AzWins23
Registered User
It just seems like the Draft is nothing to me anymore!
Jersey Girl Cards Fan said:BTW, the dude also said he thinks they should make the 40 yard line red, white and blue. Said it would be nice to have parents explain to their kids why that yard line was the way it was. I doubt it will happen, but I couldn't agree with the guy more.
Jersey Girl Cards Fan said:It's not going to be the happy, fun-fest I usually have with my brother and sister, that's for sure. It doesn't seem like a lot of things matter right now.
Some guy on Fox was just talking about how great Pat was and how Eli is a threatening to sit out all year and that maybe Eli should change his mind about things. Personally, I don't give a damn what the guy does.
BTW, the dude also said he thinks they should make the 40 yard line red, white and blue. Said it would be nice to have parents explain to their kids why that yard line was the way it was. I doubt it will happen, but I couldn't agree with the guy more.
BigRedMO said:Tilman was a good player. I did not know the guy so I cant mourn more for him than any other soldier, sailor, airman or marine. However, can we please refrain from bringing politics and the war into this site. I come here to escape all that. Fo the record I disagree with the war. I also disagree with using the death of a person to motivate a team to win or have a good draft. His life is worth more than being used as a motivation tool. Thank you.
BigRedMO said:Buckeye I am sorry for the loss of your son and I respect your polite disagreement with me.
Borderrat said:I believe most people that volunteer for the military do it so life at home can continue, to ensure our values and rights are protected.
Right now things basically suck to sum it up. We lost a great person. It will be difficult to enjoy or even watch the draft this year but in my opinion Pat Tillman would want life to go on.
Losing Pat Tillman puts a different view of the draft, football is just a game. So the draft matters for the future of the Cardinals, to us fans but not as much as we thought 24 hours ago.
Thank you Pat Tillman, R.I.P.
BuckeyeCardinal said:I'll still watch the draft tomorrow.....I'll just be interested....not happy.
AZCB34 said:Quite frankly I have lost all my desire to get psyched up for the draft after today. I was thinking about heading down to Jackson's with my boys but have decided to not do that now. Seems a "waste" of my time to hang out in a bar and watch generally ungrateful punks become millionaires while the thought of our soldiers DYING is so firmly entrenched in my head.
Think I will take my boys to the park (maybe the zoo too) and enjoy some time with them...life is short and we get all these constant reminders of it yet we so often ignore the reminders.
bigredjane said:Hell Yes, enjoy the draft, that's one of the things wer'e fighting for!! He was without a doubt the ultimate free spirit, from pole sitting and meditating on the highest light fixture at SunDevil stadium to riding his bike to practice when others were in their shiny Escaldes, to training for an iron man competition to prove he could just DO IT !! He was also at the top of his class at ASU. I loved watching him play as a Devil and again watching his first training camp as a Cardinal, wondering when they were going to stop talking about his size not being at the Pro Level. But he proved them wrong and when he was on the field he was all over it , a real Ball Hawk. I loved watching him play, he reminded me of another favorite Chuck Cecil in the hard headed way he played, all stops out. One of my most treasured Cardinal Jerseys is a Tillman #40 I used to wear to the games. At one of the Football 101 for Women nights, at the training facility he and Jake were there and all the women lined up for autographs, he signed my jersey on the shoulder and I told him I Loved to watch him play, he smiled and said, I like your jersey!! I loved his frank way of talking and will never forget after a loss some one caught him on camera coming out of the locker room and asked him what he thought was wrong and as only Pat could put it he looked right at the camera and said, "We played like crap!!" I was not at all suprized when he decided to hang it up and join the Army, Rangers yet! I saw an interview at ground zero when the team was in NY and he was devastated. I think it was then that he made up his mind to make a difference. He had a short life but he left a large legacy for us all. When the draft is on remember he would want you to enjoy it to the fullest, he would!!