Club Shay Shay - Johnny Manziel Part 1
Episode Date: February 21, 2024Club Shay Shay welcomes Johnny Manziel for a candid conversation with Shannon Sharpe. In this episode, the Texas legend boldly declares Kyler Murray as the best high school quarterback to ever come ou...t of the state, even placing him above Patrick Mahomes and himself. He shares insights that his decision to not commit to Oregon had nothing to do with Marcus Mariota's presence, and then reminisces about beating Alabama as a true freshman at Texas A&M. The conversation takes a surprising turn as Manziel reflects on the Manti Te’o catfishing scandal and the historic Heisman race they were apart of, which Johnny Football inevitably won. #VolumeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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All my life, been grinding all my life.
Sacrifice, hustle, pay the price.
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Hello, welcome to another episode of Club Shea Shea.
I am your host, Shannon Sharp.
I'm also the proprietor of Club Shea Shea.
And the guy that's stopping by for conversation today is one of the most polarizing college athletes ever.
One of the best college football players ever.
Member of the Texas A&M Hall of Fame.
He's the first freshman to ever win the Heisman Trophy.
A rock star quarterback.
A larger than life persona.
A phenomenon.
He was must-see TV every Saturday.
Former NFL quarterback.
Texas legend.
And the stadium in which he played in in college has been called the house that Johnny built.
Johnny Manziel.
What's up, baby?
Bro, how you doing?
Thank you for having me.
Thank you for having me.
Long time coming, man.
Thank you, bro.
I don't want to toast.
I know you don't drink anymore. You don drink anymore right right right now i'm in the way
don't want to toast the water but nevertheless i appreciate the offer i appreciate you stopping by
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I'm trying to figure out what's in the Texas water.
You get Patrick Mahomes, Drew Brees, Matthew Stafford, Andrew Luck, Kyle Emerge, Vince Young, Nick Foles, RG3, Ryan Tannier, Baker Mayfield, Jalen Hurts.
What the hell are they feeding them?
What are they drinking in Texas to produce these type of quarterbacks?
It's a way of life.
From the time you're a kid,
and you can go back even further than just the guys that you named.
That's our current NFL recent guys that you see.
But you can take it back.
There were guys that you see in the NFL.
Let's give you a great example.
Andy Dalton. What that guy did at TCU, what he did for the state of Texas. And if you're a
Dallas Fort Worth kid, you love the frogs during that time. You know, so there have been great
quarterbacks come through the state of Texas for a long, long time. And I think it comes down to
this, that Texas high school football is a way of life you know from the time you're five six
years old you're to pop Warner the flag football all that stuff that's going on is a way of life
and I played baseball my whole life growing up so football was never it for me until I got to be
about 14 or 15 years old right so just looking around and knowing the landscape now it's only
gotten bigger right and it's only growing but there is something in the water there's a bunch of dogs not just at the quarterback
position right all the way throughout i mean you look at miles garrett our defensive player of the
year we were talking about like there's some real real cats that come from houston they come from
dallas they come from san antonio and they come from austin right and it's just a great state for football. I mean, in my opinion, if you look at it countrywide,
you got Cali, you got Texas, and you have Florida,
where the dogs come from, in my opinion.
Do you remember watching those guys playing high school football
when you were growing up?
And did any of those guys you try to emulate?
Yeah, I think RG3 did an amazing job for me and like you know
setting a great example of what a dual threat quarterback should be i mean i won the heisman
2012 right he won it in 2011 so i got to watch that crazy year of a high flying throw it around
the yard kind of offense and a guy that could run that track speed everything that he had
complete package for what
you know in my opinion a college dual threat quarterback should be did you ever see any of
those guys play high school football or just watch them from on when the highlights came on
television i would say i watched kyler's career probably the closest okay i had a huge hand in
getting him to texas a&m right um 2012 and 13 whenever I was at A&M, I saw this kid. And I'd known his dad,
obviously a legendary quarterback at Texas A&M in his own right. But Kyler, I saw this kid who was
ingrained and molded to be exactly where he's at today in his life. And I think that's what his dad
did for him to get him to a place of high-level success.
And if you know anything about Texas high school football, I would say his resume and what he did makes him hands down the best Texas high school football player to ever play.
Player, not just quarterback, player.
Ever in the state of Texas.
Wow.
I think he lost, I don't know if he lost a game.
I think he lost one game.
Maybe one.
Right.
And that would have to be checked.
But, like, one.
And what this kid did, made circles from not just Dallas, not just Houston, not just Austin.
Right.
From the top of the tip to the bottom and from east to west.
Right.
Well, what happened?
Why wasn't Texas A&M able to keep him?
You know, I have my opinion on this,
and one that I think is very correct,
and the fact that that same time we signed two five-star quarterbacks.
So we had Kyler Murray and Kyle Allen in that same class.
After I left, the direction of the program, I felt,
lost a lot of its stability.
You know, we had really good coaches in our organization but
we didn't hone in and detail and work and focus on one guy who was going to be our guy
right they played this game of back and forth and not like it's kyler murray right what are we
talking about lost one game his whole career you're not going to go give this guy the keys.
I don't care what he's doing. College is a time as a freshman that you mold men, right? You mold
these guys into what you want them to be. When I went to college, my dad shook Mike Sherman,
shook his hand and looked him in the eye and said, this is where you take over and molding my son
into being the grownup that he needs to be one day. And I think with that, Coach Sumlin lost a little bit
of what he was originally there to do.
You get a new contract, you go to the SEC,
you win 12 games, you get a Heisman winner,
you're talking about a new stadium,
you're talking about a new deal.
Your focus shifts from what the main thing is
to a whole bunch of bullshit, in my opinion.
And they didn't just hone in,
and they didn't give
him the keys and i think a lot of that's to be said has to deal with kyle allen as well right i
think he made it very difficult um behind the scenes for what people didn't know um to just
give kyler the keys and you know in my opinion where our program is now as a football program
that is the one step and one thing and mistake that we made
that is keeping us from being where we want to be and especially during that time, why
we didn't have success.
Because Kyler was supposed to be you.
He was supposed to be that transition because of what you started at SEC and we'll talk
about that Saturday afternoon in Tuscaloosa and what you actually did down there.
So that was supposed to be the next step. Okay, Johnny built this, he has it going, guess what?
We have somebody to step right in and keep it going.
Boom, right there in front of your face.
I worked my ass off behind the scenes to get Kyler Murray to Texas A&M.
Loved him, loved what he stood for, loved who he was as a kid,
loved that he looked up to me at that point in time.
I don't mind how times have changed since up to me at that point in time. My how times have changed since then.
But at that point in time, the look I got in his eyes when I hosted him around and took care of him was that he looked up to me as something he wanted to be like me.
Right.
