Next stop, SubwayMania: Meet the man and story behind one of wrestling's most viral sensations
If you're a New Yorker, you probably read that sentence in the exact same cadence and tempo of Charlie Pellett, the iconic voice of the New York City subway system.
Millions of people ride the subway every day. Whether they're heading to work, out to meet friends, or just need to get from point A to point B, it's one of the most reliable forms of transportation there is — yes, even you, L train.
For born-and-raised New Yorkers like Tim Rivera, the subway is ingrained in their DNA.
'I take the train every day and I have been since I was a kid,' Rivera told Uncrowned. 'My life revolves around the train. Everything I've experienced has involved the train. Going to the movie theater, hanging out with friends — it always involved the train.'
Rivera's internet claim to fame also just so happens to have a direct link to the subway, as the Spanish Harlem-born video editor is the creator and one of the stars of SubwayMania, the viral wrestling sensation that stages wrestling matches on the same trains that carry millions of New York commuters during rush hour.
When it comes to Rivera, 29, the idea for SubwayMania was born from a high-school graduation present. Rivera's mother bought him a replica, "Attitude Era" WWE championship belt (not the Winged Eagle, he specifically clarifies) more than a decade ago, and he envisioned a playful cosplay segment involving The Rock and X-Pac. Initially planned as a one-off, the 2016 video eventually led to the first match in SubwayMania's history — then branded Subway Slam.
'I've always been doing content, always trying to find my niche, but I always loved wrestling,' Rivera said. 'One day, I thought it would be funny if my friend — who played The Rock — if he just posed on the train as if the corner of the train was the turnbuckle, holding the championship belt. I love storytelling and skits so I decided to push myself and do a whole segment on the train — cutting a promo and whatnot. It was supposed to be a one-time thing, but I posted it and it went viral. People wanted a match because it's what we were hyping up. It was just for giggles though. They wanted us to wrestle on the train, I wasn't sure how we were going to do it, but we did it.'
Anyone who relies on public transportation knows there are certain pitfalls you may need to navigate — delays, crowds, etc. — and that's just your standard commute. Even though the New York City subway system is no stranger to entrepreneurial endeavors — train cars have long served as stages for musicians, dance floors for aspiring performers, or even makeshift bodegas where you can buy anything from candy to churros to batteries — pulling off an entire wrestling match presents Rivera and his team with an entirely new set of challenges, especially as the operation and production has become more complex.
'Nobody else could really pull this off,' Rivera said. 'How do I know what stops are crowded, what stops are low-key, what trains to use? You have the 4, 5, 6 trains, those train cars are smaller than the 7 train or N, Q and R. How do I know this? I'm not out here Googling what train cars are bigger. It's through experience, life. There are times where it can be tough. Not every SubwayMania is 100 percent guaranteed, but with my team, especially throughout the years, we're all from New York and have confidence, we prep, we plan and rehearse our stuff — that way, when we do shoot it, it's less than 10 minutes and that's it.'
That first Subway Slam video generated 55,000 views, with the resulting match nearly doubling that number. The exponential growth continued a year later as Rivera created another train match, this time a full-on Royal Rumble, with eliminations happening at actual subway stations. The Subway Royal Rumble's 285,000 streams paled in comparison to what happened in 2019 as WWE brought WrestleMania to MetLife Stadium in New Jersey and Rivera's creation fully exploded, with the first branded SubwayMania video drawing more than 2 million views on YouTube alone. The success has even permeated to the props, as the old replica WWE belt has since been swapped for a custom SubwayMania one.
'With WrestleMania coming [to the area in 2019], I said we needed SubwayMania, and that one really went crazy,' Rivera said. 'The name stuck, too. I just kept going — let's see what else we could do on the train. It's being creative and pushing the boundaries, there's always more.'
That penchant for more also presents new hurdles. A traditional WWE wrestling ring measures 20 feet by 20 feet. The average New York City Subway car has a width that is half that, not accounting for seating and dozens of straphangers who may be onboard. As SubwayMania has grown, Rivera and his crew have upped the ante in the sense that chairs, ladders and even tables have been introduced.
While Rivera isn't a trained wrestler himself, the other talent in the videos do have professional training. Rivera's friends, three wrestlers who go by the monikers of Lex Gunz, Deadkid and Mahdi Ladjo, play various characters in the SubwayMania universe, from referees to Kevin Owens to The Undertaker. They're in a faction together outside of SubwayMania on the independent wrestling circuit and that experience allows them take on key roles in planning the matches.
