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In the presence of greatness
posted 05/25/09 7:32 pm
ABC 7 News - In the presence of greatness
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(Sports Network) - My earliest college football memory is of
the 1978 Cotton Bowl, as an eight-year old boy watched his favorite team
(Notre Dame) and his favorite player at the time (Joe Montana) upset the top-
ranked Texas Longhorns for the national title. The following season in the
same venue, "Joe Cool," as he would later become, rallied the Irish from a
22-point, fourth-quarter deficit to knock off Houston in one of the greatest
college football games of all time. The comeback was that much more impressive
considering the weather conditions and the fact that Montana was suffering
from the flu in the subsequently-named "Chicken Soup Game."

The point of my little stroll down memory lane is to date myself and say that
I have been hooked on college football for just over 30 years now. It is not
to proclaim Montana to be the greatest football player in college history. He
saved that distinction for his professional career.

There have been a ton of great players that could be considered the all-time
best over the last three decades. I limit this topic to that time frame
because I simply don't remember football before then.

Herschel Walker has to be near the top of everyone's list, doesn't he? The
1982 Heisman Trophy winner was a three-time consensus All-American and led
Georgia to an undefeated season and a national championship with a win over
the Irish in the Sugar Bowl (1982). Other running backs that could earn the
title of "all-time best" include Bo Jackson (Auburn), Barry Sanders (Oklahoma
State), Ricky Williams (Texas), Marshall Faulk (San Diego State), Marcus Allen
(USC)...The list goes on and on.

As far as the best quarterbacks over the last 30 years, the aforementioned
Montana, although legendary as a pro, comes up a bit short in terms of this
list. The New England area could lay claim to the top college quarterback in
the diminutive form of Boston College's Doug Flutie. The 1984 Heisman Trophy
winner will always be remembered for the "Hail Flutie" play against Miami that
year. He single-handedly put Boston College on the college football map, where
it remains to this day. Other QBs worthy of mention include Tommie Frazier
(Nebraska), Matt Leinart (USC), Danny Wuerffel (Florida), Charlie Ward
(Florida State) and Tim Tebow (Florida).

That's right, I am starting to think that the current Gators quarterback may
just be the best college football player I have ever seen (live that is).

I mean, what hasn't the young man done? After playing a key role in Florida's
national championship season as a freshman, Tebow followed that up with
becoming the first-ever underclassman (freshman or sophomore) to win the
Heisman Trophy in 2007. If that weren't enough, Tebow again led the Gators to
a national title this past season and will return to attempt the trifecta in
2009.

Tebow has shown the ability to dominate the game both with his arm and legs,
as his stats are ridiculous (over 6,300 passing yards and 67 TDs, while
amassing over 2,000 rushing yards and another 43 scores), but it is his
leadership qualities that give him his greatest advantage and catapult him to
the top of the heap. His ability to command a huddle and an entire team, for
that matter, is exactly what all the greats did, and what separates him from
his peers today.

His awkward delivery is well-documented and scrutinized, and his game at this
time probably doesn't translate perfectly to the NFL, especially given the
league's usual affection for classic, drop-back, pocket passers.

To rectify that, however, Florida head coach Urban Meyer is going to put him
under center more, as well as give him a more conventional, over-the-top
delivery. It only seems fair considering all that Tebow has done for Meyer and
the Florida program.

Every team on Florida's schedule and the SEC as a whole, for that matter,
probably hopes the experiment is a disaster.

However, in seeing Tebow's body of work over the last couple of seasons, is
that reasonable, or just wishful thinking?

Tebow has dominated the competition at the college level and that is what he
will be best remembered for.

The bottom line is that it is fun to watch Tebow play the game, something that
I have tried to share with my two teenage sons the last two years.

Who knows, 20 years from now, my boys may be arguing the merits of Tebow and
just how well the stars of that era match up with Florida's gifted signal-
caller.

That argument alone will help define his greatness.




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