Her parents say they love when it happens, usually in the handshake line after a game when they hear the surprised tone in someones voice.Sometimes it is preceded by, Oh my God, as in Oh my God, that was a girl, which is what an opposing coach said recently after Auburn Roberson threw the winning touchdown pass, then took off her helmet as the two teams traded good games.Were like, Oh yeah, they just found out shes a girl, Autumn Roberson says of her 13-year-old daughter. And shed rather it be like that. Thats why her hair is never down, its never sticking out, because she wants you to think shes one of the boys.Its really all Auburn asks. No fanfare. No special favors. In fact, the only time she was ever close to being annoyed with her best friend, Justin Birkelbach, whos three months younger than Auburn but 122 pounds heavier and 11 inches taller, was when he refused to tackle her hard.It was the first year we were on different teams -- we were in fourth grade, Birkelbach, 12, recalls. I was scared to death to tackle her the first time, and I remember when I did tackle her, I gently placed her on the ground. Then right after, I tried to help her back up because I didnt want to just leave her on the ground.She kept dropping hints later that she wanted me to try harder and just play regularly.He would find out the depth of that wish when all five-feet, 105 pounds of her bore down on him at a game a few weeks ago, and took him out at the ankles.Im not at all worried about her [anymore], he says with a smile. If anything, Im worried about the people she tackles.One of an estimated 25,000 girls who played the sport on the youth level in this country last year (according to USA Football), Auburn loves football. She loves it so much that her bedroom -- with the Fatheads of her in uniform from her Super Bowl-winning teams; the NFL-themed bed linens and furniture; assorted signed footballs and framed photos; trophies; a Cam Newton feature wall and closet full of football jerseys -- is every football-lovers dream, and the envy of all her little brothers friends.She loves football so much that after a brief and ill-fated attempt by her mother, a former college cheerleader, to enroll her in dance classes as a toddler, her parents snuck her into an all-sports recreational program at age 4 -- one year younger than the enrollment requirements.They should have known by then that that was where Auburn would be happiest. At a year and a half, her father, Brian, noticed that when theyd throw a ball around the house -- any ball -- she had perfect aim; she could throw it on a line and zip it right in at you.Auburn loves football so much that when she started bringing home books from the school library in first grade, the first one was The History of the Green Bay Packers.After that, it was the history of any team, Autumn says. So I know more about every team than I want to.Auburn, who plays quarterback and middle linebacker for the Haines Middle School team in St. Charles, Illinois, and quarterback, running back and safety for her area club team, the Tri-City Chargers, loves the sport so much that she says she would like to continue to play on the high school level, college level and until recently, maybe even the NFL level.She doesnt rule out the womens pro league, either. Its all right, the uniforms kind of throw me off [though], she says of the Legends Football Leagues bikinis-with-shoulder pads look. If it was more like the NFL, Id probably like to play, yeah.But realistically, what is her future in the game?Sam Gordon was 9 when she shot to YouTube fame after her father, Brent, circulated a highlight reel that showed his less-than-60-pound daughter whizzing past defenders and scoring at will in her mostly male tackle football league in the suburbs of Salt Lake City, Utah.Sam, now a 13-year-old eighth-grader, has serious aspirations and elite talent in soccer, but she still plays football. Now, however, it is in an all-girls tackle football league she and her father started two years ago after Sam asked kids at a school assembly if any girls were interested in playing, and nearly every hand shot up.Last season, they had more than 100 girls enrolled in the eight-team league. And Sam says she feels for Auburn and female football players like her who are usually at a size disadvantage against boys as they enter their teenage years.It really is unfortunate girls dont have quite as good opportunities to get college scholarships in football, and it seems like less of a chance to play in high school, just because by that age, girls at their peak form are not going to be as tall and