Club Shay Shay - Johnny Manziel Part 2
Episode Date: February 21, 2024Johnny Manziel continues the conversation with self-awareness of the spectacle that followed him in college and acknowledges the tens of millions of dollars he might have garnered in today's NIL era a...nd passionately advocates for the NCAA to return Reggie Bush his Heisman Trophy. Johnny answers if the infamous "Drake Curse" is real, and Manziel explains why he couldn't have played for the Dallas Cowboys. Lastly, Money Manziel apologies to Skip Bayless, Drake, and LeBron for not reaching the heights they expected him to during his NFL career. This episode goes into overtime with the amount of sports anecdotes, reflections, and humorous confessions Johnny offers as signal caller. #VolumeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Part two is underway.
You win the Heisman as a freshman,
you come back your sophomore year, and you have some issues.
We start the season off with,
well, it's reported that Johnny Manziel
signed 4,000 items and this and that.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
Allegedly, Johnny signed 4,000 items for free.
So, Johnny, you got, why put yourself in that situation where it could be allegedly
i got a head on my shoulders man i'm smart enough to know what's going around me
i'm seeing the money fly around me right like i'm not walking through that same bookstore
watching those number two jerseys fly off the shelf.
Break me off.
Where am I cut?
It's everywhere else for everybody else.
Yes.
I got $700 a month coming in on stipend.
That ain't enough for me to do what I want to do.
You need some bands a month coming in, huh?
I need 70 bands.
70 bands?
Come on!
Seven? Seventy? how the hell am i traveling
to miami with seven bands what are we doing with seven bands here i need 70 wow let me ask you this
let's just say for the sake of argument when johnny manziel his heisman trophy season
and the season after the NIL is in existence
how much Johnny how much Johnny football get probably 10 million a year I could have done
five on my own with the Instagram I could have done five million a year on my own just through
the people and connections I had on my phone right that's what a lot of people don't understand is
during this time and during this rise and a lot of where my downfall probably came from is, you know, I get on my phone and get on Twitter and be like, yo, Shannon Sharp, just follow me.
Come on, James Harden, Drake, LeBron.
Are you partying with him?
I'm a DM away from being Rockets courtside.
I'll be there in an hour and a half.
I'm a DM away from being Rockets courtside.
I'll be there in an hour and a half.
My access that I had to the world and people that I wanted to be around
was limitless with just my cell phone
and a house and college station.
Had Johnny Manziel been a little bit more discreet,
you probably still could have gotten that 10.
But because IG and you posted it you at live and
you had all these places with the star they're like man ain't no way hell no college athlete
have that kind of access unless he getting broke off my family's rich yeah and so is that and see
you play to it because you can use that you know johnny doing that man johnny wouldn't take no money his family rich well little did they know johnny ain't worth 50 million dollars like being
reported correct so i wasn't discreet at that point in my life not at all i wasn't calculated. I wasn't precise in how I was moving. I was 19 years old.
I don't know nothing about the real way of the world.
Right.
I don't know nothing about what happens in Miami.
Right.
I'm a young, naive kid out here trying to get a bag on my own.
Right.
I don't know nothing.
And I can't tell my parents.
I can't tell my coaches.
I ain't got nobody to bounce this information off of.
And this is the point where I start like recluse into myself. And like,
big problem in my life, Shannon, has been I wake up every day for the last 10, 12 years and do
exactly as I please and exactly as I want every single day. And as I'm moving forward in my life right now,
I believe that as a man in life to humble yourself and to be able to get to where you want to go,
you have to do things that don't, you don't want to do. Right. You have to do things that make you
uncomfortable. You can't just wake up and go down this path of Lottie da I'm gonna do everything as
I please in that moment of time, That's going to make you soft.
That's going to make you, you got all these things that come with that, in my opinion.
If you go out and put yourself in uncomfortable situations,
if you go out and work hard for what you want,
which isn't the most glorified way all the time,
it's not fun to go work hard and put your time and your effort into something,
especially something you may not really love truly deep down to your core So, you know what i've learned in life is, you know, make yourself uncomfortable
Do things that you don't want to do to help others, you know be selfless
Find a way to give back more than just thinking about yourself
And i'm sitting here today saying at 19 years old,
I was only about self.
You know, that first year as my Heisman year,
there was a lot less of that.
I had my camaraderie with the team and I was a leader.
I was there for my dogs.
And then as that shifts, I became a bad teammate.
I became a bad role model.
I became a bad example for what a Texas A&M University football player should be and an ambassador for my school at that point in time. And I still to this day hold a lot of shame about things that I did from 19 to 27, 28 years old.
years old. Shame, Shannon, to where I couldn't sleep at night, to where I went into the LA and the Hollywood Hills and I hid, hid from everybody except the TMZ cameras in the middle of the night.
And that for me has taken a decade to come to terms with what happened in my life and what I
did to myself. Because at the end of the day, I don't have anybody to blame but myself. My mom
and dad didn't raise me to be that. And Coach Sumlin or Coach Kingsbury or any of those guys at Texas A&M didn't raise me to be
that way. My teammates sure as hell didn't push me down that path of being there. So why did it
happen? You know, those are the questions that have taken me a decade to find out what makes me
who I am and coming to terms and accepting who I am the good okay great
that's awesome that's unequivocally me the bad okay let's find out and identify
what that is and be better bit by bit day by day to ensure that what happened
in the past ain't gonna happen again moving forward. If Johnny Football persona had never been created,
do you still go down that path?
Yeah, I do, without a doubt.
From that day in Kerrville, you know, from getting to there
and being that guy and, like, getting a rise out of it
and getting notoriety and people coming around you.
It's fame is a...
It's a drug. It's addictive.
Oh, it's a high.
You chase the dragon of fame, man.
You chase the dragon of clout.
And it is very, very addictive.
And it is a problem that I dealt with in my life.
And if you would have asked me in 2014 or 15,
I would have been like, nah.
Because for a long time,
I didn't see myself as the true level of fame
of what I really was.
Who damned you out for those those autograph signings? Somebody damned you out.
Somebody got stuck with a lot of merch, a lot of stuff that they couldn't sell.
And then from there, they got stuck with maybe like twenty thousand dollars worth of product.
And the compliance department was cracking down on any autographs that were on eBay and this and that.
So they lost their avenue of how to get rid of their product.
Right.
And they got stuck.
And the guy went to the University of Texas, was in Houston.
He blew the whistle and then it all started to crumble down.
And it happened quick.
If you'd have had somebody behind the scenes working, because Texas A&M is those boosters.
They want what you gave them.
You gave them a Heisman Trophy.
You almost led them to a national championship.
If you'd have had somebody working behind the scenes to say, look, let's keep this kid happy.
This is all it's going to take.
Because you mentioned your dad.
You said, told Kevin Sumlin, you didn't know anything about this.
For three mil, that's a drop in the bucket,
considering that you could have made 10.
So I would say, like, for five million, he'll stay.
Won't ever say a word about this.
And you say, Kevin Sumlin looked at him like, bro,
we're going to keep this train rolling without Johnny.
I needed Cliff.
I needed Kingsbury for that situation to go in a perfect way.
So you needed Cliff to be your offensive coordinator because he left.
I needed Cliff to be my offensive coordinator,
and I needed Cliff to be that role model in my life
when I got too out of whack.
