Tennessee Titan Jason Babin Talks Football, Family and Why He's Teaching His Young Sons to Hunt
Filed under: Sports, Celeb News & Interviews
Jason Babin and his family make time for fun. Photo courtesy of Jason Babin
Jason Babin, a defensive end for The Tennessee Titans, has three passions he loves talking about: sports, family and hunting.
Married to Sara Babin, his college sweetheart, and dad to two boys -- Maddux, 5, and Talan, 3 -- the 2004 first-round draft pick is known as #93 on football field, but he's also dedicated to the sport of hunting.
Babin owns and operates the Babin Ranch, 500 heavily wooded acres in Center, Texas, and home to a variety of animals, including zebras, rams, antelope, wildebeests, deer, elk and buffalo.
In a recent interview with ParentDish, Babin says he has been teaching his young sons how to hunt, and that it teaches them sons valuable lessons. An edited portion of the conversation follows.
ParentDish: Sorry about the season so far.
Jason Babin: Yeah, well, the season is not going according to plan and it does not look like we are going to make the playoffs this year. A couple teams will have to lose, which means we have to win, so, overall, I would say the playoffs are a slim chance right now.
PD: You have had quite a career with the NFL. Texas, Kansas and now Tennessee.
JB: It hasn't gone as planned, but we are on track right now.
PD: Is it hard to plant roots in one place knowing you can get traded at any time?
JB: It is uneasy, which is why I am excited to finally sign a four to five year deal. Now we can be somewhere for a while and finally start a life.
PD: How does your family handle each move to a new city?
JB: My wife has been amazing about it since she is stuck with all of the unpacking since I tend to be in training camp. As for the boys, they look at it as a long vacation.
PD: What's your take on Tennessee?
JB: We love it here because we love country music and the country scenery. We are ready to make it home.
PD: In addition to your role with the Tennessee Titans, you are also a dad.
JB: When I had my first child, Maddux, I was nervous. I was never a dad before and I knew what I did with Maddux was going to be a direct reflection of me in terms of how my wife and I parent him. Now that I have a second child, I am in the groove.
PD: Do you give your boys a special pep talk before you hit the road to play a game?
JB: (Laughs.) Yes, I do. Always. I sit them both down and say, "OK, Daddy has to go to the hotel now, which means you are the men of the house and have to protect Mommy while I am gone." They take it to heart and they take it serious when I am gone.
PD: How do you stay in touch with them when you are away?
JB: We use the iPhone face chat so we can see each other, or the webcam on the computer. I tend to read them stories when they are getting ready to go to bed.
PD: Speaking of children, when you were 7 years old, you started hunting.
JB: Yeah. I started hunting early. Actually, my mom's father was a professional fur trapper for a while and he used to hunt and fish, too. Because of that, they never went to the store for meat. They always hunted for their meals.
PD: So, when you were 7, you learned how to shoot a gun?
JB: They started teaching me with a bow and arrow because that requires more patience and you need to learn patience if you are a hunter.
PD: Don't you think that is too young to teach a kid how to fire a weapon?
JB: Absolutely not. My 5-year-old shot his first deer on a bye-week at my ranch in Texas, and then we made it into hamburger and sausage for the family. We are a pretty hands-on family.
PD: What did you hunt as a kid?
JB: Where I grew up in Michigan, it was deer, rabbit and turkeys.
PD: I find your take on kids handling weapons surprising since you graduated from Western Michigan University with a degree in criminal justice.
JB: Yes, that is true. I grew up in a small town and since it was rural there wasn't a whole lot to do and hunting was common.
PD: You don't think this sends the message to children that it's OK to kill an innocent animal for sport?
JB: We are a meat-hunting family and everything we kill we eat. Look, we have a rule in our house: You do not point a toy gun at anyone. We instill the basics to our kids and, in terms of hunting, we do it because it is how we get our food. We really educate our kids about this and if you teach them the right way, they will learn those lessons early on.
PD: When did you introduce Maddux to hunting?
JB: When he was 3.
PD: Three? My daughter only played on the playground and the beach at 3.
JB: He learned how to shoot a bow and a .22, as well as (my son) Talan.
PD: And you don't think that's way too young for a kid to handle a weapon, let alone learn how to use one?
JB: Maybe it was because my mom wouldn't let me have some of that cool stuff at that age. My mom was very over-protective of me. Look, before my boys did anything, they needed to learn the proper care, such as how to clean a gun and put it away. We always promote safety first.
PD: And your wife allows this?
JB: Yeah, she is on board with it. She knows what I am doing and how I teach them the basics before we do anything else.
PD: I'm stunned other parents haven't given you a hard time about this.
JB: They do, but I don't care.