And I can see that in his eyes as a kid.
I have very mixed emotions and strong feelings about that with what happened through it.
Like I said, it comes back to I think Kyle did a really good job of playing good
football. He was a very capable quarterback. You know, he's still, you know, behind Josh Allen a
little bit right now and working with him and has been right next to him for a long time. So
that says something about his character, who he was as a football player, albeit not all the
accolades and everything you would expect, but a very solid, you know, fundamental football player.
But when you watch Kyler transfer,
and then you see what he did for the University of Oklahoma,
taking him, I think he took him to the college football playoff both years,
he wins the Heisman Trophy, and you're saying,
hold on, we let that guy walk out the door?
Hold on.
And I think he'd have been successful in the offense, obviously,
with the head coach they had at Oklahoma, at USC now.
Lincoln.
Lincoln Riley.
And I think Cliff was it.
Yo, Lincoln Riley.
And you see it like, well, I don't really care what system it is.
You see how kind of what he can do?
He can throw the ball.
He can run.
He's a true definition of a dual-threat quarterback.
No matter how small he is, I think a lot of
people kind of discounted him. Maybe
Texas A&M didn't realize what they had
because they're like, okay, you walk out the door
you're only five, whatever it is, you're
not going to be.
And he catch fire. Did they not just
learn it with me?
Did they not watch the
5'11 guy come and rock the world and put it on
fire?
Right.
They believed in me.
Right.
And that came from Cliff Kingsbury.
Right.
That's where I got mine from.
That's where I got my confidence.
That's where I got my guy who believed in me.
Jake Spavitol was our offensive coordinator when Kyler was there.
And as I was in Cleveland, I was talking to him quite a bit,
figuring out what the vibe was.
I went back to games.
I went and wanted to see Kyler. And the mesh the feel just like wasn't there for cohesiveness and you know I
remember talking to Jake about it and him just kind of being like I remember him saying this
that it's like kind of out of my hands that was like above the offensive coordinator's pay grade
right which only leaves one person left the head head coach. That's all it leaves.
Right.
So whether it was, you know, I'm speculating, but at the end of the day, that's what I was told of what it was.
What was your relationship like with Kevin Sumlin?
My relationship with Kevin Sumlin was great.
You know, he was my dog.
You know, he rode for me hard.
He went to bat for me.
He went to war for me. He went to war for me. And a multitude of different scenarios.
You know, I think where our relationship fell out a little bit is, you know, how do you have a guy who's a grown man who, I look back on this now, reflective in this.
You know, how do you have a guy who's a grown man, you know, telling me what I should do? Obviously, my coach, my guy I'm looking up to, my head football coach,
is telling me to live a certain way and put all this party and this behind you.
But if you know anything about Kevin Summons, what he's doing behind the scenes.
Oh, he's partying too?
So from behind, from my eyes, it's hypocritical.
We're partying together.
What? We're a 40-40 club in New York.
Oh, yeah.
We in the back room playing pool with Ace of Spades.
We're chilling.
Right.
Coach is there.
This is what he does.
So now looking back at it, it's hypocritical to me.
And our relationship is great and will forever be great.
And I do not sit here today as a judge of a man, a judge of a person who helped get me to the point of where I wanted to be in life by no means whatsoever.
I'm calling a spade a spade. Right. And I'm just going to be and give the God's honest truth as what I know it to be.
Right. That ruffles some feathers. So be it. Right. It's the way the world goes.
Are you surprised that he hasn't got a head coaching job?
No. You're not surprised why um i think what made coach sumlin so great
is no longer really with him right now where his focus is you know i think life has gotten
um the better of him a little bit and i'm a example of, I don't want to sit up here and be
a preacher. I don't want to sit up here and tell anybody they're living wrong or anything like
that, because that's what it used to feel like me back in the day. People were doing that to me.
So I don't see the same spark. I don't have much of a relationship anymore with him anymore.
We'll reach out and talk like here and there, maybe once a year, but not like I have the relationship with my other coaches. And, you know, my gut instinct
and feel is, and I know this because of instances that happened when I left.
Um, all right. I'm leaving to go to the draft and I'll paint a picture for you. It's 2000,
the spring of 2014, December, 2013, right in there about December, January.
I'm getting ready to make this decision on if I'm going to the NFL draft or I'm going to stay.
And I found this out five years later from my dad.
But my dad went and had a meeting with Kevin Sutton.
And pretty much went to him man to man and was like, we'll take three million bucks and we'll stay for the next two years.
And my dad says this is true as today as he did when he told me. He left. He did the same thing that he did when Cliff
Kingsbury asked him to be the highest paid offensive coordinator the year before. And Cliff
would have stayed with me another year and we would have ran it back and gone for another one.
But he comes to someone, he asks them for X for x amount someone he had this ego about him that what we built we was all him right and then you start
that next year okay i leave decide to go to the nfl this deal doesn't work kevin someone kind of
blows us off we can do this without you type of vibe. Okay? So the fall comes around.
2014 A&M football season.
Kenny Hill is named our starting quarterback.
We win our first five games of the year.
We're 5-0.
We're top 10 in the country.
I ain't getting no love in the program.
Yeah, because I'm thinking I remember hearing it,
and they talk about Johnny who?
Who?
Because he had.
South Carolina, five touchdowns, first game of the season. Okay, okay. So you remember hearing it, and they talking about Johnny who? Who? Because he had – South Carolina, five touchdowns, first game of the season.
Okay, okay.
So you remember hearing it also.
So hold on, I want to make sure.
I've got to backtrack.
Yeah, back it up.
You said your dad went to Kevin Sumlin.
Yep.
And says for $3 million.
We're staying for two more.
Now, you do realize this is prior to NIL.
I agree.
So this is a backroom deal.
It went on for 30, 40 years before.
It was the same way that was happening when you was getting recruited back in the day.
And you guys, and you know, Texas A&M got money for it.
I mean, Texas A&M, nobody got no money like Texas A&M.
Y'all got the big dogs.
Aggie ring, baby.
Y'all got the big dogs.
And so $3 million, if he had gone to any of the boosters and said, you know what?
Done. Johnny's dad said he'll stay for an additional two years if we just break him
off three mil. Just keep it in cash. Throw it somewhere. We'll get it later. We don't need it
right now. Right. But for my security, if something happens for two years down the road.
Right. And my dad did this without me knowing. And I ain't mad at him about it for nothing.