heavy as boys, she says.That was where my dream of girls tackle football comes in. I want girls like [Auburn] to be able to play in high school and get college scholarships and play football at a professional level, and I think [girls leagues] give more girls opportunities to do what they want to do.Sam said she heard from girls who wanted to play football, but who said their parents did not want them to compete against boys. The all-girls league is a good solution, she says, and she doesnt miss playing with boys.All the girls have such a fun time, which is a little different with boys. With boys, you see many of them doing it for a long time, but not with the same love of the game that the girls have. With girls, everyone really wants to be there, so it makes the experience so much better.She will pursue soccer, but said she wants to continue to play in an all-girls football league, hoping to entice high schools in her area to start club teams. At 4-foot-8, 90 pounds, she said she couldnt envision playing with boys in high school.I think they would take me seriously in high school, but to be honest I dont know how good of a chance I would have, Sam says. I think I would be one of the better ones in agility and speed, but in size and strength, even compared to girls Im small, and Id be crushed by boys, honestly. It would be difficult getting a starting spot. When theyre that big, its very difficult.Brent Gordon said he is a big believer in the team building, discipline and hard work that carries over from football to other aspects of life.But I dont think in older age groups, the risk of injury is worth it, he says. There are other pursuits, theres also all-girls leagues. I think girls should definitely consider playing football at younger ages but definitely should also be realistic about their risk of injury as they get older.Auburn said she loves the game because she loves the action. In other sports, its maybe waiting around, or its too fast and I kind of like the pace of football, she says. Its really exciting and everything.She calls the plays on both offense and defense and its what she likes most about being quarterback.Im in charge of it all. I mean, Im not bossy about it or anything, but its nice to be in control because I almost know whats going to happen and whats happening around me, so its easier.She loves Joe Montana and Tom Brady, but worships Cam Newton because of his style of play.Especially at this age, seventh grade, probably the first reaction [of other boys] is Oh, its a girl, lets go lay some hits on her, says her Haines teammate Max Medernich, 12. But Auburn is one of a kind, a Cam Newton sort of thing. She can throw, she can run, she can do anything. And people are shocked by her. Shes magnificent.Auburn also plays basketball with girls and baseball with boys and its her overall athletic ability that helps her most, says Luke Sharkey, 13, another Haines teammate.She has a great arm and can run really well, he says. Once she gets out of the pocket, I know theres a first down coming or a significant play.Autumn, who has two younger children -- August, 11, and Braidy, 9 -- says she thought it was crazy to allow her oldest daughter to begin tackle football at age 7. And her husband agreed it certainly wasnt part of any plan.It always just felt like she was meant to do it, Brian says. It was an easy decision on my part.He kept telling me, Shell be fine, Autumn says.Last year, when Brandon Petersen, a social studies teacher and the football, basketball and track coach at Haines for 14 years, asked his class who was interested in playing football this fall, Auburn raised her hand.I never had a girl volunteer to play football for my team before, Petersen says. So out of curiosity I said, What position do you want to play? And she said quarterback, and I was like, Thats interesting.He says his first thought was how they would handle the whole locker room thing. His second? Could she handle the physicality? When we do tackling drills, can she handle it?Then he saw her throw.I was like, Whoa, now I can see why she wants to play quarterback, he says. When we do tackling drills, shell put her shoulder right into anybody. We had a game [a few weeks ago] and they had a kid about 200 pounds and she just took him down like it was nothing.Petersen calls Auburn poised, a great leader who commands the huddle, and an astute student of the game who recognized offenses and defenses scarcely before he introduces them. As for the reaction of his male players, many of whom had played with Auburn since second grade? They recognize how good she is and the transition