He Comes To Work Every Day

On the TunneySide of Sports January 25, 2021 #832 Up next… He Comes To Work Every Day

After further reviewAs the National Football League concludes its 100th season in this disastrous Pandemic year with rescheduling and postponements due to COVID -19, we approach Super Bowl LV to be played February 7,  2021, with some uncertainty. Note: The two combatants were determined after this article was written.) This is my 60th year of association with the NFL of which 31 of those years was as an on-field official. From the get-go, I have always considered it an honor and a privilege.

My belief is that every player, some 1700-2000, hired each year, consider it likewise. Yet only eleven players from each team get to play each play in the game. Those other players sitting on the bench but under some variance of a contract, are their substitutes. How important is each play to them? Are they ready and able to play when needed? Let’s look at some important and vital-position players, who are there but only when needed.

Aaron Rodgers is the starting quarterback for the Green Bay Packers and is considered for MVP honors this 2020 season. Tim Boyle, Rodgers back-up, played at Eastern Kentucky and is now in his third year, as a Packer yet, hasn’t played much since Rodgers has been healthy. Rodgers is 37 years old and still able to play every down. It’s an interesting comparison since Rodgers sat on the Packers bench for 3 years behind Brett Farve who played 16 years for the Packers. However, when Farve was traded, Rodgers has kept the Packers alive and well.

Tom Brady is the starting QB for the Tampa Bay Bucs who played against the Packers in the NFC championship battle. Brady has been healthy most of the 2020 season but is 43. His backup is 31-year old Blaine Gabbert who was a first-round pick out of Missouri and now in his 11th-year.

Josh Allen is the starting QB for the Buffalo Bills from Wyoming University and was drafted in the 10th round in 2018. His backup QB is 6th-year veteran Matt Barkley from Southern California.

The Kansas City Chiefs who played the Bills in the AFC championship game suffered its most devastating injury to former Super Bowl MVP and starting QB, 25-year-old Patrick Mahomes who left that divisional game in the 3rd quarter against Baltimore with a concussion. Entering the game was Mahomes back-up, Chad Henne, a 13-year veteran from the University of Michigan.

The challenge for 35-year old Henne was to maintain the Chiefs lead (22-15) throughout the 4th quarter. And he did! – with a 3rd down scramble and a 4th down completion for a first down. As one of his teammates commented after the game: “He comes to work every day!”

Will you follow Henne’s example and be prepared to go to work every day?

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About Jim Tunney Ed.D

Retired NFL referee Jim Tunney gives his unique view of sports and life every Monday in his column, The TunneySide of Sports
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