It's the way the business worked back then. Right. a bag man there was a bag man at lsu there was
a bag man at bama there was a bag man at every school around the country if you were competing
for a national title it was what it was and it was always that way until we're into the nil portion
of everything now the way it should be if i could if i ask you i say johnny who's your mount rushmore
high school quarterbacks in the state of texas what four heads you putting up kyler murray is
is for sure um andrew leave RG3 off that list
oh man tough you got Vince Young tough oh you can't you can't label it to four you can't label
it to four I played against Baker so I didn't get to see him start at quarterback but we played Lake Travis
his high school I mean this is an impossible list it probably takes five the best that I got to like
be around Andrew Luck was a little bit before me so from what I saw and I remember Kyler
top notch you know I didn't get the breeze days Stafford for the legacy he left at Highland Park and what you would hear
about. Man, nobody had an arm in the state
of Texas like him ever. So Kyler,
Stafford, for sure. I think
you have to throw RG3 in there winning the Heisman.
I think you have to throw Baker
in there for winning the Heisman. So you got
what? Three Heisman Trophy
winners and Stafford? Yep.
Pretty good. And your
goal is Kyler. To me. To me. And he's younger Yep. Pretty good. And your goal is Kyler.
To me.
To me.
And he's younger than me.
Wow.
That's.
So let me ask you this, Johnny.
Your upbringing.
What was your upbringing like?
And what type of kid was Johnny Manziel?
Johnny Manziel was a really good kid.
You know, up until the time I probably got my driver's license, 14, 15.
You know, I grew up in Tyler, Texas. Small small East Texas town about an hour and a half outside of Dallas
My family came over from Lebanon and went straight to East Texas
So I was like the fourth generation of people that have been here in the States
I Was a baseball player. I wanted to be Derek Jeter. I wore number two because of Jeter.
I loved the Yankees at that point in time in my life. And my life was, you know, until I was 13,
14 years old, it was baseball tonight, every night, sports center with the OGs back in the day.
And I sat and I watched every day, every baseball. I loved it. And from the time I was like eight years old on
until the time I was like 14, 15, I traveled and played baseball. I got in the car with my mom.
My dad worked at a car dealership. So six days a week, he was grinding, trying to, you know,
make life easy on us. And I felt very blessed that I did have the ability to have an easy life you know I think I put out this persona at the time later that we were well off
and wealthy in this and I think that was just at the time something to say maybe
what I even truly believed at that point in time but you get back to what I was
saying I was a baseball player and travel me me and my mom, my sister hop in the
car and we're going to Louisiana. We're driving all over Texas. We're going everywhere to go
play traveling, select baseball as a kid. I was playing a year up from my age group. So I'm like,
I'm in the deep end and I'm holding my own. And like always thought even to this day
that baseball was my best sport, that I was always meant and destined to be a baseball
player. And I think because I started so early, by the time I got to high school, I was just
burned out of it. Football started to come in my life. Really, what I vividly remember is
the 2005 Rose Bowl. And for Christmas Day, I wake up and my dad has his number 10 Vince Young,
Christmas Day, I wake up and my dad has his number 10 Vince Young Texas jersey.
I was a Texas Longhorn freak.
Right.
And I'm going to sit here and get a lot of hell for my Aggies, but like it is what it is.
And I remember this Christmas Day, might go to the tree, see this Vince Young jersey with the Rose Bowl patch on it.
And after that, it was really just like all football from that game, that last drive, that cross into the end zone by Vince.
The confetti was the background on my computer for four years with Vince.
Rose Bowl was the biggest to me.
When you say you were a good kid, good kid by 90 percent of America or good kid just for Johnny Manziel?
Good kid by 100 percent of 90 percent of America. I was raised the proper way. I was raised in a strong, sturdy household,
both mom and dad there and younger sister, three years younger than me.
You know, we were we were religious. You know, we were a Christian family. We went to church on
Sundays. Sundays were our day for our family golf outings
where my dad and my sister would play me and my mom, and we would go play a scramble every Sunday.
We were very family-oriented. My time I spent with my grandparents, my aunts, my uncles,
we were a cohesive unit, especially back then. And I think it's hard because you look back at what you know me now,
and you wouldn't expect that, which is why you asked the question that you did.
Because I didn't prove to the world when I got on a world stage what my morals and values and
how I raised truly was. And I think a lot of that shift started to happen as I was 15, 16 years old.
And I was living and originally grew up in Tyler. Okay. Earl Campbell, the Tyler. Two Heisman Trophy
winners in the same town, the Tyler Rose, baby. And when I was about 13, I'm in between my sixth
grade semester. So it's like in between my sixth grade semester.
So it's like January of my sixth grade year.
My dad comes in.
He's like, we're moving.
Doesn't say a word.
Just packs everything up.
And we drive five and a half hours away to Kerrville, Texas.
And Kerrville, Texas is 40 miles west of San Antonio, out in the middle of the hill country.
Beautiful.
But it's very country.
You know, it's very little backwoods kind of place, 20,000 people.
And it's dually trucks and farms and ranches and everything you would expect a Texas town to be.
And when I went there, life shifted. It was like the old Johnny Manziel
was there before that move. And then there was a completely new person born after that.
And I think that comes from like, when I got there and I first got to class at this new school,
I was nervous. You know, I didn't have any of my friends. I didn't know anything. It was the most
first time in my life. I think I was really. It was the most first time in my life.
I think I was really, really uncomfortable in the situation that I was in.
And I created and took over a little bit of a different persona in the sense of like kind of where I get a little bit more of my attitude, a little bit more of this country place where I felt like I had to, you know, I had to stick up for myself, not even flex. I stick up for myself. You know, I'm a new kid on
the block here. I ain't getting bullied around by nobody out here. My dad taught me the right way
that if somebody wrongs you in a sense, right, you can either try and handle it the right way as a
man, or if somebody takes it too far down the line, I give you full permission to do what you
need to do to protect yourself.
And I felt like I was getting bullied around and punked around a little bit.
And I started to stand my ground.
And with that became a new like growth.
There's a 15 year old, 14 year old kid in life.
And I remember that shift like it was yesterday.
You said your dad all of a sudden packed the family up and left.
How unexpected was it?
Was there any talk?
Do you remember him, he and your mom having a conversation about, you know, this is not
working.
I think we might need to move.
I think there's a better opportunity over here.
Was there ever any conversation that your family, there's a possibility that your family
might leave Tyler and head to where you ended up going?
None, none.
Came in one day
and just, that was it. We got in the car, we went and that was it. Never heard of, never heard a
conversation, never heard a talk, never really got a reason, nothing. We were just doing it.