'[The guys I work with] are trained and go by 'The Cult' faction,' Rivera said. 'Deadkid and Justin are from Harlem. Deadkid was onboard from the beginning and I was trying to get the other two and they eventually started doing it. They help a lot, they teach me moves, me and my boy Spag, we just do [SubwayMania] but we know how to sell. I'm in the wrestling scene but I never wanted to be a wrestler, I guess I just do it on the subway.'
SubwayMania has opened doors — pun intended — for Rivera as a wrestling content creator, even earning him recognition from WWE and executives Paul 'Triple H' Levesque and Nick Khan in the process. Rivera met Levesque and Khan in a chance work encounter last year and he happened to be wearing a SubwayMania shirt at the time. Arguably the two most powerful men in WWE knew of the videos and offered him tickets to WrestleMania 40 in Philadelphia. A year later, Rivera — cosplaying as Jey Uso — managed to be featured in the "Showcase of the Immortals," thanks to SubwayMania.
'In April we were featured on WrestleMania 41,' Rivera said. 'I was here watching with my partner and I'm laying down with her and I just saw myself and we lost it. I sometimes wonder, how did I get here? From the subway to being part of WrestleMania.'
SubwayMania has also become an unofficial right of passage for pro wrestlers who come through New York City. In the past month alone, Matt and Jeff Hardy, Mike Santana and TNA President Carlos Silva all took part in SubwayMania, with Jeff Hardy making his maiden voyage on the New York City subway system.
'It's been really cool. I feel like SubwayMania has been a blessing for me,' Rivera said. 'I believe [the success is about] consistency and continuing to innovate. Matt Hardy said that on his podcast and it's true — nobody is doing what I do. On top of that, having the creativity with the cosplay, the moves, the commentary, the camera angles, the video editing — I edit all my stuff — it feels like a real wrestling match. It's never been done before the way I'm doing it. It's consistency, quality and the fans sharing it, that's what is getting wrestlers and legends to want to be a part of this.'
With WWE SummerSlam 2025 taking place this weekend at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, SubwayMania and Rivera will certainly have a presence. Rivera is hosting an event alongside professional wrestler Big Swole called Summer Bash, which is run by the people behind WaleMania. Rivera declined to divulge the details as to who may appear on the inevitable SubwayMania segments, and instead did what any good wrestling promoter does: Sell for his promotion.
'It's cosplay and we're paying homage," he said, "but also this has added the factor that you never know who is coming through those doors.'
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Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Men Are Revealing The Exact Moment They Knew They Were A "Manchild," And It Explains A LOT
At the edge of a high school track, I watched my 11-year-old son Thomas' face drop as the announcer read out the long jump results. His event was already over. I'd asked his twin brother, Charlie, to check the meet schedule, and he'd given me the wrong time. I'd trusted an 11-year-old with something that was my responsibility as the adult. Thomas had trained for months. Now he stood there, trying not to cry, while other kids celebrated. What hit hardest wasn't just that Thomas missed his event. It was that I'd let both of my sons down. One missed an important event he'd trained for. The other was left carrying the blame. And both of those outcomes were on me. That moment revealed a pattern I was reluctant to face. Even though I was divorced with 50/50 custody, I often treated parenting as a task I could delegate. I was trying too hard to be liked. I wanted to be the fun dad, not the firm one — and that meant avoiding some of the more mundane or difficult responsibilities. I kept acting like their friend when what my kids needed was a responsible adult. What I was doing is known as being a 'manchild,' a term used to describe men who avoid responsibility at home through procrastination, deflection or feigned ignorance. Men often say they are 'just not good at multitasking' or that their partner is 'better at organizing,' but the outcome is the same. One person ends up doing the emotional and logistical heavy lifting while the other waits for direction. This dynamic I experienced reflects a broader cultural conversation about men avoiding responsibility. Sabrina Carpenter's viral summer hit 'Manchild,' which has inspired dances, discourse, and social media buzz, calls out grown men behaving like children. Though aimed at a past relationship, the song echoes a broader frustration with men dodging responsibility at home. The pattern of feigned ignorance is familiar to family therapists. 'They pretend they aren't aware of things that most people with kids would have on their radar, like needing a teacher gift at the end of school,' Bonnie Scott, a licensed professional counselor at Mindful Kindness Counseling, told HuffPost. These habits can follow men for years, but some are forced to grow up fast. When Man-Children Are Responsible For Real Children Rene Garcia, now the owner and lead clinician at Garcia Mental Health, learned he was going to be a father at 23 while still in college. 