Celebrities Get Pushups In for Veterans and Retired Athletes

By: - August 25, 2018

We’ve all spent time at the gym and seen someone crushing it in their workout. Maybe they’re lifting twice what we are or racking up miles on the treadmill. We’ve probably noticed how dedicated they are to their workout, putting in early morning hours or two-a-day workouts. They may even make their living from intense physical pursuits. But what we may not see is the struggle that elite athletes face when their days of professional fitness and physical performance are over. What happens next?

Merging Vets and Players (MVP) is a non-profit organization that brings these two groups of motivated athletes together to get support, community, and a killer workout. MVP focuses on the physical performance foundation that these groups have, as well as the heart and mind behind the athlete. “We work on what is between the ears and behind the rib cage,” says MVP.

Participants meet for weekly workouts and support groups in three main locations; Chicago, Los Angeles, and Las Vegas. Each meeting location is at a local gym that caters to elite athletes looking for an intense workout. MVP plans to expand to more locations as resources become available and they are able to grow.

Founder Jay Glazer hopes MVP will be able to provide transition support to veterans and professional football players. In 2015, he saw that people leaving these two groups struggled to transition to life outside of their highly specialized fields. The skills that they had honed through years of military service or in the world of professional sports, along with the sense of identity that came from that work, sometimes made it hard to transition to another field. So, MVP was born.

“By merging veterans with players, these warriors can benefit from each other’s strengths, experience, and abilities to unlock their full potential,” says MVP’s website. “Merging Vets and Players ensures these men and women know that the challenges they are facing are far more about who they are—Warriors—than what they did in the military or on the field.”

Pushing Dirt

MVP recently created a pushup challenge, designed to raise money by challenging fellow members of Unbreakable Performance Center, Jay Glazer’s gym and one of the locations of MVP, to complete 25 pushups. Former New York Giant Michael Strahan pledged to donate a new piece of equipment for every 25 pushups that those challenged completed. So, people starting pushing dirt and raising money.

Actor Chris Pratt recently challenged John Krasinski to do 25 pushups. Both Pratt and Krasinski completed the challenge—more equipment for MVP! Others are completing it daily and posting on social media with the tag #UNBREAKABLExMSX.

Sylvester Stallone himself completed the challenge, although he captioned his Instagram pushup video with the disclaimer of “I’m not sure that 25 but I’ve been hit in the head a lot so my math is terrible…believe me I can do it.”

The leadership at MVP knows exactly what professional athletes and combat veterans face when they transition to a new career because they had to do exactly that. Co-founder Nate Boyer played professional football as a Seattle Seahawk and Texas Longhorn after his career as a Green Beret. Others on the Board of Directors include UFC fighters, paralympians, sports broadcasters, and veterans. All of the location program directors and managers are veterans and bring their experience to create what athletes and veterans need.

Lasting Change for These Warriors

The success stories that come out of the MVP locker room are nothing short of life-changing. Veterans and athletes come together to create a new sense of purpose and community.

After serving in the Army for eight years, including a tour in Iraq, veteran Jonathan Neves encountered a lot of transitional challenges when adjusting to civilian life. He went back to school, earning a degree in video game programming, but struggled to find work in the field. He eventually started his own development company, but when he left to work at a more established company, he ended up homeless.

MVP, along with Veterans Affairs, helped Jonathan find a new sense of purpose and support. What began as a good workout evolved into a place to network, find job advice, and referrals to services that helped him progress.

“He realized that MVP was more than a place for veterans and former professional athletes to work out and share similar experiences, it was also a means to help him in his career by providing expert guidance, a safe place to talk about professional headaches, and referral services,” said Jonathan’s testimonial. MVP even provided Jonathan with his first suit to help with job interviews.

MVP also recognizes that professional athletes go through a similar transition when they retire from professional sports and enter another career. Just like the military, their identity is often closely tied to their professional accomplishments. When that path changes for athletes, it can be hard to maintain the same levels of confidence.

“So much of your identity in life was wrapped up in what you did, not who you were underneath the superhero cape,” said former Baltimore Raven Gerome Sapp of his time in the NFL.

