A one-hour documentary following the Uvalde Coyotes high school team during the season following the tragic massacre of 21 students and teachers at Robb Elementary School debuts on ESPN+ today (subscription required). '21: Loyal and True' examines how a high school football season united a community recovering from an unthinkable tragedy. The documentary will make its television debut on January 5, 2024 on ABC News Live at 8 p.m. ET.

ABC News also released a feature story and documentary excerpt focusing on how Houston Texans players, coaches, and staff rallied behind Uvalde following the tragic events that left 21 dead, visiting the town, inviting the Uvalde Coyotes football team to the Texans' home opener, and nominating Uvalde Head Coach Wade Miller for 2022 NFL High School Coach of the Year. Miller and Uvalde captain Justyn Rendon received tickets to Super Bowl LVII as well.


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ABC News presents "21: Loyal and True," a one-hour documentary special which follows the Uvalde Coyotes High School football team through the 2022 season, which began shortly after the massacre of 21 students and teachers at Robb Elementary School.The special showcases the football season that became a rallying point for the town of Uvalde, Texas and in some respects, for the nation, as the town had something to finally cheer after losing so much.

"Now, if the line of scrimmage was abolished and instead of scoring touchdowns by carrying an oblong ball into the end zone teams were instead required to kick a round ball into a net[...]then the game could no longer be called football".


Well, not in North America, perhaps...


;)

His Cowboy roots run deep into his childhood. He's been around the team for most of his life, as both his parents worked with OSU when he was growing up. His father, Mike, served as a co-defensive coordinator for OSU in 1999 and defensive coordinator in 2000. Likewise, his mother, Colleen Rambusch, worked for OSU athletics in radio and TV in what is now Orange Power Studios.


Growing up around sports and the Cowboys, some of Cassity's siblings have also spent time in college athletics. He has had siblings compete in football, baseball and lacrosse and at the collegiate level. One of his brothers, Skyler, is now the defensive coordinator at Abilene Christian and coached against Cassity and the Cowboys while coaching at Texas Tech and Missouri State. Another brother, Blake Rambusch, is currently playing in the Seattle Mariners' organization. Before coaching, his father lettered in football and wrestling for Kentucky, and his stepfather Bit Rambusch lettered in football and baseball for Army. 


Cassity said he loves the hard-nosed playstyle, something West Virginia has become known for in recent years. On top of that, he said playing at Milan Puskar Stadium is one of his favorite venues in all of college football.


And yet, too often, throwing on Sportscenter or binging NFL RedZone fails to help us understand the true life of a pro football player. It\u2019s the Instagram effect. Projecting the highlights of one\u2019s life is status quo. For everyone. Nobody\u2019s going to publicly broadcast their lowest of lows for thousands of followers, so nobody gets an authentic depiction of day-to-day life in America from their own friends. Football\u2019s no different.

Recently, I connected with a former player whose name may or may not ring a bell: wide receiver DeVier Posey. He starred at Ohio State, catching 113 balls for 1,676 yards with 15 touchdowns in 2009 and 2010. He was then one of the Buckeyes embroiled in controversy for selling memorabilia to a tattoo artist. (The silliest of scandals, in retrospect.) Posey was drafted in the third round by the Houston Texans and embarked on a football odyssey that spanned North America, from the Texans (2012- \u201814) to the New York Jets (2015) to the Denver Broncos (2015) to the CFL\u2019s Toronto Argonauts (2016- \u201817), back to the NFL\u2019s Baltimore Ravens (2018), back to the CFL\u2019s BC Lions (2018), Montreal Alouettes (2019), Hamilton Tiger-Cats (2020- \u201821) and BC Lions (2021). He\u2019s finally done playing, but this father of three is only getting started in life.

Posey: This November, I\u2019m going into Year 2 of not playing. I moved back to Columbus in the pandemic. In 2020, the CFL shut down. We got a big severance pay. It showed me there\u2019s more to life. I had a newborn at the time. He was born in \u201919. I had my son. He was about six. He was about to start school. You\u2019re with your family. You start re-doing things. I started coming up with business ideas and things I wanted to do in my next phase of life. I had an overwhelming spirit of entrepreneurship, overwhelming ideas that I felt would serve to my future. I just felt like football served my kid dreams. I don\u2019t know if you ever read, \u201CThe Fifth Agreement\u201D by Don Jose Ruiz. It\u2019s a great book. The first book is the \u201CFour Agreements.\u201D And the second one is just not taking things personal. In the book, it talks about the dream of the first attention, and how you were the dreamer who dreamed the dream. But your life purpose comes from the dream of the second attention. That just hit me. When you think about a lot of athletes, that\u2019s their first dream. That\u2019s the first thing they ever want to do: Be an athlete. Get drafted. Make a million dollars. Buy a car and a house. I started realizing my life purpose was my dream of my second attention. Your calling is sometimes bigger than you. It\u2019ll devour you. I felt like it was time to attack that second dream, and I had to give up my first dream.

