Roy Johnson raises the stakes in the race-baiting game
ESPN employs some dude named Roy Johnson who I hadn't heard of before finding this article. As far as I can tell he's here to pick up where Jemele Hill left off. Because I've seen some people play the race card inappropriately over the years, but this is a whole new deal right here. Roy is raising the stakes. He's not fucking around. The article is actually more than a month old, but it's plenty relevant now because of the ol' QB shuffle going on in Denver.
"He can't play. He can't throw. … What [former Broncos coach] Josh McDaniels saw in him God only knows. Maybe God does know -- because the rest of us don't." -- Former NFL QB and current radio host Boomer Esiason
Which is exactly what people say about black QBs? Look, Tebow can play (inasmuch as that means that he can stay on the field, not fuck up too much, occasionally succeed, etc.), but he can't throw (not against this level of competition), and yes, only God knows why Josh "Hey Denver I'm just here to ruin your football team for the next five to eight years don't mind me" McDaniels made him a first round pick. Boomer is being plenty fair there.
And that's just a dab of the criticism/hate-ism spiraled at Tebow throughout this labor-truncated NFL offseason. (You should see what my editors took out.)
Your editors didn't take anything out and we all know it. Actually it would be pretty sweet if an editor made Johnson remove someone else's quote that was like "TEBOW IS A NO-GOOD CRACKER" but I doubt that happened.
Was any single player more debated, dissected and derided as all the prognosticators assessed the goings-on leading us to Week 1 of 2011?
He was debated and dissected because he's a lightning rod for attention and has been since 2007. He was derided because 1) there are plenty of knowledgeable people out there who say he can't play QB in the NFL, yet he was on the verge of being given the starting job in Denver and 2) people like seeing players who are lightning rods for attention like Tebow fail. Here's why he wasn't debated, dissected, or derided: because he is white, or not black, or secretly Mexican.
The only ones who come close are black:
Peyton Manning, Jay Cutler, and Ben Roethlisberger! Of course!
Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam (the tattoo-less) NewtonVick's new deal coincided with a firestorm of a story in ESPN The Magazine that carried the headline: "What if Michael Vick were white?"
Which was a pretty simple and overplayed article that mostly hammered home the idea that most black kids in America grow up in a different environment than most white kids, and as a result they encounter more obstacles and challenges. Didn't really have anything to do with Vick's playing style or the non-existant criticism thereof that Johnson seems to want to make us believe exists. In fact, the "What If?" article can be best summarized by these two passages:
But after his arrest for dogfighting, so many people asked: Would a white football player have gotten nearly two years in prison for what Vick did to dogs?
This question makes me cringe. It is so facile, naive, shortsighted and flawed that it is meaningless. Whiteness comes with great advantages, but it's not a get-out-of-every-crime-free card. Killing dogs is a heinous crime that disgusts and frightens many Americans. I'm certain white privilege would not be enough to rescue a white NFL star caught killing dogs.
Yes. And:
And to those who believe we should judge a man by how he responds when dealing with the worst life has to offer -- with how he climbs after he hits rock bottom -- Michael Vick has become heroic.
And that has nothing to do with race.
Exactly. Trying to lump that article in with this one is a fucking farce.
(The piece was accompanied by a brilliant, if somewhat pale, photo illustration portraying what Vick might look like as a white man. As I said, brilliant.)
IT WORKS ON SO MANY LEVELS!
Well, what if Tebow were black?
Nothing? I think that's the answer to this question. "Nothing" if Tebow were black.
Now before you get all fired up and start rolling your eyes over yet another story tainting our precious sports landscape with "race" droppings, relax: It's all in fun.
Ah my bad, I thought we were playing for keepsies.
/takes back money and bag of own blood from center of table, puts into pocket
It's also very hard to throw around the idea that a white QB is being criticized for playing like black QBs for get criticized for being black and say that "Hey now, just messin' around. Don't get all hot under the collar, country that kind of sucks at dealing with racial issues."
Tebow, the Broncos' 2010 No. 1 draft pick (25th overall), just may be the most popular human in at least two states (Colorado and Florida).
And for good reason: He's probably the second-best college football player in history (behind Herschel Walker) or maybe third (Lord, I wish there was film of Jim Thorpe).
At the University of Florida he: (A) stayed four years; (B) generated 9,286 passing yards, 2,947 rushing yards and 145 touchdowns; (C) played on two national champion teams; and (D) won the Heisman as a sophomore.
