Joe Montana

Wright Thompson On Joe Montana. I loved this passage:

It's the moment that matters. Not records. He was fine to let his trophies burn. He misses the moments. The moments are what he thinks about when he sits at home and watches Brady play in a Super Bowl. He's not jealous of the result or even the ring. He's jealous of the experience.

"To sit in rare air ..." Ronnie Lott says, searching for the words.

"... is like being on a spaceship."

Breathing rare air changes you. Every child who's sucked helium from a birthday balloon knows this and so does Joe Montana and everyone who ever played with him. It's the feeling so many kids hoped to feel when they slipped on the No. 16 jersey and let the mesh drape over their arms.

"He breathed rare air with me," Lott says, and the way he talks about air sure sounds like he's talking about love.

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/35604915/49ers-legend-joe-montana-reflects-legacy-ahead-super-bowl

Previous
Previous

NCAA Coaches and Officials

Next
Next

"Change Their Behavior and Make Them Better"