mark weisman

PowerFtbll

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He already has over 100 yards in just the 1st quarter of the iowa game. He's Iowa's rb. He was a walk-on who will now receive a scholarship. Yep. He's tied right now for the lead in rushing touchdowns in the Big Ten. Yep.
 

celticdb15

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Weisman for Heisman, he's tearing it up!
 

whiteathlete33

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He already has over 100 yards in just the 1st quarter of the iowa game. He's Iowa's rb. He was a walk-on who will now receive a scholarship. Yep. He's tied right now for the lead in rushing touchdowns in the Big Ten. Yep.

I see he came into camp as a fullback. Finally something works out in our favor!
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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markweisman.jpg


The headline read, "Weisman listed as starting running back … for now."

Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz echoed the sentiments afterwards, “He’s a contrast to the other guys that we have carrying the football. So you know, would he be our go-to-guy, our predominant back? I don’t know. Only time will tell.”

Questions abounded about whether Weisman could actually be a “playmaker” running the football, while the “experts” insisted that he was really just a “fullback,” that he was a short-term, emergency fill-in, and that he was built to be a blocker. Or maybe he should be a linebacker, despite his impressive performance at tailback.

Ferentz admitted that, “He certainly showed some things out there competitively, and he brings a different tempo, if you will, running the football than everybody else. That was not scripted, I can assure you. But he runs tough. And we didn’t have any choice Saturday, but yeah, you just never know until guys get on the game field and perform.”

These are the sentiments regarding the player who, according to Stats Inc., is the first Hawkeye to rush for more than 300 yards and score 6 rushing touchdowns in a two-game span since 1997 (Tavian Banks).

That’s right. The first in 15 years.

And that’s also right. The player who did it was only given the chance because the coaching staff had no other choice.

This is the story of Mark Weisman. But even more so, this is the story of the Caste System.

The player who has performed so brilliantly as a tailback for the Hawkeyes the past two weeks was not offered a scholarship to play at Iowa. Nor was he considered a potential tailback, at least, not until every “real tailback” on the Iowa roster was unavailable. Literally seven (7!) other tailbacks were tried before Weisman got his opportunity: Marcus Coker (the 2011 starter), Mika’il McCall, and DeAndre Johnson were off the team by the time fall camp started. Jordan Canzeri and Barkley Hill went down with major knee injuries. Michael Malloy was ill for the Northern Iowa game and couldn’t go. Damon Bullock started the game against Northern Iowa, but he was knocked out (pun!) with a concussion. Greg Garmon was injured shortly thereafter. With nowhere else to turn, Iowa was forced to turn to Weisman.

And that is where the legend of Mark Weisman began. But his story began long before that …

A three-year starter at Stevenson High (Chicago), Weisman was a first-team all-state running “fullback,” rushing 153 times for 1,657 yards (that’s nearly 11 yards-per-carry) and 22 touchdowns as a senior. Despite the gaudy numbers, tremendous size (6-feet, 225-pounds), and a head coach who told everyone how good the running back was, Weisman only had one Division One scholarship offer coming out of high school. That’s right. Just one. His high school head coach was stunned that schools weren’t lining up to sign his phenom. Obviously he is not familiar with how the Caste System works.

Iowa said he could come as a walk-on, if he wanted to. But they had plenty of “real” talent in their backfield, so the Hawkeyes weren’t sweating it when Weisman accepted the scholarship to play for Air Force.

Despite his terrific work ethic and willingness to play fullback, his “natural” position, Weisman didn’t fit in at the Academy, where he admits that he was sleeping on the floor because he couldn’t make his bed to regulations. So, with no hard feelings, he decided to go where his heart had always wanted to be: Iowa.

As an unheralded, virtually unwanted walk-on, there were no promises that he’d get to play. But all Weisman needed was an opportunity.

