So IOW - and after so many words! - you got nothing. |
Except op and everyone in the thread complaining about athletes thanking God for their victories. |
Yes, that’s really hard data. |
An NCAA report conducted in 2011 found that 75 percent of student-athletes identified with a Christian religion. Just 13 percent of respondents said they weren't religious. Faith has long played a major role in the NFL. About one-third of the players in America's three major professional team sports—football, baseball, and basketball—are born-again Christians, with the NFL having the highest percentage. Athletes in Action estimates that 35 to 40 percent of NFL players are evangelicals, compared to about 25 percent of Americans. Post-game interviews of players, post-game prayer huddles, testimonies in print publications and online and Hall of Fame acceptance speeches demonstrate that Christian faith is very significant in the culture of pro football. https://www.christianpost.com/voices/a-growing-tradition-faith-remains-steadfast-in-the-nfl.html While the faith of Tim Tebow has garnered the most media attention in recent years, many leading coaches, including Tom Landry, Joe Gibbs, Tony Dungy, Lovie Smith and Mike Tomlin, were or are known for their Christian commitment. So have been numerous star players, such as Roger Staubach, Steve Largent, Kurt Warner, Reggie White, Mike Singletary, Aaron Rodgers, Drew Brees, Cam Newton, Russell Wilson, Jared Allen, Troy Polamalu, Darrell Green, Prince Amukamara, Dallas Clark, Shaun Alexander, LaDainian Tomlinson and Emmitt Thomas. The NFL has been ambivalent about Christians testifying to their faith. Some Christian coaches and players say that they feel free to talk about their faith, and even evangelize, if they do so discerningly, while others declare that the league prefers players to act like Christians but not explicitly say that they are Christians. The NFL has no rules prohibiting personnel from discussing their faith or evangelizing, but it has forbidden players from displaying religious symbols or messages on their apparel during games or post-game interviews. |
| The coach of the NY Jets is only Muslim coach in the NFL. |
He’s religious. |
Points to you for actual data. However, the claim upthread that you are defending was a majority of pro athletes are religious. Pro, not NCAA. Athletes, not just football players. But keep digging! |
If Christian athletes weren’t prevalent, atheist here would not be mocking them and disparaging their intelligence. (Really tolerant and kind; aren’t atheists supposed to be the “good guys?”) Anyway, successful and gifted athletes thank God for their abilities and successes, atheists mock them. Atheists have every right to whine about successful physically gifted athletes, and it’s a great anecdotal piece of evidence. |
| So many people on this thread sound like world class a-hole Megan Rapinoe. |
She’s awful. |
Nice girls don’t get the corner office. |
“I’m not a religious person or anything and if there was a God, like, this is proof that there isn’t,” said Rapinoe. “This is f— up. It’s just f—. Six minutes in and I eat my Achilles.” There’s no God because she got injured. |
| NP. Amazed at all the tolerant people here who want to stop Christians from talking about their faith. |
PS. I don't think Jesus had anything to do with winning the game. Although he may, depending on your belief, have had something to do with helping you persevere. It's just that freedom of speech is still a thing in the USA. |
You aren’t talking about Christianity; you’re telling everyone what Christians believe. You can’t speak for any other person. Everyday here someone who isn’t a Christian posts stuff about Christians wanting people to burn in hell, or that Christians love God even though he gives babies brain tumors or causes tsunamis and kills thousands. I don’t believe those things and no Christian I know believes those things. You can use your freedom of speech to say you don’t believe in God, you can say you don’t believe God exists, etc. If you don’t believe in God you can’t say He gives babies brain tumors or causes natural disasters because entities that don’t exist don’t do things. Share your opinion all you want, but you can’t speak for others. PS. people who do think Jesus has something to do with them winning the game are allowed to say so, and if you and your buddies want to show your intolerance and bigotry by mocking their beliefs and intellect, go ahead, it’s a free country. But you are just as intolerant and unkind as any “fundamentalist” or “evangelical” you pretend you are nicer/better than. |