He's also the guy your momma wishes you were: a devout, God-fearing young man who does missionary work in foreign orphanages, for goodness' sake.
Which makes him absolutely identical to someone... another pro athlete.... who am I trying to think of?
If he were black, he might have been … Tiger Woods.
Yeah! Tiger Woods! That was it! He stayed in college for two years and really didn't have an off the course reputation until late 2009 when he revealed himself to be kind of a scumbag, but yeah, Tebow's just like that. Except more whiter.
But, uh, never mind.
Shut up.
Tebow's leadership talents and personal integrity are unchallenged.
His football skills?
Now that's what riles people up -- especially those folks who say he's already an NFL bust. Ryan Leaf with a halo.
Ah yes, exactly. A draft bust of a QB who couldn't cut it in the big time, like Leaf, or Joey Harrington, or Cade McNown, or Kyle Boller, or David Carr, or Tim Couch, or dozens of other guys who AREN'T BLACK.
Or maybe Troy Smith, Vince Young, Jason Campbell, or Josh Freeman -- black QBs whose skills at times have been diminished because they didn't fit the mold of an elite NFL QB, an image that has been handed down and cherished since Johnny Unitas first struck the passing pose by which all subsequent quarterbacks are still measured.
Oh boy. This is where it gets rich.
Each of the four aforementioned quarterbacks have, to varying degrees, responded to their critics.
Yes, to varying degrees. Freeman has responded by being pretty good. Campbell has responded by being just good enough to kind of keep a starting job. Young has responded by basically washing out of football after five years, and Smith has responded by never being relevant in the first place. So, to summarize: all four of these guys have faced criticism, just like dozens of young white QBs over the years. One of the four has responded. Another has kind of responded. The other two suck balls. But let's hear about how wonderful they all are, because surely this has something to do with Tebow and race.
At 6-foot, Smith, the 2006 Heisman winner and 2007 fifth-round pick of the Baltimore Ravens simply wasn't NFL "big."He defies every convention and bowls over every coaching rule of thumb as if it were a teeny defensive back.
He runs first and throws with uncertainty.
He's a leg-QB, not an arm -- at least not an NFL-accurate one. Yet.
BUT THERE'S RACISM IN THOSE CRITICISMS SOMEWHERE! MARK MY WORDS!
Each of those shortcomings has been levied as criticism for some black quarterback in recent seasons. Now, it's brother Tebow's turn.I believe Tebow, in time, will indeed overcome his shortcomings and become a solid, capable NFL quarterback.
He has been a leader at every level.
And he has won at level.
Black or not, those attributes count more than any words -- as many of his brothers have shown.
5 comments:
I prefer Ray Jay Johnson
I actually think if Tebow were black nobody would care about him.
Re: Josh Freeman's 124.73 college QB rating: the NCAA calculates QB rating differently than the NFL resulting in much higher #s for college passers. Freeman's K State #s were actually mediocre for a 1st round pick: 44 TDs and 34 INTs. Tebow's college QB rating was over 170. So Freeman didn't drop to #25 DESPITE his QB rating, he was drafted so high IN SPITE of it.
The writers of this blog are undoubtedly racist in my mind. Not explicitly racist, but their general dismissal of and ignorance to racial issues and the racial stratification of U.S. society simply lends itself to a perpetuation of the status quo, i.e. a society founded on White privilege. I do think Roy Johnson missed the point here, and the point is that if Tim Tebow were Black, no one would care about him. At all. He certainly wouldn't have been a first round pick. Tim Tebow is basically a more powerful Vince Young, except everyone hates VY and everyone is obsessed with Tim Tebow. I'd also like to point out that Jason Campbell is actually a decent starting QB, I'm not sure what your issue with him is, and yes the Raiders talked to David Garrard and Carson Palmer after Campbell was INJURED FOR THE YEAR, you really need to get your shit together before making such abrasive and outlandish claims about the state of racial politics in our country. Finally, if you are so dead-set on Black and White athletes getting an equal shake, please explain to me Brian Scalabrine. Why is it that Brian Scalabrine, without question one of the worst players in the NBA throughout his entire career (other than one not entirely abysmal season with the new jersey nets), is not only still in the NBA, but is absolutely beloved? It's because he's White. When was the last time you saw fans chanting for DeSagana Diop or Earl Barron to check into the game? No, you fools, race remains a problem whether you want to see it or not.
Jacob,
Your VY criticism is pretty hollow when you consider that VY was the #3 overall pick in the draft over whitey whitestein glory boy Matt Leinart, mind you.
Post a Comment