AUTHOR'S NOTE: This is a work of fiction. It involves both real and fictional people and organizations. It is not necessarily an accurate depiction of how the real people depicted are in real life. The real people used are mainly background characters there for context. The central characters to the story are primarily fictional. Any portrayal of a real person has an element of fiction to it and is in no way meant to be an accurate representation of that person.
This story plays out similarly to a sports movie, and sports movies are my primary inspiration. I set the story around an NFL team, specifically the Miami Dolphins. I am basing the team loosely off the 2015 team, including the roster and list of opponents, but some players and coaches - and the schedule itself - will be fictional.
Also, this story depicts very rough sex and a lot of crass language. If you are offended by that or do not wish to read about such topics, I suggest you stop reading now.
Furthermore, this will be a four-part story. I will get the stories out as quickly as I can. Enjoy.
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(June 17, Miami Gardens, Dolphins mini-camp)
The hot Miami sun seems unbeatable and interminable; just the downside of living in south Florida, I guess. I've been here for seven years, this being my second Dolphins mini-camp, but I've never really gotten used to it. But it beats the shit out of winters back home in Michigan, I guess.
I walk up and down the line, watching my players on a tackling sled. I just don't like what I see - go figure. Ever since the ludicrous bullying scandal from two years ago, the whole unit's been shit, and it's not getting any better. I just...I don't know. I'm not feeling it. But hell, they're paying me well, and this is a springboard to something bigger.
I grab some Gatorade and look back - this one kid, he's just not doing it right. I look at my roster - we just signed this kid. Deon Wright, his name, out of some school I've never heard of. And they expect this guy to be our tight end at some point? I guess Jordan Cameron had better stay healthy or we're fucked.
As I finish off my Gatorade, I look over, and here comes an intern right for me. Camp isn't due to let out for another hour and a half, so I'm not sure what this is about.
"Coach Garrett?" he asks. "You have a phone call."
I look at him confused. "Look, tell Coach Philbin I'll have my paperwork done after camp."
"It's not Coach Philbin," he replies, somewhat nervously. "It's your daughter."
"What the hell?" Pure confusion. "She knows I have camp now."
"She said it's an emergency." OK then, I guess. At least it's air-conditioned inside.
Isabelle is my daughter - she's nine. And she's in Alabama with her mother, from whom I've been divorced for almost three years. My cheating bitch - I mean my ex, shouldn't call her a cheating bitch around my daughter even if it's accurate - lives in Tuscaloosa, home of a school I've grown to hate for a multitude of reasons. Not the least of which, of course, is my playing days - as an Auburn Tiger.
I'll be happy to hear from Isabelle - damn I love that girl. But the word 'emergency' is scary. I somewhat nervously pick up the phone and answer.
"Dad, I'm coming home." What the hell? "Mom's putting me on a plane. She's really mad and she told me to go back home. I'll be landing in two hours."
"Well, this is just fucking great," I blurt out thoughtlessly - shit. Need to watch my mouth. "Sorry, sweetheart. I didn't mean that." Certainly don't want my daughter thinking I don't want to see her - actually if it were up to me, I'd have her here watching practice all summer, and truth be told, she'd probably prefer it. "I'll make sure to have a guy pick you up. You want to come by the practice facility?"
"Yes!" she screams - she loves football, even if she prefers basketball. Actually there's a court not too far from here where she typically rounds up kids at a summer tutoring program to shoot hoops with.
"OK then, honey; I'll see you in a few hours. Just look for a guy in a suit with a sign with your name on it. Love you."
I turn to the nameless intern, a college kid who seems to be sweating bullets. "OK, I need a guy there in a suit with a sign. The sign needs to read Isabelle. That's with an E on the end. I don't want it fucked up like last year. Christ, we're a billion-dollar football team and we can't spell the name of the O-line coach's daughter right at the damn airport. Can you do that?"
"Yes, Coach." Then he disappears. I think I scared him. I was there once as a graduate assistant at Auburn. He'll be fine - I was.
The rest of camp seems to go poorly, but then again, I'm really pissed off. I'm just not feeling it. I can't figure it out - why they could go out and blow a hundred million and change on one guy on defense but can't get offensive linemen who can keep Ryan Tannehill from spending more time on his back than a drunk sorority girl. And I also have to remember not to crack that joke in team meetings, seeing as how we have females in the front office. Apparently one of them is in charge of managing the salary cap. A Ms. Claiborne who came right over from the Cowboys. And if she can't free up some room for some guys for me, she can go the fuck back there.