has been seamless, he says. Ive never had to acknowledge the fact that shes a girl or her gender at all.Her Tri-City Chargers coach Brian Glon said he was not aware Auburn was a girl during league evaluations prior to their draft, but after finding out, he came home and announced to his wife: I might draft a girl.I told her, You dont understand, she is head and shoulders better than most of the boys her age, Glon says.He calls Auburn one of the best we have as far as technique, shes a great tackler ... has a fantastic stiff arm, probably the best in the league, he says. Shes not the fastest in straightaway speed, but shes powerful. And as a competitor, we were just in a fourth-down situation with the clock winding down and she told me, Coach, give me the ball, Ill get the first down. I did and sure enough, she pushed her way in there and we won the game.But as with all football players, size is still an issue.When the boys mature from eighth grade to freshman year, is she going to be able to mature? he said. Right now, shes one of the fastest and strongest and can throw the ball 40 to 50 yards. But can she continue to grow?St. Charles North, the high school where Auburn and her Haines classmates will attend in two years, is currently 9-2 in football and ranked 44th in the state. In his four years as head coach, Rob Pomazak has sent 13 players to compete on the collegiate level -- six to Division I schools -- and currently has three players committed to play at D-I schools.But Pomazak does not hesitate when asked about Auburn one day playing for him and becoming one of the more than 1,700 girls who play high school football in the U.S., according to the National Federation of State High School Associations.Currently, shes the best quarterback at her school at her grade level, so I dont see any reason why she wouldnt come in at quarterback as a freshman, Pomazak says. After that, whether she stays at quarterback or we have to put her at running back or another position to be successful, whatever is in her best interest. But if shes the best player at her position, there is no reason for her not to continue to play that position.The smallest player on Pomazaks varsity squad this season is 5-5, 130 pounds. He has four players who weigh less than 150 pounds. While the coach acknowledges that at some point Auburn (whose parents are 5-6 and 5-8) might not be able to match up physically, he is aware of her desire for a career in football one day, possibly as an NFL scout or coach.If coaching is in her future, we want to put her in the best position to have her keep learning the game, Pomazak says. [But] I hope she plays four years, Ill be perfectly honest. We dont have many people with the leadership skills and drive Auburn has. By no means will we try to hide her or put her as a manager.He says he fully expects his team as well as the community to be as receptive to Auburn as they were to Kat Stutzman, a soccer goalie and kicker he had on his team who graduated in 2013 and went on to the Air Force Academy, though she did not continue on in football.Her teammates will have played with her since second grade and will all be very familiar with Auburn, he says.And theyre apparently not interested in leaving her behind.I hope she does [play in high school], says Haines teammate Josh Kennedy, 13. Its going to get a lot harder for her, but I think its definitely possible. All she has to do is just keep working hard like she has been. A couple years ago she told me she had a quarterback coach and I was like, Wow, she really takes this seriously.For now, Auburn says she is concentrating on basketball because she knows she can probably play in high school. Her father also stuck a golf club in her hand a few years ago. Im not too bad at golf, she says. If I could get a scholarship in that, that would be good.Auburns parents are unlikely to be surprised at anything at this point. With other sports when the season is done, now its time to move onto the next one, Brian says. But she never tires of football. I just feel shes meant to keep playing. She likes it that much.Autumn admits their daughter has blown our minds playing this long. But, the reality is that if Auburn wants a college athletic scholarship, it probably wont happen in football.I just kind of want to play as long as I can, Auburn says. If I could make it to high school, that would be nice. I think I could probably [make it] freshman year but anything past that, Id have to work really hard for it. Just being smaller, all of them are so big. ...I can punt. I could try kicking. I really just want to be around the