 in the last last game at the old Fulton County Stadium against the Seahawks. You won that. Let's take a look at that game. Oh man. Video, we never lost to the Seahawks. Either, either, either place. Yesterday we were at the box office. She says, look at our team picture. She says, this is what it's all about. Not your normal team picture. Jerry Glanville wanted everybody in the team picture. He truly is a family atmosphere here in Atlanta. Well, it's not the Adams family, but these guys are getting pretty scary and they're starting to get everyone's attention around the NFL. Stomper in trouble, and we're going to get him in the end zone. We got him in the end zone. To go back to what Jerry Glanville told us yesterday, we don't call plays from the sideline. We make suggestions. We give them to Chris Miller, and then it's up to him. He's going to throw a bomb to a man in the corner. Touchdown. Whips it across. Intercepted by Dion on the 38. A lot of people aren't sure the Falcons are for real, but when you keep pressure with that sort of thing and you play with that sort of confidence every week, good things happen. And the Falcons are in the playoff for the first time since Lehman Bennett coached him with Bart Kowski at quarterback in 1982. Touchdown, Dion! That's what an athlete. Wish I could dance like that. So I got the job, and I switched. Dion's a, believe it or not, a safety and a punt returner, and Scott Case is a corner. So I tell him downstairs that he's, and Dion comes and he goes, I don't want to be a corner. I guess it's not up for a vote. So I appreciate it. Which side? I'll let you pick which side. You want right or left? He goes, they run left? They go, yeah, he goes, I'll be the right corner. And then Scott Case comes up and he goes, I'm in the Pro Bowl. Right. I'm a corner. You're not a corner anymore, son. You're a safety. He goes, well, they told me he had an open door policy. I said, dude, the door is open, get the hell out. He came the best safety. That's what those guys were. I mean, it just, yeah, you watch how they play. They made me look like a whole lot better coach than I was because they loved it and they knew how to play. Robert, you all had the Seahawks to 13 points in that game. You said that was the fastest touchdown you saw. Can you describe the feeling, the emotions that game? You know, the way Dion played, man, he was so fast, you know, and you saw, he took, we always practice when we, in the ball, we get an interception, we always lateral, lateral back to each other. We want to keep the game going, go put pressure on them. And you saw, he took the pitch from Makar and he started up the field, man. I was rushing the quarterback at the other end. So he's down, what was it, about the 30 down here? I'm down to about the 25 at the other end. And before you knew it, he was like, boom. And before I could react, get a second react to try to get a block, he went right by my butt and was going into the end zone and hit me and I talked about it in there, he says, damn, that's a fast touchdown I've seen in my career right there. That's how fast that dude was, you know what I mean? And that's how we play, you know, and we do that to that day, to that, we teach the same thing. You teach the same stuff, yeah, you'd love it. Y'all still teach that now? Oh, yeah. Pitching the ball. Yeah, man. Really? Yeah. That's what we play. June Jones is all part of these people. We ended up with that laugh and ended up at Hawaii, coaching Hawaii, and we're pretty good. And we're going to bleach, produce, going to win the Big 10 that year. They're the number one team, Big 10. And we're going to beat them. And they got one, I go to the linebacker, go to the curl, sit in the curl, throw the ball. There's 40 seconds left. And I says, that's the game, take a knee. And here's my old play. What did you say, Jerry? I said, well, he goes, take a knee, start pitching it. Because that's what we always did. We did that in New Orleans when we beat them in the playoff. Yeah, we got to pitch play. All we have to do is fall down, games over, we kneel it down, games around. We're pitching that sucker around. Joe Fitz back in the end. Joe Fitz back in the end. He scores, but I think that last pitch, whether Deion who pitched it forward or out of forward. That was fun. That was our personal attitude, man. What do you remember about that stadium, the Fulham County stadium? I'll tell you what I remember. I didn't like playing there. In early fall, I never liked playing there because of the baseball. We shared it with the Braves. And we had a dirt infield. And then when you make a tackle in the sand. Play down the dirt. Yeah, but the dirt, man, you make a tackle in the sand. It's in your helmet, scratching the forehead. I said, hate it. And the fans sat too far back. It was a baseball stadium, you know what I mean? And so they had to put the football field right in the middle of it. So it's tough in Atlanta. At that time it wasn't winning. So I don't know if we ever sold that place out. Not many times. I'll tell you, in years past when the Braves wasn't doing so well, they were the, when they finished before October, they'd put patches of grass over it. But this year, 91, they played well into the playoffs that year. So we had to share the field well into the season. And so the dirt was still out there. I used to stand on the mound because the mound was on our sideline. And I'd stand on the center of the mound and look down onto the field because I can look over everybody else. There's no mound. But I mean, the problem with it was just the field. I was so glad that the following year we were going into the dome. So that last game, the Seattle game, it was the last game in Fulton County Stadium because we were prepared to go into the dome for next year. But what I liked about Fulton County, and I learned this the hard way, we sold tickets by twos and fours. We came to the Georgia Dome, they sold them the corporations. So a guys were buying them 100 tickets, 50 tickets. Well, then they invite you in. Now you're a guest of the 100 tickets and you're like this. The people in Fulton County that bought their tickets they were true fans. They were true fans. And they may not have been sober, but I love them. And see, that's what it was like for me. It was an environment to where they wanted to party. You know what I'm saying? So a lot of teams. We played the Saints. Their crowd would come. And they'd be more nuts. They were junker than our crowd. And there was no stadium like that. Yeah, you know, that's what I remember about it. You know, I knew that the Rangers are coming down. They think they're going to do this and that. Seattle, it wouldn't happen there. We won some games there. And you think the environment caused other teams to come in and party the night before you? Hello. I'm just saying, this is ATL. You know what I mean? You can stay up until four. That is just a few spots to go. Fun place. So, you know, and the atmosphere is just right. I mean, I get, I used to get excited to walk in there before the game. For me, it was, it was special, you know what I mean? Coming out of Houston, the House of Pain now, that was a special joint too. But it was a difference coming here to Fulton County. It was something special for me. I think it was special because we changed it, you know? From the late 80s, 90s started building when you got here. But 91, you know, we look forward to game day, and it was so electric in there. You could see how much fun people were having in there. And they would identify you by your car when you rolled into the player's car. Oh, yeah. So you pull into the player's parking lot, there'd be barbecues going, and they'd offer you beers before the game. And we drank some shit. So we're walking through there, and they're just loving you up. So it was, you know, you felt invested with the fans. Yeah, it was cool. Then you'd get in that state and we'd start playing. We didn't care about our luck. We didn't care where you walked down through a dugout to get up to the field. We didn't care about the dirt, man. It was like, all right, our fans are here. They got our back. Let's go ball, let's put on a show. That's kind of what I'm talking about.