Monday, January 28, 2013

Johnny Got His Gun Anticipation Guide Question 9


War is a necessary evil in our world that could bring out the good and the bad in people. War is completely necessary. There are also wars such as the Cold War when there were no actual bullets fired but it was just a series of smaller, more intense competitions instead. These competitions consisted of the Olympics, the race to the moon and other major accomplishments like them. There is also when people say war but it is not as brutal or dangerous as it actually is. As much as war is hated, however I see it being completely necessary. Territories wouldn’t be entirely defined without war. There is a need for leaders and there are frequently individual leaders that can dominate the world. Wars are only as evil as someone makes it. Look at World War II, Adolf Hitler killed so many people making it the worst war statistically by deaths. Death is certain. There have been many stories about soldiers dying for their country in honor. Everything that you see about war seems to be bad. Most of the soldiers die and the conditions were often horrible especially prior to World War I. The results may not be exactly what you anticipated before entering the war. The honor that comes with serving your country is unmatched through anything else. This is where patriotism comes in, when a soldier is willing to save his country at the cost of their own life. When the soldiers come back home, they are praised because the government supports their decision to join and their sacrifices that they’ve made while in the military. There are multiple foundations and projects that support the warriors coming back home. Everything that comes with being in the military provides a great memory and foundation for what the soldier plans to do when he comes back. Being involved in a war has its ups and downs but you can't disagree with how far we've gotten so far.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Chapter 8


12/5/2012

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

Chapter 8 (pages 176-206) – Character Coaches

As a highly recruited high school athlete, Michael Oher was more worried about his play on the football field over his work in the classroom. This caused the Tuohy family to hire a tutor to help Michael’s grades so he could get into college. If he was planning on going to a major college like Ole Miss or Mississippi State to play football, he would still need the grades to make it into the college like any other student. This meant that Michael would have to raise his ACT and SAT test scores and also his GPA. His GPA had to go from 0.9 in his sophomore year up to at least a 2.65 GPA by the end of his senior year to play college football. Michael began to work with a tutor. Her name was Sue Mitchell and she was a graduate of Ole Miss. Michael would work with Sue for up to eight hours a night after a seven hour school day. Studying meant almost no time to himself and he couldn’t stay focused enough to remain ready for new information.

By the end of Michael’s senior year, he was at a 2.05 GPA but he needed to raise it to a 2.65 GPA. Sean began looking for ways to increase Michael’s GPA. He was told about online courses that could update a grade more rapidly than high school or a different form of education. He was told all of this from the Ole Miss football coach. “From Coach O, Sean learned about the Internet courses offered by Brigham Young University. The BYU courses had magical properties: a grade took a mere ten days to obtain and could be used to replace a grade from an entire semester on a high school transcript.” Coach O really wanted Michael Oher on the football team, so he attempted to bend the rules for Sean but was unable to do so. This meant Michael would use the BYU online education. Michael picked a course called “Character Education” and he was able to increase his GPA by using the online courses on BYU’s educational website.

I connected to this chapter because for an extended amount of time in my freshman year, I was really worried about how my grades were going to end up. I was thinking that my GPA wasn’t going to be high enough and that it would really affect my future in high school. However, I didn’t think about my SAT or ACT scores because I didn’t know about the tests. The obvious later became clear to me. Freshman year seemed more important than it really was and I began to think about my future after high school. I figured out what I wanted to have my major in college be and how that would assist me with the future that I wanted.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Chapter 7


11/19/2012

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

Chapter 7 (pages 147-175) – The Pasta Coach

            After Michael Oher’s high school football team won the Tennessee state championship, his junior football season was over. This meant that college football scouts and coaches were able to visit Michael. He was also able to make a total of five official trips to colleges. Michael received an application to visit North Carolina State. He was also sent invitations from Oklahoma, Mississippi State, Oklahoma State, Tennessee, LSU, Ole Miss and many other division I football colleges. However these coaches didn’t know what Michael’s grades looked like. He was 162nd of a class of 163. He didn’t have the GPA high enough to be eligible to go to any division I football colleges.