He began making an impression (another pun!) when playing on the scout team. Hitting like a hammer and routinely showcasing the ability that garnered all those high school accolades, his teammates and coaches began to take note of his physical prowess. His work in the weight room became the stuff of legend, and by the beginning of his sophomore season (with his weight up to 235 pounds) he had earned the starting fullback job. Well, sort of. He was listed as a co-starter that didn’t actually start.

Still no scholarship, though. And still no indication that the coaches knew they had a high-powered juggernaut ready and waiting to run with the ball. They believed (wrongly) that they had seven better players in front of him.

And that is why the Caste System is so difficult to overcome. “Evaluating” “talent” is largely a subjective business, and the “eye of the beholder” sees what it wants to see. That is the reason certain athletes who put up huge numbers in high school but run a pedestrian forty time with pedestrian agility times are still considered “plenty fast” and potential “playmakers” because they are bursting with “upside,” while other athletes who put up equally huge numbers while running faster forty times and superior agility times are still somehow “too slow” or “too stiff” or “don’t have upside.” When coaches expect to see something, they see it … even if it isn’t true. That is why when collegiate scouts and coaches looked at Weisman they saw a potential “blocking fullback” instead of a potential “power tailback.”

You see, Weisman is a White kid playing a “Black position.”

It is obvious that those collegiate scouts and coaches ignored the easily-verified fact that the virtually unrecruited Weisman’s physical size and speed were very similar coming out of high school to highly-recruited Michigan State tailback (and Doak Walker candidate) Le’Veon Bell, who runs with a very similar powerful style. Additionally, Weisman’s production was similar, and his big-play numbers were actually superior, to the highly recruited Bell. But despite these verifiable facts, not a single “talent” “evaluator” considered Weisman to be a potential contributor at tailback.

Not even the Iowa coaching staff, who are now being forced to play him, considered him to be a playmaker with the ball in his hands.

You see, Bell is Black, while Weisman is obviously White.

Yet, somehow, he is now running for huge numbers. In fact, Weisman, the unwanted sophomore, is second in the Big Ten in rushing (and rushing touchdowns) despite only carrying the ball in a little over a game-and-a-half. Just imagine what kind of numbers he could be putting up if he had “real” talent …

Or is their more to the story? After all, it is quite obvious that the hard-running Weisman is a gifted running back.

In his first start at tailback, he ran for 217 yards and 3 more touchdowns on 27 carries. His huge day (and that whopping 8-yards-per-carry average) was lost amidst the sting of Iowa’s upset loss, but it’s clear that his ability to make plays with the ball in his hands is so obvious that only the blind can’t see it. So why couldn’t all those so-called talent scouts and Iowa coaches see it before now?

The answer is simple. No one is as blind as those who don’t want to see.

Perhaps Ferentz summed it up best after Weisman’s day against Central Michigan.

“We didn’t know how nimble he would be, how athletic he would be, how he would be at making the reads and the cuts you have to make,” (head coach Kirk) Ferentz said. “That was our thought process a couple of weeks ago.”

That’s because if you don’t think a White kid can run the ball, then you will never give him a chance … unless, of course, you have seven “real” tailbacks go down and you don’t have any other choice.

In his second full game as the starting tailback (and second-and-a-half as the featured runner), Weisman ran for 177 yards (averaging 8.4 yards-per-carry) and 1 touchdown, en route to helping Iowa to a much-needed win. Three games ago, he was a sort-of-starting fullback, whom the Hawkeye coaching staff considered worthy of nothing more than road-grading for the "real" running backs.

In the three games since the coaches were forced into playing him at tailback, Weisman has run for 507 yards and 7 touchdowns.

But instead of admitting that his staff (and collegiate scouts everywhere) made a colossal mistake in the evaluation of Weisman's ability, Ferentz continued to speak about the Hawkeye Hammer with poorly hidden dismay.

"After one game, you're kind of like, 'Hmmm, hope I'm seeing it right,'" Ferentz said of Weisman, who has topped 100 yards and scored at least one touchdown in three consecutive games as the "emergency" tailback. "Then after two, you start thinking, 'This guy might not be bad.' After three games, I think a lot of us are starting to think, 'Maybe this guy is a running back.' His fullback days may be numbered. He may be retiring from that spot."