Because that first year, my freshman redshirt, my Heisman year,
I was skirting the lines a little bit.
But every time I started to get here, he went,
pull you back.
Every time.
And I looked at him.
From that day he came on that high school field
to come look at me and tell me he couldn't offer me.
I had a trust with him and a bond with him
that I still have to this day.
And when he left,
the fuck sucked.
I'm looking at this they said they sold 45 million number two texas a&m adidas jersey maybe 45 million in revenue 45 million a lot of jerseys texas well okay 45
and so if they gave you say here johnny, Johnny, we're going to give you 5%.
I'll take 10.
Damn, Johnny, 5% is much better than what you're getting.
You're right, you're right, you're right.
Okay, fine, fine.
But when you see Texas A&M making 45 million in jersey sales
and Johnny Manziel getting $700 in a stipend,
that doesn't sit right with you, does it?
It didn't.
So you start concocting a way how you
can get how you can get some of that pie exactly i got my pie but you knew you knew that it was
wrong you knew that you could get yourself in trouble and potentially the university but at
that point in time what yes um i knew that it was against the rules i know that i'm putting myself in a position that
may not work out well for me or my university but at that time once again going back to selfish
johnny manziel you know i'm thinking about how to get that i'm trying how i get that stipend
bumped up type of like i'm thinking about the money at this point. I don't expect myself, even after winning the Heisman Trophy,
to be able to go get drafted.
I didn't know if that was a sure thing to go to the NFL draft
or be able to make any money.
So I know what I needed then.
I needed more money.
And with that money that I got as well,
I took care of my dogs in the locker room, you know,
in a big college locker room, there's dudes in there that sending half their stipend or all
their stipend back home. And they're taking six to go boxes out of the athletic facility. They go
into the apartment and there's no lights on. You see, and this is what I see. People come from all
different walks of life that walk into these locker rooms.
They don't come from Kerrville, Texas, from the suburbs all the time.
They come from the trenches.
And I bond with people that come from nothing.
Me and Mike Evans like this.
He's from Galveston, Texas, born on the island.
It is no joke down there.
Where he's from is a different way of life.
And I've seen, because of the sport that I played,
how all these people come in from different walks of life and like i've seen because of the sport that i played how all these people come in from different walks of life and it's not as peachy as you think it may be it's it's not all
rainbows and butterflies out there for some of these kids that come in and it's tough and i took
care of my dogs right now all this money didn't just go to me a lot of it did but if my boys
needed something they got it and if i wasn't there that
club and that tab at the club was picked up always did your parents know you was getting this money
oh yeah because you're breaking them off too huh you ain't although you how you ain't break mom
and dad off mom and dad are doing fine mom and dad are living at the biggest golf course in town.
Dad's got his best job he's ever had.
Right.
What you want?
Did you help him get the job?
No.
My dad's independent on his own to be able to go do that.
I'm sure my name and what was going on, of course, might have helped it.
But, you know, I was finding out and it was hard to just be like, what do you do with this cash?
You know, I can't book a flight.
How are you going to go somewhere?
Like, what do you do?
How do you check into a hotel?
How do you do this?
So it was like, you have any credit cards?
You ain't get no credit card, Johnny?
I ain't know nothing about a credit card till I got to Cleveland, Ohio.
I know nothing.
I would go buy American Express gift cards for a thousand bucks in cash and then have that.
And then I got to keep track of how much is on every balance and stuff.
I'm going through Amex gift cards like this going out of style.
Right. So I didn't know anything about a credit card. I didn't know anything about credit.
Nothing. Let's read you.
Reggie Bush, similar situation. I guess his parents took took took some money over there living in a house
and he ended up having his heisman trophy taken from him do you believe reggie should get his
heisman trophy back without a doubt it's legal now what reggie did then is legal now that somebody
could do right it wouldn't make him ineligible now even though it did at the time and in the
grand scheme of things i probably did
way worse than reggie right and everybody's gonna sit here and be like why does he still have his
heisman where reggie doesn't i can tell you the exact reason why i explained this on twitter and
people didn't really understand it but the way i was told because the last three four years i've
been walking back into the heisman i I've been rallying the boy, talking
with the guys. There's chatter, there's chirp going around that nobody in this crew, in this
Heisman fraternity, it sits right with us that Reggie ain't up there with us every year. It makes
every one of us sitting there, Troy Smith, all these guys that I sit next to, he deserves to be
on that stage with us every year, unequivocally, without
a doubt, without a question. One of the best college football players to ever lace him up,
and a very, very good argument to be the best ever in college football.
Do you believe he'll get his trophy back?
What I've been told is that Reggie can't get his Heisman trophy back until the NCAA
makes his records and his
accolades on the field for that year reinstated. As we know what the NCAA is now, what do you think
the chances are that they're going to do the right thing? Not looking likely. Not looking likely,
and it's sad. And from the top down, from the NCAA, they've been so wrong with so many things
that you would hope that one day
they would do the right thing and do this.
I'm going to continue to do everything that I can in my power,
whatever that may be.
I'm just the little guy.
I'm just the old first freshman to win it.
I ain't got the clout like I used to
to be able to really make that happen.
But for what I can and my part,
I will always stand on this table right here for Reggie Bush
and do anything that I can in my power to make sure
that it's possible for him to even get his trophy back.
What's your best guess as to why Coach Saban walked away from the game,
still coaching at the highest level?
I think the NIL has changed everything for what he's known you know I think it's made it so much more hands-on
and continually having to stay on these guys because of how many people are in their ear it's
not it's not the firm handshake anymore it's not the old school ways of the world where your word
is your bond and this and that is a very wishy-washy
where's the money today right and if it's today somebody who can outbid you where's your loyalty
just 16 17 year old kids we're talking about right so in my opinion Saban doesn't want to
deal with that anymore and what better way than to go out the way that he did you know from what
I've seen and what I saw in the media, he's still very involved in the program.
I mean, he retires and then goes back into the office at work the next day.
So Nick Saban is it.
He's him.
He is exactly what you expect him to be.
And when I met him, you know, in New York that second year of 2013 when I went back, I remember him walking into the room.
AJ McCarron was a finalist, I think.
And I don't think I remember.
I think AJ was a finalist.
And he walks into the room, and it's just like,
I remember it like this cloud,
huge aura of a person walking in.
He's not that big.
But the way he carries himself
and the aura that he has around him is like nobody
you're ever going to come in contact with and I remember him walking into the room and shaking
his hand and talking to him for a second and then that conversation kind of fades and we go on about
the night and for the rest of my life I'll never forget that moment of him walking in that guy
is it a situation now with the NIL no matter how great a coach is you see
in basketball coach k walks away roy williams walks away some of the pantheon greats have like
so now it's really a level playing field because alabama is like okay we're gonna put you in the
nfl but now somebody say well they're gonna put you in the nfl but we somebody will say, well, they're going to put you in the NFL, but we're going to give you $2 million.
So now has it leveled the playing field or has it created an unequal playing field?
There was already an unequal playing field, I feel like.
So if anything, it's given the littler guys a chance.
It gives the Colorados, right?
Yeah.
Get a guy like Prime.
Take your program from here to here.
You're getting a little bit more level.
You've got the transfer portal.
Colorado can now take people from Alabama or Georgia that don't want to go there
just based off the transfer portal.