game. Hirving Lozano Mexico Jersey Alejandro Palacios Mexico Jersey . -- The proud fathers huddled near the Dallas Stars dressing room, smiling, laughing and telling stories while wearing replica green sweaters of their sons team. http://www.mexiconationalshop.us/Alfredo-Talavera-Mexico-Jersey-Soccer/ . Ronaldo produced a spectacular individual performance on Tuesday, scoring all three goals and guiding Portugal into the next years World Cup in Brazil with a 3-2 victory in Sweden. The Real Madrid forward has scored 66 goals in 2013, but the last three may be the boost he needs to upstage Messi after FIFA unexpectedly extended the voting period for the Ballon dOr to Nov. Jesus Molina Jersey . The team also announced Tuesday that the Braves will wear a commemorative patch on the right sleeve during the season. The patch, shaped like home plate, carries the number 715, Aarons autograph and a "40th Anniversary" banner. Javier Aquino Mexico Jersey . -- Josh Sterk scored once and set up two more as the Oshawa Generals edged the visiting Belleville Bulls 3-2 on Friday in Ontario Hockey League action. Major League Baseball will play its annual All-Star Game on Tuesday night, and chances are that few -- if any -- NFL players could have made it. You have to love baseball to be great at it, as with most endeavors. And if you love baseball, why wouldnt you pursue its longer careers, fully guaranteed contracts and healthier futures?Joe Mauer, for one, chose wisely. In 2001, he turned down a scholarship to play quarterback at?Florida State?in favor of entering the MLB draft. By the end of the 2018 season, he will have earned $244 million from the Minnesota Twins.With that said, there are some pretty decent baseball players scattered throughout NFL rosters. In this moment of calm in the football year, lets consider nine of the best and rank them for the fun of it. (Get it? Nine players on a baseball diamond? With a bench, manager -- not coach -- and a general manager! Maybe I should have been a baseball writer ... )Skills are based in large part on the imperfect spectrum of whether they were drafted.Starting lineup1. Detroit Lions WR Golden TateTate was a speedy outfielder at Pope John Paul II (Tennessee) High School but had his senior season cut short by a thumb injury. Although he was one of the countrys top football prospects in 2007, the Arizona Diamondbacks used a 42nd-round draft pick on him just in case. Tate continued his baseball career while focusing on football at?Notre Dame, and in two seasons he hit .318 with 16 stolen bases over 73 games. School officials timed him in 6.4-6.5 seconds in the 60-meter run, a measure of how fast he could get down the first-base line. He was also drafted by the San Francisco Giants (50th round) in 2010, the same year the Seattle Seahawks drafted him in the second round.2. New England Patriots RB Tyler GaffneyGaffney shuttled between baseball and football during his career at Stanford and was serious enough about the former to leave school for a year to pursue success in the minor leagues. He played 38 games at the Pittsburgh Pirates Class A level in 2012, hitting . 297 with 11 stolen bases before returning to be Stanfords feature back for the 2013 football season. In two college seasons, Gaffney batted .301 with 132 runs scored over 161 games while also putting together a 24-game hitting streak.3. Seattle Seahawks QB Russell WilsonWilson was drafted twice by MLB teams, first in 2007 by the Baltimore Orioles (41st round) and then by the Colorado Rockies in 2010 (fourth round). After receiving a $200,000 bonus, he spent two summers playing at the Class A level in the Rockies farm system as a second baseman and hit .229 with five home runs and 26 RBIs in 93 games. The Texas Rangers acquired his rights in the 2013 AAA Rule 5 draft, and he spent time with them in spring training. Wilson has said that he loved baseball enough to make it a dual pursuit during his college years. But, he said, God made me 5-foot-11 for a reason. ... [H]e wanted me to go against the odds of everyone telling me no in football.4. New York Jets WR Eric DeckerDecker was drafted twice, by the Milwaukee Brewers in 2008 (39th round) and the Twins in 2009 (27th round). An outfielder who threw and batted lefty, Decker played two seasons of college baseball at the University of Minnesota. He hit .324 with an on-base percentage of .406 in 374 at-bats over 110 games. His performance and obvious athleticism excited baseball scouts who envisioned him as a ground-covering outfielder and multi-threat leadoff hitter, but Decker prioritized his football career.5. Chicago Bears