With "evaluation" and "coaching" like that, one wonders if a White player will ever be considered good enough to be a legitimate tailback.

Additionally, one laughingly supposes that "naturally," Ferentz would say the same things about black power tailbacks like Ron Dayne, Jerome Bettis, Marcus Allen, or Jim Brown, who apparently all should be incredibly thankful they aren't White and didn't play for Iowa.
 
Last edited:

Jack Lambert

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Great article, Jimmy!! That sums up the caste system in a nutshell. Could we post it on the front page?
 

white is right

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Jimmy Chitwood's relentless logic strikes again.
Wow this was the college equivalent of Hillis with the Broncos. Hopefully the coach looks at the tapes and sees that this kid has bell cow written all over his running style.
 

PowerFtbll

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personal experience with caste system

markweisman.jpg


The headline read, "Weisman listed as starting running back … for now."

Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz echoed the sentiments afterwards, “He’s a contrast to the other guys that we have carrying the football. So you know, would he be our go-to-guy, our predominant back? I don’t know. Only time will tell.â€

Questions abounded about whether Weisman could actually be a “playmaker†running the football, while the “experts†insisted that he was really just a “fullback,†that he was a short-term, emergency fill-in, and that he was built to be a blocker. Or maybe he should be a linebacker, despite his impressive performance at tailback.

Ferentz admitted that, “He certainly showed some things out there competitively, and he brings a different tempo, if you will, running the football than everybody else. That was not scripted, I can assure you. But he runs tough. And we didn’t have any choice Saturday, but yeah, you just never know until guys get on the game field and perform.â€

These are the sentiments regarding the player who, according to Stats Inc., is the first Hawkeye to rush for more than 300 yards and score 6 rushing touchdowns in a two-game span since 1997 (Tavian Banks).

That’s right. The first in 15 years.

And that’s also right. The player who did it was only given the chance because the coaching staff had no other choice.

This is the story of Mark Weisman. But even more so, this is the story of the Caste System.

The player who has performed so brilliantly as a tailback for the Hawkeyes the past two weeks was not offered a scholarship to play at Iowa. Nor was he considered a potential tailback, at least, not until every “real tailback†on the Iowa roster was unavailable. Literally seven (7!) other tailbacks were tried before Weisman got his opportunity: Marcus Coker (the 2011 starter), Mika’il McCall, and DeAndre Johnson were off the team by the time fall camp started. Jordan Canzeri and Barkley Hill went down with major knee injuries. Michael Malloy was ill for the Northern Iowa game and couldn’t go. Damon Bullock started the game against Northern Iowa, but he was knocked out (pun!) with a concussion. Greg Garmon was injured shortly thereafter. With nowhere else to turn, Iowa was forced to turn to Weisman.

And that is where the legend of Mark Weisman began. But his story began long before that …

A three-year starter at Stevenson High (Chicago), Weisman was a first-team all-state running “fullback,†rushing 153 times for 1,657 yards (that’s nearly 11 yards-per-carry) and 22 touchdowns as a senior. Despite the gaudy numbers, tremendous size (6-feet, 225-pounds), and a head coach who told everyone how good the running back was, Weisman only had one Division One scholarship offer coming out of high school. That’s right. Just one. His high school head coach was stunned that schools weren’t lining up to sign his phenom. Obviously he is not familiar with how the Caste System works.

Iowa said he could come as a walk-on, if he wanted to. But they had plenty of “real†talent in their backfield, so the Hawkeyes weren’t sweating it when Weisman accepted the scholarship to play for Air Force.

Despite his terrific work ethic and willingness to play fullback, his “natural†position, Weisman didn’t fit in at the Academy, where he admits that he was sleeping on the floor because he couldn’t make his bed to regulations. So, with no hard feelings, he decided to go where his heart had always wanted to be: Iowa.

As an unheralded, virtually unwanted walk-on, there were no promises that he’d get to play. But all Weisman needed was an opportunity.