So I think it's brought it up and made it a little even.
College football goes in those waves of like you've got your Florida dynasty.
You've got your USC one.
You have Texas with a little run in there.
You've got your Ohio State. You have Texas with a little run in there. You know, you got your Ohio State.
You got your Bama, Georgia.
You have your runs of like, I didn't want to go on this whole SEC tangent.
Be all biased.
But it is what it is.
It is what it is.
So, I mean, there has always been teams every year throughout the year that are a little bit above and below the others.
You can always have the little guy that comes up and has that magical run. But for the most part, you know, it is a little lopsided. It is hard for those Akrons or
bowling. Like it is harder for those D1 lower schools to ever really get in the conversation.
And in my opinion, I think this is a better way or only way that they can really ever even recruit
on the same level as anybody else. And that'll mostly be through the transfer portal.
Yeah. But do you see these teams now?
You see it probably Alabama and Ohio State and Michigan and all these teams.
They're like, they're probably going to their boosters or they're going to their college.
And look, man, we got to have a fund.
We got to have 25, 30 million dollars in order to get these kids.
And now you see, look, and talking to Coach Prime,
he's like, you know,
you see guys going into the portal
because these guys have already been in college.
And so you kind of know,
okay, they understand the college.
They got to go to class.
They got to go to study hall.
They've already played college ball
and played at a high level.
So it's a little easier for you
to break a guy off that's in the portal
because, you know, look at Addison. He wins the Bolitnikoff and he changes schools. it's a little easier for you to break a guy off that's coming that's in the portal because you
know look at addison he wins the bullet in the car and he changes school that's unheard of you
would have never got a guy that wins a buckets or win an award do you a water like that uh the
gursky or whatever the case may be the thorpe and transfer school johnny what if i told you that
after cliff kingsbury left and i won the Heisman that I thought about
maybe going somewhere else too?
How much it was going to take for them to break you off
for you to even consider it?
I don't know at that point in time.
You know, I was thinking about like,
you know, I loved A&M,
but this way that like...
Could you feel the shift?
Could I feel the shift?
I don't know. I could see that I was
getting used a little bit into what they needed me to do to have their master plan, right? A&M
had their vision of what they needed with this hype and the success to get the program as a whole
where they needed to be. Unfortunately, where they needed to go and where i needed to go and grow as a human being and as a
football player weren't always step in step they weren't always aligned right do i have hard
feelings about it or do i feel any kind of way about it right now absolutely not i love my school
i love what happened i love walking back into that stadium and feeling like i had a piece
of putting one of these bricks in the walls outside.
And I can carry myself and say that.
I don't think it's the house of Johnny Bill.
That's what they call it.
They can call it what they want.
You got to like that.
Like?
Yeah.
That's disrespectful to Mike Evans.
That's disrespectful to Jake Matthews.
Well, Mike Evans, they didn't call Mike Evans the Mike Football.
They call you Johnny Football.
They didn't call Jake Matthews a Luke Jokel.
Okay, so I get the praise for what we do as a team
because my play is special on the field.
Let me ask you a question.
When you were a little kid, they're like, all right,
who want to play O-line?
Raise your hand.
Who want to play DB?
Raise your hand.
Who want to play quarterback?
Exactly.
They chose the position.
So it's a positional thing.
You're giving the quarterback the rightful piece of the pie.
Now, which one of those guys was flying private?
Probably just me.
Okay, who was buying jewelry and cars?
Probably just me.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, who was hanging with Drake and James Slick and courtside of James Harden?
Definitely just me.
Yes, now you understand.
It was the house that Johnny built.
Okay, so you put it that way. It's the house that Johnny built. Okay.
So you put it that way.
I mean, you ain't never going to get me to admit to it.
But help me understand this, John.
I'm trying.
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Let's figure out, how you get suspended for half a game?
I mean, that's like I'm going to suspend you from school, but you
don't have to come to first, second, and third,
but you get to come fourth, fifth, and sixth.
You know what I asked? I asked if I could be
suspended for the second half because we'd be up
so much in the first half. Right.
They said no.
I mean, so what was it like knowing that you're not going to play
the first half and then you got to come in, I mean,
you come in cold the second half?
Nerve-wracking.
Really, really the height of any nerves that I've ever had
other than that Bengals game that I started my first game in the NFL.
Crazy nervous so much the first play that we drew up this beautiful bunch formation
with the outside motion coming in, and we knew we were going to get him in the trail,
and we knew it'd split.
We knew we'd do the scissor off in quarters.
He's going to take that corner for sure, and we're going to bust right down the middle.
I catch the ball, I take three steps, and I'm seeing red at this point and i drop back and the line opens up and i just see this one
linebacker and i'm just looking at him down the eyes and like i'm not even seeing nothing back
here right me and you come on that was how i started my games in college and we started with
so many running plays because when i got hit the first time and I got a pop,
it settled me down to the point of where I could go on about our offensive scheme for the first day.
So going into that game, you know, suspended the first half, coming back out the first play of the second half,
we draw up this beautiful touchdown and it works.
But I'm just like so laser focused and locked in on getting hit so I can kind of settle down and go.
And, you know, that half went fine.
I don't think we played very good football because it's hard to get that,
you know, flow going when you're not playing in the first half and you come in in the second.
But really, really almost the pinnacle of my nerves of college football
in that setting.
But, Johnny, you kept signing autographs.
You kept partying.
Did you feel those things helped you? I mean, did you feel that you functioned and you played better while doing those
things? That's a great question. That's a really good question. Because at that point in time in
my life, I felt like the harder I partied, the better that I played. How? My freshman year.
Tuesdays and Thursdays were beer with the baseball boys at
the house playing games and Thursdays were hitting Northgate going to the town drunk as you could get
with all the dogs Friday was the walkthrough I go to a walkthrough at 10 a.m in the morning
dying smelling like a liquor steal like a liquor store
and then I would go through that walk-through,
and you can ask anybody that was on that team,
and I hit those walk-throughs hard.
Right.
Hand in the fake.
I'm taking off down the sideline for 20, 30 yards, running back.
I'm sweating it out.
You try to sweat it out.
Oh, yeah.
Then we get on the plane.
Right.
Get to the hotel.
Meetings.
This is the system, and we're winning.
Right.
Now we're 11-2.
We beat Bama, and this whole year is Tuesday, Thursday, bang, bang,
all week, every time, like clockwork, every game of the season that year.
And I'm getting better as it goes on.
I ain't losing a step until that first offseason in 2013.
That's when I'm starting to smoke more weed.
That's when I'm partying a lot more. And then from there, I'm not taking care of myself in the way
that I did the year before to go be special. And my numbers, my second year, totally were better.
That's what I needed to do at that point in time. I needed to get you guys or whoever it was on first take or this and that
Talking in the right direction that this is these are my you know
This guy went back and did better than he did the year before so therefore
What is the next step the next step is the league the show the big thing and that's where I was at in my life
I felt like I did enough
from
Okay, I was living my life at that point in time to appease what other people expected for me or wanted for me
I wasn't living really
In the right way
I mean
Obviously I wasn't but like I was there to like tell people what they wanted to hear and like had these people around me
This is how you need to carry yourself and in that i lost who i was and when you lose who you are you resort to other
things in your life to numb that pain or to find yourself and in that i found smoking weed
and that i found partying and that kind of took over from there 2013 on
And that kind of took over from there, 2013 on.
