- 17 minutes ago
Peyton's Places - Season 5 Episode 6 -
Who Makes the Call?
Who Makes the Call?
Category
😹
FunTranscript
00:00An original series is presented by Elijah Craig, the father of bourbon.
00:11I've always been fascinated with the fact that quarterbacks used to call their own plays.
00:17And the quarterback was really the team's offensive coordinator on Sunday.
00:21I wanted to know what it was like and why it changed.
00:25And one of the best play callers was Broadway Joe Naylor.
00:28So if Boomer Esiason and I went to the site of his old nightclub, Bachelors 3, you wouldn't believe what it is today.
00:36I also learned that helmet radios can be used for just about anything.
00:42Time to hit the road.
00:46And now, the ESPN original series, Hayden's Places, presented by Elijah Craig.
00:58Well, Boomer, this is it.
01:06Are you kidding me?
01:07798 Lexington Avenue.
01:10This was Joe Namath's nightclub.
01:12It looks like we missed last call.
01:14Yeah, only by 60 years or so.
01:16In the summer of 69, this place changed football forever.
01:20Namath and the Jets had just won Super Bowl III.
01:22The New York Jets are the world champions.
01:28They have upset the Baltimore Colts.
01:31He was a hero, and he had the world at his feet.
01:33Men wanted to be him.
01:35Women wanted to be with him.
01:37And he never wanted to go to bed.
01:39So he opened the nightclub, Bachelors 3.
01:41I remember.
01:45You know, I grew up 50 miles from here, and you could hear the music blaring.
01:51Pete Rozelle told Namath to shut it down or retire, because gamblers used to patronize this place.
01:57Let me guess.
01:57Namath was like, you want to bet?
01:59So Namath retires.
02:01I'm not selling.
02:04I quit.
02:05The retirement only lasted three months.
02:07Joe still wanted to play football, so we sold it and went back to the Jets.
02:14What do you think, Boomer?
02:15You want to check it out?
02:16I'm worried that people might recognize us.
02:19What do you say we go incognito?
02:21In that?
02:23Actually, in honor of Broadway Joe.
02:32Got one for you, too.
02:33Great.
02:34Thanks.
02:34Let's do it.
02:37Looks like they sell more than soda here, Boomer.
02:59Turns out, Namath's Nightclub is now a cannabis dispensary.
03:04Hey, do you think that Aaron Rodgers shopped here when he was with the Jets?
03:08No doubt about it.
03:09Excuse me, any idea whose nightclub this is?
03:12No idea.
03:13Do you think they guarantee their prices here?
03:15I do ads for Doritos.
03:17I could probably hook you up.
03:18Have you seen any gamblers in here or mobsters?
03:21Don't worry.
03:21You can tell us.
03:22They only look like undercover cops.
03:24Hey, man.
03:25You ever taken a hit?
03:26Son, I used to take them professionally.
03:28Your name is also Boomer?
03:30What are the odds?
03:31Can I get these, please?
03:33You're the first person to come in here and only buy a bag of Cheetos.
03:37You know, this is the first time I've ever been in a dispensary.
03:39Where do you keep the Pez?
03:42Seriously.
03:44I'm Peyton Manning, and I love football.
03:47Don't worry.
03:48Peyton, who's your favorite football player?
03:49My dad.
03:50I'm on a quest to bring NFL history to life.
03:53Yes!
03:54Wow, that was pretty reckless.
03:55So join me for another adventure.
03:58Hey.
03:58Dream come true, man.
03:59Oh, awesome, man.
03:59This is right.
04:00This is right up there.
04:01You kidding me?
04:02James plays.
04:03This is great.
04:08During our visit to what used to be Bachelor's 3, Boomer Esiason reminded me of Broadway Joe's
04:15greatest skill as a quarterback.
04:17He actually called his own plays.
04:19As a matter of fact, he was the Kyle Shanahan of play calling back in the day.
04:23You did the same thing.
04:23You and Sam Weiss are the ones who saved it.
04:27Not with his mustache, I didn't.
04:29And that got me thinking about who makes the calls.
04:32Hey, I like that.
04:34You want to flip it and do the same play?