'My first daughter was unplanned, and I had not graduated from college yet. I desperately wanted to be a support for her and felt powerless on how to do so.' Garcia's biggest challenge was confronting his inconsistency. 'I'm awesome at goal setting, but following through is different. You become unreliable and someone people don't trust. This destroys relationships with kids and partners.' The deeper issue was internal: 'Change makes you challenge things in yourself you have purposefully pushed down, possibly out of protection. What pushed me was wanting to stop the same patterns from happening over and over again.' He was confronting parts of himself he had ignored for years, and the cost of continuing old patterns had become impossible to ignore. While Garcia's awakening came through early parenthood, other men face their limitations during crisis. Thomas Westerholtz, a therapist and father, experienced his turning point when his son was diagnosed with a rare and life-limiting medical condition. 'When your child is fighting for their life, you can't hide behind performance. I realized I was 'doing' a lot — working, showing up — but not always emotionally present with my family. I wasn't holding space for fear, grief, or everyday vulnerability.' 'I used to quietly assume my partner would manage the emotional temperature of the household, birthdays, school forms, noticing when our kid was off. I wasn't actively avoiding it, but I wasn't owning it either. That left her burnt out and feeling alone.' When It's Time To Grow Up For men ready to change course, the hardest question they need to ask themselves, according to parenting psychologist Reena B. Patel, is whether they get defensive when asked to take responsibility. 'That defensiveness is usually a sign that you know you're not pulling your weight,' she said. Other warning signs include expecting partners to handle the majority of emotional labor and avoiding tasks until someone else steps in. Scott said the first step is uncomfortable but simple: 'Approach your partner and say, 'I want to make sure I'm doing my part in managing our life together. Could we sit together and talk about something like the weekly schedule?'' The goal isn't to take over but to participate with genuine interest. Planning was Garcia's breakthrough: 'PLAN! I never used to plan anything. Now, if I don't write it down or put it on my calendar, it won't happen.' Letting go of pride was the first hurdle Westerholtz had to face. 'Feeling useless at first' was the hardest part, he said. 'Vulnerability isn't something most men are trained in. I had to learn not to jump to fixing, but to actually be with pain or mess: my own and others'.' Westerholtz now checks in weekly with his partner and uses a shared calendar with reminders like 'pack lunch' and 'doctor follow-up.' 'Visibility equals responsibility,' he said. These changes have brought broader impacts. 'There's less resentment. More tenderness. My partner doesn't have to mother me, and that makes space for partnership,' Westerholtz said. The change has also shaped how their son understands masculinity: 'I also see my son learning not just how to survive, but how to be a man who feels, apologizes, and holds others with care.' Consistency became the turning point in Garcia's relationship with his daughter, but it required moving beyond traditional activities. 'Being intentional with our time, and not just taking her to dinners or baseball games, but getting to know her personally, has built a relationship between us that is indescribable,' Garcia said. When Garcia volunteered as a WATCH D.O.G. (Dads of Great Students), seeing his daughter light up when he showed up for lunch made her feel supported at school and among friends. What Kind Of Man Do You Want To Be? These fathers are consciously breaking generational patterns. For Westerholtz, this transformation meant redefining what it means to be a man for his son. 'Before, I think I believed being a man meant protecting, fixing, and staying strong. Now I think it's about being present, especially when things are messy.' He tells his son it's OK to feel scared or sad, and that real strength means talking about emotions instead of shutting down: 'We talk about emotions like weather. They pass, but you don't need to pretend it's sunny when it's not.' This shift in emotional openness extends beyond family. In his male friendships, Westerholtz brings the same vulnerability. 'It used to be all banter and distraction, surface-level. But when I started being real about how hard things were with my son's health, I found that most men were relieved. Like they'd been waiting for someone to go first.' As he puts it: 'Vulnerability invites connection, not just with our partners, but with our mates too.' Patel notes that children benefit directly when fathers develop emotional maturity. 