And as I know now, you know, my dad took a better job in a different industry to be able to go do
that and do something that gave him more time to be a father. Okay. You know, the car business for him was a six day a week, six in the morning until
8 PM grind. Like I got to see my dad at dinner at night. And then on the Sundays that we spoke
about. So, you know, I get two hours with him at night during the week. And then we get that Sunday
family time that we get and hopefully baseball doesn't overlap so it was very much a family decision to be able to spend more time together
and get a fresh start you know my family and Tyler had a reputation about him you know
um as being wild and being this party family and kind of you know the rumor I guess around east texas was that you know it was
a little bit mafioso kind of vibe to it a little bit is what i hear and what i was hearing as a
kid right that's what i would hear when i was in elementary school oh you're a manzel like it was
always that kind of like we're judging you before we even know who you are wake up with football
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It was December 2019 when the story blew up. In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packers star
Kabir Bajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation. KGB explaining what he believes
led to the arrest of his friends at a children's Christmas play.
A family man, former NFL player, devout Christian,
now cut off from his family and connected to a strange arrest.
I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning.
In a story about faith and football, the search for meaning away from the gridiron
and the consequences for everyone involved.
You mix homesteading with guns and church
and a little bit of the spice of conspiracy theories that we liked.
Voila! You got straight away.
I felt like I was living in North korea but worse if that's
possible listen to spiraled on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your
podcasts i think a lot of that had to do with my dad tired of hearing all the chirp about our last
name when did you or if ever when you were growing up have an appreciation for what your dad was
doing you mentioned that he worked six days a week that he he left at 6 a.m., 6 a.m. in the morning.
He came home at 8 p.m. and you guys had dinner.
So you basically got the dinner time.
That was it.
And then you got Sunday golf outing.
What did you ever become resentful that you weren't spending the quality time with your dad and that he wasn't driving you around to all of these baseball games?
I wouldn't say it was resentment.
I would say there was full-blown anger at that point in time back in the day, like to the max.
Like, I'm watching other kids have their parents be there and stuff, and it's a natural inclination to be able to be like, yo, what's wrong with me?
And my mom is a rock.
Right.
My mom was it.
She never blinked.
She never—sol she never solid solid woman and now that i look back
and i realized what my dad was doing it takes a lot of time and a lot of effort and a lot of energy
to be able to provide for a family especially when you get away from the nest egg and the
grandparents and everything and you go do it on your own so you know for a long time this is where
me and my dad around this time just
started butting heads and then this is where the this is where the sneak you know this is where the
sneaking and the drinking and this is where it all kind of like starts to unravel a little bit and
this is kind of at this point in time 15 16 years old where i start to go down a path that you later
see on a national scale do you believe had your father been around more frequently, that the Johnny Manziel that
started happening around 15, 16, and would later cost you a lot of what you had worked so hard for,
had he been around, do you believe this would have happened?
No. I believe that life goes exactly the way that it's supposed to go. So
if he was around, it's a big if, right? And that's, it's a hypothetical type of situation.
Hard for me to answer, but I know now, um, all of the bad parts of me make me exactly who I am,
right? All the failure that I've had in life failure, what I really fail on. I lived my dream by the time I was 22 years old.
That dream that I had when I'm sitting in that classroom in Kerrville, Texas, I accomplished at 22.
Now, my dreams never were to go be in the position that you were in with a Hall of Fame jacket and to be the best NFL player ever.
I very much felt like when I got drafted and that I got a chance
to start in an NFL game, like my dreams were completely accomplished almost. Wow. And that's
just the way I truly feel, you know? So my life, the good, the bad and everything in between,
it went exactly the way that it was supposed to go to be sitting here with you today.
And I learned more through the failures than I ever did through the rise, ever.
You growing up, you say because you had played baseball,
started baseball at such an early age, by the time you got to about 14, 15,
you had completely burnt out on the game of baseball.
So now you transitioned to football.
Was your size ever a problem?
Did a coach ever tell you, say, Johnny, you're just too small, son?
Of course.
Of course.
I think that's a big reason why I didn't go to the University of Texas.
They wouldn't pull the trigger on me and my size at any position.
They wanted me to play safety.
Safety?
Safety.
Safety.
Me.
I ain't got a lot of white safeties out there, Shannon.
No, no, no.
They don't.
They don't.
So, what I'm thinking, like, hold on.
If he's too small to play, if he's 5'11", how much do you weigh coming out of high school?
Probably 173 pounds, 175.
But they didn't think you could play quarterback because of that size,
but they felt you'd be perfect for safety.
They saw athletic ability.
Okay.
They saw a special athletic talent, and they didn't know what it was.
And to be honest, until I met George Whitfield
and went and started training with him,
I didn't believe in myself that I was a quarterback.
Okay.
You were an athlete.
I just wanted to play football.
Right.
I would play receiver. I was just wanting to play football. Right. I would play receiver.
I played running back in high school.
I played anything that I could play to get on the field and be with my dogs.
I'm looking at you in your high school career.
You passed for over 7,600 yards.
You had 76 total touchdowns in high school, Parade All-America.
Mr. Texas football.
If you're the Mr. Football in the state of, there are certain states,
and this is not a knock, but if you're Mr. Football in North Dakota,
it don't hold the same weight as Mr. Football in Florida, Georgia, Texas, California.
If you're from North Dakota, baby.
Baby, if you're from North Dakota, you're absolutely right.
But being Mr. Football in the state of Texas, that means no matter what your size is, Johnny, everybody should have been beating down your door and not looking at you and saying, well, he's only 5'11", 173.
The world was perfect.
Maybe it would have went that way.
But we both know that it's not and that people oversee greatness all the time.
We do.
I mean, not necessarily you, but in a media type, people overlook greatness all the time.
People are still knocking down Brock Purdy's door right now.
And all the haters are coming through for what? Mr. Irrelevant to a Super Bowl.
I mean, it's about identifying greatness in somebody in their soul and in their heart.
It's more than just what you can do with your hands and with your arms and with your legs.
Right. I'm looking at the schools,regon rice stanford iowa state baylor
csu colorado state louisiana tech tulsa wyoming and texas a&m and it says i read that you said
that you decommitted from oregon because they had marcus mariotta and you didn't feel
confident enough in yourself that you could beat him out or you get an opportunity to play
i didn't go to Oregon.
Not anything that had to do
with Marcus. They had some really nice unis.
That was the reason I wanted to go.
2011, I think, was
2010. Cam
Newton, Auburn year.
They played LaMichael James and
the Ducks and the Fiesta Bowl
for the national championship.
Those jerseys coming out.
I'm committed.
Woof.
Like crazy.
And when I went there, they made my family.
So when I get into contact with Oregon and Chip Kelly, they didn't give us the roll out the red carpet treatment to go visit.
They're like, you want to come up here on your dime and come to this camp?
We'll let you come in and we'll evaluate you.
And as I get there, meeting with Chip Kelly and doing the whole deal that you do on a recruiting trip,
I get to the, you know, we get to the football portion of it where we're going out on the field.
And I jog out to where I'm supposed to go.
And there's this kid sitting there, 6'4", Hawaiian kid.
And he's in line.
I go, yo, what's up, bro?