04:38Nowadays, the coaches call the plays.
04:41I'm going to go bounce right slot, 300 scram.
04:43Over wireless headsets, right into the quarterback's ear.
04:47Hey, let's go Ultra Buns GTS.
04:49Ultra Buns GTS.
04:51But once upon a time.
04:52This is what it's all made about, you know.
04:54This is what the whole thing is here.
04:56There were no helmet receivers.
04:58And the quarterback made the call.
05:00Red right, 842 wedge on key.
05:02Let's go.
05:04Cut!
05:04Dandy Don Meredith, Johnny Yu, and Broadway Joe weren't just great passers.
05:13They were great play callers.
05:15I had a 60-hour rip-off.
05:16Did you check it then?
05:17Yeah, I checked it a lot.
05:18I had something else on.
05:19Something Boomer will become pretty good at in the 80s.
05:23But that's getting ahead of our story.
05:26All right, Boomer.
05:26People forget that some of the NFL's greatest moments were quarterbacks calling their own plays.
05:30What do you say we dim the lights and watch a little film here?
05:33Let's do it.
05:33This is the 1940 NFL championship.
05:36Sid Luckman calling his own plays.
05:38Not Coach George Hallis.
05:4073-0.
05:41Still the greatest blowout in NFL history.
05:44The Bears are unstoppable.
05:46A little trap play there, it looks like.
05:48Look at how nicely everybody's dressed.
05:49Exactly.
05:51All right, Johnny Unitas, greatest game ever played, 1958 championship.
05:55Unitas called all his own plays.
05:57Throws the quick one to Barry.
05:59You always heard about the great timing of Unitas to Barry, right?
06:03And look at the accuracy of the pass so he can protect himself.
06:06Yeah.
06:07You know, this is a game-winning play.
06:09You think, okay, Unitas has called his own plays.
06:11I want to call a touchdown pass.
06:13I want to call a fade to Barry.
06:14What does he call a dive play to Amici to win it?
06:17United States begins to Amici and the ballgame is over.
06:20And the Baltimore Colts are the professional football champions of the world.
06:24Pretty unselfish, though, as a play caller, right, to give it to.
06:27I think quarterbacks are probably the most unselfish people on the field.
06:31I agree.
06:32But if you get in there and you come right out and say,
06:34P-36 trap on two bank, get out of the huddle.
06:37The defense might be stacked against it because you called it with such authority.
06:41It's where they're going to go out and make it work.
06:43I always kind of like that about Unitas, right?
06:45You could call it audible.
06:46It could be the worst audible, but if you do it with a lot of confidence
06:49and good voice inflection, it'll probably be worse.
06:52He's talking like every quarterback should talk.
06:54Yeah.
06:55Like, you have to present it as if it's the right thing at the right moment at the right time.
07:00Namath has not been bashful this week, and he has said that the Jets are going to win.
07:04He said, I guarantee a Jet victory.
07:07Super Bowl III, I actually watched the film of this game with Joe Namath,
07:10which is really cool, but it feels a little blitz here.
07:14Just kind of a quick little swing, get it out to the back.
07:16This is the game-winning drive to beat the Colts.
07:18And by the way, this is a staple play that's still in the NFL today.
07:21That's right.
07:21You see a blitz, you throw it to your hot receiver.
07:24Taking advantage of what's there.
07:26There again, watch how he reads the defense.
07:28The guy in the backfield is wide open.
07:30Yeah, yeah.
07:31He's just picking them apart.
07:32Peyton, when I see that upright where it is on the field back in the day,
07:36I know that you would have ran one of your wide receivers right off of that thing
07:41to run a defender into the upright.
07:42A little rub play, right?
07:48Third down, inches to go.
07:50Hackers trying for the go-ahead score.
07:52Star begins to count.
07:54Bart Starr's quarterback sneak in the ice bowl.
07:56Terry Bradshaw's 69 maximum flanker post in Super Bowl X.
08:05Here's Bradshaw.
08:08Foddered from behind.
08:09Len Swan is open.
08:11Got it.
08:11Taylor's left there.
08:13Some of the most storied plays in football history were called by quarterbacks.
