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Author Topic: What is vital to a rookie's success in this league  (Read 1737 times)
raptorsfan29
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« on: March 13, 2008, 03:53:02 pm »

i want to start this discussion just for sake of making a good discussion.

Obviously there have been times where rookies (mostly the ones in the first round) have had high ceilings only to become a bust and ones that were drafted later to never really contribute, and the few who become all pro players, wins superbowls and basically become a legand.

So My question is what is vital for a rookie to be successful in this league, is it more the coaching that is put into the player, the system that player is put into, the work ethic of the player, or something else.
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YoFuggedaboutit
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« Reply #1 on: March 13, 2008, 08:39:36 pm »

Stroke said it best in his letter to all 2006 NFL Rookies.  This applies to all rookies.  Had to gravedig this but it's worth it.

An open letter to all 2006 NFL Rookies

Congratulations! By merit of your physical abilities and practiced application of game skills, you have been granted the ultimate job...to play the game of football for a ridiculous salary in front of millions of adoring fans.

You lucky dogs!

Now that you've been drafted, I'd like to give you my two cents on how to set yourself up to have a highly successful NFL career:

Sign your contract right now ...no matter what your agent tells you, the little bit of extra coin you get for being a stubborn ass is more than offset by the fact that your coaches, teammates and fan base now think of you as a stubborn ass. Get your lucky butt into camp, grab a playbook and start learning how to earn your paycheck.

Get to the training room early, stay there late. Nothing impresses a head coach quite as much as a player who is always in there when they arrive in the morning. Almost every time a coach is interviewed about a star player, you hear him talking with respect about how that guy is "always there when I get there at 5 AM." You want to be that guy.

No matter how strong you may think you are, start working now on getting stronger. The pump-and-flex you did at good ol' Tuscawallahatchee Community College won't cut it in The League. Hit the weights, and then hit them harder. When you finish...hit them again.

No matter how fast you may think you are, start working now on getting faster.  95% of you are going to feel like you're in slow motion the first few weeks of camp. This is the NFL and that's just how it is.  Get a good speed coach between camps and learn how to fly.

Be humble.  Until your TD total exceeds your uniform number, you shouldn't be celebrating anything on the field. By the time you get to that point, you'll have long since learned that your job is the scoring of the touchdown. Our job, as fans, is the celebration part.

Never take your fans for granted. Never forget, it's our ticket and merchandising dollars that bought that Mercedes for you...don't piss us off.

Sincerely,

Sunstroke Stevens
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