You playing receiver today?
And he looks at me and he goes, no, I'm playing quarterback.
And I remember in my head at that time, I'm like, I'm so fucked.
I'm toast.
This kid. So there toast. This kid.
So, there was that initial reaction.
And as we go through the drills, it's just like boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
Two Heisman Trophy winners before it ever happens.
Just so good that when we got off the field that day, we both got offered.
At the same time, at the same day.
And I committed on the spot.
There wasn't no doubt that that's what I wanted to do.
It had nothing to do.
They could have had five, six quarterbacks in that class.
And they told us they were going to take three because they needed depth.
Right.
So I knew that going into it and I committed anyway.
Oh, so now you what about you say you wanted to go to Texas,
but they didn't feel you were big enough to play the position.
So was it UT, A&M, were those the only Texas schools that you were considering?
The Frogs, TCU.
TCU, okay.
I loved them.
I took a visit there and had a buddy from high school that was going to school there, and I went there.
I was like, damn, there's a lot of girls up here.
And they party too, Johnny.
You know they party.
They party for you.
Almost every year, number one party school.
Frogs.
I mean, damn, man, it was crazy.
When I was in high school, I was like, this place is heaven on earth.
It's nice.
It's clean.
The girls, the football program.
Damn, Johnny, you don't mention nice and clean and talk about girls,
and you ain't got the football yet.
At that point in time, I wasn't thinking about football, Shannon.
I'm trying to go have a good time in college.
Okay, okay.
I wanted to be like this mix of entourage on HBO and Blue Mountain State
and all these things I was watching at the time,
and what I was
ingrained in was just like I'm a party boy right I just happened to be good at football a little
bit at that time you know my grind and focus and determination of the game didn't come in until I
got into trouble before my Heisman year at A&M right June of 2012 it all kind of came to a halt when I got arrested. And I got arrested for
going out to Northgate and College Station and drinking too much and blacking out and
waking up in handcuffs. And when that instance happened, it was this meeting with Coach Sumlin
and my mom and my dad. And it was was like you either figure this out today or over the
next couple weeks or your ass is out of here you're gone and then you're everything you work
for your scholarship everything you figure it out now as my family sits there in the room and
someone's looking at him just like we're looking at each other right now he's like you guys figure
it out and when that happened my family moved to college station and they moved in my backyard and i pretty
much moved back in with my mom and my dad and that was the moment that was like all right you hear
what's going on you're smart enough to comprehend this you may be fucking around with your boys
doing what you think you want to do but but the opportunity that's in front of you, you are spoiling and you need to get it together.
And that's when George Whitefield came into my life.
And I went, my mom sent me to San Diego with all the money they probably had saved up for their little saving stuff and sent me out there to work with this guy.
And they trusted him.
this guy and they trusted him. And when I came back, I left before that trip and getting arrested fourth on the depth chart below the freshmen who came in below the two other guys that were
above me in the class. And in 11 days, when I got back and we started training camp,
I was named the starter and handed the keys to the Texas A&M university football team.
That's how much of a difference my focus and my passion
and my energy being put into something turned out to be.
If that situation, you drank into the point of blacking out,
do you remember anything about that night
other than going to the bar with your homies?
I was taking Xanax back then.
And it was a very, like,
weird time in my life
where I was dealing with anxiety
and all these things
and emotions that were going on
that I didn't have any,
you know,
business being able
to handle on my own.
But from that country kid,
proud and tough
and all these things
that I prided myself on,
I wasn't asking for help.
Right.
Shannon, I didn't ask for help when I was sitting in Cleveland.
Right.
So why am I going to do it when I'm in college?
Right.
So I was a lost kid trying to figure out, like,
you know, after my first year at A&M when I redshirted,
at the end of that year, I said, fuck this.
I'm done playing football.
I was finding out how to transfer to TCU to play baseball.
That's how bad it was after my redshirt year. Six and six, we're in the Big 12. I'm going to
Ames, Iowa and all these. That ain't the stadium that I wanted to be playing in.
And there's no disrespect to them whatsoever. The Big 12 is not the SEC. Right. And you see it now.
Only two of them schools in the Big 12 got into the SEC.
Four if you add Missouri and A&M.
Only four of that whole thing really got in.
So there's a difference in program.
There's a difference in stature of dudes.
Any team can beat a team on a given day.
But consistency of a program and legacy, you know,
there's only a couple teams that got into the SEC for a reason like that.
Let's just say Johnny Manziel is a high school senior now.
And Coach Prime is at CU.
And Coach Prime comes down and talks to Johnny and says,
look, Johnny, man, with you, I see big things for you and the program.
And we need you to take us to the heights of where CU football can be.
Would you be interested in playing for Coach Brian?
Without a doubt.
Me and him being Texas guys, you know, he's up in Prosper.
We've had a great relationship for years. And I think looking back on our relationship now, he knew something special in me to the point of
where he, you know, would interject in my life at times or send me a message or like really show
love that he didn't have to do. And if I was a college kid looking now I would say Texas A&M is the best school in the country
right that's a given but number two I would play for a man for a guy who's a leader of men
for a guy who carries himself the way that Prime does and without a doubt I would sign my life
and if I look at it from a different. If I was a father and my son
was looking to go to play for a coach,
I would absolutely,
without a doubt,
unequivocally send him to Coach Brian.
You said you played baseball
from a very young age
until you were about 14 or 15.
How good of a baseball player was Johnny Manziel?
Really good.
What position did you play?
I played shortstop.
I played middle infield. Um, and I loved it. Like it was, it was it for me. I was a
good oppo hitter. Like I felt like I fielded the ball. All right. Um, you know, I had a couple
offers out there and I don't remember exactly what they were at the time. Cause football was so,
you know, overshadowing everything in my life my life um but if you ask anybody that was around me from the time i was 12 to 16 they would
say baseball was like this kid could play you played you played uh a shortstop because you
said jeter was your favorite player you wore the number two so is that kind of how you tried to
model your game you do realize that like jeter was like pristine what's your game
we talk about the one off the field with the baskets and the love notes and everything you had
are we are we talking about that are we talking about el capitan
he did a great job of like you knew what he was doing but you didn't really
know what he was doing but always if you know you know what he was doing. But always, if you know, you know.
You know.
You know.
So you modeled your game after Jeter.
So you're like, okay, I'm going to be a shortstop.
I'm going to be beloved.
Give me the pinstripes, man.
I wanted the pinstripes.
I wanted Yankee Stadium, the whole thing.
So how good was your high school baseball team?
High school baseball team was pretty good.
We had a kid that was two years older than me by the name of Logan Vick.
Okay.
And he ended up committing to Baylor.
He was an all-state kind of guy, lefty, crazy power.