And there's no reason,
there's no reason other than exactly what my behavior was 2013
on why 2014 and 15 in Cleveland didn't work out.
There's no secret that I was doing the same thing
on a Thursday night in Cleveland
that I had been doing for the Thursday night
in College Station.
Number one, because I'm the backup.
I just got handed all this money and I'm not taking it seriously enough
because I don't know how to be a profession.
I have no idea.
Now I get thrown into this organization
with a head coach that wants nothing to do with me
from the day that I get there.
With the defensive staff
that our first day of offensive install,
day one, they're running six DBs on the field in practice.
I can't even point
a fucking mic. I ain't never taken a snap under center. But Jimmy O'Neal or whatever and Mike
Petten are going to come out to the field and throw fucking eight DBs on the field the first
day of an install. Talk about your confidence getting busted quick. Now I feel like I can't
do what I was great at in Cleveland.
And I'm partying and doing what I thought made me great. So you
see how all these things are compounding together
to equal a huge
disaster. You didn't feel you could do in Cleveland what
you had been great at at Texas A&M? Not at all.
I had no confidence.
I hear you mention, you said on Tuesday night
we had this with the baseball team.
Thursday night we did this with the other boys.
I ain't heard nothing about no school.
I was a good
student. How? How what?
You parted the whole... My dad,
when I was in high school and middle school
growing up, if I didn't have A's or B's
on my report card, and that first
little six-week grade and period
comes out of the three-week mark, if I got a C
on that thing, I'm grounded
until I can get an A and
B on that next report card. That was my rules forever. So if I got a C, you're grounded.
So you ain't going nowhere. You're doing chores around the house. I'm going to show you what your
education is going to mean to you. So when I got to A&M, I went from a business major, sports management.
And then when I went to Heisman, I go to ag leadership and development.
That's a little bit different than the Mays Business School.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So now I can do my classes online.
I can do it.
The school was never the problem for me.
Right. If I applied myself in the slightest bit, I was smart enough to be able to go in and do college.
I wasn't ever,
I wasn't one of those guys that needed the study hall or the this and that. And I had a lady that was in our athletic department named Lee Hood and Ms. Hood saved my life academically. Just
keeping me focused on what it was and not getting too far. And she was like a true mother to me in
that football program. And she is the reason that I was able to even leave Texas A&M and have an opportunity to
go to the NFL.
And the thing is, Johnny, though, what I've learned is that most good athletes, great
athletes can compartmentalize.
And it seems like you were really great at compartmentalizing.
OK, party.
I'm a party.
Get school.
Get school.
Party.
Party.
Got practice.
Practice. Play. Party. Got practice. Practice.
Play.
Play.
You were able to do, in each instance, be at your absolute best.
Or as you said on Thursday to Friday, at your absolute worst.
Yep.
I think I was able to do that with the people that I had around me.
You know, with the Lee Hood, with these coaches,
and like with the right people that Texas A&M did have around.
Right. If they weren't there, I wouldn't wouldn't have had a fighting chance at all.
But because of how special some of the people were in that building, it gave me an opportunity to flourish in the smallest of amounts when it comes to that stuff.
I'm looking at I read this is like the rumor was you came from oil money.
Did you have oil money?
My great-grandpa, when they came over from Lebanon, they found, you know, oil in East Texas.
And it very much was.
You know, my family was very, very big.
So my grandpa, he had like six brothers and sisters.
They hit this huge oil well so when i'm growing up i don't even realize that we have a farm and tyler with a runway and a hanger in the
back and all this stuff i didn't even really know what it was my uh my grandpa because of what my
great grandpa had done they had the opportunity to be boys' boys, right?
Take the planes.
They were big into boxing.
So Jack Dempsey was a huge family friend of theirs.
They tell me stories about going on these hunts
with Mickey Mantle and Joe DiMaggio and all these guys.
And I've seen the pictures.
It's as real as it gets.
So you have this, like, what you saw from me
and the lifestyle that I was living,
I think was like minorly ingrained in me
for what I saw as a kid and what they were doing
in the 50s, 60s, 70s.
So it wasn't a far reach for you to like,
to have what you have because your family did have money.
So it wasn't a stretch for you to be flying private and doing all that stuff because your family did have money so it wasn't a stretch for you to be flying private
and doing all that stuff because your family came for money so you could pass it off my dad gave me
this or my family gave me this and so the incident wouldn't even matter now how could they prove it
they couldn't because you you you had i just hold on well, in 2013, he said, it's not Garth Brooks money, but it's a lot of money.
And I don't even know the full detail of it, right?
Like I got, you know, from 18 years old, I'm thrust onto the spotlight.
Now I have my own life that like I'm living.
That's like separate from that, like family stuff.
It's not as cohesive anymore, right?
The fame and everything that comes with what happened to me will break a family apart very, very quick.
Who are we going to the game with?
Who gets these tickets?
It's all about the clout and on all this stuff.
So we as a family were tested and tried throughout this rise as well.
It wasn't just a me thing.
And that's what I didn't realize until I got cut in Cleveland.
And I, and I was a couple of years removed from that. And I remember thinking and hearing from
my mom, like, you don't know how hard it is for us to walk into a restaurant in East Texas.
We're dealing with the ramifications of your actions that are going on every day. So when
you're going out here acting like an asshole, I got to walk into my grocery
store and get treated like one. And why is that fair to your father and I? And it hit me like a
ton of bricks. Is that where the change came? Because you saw the toll, not only with, I mean,
I don't know, maybe you're the last person to see the toll that is taken on you. But when you hear
your mom tell you the toll that is's taking on them because of your actions,
and they shouldn't have to suffer
for what you're doing to yourself.
It's a start.
That was the start of it.
Definitely wasn't the final thing that got me to the point
of what I'm being able to do and sit here with you today.
I think that's a complete understanding
and self-awareness of oneself. Okay. So I, without a doubt, wholeheartedly know myself and what I've done good, what I've done bad. I'm the only one
that knows the truth that I've seen through my eyes about everything. So when I got to the point where I'm completely detailed and honest
about every situation and what went into it and why I may have done that, that's a continuous
evolution of a person that takes longer than five years. And I don't think I'm a finished
product right now. I just think I'm onto something mentally that is clicking with me,
now. I just think I'm onto something mentally that is clicking with me, allowing me to be the person I think I should have been. Is this all you or was therapy involved? A lot of self-therapy. I mean,
a lot of times. And I mean, 2014, after my first season, I went and spent three months in rehab in
Redding, Pennsylvania. And I didn't have a normal off season. I didn't get to like,
I needed to work on myself.
And at this time, like I learned a lot through that.
And it continuously learned as I went on.
And this is a, you know, collection of 10 years of not therapy every day, not therapy every week.
But a lot of it is with yourself. You have to know who
you are. You know who you are. You know what you do good. You know what you do bad. You know what
you need your team for over here to help you with, to make you the best version of yourself.
And for a long time, I've been independent in the sense that I feel like I can do it all by myself,
when in reality, I need family.
You need a team. I need friends.
I need my team of people who want nothing from me,
who want nothing but the best and love for me,
and people that I can trust.
Because a lot of time in the past,
I didn't have people around me that I could trust
really genuinely, truly looking out for my best interests.
