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Manziel asked high school coach to move in, help

Former high school QB coach proud to offer support

- Josh Peter @joshpeter1­1 USA TODAY Sports

Call to Julius Scott was made at rehab center.

This week, Cleveland Browns quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel said he reached out to famed orthopedis­t James Andrews about tendinitis in his right elbow. But Manziel has said nothing publicly about the man he called after entering an alcohol and drug treatment center in January.

Few NFL fans would recognize his name: Julius Scott.

Scott, quarterbac­ks coach and offensive coordinato­r at Tivy High School in Kerrville, Texas, when Manziel played there, said he heard from Manziel last spring. And at the time, Scott added, Manziel was finishing a stay of about 75 days at a treatment center from which he made a request. Manziel asked his former coach to move to Ohio and into Manziel’s spacious house on a golf course.

By mid-April, Scott, 55, quit his job, kissed his wife and said goodbye to his two grown children. Then he headed to Ohio.

“We all come to a point in our life where we need somebody to stand by us and to be with us,” Scott told USA TODAY Sports. “You face some perils in life, you made mistakes, you’re trying to rectify them and get back on the right road.

“We all need somebody like that. I was proud to do it.”

While Manziel recently declared he and his sore throwing elbow will be ready to play

against the New York Jets when the season opens Sept. 13 — a game in which Josh McCown is expected to start at quarterbac­k — Scott reflected on what he saw before, during and after his twomonth stay with Manziel.

When Manziel wasn’t working out at the Browns complex during that stretch between April and June, there was plenty of golf, fishing and football.

“Just what hillbillie­s from Texas would do,” said Scott, adding that he and Manziel “naturally” had heart-to-heart talks, too, but declining to discuss specifics. “We laughed and joked just kind of like we did in high school.”

What apparently had vanished by April, like Manziel’s infamous money sign, was Johnny Football’s partying ways. Scott said the treatment center from where Manziel called him seemed to have an impact.

“It must be a good place, because it seemed to get him grounded,” Scott said. “I assure you, given the chance, he’s going to make a heck of a recovery and do real well. Not only in football, but life.”

Manziel declined to comment for this story, and Scott declined to discuss Manziel’s initial phone call and what he said when asking Scott to move in with him.

But two of Manziel’s former high school teammates said Scott, a disciplina­rian, was the right person to call — someone who would hold Manziel accountabl­e rather than enable him.

Charlie Kinnison Jr., a backup quarterbac­k on Manziel’s high school team, said with Scott in charge of the quarterbac­ks Manziel was not exempt from pushups, up-downs and other forms of discipline.

“If you got caught skipping class or you got in trouble in class, you wouldn’t even be able to practice that day,” Kinnison said. “You’d have to up-down the whole two hours. I’ve been a part of that, and Johnny’s been a part of that. …

“I think Coach Scott held Johnny to a higher standard because he was the leader of the team.”

But Parks McNeil, another backup quarterbac­k on Manziel’s high school team, said the relationsh­ip between the star passer and coach was special. “I just think that it’s good for Johnny to realize he needed somebody to lean on,” McNeil said.

But the relationsh­ip involved a rocky start.

One day, Manziel was playing middle school football when he scored a touchdown and set the ball on the turf. Scott, overseeing the middle school program on top of his high school duties, said he made a beeline for Manziel.

“I grabbed him, and I said, ‘Look, you hand the ball to the official here. We play with class,’ ” Scott recalled.

While Manziel passed for 7,626 yards and 76 touchdowns in three years as a starting quarterbac­k in high school, it’s also worth noting this: He rushed for 77 touchdowns, and each time he dutifully handed the ball to the official.

But football conversati­ons between Scott and Manziel could get animated, McNeil said.

“Julius was a master of getting us all fired up,” McNeil said. “Some of (Manziel’s) best games were when him and Julius would get in an argument about the way coverage was run or what plays were good being called.

“Johnny would just be on fire and run a 90-yard touchdown, hurdle somebody. And he comes off the sideline, and Julius is the first one there to hug him and smile and slap him on the helmet and say, ‘ Get ready. Let’s go back out there and score another one.’ ”

At Texas A&M, when Manziel was up for the Heisman Trophy, he invited Scott to the ceremony in New York. Manziel won the award and broke down when he saw Scott.

While Manziel struggled on and off the field last year, Scott watched from afar. He has theories about the most famous quarterbac­k he’s had in 32 years of coaching.

Namely, Manziel struggled while adjusting from life as a celebrated Heisman winner and firstround draft pick to struggling NFL rookie.

“Anybody is going to be somewhat shell-shocked, so to speak, from that,” Scott said. “To recover from that, I think when you talk about a mental state, I think that might play as big a part in his recovery as anything.”

Although Scott said he doesn’t think he’s qualified to discuss the relationsh­ip between Manziel’s past on-field and off-field struggles, he noted that Manziel has drawn praise for his on-field performanc­e at a time when he appears to be steering free of trouble off the field.

Before the elbow tendinitis flared and sidelined him this season after the second preseason game, Manziel had completed 17 of 29 passes (58.6%) for 160 yards and one touchdown without an intercepti­on. He also rushed for 33 yards and a touchdown on five carries and earned praise that Scott said he heard starting during workouts in April.

But Scott said he heard effusive praise when he attended team workouts between April and June.

“The Browns were extremely happy,” he said. “I talked to various coaches, and they told me every time they were extremely happy with his progress, his profession­alism and those types of things.

“If you look at his progress on the field, he looks like he’s much more acquainted with the profession­al game. You know, last year he kind of looked like a deer in the headlights. I think a year ago maybe his confidence was rocked a little bit. I think he’s regaining that. I sense that in the way he approaches the game.”

The housemates parted ways in June. The Browns had completed offseason workouts, and Manziel had commitment­s across the country. Less time to golf, fish and talk with his old coach. Scott returned to Texas and found another job coaching high school football.

Sometimes, Scott said, he’s not exactly sure what he did for Manziel. But it sounds like Manziel knew at a time that Scott was trying to figure out his own future.

“He said he thought my calling was to coach and to help people,” Scott said.

 ?? AP ?? Manziel
AP Manziel
 ?? ERICH SCHLEGEL, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Julius Scott, above, who helped coach Johnny Manziel in high school, says of his former player: “He’s going to make a heck of a recovery and do real well. Not only in football, but life.”
ERICH SCHLEGEL, USA TODAY SPORTS Julius Scott, above, who helped coach Johnny Manziel in high school, says of his former player: “He’s going to make a heck of a recovery and do real well. Not only in football, but life.”
 ?? KEN BLAZE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Johnny Manziel had a difficult rookie season in 2014 and is dealing with elbow tendinitis this preseason.
KEN BLAZE, USA TODAY SPORTS Johnny Manziel had a difficult rookie season in 2014 and is dealing with elbow tendinitis this preseason.

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