By Colleen Raezler | April 27, 2010 | 10:14 AM EDT
TebowThe 2010 NFL draft showed that it's not enough to be a star football player anymore. Character counts now too.

Tim Tebow, and the Denver Bronco's drafting him as first-round pick, was the big story out of the NFL draft. Despite a phenomenal college career in which he won the Heisman Trophy as a sophomore, led the Florida Gators to two national championships, and lived out his Christian beliefs, many expressed doubts over Tebow's ability to compete on the professional level.

For publicly stating his Christian beliefs, Tebow has been called a "religious fundamentalist, lightning-rod misfit," told he "has a long way to mature from a business perspective," and his family and friends were compared to "Nazis."  

By Ken Shepherd | October 14, 2009 | 11:22 AM EDT

<p>Basing his October 14 column on an anti-evangelical Christian screed by <a href="http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2009/10/column-and-id-like-to-thank-god-a... target="_blank">another opinion columnist</a>, Sam Cook of the Fort Myers [Fla.] News-Press <a href="http://www.news-press.com/article/20091014/COLUMNISTS02/910140380/1018/c... target="_blank">tackled Florida Gators quarterback Tim Tebow</a> for his both his religious convictions and his commitment to being open about his faith (h/t NB commenter and Florida alumna Blonde).</p><blockquote><p>It's hard to find fault with such an exemplary young man, but I have.</p><p>In a Monday story in USA Today, religion writer Tom Krattenmaker reported these findings:</p><p>&quot;Tebow does his missionary trips to the Philippines under the auspices of his father Bob Tebow's Evangelistic Association. The Tebow organization espouses a far-right theology. Its bottom line: Only those who assent to its version of Christianity will avoid eternal punishment. The ministry boldly declares, 'We reject the modern ecumenical movement.'&quot;</p></blockquote><blockquote>If Tebow is selling that, this Lutheran isn't buying.</blockquote>