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Nzoner's Game Room>The rise of Veach and his 6 year old daughters note… Pat no matter what.
BigRedChief 04:31 PM 01-22-2022
Pat no matter what. Veach’s 6 year old daughter wrote this note to him on draft day.

On the morning of the 2017 NFL Draft, before Brett Veach rushed off to the office, his wife Alison handed him a small note, a message from their daughter, Ella, who was 6 years old and still working on her penmanship. The card contained just four words. It doubled as a reference to a three-year-old sports movie with sentimental value. It became, accidental or not, a mission statement for the Kansas City Chiefs, an ethos that would come to define the front office of a perennial Super Bowl contender and, one day, find itself hanging near Veach’s desk.

On a small piece of paper, in the sloppy handwriting of a 6-year-old, was the following demand:

Pat no matter what.

Ella Veach, of course, had never seen the film “Draft Day,” in which Kevin Costner plays a Browns executive who becomes enamored with a pass rusher from Ohio State and scribbles a reminder on a Post-It note. (“Vontae Mack no matter what.”) Nor did she understand her dad’s own fascination with “Pat,” as in Patrick Mahomes, the big-armed quarterback from Texas Tech (though his wife, the source of the card, did). More than a year earlier, on a quiet day in Kansas City, Veach had been at the office on a weekend, working through tape on a Texas Tech lineman when he came across the damndest quarterback he’d ever seen. It was that day he told Andy Reid that he’d found the Chiefs’ next QB.

One man cannot manifest a draft pick into existence, particularly the co-director of player personnel; it takes the collective ingenuity of an entire front office — luck and sweat and sleepless nights and steadfast belief — not to mention the stomach for a deal. As Veach left his home, he still didn’t know if a proposed trade with the Bills would go through, or if the Chiefs would land Mahomes with the 10th pick. He did, however, know that he was still smitten, that the right quarterback was right there on paper, that it was Pat no matter what, and when the deal went through that night, he texted a photo of his daughter’s note to Mahomes.

Then he kept it.

“I told my wife, ‘We’ve got to hold onto this,’” Veach said. “’This might be worth money someday.’”

Those who know Brett Veach say he loves football players. That may sound like an obvious observation about an NFL general manager, but it’s the way Veach loves players that stands out. He obsesses over them. He studies them. He thinks in terms of levels of excitement. He doesn’t just love a player’s talent; he loves their story.

The first player Veach ever fell for was a high school running back named Gary Brown, who starred for Williamsport, not far from the Pennsylvania Coal Region where Veach grew up. Brown was a star, a bruising athlete who signed with Penn State; Veach, then a young kid, watched him play on a fall night and understood how important football could be. Next it was Ron Powlus, who starred at Berwick before Notre Dame. Then it was rivals from the Coal Region. When he was playing at Delaware in the late ’90s, his teammates marveled at how he seemed to know every college football player in the country.

The rest here:
Spoiler!

[Reply]
wazu 09:07 PM 01-22-2022
Great read. Veach is awesome.
[Reply]
poolboy 09:10 PM 01-22-2022
/ thread closed....site resources
[Reply]
Pablo 09:15 PM 01-22-2022
Originally Posted by Jewish Rabbi:
Pretending he is
It's just sad ya know? At least when scho tells me he banged a hooker I know he banged a hooker.
[Reply]
Flying High D 05:24 AM 01-23-2022
The dude in the article sounds like a good dude, but I would rather we stick with our current GM, Burnt Vagina.
[Reply]
redfan 08:25 AM 01-23-2022
Thank you, BRC. Fuck you, CaveJ.
Bless Blert Bleach
[Reply]
BleedingRed 08:33 AM 01-23-2022
Originally Posted by BigRedChief:
Pat no matter what. Veach’s 6 year old daughter wrote this note to him on draft day.

On the morning of the 2017 NFL Draft, before Brett Veach rushed off to the office, his wife Alison handed him a small note, a message from their daughter, Ella, who was 6 years old and still working on her penmanship. The card contained just four words. It doubled as a reference to a three-year-old sports movie with sentimental value. It became, accidental or not, a mission statement for the Kansas City Chiefs, an ethos that would come to define the front office of a perennial Super Bowl contender and, one day, find itself hanging near Veach’s desk.

On a small piece of paper, in the sloppy handwriting of a 6-year-old, was the following demand:

Pat no matter what.

Ella Veach, of course, had never seen the film “Draft Day,” in which Kevin Costner plays a Browns executive who becomes enamored with a pass rusher from Ohio State and scribbles a reminder on a Post-It note. (“Vontae Mack no matter what.”) Nor did she understand her dad’s own fascination with “Pat,” as in Patrick Mahomes, the big-armed quarterback from Texas Tech (though his wife, the source of the card, did). More than a year earlier, on a quiet day in Kansas City, Veach had been at the office on a weekend, working through tape on a Texas Tech lineman when he came across the damndest quarterback he’d ever seen. It was that day he told Andy Reid that he’d found the Chiefs’ next QB.

One man cannot manifest a draft pick into existence, particularly the co-director of player personnel; it takes the collective ingenuity of an entire front office — luck and sweat and sleepless nights and steadfast belief — not to mention the stomach for a deal. As Veach left his home, he still didn’t know if a proposed trade with the Bills would go through, or if the Chiefs would land Mahomes with the 10th pick. He did, however, know that he was still smitten, that the right quarterback was right there on paper, that it was Pat no matter what, and when the deal went through that night, he texted a photo of his daughter’s note to Mahomes.

Then he kept it.

“I told my wife, ‘We’ve got to hold onto this,’” Veach said. “’This might be worth money someday.’”

Those who know Brett Veach say he loves football players. That may sound like an obvious observation about an NFL general manager, but it’s the way Veach loves players that stands out. He obsesses over them. He studies them. He thinks in terms of levels of excitement. He doesn’t just love a player’s talent; he loves their story.

The first player Veach ever fell for was a high school running back named Gary Brown, who starred for Williamsport, not far from the Pennsylvania Coal Region where Veach grew up. Brown was a star, a bruising athlete who signed with Penn State; Veach, then a young kid, watched him play on a fall night and understood how important football could be. Next it was Ron Powlus, who starred at Berwick before Notre Dame. Then it was rivals from the Coal Region. When he was playing at Delaware in the late ’90s, his teammates marveled at how he seemed to know every college football player in the country.

The rest here:
Spoiler!
As per tradition
[Reply]
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