Wednesday, 23 March 2016

O’Neil Blake - How to Train to be a Football Player

Leaders can help inspire others. O’Neil Blake is a former college football player, a graduate student, and a leader. He was a defensive back for the Lenoir-Rhyne University football team. He also graduated in 2014 with a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology. In 2014, he was accepted into a master’s program at the same school, and expects to graduate in May of 2016. He is an ambitious, dedicated, and intelligent individual who strives to be a leader.

O'Neil Blake Football

There are several ways to become a leader in your academic life, athletic life, and professional life. The first step to becoming a leader is to develop a strong knowledge base. If you want to become a leader in a specific area of your life, you will need to develop skills and knowledge. For example, if you want to be a leader for your football team, you should be training and working the hardest. When you have knowledge, skill, and drive, your peers will naturally begin to follow you. If you are a football player who works hard, your teammates may aspire to work has hard as you, and come to you for support.

Another step to becoming a leader is to work with those around you. A good leader knows that team work and collaboration are important. Take the time to talk with your peers and to take their opinions into account. This simple act can help you become a great leader. O’Neil Blake is a leader in his academic career as well as his football career.To learn more details,Visit:
 https://twitter.com/oneilblake01

Monday, 14 March 2016

O’Neil Blake Football - Cornerbacks Coach

O’Neil Blake Football was a standout football player as a student at Osceola High School in Kissimmee, Florida, where he was enrolled from 2007 to 2010. He was born in Jamaica but came to the United States when he was fourteen years old.

O'Neil Blake Football 

“Following graduating Osceola High School in 2010 I attended Glenville State College on a football scholarship,” he recalls. “I was red-shirted my first year while attending Glenville State College; however, that same year I was awarded Scout Team Defensive Player of the Year.” Always an outstanding student, he was named to the school’s Provost List that same year.

He ended up transferring to Lenoir-Rhyne University in North Carolina where he graduated Magna Cum Laude in 2014. He also spent three years on the football team and was named an NCAA Division II All-American and led the team to three straight South Atlantic Conference championships and playoff berths.
For the 2015 LRU season he served as the football team’s Cornerbacks Coach. Playing cornerback is one of the most difficult positions in football, requiring great athleticism. Because the forward pass is such a potent weapon in football, cornerbacks need to be able to cover speedy wide receivers who have the advantage of knowing which way they are going to go as they run their pass routes.

In addition to coaching on the football team, O’Neil Blake is enrolled in the Lenoir-Rhyne University Master of Business Administration graduate program. He is concentrating on Health Care Administration and is on course to graduate in May of 2016.

Monday, 7 March 2016

O’Neil Blake Football - An Often Grim Subject

O’Neil Blake left Glenville State College in West Virginia in search of a more challenging academic environment and a great football program. He found both at Lenoir-Rhyne University in Hickory, North Carolina, where he began taking classes and practicing with the football team in the summer of 2012.

He did well on the gridiron and in the classroom and graduated Magna Cum Laude in the spring of 2014. “I started graduate school the following fall,” he recalls. “I am currently in my final semester of graduate school here at LRU, and I am on course to graduate this May.” He is working toward his Master of Business Administration with a concentration on Health Care Administration.

O’Neil Blake Football In spite of his workload, he is able to keep up with some of his non-academic interests, such as African American history. The history of Africans in North America is an often-grim subject that deals with some of the worst aspects of humanity, but also some of the best. The first Africans, kidnapped into slavery, arrived in North America around 1619. American independence did not arrive until late in the next century, but after it did slavery was still allowed, and even acknowledged in the Constitution, which guaranteed the right to possess a “person held to service or labor,” a clear reference to slavery. It was not until nearly a hundred years later that slavery was abolished. Even then, another hundred years passed before serious advances were made in civil rights. Even with the election of an African American president, it is a journey that has not yet come to an end.

O’Neil Blake also enjoys reading leadership literature. He has kept up his involvement with football as a graduate assistant and Cornerbacks Coach for the LRU football team.

Sources: http://www.history.com/topics/black-history/black-history-milestones
http://www.lrbears.com/profile.asp?playerID=2045

Monday, 29 February 2016

O’Neil Blake Football - Football Scholarship

O’Neil Blake is a graduate student at Lenoir-Rhyne University in North Carolina, where he is enrolled in the school’s MBA program. He completed his undergraduate studies there, and for three years was the starting cornerback on the school’s football team.
                                   O'Neil Blake Football

He was born in St. Elizabeth, Jamaica, in the Southwest part of that island nation, and lived there for the first fourteen years of his life. When he first came to the United States in the summer of 2007 he lived in Florida. “I attended Osceola High School in Kissimmee, Florida from 2007 to 2010,” he recalls. “While attending Osceola High School, I lettered in three sports: football, soccer, and Track and Field.” He was especially good at football, where he lined up as a cornerback. “I made the first team All-Orange Bell Conference football team my senior year (2010). I was also awarded the Attacking Player of the Year in soccer the same year.”

He won a scholarship to play football at Glenville State College in West Virginia. He sat out his first year of eligibility, and after his second year decided to transfer to a school that offered a better education, along with a quality football program, and wasn’t too far from his home. “The school I felt confident about after doing my research to make sure the school met all the required stipulations I was looking for was Lenoir-Rhyne University.”

O'Neil Blake Football played LRU football for three years, and graduated Magna Cum Laude in the spring of 2014. He entered the school’s MBA program the following fall, and also served as a graduate assistant to the football team.
Sources:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Elizabeth_Parish
https://www.linkedin.com/in/o-neil-blake-1600388a?trk=hp-identity-photo

Saturday, 20 February 2016

O’Neil Blake Football - Division II All American

O’Neil Blake lettered in three sports as a high school student, and was good enough to win a football scholarship to Glenville State College, where he was one of the team’s cornerbacks.
“I spent two years at Glenville State College,” he recalls. “I was red-shirted my first year wile attending Glenville...however that same year I was awarded Scout Team Defensive Player of the Year.” Being red-shirted means he was a member of the team but did not play in any games, thus protecting his eligibility status as a freshman.

O'Neil Blake Football After two years he transferred to Lenoir-Rhyne University in North Carolina because he felt it offered superior academics. But he also played football, and was an NCAA Division II All-American in 2014. He graduated Magna Cum Laude with a degree in Sociology and today is in the school’s MBA program as a graduate student. But he keeps in touch with football as the team’s Cornerbacks Coach.
As he knows from first-hand experience, playing cornerback is one of the most demanding positions in football. It requires a player to be fast, and possess the ability to anticipate what the offense is going to do. Football teams need skilled pass defenders, but what makes it so hard is that wide receivers know where their pass routes are going to take them, while the cornerback does not. A good cornerback loves the challenge of covering a receiver, one-on-one.

O’Neil Blake Football is on track to complete the MBA program in May of 2016, and so is looking ahead to life after football. He is concentrating on Health Care Administration.
Sources:https://www.linkedin.com/in/o-neil-blake-1600388a?trk=hp-identity-photo
http://www.livestrong.com/article/82402-better-cornerback/