He began making an impression (another pun!) when playing on the scout team. Hitting like a hammer and routinely showcasing the ability that garnered all those high school accolades, his teammates and coaches began to take note of his physical prowess. His work in the weight room became the stuff of legend, and by the beginning of his sophomore season (with his weight up to 235 pounds) he had earned the starting fullback job. Well, sort of. He was listed as a co-starter that didn’t actually start.

Still no scholarship, though. And still no indication that the coaches knew they had a high-powered juggernaut ready and waiting to run with the ball. They believed (wrongly) that they had seven better players in front of him.

And that is why the Caste System is so difficult to overcome. “Evaluating†“talent†is largely a subjective business, and the “eye of the beholder†sees what it wants to see. That is the reason certain athletes who put up huge numbers in high school but run a pedestrian forty time with pedestrian agility times are still considered “plenty fast†and potential “playmakers†because they are bursting with “upside,†while other athletes who put up equally huge numbers while running faster forty times and superior agility times are still somehow “too slow†or “too stiff†or “don’t have upside.†When coaches expect to see something, they see it … even if it isn’t true. That is why when collegiate scouts and coaches looked at Weisman they saw a potential “blocking fullback†instead of a potential “power tailback.â€

You see, Weisman is a White kid playing a “Black position.â€

It is obvious that those collegiate scouts and coaches ignored the easily-verified fact that the virtually unrecruited Weisman’s physical size and speed were very similar coming out of high school to highly-recruited Michigan State tailback (and Doak Walker candidate) Le’Veon Bell, who runs with a very similar powerful style. Additionally, Weisman’s production was similar, and his big-play numbers were actually superior, to the highly recruited Bell. But despite these verifiable facts, not a single “talent†“evaluator†considered Weisman to be a potential contributor at tailback.

Not even the Iowa coaching staff, who are now being forced to play him, considered him to be a playmaker with the ball in his hands.

You see, Bell is Black, while Weisman is obviously White.

Yet, somehow, he is now running for huge numbers. In fact, Weisman, the unwanted sophomore, is second in the Big Ten in rushing (and rushing touchdowns) despite only carrying the ball in a little over a game-and-a-half. Just imagine what kind of numbers he could be putting up if he had “real†talent …

Or is their more to the story? After all, it is quite obvious that the hard-running Weisman is a gifted running back.

In his first start at tailback, he ran for 217 yards and 3 more touchdowns on 27 carries. His huge day (and that whopping 8-yards-per-carry average) was lost amidst the sting of Iowa’s upset loss, but it’s clear that his ability to make plays with the ball in his hands is so obvious that only the blind can’t see it. So why couldn’t all those so-called talent scouts and Iowa coaches see it before now?

The answer is simple. No one is as blind as those who don’t want to see.

Perhaps Ferentz summed it up best after Weisman’s day against Central Michigan.

“We didn’t know how nimble he would be, how athletic he would be, how he would be at making the reads and the cuts you have to make,†(head coach Kirk) Ferentz said. “That was our thought process a couple of weeks ago.â€

That’s because if you don’t think a White kid can run the ball, then you will never give him a chance … unless, of course, you have seven “real†tailbacks go down and you don’t have any other choice.

Yeah, it's really unfortunate that this is the way things are right now. I once had personal experience with this, except it happened to me when I was in high school. I was a 6 feet 1 inch 4.6 forty running white kid who wanted to play running back and/or slot receiver. I found myself a third string running back and second string safety behind a slew of guys who were similar in athleticism but less in size and intelligence, if you know what I mean. They ran 4.6 forty's too, yet I was taller by severall inches than all of them and by about 10 to 20 pounds. It just didn't make sense to me or my dad. Unfortunately, I tore cartilage in my knee and tore (severely) my groin muscle just before my junior season. I missed that season. AFter that I decided to quit, because I knew there weree no opportunities for me to play football at school.

I did eventually become a starter at my university. I played rugby though. haha, an all white sport.