08:18Back is Plunkett.
08:19Behind the throw.
08:20Deep to the end zone to Branch.
08:22It is caught by Branch.
08:24Touchdown, Leonard.
08:25Jim Plunkett here.
08:26He's the last guy to kind of call his own plays in a huddle
08:29with a world championship on the line.
08:32He won Super Bowl XV and Super Bowl XVIII.
08:35Plunkett looks low.
08:36It's going to win.
08:38You know, when we say calling your own plays,
08:41we're talking about a quarterback in the huddle calling a play,
08:45getting to the line of scrimmage, and then running that play.
08:49By the time Boomer became the Bengals' starter in 1985,
08:52quarterbacks weren't doing that anymore.
08:56The game had grown complicated.
08:58Playbooks expanded.
09:00And mastermind coaches like Landry, Shula, and Walsh had total control.
09:06I put the play in, Paul.
09:08If you correct me on the field, I put the thing in upstairs.
09:13But Boomer's coach was Wacky Sam Weish.
09:18Will the next person that sees anybody throw anything onto this field,
09:23point them out, or get them out of here?
09:25You don't live in Cleveland, you live in Cleveland!
09:28And Weish had a wacky idea.
09:31Attack, attack, attack!
09:32Attack, attack, attack!
09:33Attack, attack, attack!
09:35Let's go!
09:35Quarterbacks calling their own plays was a dead thing,
09:38and then you and Sam Weish kind of reinvented it.
09:40What was the key to your no-huddle attack offense,
09:43and kind of what was the goal?
09:45Well, I think the goal was try to keep the defense off balance.
09:48Over the right tackle or the guy over the left?
09:50Over the backside tackle.
09:51So there is still motion on that?
09:53Yeah.
09:53I just want to make sure of that.
09:55The Bengals wouldn't huddle.
09:57The defense couldn't substitute,
10:00and Boomer called the play at the line.
10:0228, Baker Bruce!
10:04100!
10:05I could audible to anything I wanted to.
10:07As long as I had the right pass protection
10:10with the right personnel groups.
10:11Yeah, yeah, yeah.
10:11They should have a cheat sheet for you.
10:13They should, because this is not a normal offense.
10:16But because we didn't have the coach,
10:17the quarterback communication, and the wristband,
10:19I would have to know the formations,
10:21the personnel groups that went along with those formations,
10:23and I'd have to know the pass protections,
10:25the runs that you could call or check to
10:27at the line of scrimmage.
10:289-35 auto, Buck Denver!
10:31Felt like it was easier to pick up the pass rush...
10:33Left flip! Left flip!
10:35...by keeping them from substituting
10:37into their nickel packages.
10:38If you saw a defense substitute,
10:40did you have a buzzword that could go even quicker?
10:43Yeah, set alert, set alert.
10:44Set alert, set alert!
10:45And that would be a certain play
10:47that we would have already built into the offense,
10:50and we would run that play.
10:52Let's go! Attack, attack, attack!
10:53Set alert! Set alert, set alert, set alert!
10:56What do you want right here?
10:58Set alert!
11:00Come on!
11:01Set alert!
11:0334!
11:03Boomer's going to go back and throw it.
11:11Over the middle, it was popped!
11:12Rodney Hallamund gets the second touchdown pass of the night.
11:16That's the way to go!
11:17Oh!
11:18It sure looked wacky,
11:20but in 1988,
11:21no one could stop the no huddle.
11:23There's Eddie Brown, he has a touchdown!
11:26They're off for it!
11:27They're off for it, man!
11:28And Boomer and the Bengals rode it all the way to Super Bowl XXIII.
11:33Play action fake, Boomer back to throw, looks in the end zone, lobs it off, and a flat touchdown!
11:38Oh!
11:39For a Bengals!
11:40The Bengals have won the AFC Championship, but will be in the Super Bowl.
11:44They didn't win, but the Bengals' no huddle offense had a profound impact on the NFL.
11:51In the no huddle offense, Kelly to throw again.
11:54Now he throws it long, downfield for Lofton, and he's got it!
11:59Nice left!
12:00Heidi Raiders!
