REGGIE BUSH? DID YOU SEE VINCE YOUNG IN THE ROSE BOWL?
By David Fleming
Seleem El Banhawi doesn’t want to be rude. He truly
does appreciate The Magazine inviting him and 168,006 other fans to
voice their opinions regarding who’s NEXT. But the 14-year-old
student and sports junkie from Cairo, Egypt, believes we tend to overthink
the concept.
NEXT is about a lot of things: it’s about change and transcendence,
youth and hope, winning and losing. It’s about embracing the unstoppable
force of the future. But the one thing NEXT should never be is difficult.
It should be pure. It should be easy. It should be obvious.
And it is, at least to a teenager halfway around the world, as well
as a large number of his fellow SportsNation citizens who voted on espn.com.
More than 36% of them picked Vince Young over Reggie Bush and Sidney
Crosby (see box). “I chose Vince Young,” Seleem writes in
an e-mail. “Not for his origin or his race. I chose him because
he is an extraordinary athlete. Seeing him collect 467 yards as a quarterback
was perhaps the most amazing national title appearance in history.”
Of course, there are those who disagree. According to some readers,
NEXT is: Ultimate Frisbee (Alex, Portland); women’s rugby (Steph,
Providence); lacrosse (Fred, location unknown); the dominance of Rutgers
University football (Chris, Hackettstown, N.J.); Denise Dahlberg, the
catcher for the Texas Thunder of the National Pro Fastpitch League,
who has an arm like a cannon and a face like a goddess because wouldn’t
you rather watch women running around in tight pants than men? (Jordan,
Dayton); Dallas Lauderdale, a sophomore at Ohio’s Solon High who
has a buttery J (Tim, Solon, Ohio); or some guy named Derek who proclaims
simply yet proudly, “It’s me. I’m NEXT.”
Still, with apologies to Derek, nothing resonated across SportsNation
more than Young’s performance in leading Texas over USC for the
national title. Whether it’s Seleem in Egypt, or Jack Campbell,
a 28-year-old expectant father and construction worker in Harrisonburg,
Va., or 15-year-old Ryan Davis, a baseball player for Chandler (Ariz.)
High, most of the voters had just one question when asked to compare
Young with Bush: um, did someone at The Mag forget to TiVo the Rose
Bowl? Or, as Seleem calls it, “the Rise Bowl,” a slip of
the tongue (or thumb) that may just be the perfect way to describe the
game that launched Young’s Q rating into the stratosphere. “It
was something I will be telling my kids about years from now,”
echoes a not completely unbiased Richard Luna, a UT student.
In an era when sports is increasingly overrun by fantasy geeks, stat
dorks, capologists and loudmouthed gurus of one kind or another, The
Mag has always challenged fans and readers to look beyond the numbers,
the headlines, the obvious. This time, you told us not to.
By the thousands, you implored us to recognize that the 6'5", 233-pound
Young possesses a unique combination of physical gifts, competitive
fire and clutch decision-making skills; that his mind is as fast as
his feet; that he went 30-2 as a college starter; that he outgained
Bush by 290 yards and three scores in the biggest college football game
of the century. By the thousands, you told us not to give too much credence
to the old-boy network of NFL coaches, GMs and scouts whose pulses race
when Bush swivels his hips. And by the thousands you said, “Do
us a favor. Go back and watch the damn national championship game again.”
In that game, who carried his teammates to heights they could not dream
of on their own? Who shocked the sporting world? Who was as unstoppable
and inevitable as the future itself?
“It was Vince Young,” Seleem concludes. “And it was
obvious.”
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