            Michael was allowed three official visits to colleges. He decided to visit Tennessee, Ole Miss and LSU. These schools could also send a representative and they usually send a scout or the head coach. Leigh Ann and Sean Tuohy both went to Ole Miss and they both wanted Michael to go to Ole Miss and play football. “With Michael’s official visit to Ole Miss coming up, she picked up the phone, called Ole Miss recruiter Kurt Roper, and said, ‘I am faxing you a list of what Michael likes and what he doesn’t like and you use it like a frickin’ road map.’”  Michael’s tutor, Miss Sue, also went to Ole Miss. She told Michael stories about Tennessee and LSU. Miss Sue said that Tennessee agreed with the FBI to let them use the football field to see how dead human flesh would decompose in the dirt. There were hands and feet buried under the field. This story may have scared Michael into not wanting to go to Tennessee. Michael also wanted the college that he chose to go to would feel more like home and he thought that Ole Miss felt like home because home felt like Ole Miss.

            I connected to this chapter because my sister is currently a high school senior and she has been searching for a college that she would like to go to since the beginning of her junior year. She has visited colleges in many different parts of the state but most of them are near our home. It is a hard decision which college that you go to because colleges offer different educations and experiences while there. I also connected to this chapter because I have heard of athletes getting full scholarships just to play a sport. I cannot believe that colleges want players that badly to offer them to almost anyone who can play their sport. However, in general college sporting events are very well contested and entertaining.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Chapter 6


11/15/2012

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

Chapter 6 (pages 115-146) – Inventing Michael

            The Briarcrest Christian High school football team won the 2004 Tennessee state championship thanks to their left tackle Michael Oher. There were more football scenes in this chapter describing how Hugh Freeze the Head football coach was convinced by an assistant coach to use only one play and they would be able to win the state championship. The one play was Gap and Tim Long an assistant coach got his inspiration from the movie Tin Cup. Gap was run between the left tackle and the left guard. Michael Oher played left tackle and the running back was able to slip through and score numerous touchdowns throughout their championship season.

Chapter six had even more back story on Michael Oher. Sean Tuohy was describing a certain play on the field when Michael pushed a defender sixty yards away from the line of scrimmage. This describes the play from Sean’s point of view, “She turned around to see twenty football players running down one side of the field, after the Briarcrest running back with the ball. On the other side of the field Briarcrest’s No. 74 was racing at speed in the opposite direction, with a defensive end in his arms.” This shows the push and devotion that Michael Oher. He doesn’t want to impress anyone he just wanted to take the opposing player and put him back on the bus because the defensive end was trash talking to Michael Oher. Even though trash talking is a major part of any sport, Michael didn’t enjoy listening and he knew was to get the players to stop. Like pushing them sixty yards into a chain link fence.

I connected to this chapter because Michael Oher’s football team made it to the 2004 Tennessee state championship football game in Memphis, Tennessee and I was a spectator at the 2012 Wisconsin state Track & Field championship in Lacrosse, Wisconsin. It seems like there would be a huge difference but they were both state championships and both huge for the sport and the state for which it is held. The football game was between only two teams from Tennessee while the Track & Field championships have schools from all over the state competing. No matter what you are interested in these events are both exciting and you can witness some of the best athletes from your sport in action.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Chapter 5


11/7/2012

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

Chapter 5 (pages 91-114) – Death of a Lineman

            Thankfully, the title of the chapter didn’t refer to Michael Oher. Chapter 5 was mostly about Bill Walsh and his NFL invention of the West Coast Offense. The chapter also included Bill Parcells, head coach of the New York Giants making his defense with Lawrence Taylor even more explosive than before. Bill Walsh and the San Francisco 49ers were trying to stop the Giants in the 1981 NFC Divisional playoff game. Bill Walsh’s offence was a pass heavy offense. He set up the deep pass with other short passes and occasional runs. His quarterback was the legendary Joe Montana. He became the best in the NFL at passing the ball because he had time in the pocket to pass. Montana had so much time because Walsh decided that he would have the left guard help the left tackle and they would both block LT. However this would open a whole in the center of the offensive line and if the defense sent a middle linebacker or safety on the blitz the quarterback would pay the price for Walsh’s ability to stop Taylor. Walsh also taught this offense to his assistant coaches and they spread it throughout the NFL.

            I found this quote about Lawrence Taylor on page 107. “At the end of the 1981 season Taylor was for Parcells still a shiny new toy with a complicated control panel that he was figuring out how to use. No matter what Parcells told his rookie linebacker to do, Taylor’s instinct was to find the quarterback and kill him.” This quote shows that Taylor was one of the best pass rushers and he had the ability to hit a quarterback in the back so that he would never play again. When teams played against the Giants, the coaches wanted to stop Lawrence Taylor. He was the only player that they feared at the time and the opposing coaches tried so hard to avoid this from happening that Bill Walsh went so far to creating a new offense. Even though Lawrence Taylor isn’t still playing, there still is an offensive strategy to stop him.

