The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Hut! Hut! What?

Origins of one of football’s most distinguis­hing sounds.

- Bill Pennington ©2018 The New York Times

It is easily the most audible word in any football game, a throaty grunt that may be the sport’s most distinguis­hing sound. Hut!

It starts almost every play, and often one is not enough. And in an increasing­ly complex game whose signal-calling has evolved into a cacophony of furtive code words — “Black Dirt!” “Big Belly!” “X Wiggle!” — hut, hut, hut endures as the signal to move. But why?

“I have no idea why we say hut,” said Philadelph­ia Eagles center Jason Kelce, who in a Pro Bowl career of seven years has probably snapped the ball thousands of times to “hut” but still cannot explain it. “I guess because it’s better than yelling, ‘Now,’ or ‘Go.’ Some people have used ‘Go’ and that’s awful. That doesn’t sound like football.”

Baltimore Ravens tight end Benjamin Watson said: “I’ve never thought about hut except that it seems forceful. The quarterbac­k yells a sharp sound and guys start running at each other.”

Joe Theismann, the former Washington Redskins quarterbac­k and an All-American at Notre Dame, reckons he shouted “hut” more than 10,000 times during games and practices. “I started when I was 12 years old and I’ve been hutting my way through football for 55 years — but I have no clue why,” Theismann said.

A dig into the etymologic­al roots of “hut” must begin at … “hike!” That call was the brainchild of John Heisman, the pioneering coach for whom the trophy for the best college player of the year is named.

Beginning in the late 1890s, Heisman helped spread the growth of the game like a coaching Johnny Appleseed through jobs in Ohio, Alabama, South Carolina, Georgia and Texas. A tireless innovator, Heisman, promoting the forward pass, divided the game into quarters and, in 1898, came up with “hike” as a way for an entire team to know when the ball would be snapped into the backfield.

Before then, backs used silent gestures to begin plays. Heisman, a parttime stage actor who had been trained as a lawyer, prized gifted oratory and preferred a dynamic sound that would spring his charges into action. Hike fit the bill and also aptly described what was happening: a ball hiked backward from the ground.

Quarterbac­ks nationwide dutifully summoned the ball with a resolute “hike” for most of the first half of the 20th century. In time, however, like so many things in football — where there is too much time to think between game weekends — the unadorned hike became increasing­ly complicate­d.

Again, Heisman played a part. Another of his innovation­s was a sudden shift of backfield players before the snap, which allowed Heisman’s teams to overload one side of a formation. To augment the advantage, an element of deception was added, with code words used to signal the shift. Then, as the forward pass became a bigger part of football in the 1910s, concealing the offense’s play call became a major imperative. Some teams even approached the line of scrimmage knowing they might change the play called in the huddle before the ball was snapped. This required much more than a single, shouted “hike.” Additional coded signals were soon developed, a system now known as an audible.

Still, for roughly the last 60 years, the signal has most assuredly not been hike.

“Hike is a term used by people outside football,” Spencer Long, the Redskins center, said. “Hike is too hard to say. That’s probably why they got rid of it.”

Giants quarterbac­k Eli Manning, referring to his father, Archie, a college and NFL quarterbac­k in the 1960s and 1970s, said: “I don’t think even my dad said hike. I think our family has always been hut guys. But it’s a good question: Why do we say that?”

It turns out hike evolved into hut because of football’s longtime love of military terminolog­y. After studying “hut,” Ben Zimmer, a noted linguist and lexicograp­her, published findings several years ago that linked the term to the cadences used by marching soldiers. In U.S. military settings, it was often a substitute in basic marching commands, as in “hut, two, three, four” instead of “one, two, three, four.” And drill sergeants in the middle of the 20th century also called troops to order with, “Atten-hut!”

Many football coaches and players in the late 1940s and early 1950s had served in the armed forces during World War II. Returning to football fields after the war, they borrowed hut as a clear, concise command that could be heard by a large group of men scattered across a plain.

Theismann was happy to finally have an answer.

“With the great synergy between football and the military, it figures that it had something to do with following orders,” Theismann said. “Then again, think of the chaos and the penalties there would be if we didn’t have a word that got everyone moving together as a team.

“So that’s what it comes down to. Why do we say hut? Because it works.”

‘I don’t think even my dad said hike. I think our family has always been hut guys. But it’s a good question: Why do we say that?’

Eli Manning, N.Y. Giants quarterbac­k

 ?? PATRICK SMITH / GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­k Matt Ryan of the Falcons calls a play against the Eagles during a playoff game at Lincoln Financial Field on Jan. 13 in Philadelph­ia.
PATRICK SMITH / GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­k Matt Ryan of the Falcons calls a play against the Eagles during a playoff game at Lincoln Financial Field on Jan. 13 in Philadelph­ia.
 ?? PATRICK SMITH/GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­k Eli Manning of the Giants calls from the line of scrimmage against the Redskins during a game in January 2017.
PATRICK SMITH/GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­k Eli Manning of the Giants calls from the line of scrimmage against the Redskins during a game in January 2017.

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