Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Teaching, Coaching, Helping.

I was invited to be a guest coach with Gloucester Hornets girls 9-10yrs old. It was such a great reception and amazing outcome. One of my favorite things to do as a professional football player is teach and inspire young kids. I still remember when I was their age.

Growing up in Gainesville FL where soccer is a sport played for fun so the parents have something the kids can spend their weekends doing. For me and my parents it somehow became more than that. Since their were no travel team in my area my mother would drive me 2 hours each way to Orlando in order to be apart of a competitive league. From around the time I was 13 till 16 my mother sacrificed many days in order to drive me the 2 hours to Orlando as I slept across the back seats of our minivan. I still remember many times we had been at a tournament all day and the last game finished near 9 or 10 pm and she was exhausted from running me around. So by the age of 15 I would have to drive part of the way while she was able to rest a little bit also. 

Somehow I had a soccer gene in my body that wouldn't go away no matter how many people told me it was difficult or how strange I may have seemed to most of my friends. While many of my friends pursued many different outlets in life; some even drugs and crime; I had no interest in most things in life except one thing, playing soccer. 

All 4 of my brothers and even my sister use to play soccer also. When I was maybe 8 or 9 years old my brother and I had the task to rake up all the leaves in our front yard. We conjured a plan to rake them all into a little soccer field and play a game. It took over 1 hour to rake all the sidelines, 18 yard box, and center circle to perfect. We then spent the afternoon playing a game against each other and diving through all those perfect lines. It got a little late and my parents were not happy we had never completed our chore and in fact made a bigger mess, we then began to clean up the whole mess. 

In every house we lived in my father would build a goal in the backyard for us and over the years as we grew we would eventually grow into a full field and full size goal. He also took us to our first professional soccer game in Orlando to watch the two MLS teams the Columbus Crew take on the Tampa Bay Mutiny. What an experience that was! Here I was watching players play that I had only seen on trading cards that I bought at the local card shop. Very rarely was soccer shown on TV so we didn't see much of soccer. But the stadium was full, and the field had players like Valderama, Brad Friedel, Brian Mcbride, and more. After the game we heard inside info that the players go a local bar after the game. Our family waited patiently and eventually were able to meet some players face to face. 


While I was showing the Hornets girls some tips and signing a few autographs I noticed the same reactions and faces that I had when I first came in contact with professional soccer players. If only I can inspire a few kids to follow their dreams the same way I did, then my career is complete. 

“The purpose of life is not to be happy. It is to be useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.” 
― Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Friday, July 25, 2014

Putting in Miles

On our way to our match vs Carolina rail hawks, Richard Starnes from TSN radio asked me an interesting question. "How many miles you think you've put into this sport". 
  I hadn't really thought about it. But when I did, I've realized covered a lot of the world and spent many hours in airports and long flights to destinations I sometimes don't know much about. 
  
  My first experience was when I was 14. My coach and long time mentor called me and asked if I want to go to Germany for an academy tryout. "The team is called Leverkussen, you will like it there trust me." 
   "Who is this team Leverkussen? Are they any good?". I asked foolishly. 

It's pretty funny, I still remember to this day being in Leverkussen, training with the academy team on a pitch next to the men's team. And I remember meeting players Lucio, Oliver Butt, Peter Schumacher and others. And yet, I hadn't known any of these guys...

Mostly it's due to the fact I grew up in Gainesville Florida, a small country town in the south. A classic big truck haulin', four wheel drivin', beer and (American) football lovin' type of place. 
My knowledge of 'soccer' was limited to what I could buy on VHS tapes and what games they showed on TV every now and a blue moon. 

However While I was at training in Leverkussen I ran into one person who I had known, Frankie Hejduk from USA. I got more excited about seeing him than anyone. 


My first pro contract was in Puerto Rico. My agent called me and said to get on a flight to PR and there is a contract waiting for you. I had to Google and find out more about it. It was as foreign and unknown to me as China or Zimbabwe. 
   My third contract began in a similar fashion. I received a call from my agent saying to be in Thailand in 4 days. 4 days!!! Two of those days were mostly travel as well. Needless to say I boarded a long flight to a destination very foreign to me.

  As I remembered these moments in my career it reminds me a couple of things. Firstly, I need to learn more about other countries and their cultures. And secondly, my day job is like none other. And my career has taken me to places I probably never would've gone otherwise. It's also given me experiences and moments that are so profound and life changing. 

One of my teachers told me a quote that I always think about. It's from the actor Paul Newmon while he was waiting around on set of one of his films he cracked open a beer during the down time, and someone asked him what he was doing. 
"This waitin around is what they pay me for. Being on camera is fun for me, I'd do it for free".


That's how I feel about my profession. 



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