12:01And certainly on what I did at the line of scrimmage.
12:04Tom Moore, he would give me three plays in the huddle,
12:08and, you know, I could get to the best one at the line of scrimmage.
12:11Purple, boot the Raiders!
12:12Opposite!
12:13Opposite!
12:14Opposite!
12:15When we were losing games, we'd run a two-minute drill.
12:17Crash to Buffalo!
12:19Nice right open!
12:20We had success.
12:21Behind the Buffalo!
12:22Behind the Buffalo!
12:23Why are we waiting to get down to go no huddle?
12:26Let's just start the game that way.
12:28I mean, everybody was smiling to the no huddle.
12:30Yeah, you get into a rhythm.
12:31Sit up!
12:31Payton, looks for the quick throw, lobs it in the corner,
12:34to Marvin!
12:35He's got a touchdown!
12:37Woo!
12:38But I always liked having a thought into my helmet.
12:42Give me the starting point.
12:43Y'all were seeing it from the press box.
12:44Y'all were seeing it from the sideline.
12:45I mean, you were sitting up there with a hot dog,
12:46and you got everything in front of you.
12:47Right, right.
12:47The only time that I truly called my own plays
12:51was after Sam was let go and David Shula took over in 1992,
12:55because I knew the offense better than anybody else.
12:58Yeah, right.
12:58But now I have to learn the defensive tendencies
13:01more so than the offensive coordinator does.
13:03That's right.
13:04Hey, listen.
13:05This ain't Ray Nitschke, Dick Butkus, and Deacon Jones over there,
13:08so let's start kicking some ass.
13:09Triple right flip, 18-0 on two.
13:11Ready?
13:12Come on, let's go!
13:13So when I'm over the 50 and I'm playing the Packers,
13:15okay, what are they doing?
13:16Yeah, they're going to blitz here.
13:17And that was too much for me.
13:18Yeah.
13:19After three games, I couldn't do it.
13:20Yeah, give me a thought and then let me change it.
13:23It was exhausting.
13:24Right, right.
13:26Boomer got me thinking about a current quarterback
13:29who was once forced to call his own plays.
13:32So like Bill Belichick...
13:33What have you been having a 37-year-old?
13:35You were on to Cincinnati.
13:37I was on to Cincinnati, where I got a Queen City welcome to the jungle.
13:44How's it going?
13:45What's up, man?
13:46Really appreciate it.
13:47Thanks to you.
13:48Doing a little something on quarterbacks calling their plays.
13:52Back in the old days, you know, it wasn't always the coach calling the plays.
13:55It was the quarterback.
13:56I think you know a little something about that.
13:58The Titans division game, 2022.
14:00Helmet radio goes out.
14:05The Bengals and the top-seeded Tennessee Titans from Nissan Stadium
14:09in downtown Nashville.
14:112-40 left in the half.
14:13We are still tied at six.
14:15It's a series before half.
14:17We got to get some points.
14:18Helmet goes out.
14:23There seems to be more confusion.
14:24Burrow started out of the huddle towards the sideline.
14:27At that point, it's just like, I got to do what I got to do.
14:30Give me 11 personnel.
14:32I was like, this is my moment.
14:33I've been waiting for this.
14:34I've never done it before.
14:35Just got to the base plays at work.
14:37What'd you call?
14:38Dragonwise sit.
14:39Flat to the boundary.
14:41Burrow catches the shotgun snap.
14:43He throws toward the right sideline.
14:45Higgins with the catch.
14:46And then I get on the ball.
14:48So I have to get to the gun.
14:49Get the protection directed.
14:51White 80.
14:52Right side.
14:53End up completing that one.
14:54Burrow looks.
14:55Checks it down.
14:56Right side.
14:57That's caught on the sideline.
15:00Joey B.
15:01What's Zach doing?
15:02Is Zach, is he panicking because he's lost control here?
15:05They just started sitting back and see what he's going to do.
15:08See what happens.
15:09Joe's got it.
15:10We go hurry up.
15:11I go a bunch into the boundary again.
15:14We call it Mayweather.
15:15It's a little play action.
15:16We're getting nickel pressure.
15:17So I have to get out of the play action protection.
