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I love the Malcolm Butler story — 20 Comments

  1. PATRIOTS vs SEAHAWKS haiku

    It’s no mystery
    Who deflated the Seahawks.
    The Butler did it!

  2. And if the Seahawks had won you could have written a similar piece about Matthews who made his first ever NFL catch in this game and went on to make four and a touchdown.

  3. Butler only played two years of high school ball in Vicksburg, Miss. He played two years in a junior college (Hinds JC)near Jackson Mississippi. Playing at the Division II level at West Alabama, Butler was very effective and had lots of regional recognition in his league. The Patriots found him somehow.

    On the miracle catch Butler’s tight coverage probably saved a touchdown.

  4. This morning, John Madden said it was the greatest game he had ever watched, as a fan. That meant he is excluding those in which he was involved as a player, coach or TV analyst.

  5. A great life lesson for us all. We all have the capacity to be the hero don t we. That young man could have hung back but he seized the moment! And it came to him & on such a big stage. He genuinely looked speechless & in shock on the
    Sideline. It was a rollercoaster of emotion tp watch live neo
    You missed the chance to get your stress hormones flowing
    With the circus Seattle catch followed by a flood of good endorphins when we got that intercept !!
    Sweet & so sublime !
    I am girl that loves football picked it up watching Sundays
    With dad !

  6. Alex:

    Bottom line: if Butler doesn’t intercept, no one cares one whit about Carrol’s decision to pass instead of give the ball to Lynch. The Seahawks win, and Carrol’s a genius.

    It Butler intercepts (a highly astounding feat under the circumstances) Carrol becomes an idiot.

    And yet Carrol’s decision was the same in either case.

  7. I mentioned this in earlier thread, but check out Malcolm Butler interview on NBC this morning:

    http://www.nbcnews.com/id/36090945?launch=56916496&config=26185044

    Very humble, deserving young man. He seems a bit shell-shocked, of course!

    I have also been impressed with the positive, very Christian response exhibited by Russell Wilson, who threw that interception. Also classy and humble, as his tweets reveal:

    http://www.latimes.com/sports/sportsnow/la-sp-sn-russell-wilson-tweets-20150202-story.html

  8. CV:

    Thanks for the link to the Butler interview. He’s one happy camper today. I put the video up as an addendum to the post.

  9. The 12s in Puget Sound (of which I’m not really one since I’m a lifetime Bronco fan) are depressed today. There is a lot of finger pointing at Carroll and Bevel. However, as pointed out in the link by Alex, it was the high percentage call.

    As Richard Sherman and a few other Seahawks players said, “They made the play.” Or specifically Butler made the play. It’s tough to lose when it’s seemingly in your grasp, but the Seahawks and the 12s will recover.

    Best Superbowl ever? This one was good, but my nomination would be Superbowl XXXII in 1998. Denver over Green Bay 31 to 24. The game was tied until the winning touchdown was scored with 1:52 to go. Another quality game. Especially meaningful to Bronco fans who had endured four Superbowl losses before that first win.

    My allegiance to the Broncos goes way back to my years of living in Colorado. Had the pleasure of flying Bronco charters on many occasions when they were owned by the Phipps brothers. Those were the days before airline security was a big deal. On the charters it was legal to open the cockpit door after reaching cruise altitude. Many of the players would come up and chat with us. We asked questions about the team. They asked questions about flying and airplanes. Got to know a few of them as human beings, not just padded gridiron gladiators. I moved to the Pacific Northwest, but my allegiance to the Broncos remains.

  10. “I just knew they were going to throw. My instincts, I just went with it, just went with my mind and made the play.” Malcolm Butler

    From neo’s linked article: “Butler read the play immediately, took the perfect route to the ball, and was tougher at the point of contact than Lockette. If he’s a hair slower, or lets Lockette bump him off the ball, the Patriots lose and we never even think about the play call.”

    That made me think of this;

    Brutus:
    There is a tide in the affairs of men.
    Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
    Omitted, all the voyage of their life
    Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
    On such a full sea are we now afloat,
    And we must take the current when it serves,
    Or lose our ventures.

    Julius Caesar Act 4, scene 3, 218—224

  11. The most impressive part is that there was no pause, no hesitation on Butler’s part.

    Just an extra fraction of a second to confirm his analysis and move, maybe he still knocks the ball away from Lockette, but he doesn’t get that interception. If he only knocks the ball down, that’s 2 downs for Lynch or maybe Wilson, a dynamic runner in his own right, to run it in from a yard out.

  12. Watch the movie “Invincible.”
    What, a Disney movie about the Philadelphia Eagles way back when, under Dick Vermeil as the new head coach? Yes.
    It is a very nice movie, with a good old-fashioned moral, and some startling visual accuracy, like Vermeil’s white (yes, I remember!) belt.

  13. It was a good game. I live in Portland, Oregon, was born in Seattle, so theoretically I should have been on their side (as I was last year). But something about them has put me off a bit, so I was reasonably neutral. You get more of a real charge out of the experience when you’re more strongly emotionally involved. Nevertheless it was fun.

  14. I played a fair amount of high school sports, and had different periods of being either a star or important player in either football, basketball or baseball. “Mind over matter” seemed to enter into the equation much more in football than in baseball or basketball. So it can become interesting on a level quite separate from learned and practiced skills. Something almost “magical” can take over.

  15. Interesting background on Malcolm Butler!

    We really enjoyed the game, and as Pats fans, the last 2 1/2 minutes were a roller-coaster of emotions. The interception had us jumping up and down with glee.

  16. Pingback:The Bookworm Beat 2-4-15 — The “Obama’s not sad” edition and Open Thread

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