When I played and got to varsity freshman and sophomore year, he played shortstop.
Okay.
So they kind of just plugged and played me wherever and if he pitched i took his position but we kind of played off each other
and kind of when i was in high school when i saw him how good he was he was better than me right
and he did things on a baseball field that i saw on the dan and that yeah he did that every day and he hit some bombs that took out
light poles and did the whole thing he was that guy and when i saw him and where i was i always
thought i ain't gonna be that i i really truly was like he and i'm good but i'm good but i ain't that
and i'll sit here today and give you the honest truth of what it is so that was kind of like all right you got to go do all of this just to get a 50 60 percent of your
scholarship paid for get me on a gridiron right you were i read uh you were selected uh by the
padres in the 28th round the 837th pick of 2014 so why didn't you just just, you know, you didn't have to go,
but you could have said, like, hey, I signed.
I mean, I've been pretty good on the resume.
Like, hey, Padres took your boy.
I signed, you know, but I ain't feel like doing it.
I play football.
Sound like my dad.
My dad still to this day is like, are you going to go back
and maybe go to the Padres and play baseball or something?
I'm like, pops, come on, man.
Pump those brakes.
But see, you look at Kyler.
Kyler was the eighth pick in the draft.
Why do you think guys, a lot of guys,
choose football over baseball
considering the money that baseball players make?
Shohei just got $700.
Aaron Judge makes 40
We see what Mike Trout
And it's guaranteed
Why do you think guys choose
Guys that are really good
And can play both
Choose football over baseball
Because this ain't all that runs the world
I can do the same with 700
As I can do with 50
That ain't it
For me, I'm not motivated by the money like that.
So for me, it's about the rush.
For me, it's about the thrill.
Same thrill I got walking into a nightclub
or partying or this or that.
I've been a guy of thrills.
And when you meet me in that A-gap
or you meet me in the hole somewhere on a draw play
and I mix you up so bad you're in a pretzel,
like that rush to me,
people trying to come after me and knock my head off
and being able to get away and be slippery
and do what I did best in college,
that's what made me feel alive.
That's what made me feel whole.
You graduated early in high school,
enrolled in Texas City,
and why did you feel you needed,
did you feel you needed to do that
or you were just trying to get away from your hometown?
Like, man, I got to get up.
As far as enrolling early?
Yeah.
I saw the greats doing it.
I saw the good quarterbacks in every class were getting on campus early to figure it out.
So I would say it's 50-50 on if I just wanted to get away from the fam and get my own car and be in my own apartment.
And I was in a hurry to grow up, which is what a lot of people do in life.
and I was in a hurry to grow up,
which is what a lot of people do in life.
And sitting back now,
I realize that you should enjoy your time from you're 12 to you're 16, 17 years old.
And it's only getting worse with NIL
and what's going on in the world.
People are treating 13, 14 year old kids
like brands and businesses.
And you see all these kids,
there's social media
and they're trying to make money.
The love of the game
is not about that.
And now we're at the point
where in college
you're getting exposure
to millions and millions of dollars
and it's taking away
the passion and the love
for what it truly is.
If you would have handed me
a million dollars
in my freshman year
when I got to A&M,
you'd have seen some shit.
You might not have made
your sophomore year, Johnny.
I might not.
I definitely wouldn't be
sitting in New York
with that trophy.
I promise you that.
But you would have seen
some shit for sure.
When you had your visit
to Texas A&M
and you're walking around
on campus
and they normally have,
they pull out their best,
you know,
their best ladies
to show you around.
They call them hostesses
and they show you around
and you're walking around
on campus
and you look at the ride and you're like, yeah, I'm coming early.
It's never about the girls for me back then, really, to the max.
I've always been a guy that rides for my dogs and I enjoy the time with my bros and just drinking and smoking or doing whatever.
That was always what it was for me.
So when I went on my visit to Texas A&M, they stuck me with
two of the biggest party boys on the whole team
and they showed me the time of my life
to the point of where I'm in the back of the Uber
and I'm sick.
I had too many shots.
I am lit off my ass.
And I remember being in this Uber
and being like, man, I got to throw up.
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It was December 2019 when the story blew up.
In Green Bay, Wisconsin, former Packers star Kabir Bajabiamila caught up in a bizarre situation.
KGB explaining what he believes led to the arrest of his friends at a children's Christmas play.
A family man, former NFL player, devout Christian, now cut off from his family and connected to a strange arrest.
now cut off from his family and connected to a strange arrest. I am going to share my journey of how I went from Christianity to now a Hebrew Israelite.
I got swept up in Kabir's journey, but this was only the beginning.
In a story about faith and football, the search for meaning away from the gridiron
and the consequences for everyone involved.
You mix homesteading with guns and church and a little
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Join me, Jamie Erdahl, alongside Peter Schrager, Kyle Brandt, and Akbar Bajabiamila for a daily breakdown of the league's biggest stories. From game plan analysis and player interviews,
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Not let these guys see any sign of weakness.
So I just remember being like,
all right, I'm going to see you boys later.
I'll see you in the morning.
And I don't even make it to my room.
I don't even make it back to the room you know my family were in these joined rooms at this hotel and college
station the hilton and they wake up the next day and i'm just outside the door just
and that to me i woke up the next day they're kind of pushing me i'm like success i'm alive. I'm good. And I'm sitting going to meet Coach Sherman at this taco place, Fuego.
And I roll in by 10 minutes late and he looks at me and I'm just white as a ghost.
And Coach Sherman had been with Brett Favre and Green Bay.
He knew what he knew. He knew what was up.
And he was so good that he was just like he knew we knew when he put me with them two dudes from San Antonio,
who I looked up to, it was on.
And he had me.
I'm in the boat.
I'm in the boat.
When you go back and you mention your freshman year,
where did you think you redshirted?
What was it about that?
Was it not being able to play as much as you thought you would?
What transpired in Johnny's mind that kind of led him down the path of where he was with hitting?
I just remember the first day going out to that first practice in the morning.
And you get like one rep.
Is that like young kid?
Right there early.
This is spring practice.
So, you know, all the guys are getting done kid who's there early. This is spring practice.
So, you know, all the guys are getting done with the season.
Then you're into spring.
And I get that one rep and he's like, come back.
And I'm like, seven step drop.
And I let this ball go, Shannon.
And it might have hit the top of the indoor.
This thing.
And I remember Coach Sherman had his play sheet and he threw it down and he goes what the fuck was that i'm nervous these ball tannahill like these balls aired up like yeah
rock hard i need that brady yeah you need a little look give me a little cushion for the
and that's my confidence man i went from mr mr football. Football of Texas to getting in here and being like,
I don't throw it like Jameel Showers does.
Right.
The guy who was behind Tannehill.
I don't throw it like him.
