Apprentice of Jesus Christ; #Army#Veteran, #USF Alum; 24 years coaching and trying to Serve others; All #Tampa sports enthusiast. #FACA District 15 FB Chairman
Choosing what is right won’t always be the easiest option, but character is built when you stay devoted to goodness.
Don’t let shortcuts or compromise define you.
Let your identity in Christ guide the way you compete and live.
#FCATeam#Devotional#FaithAndSports#Jesus
@willweatherford@andytaylor6@NewCollegeofFL@USouthFlorida Will, it's dissapointing to see how you've changed your stance on this issue over the past couple years. You sold out USF on this! You've done great things for USF in the past, but this is not one of those things!
“For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved. He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. And this is the condemnation, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.” (John 3:16-19)
A brother reads a letter to his baby brother with Down syndrome.
Most people like Zach are aborted in the womb due to their extra chromosome. This is proof that, regardless of what culture says, people with Down syndrome aren’t “burdens” to eradicate, but gifts to be embraced.
Prestigious doctor leaves a crowded room stunned after asking pro-abortion politicians:
"If abortion is healthcare, my question is: what disease are you treating?"
Mormons are upset because Christian artist Forrest Frank shared an intro to his newest song ft. Phillip Anthony Mitchell, who states “Joseph Smith is still in his tomb”, while Jesus is alive.
It’s one of a few false prophets mentioned, including Muhammad in the intro.
🎥: HiForrest/IG
As an AD, one of the biggest challenges is understanding what athletes and parents truly want. Everyone says they want to win, but too often the communication I receive is centered around why practice is being missed, why workouts can’t happen, or why the commitment isn’t possible.
Winning is rarely about what happens on game day, it’s built in the unseen hours of preparation, consistency, and sacrifice. You cannot claim to want success while consistently avoiding the work required to achieve it.
Too often, “we want to win” really means “we want the rewards of winning without the discomfort of earning it.” When that gap exists, the blame often shifts to the coach instead of the habits.
Great programs are built when athletes, parents, and coaches all align in understanding that commitment comes before results. Wanting to win and being willing to do what it takes to win are two very different things.