I wish the best for all kids like me who are equal or great in athleticism, but need opportunities.

Oh! and I forgot. WE had an athleticism test at my school, and when I was sixteen I was third highest on the football team on the test. But I was behind...cough cough... yep, 3 white guys were the highest. I was third. yep
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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an update to the story ...

In his second full game as the starting tailback (and second-and-a-half as the featured runner), Weisman ran for 177 yards (averaging 8.4 yards-per-carry) and 1 touchdown, en route to helping Iowa to a much-needed win. Three games ago, he was a sort-of-starting fullback, whom the Hawkeye coaching staff considered worthy of nothing more than road-grading for the "real" running backs.

In the three games since the coaches were forced into playing him at tailback, Weisman has run for 507 yards and 7 touchdowns.

But instead of admitting that his staff (and collegiate scouts everywhere) made a colossal mistake in the evaluation of Weisman's ability, Ferentz continued to speak about the Hawkeye Hammer with poorly hidden dismay.

"After one game, you're kind of like, 'Hmmm, hope I'm seeing it right,'" Ferentz said of Weisman, who has topped 100 yards and scored at least one touchdown in three consecutive games as the "emergency" tailback. "Then after two, you start thinking, 'This guy might not be bad.' After three games, I think a lot of us are starting to think, 'Maybe this guy is a running back.' His fullback days may be numbered. He may be retiring from that spot."

With "evaluation" and "coaching" like that, one wonders if a White player will ever be considered good enough to be a legitimate tailback.

Additionally, one laughingly supposes that "naturally," Ferentz would say the same things about black power tailbacks like Ron Dayne, Jerome Bettis, Marcus Allen, or Jim Brown, who apparently all should be incredibly thankful they aren't White and didn't play for Iowa.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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i stumbled across a couple of interesting write-ups today that put Weisman's performance in perspective.

Digging into Iowa football stats
Mark Weisman has been good for the last three games. But exactly how good? Here’s a look at the numbers.

Weisman rushing yards per last three games: 169

Weisman has 507 rushing yards since taking over as Iowa’s top ballcarrier. That is second best in the nation over that span, and it puts him in rare company in school history as well.

Marcus Coker averaged 106 yards per game on his way to an All-Big Ten second-team selection last year. Shonn Greene tallied 142 yards per game in his Doak Walker-winning 2008 season. And Greene’s best three-game stretch from that season was 489 yards — 18 fewer than what Weisman has produced.

The bruising sophomore is also gaining more than 7 yards on average every time he carries the ball. That’s almost a full yard more than Greene’s 2008 campaign and more than 2 yards above Coker last season.

It remains to be seen whether Weisman can run like this for the whole year or against defenses like Michigan State or Ohio State. But his three-game run has been historically good.

Over the last three games, Weisman is the nation's second-leading rusher.
In Iowa’s first two games, fullback Weisman carried the ball a total of two times for eight yards. He entered the third game, against Northern Iowa, early in the second quarter. Since that entrance, he has rushed 72 times for 507 yards.

(Note from JC: Weisman carried the ball twice in the first half against Northern Iowa, and both carries went for 1-yard touchdowns.)

That translates to 169.0 yards per game. Which is a higher average over his last three games than anyone in FBS but (University of Nevada's Stefphon) Jefferson.

Weisman is tied for 26th in FBS rushing with 103.00 yards per game. The first two games have virtually taken away any chance he has of ranking in, say, the top five.

But if you throw out those two games and look at what the national leaders have done in their last three games? Weisman is No. 1. And he didn’t get a carry in the first quarter of the first of those three games, against Northern Iowa.

