Look at the transcript of one of his interviews a few pages back. He only mentions his religion twice - the first line where he thanks his Lord and Savior and once later, when asked, answered in the affirmative that maybe there was some divine intervention in a particular play.
I live in Denver, so it is Tebow Time all the time. It is the rare interview where he does not do an initial "I want to thank my Lord and Savior" and then moves on and it is all about football.
So, he does does do exactly what you say is acceptable.He throws in a few thank yous and then talks about football. It IS the media that presses him and continues to ask questions about his religion. It IS the media that makes such a huge deal about it, not Tebow. He does a thank you and then moves on and thanks his coach, his team, the other team, etc.
He is not the first sports person to thank their chosen savior. He is not the first to make some religious motion - I can't count how many times I have seen a Catholic athlete cross themselves. He is not the first person to wear a symbol for something they believe in. Perhaps all the athletes who wear pink should be tagged as being too religious.
He is just a golly, gee, shucks kind of person and that doesn't fit the stereotype so many have of the tough football player, so gets picked apart for his beliefs.
FWIW - I hate Focus on the Family with a passion, almost hate to drive down to the Springs. But I do think the kid is getting a raw deal being pegged for being a religious zealot.
Personally, I like what Leno had to say the other night:
It is hard to figure out who God likes better. He gave Tim 6 wins, but he gave Tom Gisele