High-school
freshman won't let having no arms stop NFL dreams
Tully
Corcoran
FOX Sports
JAN 31, 2014
8:12p ET
Isaac Lufkin
has ambitions to play in the NFL, and he doesn’t see why not having any arms
should stop him.
Lufkin is a
freshman high school kicker in Rhode Island. He was born without arms, but he
doesn’t consider that a condition worthy of anybody’s pity. If he drops his
backpack and somebody picks it up for him, he tells CNN, he drops it again so
he can pick it up himself.
“If I can’t
do it,” he said, “nobody else is going to be able to do it, sooner or later.”
During
games, Lufkin places the ball on the tee himself, sitting on the ground and
pinching it with his two feet. He has shown a talent for accuracy in his kicks,
and an extraordinary record on onside kick attempts.
But his
ambitions extends beyond that. Lufkin wants to play on the defensive line ,and
he says his lack of arms are an advantage that make him unblockable.
“They can’t
grab my arms, they can’t grab my jersey,” he said. “The only thing they can do
is actually block, but I can still crawl under them. And it’s not like they can
sit on me.”
He’d be an
inspiration to disabled kids, except that neither he nor anybody in his family
sees him that way.
”I don’t
find him disabled at all,” said his mother, Lori. “And I never looked at him
that way.”
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