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re: Rahim Alem and Tremaine Johnson

Posted on 11/30/08 at 3:31 pm to
Posted by rchamp
New Jersey
Member since Nov 2008
256 posts
Posted on 11/30/08 at 3:31 pm to
Well- if i was getting my entire education paid for to do a job (which is the case here)---and i were lectured EVERY DAY (as defensive players are) that the second infraction always draws the penalty (It happens to them all the time)- AND you know the game is WON with the stop-- then no I would not react like that.

I also think TJ was over-reacting....Did you actually watch the play. I saw no fingers going into his eyes like you and he protray. I did see some exchange of words but no "eyeball extraction"/ poking. Please send a link to the video you are referring to
Posted by TigersInExile
OhioTiger
Member since Nov 2008
901 posts
Posted on 11/30/08 at 3:44 pm to
quote:

then no I would not react like that.

Seriouly, we are presumably older and wiser, and have hopefully learned a bit over the years about self-restraint and the consequences lack thereof can have not just for ourselves, but others as a direct result of our actions as well.

Young student athletes are often still learning these lessons in the hard knocks of sports. You can preach and teach at young people all day long - you know this - and they mean well ... and then somebody pokes 'em in the eye and they react in a boneheaded manner in heartbeat.

That's the bane of youthfulness - you know, like the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. Johnson learned a hard lesson I doubt he'll ever forget, especially because it is a lesson that most likely cost him and his teammates a win in the last game of the regular season.

Mine came to us a little later in life than most people get them, and they've come in all shapes and sizes with distinctly unique personalities. Why on earth they do some of the things they do and have throughout the years is something I have to reach far back to my own childhood and teen/early twenties to have an iota of understanding for.

Kids will be kids and young student athletes will be young student athletes at the most inopportune times, won't they?

It's life and it's painful sometimes. But isn't that what parents always say about sports? It teaches our children life lessons, how to win and lose? That sort of thing? He's not my kid, but Johnson learned a very hard lesson Friday ... he's had to face his teammates in the locker room, on the trip back to BR and he'll be facing his classmates and the public as he moves about campus in the coming weeks.

If nothing else comes of it, let us hope those two young men learned lessons they and their team will profit from in the future.
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