And then it happens - the car pulls up, and I see Isabelle's smiling face in the back. Hey, at least someone's using the ride program the NFL has, even if it's a nine-year-old girl. Soon to be ten, and hey, I can be there for her birthday now.
She rushes out of the car and runs right to me. It sure is good to see her, even if I don't know what the hell's going on. I scoop her up - damn she's getting big.
"So what happened?" I ask - but her attention quickly goes elsewhere, particularly to two of my players tossing a football. "You know what? We'll talk when we get home. You want to toss the football with the guys?" She does, so we run out to the two guys, both tight ends.
Jordan Cameron, our starting tight end - I'm helping out tight ends coach Dan Campbell with the tight ends - knows just what to do. he pitches Isabelle the ball and she catches it without a second thought. Of course, I look at Deon, his backup - damn rookie - and he's lost.
"Coach, what the hell?" blurts out Deon thoughtlessly - and I give him a hard look.
"This is my daughter Isabelle," I explain. "And I'll thank you to watch your mouth while she's around." That shuts him up with nothing more than a sheepish 'OK, Coach.' Isabelle isn't fazed - she tosses him the ball, and wouldn't you know it, he drops it. That's all I need to see.
"Jordan, you and Isabelle keep going." He gets the hint as I pull Deon aside. I see Deon's head down - I don't know what his deal is. I know he's a fifth-round pick out of some Midwestern school that never played anybody, so obviously the scouts saw something in him I don't.
"I only have so many spots on this team." I start with 80 guys and it ends up whittled down to 53 when the season starts. "If you can't catch a ball from a nine-year-old, how do you think you're going to catch one from Tannehill?" He doesn't really have a coherent response. "The team signed you for a reason. I want to see that reason. You have tomorrow's mini-camp and the rest of today. Now show me what you got." With that, Deon heads out while I go join Jordan and Isabelle in the football-toss. Sure is nice to blow off steam; besides, Jordan can actually catch a ball.
I take a look back at my guys - particularly this left tackle we just picked up. He's good, but he's a bit unhinged. Vickers, I think his name is - yes, Ronnie Vickers. We need a left tackle in the worst way, especially since Branden Albert can't seem to stay healthy.
Isabelle and Jordan are off shooting baskets with a few other players - I don't mind players playing basketball in downtime and I'm actually happy they stay active and expand their skill sets, plus it keeps my daughter distracted - while the offense runs a play. Deon's blocking for Knowshon Moreno, our free-agent pickup from the Broncos, and Moreno goes down like a ton of bricks - Cameron Wake got through. I look closely - Deon's actually a hell of a blocker. Maybe he needs to be left tackle, because Vickers just blew his assignment.
Vickers grabs Deon by his face mask - screaming at him loudly. Mike Pouncey, the group's leader and center, walks over to break it up. I love Vickers' passion, but he needs to know he fucked up.
I jog over - Deon's just kind of taking it while Pouncey intervenes. I get within earshot. "Learn to block!" Pouncey tries to get in Vickers' ear - no success. I grab Vickers by the shoulder - being 6'5" and 240 pounds, mostly muscle, helps me in this case - I'm only 31 and train with my players, so I stay in shape.
"You got anything to say, boy?" shouts Vickers at Deon - bad idea, dude. I grab his face mask.
"The hell you think you're doing?" I scream. I motion Deon over. "He did his job, Ronnie. You missed that block. You want to make this team, do your damn job."
I line them up - once again, Moreno up the left side. Once again, Cameron Wake gets through - Moreno gets ahead of him and it's a short gain. At least Vickers did his job, as did Deon.
I look over - Vickers shoves Deon to the ground. "Get the fuck back, rookie!" Jesus, dude, calm the hell down. Vickers doesn't seem to be getting the message - again, I go over to intervene as Vickers bends down. I don't think anyone else hears Vickers' message to Deon but Deon - and me.
"Welcome to the NFL, you dumb fucking-" oh shit.
I got this job because of a racism scandal two seasons ago. The last thing I need is another one.