Former New York Giant Jarrod Bunch found his new normal with the help of MVP. “Being part of ‘MVP’ gives retired athletes and retired veterans the ability to interact and share experiences and stories of what it’s like to be removed from such an influential part of his or her life, and be expected to live like any other, ‘normal’ person,” he said. “Whatever ‘normal’ is for us, we figure it out together.”

Success stories like Jonathan, Gerome, and Jarrod’s echo through the MVP gym. The work that Jay Glazer and his team are doing to bring new challenges to the most elite athletes in the world has brought so much more than just physical fitness. The support that they are able to both give and receive creates a community for these athletes, at a time when they need it most.

The MVP mission statement says it all: “MVP’s mission is to match up combat veterans and former professional athletes together—after the uniform comes off—to give them a new team to tackle the transition together. MVP shows them they are NOT alone.”

  • RSS WND

    • The way Trump can end inflation pronto
      Inflation is a disaster. It is destroying our economy. It is destroying our paychecks and buying power. It is destroying the great American middle class. It is destroying our retirement plans. And it's destroying jobs. President Joe Biden claims we are creating jobs. We are – only millions of crappy, part-time jobs for unskilled, uneducated… […]
    • Biden's tariffs & EV mandates: A horrible combination
      Not long ago, President Joe Biden promised to transform the American auto industry – "first with carrots, now with sticks," is the analogy The Washington Post used. Now, I don't know about you, but I'm not sure I'd trust the president to drive my car much less dictate the future of industrial policy. Yet, Biden… […]
    • Are we still 'America the Beautiful'?
      In late May of 1990, my newlywed husband and I removed our wedding finery, climbed into his pickup truck and embarked on a planless, leisurely tour around the southwest. We saw many wonders, both big and small: the Grand Canyon, the Vermillion Cliffs, Mesa Verde, Canyon de Chelley. We also saw amusing or interesting roadside… […]
    • The Chinese plan for a Caucasian-only deadly virus
      Between 2019-2022, Samuel Bankman-Fried (SBF), 32, "orchestrated one of the largest financial frauds in history, stealing over $8 billion of his customers' money," for which he was sentenced to 25 years in prison. Unfortunately for investors, his tremendous panache made him an effective snake oil salesman. As SBF's trial was winding down, a speech was… […]
    • Is this really the best Democrats can do?
      Today's Democrats really makes you wonder if legendary Thomas Sowell had them in mind when he stated, "We are living in an era when sanity is controversial and insanity is just another viewpoint." On March 20, 2024, the "Anderson Cooper 360" show allowed "Democratic Party strategist" James Carville to make threats against former President Trump.… […]
    • Will American Jews stay blue in November?
      By Robert Anthony Writing some notes for this column, I was shocked to learn how far back the Jews have had left-leaning politics! I have long known that the majority of the Jews vote blue/left and have throughout Jewish history in America. But I was shocked to learn how large a majority. In the 2018… […]
    • WATCH: Trump speaks at Lincoln-Reagan Dinner in Saint Paul, Minnesota
      For 25 years, WND has boldly brought you the news that really matters. If you appreciate our Christian journalists and their uniquely truthful reporting and analysis, please help us by becoming a WND Insider! Content created by the WND News Center is available for re-publication without charge to any eligible news publisher that can provide… […]
    • A Catholic commencement speech at a Catholic college – the horrors!
      While a petition calling for the firing of Harrison Butker, one of the greatest placekickers in the NFL, has gained more than 100,000 signatures, sales of his jersey are skyrocketing. Why all the controversy? This past Sunday, Butker, who plays for the Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs and is a traditional Catholic, delivered the… […]
    • Galatians Unearthed: The Jerusalem Council: Circumcision, food & sex
      Editor's note: The following video is presented by Pastor Daniel Joseph, president and founder of Corner Fringe Ministries. Subscribe to the Corner Fringe YouTube channel here. The post Galatians Unearthed: The Jerusalem Council: Circumcision, food & sex appeared first on WND.
    • Can we really know the will of God?
      Does God still speak to people today? Let's be honest, when someone says that God has been talking to them, we get a little suspicious, sometimes even a little concerned. So, does really God talk to us? Does God Almighty actually have a master plan for our lives? And if so, how do we discover… […]
  • Enter My WorldView