Johnny, you mentioned that you partied,
you liked to drink alcohol.
Was there heavier drugs involved other than alcohol and marijuana?
Oh, yeah.
A hundred percent.
In college?
No.
Once you got to the league?
Yes.
That's when the real, like, hiding and reclusing started.
And, man, I've given Cleveland a really, really hard time.
And I think it's all more situation than it is really the city itself.
Being in a fishbowl city like College Station ate me up because I couldn't move.
I couldn't park my car the wrong way.
I couldn't do anything.
I was always spotlighted.
And then I go to Cleveland.
I signed with LeBron and man and
then and now LeBron comes back and I'm under LeBron's wing so now this lamp
heat lamps even hotter on me I'm not playing I don't got confidence on the
field and now I'm taking out my anger on my day-to-day like interaction my team
I'm struggling but not letting anybody know right so like my whole like
gripe with Cleveland is not really anything as what I've made it to be and I think that's just
the bitterness of like how things went and me not realizing that I did it to myself for a long point
in time do you remember the first time you tried hard drugs oh yeah yeah for sure what what what
was it about it that made you try it did Did you think because I'm Johnny Football, I can handle this? I can do something that no one else has been able to do. Do a hard drug and be able to still function and do everything I'm the guy, just like I am on the field,
in the club, in the streets. So it's all in front of you if you want it and you're hanging around
the wrong circles. It ain't hard to find at all. So you get around people who you think you look
up to or this or that, and then it just goes. And then it kind of goes and it snowballs and it keeps getting worse and you go from cocaine
to oxycontin to percocets to mushroom i mean to i look at the mushrooms as a different thing now
that's not a good thing to say but like the harder drugs the drugs that like tear you down i never did
anything with needles never did anything like that but the coke and the Oxys and the Percocet were very, very tumultuous in my life and like popped their head, especially the days of wandering around the Hollywood Hills.
And it makes sense why you see me so sporadic.
And like I was 210 pounds when I left Cleveland.
I was 170 pounds sitting in Vegas that August, that september october whatever it was later in that
year how you lose 40 pounds you're on a strict diet a blow oh i was about to say i only you
don't want either one of them i mean you lose 40 pounds in that length of time you're gonna crack
or olympic so that's the new thing now touche tou, touché. You're right about that, bro.
And at that point in time, man, I would look in a mirror and I didn't see myself any different than when I was in Cleveland.
Really?
Until I stepped on a scale at the Cosmopolitan Hotel in Las Vegas.
I didn't realize I lost 40 pounds.
Wow.
At all.
And people were hitting me up like this.
And I remember these pictures came out and I was like, damn, what am I doing?
Ah, whatever.
We'll figure that out later.
Let's go again.
Let's go there.
So as an athlete, you're very competitive.
When you do drugs, do you still have that competitive nature?
Like when you're with your boys, you're like, shh, man, I ain't going to let you one up me.
You can't.
I'm a tank when it comes to the party.
I mean, I could party.
We'll hang with the best of them.
I ain't saying that to brag.
It's not something to really sit here and glorify.
But it's true.
You put somebody that you think in your life can really go that distance with the Henny or with the drugs or whatever you want.
I'm going to go 12 rounds with you.
I mean, Johnny, you're a small man, bro. I'm going to go 12 rounds with you. I mean, Johnny, you a small man, bro.
I'm a little thick, I guess.
So, Drake does a song, Draft Day.
What was it like to hear Drake mention you in a song?
And what was it like hanging out with Drake?
He's one of the biggest celebs
in the world and here's a
college kid, a young college kid
just hanging out with him. Yeah, I remember when I
went to Toronto for the first time and my mom
called me and I could hear the worry
in her voice.
Where are you? Toronto?
Canada?
You even have a passport?
Yeah, I took it from the safe last week when I came by the house.
So, like, my relationship with Drake is one that changed my life for the better forever, still to this day.
You know, a pillar of my life.
And from the first day I met him, the first day we talked, our relationship has been pretty constant.
And he rides for me as hard as anybody ever has in my life.
And I'm thankful for him.
I appreciate him.
And I try to let him know whenever I'm with him how much his relationship means to me, how much our friendship means.
And it's the coolest thing in the world to me, from that kid in Kerrville,xas to be able to sit there and walk out on the draft radio city music hall and there ain't no song
playing that you like it's my song about the day that's happening now chills right but what do you
think when people say man drake cursed you because you know there's this thing that say that drake
has a curse that anybody that's doing well if dra Drake all of a sudden likes him, they're going to lose.
Who believes in curses like that?
That guy's the most positive energy, great aura.
Maybe he picks wrong sometimes in the teams or whatever it is or his bets.
But that's his life, right?
There is no curse.
Right.
That's to each his own.
You know, if I handle my business in the proper way,
I make him proud.
Right.
Right?
Our relationship changes.
Like, so, like, that's,
there's a lot of people that I let down.
I truly feel like him and LeBron,
at a point in time,
were people that I really, really let down.
You mentioned that you,
that LeBron and Mav, you, that LeBron and Mav,
you signed with LeBron and Mav,
and there are people saying
Johnny Manziel will be bigger
than LeBron James in Cleveland.
I think that person is Skip Bayless.
He definitely believed in you.
He does.
He believed in you,
and his thing, to his credit,
when he believes in a guy, yourself, Tim Tebow.
Baker.
Baker.
Yeah.
Skip.
I love you, bro.
I hope you know that it was always love.
And I honestly feel like I let him down, right?
Right.
I remember watching first take religiously and being able to see him come on there and ride for me when everything was going on i remember seeing the passion in his voice and
the way he was animated when he would talk about me um so when i signed i go to cleveland and this
you know johnny manziel will be bigger than lebron like okay you got your clickbait you got your
headlines for that week type of thing and it was was never, ever going to be a reality.
But because of me signing with LeBron and Mav, I had the opportunity to even be great in my own right. They gave me the best fighting chance and built a team around me.
And the thing that I realize now is the reason why they're probably still pissed at me to this day.
They don't lose. They don't bet
on anything that's not a sure thing. And what I did and the way I carried myself and the way that
I was in my time during Cleveland was pure and blatant disrespect to them for giving me everything
that I could have ever needed to be successful. So something that still to this day, I think now
that we're talking about it, I haven't completely, truly got over yet, you know, how I let them down.
And I remember this is how bad off I was whenever I was in Cleveland.
You know, LeBron would text me every week to come over to the house and watch a game
or play poker with the boys and just tried to be there.
And I was so depressed for the first time in my life that even my biggest
role model and inspiration in my life couldn't get me out of bed to come and hang out with him.
You know, when I went to the Cavs games, I went, I was in, I was out. I didn't really grasp and
latch on to him in a way that I should have. And he tries to take me under his wing, right? And
I'm just kind of nudging it away because of where my mental is
and being just fully depressed
and where I was in my life.
Is that an excuse?
Absolutely not.
Because at the end of the day,
the respect that I should have for them
giving me everything should trump all else.
I see you got a lot of ink.
Do you remember your first,
what made you,
do you remember your first tattoo
and how old were you when you got it and what made you say you know what i won't eat all
right so my mom as a kid if you get any tattoos i'm gonna disown you they went really hard down
that route and when i got to a little bit higher place in life i'm kind of like
let me test and see if you still gonna love me after this so i went that first semester
in a college station i went and got a tattoo it said against all odds on the inside of my arms
and i got a proverbs thing on my on my chest john bones jones has this philippians 413 i got a
proverbs 3 5 through 6.
Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding
and all your ways submit to him
and he will make your path straight.
And I got that.
And I remember going to the lake house
six months later and my mom's like,
why are you jumping in the lake with your shirt on?
Ah!
No, it's nothing. It's nothing. Finally, she's like, take your shirt off. Ah! Ah! It's nothing.
It's nothing.
Finally, she's like, take your shirt off.
And I'm like, all right, moment of truth.
She took it pretty good for what I expected, to be honest.
She kind of just went back in the house.
And now we're at the point where my dad's starting
to get some tattoos.
Oh, you influenced him.
I think I had a little bit of an input in that.
I think I've had an input in his mind shift just to see that if I can go through what I've been through and still be sitting here today with the attitude and the outlook on life that I have, I truly feel that anybody can.
And my dad's had his flaws in life, my mom as well, and we all do as human beings.
But it's about never giving up.
And it's about keep going is the mantra and mindset that I use.
Keep going.
God only gives the toughest test in life to people that can truly handle it.
Soldiers.
Yeah, a lot of mine was self-inflicted, but I feel to a point today that I'm here for a better purpose, for a bigger purpose.
Maybe being a Hall of Fame NFL football player was not what I was meant to be in life, and I'm here for a better purpose, for a bigger purpose. Maybe being a Hall of Fame
NFL football player was not what I was meant to be in life. And I'm okay with that. Right. Right.
I'm okay with continuing to grow as a man and figure out exactly what makes me tick, what my
new passions are in life and what my new like goals are and where I want to go. Is it true that
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A plunky drug test at the combine and your dad faked a medical emergency? I don't remember the medical emergency, but I remember having the greatest training camp leading up to the NFL Combine. And five, six days before the Combine,
I drove from San Diego to the Beverly Hills Hotel, and I wanted to go to Greystone Manor in West Hollywood.
I got with some NFL boys and I went to Hermosa Beach and I got drunk and then I went to the club
and I remember as this whole day progressed on, I was a little too lit at the club that night,
about one. And I remember as I'm kind of like in and out of it, somebody handed me a blunt and me
really being not all there and composed.
And I remember the blunt coming up right in front of my face
and I remember my immediate is like.
But I couldn't tell my agent or anybody the next day
if I actually did smoke this or not.
So now it's like full crisis mode.
We're taking tests and we're doing this
and like now the next six days are
like flush flush the system you fail a drug test you go from being maybe the potential first pick
in the draft so we'll see you in the third round and that's a five-year deal turned to a four
turn to guarantee money into nothing like everything is riding on this so i did go into
indie with a very very question mark on if i was going to pass my drug test for smoking weed.
And so you—
Passed.
I guess I didn't smoke it.
Wow.
Oh, okay.
So—
Wow, you said.
Yeah, because considering the way you've been partying, bro.
I just remember that going to grab it.
Yeah.
I remember that, and I remember for some reason just still locked in even if I was out of it.
When you were coming out, there was a comparison
because of your ability to do a threat, to run and throw the football.
You got compared to a little bit of RG3, a little bit of Russell Wilson.
Did you like those comparisons?
I liked the Brett Favre comparison the most, I think,
because Brett shaped the way of what I wanted to be as a quarterback.
I didn't know at the time back then, really,
until I got out of Cleveland, of what Brett's story was in Atlanta.
Right.
You know, I had this Brett Favre Atlanta Falcons jersey
that I wore religiously when I was in College Station.
And I didn't know that he was there and, like, what happened
and him getting to Green Bay and what a, like, huge turning point
and pivot it was for him in his life.
But that's, you know, that's the one that I like the most
and that I appreciated the most because he was the man.
Did you really text a Browns coach during the draft
and say, hey, let's wreck the league?
So me and Dal Loggins, who is my quarterback coach,
we had a good relationship,
and he was texting me throughout
the draft like be patient bro be patient we're coming to get you and this was a very personal
conversation between me and him okay that he told to a friend that then got spun into what it is
today okay so there was no you know i'm still walking across the stage doing all this i'm doing
my thing like i'm more excited to go to avenue and new york and party
with drake and the boys after to celebrate than i am really thinking about football at this time
everything to me was like getting drafted in the first and going to this party afterwards and like
it's what it was the cherry on top of the whole thing was what it was for me so you know that was
a very personal text that I sent that was internally
supposed to motivate us to be and get to where we wanted to go. That then was then spun as to me
being this cocky, full headed, you know, egotistical little shit that doesn't know anything about the
NFL. And I don't think that's necessarily how I was. Now, you can ask Andrew Hawkins or Joe Thomas or Joe Hayden or, you know, the legends in the building that we had with us.
And they would probably tell you that I was carrying myself like that.
From my perspective of things, that was never my intention, nor did I want to carry myself like that.
It was against everything that I was raised and ingrained to be.
Did you want to go to Cleveland? Where did you want to get drafted?
Where did I want to get drafted? Probably Dallas.
Better. I love Jerry. I love getting a chance to go to sporting events in that stadium and cross in circles with him.
I loved getting the opportunity as a college Texas A&M kid to walk into that box and rub shoulders with the honcho.
Yeah.
The guy.
Yeah.
So I loved that.
And 16th pick of that draft was Dallas.
And I remember the anticipation in Radio City when that pick was coming up, and I had my fingers crossed under that table the entire time.
Please, let me go put that star on my helmet.
Looking back now, thank God that it didn't happen,
because I wouldn't be sitting here today.
You're saying that you wanted to go to Dallas, you were hoping Dallas would draft you,
but you said you're glad you didn't go to Dallas because?
Dallas draft you, but you said you're glad you didn't go to Dallas because?
I think knowing what I was doing in Cleveland, how hard it was for me to party and move and do these kind of things.
If you were to put me in a landscape that was my backyard that I knew, you know, I had been driving from College Station up to Dallas when there wasn't nothing going on in College Station.
Right. So it was something I was familiar with.
I know who I was hanging around at that point in my life.
And I think it would have been just an absolute disaster to the point of, it wouldn't have
been suicide that would have been the issue.
It would have been drinking and driving.
It would have been taking a bag from somebody you shouldn't take it from and just, boom,
could have been over in an instant.
So I think I know myself well enough to be able to say
that it would have been bad in its own right.
And luckily, thankfully, you know, it didn't happen,
even though at that time it's what I wanted.
What were your study habits like in Cleveland?
How often did you study?
Did you watch tape?
Did you study the game?
When you're in meetings, were you attentive?
What was Johnny's study habits, practice habits like?
I would say, you know, Kyle Shanahan was the most detailed person that I had ever seen in my life.
And I thought Cliff Kingsbury was really, really good. But Shanahan took it to a different level.
He could coach 11, 12 positions on the offense,
detail, hat placement, hand placement,
every single thing.
So our meetings and things were incredibly detailed.
My quarterback room was not a home for me because of Brian Hoyer.
Brian Hoyer had been waiting on opportunity
to be able to go really provide for his family, get an opportunity.
And he saw how much of an upper hand he had on me.
And he didn't hold back when it came to that.
