| MoLewisrocks |
06-19-2006 02:03 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by shakadave
That bothered me too. As if it's obvious that if you own a motorcycle, you travel at speeds of 130mph. What is it with athletes and motorcycles? Even if I had the right bike, I wouldn't even want to ride it that fast. My brain must be missing some part that theirs has --- or is it vice-versa?
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This was taken from an interview on All Access - must have been the draft one. I recall he said he sold the bike when he realized he had kids and a wife to support.
There are Pats players today who ride, but not to work or sans helmet. And most have Harley's or choppers - not crotch rockets. And while it is argueably foolhardy to take that kind of risk when you are dependant on physicality to earn your living and hobbling to your cubicle on crutches won't suffice to keep those six and seven figure salaries coming, most of these guys don't have the term "franchise" ahead of their position either. That's a whole other level of responsibility from a corporate standpoint.
These guys are risk takers by nature - risk their lives every time they step on the field (just one hit away as they say). It takes a different kind of mentality to not only face that kind of risk but embrace it, and I guess some of them crave the same feeling off the field.
And lots of NFL HC's ride, which makes it hard to say do as I say not as I do. Cowher rides. So does Holmgren, who now regrets he once filmed an interview segment riding helmetless at a producers request. I don't know if they ride but I could easily picture Gruden or Mora Jr. doing a buck thirty on the way home from a particularly frustrating loss or practice on or in any vehicle. ;)
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