For Mark Rose, football is more than a living.
It's a way of life.
But it's not worth dying for.
Rose has become a lonely but powerful voice: a longtime high school coach — one of the more successful in football-mad Alabama — who finds it ludicrous to be carrying on with prep sports in the midst of a devastating pandemic.
He felt so strongly about it that he quit his coaching job at Russell County High, a school in the rural, eastern part of Alabama, not far from the Georgia line.
"I put it all on the line, but I would do it all again," Rose said Friday when reached on his cell phone. "I couldn't sleep at night if I wasn't protecting my players, their families and my coaches."
Rose is outraged that some 30,000 high school kids in Alabama — not to mention hundreds of thousands around the country — have continued to play football without the rigid testing protocols that colleges and the NFL were able to put in place.
"We have zero testing policy in the whole state. None," Rose said "We were just guinea pigs out there."