He's a household name in the largest sport in America. His life "should" be set if he wants to hang around the sport. Practice squading, coaching, broadcast (maybe not on camera, but behind the scenes analysis and maybe even QB interviewing).
There are plenty of cases where hitting the top in football doesn't necessarily mean life-long success. Lots of things can go wrong...but being a Heisman winner really should be a golden ticket. It means you were the best in your sport in the biggest sporting "league" in the US (I.e. College Football). It means pro contracts (which he got). It means endorsements. It means you have a life-long, elite credential to open so many doors within the sport thereafter. It means public speaking contracts. It means foundations and charity forming. It means you're a household name within America. The rest of us are trying to make a good impression in some low-life job interview. This guy is sooo beyond anything remotely close to that. He has a golden ticket in football. In America, that should be a golden deal for life (and usually is).
361
u/[deleted] Apr 23 '21
[deleted]