From the Nebraska football website:
Head Coach Scott Frost Quotes - 10/7
NU Athletic Communications
Nebraska Football
Weekly Press Conference
Memorial Stadium (Lincoln, Neb.)
Monday, Oct. 7, 2019
Minnesota
Scott Frost
Nebraska Head Coach
On quarterback Adrian Martinez
“Well, we have a week to help to see where Adrian (Martinez) is. But, we feel comfortable if we have to go with Noah (Vedral) and Luke (McCaffrey). Both of those guys got lots of reps today, and they have been repping a lot all through the fall, so if it ends up being them we’re fine. But we will wait to see where Adrian (Martinez) is.”
On how the upcoming bye week plays into practice
“I don’t know if it does. If Adrian (Martinez) is healthy, he will go. If he isn’t, then we feel great about where else we are. But it is good timing for a bunch of guys, so it has been a long stretch here. We have had a one-week season to play the best we can this week, so they can rest and get a lot of guys healthy.”
On if Martinez would need to practice for a certain amount of time to play in the game
“He needs to practice a little, but he has had plenty of reps, so we will make those decisions down the road. Adrian kind of depends on when and if he is able to look efficient in practice.”
On Luke McCaffrey
“Luke is a special athlete, he is going to be a special player. We definitely want to save his years so we have to be smart. I would love to see him out there doing something, but we have to be smart in which other games we play him in. It is funny, Saturday once Adrian was out and Noah went in and Mario (Verduzco) asked if his helmet comes off or something who we are putting in, and I said Luke without thinking about it. I did not expect it to happen on the next play. It was unfortunate he was out there but, he did a good job on his one play. He has got three more to play this year and we’re not going to play him in another.”
On Adrian Martinez’s injury
“He will be all right.”
On JD Spielman’s injury
“He will be all right.”
On if you would have preferred to have put someone else instead of McCaffrey
“It is hard to say. Luke could have just as easily popped a run and won the game for us. He is the next guy up on the depth chart right now, so he is the next guy in. We still have three more games to use him so we will figure out really soon.”
On the play where Vedral recovered a bad snap
“We tell them all the time, if there is some situation like that and we have any kind of bubble or RPO on to get outside the pocket and try to get rid of the ball unless you can get yards. He did a good job. He tried to gain yards on it and couldn’t and threw the ball away. It was a negative play. He made some good decisions on Saturday and that’s what we expect out of him.”
On how he evaluated the snaps from the center position
“We’ve had snap issues all year. It’s gotten better progressively. We’ve come a long way. It’s hard for quarterbacks or anyone else to have good timing and good rhythm and have their eyes where they’re supposed to be when we’re worried about too many unknowns, and the snap is the first one. We are putting a lot on our quarterbacks from the decision standpoint. They have to be able to get their eyes on the right place and see the right thing to make the right read. We’re playing young linemen. We’re playing a young center. It’s gotten better, but it still needs to improve.”
On what stands out about Minnesota
“First of all, they’re undefeated. They played well at the end of some tight games. I think they’re big and physical up front. They've got some big tight ends that help them in the running game. Their quarterback has been really efficient. They have two really good wide receivers. They’re going to smash you and run some RPO’s (Run-Pass Options). They’re going to take shots. They’ve been putting up a lot of points. Defensively, they’re a lot more sound than what we saw last year and more athletic. They’ve definitely improved. You can tell it’s year three of his tenure up there. They’re starting to look like the team he wants them to look like. It’s going to be a good challenge for us and a great opportunity.”
On what the two programs have done right since they met last year in October
“I don’t know. I can’t speak for them. I know the whole thing is a process. You have to keep getting better inch by inch and day by day. It’s pretty obvious that they’ve continued to improve. I think we’re on the right trajectory as well. We’ll probably have this game and a lot more tough games and big games against these guys.”
On if it feels like they’ve won 75 percent of their last 12 games
“I don’t know. We’re just in the middle of this process of getting us to where we want to be. There’s a lot of steps to take. We’ve certainly come a long way. I don’t think anybody in the building is happy where we are either. As a coach, you could go undefeated and not be completely happy because you don’t play as well as you want to. We've just got to keep finding ways to get us chances to win.”
