One player discovers that “the grass is not always green” elsewhere
There were more than 17,000 sports transportation for secondary schools registered in the last academic year in California, and one of the most offensive attacks by Shameded Harut Agazari.
On Monday in January, he left Shaamaad. On Tuesday, he started football and playing football in Borbank Hi. By Tuesday noon, when his mother picked him after playing football, he told her: “I don’t think it’s the right place for me.”
“Maybe you are right,” she said. “How do you feel? Do you want to return to Chaamadd?”
“Yes,” he said.
On Wednesday morning in Starbucks, he met the Chaamade Eddy coach David Machuka and asked to return.
By Thursday, he returned to Chaamadd in the same seasons. He felt embarrassed, but his teachers jokingly, “You have already missed me?”
It took the courage to ask for a second chance, and what is the decision that it turned out. Five times this season, Agazaryan was appointed as a team leader by his coach. The elderly had 6 feet and 255 pounds a offensive attack and a defensive man.
“He was amazing,” said Machuka. “You are talking about a 360 -child. He represents what I think is important because he is a captain – dedication, and hold people responsible. He does everything correctly.”
There are a lot of lessons to be learned from Agazaryan experiences.
He said: “The grass is not always green to where it goes.” “I discovered that there are not many places better than Shaamaad.”
His parents were the ones who gave him the green light to transport him even though they wanted to stay.
“Frankly, at the time, I had a lot of friends [at Burbank]He said, “They were sending me text messages every day. I was not a good academic scourge here. I thought I needed to restart.”
Soon he decided that he was wrong. But will he have an opportunity to return to his old school?
One of the most important decisions he made is a conversation with Machuca before Leave. Often, students and their parents do not even inform the coach they leave.
“I feel that you should leave on good conditions because I know the team’s teammates who left last year and did not speak to the Machuka coach at all,” he said. “I felt as a man, I had to talk to him.”
This previous discussion has made Machuca open to welcome Agazari’s return as long as the parameters are followed.
“I already told him when he was leaving,” said Machuka.
The second opportunity was not lost.
“It was better,” said Agazari. “I feel when I came back, my head turned. I was a better person, better in the semester, better in the field. I felt that I was controlling my feelings more.”
The coaches complained that it was difficult to train the players these days, because they knew whether someone was taking something to say in the wrong way, immediately thinking about moving to another school.
Agazaryan warns, “Never burn your bridges because you never know what will happen. Just because there is one bad thing that does not mean that you must take off your belongings and leave. You have to build a relationship with everyone on the campus, you will be really happy.”