Texans’ Phillip Lindsay explains how Taekwondo helps him as a running back

Houston Texans running back Phillip Lindsay says that Taekwondo has helped him out in his NFL career.

Part of the secret behind Houston Texans running back Phillip Lindsay’s success in the NFL has been his dabbling in the martial arts.

The Pro Bowl running back takes part in Taekwondo to help harness his power as he carries the football.

“Balance, power, everything comes from the core anyway,” Lindsay told reporters on a Zoom call on June 9. “It’s being able to have control of your body as well and to have that control, but the power at the same time.”

The power has been evident as he has tallied 2,550 rushing yards and 17 touchdowns on 534 carries through 42 career games, all with the Denver Broncos.

Taekwondo also helps Lindsay with the mental aspects of going through the grind of an NFL season.

“Also, with the meditation and everything like that, it relaxes your mind and puts you in a different place where you can focus more and just kind of block out everything else,” said Lindsay. “In this game, you’ve got to be able to have focus.”

Even if Lindsay weren’t in pro football, Taekwondo would still be a part of his life. Lindsay’s father was a dojo and taught classes. All of Lindsay’s siblings participated in the class. Although their father was a master at Taekwondo, football came first.

Said Lindsay: “We didn’t get to do the tournaments and stuff like my sisters and them did because we were in football at that time, but we did a lot of it just for mainly the places we lived was like more of a self-defense to try to help each other out, but also learn about our bodies.”

Lindsay is hoping Taekwondo helps him rebound from a down year with the Broncos. Through 11 games and eight starts, Lindsay rushed 118 times for 502 yards and a touchdown. It was the first time in his three seasons he registered fewer than 1,000 yards rushing.

Tonga’s viral flag bearer qualifies for his third straight Olympics, second Summer Games

Pita Taufatofua is returning to the Olympics.

Pita Taufatofua — the Tongan flag bearer who first went viral after the 2016 Rio Olympics Opening Ceremony for his the shirtless and thoroughly oiled-up entrance — will return to the Summer Olympics and compete in his third straight Olympic Games.

In the Oceana Olympic Qualifier tournament for taekwondo in Australia on Saturday, he won the 80kg+ category to secure a qualification spot for his country, and he said that if he won, he’d receive the spot, which a Tonga Olympic official confirmed to NBC Sports. And he did all this only a few weeks after suffering a rib injury.

Prior to qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics, Taufatofua, who’s now 36 years old, posted an inspirational note on Instagram, writing:

Team Tonga is all weighed in and ready to fight. I landed awkward during sparring while trying to protect this fractured rib from getting worse, resulting in a twisted ankle. The good Lord definitely has a sense of humour in the way he likes to test us. Hasn’t been an easy run the last month, this is the nature of life… Strapping tape is holding me together but just so glad to be finally competing. Whatever you go through, there are no excuses- just reasons to keep pushing! As always, I will show up and leave it all in the ring. #GoingToNeedABeachAndIceColdCoconutAfterAllThis!

But Taufatofua isn’t done.

He’s still looking to qualify for the Tokyo Games in sprint kayak. If he does that, he’ll be the first athlete to compete in a different sport in three consecutive Olympics and the first athlete to compete in multiples disciplines at one Summer Games since 1992, according to NBC Sports.

At the Rio Games, he competed in taekwondo and lost in the first round. And then for the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, he qualified for cross-country skiing as the second Tongan Winter Olympian. He also entered the Opening Ceremony with his famous shirtless and oiled-up look.

He finished 114th out of 116 athletes in the 15-kilometer race.

But his results at the Games haven’t mattered to Olympics fans. People still love him and will now get another chance to cheer for him at the Tokyo Games this summer.

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