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As a former NFL player, NFL training camp is where the real work
begins, especially for rookies and un-drafted athletes who want to try
and make a team. Prior to training camp, you may have been on
vacation or spending time with friends and family. But the fun is over
the moment you are given your training camp room key. This is where the
sweat and tears start. This is where nervous butterflies give you a
constant uneasy feeling in your gut. You start training camp by
meeting with other players and coaches. There is a nervous excitement
in the air and it seems that all the players have some jitters. Your
mind plays games against your confidence and you find yourself asking
questions like, “Am I really good enough to play in the pros?” “What
will I do if I don’t make the team?” “What if I can’t remember the
plays we are taught?” “What happens if I get sick or injured?” Then
you get your schedule and it tells you where to go and meet. The
schedule tells you that your first meeting is a team meeting with the
head coach, staff, trainers, and the team owner. This is it. Training
camp has officially started. It’s time to get to work and prove
yourself. Psych yourself up. You are the best. You are going to do
great and impress everybody. You are going to make the team and become
a starter. You are a professional football player! The schedule
says that practice starts tomorrow. Morning practice is at 9:00 am to
11:30 am. Lunch is noon to 2:00 PM. At 2:30 PM to 3:00 PM we watch
film. Our second practice is from 3:30 PM to 5:30 PM. For the
first three days of camp, practice is a light practice with shorts and
a helmet. This is to get your legs under you. On the fourth day of camp
you get to put on pads. This is when the excitement begins and the
butterflies go wild. You are so anxious to hit somebody. It feels like
it has been forever since you were last on the field and ready to play.
This is the toughest day for you. Your body has to get accustomed to
the pads that weigh 70 lbs. Your body suffers as you go through
practice drills while wearing these heavy pads in 100 plus degree heat.
This is when you find out if you are in shape or not. Can you survive
it? Are you going to get sick? Are you going to look weak in front of
the other players? Be a man! You can handle it. If others can do it you
can too. It’s mind over matter. Do it! Coaches make day four with
full pads a very physical day. This is to break players in on wearing
pads in heat. This is where there coaches see which players have the
strength and stamina to compete in the NFL. This is also where coaches
see which players take being an athlete seriously and keep their bodies
in top physical condition and which players are lazy and don’t work out. After
afternoon practice players hit the showers and the cold tubs. Cold tubs
are filled with ice water. They feel like hell but they help an aching
swollen body recover like nothing else. After you clean up, it’s
time to have dinner from 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM. But the day is not over
yet. You have film to watch from 8:00 PM to 9:30 PM. Snacks are at
10.00 PM and curfew is at 11:00 PM. At 11:00 PM you better be in your
room and ready for bed. If not, you face the wrath of the coaches, and
the last thing you want to do is make your coaches mad. Coaches do not
like problem players, especially rookies and walk-ons. There’s too much
talent out there to put up with trouble makers. Get your butt to bed. This is your life every day for the next 6 weeks. Do you think you can handle it? Martin Chase is a retired NFL player who now owns
MCSportsFan.com, a popular NFL Merchandise website.
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