15:19Get to the gun.
15:20Get the protection directed.
15:22Now Burrow moves into the shotgun.
15:24Play clock at 10.
15:25Joe is ready for the snap.
15:27Catches from Hopkins.
15:28Drops back to throw.
15:29Has time.
15:30His pass.
15:31Caught over the middle at the 29.
15:32Higgins down to the 21.
15:34End up completing that one.
15:36Then we were able to call timeout and get a new helmet in.
15:39The snap.
15:40The put down.
15:41The kick.
15:42It has the distance.
15:43Yes.
15:44It is good.
15:45Yes.
15:46Wow.
15:47Come on, come on, come on.
15:48The Bengals have taken a 9-6 lead.
15:51Did you like calling your own plays?
15:53I did.
15:54I don't think I'd want to do it all the time.
15:55I'll leave that to Zach.
15:56He thought that I was faking it.
15:58Faking the headset going out.
16:00He thought you were saying, I can't hear anything.
16:03I'm calling my own plays.
16:04I got it.
16:05Last year, divisional game against the Titans.
16:07Two minute.
16:08I was there.
16:09Oh, yeah.
16:10That was you.
16:11Helmet cuts out.
16:12I had to call the whole drive.
16:13Is that right?
16:14Yeah.
16:15I actually did not know that.
16:16Yeah.
16:17Which, I love that .
16:19There you go.
16:20He's going back to going like Olsen.
16:21Yep.
16:22He still, to this day, thinks I was faking it.
16:24Is that right?
16:25But I wasn't.
16:26I promise.
16:27He said, don't get used to it, right?
16:28My first preseason game, helmet communication is brand new to me.
16:31And they told me, hey, if it goes out, have a pass play ready.
16:36Third play, the helmet goes out.
16:39Third and five now for the Colts.
16:42Peyton Manning runs the offense.
16:44I call it a little three-step slant to Marvin Harrison.
16:47About a four-yard pass.
16:49He runs it 48 yards for a touchdown.
16:51Here's a quick pass and a touchdown run by Marvin Harrison.
16:54A quick sideline throw to Marvin Harrison from Peyton Manning.
16:58The NFL is easy.
16:59All you do is going to slam to Marvin Harrison.
17:01It's easy.
17:02Omaha.
17:03Wembley, Rose.
17:05Right.
17:06Joe certainly has a knack for making quarterbacking look easy.
17:11Joe Burrow floats a perfect ball.
17:13Pressure from Crosby.
17:15Burrow gets away.
17:16Throws to the end zone.
17:17And a diving catch for Mike Kosicki.
17:20I know you're working hard out there, but it doesn't seem like you sweat.
17:23A lot of people compare you to Broadway Joe.
17:26Joe Namath.
17:27It seems like you're always just calm and cool in every situation.
17:30I'll take it.
17:31Whenever you can get compared to great quarterbacks that have played in the league,
17:34that's a huge compliment.
17:36You know, he was a fashion icon, quarterback icon, football icon.
17:42So it's always an honor to be compared to guys like that.
17:45Joe, thanks for being a part of this.
17:47Appreciate it.
17:48Love talking about quarterbacks calling their own plays.
17:50I want to kind of channel Paul Brown back in the old days with the helmet radio.
17:54Do you mind if I borrow your coach and your tight end to kind of simulate what it was like wearing that old school helmet radio?
18:00Yeah, bring him out here.
18:01Hayden.
18:03Coach Taylor.
18:05What are you doing here?
18:07Joe Burrow said I could borrow you.
18:09I'm trying to get inside one of Paul Brown's helmets.
18:11Man, you don't travel light.
18:13What are you trying to do?
18:14Get WKRP back on the air?
18:16I like that reference.
18:17I've been thinking about what it was like when quarterbacks called their own plays.
18:21Oh, like Broadway Joe and Johnny U?
18:23Exactly.
18:24Paul Brown changed all that.
18:26If you want a real lesson in that, then...
18:28It was Paul Brown who first took play calling away from the quarterback.
18:32Coach Paul Brown uses his signal calling shuttle system as he sends guard Chuck Knoll into the game with the play.