            I connected to this chapter because I play Madden NFL games. I mentioned in a previous blog that Madden is a video game simulation of American football. On Madden, I play defense and I enjoy blitzing. Blitzing is when you send more defenders than the offense is planning on or able to block. I feel as though blitzing is the best way to play defense because the rushers will either sack the quarterback or give up a huge play for a touchdown. I believe that I will take that risk and almost always sack the quarterback or stop the running back for a loss of yards. Therefore, I agree with what Bill Parcells is trying to do by rushing with an outside linebacker.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Chapter 4


10/31/2012

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

Chapter 4 (pages 65-90) – The Blank Slate

The Blind Side movie was based more on Michael Oher’s love for football. In this chapter, Michael’s basketball and track careers get started. In basketball, he played center and was also able to shoot three pointers. He also threw discus and shot put in track and field. Michael was never taught how to throw discus or shot put but then he saw how to do it and was able to throw them better than anyone else in the state. He was passing all of his classes with high Ds. This was caused by the teachers at Briarcrest figuring out that Michael tested better orally than he did writing down answers.
While I was reading this section, I found this quote on page 66. I believe that this quote shows the raw ability and strength of Michael Oher. “One afternoon he took a sack of footballs out to midfield. Standing on the fifty-yard line he threw them, one by one, through the goalposts at the back of the end zone. As a rule, a good college quarterback’s range was 60 yards-from midfield to the line across the back of the end zone. Here was this kid, sophomore in high school, shaped nothing like a quarterback, chucking the ball 70-75 yards. And making it look easy.” I choose this quote because it shows the athletic ability of Michael Oher. He was able to throw and ball seventy plus yards and he was a big man. Michael was six foot seven and over three hundred pounds. He also played basketball, but instead of dunking like a larger player would, he wanted to shoot a three-pointer. He didn’t like to be near the hoop because he wanted to score on shooting instead of easy layups.
I connected to this chapter because I run track. One day our coaches decided that we everyone who isn’t in a field event should be required to go to a practice and just workout as if we were to be in that field event. I chose pole vault and I was one of six people trying it because we had only three athletes doing it regularly. While I was one of few people pole vaulting, the majority of the team was trying discus. Unfortunately, we don’t have anyone on the track team that is the size of Michael Oher and we had no chance of throwing it as far as him either. I still enjoyed reading this chapter because it showed that Michael Oher was in other sports than football.

Monday, October 29, 2012

Chapter 3


10/25/2012

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

Chapter 3 (pages 39-65) - Crossing the Line

The third chapter of The Blind Side involved more back story about Michael Oher. Michael is also commonly known as Big Mike. The Tuohy family is also introduced. Sean Tuohy is the father and he is known as an All-American success story. He grew up poor and played basketball at Ole Miss. He became their all time leader in career assists. He was also drafted into the NBA but decided not to go and now he owns over eighty-five fast food restaurants including Taco Bell, KFC, Pizza Hut and Long John Silver’s. He also married his high school sweetheart Leigh Anne Tuohy. The couple gave birth to two children; and they also adopted Michael Oher. The oldest is Collins Tuohy and the youngest is Sean Tuohy Jr.

            I found this quote referring to Leigh Ann Tuohy and her first few encounters with Big Mike. “She noticed things about him. She noticed, for instance, that he wore the same pair of cutoff jeans every day, and that he hadn’t the first idea how to interact with other people.” This states that Michael was very poor, and he was socially awkward. People were afraid of him because of his size, and he was afraid of them because they had confidence or more money. The Blind Side is based on a true story and the Tuohy does take Michael in and adopt him. The chapter also mentioned that Sean Tuohy had previously helped kids who went to Briarcrest. However, the Tuohy family had never gone as far to help someone to the extent of adoption.

            The narrator states that the Tuohy family was all incredible athletes but they also were dedicated to school and have all gone to college. Sean went to Ole Miss to play basketball and run track. Leigh Ann also went to Ole Miss and she was a cheerleader. Collins plays volleyball and track. Sean Jr. is also going to go to college to play basketball just like his father. I connected to this because I believe that families should be equal between athletics and academics. I have pretty good grades at the beginning of my sophomore year and I plan on going to college. However, I currently run both cross country and track but I don’t plan on doing either in college.