On how running back Maurice Washington responded to being suspended in the first half of Saturday’s game
“As far as the first half, it was my decision to hold him out. We hold our players to a certain standard, and we want to help them to live up to that standard. We held him out the first half. How did he respond? We’ll see how well he responds this week. We want him to come back and play well and come back and prepare well and get ready to play them, and if he does, this will all be water underneath the bridge. We need him to respond just like the rest of the team."
On Minnesota's young offense
Anytime you're young, there's going to be ups and downs. The one great thing we did Saturday is we didn't turn it over and that was probably the difference in the game. Young offenses can make plays. They can also make mistakes. We need to limit those mistakes. We had a couple that cost us a drive here and there if there's a drop or a penalty or things like that. If we limit mistakes, we're going to have a chance to win games. You can tell their young players are really good. Some of our best players are young guys. There's a bright future ahead. But I think the key is be efficient and be yourself."
On the forecast
"We'll see. I'm hoping for a nice, pretty, brisk fall day. If it turns into something else, we just have to make sure we have the right plays and ball sheet to operate in whatever kind of environment we're playing in."
On Noah Vedral
"I knew the family first and foremost. I played with two of his uncles on both sides. They're good friends of mine. Especially Jon Vedral and Matt Vedral. Great athletes, great players. We like the way Noah threw. Liked his athletic ability. He's a really good athlete in high school. Basketball, football, track and field. [There were] several times he ran the [hurdle] times that he had. We knew he had the speed that he needed. He's just got the right mentality. We saw something in him and he hasn't disappointed us. He's been a really good player, and if it is his turn to play on Saturday, I feel great about him."
On his multi-sport skills
"I don't think enough kids are playing in more than one sport. Specializing is great. You get better at your craft, but there's a lot of lessons to learn from other sports. Track makes you faster, more athletic, more explosive. Basketball helps you in body control, understanding space. The competition of all those things help. I want to recruit a lot of guys that are multi-sport athletes. It means they love competition. They love being out there. There are different players that are and aren't. If I had a choice, I'd take guys that are playing sports year-around."
On former Husker quarterback Matt Turman
“If I was comparing Matt and Noah. Noah is taller. Matt was a good friend. A really good football player. Really smart. Won some games here at Nebraska and in key moments. So he would always rise to the occasion and never let the moment be too big for him. I can see some similarities with Noah there. I don’t see Noah rattled very often. Anytime you have coaches' kids, they are used to kind of being in those situations and both of those two are coaches’ kids.”
On wide receivers ready to contribute and what is holding some of them back
“We need guys to keep improving at that position. We've got to be able to get open consistently. We've got to be able to get them the ball. We've got to be able to protect and get the ball. We've got to be able to push the ball down the field more in the passing game. We are working every day to make those things happen. The receivers had a really good day today. Hopefully that carriers over. Have a good Tuesday and a good Wednesday and if weather allows us to throw it maybe we will be ready to try and do some of that.”
On redshirting Barret Pickering
“We hadn’t talked about that yet. We have just been having our fingers crossed that he’d be back sooner rather than later. I guess if we get a few more games into the season, we might start having that discussion. Right now, we just want him to be healthy.”
On how much the coaches are asking of players knowing the bye week follows this week’s game
“Everything. Pour everything into this week. It’s a one week season. We are going to look up on Sunday morning and either be 4-3 or 5-2 and then we get to rest and recuperate. And recover mentally too as we prepare ourselves for the next stretch. Whatever our guys got, they have to pour into this week to try and give us the best chance.”
On redshirt strategy
“We just have to talk about it every week. I think you can have a plan going into the season but things change. It’s impossible to come up with a strategy and stick to it. There’s been weeks when we need guys on special teams, so we had to bring them up. We are kind of trying to rotate those guys to save games. You never know where you are going to have injuries and one of those guys is going to have to play for you on offense or defense, so we are just trying to make decisions each week as they come along and do our best to salvage a year for every guy we possibly can.”
“So, we’re kind of just trying to make decisions each week as they come along and do our best to salvage the year for every guy.”
On potential redshirt players
“If I had to pick one right now, [freshman running back] Rahmir Johnson, is a kid right now who is ready to help us. He’s practicing really well. He’s fast. He’s going to give us a weapon somewhere down the road. He’s played in two games, we got him in for a series on Saturday but probably didn’t get him in enough. That’s two games, so we’re going to try our best to keep him around here for four more years after this. You never know what’s going to happen with injuries and other things with the teams. We might end up having to play him. He’s an example of a guy kind of on the cusp, but if we can help it, make sure he doesn’t use this season without getting too many reps.”
