Topic: Cultural Text-American Football
Source: My sophomore year in high school and my first year on the varsity football team. This was in fall of 2008.
Relation: In the textbook, Cultural Anthro, it discusses the meaning people in certain societies give to games; like American Football in the United States, and the Cockfights in Balinese.
Description: My first year playing varsity high school football was a little different than I thought it was going to be. The head coach was Coach Nova, and he had been a head coach for a handful of years and was very successful at it. He won three straight league championships and went to the playoffs three straight times. So when he asked me to move up from the junior varsity squad to play for his varsity team, I was more than happy. I learned so many things to help me become a better football player through him coaching me and through going to practice every day. To show up earlier than early to practice; to respond to your coaches as coach Nova or coach Rook; to never give up on a play, even if it’s not what you called in the huddle; to not quit the team, even if you didn’t like the team or the coaches; to never quit on yourself, no matter how tough the circumstances are; to trust in your teammate next to you to do his job; to play every play like it’s your last; to always play with your heart and go have fun. These were special details to the game of football that I never really thought to do. They helped me through some very tough times that year. Like when I switched positions in the middle of the season. I had to learn a whole new style of play which was very difficult. I also suffered a torn tendon in my oblique which only made things worse. Trying to impress my coach, playing a new position, and playing with a torn oblique tendon were some of the most difficult tasks I had ever had to do, but with the support of Coach Nova, and his simple little sayings, I was able to get through it.
Commentary/Analysis: In the textbook, Robbins talks about how Americans see American football closely related to war. Well this is true to a certain extent. As a player we also see football as a war. Every game is a battle and the whole season is the war. I also see the game of football as a way of life. Whenever Coach Nova had talked to us he was always trying to connect football to real life. Everything stated above has meaning to football, but more importantly meaning to life. In real life you always want to be early to class, work, and possibly job interviews. In football, calling a coach, coach, really goes a long way, just like whenever you talk to someone, you should hold them to a higher respect by calling them sir or mam. Being flexible in football is just as important as being flexible in your daily schedule. Life will throw some pretty crazy things your way and most of the time it’s not what you prepared for. Just like when a play goes wrong in a game. You still have to figure out what to do next, just like life. My coach always told us never to quit, even the smallest things in life. If you quit one time, you’ll always be a quitter. Trust is a huge factor in our everyday lives just like in football. To trust your teammate is like to trust your spouse to be faithful, or to trust your co-worker to get part of the job done. In football you have to go hard every play. In life you have to do the best you can at everything in order to be successful. Maybe the most important aspect of the game is to have fun. Well in life that’s what we’re always trying to accomplish; to have a fun time. So from observing football as a spectator or fan, they could say it’s about war and about marketing. But from a participant observing football, I can say it’s more about a way of life for the future.
In your analysis, you talked about how football mimics situations in everyday life. I think that can be true, as it is in a lot of other team sports. The coach and the players form a little hierarchy of sorts, with the coach being at the top. I don't really know many positions or their roles in the game, but it seems like some are more coveted positions than others. It's like a microcosm of an agressive, proud society. Fierce loyalty is another example of a characteristic present in both a team and our culture. So I think you're right and ou seemed to have learned a lot about what it takes to make it in our society from your experience participating on a football team.
ReplyDeleteGreat blog, I enjoyed reading it and I really liked how you explained the process you went through when transiting from JV to varsity. I feel that football is kind of like a war, which is to the point where there are plans ("plays") to get the the other teams side, and there must be a lot of team work. I also believe that football is a great way to learn key things about life, such things that you stated in your analysis. But how does one learn these things without football?
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