'They model respect, empathy, and resilience skills that their children will carry into adulthood. Partners also feel more supported, less stressed, and free to be individuals, not caretakers for another adult.' The 'manchild' label stings because it highlights a gap between how men see themselves and how they actually show up. Like Garcia and Westerholtz, I'm learning to show up differently for my sons. I need to be a father who is sometimes a friend, not a friend who is sometimes a father. That track meet taught me the hard way. Now, I check every appointment, every schedule, every exam and essay due date. Nothing has been missed since. My sons are 18 now, and my habit of double-checking everything still annoys them. But I would rather that than let them down again. As Westerholtz put it: 'You're not less of a man for softening. You're just becoming less of a boy.' This article originally appeared on HuffPost. Solve the daily Crossword


New York Times
13 minutes ago
- New York Times
As beloved Buffalo Bills coach Marv Levy turns 100, former players reflect on the ways he changed them
Fran Levy was anxious about the idea and set against it. Her husband is 99 years old. Interstate travel is not easy on him. Stairs are a menace. People want to hug him and shake his hand, creating nervous moments when he's no longer holding onto his walker. Besides, he had an event scheduled the next day back home. Advertisement Her husband, however, is indefatigable former Buffalo Bills coach Marv Levy, and the man doesn't shrink from a challenge. The Pro Football Hall of Fame had invited Levy to celebrate his 100th birthday as part of induction weekend. A little argument occurred in the dining room of their Chicago home. 'She challenged the idea of us going,' their daughter, Kimberly Alexopoulos, said, 'and he put his hand firmly down on the table and his voice raised. 'What do I say? What do I say? When it's too tough for them, it's just right for us!' He still uses the Marvisms in his family! 'I started crying. Let's all be like him our entire lives.' So all the Levys are going. His 100th birthday is Sunday, but he'll be celebrated all weekend. The Hall of Fame arranged for a custom van to take Marv and Fran to Canton and back again for the festivities, highlighted by a birthday celebration Friday among family, close friends, Bills alumni and fellow bronze-bust legends. He'll be honored again Saturday afternoon, this time on national television as part of the 2025 class' induction ceremony in Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium. 'It's a monumental effort for him,' Alexopoulos said, 'but he knows this is going to be historic and wants to give back to football, to the Hall of Fame, to his former players, to anyone who has ever been a fan.' Levy insisted they return home Saturday night, not because Marv wants to spend his centenary at home, but because he's a man of his word and already committed to a Sunday afternoon appearance at the National Sports Card Convention, coincidentally in suburban Chicago this year. The event will be another opportunity for his greatest players to honor their patriarch. Fellow Hall of Famers Jim Kelly, Thurman Thomas, Andre Reed, James Lofton and Bruce Smith will be signing autographs there too. Advertisement 'Everybody in his presence is engaged in whatever he is saying,' Alexopoulos said. 'To me, it's the most endearing part of him. He's the best role model that anyone's been blessed to have for all these years, and I will share him with anyone and everyone as long as they're going to see his character and goodwill. 'Sorry to cry. I don't understand how he's so superhumanly amazing like that.' Let's see if his former players and a select few others can explain the ageless spirit and timeless renown of Marv Levy. How would you explain to someone who has never met Marv Levy what he's like? Darryl Talley, Bills Wall of Fame linebacker 1983-94: It's almost like a kid going to see Santa Claus. Think about it. How often do you get to see Santa Claus as a kid when you still think he's real? James Lofton, Hall of Fame wideout: Nowadays, every once in a while, you hear people talk about a player as a unicorn. Marv Levy was a unicorn. Sean McDermott, who hosted seven Super Bowl Bills to dinner when he became head coach in 2017: You could tell how much Marv meant to them. Just listening to the stories. It wasn't 'He was my friend.' It was, 'Remember when Marv made us do that?' They talked about how he was teaching them as young men, lessons they are still talking about and sharing with their kids — and now their grandkids, probably. Steve Tasker, seven-time Pro Bowler on special teams: He's a human being you gravitate towards and want to emulate. Just being around him, it felt like he made you better. Andre Reed, Hall of Fame receiver: Marv was a dad to me. Players that weren't even coached by him say that. He has an aura. Levy was considered old when the Bills hired him in November 1986. So old, in fact, that Levy lied about his age, telling owner Ralph Wilson he was 58 years old when he was actually 61. Advertisement Pete Metzelaars, Bills tight end 1985-94: I don't think any of us had recollections of him being the head coach at Kansas City (from 1978 into 1982). It was, like, 'Who's this guy and what did he do? Why are they picking this guy?' He was doing color