On Luke McCallum's game-winning field goal against Northwestern
“I hope I’m not in that moment again. We watched it several times. Protection was pretty good but right now I need clarification on the rules before coming over a long snapper and have been here for a couple of weeks here. I need a little clarification on that rule. We got a little movement because they had two guys in the gaps over our snap. The rest of protection I think was good. The kick certainly wasn’t high enough. It found an unbelievable hole over somebody’s hands and through. We were due a break or two, and I think we definitely got one at the end of that game.”
On senior wide receiver Kanawai Noa
“I can’t say enough about him. He’s a great player and a great person. He’s tough and practices his butt off. I’m really surprised that the game hasn’t given him more opportunities to make plays, but the way he’s practicing, sooner or later he’s going to break out. We’ll keep doing what we can to get him in there.”
On Monday’s practice
“Today was probably our cleanest Monday. The guys gave everything they got, and they have to this week. Preparation leads to playing the game. Today was a good start.”
On keeping the team “cleanest”
“Just cleanest, practice was good energy, thought the execution was probably the best offensively I've seen all year on a Monday. We kept it a little more simple today, so that might have had something to do it, but the guys definitely responded and came out and practiced fast and there weren’t a lot of balls on the ground today. Guys knew what they were doing and started the week off really well.”
On Minnesota’s receivers
“Yeah, I think they have several good receivers, (Tyler) Johnson would probably be the leading one, but there’s a lot of guys you have to pay attention to. They do a good job of running those guys deep and completing some deep balls. They do a great job on RPO’s that if your eyes aren’t right or you’re not in the right place could turn into big plays. So, they definitely have some weapons on the perimeter and our DBs have to be on their game, but really everybody does because there’s a lot of things that go in to take away that run pass option."
Cam Taylor-Britt playing safety
“With everything that’s happened in the secondary, Cam, you’re seeing what we saw in Cam all spring and all fall camp. He’s a pretty special player. It’s a good thing we have him because we’re able to plug him in at any one of the spots and have a good player at one of those spots. So, he gives us that flexibility. We've got some other guys playing well. Marquel Dismuke was our DB of the game. He had a really good game Saturday, so there’s some other guys doing some good things. But it’s great to have a guy that you can move around and expect good play from no matter which position he is at.”
On the most encouraging thing about the defense’s play
“I just see improvement. I see them getting better every time we go out. Before this I would have never expected to win a 9-6 game or a 13-10 game, but a lot of credit to Coach Chinander and the rest of the D staff and all those guys on defense. We didn’t play very well on defense against Ohio State and in the fourth quarter out in Boulder, but other than that our defense has played really well all year. We’ve got to be a little more consistent, but there’s definitely been some vast improvement and the majority of the time this year, I’ve been really pleased with their play.”
On if the low scoring games are on the offense not performing or on the Big Ten defenses
“It’s both. We have a long way to go offensively. We have to create more things, get more weapons, there’s a lot more things that we need to make our offense better. This is a good league and a lot of these teams are good. You know this is a grown man’s league. You better have some grown men blocking and carrying the ball. Better have athletes on the perimeter so you can take advantage of it when people are loading the box. Northwestern has a good defense. Pat [Fitzgerald] does a great job, he has tough kids. They’re going to be in a lot of those games this year.”
On if he would like to have a pass interference challenge like in the NFL
“No. I watched the Cowboys’ game yesterday and I’m not sure the red flag is a very good idea. Every time we try to solve one problem by fixing something, it creates more problems. Watching the NFL game, I don’t think I’ve seen an overturned pass interference call. There are too many stoppages, too many TV timeouts I think for my liking right now so. We all complain about a call here and a call there for the most part, but the referees are doing a really good job in our league and they know what they’re doing. Honestly a couple of the calls I disagree with the most in my time here were ones that have gone to replay, so I’m not sure if they always get it right. So I would prefer to keep the game the way it is.”
On if his dad talks about his game at Minnesota
“Dad talked to me about every game he’s played. Might need help figuring out which one that was. There was actually a picture in my grandpa’s office, his shop at the dairy farm just between here and Malcolm, of five still frames of dad’s touchdowns against Minnesota, so I’ve been seeing that since I’ve been able to walk because I’ve seen it at the farm.”
