That was the turning point.
We are the invisible architecture of every victory. And that is a glory all its own. Sidelined- The QB and Me
We won.
We started staying after practice. Not to throw routes, but to talk. He taught me how to read a defense—how a safety’s stance reveals whether it’s Cover 2 or Cover 3. In return, I taught him how to fall. Not the Hollywood dive, but the tactical collapse that protects a throwing shoulder. We realized that the game is not a hierarchy of importance; it is a chain. The long snapper, the holder, the kicker, the center, the QB—if any one link rusts, the chain snaps. That was the turning point
I was the guy holding the kicking tee.
I was sidelined no more. Not because I became the starter, but because I realized that the sidelines are not a place of exile. They are a place of perspective. The QB carries the weight of the world on his shoulders. I carried the weight of the snap. We were both alone in our moments of crisis, but we were never truly alone. We won
Derek had the arm. The cannon. The ability to throw a laser beam into a window the size of a pizza box. I had the precision of a jeweler; if I snapped the ball a half-inch too high or too low, the punter’s laces wouldn't turn, and the kick would sail wide right. Derek got the glory of the touchdown pass; I got the anxiety of the extra point snap. If I failed, the scoreboard didn’t change. If Derek failed, we lost the game. That was the conventional wisdom, anyway.