That ball don't come out and it don't come out like that with me.
So then you start to see and you're comparing yourself to other people.
And as that year went on, being the bottom of the barrel guy,
you know, being the guy that's getting ragged on by the seniors and this,
and I'm traveling, like, I'm quiet.
I don't talk much.
I kind of stay in my lane.
I don't ask questions.
I ain't trying to better myself at that point.
I'm just losing confidence week by week and just kind of, like,
getting to the point where I'm like lost.
Is football what I really like?
Right.
And that question was in my life from that point on.
Wow.
So from that point on, you always question whether the importance of football or ability.
I was about to take is Johnny. Does he possess the ability to be what many believe he
can be so you had self-doubt i had self-doubt for sure and i had self-doubt and i didn't get
self-assurance of myself and what i was as a football player until cliff kingsbury walked
in my life and a funny story about cliff kingsbury that i tell to everybody we've been locked in like this since the first day i ever met him
kerrville texas is 40 miles an hour you know away from san antonio so
cliff kingsbury's the university of houston would coach someone has case keenum there obviously
another real texas high school football legend.
And 7 o'clock, our practice starts in Kerrville.
We ran a very military drill style of football program with values.
And a lot of what we talk about at Texas A&M was how my high school football
program was.
So Kingsbury comes out on the field that
first morning and I'm getting ready to warm up and he comes up to me and he dabs me up and he goes,
what's up, bro? I just want to keep it a buck with you. I don't have any scholarships to give you,
but every single coach that I walk into a building in San Antonio, Texas said, you need to get your
ass in the car and come down here and watch this kid practice. So he goes, that's exactly what I'm
doing. And I just want to let you know, I'm here to watch you ball watch this kid practice. So he goes, that's exactly what I'm doing.
And I just want to let you know, I'm here to watch you ball out for a practice.
And one day our paths will cross again.
And I'm nervous.
This is Cliff Kingsbury who played at Texas Tech.
This is another legend in my eye.
Yeah, yeah.
I have a lot of records.
He was a real guy.
Yeah.
He wouldn't know whatever you want to say, but he was him.
Yeah.
At one point in time.
And I didn't know the significance of what that talk as a high school kid was going to lead to being on a stage in new
york four years later three years later but he kept it real with me like that was like yo i can't
take you well i'm here to watch you ball wow and after that me and after the day of the workout he
just sitting over there on the side and he just gives me one of these like you crush that if you would have set out your entire season
of the freshman do you think you would have learned your lesson oh um no i think it took me
having the biggest fear of my entire life failure come fruition. And failure wouldn't have happened for me
if I didn't get to the success that I got.
Does that make sense?
Yes.
Do you think they would have disciplined you?
I think they could have.
I think what I was doing in the off season
and what I was doing in my workouts
and who I was as a team leader,
coming back with the Heisman Trophy,
they should have benched me.
They should have suspended me.
What I was doing, hey, you can't smoke weed.
Babe, give me the fantasy.
Give me the fantasy of what you got, bro.
Talk about us, bought a box of Whiteout White Graves.
We ain't even slowing down, nothing over here.
This is what we're doing
and like from that okay so you win the heisman yeah we come back we play oklahoma in the cotton
bowl smashing smack okay after that that night after the game is the infamous sparklers in the
mouth with the dom and the burberry scarf yeah right after this is where like it starts and
it's like we just smacked our old rival in the big 12 and jerry world in front of 105 right on
new year's day this is where the ego this is where the you know this is where you shift from you know
johnny manziel into johnny football the little transition and then from there it's mr it's
johnny football yeah and now there's no more self-doubt now there's no more self-doubt because and the Johnny football, the little transition. And then from there, it's Johnny football.
Yeah.
And now there's no more self-doubt.
Now there's no more self-doubt because I know what I'm doing in practice.
I know what I'm doing when I see cover two and I'm like, whole shot.
I'm toying with them in practice.
They're mad.
I mean, the only thing they have on me in practice and the setting that I'm seeing the live rep bullets fire
is they can't tell when a sack happens in practice because the setting that i'm seeing the live rep bullets fire is they can't
tell when a sack happens in practice because we ain't sacking people right and you know in a game
you know practice i'm running and give somebody a little move and i'm just looking at him like
ain't no way you making that tackle on the field buddy you can hop and hoop around and do your whole
defensive thing all you want you know out there under them lights no that ain't gonna happen
brother it ain't gonna it's not gonna happen right and that's not me speaking out of my ass
i got film right no i got i got stuff to show you that like i wasn't what i was more than what
you thought i was especially as a running quarterback i'm at the SEC. 1,400 yards rushing in my freshman year. It's
documented.
The first freshman in NCAA history
to pass for 3,000 yards and
rush for 1,000 yards in the same season.
The first player to pass for 300 yards and rush
for 100 yards in the same game three times.
Broke Archie Manning's 43-0 record
for 520 yards of
total offense with 576.
Owns all these freshmen record 11 and 2 rank
number five best since 1956 beat oklahoma 41 13 in the cotton bowl produced 516 yards of
offense for touchdowns with a record 229 yards rushing when you look when you do you understand at the time what you're actually doing?
When the ESPN Heisman list came out about week eight, nine,
is when I started to kind of see like, whoa, because this is, you know, my life growing up with my boys was NCAA football, the video game,
the road to glory, the road to the Heisman, creating a player and being able to go do these things.
Pick your school, go to the, you know, do all of that.
And now I'm living it.
Right.
So the focus doesn't shift to like getting the Heisman.
It just focuses on like taking this team to heights that we haven't been before and when you walk into Tuscaloosa Alabama and do what happened
that day something that leaves a legacy what 2012 it's 2012 years later where I walk down the street
every day of my life and somebody comes up and dabs me up and goes 15 and a half point underdogs
Alabama I'll never forget that day for the rest of my life that's what kind of impact that day
had on college football and I hear it every day see it every day you see alabama on the schedule uh and you're on the heisman watch list you mentioned your 15 point
underdogs and you understand what alabama is that's coach saban you know the the dogs that he
has on that roster you know the dogs that he sends to the nfl every year multiple what's going through
your mind do you ever think man if i can go to alabama
if i can go to tuscaloosa and beat bama oh they got to take notice can't think like that can't
think like that and be successful because you're putting pressure on yourself that's unneeded okay
i got 95 of the country that's saying alabama is going to beat us what do we have to lose right i
remember being on the bus on the way of the game
and putting on the movie 300. This part comes on where it's give to them nothing, but take from
them every single thing, everything. And that was my mindset going into the game that like everybody
in this stadium expects you to lose. Everybody in this state is rooting against you. We got maybe
20, 30,000 loyal Aggies scattered through about in the stands.
We already lost two games that year.
What's the third going to do?