Head Coach Scott Frost Quotes - 10/7
NU Athletic Communications
Nebraska Football
Weekly Press Conference
Memorial Stadium (Lincoln, Neb.)
Monday, Oct. 7, 2019
Minnesota
Scott Frost
Nebraska Head Coach
On quarterback Adrian Martinez
“Well, we have a week to help to see where Adrian (Martinez) is. But, we feel comfortable if we have to go with Noah (Vedral) and Luke (McCaffrey). Both of those guys got lots of reps today, and they have been repping a lot all through the fall, so if it ends up being them we’re fine. But we will wait to see where Adrian (Martinez) is.”
On how the upcoming bye week plays into practice
“I don’t know if it does. If Adrian (Martinez) is healthy, he will go. If he isn’t, then we feel great about where else we are. But it is good timing for a bunch of guys, so it has been a long stretch here. We have had a one-week season to play the best we can this week, so they can rest and get a lot of guys healthy.”
On if Martinez would need to practice for a certain amount of time to play in the game
“He needs to practice a little, but he has had plenty of reps, so we will make those decisions down the road. Adrian kind of depends on when and if he is able to look efficient in practice.”
On Luke McCaffrey
“Luke is a special athlete, he is going to be a special player. We definitely want to save his years so we have to be smart. I would love to see him out there doing something, but we have to be smart in which other games we play him in. It is funny, Saturday once Adrian was out and Noah went in and Mario (Verduzco) asked if his helmet comes off or something who we are putting in, and I said Luke without thinking about it. I did not expect it to happen on the next play. It was unfortunate he was out there but, he did a good job on his one play. He has got three more to play this year and we’re not going to play him in another.”
On Adrian Martinez’s injury
“He will be all right.”
On JD Spielman’s injury
“He will be all right.”
On if you would have preferred to have put someone else instead of McCaffrey
“It is hard to say. Luke could have just as easily popped a run and won the game for us. He is the next guy up on the depth chart right now, so he is the next guy in. We still have three more games to use him so we will figure out really soon.”
On the play where Vedral recovered a bad snap
“We tell them all the time, if there is some situation like that and we have any kind of bubble or RPO on to get outside the pocket and try to get rid of the ball unless you can get yards. He did a good job. He tried to gain yards on it and couldn’t and threw the ball away. It was a negative play. He made some good decisions on Saturday and that’s what we expect out of him.”
On how he evaluated the snaps from the center position
“We’ve had snap issues all year. It’s gotten better progressively. We’ve come a long way. It’s hard for quarterbacks or anyone else to have good timing and good rhythm and have their eyes where they’re supposed to be when we’re worried about too many unknowns, and the snap is the first one. We are putting a lot on our quarterbacks from the decision standpoint. They have to be able to get their eyes on the right place and see the right thing to make the right read. We’re playing young linemen. We’re playing a young center. It’s gotten better, but it still needs to improve.”
On what stands out about Minnesota
“First of all, they’re undefeated. They played well at the end of some tight games. I think they’re big and physical up front. They've got some big tight ends that help them in the running game. Their quarterback has been really efficient. They have two really good wide receivers. They’re going to smash you and run some RPO’s (Run-Pass Options). They’re going to take shots. They’ve been putting up a lot of points. Defensively, they’re a lot more sound than what we saw last year and more athletic. They’ve definitely improved. You can tell it’s year three of his tenure up there. They’re starting to look like the team he wants them to look like. It’s going to be a good challenge for us and a great opportunity.”
On what the two programs have done right since they met last year in October
“I don’t know. I can’t speak for them. I know the whole thing is a process. You have to keep getting better inch by inch and day by day. It’s pretty obvious that they’ve continued to improve. I think we’re on the right trajectory as well. We’ll probably have this game and a lot more tough games and big games against these guys.”
On if it feels like they’ve won 75 percent of their last 12 games
“I don’t know. We’re just in the middle of this process of getting us to where we want to be. There’s a lot of steps to take. We’ve certainly come a long way. I don’t think anybody in the building is happy where we are either. As a coach, you could go undefeated and not be completely happy because you don’t play as well as you want to. We've just got to keep finding ways to get us chances to win.”
