com took the unprecedented step of posting the profiles of sixth-graders. The quest to herd the nation’s most talented players onto the football rosters of college teams has created a race to the bottom.

Even some coaches are playing a part. College coaches are flying helicopters over target high schools (Kevin Sumlin of Texas A&M), climbing trees, and inviting themselves over for sleepovers (Jim Harbaugh of Michigan).

We should not be surprised when a system that crowned its first freshman Heisman Trophy winner at the age of 20 falls from grace. In a society that pays more attention to falling 40-yard dash times than rising SAT scores, it is time for us to encourage athletes to create an identity outside of their sport.

The truth is that at some point, the ball will go flat for every player. And when it does, he will be left to pick up the pieces.

Manziel released a statement after being indicted saying, “I’m hoping to take care of the issues in front of me right now, so I can focus on what I have to do if I want to play in 2016.”

Unfortunately for Johnny Football and the rest of us, the delusion continues.

Daron K. Roberts is founding director of the Center for Sports Leadership and Innovation at the University of Texas at Austin.

Popular posts from this blog

You can pay at a restaurant by smiling at a camera

© Provided by Engadget As easy as it is to make purchases in the era of tap-to-pay services , it's about to get easier still. Alipay (which handles purchases for Chinese shopping giant Alibaba) has launched what it says is the first payment system that uses facial recognition to complete the sale. If you visit one of KFC's KPRO restaurants in Hangzhou, China, you can pay for your panini or salad by smiling at a camera-equipped kiosk -- you need to verify the purchase on your phone, but you don't have to punch in digits or bring your phone up to an NFC reader. The system (Smile to Pay) is purportedly resistant to spoofing with photos and other tricks. It relies on both depth-sensing cameras and a "likeness detection algorithm" to make sure it's really you. Reportedly, the technology is good enough that it can accurately identify people even when they're disguising themselves through makeup or wigs. You shouldn't have to worry about someone buying ...

Cimatu warns miners: Don’t befoul watersheds, forests, aquatic resources

© Provided by Mediamerge Corporation Newly-appointed Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Roy Cimatu poses for a photo before being sworn into office by President Rodrigo Duterte ahead of the 15th Cabinet meeting in Malacañang on Monday, May 7, 2017. Robinson Niñal/PPD Environment Secretary Roy Cimatu on Tuesday warned mining firms to observe responsible mining and avoid destructive practices or face sanctions His pronouncement came in response to President Rodrigo Duterte's second State of the Nation Address, in which the chief executive emphasized mining's impact on the environment. "I know for a fact that in a number of cases, weak and irresponsible mining practices result [in] environmental destruction—contaminating farmlands and poisoning our rivers and seas," Cimatu said in a statement. "Miners better refrain from despoiling our watersheds, forests and aquatic resources," he added. Cimatu said the Department of Environment and Natural Res...

Tesla cloud account hacked to mine cryptocurrency

© Provided by The Hill An unidentified outside hacker infiltrated Tesla's Amazon cloud account and used its systems to quietly mine for cryptocurrencies, a cybersecurity firm announced Tuesday. The hack also potentially exposed the electric car company's data. Researchers for RedLock found that Tesla's credentials on an IT administrative console were not password protected. They made the discovery while trying to track down which organizations had left their Amazon Web Services (AWS) credentials openly exposed on the internet last month. The hackers quietly hijacked the console and began running scripts to generate virtual currency like bitcoin, the latest in a series of "cryptojacking" attacks. The researchers also found the hackers used "sophisticated evasion measures" to go undetected. A spokesperson for Tesla said the company learned about the breach in a company-sanctioned bug bounty program that pays outside hackers to discover vulnerabilitie...