18:39Brown was so successful calling the plays in Cleveland, the Browns went to 10 championship games in 11 years.
18:47Paul Brown, head coach of the Cleveland team since 1943, have been in the title game in all seasons.
18:53Paul Brown will no longer serve in the capacities of head coach and general manager.
18:59When Art Modell fired him, Brown created the Bengals.
19:03All right, count on five.
19:04Mentored a quarterback named Sam Weish and chose uniforms that were nearly identical to the Browns.
19:12All right, Coach, I want to show you something.
19:14What really made Paul Brown's dream of calling the place possible was this, some cutting-edge technology.
19:19Is this from World War II?
19:20It's a space race, actually.
19:22Paul Brown wondered if Cold War technology could be used for something important, like beating the Giants.
19:29So he gets a NASA engineer at the Lewis Flight Propulsion Lab in Cleveland to design this, the original helmet radio.
19:37What year is this from?
19:381956.
19:39Didn't we start using these radio helmets in the early 1990s?
19:43Exactly.
19:44Coach Taylor is right.
19:4950, 50.
19:50The NFL legalized the helmet radio in 1994.
19:54Red right.
19:5550 halfback read on set.
19:56Ready?
19:57Here's Coslett holding the plays.
19:59The new innovation this season.
20:01They're radioed in to the quarterbacks with special radio receivers in the quarterback helmets.
20:06Almost 40 years after Paul Brown invented it.
20:09To communicate with quarterback George Ratterman, Brown purchased a broadcast license from the FCC and erected his own radio station on the Brown's bench.
20:24Coach, what do you think opponents came in here?
20:28They saw this antenna on Paul Brown's sideline.
20:31Hard to be discreet about that.
20:33I'm sure that there's some suspicious coaches and players on the opposite sideline.
20:36No doubt about it.
20:37Let's get this thing rolling.
20:38This looked like a mechanism.
20:40He felt like an idiot with the thing because it was an antenna and you would have to turn like that.
20:44So I'd have to stand outside the huddle going like this, you know, until he came in loud and clear.
20:49Brown's big idea was ahead of its time.
20:53His plays were often cut off by taxi dispatches and the police band.
20:58Anyone with a transistor radio could listen in.
21:02I think the Giants stole the signals in the last game, actually.
21:05Quarterback and chief radio operator George Ratterman tries to get a Cleveland pass on the beam, but New York is guarding all frequencies.
21:12How do you think the NFL reacted to Paul Brown's creation here?
21:16Not very well.
21:17I would imagine they accused him of cheating and tried to find a way to put an end to it.
21:21You're right.
21:22Burt Bell actually banned it.
21:24He's like, you can't have the only one team doing it.
21:27And like you said, it didn't become relevant again until the 90s.
21:30Yeah.
21:31You think this thing still works?
21:34Of course it does.
21:35It's Paul Brown.
21:36Everything he invented still works.
21:38Want to give it a shot?
21:39Absolutely.
21:40But remember the words of one Sam Weish, you don't live in Cleveland, you live in Cincinnati.
21:47An alphabet of stickers turned my Browns helmet into a Bengals one.
21:57And Joe was kind enough to lend me his hungriest receiver, tight end Mike Gesicki.
22:04Thanks for helping out a quarterback.
22:06Not a problem, Peyton.
22:07You just gotta buy me and Coach lunch after this, man.
22:09I'm starving.
22:10No problem.
22:11This is an ESPN show.
22:12I'll take you to the best fast casual eatery in town.
22:15Is Coach here gonna land an airplane with that thing?
22:17We're gonna try to do something better actually, Mike.
22:19You and I are gonna try to run some routes using Paul Brown's old radio helmet.
22:23Whose jersey is that?
22:24Are you kidding me?
22:26The greatest backup quarterback the Bengals have ever had.
22:29Veteran Sam Weish, a proven backup quarterback, but certainly no superstar.
22:34You better do Sam Weish justice, Peyton.
22:36I will.
22:37Let's go.
22:38All right, hold up, hold up.
22:41Let's go right hash, both on the right hash, Peyton.
22:44Let's go tied left, 200 jet Tesla.
