Michael MacCambridge's 2004 America's Game: The Epic Story of How Pro Football Captured a Nation:
The Patriots' cohesion called to mind the words of the All-Pro center Bill Curry, when reflecting on the kernel of self-reliance at the heart of the ultimate team game. "There is a moment," said Curry, "in the fourth quarter, when you can't put one foot in front of the other and you've lost 14 pounds to dehydration and there's blood everywhere and you hadn't missed a play. There's not any money that is going to make you run your face into Dick Butkus. There's not a Super Bowl ring, none of that stuff. It's just some sort of instinct that says I'm indestructible and I'm going to whip this other indestructible guy here. Only then do you see a great team. All the other exterior motives don't work, at some level all you really want to do is quit. So, then, there is some little flame that never flickers and it says you're not quitting and it comes from inside. Then you look at the guy next to you and because you love him -- you many not particularly like him off the field -- but on the field you know what he is and you what he's going to do. Then, you can't let him down, cannot let him down. That's how great teams happen. Has very little to do with moral rectitude or all the things that we love to talk about as coaches. We would like for them to be in there, but there is something incredibly moral at that moment when you're looking for a way to just make yourself put one foot in front of the other.
Tags: Michael MacCambridge, America's Game
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