So there was instances in the quarterback room early on where I would ask the same question a couple times.
And he'd be at the head of the table and go, again?
We're doing this again?
Wow.
Keep him out of it, right?
Let's just cut that off.
And I don't have a bad word to say about Brian Hoyer.
That is just fact of what happened in that room.
So when that happened.
So if we were to ask another quarterback that's in that room.
Go ask Connor Shaw.
Go ask Connor Shaw, who played at South Carolina
and was with us in Cleveland. Go ask him how Brian Hoyer was in that room go ask connor shaw go ask connor shaw who played at south carolina and was with us in cleveland go ask him how brian hoyer was in that room go ask dal
loggins how he was in that room and it's okay but at that point in time of where i was and i'm the
franchise guy i could have used a little help especially when they knew what i was doing and
i've said this before in the past and people have, why don't you take self-accountability for what it was and you not putting in the work?
I didn't know what work like that was. I didn't know what the grind was because I was great at
Texas A&M without it. So a sense of entitlement comes in that I can do it the same way because
I don't know any better. So when you have that going on in the quarterback room, then I just do this. I ain't speaking. If I question something, I'm not asking. I'm embarrassed.
All right. I'm getting dogged by a guy who's supposed to be my teammate.
When I don't know, I'm trying to figure it out. I don't know what cover three is.
You know what we did at A&M? If that linebacker's tucked in and swopes faster than him
bang i'm throwing the bubble and he's down the sideline i wasn't looking at safeties i'm not
looking at one high two high rotation my mind didn't work that way from a football player
perspective and then when i'm going into my safe space quarterback room i'm getting
so i'm not saying a word. Now I'm struggling.
Now I'm getting behind.
Now I don't know the detail of the plays because I'm not going home and dialing it in even more.
In the building, I studied film.
I wanted to watch these Rex Grossman clips of Washington and Shanahan.
I wanted to watch RG3 2012 season.
I wanted to see how you do this stuff. And I watched it. Did I grind it the way that Peyton Manning does? Absolutely not. I didn't even know that was a thing until Josh
McCown got in the building the next year. And when Josh McCown came in, the shift in that room went
through the roof of positivity. When I got there, he comes up to me and he goes,
you want to be a great quarterback? I go, yeah. He goes, tie a string to the end of my backpack
and you can follow me around wherever you want. And I'll show you what it takes to really be a
quarterback in the NFL. Now, when that goes to the practice field and we're out there and we're
dialing in these bang eights, we're the comeback mccallan's sitting there like you can't fucking do this i can't make that throw but you can't
what do you think that does for a second year player's confidence through the roof now our team
as a whole is not the same our organization in a sense inside the building is still incredibly dysfunctional but for those first
like you know 10 12 weeks of the season in 2015 we're not winning you know we only win two games
that year right like me as a football player i'm growing john de filippo who's our offensive
coordinator like we're growing together his energy in the room and what it is is like positive.
And it's me, Josh McCown, and Connor Shaw again.
And there is a huge shift in that quarterback room that next year.
And I start to get confidence and I start to do this.
And then life happens to me again to where I'm not taking care of myself.
Right.
And I'm frustrated in the building.
And I'll never forget,
probably about week 13 or 14 of the season,
I'm walking out of Coach Petten's office,
or I'm upstairs where the coaches' offices are in Cleveland,
and I walk by Jimmy O'Neal's office, and he's like,
hey, Johnny, come in here for a sec.
I'm like, oh, it's our defensive coordinator.
I'm like, what's up, coach?
And I'm chill with everybody.
Like, I'm up.
That's just how I am.
And he's like, he's sitting back at his desk.
Kind of got his foot up and he goes,
you know, we'd be a really good football player
if you got your head out of your ass.
And I'm like, so caught off guard.
Now this confidence that I'm building is immediately just I don't know if he meant it in a way or just like you know you're
two and two and twelve and your team is struggling and you're like you know looking to ways to vent
or whatever it was but this happened and when I left that that office and I went back down to the
quarterback room I was white as a ghost.
So white that Josh McCown looked at me just like you are and was like,
what happened?
And I'm like stuttering through this story.
And Josh McCown gets up out of his seat and walks straight up to that
fucking office.
Now, what was said, I don't exactly know what it is.
But when he came back in that room, he was pissed.
He said, you don't do that
in this league with a young guy and somebody like you just don't build him up you can't break his
confidence break me in half and from there i was broken i didn't give a i didn't care about
that team i didn't care about that what my role was and there's no excuse all of these things led
up to be the perfect failure and at the end of of the day, it's on my shoulders. But when you're starting to get a little momentum and you get broken like
that, that's when the running to Vegas happened and me missing the last game of the season.
That's when the wig story comes out and when I'm really like running two, three weeks after this.
When this happened, I go straight home. I go straight to my basement.
I get the biggest bottle of Hennessy out of the bottom of the drawer. And now I'm sitting in the
basement. I'm listening to Future every second, every day. I'm partying by myself just to try and
get out of this reality of a situation that I'm living in with a head coach that wants nothing
to do with me, with a DC who's saying, if I get my head out of my ass, we'll have a chance.
Just this whole perfect storm of just like, fuck this. And when that happened, I was done.
What was your relationship like with Josh Gordon? You have a guy and he, we know he's had his
issues, his struggles, very similar to what you to what you're sharing with us right now.
What was your relationship with Josh?
Great.
I saw a side of Josh that the rest of the world didn't get to see.
I saw a guy that was from that trap, from that bad neighborhood growing up
who had beat the odds to be able to get there.
One of the most physically talented specimens that you'll ever see
on a football field.
He struggled with a lot of the same things that i struggle with and i tried my best throughout those times to be a
better um influence around josh than a lot of other people were because a lot of his boys didn't
give a shit at that point in time and you know should i have done things differently in our relationship to not, you know, sway him
certain ways? Because I think I definitely had the juice. We didn't do drugs together.
You didn't do drugs. We didn't do drugs together. He would, uh, he loved the weed, man. He loved it.
And when he would come over to my apartment, all he ever wanted to do was roll it and put it on
the counter. He just wanted to be included on the whole thing right which is the way his mind kind of worked but he never smoked
around me he never i mean we went on trips together we went to aspen we went everywhere
like jg was my dog to the core and funny you asked i just spoke to him yesterday and he sounds like
he's in the best place that i've seen him in years. And it takes time and getting away from it.
And for me and him, we're talking about golf now.
And golf is kind of like an avenue that I never thought me and me and JG would be able to talk about golf, go play.
And golf has really shifted my mindset and being able to still continuously give me competition.
But as much as it is against other people when you're playing golf is always about yourself and battling yourself
Six inches between your ears and then you know getting in a good headspace to go up and hit a good shot
John I want to get you out on here you mentioned that once you left Cleveland
That you contemplated suicide and you spent all your money
Clearly, that's the lowest point of your
life. Was it a culmination of, I'm not where I thought I would be as far as in the NFL. You're
in the NFL, but you're not playing and you're not, you feel you're not getting the support that you
need or deserves in order for Johnny to be Johnny, because you just, need somebody just a little support you need somebody to say Johnny hey bro you can
do this pat you on the back instead of kicking the butt all the time it's when did you know
so what happened when you're contemplating taking your own life it's different it's um it's not that
I don't have the support it's not that I don't have the support. It's not that I don't have the team, because at that point in time, I had every single person you could ever think trying to reach out. And I'm just blocking people every single turn. And I think for me, it was something I didn't love football, okay, but it was a feeling. And when I didn't play for a while and I'm out of the league and I'm trying to get back in, I end up going to Canada.