On how running back Maurice Washington responded to being suspended in the first half of Saturday’s game
“As far as the first half, it was my decision to hold him out. We hold our players to a certain standard, and we want to help them to live up to that standard. We held him out the first half. How did he respond? We’ll see how well he responds this week. We want him to come back and play well and come back and prepare well and get ready to play them, and if he does, this will all be water underneath the bridge. We need him to respond just like the rest of the team."
On Minnesota's young offense
Anytime you're young, there's going to be ups and downs. The one great thing we did Saturday is we didn't turn it over and that was probably the difference in the game. Young offenses can make plays. They can also make mistakes. We need to limit those mistakes. We had a couple that cost us a drive here and there if there's a drop or a penalty or things like that. If we limit mistakes, we're going to have a chance to win games. You can tell their young players are really good. Some of our best players are young guys. There's a bright future ahead. But I think the key is be efficient and be yourself."
On the forecast
"We'll see. I'm hoping for a nice, pretty, brisk fall day. If it turns into something else, we just have to make sure we have the right plays and ball sheet to operate in whatever kind of environment we're playing in."
On Noah Vedral
"I knew the family first and foremost. I played with two of his uncles on both sides. They're good friends of mine. Especially Jon Vedral and Matt Vedral. Great athletes, great players. We like the way Noah threw. Liked his athletic ability. He's a really good athlete in high school. Basketball, football, track and field. [There were] several times he ran the [hurdle] times that he had. We knew he had the speed that he needed. He's just got the right mentality. We saw something in him and he hasn't disappointed us. He's been a really good player, and if it is his turn to play on Saturday, I feel great about him."
On his multi-sport skills
"I don't think enough kids are playing in more than one sport. Specializing is great. You get better at your craft, but there's a lot of lessons to learn from other sports. Track makes you faster, more athletic, more explosive. Basketball helps you in body control, understanding space. The competition of all those things help. I want to recruit a lot of guys that are multi-sport athletes. It means they love competition. They love being out there. There are different players that are and aren't. If I had a choice, I'd take guys that are playing sports year-around."
On former Husker quarterback Matt Turman
“If I was comparing Matt and Noah. Noah is taller. Matt was a good friend. A really good football player. Really smart. Won some games here at Nebraska and in key moments. So he would always rise to the occasion and never let the moment be too big for him. I can see some similarities with Noah there. I don’t see Noah rattled very often. Anytime you have coaches' kids, they are used to kind of being in those situations and both of those two are coaches’ kids.”
On wide receivers ready to contribute and what is holding some of them back
“We need guys to keep improving at that position. We've got to be able to get open consistently. We've got to be able to get them the ball. We've got to be able to protect and get the ball. We've got to be able to push the ball down the field more in the passing game. We are working every day to make those things happen. The receivers had a really good day today. Hopefully that carriers over. Have a good Tuesday and a good Wednesday and if weather allows us to throw it maybe we will be ready to try and do some of that.”
On redshirting Barret Pickering
“We hadn’t talked about that yet. We have just been having our fingers crossed that he’d be back sooner rather than later. I guess if we get a few more games into the season, we might start having that discussion. Right now, we just want him to be healthy.”
On how much the coaches are asking of players knowing the bye week follows this week’s game
“Everything. Pour everything into this week. It’s a one week season. We are going to look up on Sunday morning and either be 4-3 or 5-2 and then we get to rest and recuperate. And recover mentally too as we prepare ourselves for the next stretch. Whatever our guys got, they have to pour into this week to try and give us the best chance.”
On redshirt strategy
“We just have to talk about it every week. I think you can have a plan going into the season but things change. It’s impossible to come up with a strategy and stick to it. There’s been weeks when we need guys on special teams, so we had to bring them up. We are kind of trying to rotate those guys to save games. You never know where you are going to have injuries and one of those guys is going to have to play for you on offense or defense, so we are just trying to make decisions each week as they come along and do our best to salvage a year for every guy we possibly can.”
“So, we’re kind of just trying to make decisions each week as they come along and do our best to salvage the year for every guy.”
On potential redshirt players
“If I had to pick one right now, [freshman running back] Rahmir Johnson, is a kid right now who is ready to help us. He’s practicing really well. He’s fast. He’s going to give us a weapon somewhere down the road. He’s played in two games, we got him in for a series on Saturday but probably didn’t get him in enough. That’s two games, so we’re going to try our best to keep him around here for four more years after this. You never know what’s going to happen with injuries and other things with the teams. We might end up having to play him. He’s an example of a guy kind of on the cusp, but if we can help it, make sure he doesn’t use this season without getting too many reps.”
