LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in The Blind Side, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Generosity
Left Tackle, Protection, and Shifting Strategy
Football Industry and Culture
Racism and Outsiderness
Summary
Analysis
Back in the 2000s, Michael Oher has fled from Ole Miss, and “all hell broke loose.” Antonio Turner, the teammate Michael beat up for insulting Leigh Anne and Collins, is taken to a coach’s house, while the injured little boy is rushed to the hospital. The boy’s father, a tutor named Bobby Nix, says he’ll be pressing charges.
The situation is dire for Michael: he’s hurt a little child and, on an even more basic level, he’s behaved in a way that suggests that he’s not mature enough to handle the pressures of college and football stardom.
Active
Themes
Michael Oher drives around Oxford, angry and confused. Recently, the NCAA has been saying that the Tuohys have used him for his talent, but throughout the entire ordeal Michael has remained loyal to his adopted family. He doesn’t believe that Sean and Leigh Anne were manipulating him. He looks at his phone and sees that Sean has been texting him.
Without forgiving Michael for his actions, one can understand that he’s been under a huge amount of pressure, both from his coaches and from the NCAA. Furthermore, one can admire Michael for being so loyal to his adopted family, even after the NCAA has accused them of manipulating him.
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Themes
Meanwhile, Sean Tuohy gets a call from Coach Orgeron, who explains that the little boy who got hurt needs stitches, but is otherwise fine. However, the police are still going to arrest Michael Oher. Sean decides that it’s time to call a lawyer. He talks to his old friend Steve Farese, a prominent attorney. Steve’s first reaction is that the police probably won’t arrest Michael, since the child’s injury was an accident. Suddenly, Sean gets a call from Michael. Sean tells Michael to turn himself in to the campus police. Shortly afterwards, Michael meets with Coach Orgeron, who just tells Michael, “It’s lonely at the top,” and tells Michael that there will be “many Antonio Turners” down the line.
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Themes
Quotes
After hitting Antonio Turner, Michael Oher does some mild community service, but is never prosecuted. He settles into success. Meanwhile, Briarcrest receives record numbers of applications from black inner-city kids, though the schools’ new president doesn’t want to admit any of them. Other Briarcrest teachers think that Michael’s success will help spread the Christian gospel. Although Michael isn’t the most outspoken proponent of Christianity, one teacher, Jennifer Graves, notes, “Moses stuttered.”
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Even after Michael chooses the University of Mississippi, Phil Fulmer remains obsessed with him. He tries to convince Michael to transfer to the University of Tennessee. Fulmer also spends time scouting football practices at Briarcrest, where he notices other promising players. Sean Tuohy continues to help out with the Briarcrest football team, though he’s furious that Briarcrest won’t admit more inner-city black students.
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Leigh Anne continues to spend lots of time with Michael Oher. It often occurs to her that there must be other people just as talented as Michael living in the Memphis inner-city. She reads about a talented football player from the inner-city, Arthur Sallis, who fails to make the grades to go to college, and ends up going back to the inner-city. Around this time, Sallis is shot by two robbers, and nearly dies. Shortly after he leaves the hospital, he’s murdered in his home, at the age of twenty-three. Inspired by the tragedy of Arthur Sallis, Leigh Anne decides that she wants to create a foundation for people with athletic ability who lack the academic talents to go to college.
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Due to his success, Michael Oher gets lots of calls from poor friends, many of whom want money. Denise calls him more than she ever has. It occurs to Michael that many of the people with whom he grew up never worked for anything. However, Michael wants to use his good fortune to help his old friend, Craig Vail. Michael has always admired Craig for his modesty and pride—he doesn't present himself as a victim. Michael reunites with Craig. He tells him that he’s been doing well with football, and claims that he could take on Dwight Freeney, the best pass rusher in the NFL.
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Dwight Freeney has had a remarkable career with the Indianapolis Colts. He sees himself as the successor to Lawrence Taylor. In 2006, Freeney hears of a talented kid named Michael Oher, who claims that Freeney is no match for him. Freeney later learns that Michael is three hundred and fifty pounds, six foot five, and runs the forty-yard dash in less than five seconds. When he finds out about Michael, Freeney doesn’t smile. He just says, “You tell Michael Oher I’ll be waiting for him.”
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