And when I walked into that locker room for the first time and walked out on a practice football field,
every single feeling that I had felt in that Cleveland locker room came back to me in that Canadian locker room.
came back to me in that Canadian locker room.
And I knew right then and there that I didn't truly, truly love this game to the point of where I need to do what I need to do to be successful.
So the suicide thing comes in when you look at life and you say,
I fucked up the biggest golden opportunity that you could have ever imagined.
And this is where I think whenever you said what you said about the fan-controlled football league,
it is sad, Shannon.
What you said on that day is exactly right.
It is sad to watch a guy who had all the potential in the world,
all the opportunity, all the resources and team around him,
and he still goes, fuck that.
But what if I told you today that I don't think that I loved
what I was doing enough to ever get into the mix of doing it the right way?
I went through that period with Josh McCown where we did it,
but like it never was like over the top.
And I'm not in the gym.
I'm not grinding.
I'm not doing the things that I did back in the day that made me great. So now I realize that I didn't love the game of football like that. I just happened to be immensely talented at it. I happened to have great teammates around me, great coaches, great, perfect storm to be able to get me to walk across that hall at Radio City Music Hall, walk across that stage.
across that hall at Radio City Music Hall, walk across that stage. So that feeling came back in Canada. I realized I don't love the game. And then when the game's gone from you,
there's a huge transition. And every guy will tell you what the transition is to
figuring out your identity and who you are as a person. And I truly feel like from 2017 on,
that's seven years, that that's what I've been doing. And my mission has
been to try and stay away, get a little bit of this hype off me, and just live and find out about
life, to be a great uncle, to be a great brother, to be a great son, to be a great role model for
Texas A&M, to be a great alumni, a leader, to be a great resource for my guys who play at Texas A&M, to be a great alumni, you know, a leader, to be a great, like, resource for my
guys who play at Texas A&M. And these are all things that I'm trying to do moving forward
that I've completely neglected in the past. If I could say, Johnny, you could go back,
what would probably be one of the two things that you wish you could do over?
If I could go back to a certain point in time, I would drop myself
right after that
in the locker room of the Oklahoma game in the Cotton Bowl.
Knowing what I know now,
I would have known how to handle myself.
I would have known how important and imperative it is
to be a better teammate
than just numbers on a field on Saturday.
There's something to be said about how your guys ride for you
when you're doing the right things in the building.
And that 2013 year for us at Texas A&M,
a lot of internal problems were happening
because their leader is distracted.
Their horse that makes this whole carriage go is fucked up.
And the shame that I have for letting guys down like cedric aboye and like jake matthews and mike evans is the same shame that i carry with me to this day
about letting down joe thomas as a guy who's in the end of his hall of Fame career and is looking for somebody to come in and lead this team,
and then you get me.
It's tough.
You know, it's embarrassing.
It's embarrassing to have been the guy
that have let down some overall really great athletes
of my time and of my generation.
Something I carry, hopefully hopefully with my head high
right now but at the same time internally i know it eats me alive um because they did more for me
than i gave in return to them and what a shallow kind of selfish way of life that i was living at
that point in time and i have a lot of regret like i regret wasting a couple of joe thomas's last years in cleveland i regret
disrespecting lebron and and not making sure that's making sure what it meant to me showing
him that i give a fuck enough to just do what's right to listen to mav and listen to the team
they built around me you know it fucks me up that i messed up our second year at Texas A&M and we went seven
and four or whatever, because that was our chance to win a national title.
We got them off the game against Duke.
Had a cool game against Duke.
One that was like a legendary kind of tale on it.
But like, I almost wish to this day that we lost that game because I would have came back.
Right.
So us having that legendary run against a bowl game,
that's kind of like,
kind of wish we would have lost because then I would have came back with a
vengeance and I probably wouldn't have got drafted because I would have gotten
in trouble.
But it doesn't sit right with me,
certain things.
And those are three things,
how I wasted my 2013 season,
how I treated the legends in that building in Cleveland and how I treated LeBron
and Matt. And, you know, from there, I can even take it a step further and say in 2016, I don't
think I treated Drake the way that I should have with representing the clothes that I was wearing
and his OVO brand and his label and everything. You know, at that point in time, I was so selfish
that I was dragging everybody that was tied to me through the mud
Now it's regret. I'm not harboring on this in this in any kind of way
I'm, just calling it exactly what what it is in the way that I feel about it
And you know, I owe those people apology and hopefully one day down the line
I'll be able to have the opportunity as a man to be able to look them in the eye and be able to do that
I understand. This is my last question for you.
I understand what that win in Tuscaloosa did for your career,
but it seems to me it was that win against Oklahoma in the Cotton Bowl
that really changed it for you.
You know, they're coming down from Norman.
We're coming up from College Station.
It's a clash in the biggest stadium in the state of Texas, the spectacle.
For us in Texas, this is the granddaddy of them all.
Not what goes on out in the Rose Bowl out west.
For a Texas kid, for a Kyler Murray, for these guys we were talking about,
to play in that stadium and do what we did that day was like,
you can't tell me shit from there on
out. And what a shallow mindset to have, what a selfish mindset to have. But being a Texas kid,
it's almost feeling like one of those real big dreams and pillars of your life has been
accomplished. And I didn't treat people the right way after that. And it's unfortunate.
As we sit here today, how is Johnny Manziel doing? Probably the happiest i've ever been in my life and i think i went through a period of
time after the documentary came out where i maybe acted a little bit like i did in the past and it's
easy to let ego and fame and stuff kind of creep back in and what i've done now since really December-ish, it's new, three months, but I've insulated
myself in a way with a team that I can trust, people that I love that are doing nothing
but looking out for my best wishes, best regards.
They know me.
They're not letting me cheat.
They're holding me accountable.
And it's not going to happen overnight.
It is going to be a slow, gradual process to get to who I want to be as a man. But in my opinion, sitting here today with
you and join the hell out of this conversation, I feel like I'm on the right path to where I need
to go. And as Johnny Manziel, not as Johnny football. You were once married and this is
the last one. You were once married. Could you see yourself being married again? Or is there
someone in Johnny Manziel's life that's keeping Johnny grounded?
Nope.
It is my friends right now, my family.
It is my two nieces with a third one on the way that I talk to every single day on FaceTime that are really my reason why I'm still here.
And a huge reason of my success is based off my sister and my mother and my father and
my true core friends and my team I have around me so love will come when it
comes but for right now I'm focused on getting a bag taking care of my money
getting back to where I need to be being the best brother being the best uncle
and being there for my family and my university in a way I need to be to make
people proud that I want to make proud.
I don't want to continuously keep letting people down when I feel like I'm destined for bigger,
greater things than that in life. I am so proud that you're sitting here today
and you found your reason to live. Sacrifice, hustle, pay the price.
Want a slice, got to roll the dice. That's why all my life I've been grinding all my life.
All my life, been grinding all my life. Sacrifice, hustle, pay the price.
Want a slice, got to roll the dice. That's why all my life I've been grinding all my life.
I've been grinding all my life.
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