Posey: My back. My neck. My shoulders. My hands hurt in the cold. But that\u2019s what football is. It\u2019s a brutal sport. You put your body on the line. That\u2019s why I respect these guys who go out there each week and play. They\u2019re gladiators. Modern-day gladiators. It\u2019s a blessing, but at the same time, you learn to take care of yourself.

Posey: I came here a Make-a-Wish kid back when I was born. I was born in San Francisco with half of my immune system. So, I was born with less white blood cells. Essentially what that means is, I\u2019ve never had a fever in my life. I would just get sick. What a fever is, technically, it\u2019s your body heating up the sickness. I never got those signs so my meter is always off. During Covid, it\u2019s funny, I told people it\u2019s going to be 97.3 everywhere I go. You have to get your temperature at every location. My Mom petitioned the state of California. I was able to get IVs and gamma globulin shots, and she did it through the Make-a-Wish foundation. That\u2019s part of the reason I always wanted a nonprofit because a nonprofit helped pay for my care and impacted me as a kid. So once we moved from Cali to Ohio, I was raised by a single Mom. I was one of those kids who gravitated toward football.

I started playing football in kindergarten and was always a natural. It was always tough because of how physical it was and the conditioning. So I kind of started hating it. And then when I got to school, I wanted to play quarterback. When I got to high school, I went to one of those all-white Catholic schools and my class was one of the first classes with a bunch of African-American dudes who came in. So I ended up losing the job. They said, \u201CYou should try receiver.\u201D And I said, \u201CMan, I quit. I don\u2019t want to play.\u201D I was a hooper. I played varsity basketball as a freshman and was a sophomore starter, so I figured basketball was my game. I didn\u2019t play varsity football until my junior year. And I just exploded, man. All-State. The rest is history.

After that, Bill O\u2019Brien came in. We didn\u2019t see eye to eye. He traded me from Houston in \u201915. Got to the Jets. I got married that year and had just bought a house in Houston so it was like, \u201CWow. This is the worst time to get uprooted.\u201D I battled more injuries. I think they were stress-related. I got cut. I was out of the league a long time. I worked out for six teams in \u201915. I got signed to Denver. Gary Kubiak was the offensive coordinator out there \u2014 I signed a futures deal in December and then that January the Broncos ran the table and won the Super Bowl. So I was like, \u201CThat\u2019s not a good idea. They\u2019re not going to change anything about that room.\u201D I was in a training camp battle and told myself I worked so hard to come back from this injury and did so much under-the-surface work that I just want to play. My brother was playing in Canada so I drove to Toronto, saw him play and was like, \u201CMan, I can play this game. This is a real professional league.\u201D They\u2019ve got fans, their own game, a lingo when it comes to football that\u2019s different. I\u2019m going to go to the CFL and my whole goal was to ball out and make it back to the league. I got cut from Denver. I went home for three to four weeks and I wanted to make sure my wife wouldn\u2019t leave me because I was going to go to a lesser league and making way less money. I wanted her to believe in me and believe in the dream.

I got back with the trainer I trained with for the Combine down in Florida. Moved to Florida for a bit. Rented my house out in Houston and I was just training. So going into \u201917, we had Marc Trestman as our coach \u2014 the former Bears coach. A real intellectual guy. He put me on all types of spirituality stuff. Manifestation. Visualization. Learning how to forgive myself. Learning how to not be so hard when it comes to coaches. I had this thing with football coaches where I was always opposed and just wanted to fight and be like, \u201COh, man, this guy\u2019s trying to f--k me over!\u201D He taught me how to let that stuff go and just play.

We ended the season 8-8, ran the table in the playoffs and we won the Grey Cup. I won Grey Cup MVP. And I was able to go back to the league. I told all the people at that organization, \u201CHey, this is what I want to do. I want to go back.\u201D So, they released me. I worked out for some teams and I signed with Baltimore. Harbaugh gave me a shot. \u2026 I played with Ricky Ray but also S.J. Green. He\u2019s one of the greatest CFL receivers. He\u2019s like, \u201CIf you\u2019re not read 1 or 2 or 3, you\u2019re not getting the ball.\u201D So I just learned that when I learned how to study, how to study football, and just put plays in my head. I could learn any playbook in four to five days. All football is, is personnel, formation, motion, assignment, technique and then you can be yourself. So all you have to do is take 70 to 150 plays and understand those five things, it\u2019s really like a card memory game. It\u2019s simple. It\u2019s word association. It\u2019s words with action \u2014 \u201CWhat does this word make me do?\u201D And there\u2019s nothing new under the sun, so it\u2019s just different names for different things. So when I got to Baltimore, I had this knowledge and I could see, \u201CThese guys are putting me on backside routes.\u201D I could see the writing on the wall. It\u2019s more stress than enjoyment so I said, \u201CI\u2019m going to finish my career out in the CFL.\u201D 006ab0faaa

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