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 The True AthleteNo one has to look further than the front of the sports page
to see problems in the sports world today – Murders, DUI’s, drugs, stealing
from teammates, abuse of spouse or girlfriend, etc. We see embarrassed college presidents standing in front of a
national television audience explaining why coaches were fired for behavior
that does not align itself with the educational mission of the school or with
profession of coaching.  The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) is not afraid to take a stand to be different
– in fact we are proud to be different and to offer an alternative to the
culture of sport as it now exists.  We are real college athletes Through the Champions of Character
program, the three hundred plus institutions of the National Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics represent and offer a pure vision of sport for the
participants. An NAIA athlete chooses a school where they can receive the education they desire as well as an
opportunity to compete in a sport they love for a few more years. 
 College
     athletics at this level is not a year round job, we are still here as
     students first and simply for the love of the game. Classes,
     not practices, are the main focus of our day but we look forward to being
     at practice to renew special relationships.We
     lift, work, hustle, sweat and compete for championships just like athletes
     at every level. When we win, we
     rejoice humbly and when we lose, our tears are for real, but we continue
     on with grace and can rely on each other to be ready to go the next
     day. We
     play for the love of teammates and coaches. We do not practice next to a player who is going to “come
     out early in the draft” but rather one that is going graduate on time and
     become a nurse, public school teacher or future CEO. We do not share a locker room with an
     “NBA lottery pick”, but instead with a person headed to an overseas
     mission trip. We do
     not expect an “endorsement deal” but rather we expect to endorse and lift
     up others as we visit elementary classes to read to primary students. Our hopes are not tied to signing a
     multi million-dollar contracts, but rather using our degree and education
     to build a future for our families and communities. We do
     not play in front of national television audiences, but rather we play in
     front of several hundred enthusiastically supportive friends made from
     community service projects our from History or Physics class. Our efforts are not rewarded by being
     on SportsCenter but rather by the faces of the local youngsters who come
     to see if we really do win and lose with character and integrity. In our
     spare time we are not “unapproachable celebrities” on campus but we play
     intramurals or help coach a youth team. The
     “disease of me” has not afflicted many of our programs, our schools
     attract “we first” people. We
     build our teams and student populations with young people from wheat and
     cotton farms, inner cities and foreign countries. Many
     of our coaches still teach a full load, drive the vans and wash the uniforms
     and wouldn’t trade places with anyone. In this day when big name coaches are constantly battling over
     zealous boosters while chasing the next big contract, our athletic
     departments are made of the highest quality people who have been on the
     same campus for 30 or 40 years because they love the school, the life
     style and the mission. The most
     valued person at our games is the person who is the “volunteer”
     scorekeeper who is entering his/her 4th decade. Sometimes
     we play in front of 5000 sometimes in front of 50 but it does not change
     our preparation, effort or enjoyment. Those fans cheer for us because they know us, we represent them, we
     are not just names on the back of the uniform or in the program, but we
     are the people they sit with in the student union and eat with in the
     cafeteria. We do
     occasionally sign autographs, but we are more likely to sign graduate
     school applications or be in out collecting signatures for a local
     referendum. We
     play as hard as we possibly can, get back to campus late and then get up
     and go to class where we are nothing more than any other student. We see
     the bigger picture and will be sad when the day comes when we cannot
     practice but we look forward to using the education we have worked hard to
     achieve. We attend
     beautiful campuses from Washington to Florida, from California to New
     England, we proudly call ourselves “Hard Work U” in the Ozark mountains –
     we are small schools in small towns on the plains of Texas – we are
     colleges of 400 where our professors know us as people in the city where
     the major university has 35, 000 students. We are the only show in town in Clinton, Iowa. We are
     the people at the bottom of the box scores but at the front of the line
     serving hot meals to the elderly. We
     experience the shared joy of being part of something bigger than
     ourselves.We
     love our school, our coaches, our team(s) and the community we
     represent.  The NAIA - real college athletes. For more information on NAIA Champions of Character please visit www.championsofcharacter.org
or email us at championsofcharacter@naia.org. 
 
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