Jump to content

The Silsbee Soccer Coach


Islander

Recommended Posts

While at the Hamshire-Fannett soccer tournament, the Silsbee Soccer Coach made it a point to speak with me today.  It was a very good experience.

His sincere words regarding last years tournament made a significant impression on me.  The Coach's comments centered around the important things in high school sports.  The Coach spoke of sportsmanship and playing with the right attitude. The need to realize that your opponent is not an enemy, but just another person wanting to play a game.  After the short time that I spent with him, I am confident that his concern for the welfare of others significantly enhances his ability to be a good leader for impressionable young men.

Good Luck to you, Coach.  I wanted to thank you again for your comments.  I am confident that those comments will echo in my mind in the future when I remember my trip to Hamshire-Fannett.   

From The Bears' Number One Fan 
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest SexyTigger
Yeah he is a really good coach and has really calmed the team down in the past year. We are no longrer a team that fights, but a team that playes soccer.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name="SexyTigger" post="953086" timestamp="1295733808"]
Yeah he is a really good coach and has really calmed the team down in the past year. We are no longrer a team that fights, but a team that playes soccer.
[/quote]


Too bad. I like a soccer team that fights, makes it more interesting, like hockey. ;D
Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name="AggiesAreWe" post="953105" timestamp="1295735638"]
[quote author=SexyTigger link=topic=79035.msg953086#msg953086 date=1295733808]
Yeah he is a really good coach and has really calmed the team down in the past year. We are no longrer a team that fights, but a team that playes soccer.
[/quote]


Too bad. I like a soccer team that fights, makes it more interesting, like hockey. ;D
[/quote]

maybe you can teach that frame of mind to the basketball team.  HJ would cakewalk over the Tigers if they lost 3 or 4 starters due to ejection...
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Member Statistics

    45,993
    Total Members
    1,837
    Most Online
    PressBox Stats
    Newest Member
    PressBox Stats
    Joined


  • Posts

    • It’s a fact.  Are you not bothered with those?  Big girl also has an issue with facts.  Must be a liberal thing!
    • That’s kinda over-simplifying matters.    Are you talking about local politics or the platforms of the DNC/RNC? They’re two completely different scenarios.    To be frank, a politician couldn’t get elected in Hardin County as a Republican… until 2010-2011 when the locals all switched to the R Party.    I think that the truest example of a Democrat is the late George Wallace, Governor of Alabama. He ran in 1958 against a staunch segregationist and lost big time. Both Dems, btw. He came back in 1962 as a hardcore opponent of integration and won handily, becoming the racist spokesperson for a South that wanted to remain segregated. By 1982 he won his last term as Governor of alabama, still as a democrat, but carrying over 90% of the black vote.    Who switched? Was it the party? The politicians? The people? All of the above, in all different directions and over a period of about 60 years.   The problem with arguments about switching is that there are no constants.  We all know that guy…. southern accent, white-headed flat top haircut, short sleeve western shirt with those old wrangler double-knit pants. He probably held public office all over the south, and he had some really crazy ideas about race…. Might not have been in the Klan, but knew a bunch of people who were or had been. And he voted 100% Democrat.     We can all say “yeah, and he became a Republican after the civil rights act was passed!” And we’d be wrong.  The truth is that those old ideals and ways of thinking pretty much died off.    The truth of the matter is that the civil rights act passed the senate with a 71-29 vote majority.  But it’s interesting to point out that the 71 “yes” votes were actually 27 Republicans and 44 Democrats voting “for” the civil rights act, with 6 Republicans and 21 Democrats voting against the Civil Rights Act.  So which party was in favor and which one opposed?   And now 60 years later, with an ideological split in America, both sides are trying to claim moral superiority and cast blame over history that, to be frank, we don’t understand.    But to be honest, the Democrat party of 2024 is not what it was… and neither is the Republican. Just because things are so black-and -white today doesn’t mean that they always have been. 
    • We wont win the series, but it would be nice to get a win today before heading to Baltimore. 
    • Like who?  Do you have any names of actual applicants? Asking because I have not seen a list of applicants. 
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...