Here is what Weisman and the top 10 in FBS rushing yardage per game have done in their last three games:

26. Weisman, Iowa 72 carries, 507 yards. 169.0 yards per game, 7.0 yards per carry. *

1. Stefphon Jefferson, Nevada 98-595, 198.3, 6.1

2. Cody Getz, Air Force 66-465, 155.0, 6.0

3. Beau Blankenship, Ohio 98-499, 166.3, 5.0

4. Johnathan Franklin, UCLA 52-266, 88.7, 5.0

5. Joseph Randle, Oklahoma State 69-427, 142.3, 6.2

6. Le’Veon Bell, Michigan State 72-375, 125.0, 5.2

7. Tevin King, Louisiana Tech 46-369, 123.0, 8.0

8. Jawan Jamison, Rutgers 84-379, 126.3, 4.5

9. Raymond Maples, Army 51-380, 126.7, 7.5

10. Kenjon Barner, Oregon 53-338, 112.7, 6.4

* the emboldened players are White running backs
 

celticdb15

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[h=1]Hawkeyes' Weisman looking to keep his edge[/h]

http://qctimes.com/sports/football/...cle_153cd435-1cae-5059-acf8-1f5f30429b57.html



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Buy Now
Mark Weisman



July 14, 2013 2:23 pm • Steve Batterson [email]sbatterson@qctimes.com[/email]
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IOWA CITY – When Mark Weisman stepped to the forefront at running back last season for the Iowa football team, it was out of necessity.
Now, the Hawkeyes sophomore is trying to stand out in a crowd.
Unlike last season, when Weisman was shifted from fullback to tailback because of injuries and went on to lead Iowa with 815 rushing yards, there is no shortage of ball carriers in Iowa's camp this summer.
Damon Bullock returns, Jordan Canzeri is back after missing the 2012 season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament, and redshirt freshmen Michael Malloy and Barkley Hill are positioning to compete for playing time.
“It’s not August yet, but we feel good about the depth we have there and the potential that we have heading into fall camp," Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said.
“When Mark had to go last year, he was basically the only guy we had back there. Hopefully, we’ll have a little more balance this year and can give him some help. It would be nice to be in a position where one guy didn’t have to shoulder the entire load."
Weisman rushed for 217 yards in his first start against Central Michigan and totaled 293 yards in Iowa’s first Big Ten tests against Minnesota and Michigan State before suffering an ankle injury.
The Hawkeyes cobbled together a running attack the rest of the year but stumbled to losses in their final six conference games to end a 4-8 season.
“It wasn’t fun for any of us, and it’s something we don’t want to go through again," Weisman said.
That provides motivation.
“It would be easy to get lost in the shuffle, and I don’t plan to let that happen," he said.
He continues to prepare to play tailback and is spending time working to gain flexibility and the ability to make more effective cuts.
Weisman, who walked on at Iowa after initially beginning his career at Air Force, said he is approaching things as he did when he arrived at Iowa.
“The mentality that I’m going into things with now isn’t any different," he said. “It’s kind of a walk-on mentality, that you have something to prove and that’s really still the case for all of us. Jobs are open. There’s plenty of competition and I’m not going to let somebody outwork me. That’s the way I approach it and I’m sure the other guys are thinking the same thing."
It’s the way Ferentz hopes that all of his running backs approach their individual work.
“As we’ve seen in the past, we can never seem to have enough running backs, and the more they push each other, the better I think they all will become," Ferentz said.



 

Leonardfan

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Ferentz better keep Mark as starter and have the other backs be change of pace only. Weisman is a workhorse running back like Bell was for MSU. Just give him the ball 20-25 times a game and he will get you 100+ yds.
 

FootballDad

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Ferentz better keep Mark as starter and have the other backs be change of pace only. Weisman is a workhorse running back like Bell was for MSU. Just give him the ball 20-25 times a game and he will get you 100+ yds.
Hopefully the coaches, fans, media, and alumni will allow him to be that workhorse. But look at his picture in celticdb15's post. A clean-cut, baby-faced white boy. How can he possibly be able to compete with a spider-haired-dreadlock supa-afflete? No mind that he would have a higher ypc, be a better blocker and better receiver, he just doesn't look incredible in the minds of the average brain-washed DWF.
 

