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2nd VIEW: Bronco leans on faith, team after diagnosis; calls Manning ‘man of faith’


EDITOR’S NOTE: 2nd VIEW is a key Baptist Press story that has been posted within the past several days. For a listing of additional key stories in Baptist Press in recent days, always take a look at the daily RECENT NEWS listing.

Originally posted Jan. 30, 2014

NEWARK, N.J. (BP) — Jacob Tamme is used to intense competition. He’s taken hard hits on the football field in games and in practice during his six years in the NFL. But when his wife Allison was diagnosed with thyroid cancer last year, the Denver Bronco said he was forced to rely on his Christian faith more than ever.

Tamme, who caught a touchdown pass in the Broncos’ win against the Patriots in the AFC Championship, said his team’s Super Bowl run this season has been the opportunity of a lifetime. But he said his relationship with Jesus has helped him overcome. Now one year after his wife was first diagnosed with cancer, the backup tight end reflected on how his faith has sustained him and his family. After successful surgery and treatment, Allison is a cancer survivor.

“My faith has been key,” Tamme said Jan. 28 as reporters gathered around him and other players at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J., for media day during Super Bowl week.

Tamme, who will be playing in his second Super Bowl — his first was in 2010 when the Colts lost to the New Orleans Saints — said he has seen how his faith also has strengthened him through challenges on the football field.

In his second season as a Bronco, Tamme has been called on at key moments to fill in for Pro Bowl player Julius Thomas, who struggled with a knee injury this season. Tamme scored another touchdown earlier in the season against the Patriots.

“We’ve gone through a lot as a team this year,” Tamme said. “From all sorts of things … to [Coach John Fox] being out, to losing players to injury. I think the great teams are the ones that can do what we’ve done and overcome those things … really come together as a team and support each other.”

Having a tight-knit group of fellow believers who lean on prayer has helped, the former standout from the University of Kentucky said.

“We have a lot of guys on the [Broncos] that are men of faith and guys who pray together and believe that there is power in that,” Tamme said. “We have a good group, a solid foundation as a team.”

One teammate who Tamme pointed out as a spiritual leader is quarterback Peyton Manning. While Manning is known for keeping conversations with the media on football, Tamme described him as a solid example of how a player should handle himself on and off the field.

“Peyton as a leader is as good as it gets,” he said. “He leads in a way that not a lot of guys are able to do. Having him in the locker room is pretty big. … I don’t know how often he has or hasn’t expressed [his Christianity] but yeah, he is certainly a man of faith.”

In the book “Manning,” published in 2001, the Bronco quarterback gave a rare glimpse of his faith.

“My faith has been number one since I was thirteen,” Manning wrote. “… Some players get more vocal about it … and some point to Heaven after scoring a touchdown and praise God after games. I have no problem with that. But I don’t do it, and don’t think it makes me any less a Christian. I just want my actions to speak louder, and I don’t want to be more of a target for criticism. … My faith doesn’t make me perfect, it makes me forgiven, and provides me the assurance I looked for half my life ago….”

Tamme said Manning is just one example of the many solid Christian athletes in the NFL.

“We have a lot of men of faith on this team … across the NFL,” he said. “It’s inspiring to get together with these guys and be in unity about that. It’s been special.”

While having that support is important, Tamme also pointed to the Bible as a source of strength and guidance.

“For me the Bible is the rock and the foundation of God’s Word,” he said. “I think it grounds you. For me, there’s all sorts of things that want to get [in your mind] and impact the way that we think. … Just to have that foundation every morning is a discipline that I’m really working on.

“… To be a part of a team like this has been more than I’ve ever dreamed of as a kid, to play in two Super Bowls in six years,” he added. “To have a chance now to win one and get that ring — it’s been a special year.”
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Shawn Hendricks is managing editor of Baptist Press. Get Baptist Press headlines and breaking news on Twitter (@BaptistPress), Facebook (Facebook.com/BaptistPress) and in your email (baptistpress.com/SubscribeBP.asp).

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  • Shawn Hendricks