Electric Slide said:When all these good things have been taking place with Toby Gerhart, why must some here still bash his chances and future potential? Toby has been doing everything right to this point. I in fact didn't even think it was possible for Toby to be considered top-3 on a high profile Heisman site. How long does it take for some of you to see a positive trend? We have some here saying Toby has "no chance," while even caste websites say he DOES have a chance! That is backwards. Look for the caste system to fall apart we need to encourage white RBs to go into the field of battle and test their skill against seemingly insurmountable odds. What if Toby was YOUR son? When you are having dinner with him after the game when he ran for 223 yards, would you tell him "Well son, you still have no shot." How do you think that would make him feel if his dad said that??? There is no value in trying to "predict" future failings. It does us and the white athletes involved no service. Who the heck cares if we were right, but hoped we would be proven otherwise? That doesn't make you smart, edgy, or cool. It's quite simply putting down someone who is doing the nearly-impossible. Just think of it, of all the people in the world only a small few live in America. Of that only 66% of so are white. Only have are male, and only a small percentage are capable of or will do sports. Of those only a small percentage play football, and only a small percentage at RB. Of those very few will make any college team, let alone a team like Stanford. And then he's at the top of the heap of all running backs, white, black, Hispanic, or Polynesian. Just think of that for a second and absorb it for a little bit. Let's hope he continues to defy the odds at some point, instead of saying "well, he's made it past 99 barriers, but he'll sure get done in on 100."
Look, I know there's a million things that could go wrong. There always is in any situation in life. But why must we constantly contemplate and forecast that kind of negativity? If the chips land the wrong way, than so be it. It's not the end of the world or of the life of the people involved. There's nothing we can do about that. I know what happened to Luke Staley, Brian Leonard, Peyton Hillis, and Jacob Hester. Those situations surely burned me as much as they did you. At least the latter three can hope beyond hope that something changes. Remember thought that those were different people, in a different situation, at a different time. Lets stay hopefully optimistic that this will be time when the stars are aligned, and everything goes the right way.
I'm hoping Toby is having good practices this week; is fielding all the attention from his team, family, friends, fans and the media well; is taking care of all his bumps and bruises; is feeling fresh, hydrated, energized and psyched up going into the game on Saturday; and runs like he's never ran before, scoring on multiple long runs, and poses for the Heisman after it. To hell with the 15 yard penalty, if he does that, the image will be repeated 100 times an hour on multiple stations, and will be the front-page photo Sunday morning of the San Jose News, the Palo Alto Times or whatever newspaper is for that hometown.
Go Toby! All the positive energy in the world is flowing towards you! Run like never before and show them what your made of!
As we discussed in another thread a few months ago, there are different ways to approach the problem. Negativity has its strengths if done in a way to alert people to the problem and make them angry about it.
I recall Pollyanna being bashed pretty strongly by some here because he wasn't "positive enough" about the way Peyton Hillis was going to be used this year. Well, guess what?Pollyanna was a virtual "Pollyanna" compared to how it's actually gone down in Denver. This crap has been going on longer than most posters here have been alive. When one White player after another has been royally screwed for at least 25 years, and really you have to go back to 1968 to when the Cultural Marxist Revolution really got going in sports, there's nothing wrong with being a realist. Being negative (realistic based on a scenario that has been repeated over and over again) can also motivate Toby Gerhart and any and every other White athlete. Telling someone they can't do something is just as powerful a motivator as telling someone they can. Quite frankly I enjoy and appreciate both approaches if done with the goal of raising White consciousness and opportunities for White athletes.