PD: What are the benefits to teaching your kids how to hunt?
JB: There are three great benefits. One, I feel it teaches them patience. It taught my 5-year-old how to sit still and not move for two hours. It also teaches them life lessons, such as finding food for survival. And, three, we get to spend lot of quality time together, which I wouldn't trade for the world.
PD: You and your dad also run the Babin Ranch Center in Texas where you serve as the owner and your dad is the manager.
JB: He fills in for me while I am gone because we have a lot of corporate outings during the fall season while I am gone due to football.
PD: Do you let kids hunt there?
JB: Yes, we can set it up to be a family atmosphere.
PD: So, at what age can kids go there with their parents?
JB: At least 12, and their parents have to be avid hunters and they always have a guide with them at all times. We always put safety first.
PD: I'm shocked PETA hasn't come after you.
JB: Oh, yeah, and I love to antagonize them. I have even saved some of the letters they sent me -- how I have made the world a darker and gloomier place and my soul will be forever blackened.
PD: Your response?
JB: I invite them to come out, but they never have.
PD: I notice you give a lot of tickets away to needy children to attend a football game.
JB: Yes. I was lucky to have good role models when it came to my parents and, unfortunately, not every child has that. The more I can do to help out children is an amazing feeling.
PD: Do you work with a particular charity?
JB: No, but I am hoping to be in one place long enough to team up with someone. Since I get tickets at face value I purchase them for the children so they can go to a game.
PD: Is it true a lot of athletes follow the same practice?
JB: Yes, a lot of guys do. I think the guys get involved because, if you read some of the bios about these players, you see a lot of them came from nothing and, in the end, made it to the NFL. I think it is a great way to give back and teach other children you can do anything you set your mind to.










ReaderComments (Page 3 of 8)
1-01-2011 @ 6:09PM
Bill Lappen said...I'll bet all you anti-hunters believe your steaks,lunchmeat,
and poultry are produced at the grocery store.
Reply
1-01-2011 @ 6:23PM
Dan said...You hunt, with a gun, for your steaks, lunchmeat and poultry ?? Seems like a big chore unless you have your own farm. I just go to the grocery store.. When I want venison and it's hunting season then I go hunting..
1-01-2011 @ 6:29PM
economystc said...What about vegetarians?
Plants respire. They process food. Plants consume CO2 and expel O2, just the opposite of mammals like humans and beef and pork and sheep etc. And fish process O2 and expel CO2 as a result.
They need sunlight to live and to process their food. They die without water.
Plants have offspring through male and female generation.
Therefore Plants also have a lifecycle. They are born by sprouting from a fertilized seed, live and die.
AND YOU EAT THEM.
Reply
1-01-2011 @ 6:36PM
economystc said...What about vegetarians?
Plants respire. They process food. Plants consume CO2 and expel O2, just the opposite of mammals like humans and beef and pork and sheep etc. And fish process O2 and expel CO2 as a result.
They need sunlight to live and to process their food. They die without water.
Plants have offspring through male and female generation.
Therefore Plants also have a lifecycle. They are born by sprouting from a fertilized seed, live and die.
AND YOU EAT THEM.
Reply
1-01-2011 @ 6:37PM
Talkin' Judo said...I think hunting for food is a nobler activity than running a dogfighting ranch. Hunting and killing animals for food is a necessary evil, making animals fight each other for our entertainment is disgusting and beneath contempt. At least he is not like Michael Vick.
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1-01-2011 @ 6:45PM
Stan said...Way to go Jason,sounds like you are teaching what this country was founded on.An educated gun owner is a safe gun owner! ignorance is the real danger.
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1-01-2011 @ 6:44PM
Alen said...I applaud your use of hunting to teach your children responsibility and family pride. I am a life long hunter and have introduced many young men and women to the sport. It is not the kill that is important, it is the time spent in the wild, the time spent with family, and the understanding of the world around us that is important. Congratulations and keep up the good work.
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1-01-2011 @ 6:47PM
Alen said...Melody, Do you ever eat any meat. Wonder where it comes from????
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1-01-2011 @ 6:50PM
Alen said...Melody, Do you eat any meat? ever wonder where it comes from ????? Your comments are naive.
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1-01-2011 @ 6:58PM
DSherline said...Oh, how horrible. Teaching a child gun safety and how to handle and operate one at such an early age. And those poor animals they're killing.
Guess what you morons. The children who learn gun safety and how to handle and operate one are the ones that will know what to do if they ever encounter a loaded weapon somewhere and there's no adult around. It happens and most of the time someone gets hurt because the child didn't have a clue what to do.
As far as the lives of "those poor animals" go the kids are being taught to hunt for food, not for the so called "sport" of it. Eat what you kill, kill only what you're going to eat.