white is right

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Hopefully the coaches, fans, media, and alumni will allow him to be that workhorse. But look at his picture in celticdb15's post. A clean-cut, baby-faced white boy. How can he possibly be able to compete with a spider-haired-dreadlock supa-afflete? No mind that he would have a higher ypc, be a better blocker and better receiver, he just doesn't look incredible in the minds of the average brain-washed DWF.
Get aboard the Weisman express the next stop could be the Doak Walker award he appears to be having a monster work horse type season....:jaw:
 

Phall

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Mark Weisman’s parents OK with Yom Kippur choice


Sorry to rain on the parade. Let's get this out of the way first: I don't think that Weisman has emerged as a rare "white" running back because he is jewish. He had to overcome all the usual hurdles of prejudice against white backs, take full advantage of limited opportunities after black injuries, and now still needs to fend off the rest of the depth chart. I imagine he'll hit the same invisible wall at the pro level that all his white counterparts have encountered.

Weisman is a caste-buster like basketball's Jeremy Lin or Hedo Turkoglu. As a rule, this is helpful to open new eyes to sports' racial paradigm and to pave the way for future players. For me, it's just too much to actively root for Weisman though. Without any idea of his ancestry or his politics, I still know that he is going to have a distinction from whiteness somewhere beneath the surface. Christianity, atheism, and even Islam can be referenced absent racial implications. Judaism cannot: countless little tenets remind us of this ("The Tribe", "Chosen People", etc.). Well, I have no qualms about being just as exclusive.

weis1.jpg

Passes the eye test?
 
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I cheer for Weisman for mostly the same reasons I cheer for Jeremy Lin.

1) The DWFs see Weisman as white (unlike Lin). He will be forced to play fullback in the NFL, assuming he gets the chance. Being a Jew is no advantage in football. Being black or poly is. If being a Jew actually ends up helping him (with the media), then the irony is that it's a blow against the Caste System, because the DWFs see him as white.

2) The Caste System is about black superiority more than it's about white inferiority. That might be a subtle difference, but it matters. That's why Lin confounds the DWFs, and the propagandists. Any non-black that does well in football or basketball is a blow against the System, and that's a good thing. Oh, and polys are black to the DWFs, so they don't count for these purposes. The DWFs' worship of black athleticism cannot be overstated. Any display that disproves it is a positive.


I just want players treated fairly. If that ever happens, lots of white players will star, and I will care very little if a Jewish running back did well. Weisman's current success helps a little toward that goal. Still, I hope Zwinack out-gains him.
 

Leonardfan

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He is white, his religion may be jewish but I am sure his gene pool originates from either Germany or Russia.
 

dwid

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weis1.jpg

Passes the eye test?

Matty G was going to constantly mention it anyway. I don't know if he would have been able to get out of Air Force though, which is why I am conflicted about rooting for him. Plus I have to study his running more, because Shonn Greene was able to win the Doak Walker award with 1800 yards one season behind the same line (well a similar line, the coach looks for similar players to run the offensive line), and he couldn't make a single person miss in the pros. Weissman has one run over 20 yards this year, now that could be due to the scheme, or because of Wesiman. The zbs (when run exclusively) is great for getting chunks of yards but it can also limit a player with big plays, there are some who this scheme does not affect and watching Wegher he was much better, oh well, hopefully Weissman improves. It could be due to some lingering minor injury, because he had 3 straight games last year with 30+ yard plays then 2 bad games and 2 missed games where he was obviously injured.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Weisman is well on his way to another 100-yard game, with nearly 50 at the half and a touchdown. Iowa is putting it on Western Michigan, 38-3. ouch!

as far as Weisman goes, the announcers constantly knock his lack of speed, but one of the broadcasters in today's contest mentioned that he is second in the Big Ten (behind the "electric" Devin Gardner) with 11 runs over 10 yards. and he just burst for 14 more, so notch another 10-plus-yard carry down for him.

personally, i cheer for him. he certainly beats another Trayvon skittling around the field, and his story is straight out of the Caste System playbook towards White running backs.
 
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