commentary for our games, and we knew he'd coached in Canada. Tasker: I got to Buffalo very early in Marv's tenure. I was one of the first new guys on the team, part of his movement. Who knew where it was going to go? Cornelius Bennett, 1990s All-Decade linebacker: You couldn't imagine this man, so tiny and frail-looking, was a leader of giants. Mike Lodish, Bills defensive lineman 1990-94: Looking at him when I got to Buffalo as a 10th-round draft pick (in 1990), I thought, 'Wow.' I didn't expect him to be this little guy. I was thinking NFL coaches were John Madden-sized or looked like Dan Campbell. Levy enlisted in World War II the day after high school graduation, graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Coe College, was accepted into Harvard Law School and eventually earned a double master's degree in English and history from Harvard. Tasker: He never failed to be impressive in anything he did. He's always special, and he's full of integrity and humor and self-deprecation and humility. Lofton: He easily could have been your English professor or your philosophy professor in college. He just had a way of using words that related to every man on the roster while holding them to a higher standard as a player. Talley: He's a supercool nerd. He's the most unusual person I've ever seen. He can make a smart man feel dumb and a dumb man feel smart. Lodish: I soon realized you don't need to be a big man to be a great coach. You need to have the ability to communicate and to get your players to buy into your philosophy. Tasker: He was just a human being that you gravitated towards and you wanted to emulate. Being around him, it felt like he made you better, and it was always a gift. Advertisement Levy quickly became known for his ability to harness one of the NFL's most notable collections of alpha personalities. Talley: Just to handle all the egos we had in our locker room — that alone — he has to be a great man. Marlon Kerner, Bills safety 1995-98: Coming into a team with a history of success, having been two years removed from a fourth consecutive Super Bowl, I was unsure of so many things. Coach Levy was such a calming voice. Steve Christie, Bills kicker 1992-2000: He is a teacher of men in a business that brings in a multitude of different individuals from, at times, vastly contrasting backgrounds. He was able to mold all of us together into a collective force that was prominent in the league for years. Metzelaars, Indianapolis Colts offensive line coach 2004-11: He treated us like men. 'This is what we're going to do. This is how we're going to do it.' He was very similar to Tony Dungy. They weren't emotional and rah, rah, rah. Marv was calm, clear, intellectual. Bennett: Most head coaches that I've observed, they need to make sure you know they're in charge. Coach Levy was not like that. He didn't have to prove anything. Metzelaars: There were times he'd play the old-man card and pretend he didn't hear what somebody said, that selective hearing. He'd let it slide and then handle it behind the scenes. Kerner: He also had a true open-door policy, and for a young guy, that was huge to see. It made him approachable and real. He was the type of coach that you would be willing to do anything for if he asked. Jerry Ostroski, Bills offensive lineman 1994-2001: Marv treated us like men, individuals in a team concept. When issues arose, he never tried to — publicly or in front of the entire team — shame us. Marv handled each situation man-to-man and in private. Lofton: We became the Bickering Bills because we were a talented team in transition, and he recognized how to address it. Advertisement Metzelaars: It was about a team that hadn't been successful learning how to handle success. In '88, we made the AFC title game. We had expectations the next year and thought we'd be great, but we were up and down. The attention and the media were something we had to learn to handle and say things the right way and not throw people under the bus. Lofton: Marv takes all those bickerers and puts them on the leadership council. Winning helps too. But what comes first, the winning or the unity? Marv making those guys leaders helped the team unity more than anything else. Talley: If we didn't think you were pulling your weight or were half-assing with your bulls—, we'd cuss you out and tell you to do your f—— job. We were not going to accept you not doing your very best. Marv did a masterful job of letting us deal with our emotions, say what we had to say and move on to the next game. Metzelaars: The great thing about that team was that nobody was untouchable. You could give Jim a hard time, Bruce a hard time, Thurman a hard time, Andre a hard time, and they'd take it. That mattered. Bennett: He didn't get in our way. He allowed us to be ourselves. He knew we were going to work. 