22:46Right hash, tied left, 200 jet Tesla.
22:48All one, ready?
22:4920, set.
22:50Let's go dice left, three jet Aggie Bolt.
22:51Let's go dice left, three jet Aggie Bolt.
22:52Let's go dice left, three jet Aggie Bolt.
22:53Woo, 20, set.
22:54For a helmet that was 70 years old, it was working pretty well.
23:10Good call, Coach.
23:11You look pretty good in that helmet, Peyton.
23:14Left hash, left hash.
23:15Hey, we're at 11.
23:16Mike's here.
23:17Let's go lab to toga right, three jet chips.
23:19We got a burglary in progress at 6th and Broadway.
23:20All units report, please.
23:21All units report.
23:22I see what Radarim was talking about.
23:23I'm getting everything but you.
23:24Peyton, what are we going to eat?
23:25Can I get two hot and honey pepperonis and an order of cheesy breadsticks?
23:27I'm getting peach orders here.
23:28Well, tell them to deliver it.
23:29All right.
23:30See that thing, Coach?
23:32All right, pizza man.
23:33We're calling it all over here.
23:34Mike Gusecki really wants that pepperoni.
23:35Gusecki?
23:36Stop pranking me, kid.
23:37Kid, it's Peyton Manning, and I'm not pranking you.
23:38If you're hearing this, you must be within 500 yards of Pacor Stadium.
23:39Just drive right in.
23:40You got it?
23:41Food's on its way.
23:42Let's run another one.
23:43Let's go.
23:44We got a score here, Peyton.
23:52Let's go trips left to Jet Cadillac.
23:56Let's gother, you go.
24:00All along.
24:02All along along there, Mike Gusecki.
24:06All along my other line is the difference.
24:07See how fast?
24:08There's nothing.
24:09Do you want a score here?
24:10You've got a score here, Peyton.
24:13We have two jet Cadillac, trips left, two jet Cadillac.
24:18Trips left, two jet Cadillac.
24:20All right.
24:22We're 20, we're 20, set.
24:26Peyton has the ball at the 10, steps up.
24:28Throws into the end zone, and is caught.
24:31Touchdown, Mike Desecki.
24:34This thing still works.
24:36Finally.
24:40Paul Brown delivers every time, literally.
24:45Hope you worked up an appetite running those four routes.
24:51No matter how you slice it, play calling has come a long way.
24:5575, flanker shape.
24:57The game's gotten so complex, it helps having a Zack Taylor in your ear.
25:02Hey, Joe, I'm going to go big 13X here.
25:05But when a coach can't get a dial tone...
25:07A great quarterback can still make the call.
25:13Pass 15, really, X split, derail.
25:15Round one, ready.
25:17Thanks a lot, Coach Mike.
25:18Really appreciate y'all being a part of this.
25:20Y'all are just the latest chapter in the saga Paul Brown created 70 years ago.
25:25Let's go helmet radio on three.
25:28One, two, three.
25:29Helmet radio.
25:31You know the best thing about this unibar face mask?
25:34What's that?
25:35You can eat with your helmet on.
25:40The Jets haven't won a Super Bowl since the NFL shut down this nightclub.
25:45You think the two are connected?
25:46You know, I always felt like if you gave it to the running back and there was a wide open hole and he scored...
25:51James Brooks runs 29 yards for a touchdown.
25:55I felt like that was an assistant basketball.
25:57Yes, yes, you created that hole.
26:02You know, back when this was a nightclub, you had to go to the bathroom to get the drugs.
26:06Let me show you the coaching section from the 1969 Media Guide.
26:12What coaching section?
26:14There's only five, six coaches on here.
26:16How many assistant coaches do you have?
26:18About 25.
26:19Hey, sweet staff.
26:21Yeah, he used to look pretty good with the crumb catcher back in the day.
26:24Joe Burrow, he mentioned that you thought he was faking it in that Titans game.
26:28That the headsets really weren't down and he just wanted a chance to call his own place.
26:32I wouldn't put it past him.
26:33Don't look.
26:34I think that's Ricky Williams over there.
26:36...
26:49Omaha!
26:51...
26:53...
26:55...
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