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Wysłany: Czw 17:10, 09 Gru 2010 Temat postu: I had all the friends |
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“I’ve never felt happier in my entire life,” Jones said on the “I Am Second” video, taped long before his big Bedlam performance or his monster season.
“I get done with that first year of college not knowing if I want to continue at OU,” he said. “I didn’t know if I wanted to quit. I just wanted to crawl in a hole and just be left there.”
Jones built his whole identity around who he was as an athlete. Throwing a football gave him worth. Scoring touchdowns gave him meaning.
It was the season that changed his life.
Egad.
“He’s had a special year,” Sooner coach Bob Stoops said.
But the yards and the touchdowns and the success might never have happened had it not been for the season that he nearly quit and the reason that he didn’t. [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
“I became sad and lonely, and I went through a state of depression for that first year,” Jones said. “When everybody’d be having a good day, I’d try to drag ’em down so I could feel better about myself. I was just drowning.”
From the time he was little, adults had been telling him that he’d play in the NFL some day.
His first season at OU, though, he was redshirted.
Jones thrives after surviving a low point
Then again, he has a unique appreciation for redemption.
We’re talking about his first year on campus, the season when he was a true freshman, the fall that he redshirted.
Jones now wants to be a preacher when his playing days are done. He wants to share the love and the joy that he feels because of his faith.
Jones arrived in Norman a couple years ago as a blue-chip, four-star recruit. He was an icon back home in Artesia, N.M. He was a multi-star standout.
Jones admitted that he tried to find comfort in alcohol and girls, but nothing made him feel better.
“And He freed me from all the depression that I had, all the sadness, all the loneliness,” Jones said. “It was probably one of the greatest moments of my life.”
Thing is, his future isn’t the only thing that has changed. His here-and-now has, too.
“In the end of times, it’s not really going to matter if I’m a Hall of Fame quarterback or a great college quarterback or anything like that. It’s going to matter what I did on this earth and how I used my gifts for God.” [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
No football? [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
When Jones threw three first-half interceptions last week against OSU — two that were meant to be thrown away but weren’t quite chucked far enough — he didn’t fall apart. He didn’t self-destruct. Instead, he came through in the fourth-quarter clutch. [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
Jones continues to redeem himself. [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
“Everybody loved me.”
“Any other throw ... and he’s going to get caught,” Stoops said.
ARLINGTON, Texas — To understand how Landry Jones made two of the best throws of his career only a half after making two of his worst last Saturday night, you need to know about his freshman year at Oklahoma.
He remembers one particular time when he was alone and felt the presence of God.
Five interceptions in a 10-3 loss last season? [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
As bad as that sounds, it gets worse. [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
As OU prepares for Nebraska and the Big 12 title game,[link widoczny dla zalogowanych], no player is more important to the outcome than Jones. If he plays well against a stellar Husker defense, the Sooners will celebrate another conference crown. If he doesn’t, there will be Lincoln flashbacks.
No meaning. No worth. No identity.
What’s more, those two passes were the next two balls Jones threw after nearly giving up his fourth interception of the game, a ball that went through not one but two sets of Cowboy hands, a pick that would’ve surely ended the Sooners’ hopes.
Check that.
Not the year that the quarterback was a redshirt freshman taking over for an injured [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u].
“By the world’s standards, I was a successful person,” Jones said on the “I Am Second” video. “I had all the friends, all the girls. Everyone liked me.” [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
His perspective changed. So did his life. [link widoczny dla zalogowanych][/u]
Jones grew up in a Christian home, going to church and learning all the stories, but it wasn’t until those darkest of days that he saw the light. His faith became real.
“He makes mistakes like everybody does,” Sooner safety Quinton Carter said, “but he always bounces back.”
First was the strike to Cameron Kenney for a catch-and-run 86-yard touchdown.
Jones tells his story for “I Am Second,” an online movement inspiring people to live for God through the testimonies of athletes, actors and musicians as well as average joes.
Jones has thrown for 3,947 yards and 34 touchdowns. That’s more yards than Boise State’s Kellen Moore or Stanford’s Andrew Luck, more touchdowns than Oklahoma State’s Brandon Weeden or Arkansas’ Ryan Mallett.
“I didn’t know if I wanted to keep living,” he said. “How can I go through another miserable year like that?
“I just wanted to die.”
It was the moment that he started seeing himself not as “Landry Jones, athlete” but as “Landry Jones, child of God.” He realized that what he did on the football field didn’t give him worth, that the good stuff didn’t define him, that the bad stuff didn’t either.
Then again, this is a different season, and no player deserves more credit for the Sooners’ presence in tonight’s game than Jones.
Then came the bullet to James Hanna for a game-clinching 76-yard score.
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