'Club Marv' was a pejorative. Media and players from other teams scoffed at Levy's radical approach to training camp, reducing practice times and giving veterans added rest. Levy's philosophies now are universally accepted and even incorporated within the NFL's collective bargaining agreement. Jamie Mueller, Bills fullback 1987-91: Marv didn't want to babysit. He didn't want to deal with BS. He wanted to work with professionals. Ostroski: Many people across the league felt he was a 'soft' coach and, quite frankly, it was quite the opposite. Toughness was understood and a must to be a part of the franchise. Advertisement Metzelaars: People said our camps were 'so easy' and 'so soft.' We'd be out there an hour and 30, 40 minutes — boom, get all the work in and get off the field. It was about moving fast, playing fast, recreating the speed of the game in practice as much as possible. Talley: He did things other coaches wouldn't think of. Lofton: It's exactly what the NBA is doing today with load management. He was just so advanced in his thinking. Phil Hansen, Bills defensive end 1991-2001: If you want to sum it up in one phrase, his whole mission was 'clarity of purpose.' Every football coach is bombarding you with instruction and all these reminders. You gotta get in this stance! You gotta low pads! You gotta shed 'em! You gotta get to the ball carrier! You gotta get to the quarterback! Marv knew you were hearing it all week. He made more of an impact with less words. Lodish: Marv's influence was an academic approach to football that inspired us to do extra stuff like study film and take care of our bodies. The extra stuff is what separates the great teams from the bad ones. Lofton: He knew we had to be fresh and fit to run our K-Gun offense because we got just as tired as the defense did, but we could never let them know that. Hansen: You always heard about coaches who, if you lost the game, they would work you twice as hard. That's what I would grow to expect: If you lose, you've got to work harder — fire and brimstone. Marv would do the opposite. He would say, 'You know what? Maybe we're working these guys too hard. I trust them. Let's take the pads off Wednesday.' Thurman Thomas, Hall of Fame running back: I wish sometimes Marv would have gotten a little bit angrier at us. You hear the stories about Bill Parcells getting on Lawrence Taylor's ass every now and then to try to bring out the best in him. Marv just wasn't that guy. Advertisement Ostroski: Marv did not feel the need to beat toughness into us with crazy practices and workouts because he knew his players so well that he was already confident the 53 guys on the roster already had it. Bennett: So many of us played at a high level for 10 years or longer. That's all Coach Levy and his style of coaching. Metzelaars: The way he took care of the players had a lot to do with us being able to come back and play at a high level, year in and year out, even after the disappointments. Thomas: For him being too easy on us, we always knew what to do! He didn't have to tell us a lot. Talley: You didn't want to be late for anything Marv had scheduled. You wanted to be early. You wanted to follow him because he let us play football. He just directed us. Thomas: Everybody was on time. Everybody was under weight. Everybody was in shape. Talley: However old Marv was when he got here (60 years old), he still was running three and four miles in between practices. Just running because he had so much energy to burn up. Lofton: Here's a guy who could still turn it on. You couldn't look at him as this little, frail guy. He was in his prime at the time. Metzelaars: I think he did some lifting too! Talley: First one there and last one to leave. Ostroski: Marv was a players' coach and always about the individual. He thrived in taking outliers and players that maybe did not quite fit a specific mold and, with development, he got them to thrive in the Bills system. … Everyone today talks about 'You never know what someone is going though.' Marv was handling things this way since the '80s. Thomas: He never really got upset. He always talked about how things should be, how things should go. If there were games Marv pulled me out because of a fumble or dropped pass, I wouldn't have minded, but he always showed so much trust in me that I was going to do my best every single time. I wanted to play hard for him, to win a Super Bowl for him. Advertisement Bennett: When you have a coach like that, you can't do anything but want to perform for him. You might want your individual accolades, but you wanted to do it for Coach Levy. To me, that's a tremendous leader. Known for his extraordinary oratory skills, everyone who has been around Levy has a story to tell about his Marvisms and motivational speeches. Metzelaars: We also went from Hank Bullough and his way with the English language to Marv, who was an unbelievable orator. (Bullough once infamously began a news conference by ripping a fart and calling it his opening statement.) Hansen: I hung on every word. I don't think players pay as much attention to coaches because they say the same thing over and over. Marv always had something different to give you. Talley: The longer I stayed around him, the more I just became enamored with the things he would say. He could connect with anybody from any background. Didn't matter who it was. He had the ability to communicate like I have never seen. Lofton: The first training camp I had was the 1990 season because I arrived during the 1989 season, where we lost to Cleveland in the playoffs. In the first meeting, he laid out that we needed home-field advantage. 