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Jimmy Chitwood said:ypac said:oh i know lots about andrew
rock...maybe even more than you. did you know that rock wasn't even a
400 runner in high school? his primary event was the 300 hurdles, and
he was pretty damn good at them too, i think he was wisconsin's
division III state record holder at 37.5. but check this out. at a
major track school like florida state, to be considered for a
scholarship you have to run 37 flat. you can definitely walk on
with a time that rock had but that's not a scholarship. i bet rock
could've gotten a scholarship to a lesser division I school, but that
may not have done any good. unless that school has some serious track
coaching, you might not really improve. instead, rock went to DIII
powerhouse Wisconsin LaCrosse where he was allowed to change events at
his discretion, got plenty of attention and excellent coaching. in fact
his coach at UW Lax, is now a coach at the UW Madison (Division I). Had
Andrew Rock gotten a scholarship for track, it would've been for the
intermediate hurdles, and there's no way of knowing that his story
would've turned as good as it actually
has.
ypac, you just made my point for me. by your own admission, Rock
had to go to a lower level school to get the opportunity his raw talent
deserved.
somehow, though, you claim his going to Division III UW Lax allowed
him access to better coaches who were more adept at developing his
talent than the (more recognized and certainly more well-paid, i'd
suspect) track coaches at more prestigious universities.
wouldn't you agree that this is a problem? i can't explain it any
more clearer than that. a talented white athlete had to go to a small
school to get an opportunity, plain and simple.
fortunately for Rock who participates in an individual sporting
event, his times on the track couldn't be ignored once he decided to
turn pro. however, in football performances by white athletes at lower
levels of college ball count for exactly nothing (see Danny Woodhead as
a vivid recent example), even if they are physically equal or superior
to their more high-profile collegiate peers. and, as a result, they end
up being ignored or rudely discarded by the NFL.
no. i ididn't make your point for you. and it seems that you ignored
key facts from my post. again, rock wasn't a 400 runner in high school,
and his hurdle time (37.5) would not have gotten him a scholarship at
the top schools. florida state (for example) gives scholarships to kids
that run 37 flat or better (37.00) and allows people with times of
38.20 or better to be walk ons. i'm not making this up. go look it up
on FSU's track website.
i never said that he got "better" coaching, i simply said he got
excellent coaching at UW-Lax. Rock's coach Guthrie, is now coaching at
a Div I school. Going to a prestigious school is not a guarantee
for success. David Klech, an amazing white talent out of California,
had the top 300 hurdles time in the country in 2006. He took a
scholarship to UCLA. he did pretty much nothing his freshman year and
got injured. he's since transfered to Oregon and sat out this year.
this upcoming year might be his year, but nothing is guaranteed.
Klech beat current NCAA 400 hurdles champ Jeshua Anderson when they
were in high school. Anderson went to a smaller school at Waashington
State, but won a national championship as a freshman. it'll be very
interesting to see a healthy Klech go after him. my point in bringing
this up is that it doesn't necessarily matter that you go to a smaller
school, because the big time prestigious school doesn't always work
out.
i'm not talking football b/c everybody here already knows that's moot. my question was about sprinting and track.