We're out of the SEC title.
We're out of the national championship conversation.
Let's just try and go ball.
And Cliff Kingsbury put together an unbelievable game plan for us offensively
that highlighted our strengths,
that kept us from being too vulnerable
on a defense like that and for the first half of that game they don't know what the fuck is going
on we're running option with go routes and all we are just unleashing the cliff kingsbury like
creativeness of a football playbook for an air raid. You know, this wasn't old Mike Leach air raid.
This wasn't anything that Lincoln was doing wherever.
This was just its own subtle thing or own, you know, particular thing.
Right.
That was tailored to me being able to run the ball the way that I could,
as well as having an unbelievable like offensive line
to be able to handle what they were throwing at us.
Luke Jokl, Jake Matthews, Cedricric aboya these are all first round picks in the nfl and some really really
solid players right wow i forgot you guys had that kind of offensive line yeah so that's why
they were able to hold up joker was the number two pick in the draft i think jake matthews
with the top 10 pick in the draft you guys were loaded mike evans swoops was very underrated mike evans and
that's somebody that man what a brother to me man it makes me even emotional even think about it we
got to come in at the same time in red shirt and that red shirt year we were tearing their ass up
so much that i went to my locker one
day later in the year and they took my red jersey so they couldn't hit me and they put a black jersey
on me to be able to smack me in practice because me and mike were doing our thing we were doing our
we were starting that recipe of that pot and we were starting to cook and then as that year goes
on that redshirt freshman year that we play together you start to see a kid who's like a
man amongst boys out there and like really six five with that frame like he was always what he
was but that confidence that started to grow in him me and him had this telepathy same way you
probably had with a quarterback back in the day where it's just like that was a route right quick easy he knew everything and me and him had that relationship
that was like special special wow and it'll never be taken from us you know i can sit here and talk
to him and still do the same signals it's 12 years later i can throw a peace sign he's gonna go to
the crib right is what that means every time
so you know to have a special bond with somebody like that that kid that guy that man means the
means the fucking world to me when alabama started to come back you looked at reporting you said f
alabama f saban and that you were going to score why were you so confident? Because the crowd had gotten back in it. They're going haywire, defense, just freshmen.
Why were you so confident that you were going to get this football
and you were going to go down the field and score?
Yeah, well, the first half of that game, first quarter, we're up 20 to nothing.
So that stadium, you could hear a pin drop.
Yeah.
And Tuscaloosa doesn't get like that very much, if ever.
I mean, you can count on both your hands how many times they've lost since 2010, for the most part.
Yes.
So confidence in what we were doing, you know, we lost our first game of the year to Florida.
Cool, first game of the year, whatever.
Then we get up on LSU and we end up blowing that game where I feel like we really should have won.
That was our turning point in the season.
After that, we started to get together and come together
that we didn't want to be, you know, the weak link of this team.
We needed that offense and who we had to be the catalyst,
to be the center point of that team,
and we needed our defense just to kind of hold on.
So as much as
the Tuscaloosa and the Alabama game is about me and the offense it's not the way I look at it
our defense got multiple stops got a pick late on like the last drive is there on the eight yard
line to go in and take the lead that changes things we get a pick we get the ball out and then there's 50
seconds left in the game we are on like third and seven Saban has a timeout we run a run play we get
like four we're backed up on our own 20 so it's punt time now we're gonna punt it to who I mean
could have been it could have been Amari Cooper. Whoever they had back there was a menace.
And we had put this plan all week of a special teams punt scenario
where we go on the hard count.
It's third and four.
We go hard count.
They jump.
We touch them.
First down, mic drop.
So you have your offense, what we did in the first half.
We scored 20 in the first quarter.
We only scored nine the rest of the game.
We're hanging on for dear life.
The plays that we made on that one score drive,
the six points we scored in the second half,
was off a turnover, wheel route down the sideline, dime,
corner route, next play, dime.
Two plays, touchdown, very opportunistic
and going with the flow of the game and then you seal the game with a special teams play so you got offense defense special teams
we walk into the locker room in Tuscaloosa and we burn that thing down total team win total
completely without a doubt total team win if they have the college football playoff in 2011
you guys have and a and m gets it do you believe y'all win the national championship we got to play
bama again probably so that's another like knock it out i think we have a very good chance i think
we got better and even from the tuscaloosa game the alabama game up until the cotton bowl the
cotton bowl was our best showing of the entire year.
Oh, yeah. Y'all put it together, man.
We did, and that's just where our, like,
that was the pinnacle of what our team was that year,
and we showed it at the last game on the biggest stage.
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Obviously, you won the Heisman, but you go to New York for the Heisman ceremony.
And you're up against Manti Teo.
And you know what transpired with all that situation, being catfished.
Did you guys talk to anything about that?
So how was he during that time amazing
and his parents and family the way they were with my family you know you'll see my dad and my mom
and the videos of the Heisman ceremony with lays around their neck so it was a very um
you know we were close throughout that week right I thought he his family was amazing I thought
Manti was amazing you know I didn't know anything about whatever anything else was until later from the doc.
And during those times, we even played against each other when I was in Cleveland
and he was in San Diego, I think.
So we always had a good relationship.
I always respected him for what he stood for and who he was as a person
and who his family was.
Right.
I'm going back and i'm looking
at guys that have won the heisman from the sec you look at joe burrow cam newton tim tebow
kyle murray baker mayfield you were the first freshman to ever win it and you accumulated
sec record then 4600 yards of total offense where would you put yourself if we're having if we're
having a a college and i'm not going to the nfl because obviously the guys with the prototypical size
but where would you think johnny manziel see heisman trophy season
would rank among those guys behind burrows
behind burrow but in front of camp no what about uh i would say for me in my opinion joe burrows
is probably the best heisman season to ever happen.
And that's just like, look at the numbers.
It's not even a comparison.
For me, it's him and Barry.
And the swagger and what he did it with.
And I think it's a no-brainer.
I think, yeah, I agree.
Him and Barry somewhere up there at the top, stand alone type of thing.
Cam, for me, is of cultural importance and you know coming in from
blend junior college and going to auburn i remember that and then they played the team
oregon that i was committed to at the time right so it leaves an impact and a memory on me and i
love cam newton right to the max love what he stands for love what he what he's about love him to death and always have he
knows that and so i think you go joe burrow i think you go cam and then i'm right below that
and i respect bakers and kylers and you can nitpick all this all you want because at the end
of the day it's all about getting to that stage in new york and getting that trophy right now
you're splitting hairs on who's greater than who and all collectively as a whole.
We're fucking badass.
Right.
This concludes the first half of my conversation.
Part two is also posted and you can access it
to whichever podcast platform you just listened to part one on.
Just simply go back to Club Che Che profile
and I'll see you there.
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