'To do that, we probably need to go 7-1 at home and no worse than 5-3 on the road, maybe even 6-2 because we need to play in Rich Stadium.' I'm used to coaches talking about getting to the playoffs, but nothing this specific in July about home-field advantage. I thought there would be some snickers in the back and I looked at those core players, who were All-Pros and Pro Bowlers, and they were steely-eyed. Hansen: He could read the room and knew what words would get through. Lofton: We bought into exactly what Marv Levy was selling because he was telling us exactly what we needed to do and probably what we needed to hear. Advertisement Jim Ritcher, Bills Wall of Fame guard 1980-93: His stories were so inspiring. He would always leave you with something memorable, things like: 'Where else would you rather be than right here, right now?' And 'When it's too tough for them, it's just right for us.' Ostroski: My favorite Marvism is 'Systems don't win. Players do!' Bennett: 'When it's too tough for them, it's just right for us.' That one, to me, more than any other stands out. When we were home and it was cold, and the field was icy, that summed up our team. We won some crazy games there. Metzelaars: 'One more river to cross.' Tasker: 'It's simple, but it's not easy.' It's simple to say or to understand, but it's not easy to do. I think that's what life is. Life is about just making your way, but it's not easy. Mueller: He would draw up a play on the board, say, 16 Slant. He would go, 'Offensive line, you do X-Y-Z. Jamie, you block here. Thurman, you run for a touchdown.' Simple when you draw it up, but difficult to get done. The attention to details, that resonates in life. Tasker: Marv had that sophisticated vocabulary that could throw you for a loop. Thomas: Every time he used a big word, he would say, 'Look it up, Thurm.' Talley: And then Thurman would say, 'Can you spell it for me?' Reed: Before every meeting, we would guess and maybe even place a bet on what type of story he was going to tell. 'Is it going to be a war story?' Metzelaars: He loved World War II history. He once recited this old British military song: 'Hitler has only got one ball, 'Göring has two but very small, 'Himmler is rather sim'lar, 'But poor old Goebbels has no balls at all.' Why do I remember that? You remember it because he made a point with it. He was talking about Nazi Germany and why all of Europe isn't under their control right now: 'Because they couldn't win on the road,' he said. We had lost 20-some road games in a row, and that story stuck. We finally went out and won one. Advertisement Lodish: He would use all this history to teach lessons, get us to laugh and be cohesive with each other in our team meetings. Hansen: At halftime of the Comeback Game, he told us all the things we needed to do and said, 'Now, let's go out there and have a garrison finish!' Everybody screamed, 'Yeah!' and ran out onto the field. I thought, 'Garrison finish? What the hell is that?' I had to look it up after the game. Do you know what a garrison finish is? Well, in true Marv style, I could tell you, but I won't. Go look it up. But no Marvism is more recognizable than 'Where else would you rather be than right here, right now?' Just before the opening kickoff at every Bills home game, the 'Legend of the Game' alum will Lead the Charge of players from the tunnel and exalt the crowd with Levy's pregame question. Lofton: Marv Levy was about enjoying the moment. 'Where else would you rather be than right here, right now?' What can you do in this moment for victory? McDermott: I had it put in my office because there's a lot that's baked into that: 'Where else would you rather be?' I hope he's OK with another coach using that because I'm using it with the most admiration and appreciation and gratitude. It's become a big piece of Buffalo. There's gratitude there. When I walk into my office every day or players come in or we have free agents in for a visit, I want that to be the message, that this is a special place. Ritcher, Legend of the Game for Week 7 last year: Buffalo, being the small market it is and enduring the weather, you're saying none of that matters. What's important is being in that moment. Reed: I'm coming back to Lead the Charge against the Ravens for the season opener, and it's part of the culture now to say it. The fans go nuts when they hear that because it means a lot to this organization and this city. Advertisement McDermott: A hundred percent. It's awesome. How about Ryan Fitzpatrick, pulling his shirt off to say it? When people ask me what it's like to coach or play in Buffalo, I tell them to Google 'Ryan Fitzpatrick, playoff game, right here, right now.' You talk about an all-time sports moment? The crowd saw him pull his shirt off and they got louder. Then he started to say 'Where else would you rather be …' and it got louder. And after they screamed 'Right now,' it went to a level I don't think I've ever heard. It doesn't get much better than that. THE LEGEND OF FITZMAGIC!!