JDSal45
Third String But Playing on Special Teams
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2004
- Messages
- 693
- Reaction score
- 16
From Eric Mangini's wikipedia entry:
"Mangini worked his way up in the NFL. He began his career as a ball boy with Cleveland at the age of 23, and later became an intern in the public relations department. While working as a ball boy, he was often quoted as saying "no job is too small in the NFL." He worked 18 hours a day in the PR department, and at night he took copies of stats in the copyroom. Bill Belichick, then coach of Cleveland Browns found him there, and liked him so much that he asked the general manager if they had another job for him. Mangini was given the smallest coaching job in the Browns, putting film together for the coordinators"
Must have been around the time Bill Belichick was giving him hundred dollar bills out of his pocket so he could live a little more comfortably. What a scum bag. I hope the guy goes 4-12 and gets fired by the end of the 2008 season, never to work again in the NFL
J D Sal
"Mangini worked his way up in the NFL. He began his career as a ball boy with Cleveland at the age of 23, and later became an intern in the public relations department. While working as a ball boy, he was often quoted as saying "no job is too small in the NFL." He worked 18 hours a day in the PR department, and at night he took copies of stats in the copyroom. Bill Belichick, then coach of Cleveland Browns found him there, and liked him so much that he asked the general manager if they had another job for him. Mangini was given the smallest coaching job in the Browns, putting film together for the coordinators"
Must have been around the time Bill Belichick was giving him hundred dollar bills out of his pocket so he could live a little more comfortably. What a scum bag. I hope the guy goes 4-12 and gets fired by the end of the 2008 season, never to work again in the NFL
J D Sal