DALTON, Mass. – By any reasonable measure, Keith Willis has been a success in sports and in life.
And the former NFL tight end probably inspired a little awe among the Wahconah High School student-athletes who filled the Nessacus Middle School auditorium on Wednesday evening.
But he did not come to show off. He came to show those students how to be winners themselves.
“How many think it’s cool that I played for five different NFL teams?” Willis said, asking for a show of hands from the youngsters. “It’s pretty cool, right?
“You know what people don’t think about? That means I was cut five different times.”
Willis was an all-America high school football player and multi-sport star in Virginia who went on to stand out at Virginia Tech before playing in the NFL from 2004 to 2008.
Today, he is an entrepreneur and motivational speaker. And this week he is making several more stops in the Berkshires to inspire youngsters.
On Friday, he will address students at Pittsfield and Taconic High Schools before giving a talk at the Boys and Girls Club of the Berkshires at 4:30.
Wednesday evening, his message focused on the value of facing adversity – sharing personal stories about his life in professional football and the pain of losing a chance to play basketball, his favorite sport, at the collegiate level.
“People see the success,” Willis said. “They say, ‘Oh, he went to college.’ And, ‘He played multiple sports.’ All that’s cool. … What people don’t realize is to make it to that level, you have to get accustomed to and comfortable in adversity.
“I’m going to show you today how athletics prepared me for life. It takes a special human being to commit to being a student-athlete. … Being a student athlete is not for the weak. But the beautiful thing I appreciate about being a student-athlete is what it builds inside of you.”
And if an athlete does not build resilience in the face of failure, they will not go very far, Willis said.
“When the Friday night lights come on, when you’re on the soccer field, the basketball court, the lacrosse field or the track, when the tension is high and the intensity is high – that’s when it really matters,” Willis said. “I’ve been fortunate to be in a lot of high pressure situations, and I’ve seen people from middle school, high school, college and the pros. And no matter what level, I’ve seen people crumble when the lights turn on. I’ve seen people fold.
“Whatever is inside of you will come out of you through adversity. … When you hit adversity, you naturally revert back to your training. When you hit adversity, who you are comes out. I love seeing people when their back’s against the wall, because I find out, ‘What’s your DNA? What’s your genetic makeup? What’s inside of you?’ That’s what I need to know, not what you say. I don’t care how many weights you can lift, how many laps you run, how fast you can run. That’s cool to give you advantages. But I’ve seen people that might not be as physically strong but have the internal makeup of somebody who can bench 500 pounds and run all day long because of who they are inside.”
Willis talked about his own journey as an athlete, pushing himself in high school by taking up track and field, which he described as his fourth favorite sport after basketball, football and baseball.
“The sport that tested me the most was track and field,” he said. “I only ran track to become better in basketball and football. I wanted to become more athletic, more explosive. I wanted to become more flexible and how to run faster. But my mother told me something … she said, ‘I don’t care if you come in first, but you better not get last.’ In my weakest sport, ‘I don’t care if you get first, but you better not get last.’ What does that tell me? I’m not losing this race. Somebody is going to finish behind me.
“I had to work extra hard, because it didn’t come naturally to me. I had to learn how to run the hurdles, I had to learn how to do the long jump, I had to learn how to run the 400, learn how to do the high jump. Everything. Just so I wouldn’t embarrass myself on the track.
“But what happened was, by my senior year, I went all-state in six different events.”
That lesson in overcoming adversity – learned through sports – can have much wider implications, Willis told the young audience.
“As you get into life, and the adults here can tell you this, you’re always going to be facing adversity and dealing with an unfamiliar environment,” he said. “When teachers get a job at a new school, it’s an unfamiliar environment, and they have to come and figure it out to be successful in that new school.
“A new job means a new environment. You don’t think there’s adversity coming into new environments? There’s always adversity with new environments. I’ve had multiple businesses, and I’ve done very well with it. Because sports taught me how to operate in an unfamiliar, chaotic environment, I was able to relate that to life and become successful in life.”
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
Your Comments
iBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.
No Comments
Dalton Police Association Wins League Championship
iBerkshires.com Sports
DALTON, Mass. – Tye Shove struck out 14 hitters in 5 and two-thirds innings on the mound and hit a home run and a double at the plate Friday to lead the Dalton Police Association to a 3-2 win over Realty Street in the championship game of the Dalton-Hinsdale Little League.
Shove also doubled, going 2-for-2, drove in two runs with his homer and scored DPA’s other run as Police earned its third straight one-run win over Realty Street.
DPA coach Josh Bradley praised Realty Street for going toe-to-toe with his squad three straight times. League President Jake Harte said Friday’s game was the best he has seen in all his years around the league.
It is a fair bet that the Dalton-Hinsdale League has not had many better title games in its 50 years of existence.
Realty Street rallied for a run in the top of the sixth inning and had the tying run at third base with one out when Shove picked up his final strikeout of the game and Colton Bradley came in to strike out the only hitter he faced to end it.
Aside from Bradley’s brief save appearance, it was a duel between Shove and Realty Street’s Anthony Zaniboni, who struck out 10 in five innings of work.
Realty Street played error-free ball behind Zaniboni, who at one point struck out seven in a row.
Cassidy Flynn scattered five hits in a complete-game effort in the circle as Lenox upset top-seeded Hoosac Valley, 3-2, in the quarter-finals of the Division 5 State Tournament. click for more
Brayden Durant struck out seven and walked one in a complete-game effort on the mound Saturday to pitch the Drury baseball team to a 6-0 win over Keefe Tech in the quarter-finals of the Division 5 State Tournament at Joe Wolfe Field. click for more
Jason Codey struck out 13, walked two and allowed just an infield single as the Generals earned a 7-1 win over Wahconah to claim their third straight regional title. click for more
Gracelyn Wright struck out eight, and Genevieve Lagess went 3-for-5 with four runs batted in as the Hurricanes beat Monson, 17-3, to claim their first Western Mass title in four years. click for more
For the boys, Ward Bianchi helped lead the way with a win in the shot put and a second place in the javelin as the Mounties finished 16 points ahead of runner-up Pittsfield (pending the results of the pole vault, which were unavailable at 11 p.m. Friday night). click for more