University of New Mexico, Alberquerque
 A. Leon Polhill, Gator
Friends are the family that we choose for ourselves. 




________________________________
From: Oliver Barry <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2009 4:27:58 PM
Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [gatornews] [DailyLobo.com] Tim Tebow, America's 
sweetheart


The Daily Lobo?  Badman, where ever did you find this?  And, just who is Damian 
Garde?  J
 
Oliver Barry CRS,GRI
Real Estate Broker
Bob Parks Realty
1517 Hunt Club Blvd
GallatinTN 37066
Phone: 615-826-4040
Fax: 615-822-2027
Mobile: 615-972-4239
 
 

________________________________

From:[email protected] [mailto: [email protected] ] On Behalf 
Of [email protected]
Sent: Monday, September 28, 2009 2:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatornews] [DailyLobo.com] Tim Tebow, America ’s sweetheart
 
 
Tim Tebow, America ’s sweetheart
By Damian Garde | DAILY LOBO
Tim Tebow is a remarkably detestable football player.
There’s the endless media fawning, the squeaky-clean image, the dumbfounding 
Heisman acceptance speech and, of course, the God complex.
Tebow, the bruising, gee-golly face of college football, is the ambassador from 
a world of early bedtimes and rubber wristbands. After winning two national 
titles quarterbacking the Florida Gators, Tebow became the proselytizing poster 
child for everything annoying about his sport.. 
On the field, he’s a bizarrely upright, unstoppable rusher, and he’s averaged 
31 touchdowns through the air in the past two seasons. He’s equal parts Joe 
Namath, Joe Jonas and Jimmy Swaggart.
In short, he’s the bro messiah.
So, on Saturday, when the Chosen One took a nasty shot, clanked his head on the 
way down and lay motionless on the field, I should have felt some tinge of 
schadenfreude. But I didn’t.
Hard as I try, I just can’t bring myself to hate Tim Tebow.
On the one hand, listening to Tebow is a bit like driving behind a Hummer: 
maddening, uncomfortable and ideologically offensive in a way you can’t quite 
put your finger on. But on the other hand, you can’t blame the sun for rising.
To most people, a postgame interview might not seem like the proper place to 
explain that God has a plan for everyone and that your motivation in throwing 
footballs at people is to get to heaven. But for Tebow, a man who was raised by 
missionaries and spends his spring breaks spreading the Gospel to Third-World 
kids, a career in football is just an extension of the family business.
Furthermore, the guy’s entire biography reads like a parable. While his mother 
was pregnant with him, she came down with amoebic dysentery while out building 
mud huts in the Philippines . Her doctor recommended she terminate the 
pregnancy, because having a child would put her life at risk. But she, of 
course, refused, bringing into the world a brutal football force, smashing 
fellow human beings on Saturday and getting up for church on Sunday.
That story, along with other tearful testimonials of Tebow’s general 
blessedness, is just a glimpse at the culture in which he was raised. If you 
were told your entire life that you were a walking miracle, wouldn’t you start 
to believe it at some point?
And as much as Tebow rarely passes up an opportunity to plug the Book of John, 
it’s hard to tell which came first: Tebow’s postgame preaching or the sports 
world’s fascination with his divinity.
Would a reporter ask Colt McCoy if he was saving himself for marriage? Would 
ESPN speculate that Jacory Harris asked Jesus for some downfield blocking? 
Tebow fields all manners of nonsensical questions and, in a sense, his 
willingness to bind faith and football for his interviewers is kind of 
endearing.
As tempting as it is to snicker when Tebow explains that Jesus “already tweeted 
enough; we just have to look at it,” there’s no pretense to his madcap 
preaching. The guy’s just doing what he knows: saving souls and winning 
football games. You can’t hate an athlete for being honest with himself.
So, when Tebow gets to the NFL and turns every postgame presser into a revival, 
it won’t bother me. Unless he gets drafted by the Cowboys.



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1996 National Football Champions   |   2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions
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Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us
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