On Luke McCallum's game-winning field goal against Northwestern
“I hope I’m not in that moment again. We watched it several times. Protection was pretty good but right now I need clarification on the rules before coming over a long snapper and have been here for a couple of weeks here. I need a little clarification on that rule. We got a little movement because they had two guys in the gaps over our snap. The rest of protection I think was good. The kick certainly wasn’t high enough. It found an unbelievable hole over somebody’s hands and through. We were due a break or two, and I think we definitely got one at the end of that game.”
On senior wide receiver Kanawai Noa
“I can’t say enough about him. He’s a great player and a great person. He’s tough and practices his butt off. I’m really surprised that the game hasn’t given him more opportunities to make plays, but the way he’s practicing, sooner or later he’s going to break out. We’ll keep doing what we can to get him in there.”
On Monday’s practice
“Today was probably our cleanest Monday. The guys gave everything they got, and they have to this week. Preparation leads to playing the game. Today was a good start.”
On keeping the team “cleanest”
“Just cleanest, practice was good energy, thought the execution was probably the best offensively I've seen all year on a Monday. We kept it a little more simple today, so that might have had something to do it, but the guys definitely responded and came out and practiced fast and there weren’t a lot of balls on the ground today. Guys knew what they were doing and started the week off really well.”
On Minnesota’s receivers
“Yeah, I think they have several good receivers, (Tyler) Johnson would probably be the leading one, but there’s a lot of guys you have to pay attention to. They do a good job of running those guys deep and completing some deep balls. They do a great job on RPO’s that if your eyes aren’t right or you’re not in the right place could turn into big plays. So, they definitely have some weapons on the perimeter and our DBs have to be on their game, but really everybody does because there’s a lot of things that go in to take away that run pass option."
Cam Taylor-Britt playing safety
“With everything that’s happened in the secondary, Cam, you’re seeing what we saw in Cam all spring and all fall camp. He’s a pretty special player. It’s a good thing we have him because we’re able to plug him in at any one of the spots and have a good player at one of those spots. So, he gives us that flexibility. We've got some other guys playing well. Marquel Dismuke was our DB of the game. He had a really good game Saturday, so there’s some other guys doing some good things. But it’s great to have a guy that you can move around and expect good play from no matter which position he is at.”
On the most encouraging thing about the defense’s play
“I just see improvement. I see them getting better every time we go out. Before this I would have never expected to win a 9-6 game or a 13-10 game, but a lot of credit to Coach Chinander and the rest of the D staff and all those guys on defense. We didn’t play very well on defense against Ohio State and in the fourth quarter out in Boulder, but other than that our defense has played really well all year. We’ve got to be a little more consistent, but there’s definitely been some vast improvement and the majority of the time this year, I’ve been really pleased with their play.”
On if the low scoring games are on the offense not performing or on the Big Ten defenses
“It’s both. We have a long way to go offensively. We have to create more things, get more weapons, there’s a lot more things that we need to make our offense better. This is a good league and a lot of these teams are good. You know this is a grown man’s league. You better have some grown men blocking and carrying the ball. Better have athletes on the perimeter so you can take advantage of it when people are loading the box. Northwestern has a good defense. Pat [Fitzgerald] does a great job, he has tough kids. They’re going to be in a lot of those games this year.”
On if he would like to have a pass interference challenge like in the NFL
“No. I watched the Cowboys’ game yesterday and I’m not sure the red flag is a very good idea. Every time we try to solve one problem by fixing something, it creates more problems. Watching the NFL game, I don’t think I’ve seen an overturned pass interference call. There are too many stoppages, too many TV timeouts I think for my liking right now so. We all complain about a call here and a call there for the most part, but the referees are doing a really good job in our league and they know what they’re doing. Honestly a couple of the calls I disagree with the most in my time here were ones that have gone to replay, so I’m not sure if they always get it right. So I would prefer to keep the game the way it is.”
On if his dad talks about his game at Minnesota
“Dad talked to me about every game he’s played. Might need help figuring out which one that was. There was actually a picture in my grandpa’s office, his shop at the dairy farm just between here and Malcolm, of five still frames of dad’s touchdowns against Minnesota, so I’ve been seeing that since I’ve been able to walk because I’ve seen it at the farm.”