You’re Not Bo!

My sons, Bo and Mark, played football for nine years, from the fourth grade through their senior year at East Wake High School and, early on, I instructed them:  Do not fake an injury.  Do not lay on the ground acting like you’re hurt unless you are.  If you don’t get up, you better be hurt.

It wasn't #66.
It wasn’t #66.

And here we were, with less than a minute to go in the last game of Bo’s senior year, a playoff game we were about to lose, when he went down.  And stayed down.

I’ll be damn! I thought. One more play and his football career would have been over.  One more lousy play.

Then I did something I had never done and never dreamed I would do.  I stood up and walked down out of the stands onto the track beside the field. I walked down the track a little ways and then out onto the field.  I stopped beside the boy laying on the ground and looked down.

He was not wearing number 66, Bo’s number — it was the other offensive guard. Bo was standing nearby with his teammates, looking perplexed.

I was not embarrassed. I was relieved.  That was not my son laying on the field in pain. One more play and Bo would walk away from football dinged up some but with no injury he couldn’t live with.

Relieved and grateful.

Coming Friday: You Need To Check My Contract

 

Thump ’em, Bo!

My oldest son, Bo, was not all that well coordinated.  So when he got to the fourth grade and tried out for Knightdale’s Mighty Mite football team, his first few practices didn’t go well. One evening he came home crying.

Bo
Bo couldn’t catch the ball…

“I couldn’t catch the ball,” he told me. “The other boys could catch it, but I couldn’t catch it.”

I was not surprised.  He couldn’t catch a baseball very well either.  Or hit one.  But he was smart, and strong, and he always tried hard.

I told him, “Bo, you don’t have to catch the ball. All you have to do is grab those other boys after they catch it and throw ’em on the ground.”

He stopped crying right then and a HUGE smile spread across his face.  Throw them on the ground?  He could do that.  

He was good at throwing them on the ground.
…but he learned to catch the guys who did.

Bo played nine years of football.  On defense he was a linebacker where he specialized in throwing boys on the ground. On offense he was a guard and he got to where he was pretty good at knocking them down, too.  His senior year at East Wake High School, near Raleigh, he was captain of his team, All Metro, Metro 3-A Player of the Year, and All East.

Coming Friday: Teaching Moment