Buddy Teevens documentary, 'The Buddy Way,' is a warm tribute to a football trailblazer
'Nothing was showy about him, nothing was about him,' said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, among his close friends. 'Everything was about the people around him, the people who played for him, his college. You saw that loyalty, that strength, the tremendous values that he had. You wanted to be with Buddy anytime he would let you.'
Teevens, who died in 2023 at age 66 six months after he was hit by a truck while riding his bicycle in Florida, is memorialized in 'The Buddy Way,' an uplifting, feature-length documentary that debuts at 2 p.m. PT Wednesday on ESPN2 and ESPN+, the latest offering from Peyton Manning's Omaha Productions.
Manning, too, was especially close to Teevens, as the longtime coach helped run the Manning Passing Academy, the camp that draws the nation's best high school quarterbacks — as well as the top college quarterbacks, as counselors — to Louisiana every summer.
Read more: Chiefs oust Bills again and will face Eagles with shot for first Super Bowl three-peat
'Every summer, Buddy was a mainstay in our life,' said Manning, a Hall of Fame quarterback who won Super Bowls with the Indianapolis Colts and Denver Broncos. 'That was my motivation. When you're evaluating a story you always need to say, look, your intentions are great but are people going to be interested in this? Is it that unique of a story? In this case it was.'
The irrepressibly enthusiastic Teevens, a onetime undersized quarterback who was Ivy League Player of the Year at Dartmouth, made a risky decision at his alma mater in 2010 when he became the first coach to eliminate full-contact practices. He in part motivated Dartmouth's engineering school to create the Mobile Virtual Player, a robotic tackling device eventually used by other college teams and in the NFL.
Ridiculed at first, Teevens' no-tackling-in-practice approach was eventually adopted by the entire Ivy League. The NFL was on a similar track and limited full-contact practices in the name of player safety.
What's more, Teevens was a pioneer in hiring female coaches, some of whom made their way to the NFL. This season, the league had 15 women working as full-time coaches.
'We just felt really strongly that his story couldn't die with him,' said Jane Skinner Goodell, who served as one of the executive producers along with Dartmouth alumnus Murry Bowden and Manning. 'You don't meet people like Buddy Teevens very often, maybe once in your life if you're lucky. He cared so deeply about people, about doing the right thing. Doing the right thing no matter what. So we just wanted to help pay that goodness forward in some way.'
The documentary is directed by Rory Karpf, who traces Teevens' four-decade football career with never-before-seen footage and interviews with the coach's family, friends and players. Karpf also directed 'The Book of Manning,' the popular documentary that tells the story of Archie and Olivia Manning and sons Cooper, Peyton and Eli.
Peyton Manning said he felt compelled to work on this project after losing a string of people close to him in recent years, among them longtime ESPY Awards producer Maura Mandt and Demaryius Thomas, former star receiver for the Broncos.
Read more: Super Bowl LVIII: Start time, teams, betting odds and halftime show
The quarterback established scholarships in the names of Mandt and Thomas, as well as the Buddy Teevens Award, presented to a coach who has made a lasting impact on the game. Last week, Army coach Jeff Monken received the inaugural Teevens Award.
Moreover, Manning said 'The Buddy Way' — which eventually will live on Disney+ — is just the type of story that inspired the creation of Omaha.
'Our theme is positive, unifying stories that celebrate hard work, a sense of community and peoples' accomplishments,' he said. 'That is Buddy Teevens and this story to a T. It's emotional and sadness is a part of it, but it's inspiring. It is a unifying story. That's exactly what we started the company for, to tell stories like this and try to make an impact in a positive way.'
Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NBC Sports
22 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Quinshon Judkins fantasy football preview 2025: Stats, season outlook, predictions
Rotoworld Staff, Quinshon Judkins 2025 Fantasy Preview 2024: Originally recruited to Ole Miss, Judkins (6'/221) was inarguably the best freshman running back in the country in 2022, totaling 1,567 yards and 16 touchdowns on 274 carries. His efficiency plummeted from 5.7 yards per carry to 4.3 in his sophomore season, as he supplied 1,158 yards on a nearly identical workload. Looking for a power complement to TreVeyon Henderson, Ohio State then lured Judkins away from Ole Miss ahead of their 2024 national championship campaign. What's changed: Splitting the backfield with another future NFL back, Judkins rushed only 194 times, but his efficiency rebounded as he went off for 1,060 yards and 14 scores. Judkins is a serviceable pass-catcher but nothing more, having caught 22 balls in each of his final two seasons. The former Buckeye was a physical and consistent runner in college, but scouts were quick to point out his lack of top-end speed. Outlook: Second-rounder Judkins was supposed to begin his rookie year as the Browns' clear-cut early-down back, but he was arrested and charged with domestic violence in July. Still unsigned as of this writing, Judkins appears destined for a stay on the commissioner's exempt list, and might not even play NFL football in 2025. That leaves holdover Jerome Ford and fellow rookie Dylan Sampson as the Browns' top two backs for the time being. Get personalized fantasy football insights based on your league settings with FantasyLife+. Your league is unique, your advice should be too. Head to and use code ROTO20 for 20% off. **Projections from Spotlight Sports Group Go to: All players | QBs | RBs | WRs | TEs


USA Today
23 minutes ago
- USA Today
2026 NFL draft: Todd McShay mocks nation's top tackle to New York Giants
The 2025 season doesn't start for a few more weeks, but we've already seen a fair share of "way too early" mock drafts. Now that we've seen a little bit of each NFL team through the first preseason games, draft analyst Toddy McShay released his "appropriately early" mock draft. He and Steve Muench co-host The McShay Show podcast and worked together to scout players that teams might actually draft, rather than shooting in the dark. Based on FanDuel's Super Bowl odds, the Giants are projected to have the third overall pick. With that pick, McShay and Muench predict that the Giants will select offensive tackle Spencer Fano out of Utah. "I think that offensive line's got a chance to be a lot better than people expect. Marcus Mbow they drafted (this year), by the way, Marcus Mbow is having a good camp. That's 'our guy' from Purdue, I think he gets a little stronger and there's something there," McShay said. McShay goes through the top five picks in his mock before getting Muench's opinion on his selections. Muench is very high on Fano. "Violent, athletic, it's not all clean," Muench said. "It's not all clean. But that gives you is the opportunity to see what happens when he gets caught in a bad spot. I remember watching when the Jets took Alijah Vera Tucker out of USC. I remember Joe Douglas, who was the GM of the Jets at the time, talking about 'what happens when Vera Tucker gets caught out of position, how does he recover?' And they were so impressed with his ability to recover. "Man, I see Fano, and when he's clean with his technique, it is beautiful, but when he does things that he's not supposed to, he still wins. And when you're looking at that kind of a talent, I would have no problem taking him in the Top 5.' The Giants' offensive line has struggled over the last few years, but it does seem to be coming together this year. However, aside from John Michael Schmitz, all of the starting offensive linemen have been in the league for a minimum of five years. There's not a ton of youth behind them, either, and Fano could easily slide into the rotation should the Giants actually draft him.


USA Today
23 minutes ago
- USA Today
Texans' C.J. Stroud praises Panthers' Bryce Young: 'He's one of the best QBs I've seen'
C.J. Stroud will always be attached to Bryce Young. The Houston Texans quarterback went second in the 2023 NFL Draft after Young landed with the Carolina Panthers at No. 1 overall. Both gunslingers grew up in California, with Young playing for the Inland Empire Ducks while Stroud suited up for Pomona Valley Steelers. The duo also finished top three in the Heisman Trophy voting during 2021, with Young becoming the first Alabama quarterback to claim the title. And they trained together ahead of the draft with the intent of becoming franchise quarterbacks for their respective programs. While Stroud, who won the 2023 Offensive Rookie of the Year Award after becoming the fourth first-year passer to throw for 4,000 yards, has found more success entering Year 3, he's perhaps Young's biggest supporter around the league. Even when Young struggled as a rookie and eventually ended up getting benched, Stroud knew his friend would figure it out. He has, and it was on display throughout Thursday's joint practice at the Methodist Training Center in Houston. Carolina seems poised to make waves in the NFC South this upcoming fall, and Stroud isn't surprised to see the No. 1 overall pick live up to his status. "He's very even keeled, very to himself. I think I've seen a dog come out of him that he has that a lot of people haven't seen," Stroud said. "But I know he dealt with some frustrations. I think it's good that we go through these ups and downs to refocus you back on what's important. I think he had that, and I had that last year as well. I think he bounced back like he should, and we all know he can. He's a heck of a player, one of the best quarterbacks I've ever seen in my life. He needs some help around him too. I'm just really proud of that guy. Just the same way he said about me, through every ups and downs, every valley and peak, he stayed the same guy, stayed loyal and stayed a friend and a brother. So, I'm very appreciative of him." Stroud and Young will do battle in Saturday's exhibition outing, which kicks off at Noon CT from NRG Stadium.