sutomcat
No recent Cali or Iggy awards; Mr Irrelevant
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2011
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Welcome to Pay It Forward Day!
There is tremendous power and positive energy in giving – it is a shame that not enough people have experienced it to the fullest. Pay It Forward Day is about all people, from all walks of life giving to someone else and making a positive difference. At last count there were more than 5 million people in 78 countries around the world participating on the day.
So why Pay it Forward?
- To encourage all of us to embrace the incredible power of giving.
- To show each other that we care and that there is love, hope and magic all around us.
- To know that we may be only one person in this world, but to one person, at one time, we are the world.
SU News
Two SU Players Expected to be Drafted This Weekend (DO; Fortier)
Only two of Syracuse’s eight players who attended the school’s pro day are projected to be selected in the National Football League Draft in Chicago this weekend.
Former SU defensive end Ron Thompson is projected by FOXSports.com to be drafted No. 94 overall in the third round by the Denver Broncos. Seven-round mock drafts by NFL.com and Pro Football Focus don’t have Thompson being drafted at all.
The other former Orange projected to be drafted is punter and fake-kick aficionado Riley Dixon. He impressed at the NFL Combine in February as ESPN analyst Mel Kiper ranked him the No. 2 punter available in the Draft.
Other
For NFL Draft Hopeful Wendall Williams of Syracuse, Will a Dash Lead to a Dream? (PS; Fairburn)
It's a rainy Thursday, and everyone is gathered to watch Wendall Williams do his thing.
His thing, at this point, is running. Fast. It had been just a few days since Williams changed his life by running the 40-yard dash in 4.19 seconds at the NFL Regional Combine in Minnesota. The official time came in at 4.32 seconds, but it's the 4.19 that quickly became legend. His stardom is fresh as local reporters huddle around him at the Syracuse Indoor Sports Center. He's still catching up on sleep, and as he answers questions, the bags under his eyes are visible beneath his Yankees hat.
Williams readies himself to dazzle the crowd. He removes his hat and throws his hood over his ponytail. One last time, he checks the laces on his bright gold cleats, which he won at the Regional Combine for his blazing 40 time (he would have won $1 million if the hand-timed 4.19 held up). He begins loosening his wiry, 5-foot-10-inch, 185-pound frame with high knees and light skipping, his focus sharpening with each exercise. It may just be a random workout for a handful of onlookers, but Williams has something to prove.
Williams hates the concept of chasing his dream. He's 25 years old and went to three community colleges before landing at the University of the Cumberlands. His 40-yard dash time helped him get one step closer, but he still has ground to make up.
"I'm trying to catch it right now," Williams says.
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