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FIRST PERSON: Lessons from a backup QB
by Alex Forrest
Date: Sep 17, 2008

GREENVILLE, S.C. (BP)--On Nov. 24, 1999, Chatsworth High School met Palisades High in a high school playoff game in Los Angeles. The winning quarterback threw for over 400 yards and four touchdowns.

The losing quarterback, a kid named Matt Cassel, was 3-for-11 for 46 yards, but reportedly made a big impact as a defensive back. It was the last time Cassel would be a starting quarterback for a long time.

Despite the inauspicious numbers in that last game, Cassel was a highly regarded quarterback and played college football at Southern Cal. If you haven't heard, they have a pretty big football program at USC and they recruit pretty well. After red-shirting his freshman year, Cassel served as the backup to Carson Palmer, his roommate, who won the Heisman Trophy and became the first overall pick in the NFL draft.

Then it was Cassel's turn to take the wheel at USC. Or not. Matt Leinart beat him out for the starting job.

At that point, Cassel would be excused for transferring somewhere where he could play. But he stuck it out for the Trojans. He played a little on special teams and at wide receiver. He even started a game at tight end. He played a little quarterback in mop-up duty.

But he persevered. He practiced. He was ready. He worked hard day in and day out when nobody noticed. That persistence paid off when the New England Patriots selected him in the seventh round of the NFL draft. The guy who backed up two Heisman Trophy winners now backed up All-Pro Tom Brady. Again, Cassel practiced, persevered and waited for three more years.

When Tom Brady went down with a season-ending knee injury in the first game of the season, Cassel's moment finally arrived. Last Sunday, nearly nine years after starting for Chatsworth High, Matt Cassel was finally the starting quarterback.

I like Cassel's story because it provides a compelling picture of perseverance, patience and discipline. He worked hard in practice and in the off-season, and he waited. His opportunities to get in the game were few and far between, and they were largely meaningless. Many would have slacked off or even quit.

Cassel's story challenges me to persevere in quiet discipline regardless of what role I'm called to play (or not). Discipline bears fruit and there is a reward for perseverance. That's true in football, and Scripture makes clear that it is true in God's kingdom as well.

Paul called the Corinthian believers to be steadfast in the face of all circumstances because their labor for the Lord was not in vain (1 Cor. 15:58). Scripture abounds with calls to persevere as we look backward to the cross and forward to a sure reward that is ours by grace. Paul himself used sporting analogies more than once, as when he reminded the Corinthians to run the race to get a crown that will last forever (1 Cor. 9:24). So I think he would also like the story of Matt Cassel.

The reward of our perseverance, patience and discipline, however, is not a victory over the New York Jets, but an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled and unfading (1 Peter 1:4). So let's press on.
--30--
Alex Forrest is a two-time graduate of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He lives with his wife and two sons in Greenville, S.C.

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FIRST PERSON: Lessons from a backup QB
-9/17/2008


 
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