The Question is Not Whether He
Was Cut but Will He Be Picked Up?
Michael
Sam, the first openly gay NFL aspirant, was cut by the St. Louis Rams. After almost being undrafted, Sam’s dream
came true. He was drafted in the late
rounds (249th to be exact) by the St. Louis Rams. He had won many defensive player accolades as
he starred at the University of Missouri.
It was almost a storybook tale! UM star gets to play for the St. Louis, MO. football team in the regular season…….hope
springs eternal!
But the
reality of the Rams having a plethora of all-star quality defensive ends and
the emergence of an undrafted defensive end whose pre-season rating numbers far
exceeded those of Sam made the decision by the numbers clear…………regardless of
race, sexual preference, nice guy criteria, Michael Sam needed to be put on
waivers. In professional sports, like it
or not, it’s about putting the best players on the field. Then the team can win!
That puts hometown fans in the stands and attracts advertising sponsors to pay the
price so that those whose livelihood (from the multi-dollar contract player to
the low wage earning vendor selling popcorn or beer in stands) depends on the
team’s success will also be winners.
BUT NOW
COMES THE REAL TEST OF WHERE OUR SOCIETY STANDS ON THE LGBT QUESTION. Will Michael Sam be picked up off the waiver
list by another team? By the numbers
Michael Sam is more proficient at his defensive end position than many veterans
and rookies in the league. There are at
least several teams that have defensive linemen on their roster with less skill
than Michael Sam. Jeff Fisher, the Rams’
coach, acknowledged that Michael Sam has the ability to play in the NFL……just
not on a talented defensive end laden team in St. Louis. Now the question of our society’s –
particularly in the world of sport – openness on LGBT justice issues is really being
tested. We now know Michael Sam has “got
game” but will he be able to play in the NFL game?
Michael Sam knew the truth and
knew the numbers and made a statement that displayed his gracious and tenacious
character when he tweeted: "I want to thank the entire Rams organization
and the city of St. Louis for giving me this tremendous opportunity and
allowing me to show I can play at this level.
I look forward to continuing to build on the progress I made
here toward a long and successful career. The most worthwhile things in life
rarely come easy, this is a lesson I've always known. The journey continues
..."
Several
months ago it was about a gay being drafted by an NFL team. It was first-and-ten. Now it’s about a rising NFL prospect who
proved he can play. Now it’s
second-and-three. Those who have defended
injustice are rapidly losing ground! Hallelujah!
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