If any of you eat any kind of meat you have no place saying anything about "those poor animals". You're already part of animal killings. Now you're arguing about where it's okay to do the killing, that's all.
Besides, do you really believe that meat's going to be readily available at the grocers forever? Not very likely.
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1-01-2011 @ 6:55PM
Alen said...Douche, Really Is that all you can come up with
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1-01-2011 @ 7:04PM
Alen said...What, no witty parry or are you using your thesaurus to try to find words longer than one syllable. You obviously have a one track , closed mind mentality. I have neither the time or the interest to spar with one who comes to the fight unarmed.
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1-01-2011 @ 7:31PM
johnsonbrown4000 said...Didn't he every hear of a supermarket? Hunting might have been good 100 years ago but now it's stupid.
The only good thing is they don't just do it for sport they do eat it.
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1-02-2011 @ 9:15AM
DSherline said...So you think that hunting should be banned and our benevolent government should be given the task of keeping animal populations at sustainable levels? That we should give up hunting and the passing on of the skills necessary to do so? Should we should give up on the notion of relying on ourselves?
Do you also think that grocery stores and the commercially produced meats available at them, will be around forever?
Let's not forget that animals that are raised for the sole purpose of being slaughtered for their meat, and are killed at a slaughter house have it so much better than animals that live their life in the wild and are taken out by a single surprise shot.
Have you ever seen the conditions of a commercial "meat farm" or a slaughter house?
1-02-2011 @ 10:38AM
Jen said...I think everyone is just a tad dramatic. I love animals just as much as anyone else, but hunting is a sport. If a man wants to hunt, that is his right. There are so many more inhumane things going on in the world to get hung up on this. I think he sounds like a great person and even better dad!!
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1-01-2011 @ 7:58PM
antonia said...I would have no problem with hunting if it was done for the sole purpose of putting meat on a STARVING family's dinner table or A DIRT POOR family's dinner table but this is not the case. This reminds me of that saying that often society or generations of families have done certain traditions because they have ALWAYS done them...even though the tradition itself makes no sense anymore and/or is outdated. Hunting is one of those outdated traditions. Hunting, for settlers generations ago, was then necessary to their survival. They didn't have grocery stores they could go to for their meat like we do now. But given that its no longer necessary to hunt due to meat being readily available at grocery stores, hunting is no longer necessary--UNLESS you can't afford to buy meat (too poor), but that is not the case here. Let's be honest hunting is still continued because certain people LIKE to shoot guns AND LIKE to watch the animals they shoot die. So don't give me that crap about hunting being a noble activity especially in this day and age, when its no longer necessary for one's (or one's family) survival with grocery store's one can go to buy their meat.
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1-02-2011 @ 10:47PM
Brandon Giuda said...Another ignorant ass. Many families put food on their table today to save money, because it is a wonderful tradition, and so they won't have to depend on others, like you do. I, like all hunters I know, do not enjoy killing an animals, but we realize the gravity of what it takes to provide food for our families. We aren't hypocrites who rail at hunters but have no problem eating meat, so long as someone else does their dirty work. Have you ever even thought of trying to provide some of your own food, or are you a typical dependent?
1-02-2011 @ 2:00AM
GreatWhiteHunter said...how do you think the meat gets to the grocery store?
it first gets killed. what does it matter WHERE it gets killed?
at least an animal hunted in the wild had a good life, compared to your grocery store meat that lived on a cramped farm, knee deep in dung, treated like crap with absolutely NO life to speak of. and think about it, this guy has 500 acres, thats huge. I'd like to see you walk 3 acres to find food. He theoretically could have to walk 499 acres before he was able to make that awesome, blood splattering, bits o brain flying kill shot!
1-02-2011 @ 9:29AM
DSherline said...So you think that if someone's relatively well off they should not have the choict to hunt for their meat, but should only be allowed to get it from a grocery store? Do you also think that the grocery stores will be around forever? That we shouldn't pass on the skills necessary to be self sufficient to future generations? That we should give up on the notion of relying on ourselves?
1-02-2011 @ 4:34PM
antonia said...You are not getting my point--in this age that we are in for most people hunting is not a necessity for their survival--so why are those who don't need to hunt for survival being allowed to do it. You should ONLY be allowed to hunt for survival--that is why hunting was ever done to begin with, that was the sole purpose and reason for it and the ONLY noble reason for it. Hunters, generations ago, didn't think hunting was some fun sport, they did it to survive, for them and their families. When did it become okay to hunt because it was fun. Whatever happened to respecting nature and only taking from it what you need to survive and for no other reason...there is no nobler reason than that. And trying to make hunting justifiable for any other reason than that shows lack of respect of nature.