Dennis Waszak Jr.
Itâs usually sometime at night, when football is the furthest thing on the New York Jets backup quarterbackâs mind. Thatâs a rare moment these days for Tebow, particularly during training camp. But one of his closest friends â" an âaccountability partner,â as he describes him â" is always a phone call away to keep his priorities in order.
For No. 15, that means God is No. 1. Family comes second.
Football is a distant third.
âHeâs someone I pray with,â Tebow said in a recent sit-down with The Associated Press, preferring to keep his friendâs identity private.
âHeâll ask me: âHey, did you get in the word today? Were you praying today?â I have him because I need someone who is always investing in me, you know?
âYou donât ever want to become complacent. Thatâs very easy to do, because life gets in the way.â
Especially when youâre one of the most popular people on the planet.
Tebowâs every move on the field is scrutinized, from how he throws to how he runs â" or, as was the case early in camp, how he jogs shirtless through the rain after practice. Off the field, heâs easily recognized by even the most casual of football fans. Being on the cover of GQ magazineâs latest issue, which hit newsstands Tuesday â" the quarterbackâs 25th birthday â" helps. It all makes things predictably tough when youâre just trying to be normal.
Deep down, he understands that heâs anything but. Thatâs why Tebow, a devout Christian, leans on his faith constantly, even during the dog days of training camp when prayers and playbooks could get muddled in his mind.
âThereâs football, wanting to get in an extra workout, wanting to go to an extra meeting,â said Tebow, who is expected to be used in a variety of ways by the Jets this season. âThatâs when your priorities get jumbled, maybe for an hour, maybe for a day, maybe for a week or maybe for a year. I donât want that to happen to me. Itâs a constant battle. Itâs nonstop. Thatâs why itâs always good to have people around you who hold you accountable.
âMy friend doesnât tell me what I want to hear. He tells me what I need to hear, and thatâs important.â
Tebow works hard at maintaining his image as the guy he has always been, whether heâs talking about his role on the Jets or speaking to a crowd of 15,000 â" as he did on Easter Sunday at a church in Georgetown, Texas. He has a warm, infectious smile, looks you in the eye when he speaks and has morals that would make any parent proud. Thereâs also his extensive charitable efforts with the Tim Tebow Foundation, which helps needy children all over the world.
âBeing able to score touchdowns and win games is a way to get that platform,â Tebow said, leaning back in a folding chair and tapping his fingers on a table. âBut ultimately, if thatâs what you do in your life and thatâs what your life is based on, I donât know, I feel like thatâs a little bit of a meaningless life.
ââBut if you can take that and do something with it like a lot of athletes do, then youâre having a life of success, a life of meaning. Itâs not about the games that you can win. Itâs about the lives you can touch.â
He has a rock-star type of following, as evidenced by the countless fans who have shown up to training camp with signs dedicated to their favorite player. The chants of âTee-bow!â are constant on some days, with wide-eyed fans hoping the quarterback will glance in their direction.
Even people who donât follow sports know all about âTebowing,â the pose the quarterback made popular by praying on one knee on the sideline during big moments in games. The fact that many do it for laughs doesnât offend Tebow. At least, he says, prayer is being talked about.
âMaybe beyond anything else in my life, I want to be a great role model,â Tebow said. âI donât want someone to say they regret what they did because they followed me. If anything, I want them to say that I was someone who led them in the right direction, was a good role model, and because they knew me or watched me, their life was better. Thatâs my goal.â
That approach is a big reason so many people love Tebow.
Itâs also why there are plenty who dislike him. There are skeptics who say heâs too good to be true and his image is merely a well-designed public relations touchdown.
âYou just want them to meet those kids we help, you know?â Tebow said, his tone turning serious. âAnd you want to see how it makes them feel. Honestly, I canât let people like that affect me or worry about them. Those are few and far between, and honestly, they should be more worried about something else other than why theyâre mad at me for trying to help someone.â
He doesnât complain about it. He accepts who he is, and what everyone expects him to be.
âIt definitely can be tough, but at the same time, I donât want to let the media or the world affect how I live,â he said.
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