#GoBills | #BillsMafia — Buffalo Bills (@BuffaloBills) January 20, 2025 Ritcher: It was fun to say those words. They were so meaningful when Marv would say them, and to hear the fans scream them along with you was special. McDermott: Sometimes, I'll walk into a team meeting and just say it — almost instinctively. It'll come out of my mouth without thinking. Levy is the oldest living Pro Football Hall of Famer, but he has another 309 days to catch Chicago Cardinals halfback/quarterback/defensive back Charley Trippi and 538 days to catch Brooklyn Dodgers quarterback/tailback Ace Parker for the oldest ever. But neither attended the Hall of Fame as centenarians. Alexopoulos: We don't even have a comparison here. What do you do with a 100-year-old at the Hall of Fame? We're the first. Metzelaars: I lost my mom and my father-in-law this past year, both at the age of 91. For Marv to be still rolling at 100 is incredible. Tasker: It's a gift. You can tell he's old, but he's still Marv! He's still able to hold conversations. Being able to share this with him and all these guys that he's meant so much to is pretty cool. Lodish: The man has uncanny cerebral capabilities. Bennett: His sense of humor is still tremendous, and his wit is amazing. As I'm talking right now, I'm smiling, just thinking about it. Advertisement Alexopoulos: He still has strength. He can walk a straight path for longer than the average 60-year-old. He has his walker, and he handles flat Chicago well. He goes shopping. Lodish: A couple years ago, I went back to a game. Marv and Fran just so happened to be sitting in a box just above us. I asked my family, 'Do you want to meet Marv Levy?' We walked into the box and said, 'Coach Levy, it's Mike Lodish. I just wanted to say hello.' He goes, 'Mike Lodish? We drafted you in the 10th round in 1990 out of UCLA. How are you?' What I want everybody to know is that Marv Levy — at probably 97 years old then — remembered some nose guard he drafted 30 years earlier. I was blown away. Bennett: Most guys that played in our era don't have this. Their coaches have passed. But we still have our general. Thirty-eight years after an 'old man' became Buffalo's head coach, he continues to make an indelible mark on his players and the organization he guided to four straight Super Bowls. Thomas: Marv is my father figure and my coach all in one. That won't ever change. He taught me a lot about life. He always asks, 'How are Patty and the kids?' It's not just about football. Bennett: When I made the decision to sign with the Falcons in 1996, Coach Levy called me that same morning. We had a long conversation. I told him, 'If I didn't have a father, and I could choose someone to be my father, I would choose him' because he was everything. Ritcher: I'm glad that he decided to be a football coach and not a lawyer, as his father had wanted. When told of Marv's desire/decision to be a football coach, his dad's response was 'Be a good one.' I have passed down many of the lessons he taught to my sons and grandchildren. I am privileged to have played for and to know Coach Levy. Hansen: I didn't know any different until Marv retired. The older I get, the respect and admiration just grows. I didn't realize how good I had it until it was over. Advertisement Reed: We were fortunate to be in his presence. Regardless of us going to four Super Bowls and didn't win, I wouldn't rather do it with anyone else than Marv. Talley: The greatest thing he taught us as a coach was how to take something from a defeat and put it aside to use for the next time that situation came up or when you played that team again. Just put it in a box and wait. That goes for life. Mueller: Marv is a class act, always has been. He stays above the fray, always. Kerner: He means everything to me as a former player. He believed in me and gave me an opportunity to live out my dream. I learned how to be a professional in everything because of him and the staff that was assembled. Those lessons carried over to how I approach everything. I am not who I am today without the example of Coach Levy. Lofton: When I got a chance to coach, I was very reflective of the message to put out there and the standard you want these guys to meet. Everybody wants to build a great program, but it's a daily mission. Marv Levy was so good at that. Bennett: He was everything I was supposed to get out of football as a head coach and a leader. He got the best out of me. I never wanted to disappoint him, and I hope the way I played exemplified that. Thomas: I'm blessed to have him still in my life. I can't wait to give him a big hug and tell him I love him.


Bloomberg
13 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Big Sur Architectural Marvel Lists for $5.5 Million
An iconic curvy house designed by 'organic architecture' proponent Mickey Muennig in Big Sur, California, has hit the market for $5.5 million. The 3,000-square-foot home offers four bedrooms and four bathrooms and patios outside almost every room. It sits on five hilltop acres overlooking the ocean. Sheila Sheppard bought the playful property now known as Casa Luna in 1998 with her late husband, Gaston Georis, the restauranteur behind Carmel's beloved La Bicyclette. Sheppard remembers being blown away by the views when they were house-hunting some 27 years ago.