OL Kyle LongLong might be the most intriguing baseball prospect on this list given his freakish athleticism. Already 6-foot-6 and nearly 300 pounds as a senior at St. Annes-Belfield (Virginia) School, Long hit .500 and recorded 95 strikeouts in 50 innings. He initially planned to focus on baseball in college, even after the Chicago White Sox made him a 23rd-round draft choice in 2008, and accepted a baseball scholarship from Florida State. Legal and academic issues led to his departure after one year, and from that point on he focused on football. We can only imagine what a pitcher of Longs athleticism and sizze could have done over time in baseball.dddddddddddd. New England Patriots QB Tom BradyA catcher and left-handed hitter, Brady was drafted by the Montreal Expos (18th round) in 1995 out of Junipero Serra (California) High School. Media reports have touted his strong arm behind the plate and power that once sent a ball over the fence and onto a bus, awakening a driver who thought he had parked a safe distance away. In 61 high school games, Brady batted .311 with eight home runs and 44 RBIs. The Expos pursued him following the draft but never offered a formal contract after he made clear he would pursue football at the University of Michigan. Pretty good decision there from both sides.7. Houston Texans QB Brandon WeedenWeeden pursued baseball as hard as any player in the NFL, playing five exclusive seasons in the minors after high school. A second-round pick of the New York Yankees in 2002, he never made it past Class A. After spending time with three organizations, he quit following the 2006 season. Weeden posted a 5.02 ERA in 374? innings over 108 games. At the age of 24, he enrolled at?Oklahoma State?to begin his college football career in 2007. The rest, is, well ... you know.8. Tampa Bay Buccaneers QB Jameis WinstonBaseball America considered Winston the second-best baseball prospect in the state of Alabama in 2012, and the Rangers made him a 15th-round pick in 2012 even after he made clear he planned to enroll in college. At Florida State, he played right field and pitched -- with his fastball reportedly hitting 94 mph -- and was also a switch-hitter. In two years of college baseball, he compiled a 1.94 ERA with nine saves while hitting .209 in 158 at-bats. Winstons contract with the Bucs contains a clause prohibiting him from playing baseball.9. San Francisco 49ers QB Colin KaepernickKaepernick was a ridiculous high school pitcher in Turlock, California, throwing two no-hitters and striking out 97 in 13 starts as a senior. He was the target of intense college baseball recruiting in 2006 and was considered a draftable prospect at the time, but he wanted to play college football. When his NFL prospects appeared bleak three years into his career at?Nevada, the Chicago Cubs grabbed him in the 43rd round of the 2009 draft and tried to convince him to spend the summer in their minor league system. Kaepernick declined and continued focusing on football.On deckTennessee Titans QB Matt CasselThe high point of Cassels baseball career came in 1994, when he played first base for the Northridge (California) team that reached the finals of the Little League World Series. He appeared briefly as a pitcher at USC during the spring of 2004, striking out 10 in 8? innings, and was drafted by the?Oakland As?(36th round) later that summer.Miami Dolphins QB Matt MooreWhile pursuing a college transfer for football, Moore dabbled in semi-pro baseball and was drafted by the Los Angeles Angels (22nd round) in 2004 as a third baseman. He decided to continue his football career at?Oregon State.Pittsburgh Steelers CB Senquez GolsonGolson hit .345 as a senior at Pascagoula (Mississippi) High School, and the Boston Red Sox made him an eighth-round draft choice in 2011. He went to Ole Miss instead to play both baseball and football, but he quit baseball after one season with a .204 batting average in 22 games.ManagerOakland Raiders coach Jack Del RioDrafted by the Toronto Blue Jays (22nd round) in 1981, Del Rio instead accepted a scholarship to play football at?USC. He played catcher for the Trojans as well, hitting .340.General managerDenver Broncos executive vice president of football operations/general manager John ElwayElway was drafted twice, in the 18th round in 1979 by the Kansas City Royals and in the second round in 1981 by the New York Yankees. He was named the Yankees top prospect in 1982 and hit .318 with four home runs and 25 RBIs in Class A that year. That performance provided credibility to his threat to play baseball if the Baltimore Colts drafted him in 1983. ' ' '