What a great series. Something to look forward to on Mondays.
@GI_Joe4 ай бұрын
More! I need MORE!! Good job, JJ and the Irsay family for giving back to a city and it's people!
@JJStankevitz4 ай бұрын
thanks!
@MattK95484 ай бұрын
Holy hell, this has been such a fantastic series. You know the story, but to hear the intimate details has been tremendous.
@JJStankevitz4 ай бұрын
thank you - really appreciate it!
@DanDukeFan4Life4 ай бұрын
We love you, J.J. Go Colts!!!
@RedJeepAdventure20214 ай бұрын
Excellent job J J! This was an awesome series!
@JJStankevitz4 ай бұрын
appreciate it, thanks!
@DanDukeFan4Life4 ай бұрын
I’m thirty years old, I’ve been a fan since 1998 (four) manning was drafted on my birthday. Said whatever team he is drafted too that’s my team for life.
@Austin.Kilgore4 ай бұрын
I realize I definitely have a bias with me being Indianapolis born & raised… but nonetheless I still don’t understand why the majority viewpoint on things seems to be that Robert Irsay did Baltimore dirty by leaving and that he’s the bad guy in this scenario. They literally left him no other choice, what else would you expect him (or anyone for that matter) to do? Just willing give them HIS team/organization?
@technogamer16864 ай бұрын
JJ mentions that that what Schafer told the media so
@AllUpOns4 ай бұрын
I'm an Indy fan as well, but Bob Irsay was definitely a bad guy. Not to mention a bad owner. He was an angry drunk. He'd get upset and fire random people he crossed in the hallway. He'd march down to the sidelines and demand the coach play a different QB. And his relations with the public were no different. Just listen to that press conference. The dude clearly did not understand public relations. All of Jim Irsay's best traits as an owner were learned by watching his dad do the exact opposite. I do agree that the eminent domain stuff forced Bob's hand to move the team. But most people didn't (and still don't) understand the political stuff going on behind the scenes. They just saw the news footage of the Mayflower trucks sneakily moving the team in the dead of night. That's a shocking way to learn that your city is losing the team you love.
@Smoke_87874 ай бұрын
To think there’s fans in Baltimore so bitter still, yet they probably didn’t feel bad for Cleveland when they took there team from them, Both cities won in the end to, don’t be biter about the Colts, support the Ravens
@MrDeeds_1174 ай бұрын
Happy to see another one pop up!
@JH-ot5mn4 ай бұрын
For any butthurt Baltimore fans out there - As a lifelong Indianapolis Colts fan, who literally watched the Hoosier Dome roof be raised, I care as much about your feelings and opinions as you do about original Cleveland Browns fans, i.e - YOU DON’T care at all.
@cranjismcbasketball16384 ай бұрын
Cooked em to perfection
@jakegodman3 ай бұрын
Not a fair comparison now just like it wasn’t a fair comparison in 1995.
@NP0UTLAW4 ай бұрын
It’s Baltimore’s own fault they left.
@uncleloof3 ай бұрын
This would be an amazing 30 for 30 mini-doc, so we'll done!
@robfreedman64963 ай бұрын
There there be a movie about this in theaters!
@bblkwell374 ай бұрын
I was living on the east coast during the decade of the 90’s. I have friends and family In Baltimore and even with the city getting another nfl team STILL hates the Irsay name and Indy !!! I always been amazed at the double standard they have when they STOLE the Browns from Cleveland.
@jakegodman3 ай бұрын
Blame the NFL commissioner at the time. He didn’t want the league expansion in Baltimore, and told the city to go build a museum instead. Baltimore had the best looking bid in 1994 for an expansion team, and instead it went to Jacksonville. They did not steal the Browns. However, a team moving was gonna be the only way Baltimore got the NFL back in town.