spiritofspook
Newbie
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2012
- Messages
- 17
White athletes in the NFL are not QUICK enough to cover NFL wide receivers. Many are not quick enough to cover College receivers.
Off topic for a sec- I got to this sight on accident trying to research Brandon Hardin, a white (ish) corner prospect who has worked out for my beloved Chicago bears who are in dire need of corner/safety help. Much to my semi surprise i come across this site. Here we have an entire site with the intention of pointing out the "unfair" disparities against white athletes in the most popular American sports.
Although there is much truth to the fact that some white athletes are discriminated against/discouraged from playing certain positions, there seems to be a lot of selective logic and cherry picking going on around here, along with some clearly misplaced resentment and thinly veiled hate. But considering this is a sports site, i figure lets just stick to the subject and see where this goes. Maybe we can learn from each other.
Back on topic- Professional White athletes can run as fast, jump as high, use as much strength, etc as any high level professional athlete of any race; however, they simply do not have the needed hip flexibility that SOME (not all) high end professional black athletes do. I see threads about white players running 4.3 fortys, i see a lot of conspiracy theories about promoting racial...? uuuh something through sports (of course this is only at certain positions no one has an issue with white linebackers, defensive linemen, offensive linemen, quarterbacks, etc but for some reason the positions that require the most lateral quickness there is a CONSPIRACY!!!:der. I see a lot of complaining, but i don't see much logic. Next you guys should complain that there aren't enough Mexicans in the NBA, or enough Black hockey players. Crying conspiracy there would be just as illogical. But we will get to those some other time.
Cornerback more than any other NFL position requires high levels of agility. The ability to turn your hips and change direction is key when you have to follow NFL wide recievers all over the field. NFL receivers that run much more complex routes than in college. NFL receivers who have much more accurate QBs throwing them the ball will easily burn a corner who is not quick enough to keep up. This is why Darrel Revis shuts down receivers several inches taller than him. It is the same reason why most corners are under 6 ft tall; that extra height (Hardin is 6-2 btw) makes it harder to be as quick. Just like you cant name 1 white corner in the last 10 years, you cant name 5 all pro corners over 6-1. Malcolm Jenkins played corner for Ohio State at 6-2; in the NFL he was moved to safety. When you have a low center of gravity and a wide hip base (something that sub saharan Africans are genetically predisposed to, kinda like our women and their big butts- a genetic condition called Steatopygia) then you can change direction at full speed without losing ground.
ANYONE with strong enough legs and hamstrings can run fast in a straight line. Adam Archuletta was a case study in this. (For any white athletes who are looking for a way to improve their speed and quickness look up his training regimen) I was once a coach for a track team, and one of our fastest sprinters was a short chubby Pakistani kid with a weird stride. In a 100 meter dash, he was running in the low 11s (pretty good for a high school kid) but as a running back, he couldn't shake anyone on the field. He just didnt have the lateral quickness. The same goes for many good overall athletes when tested against an NFL level receiver. You need lateral quickness and agility 1st; speed is secondary. No conspiracy needed, just genetics. Nice forum btw, very user friendly.
Off topic for a sec- I got to this sight on accident trying to research Brandon Hardin, a white (ish) corner prospect who has worked out for my beloved Chicago bears who are in dire need of corner/safety help. Much to my semi surprise i come across this site. Here we have an entire site with the intention of pointing out the "unfair" disparities against white athletes in the most popular American sports.
Although there is much truth to the fact that some white athletes are discriminated against/discouraged from playing certain positions, there seems to be a lot of selective logic and cherry picking going on around here, along with some clearly misplaced resentment and thinly veiled hate. But considering this is a sports site, i figure lets just stick to the subject and see where this goes. Maybe we can learn from each other.
Back on topic- Professional White athletes can run as fast, jump as high, use as much strength, etc as any high level professional athlete of any race; however, they simply do not have the needed hip flexibility that SOME (not all) high end professional black athletes do. I see threads about white players running 4.3 fortys, i see a lot of conspiracy theories about promoting racial...? uuuh something through sports (of course this is only at certain positions no one has an issue with white linebackers, defensive linemen, offensive linemen, quarterbacks, etc but for some reason the positions that require the most lateral quickness there is a CONSPIRACY!!!:der. I see a lot of complaining, but i don't see much logic. Next you guys should complain that there aren't enough Mexicans in the NBA, or enough Black hockey players. Crying conspiracy there would be just as illogical. But we will get to those some other time.
Cornerback more than any other NFL position requires high levels of agility. The ability to turn your hips and change direction is key when you have to follow NFL wide recievers all over the field. NFL receivers that run much more complex routes than in college. NFL receivers who have much more accurate QBs throwing them the ball will easily burn a corner who is not quick enough to keep up. This is why Darrel Revis shuts down receivers several inches taller than him. It is the same reason why most corners are under 6 ft tall; that extra height (Hardin is 6-2 btw) makes it harder to be as quick. Just like you cant name 1 white corner in the last 10 years, you cant name 5 all pro corners over 6-1. Malcolm Jenkins played corner for Ohio State at 6-2; in the NFL he was moved to safety. When you have a low center of gravity and a wide hip base (something that sub saharan Africans are genetically predisposed to, kinda like our women and their big butts- a genetic condition called Steatopygia) then you can change direction at full speed without losing ground.
ANYONE with strong enough legs and hamstrings can run fast in a straight line. Adam Archuletta was a case study in this. (For any white athletes who are looking for a way to improve their speed and quickness look up his training regimen) I was once a coach for a track team, and one of our fastest sprinters was a short chubby Pakistani kid with a weird stride. In a 100 meter dash, he was running in the low 11s (pretty good for a high school kid) but as a running back, he couldn't shake anyone on the field. He just didnt have the lateral quickness. The same goes for many good overall athletes when tested against an NFL level receiver. You need lateral quickness and agility 1st; speed is secondary. No conspiracy needed, just genetics. Nice forum btw, very user friendly.