 Kevin Dyson is deep with Ike Bird. Do the Titans have a miracle left in them in what has been a magical season to this point? Christie kicks it high and short. Gonna be fielded by Lorenzo Neal at the 25. Pitches it back to Y-check. He throws it across the field to Dyson. You know where I was during the Music City miracle. He's got something. He's got something. He's got it. He's got it. He's got it. My question is... In zone! Section 139, row Q, seats one through six. I was at a house with a bunch of my high school friends and we were watching the game. We were actually like playing football outside in his yard. I was in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. We had a game against LSU. I was a cameraman at the time on the field. I was on my way to Bean Station. Bean Station's a little community over in East Tennessee but my wife and I were headed back to East Tennessee to see her mom and dad. I had the best seat in the house between Mike Keith and Pat Ryan who was the color analyst at the time. I watched the game laying in bed and the miracle happened and I knew that we had Monday night nitro and buffalo. I was at the 35. So I was sitting in the upper deck in the 300 level and I was walking down the long winding road of a ramp. We had done a pre-game show and my general manager was kind enough to let us come watch the game in the suite. I'm preparing for the post-game show. Making sure the commercials are ready, making sure we're ready. I hear Mike exclaim that Frank Weicheck has gotten the pass and he's lateral-ing it. And then you're mesmerized. He catches the ball and I'm like, all right, Neil, fair catch it. He catches it. I'm like, oh, God, no. So he starts to run a little bit and I'm like, just get down on the knee. Let's get the ball back in Nye's hands so he can work his magic. Then he hands it to Frank Weicheck. And Frank, okay, I love Frank. But Frank is not going to outrun anybody. What are we doing here? Seriously? And then all of a sudden I see him throw a nice beautiful lateral to Kevin Dyson and I see a wall of blue jerseys and not one buffalo bill in sight. And I'm like, oh, that's interesting. Wow, this thing is really, it's going to happen. I said, Steve, watch this. We're going to score. Three splits to the end zone. Kevin's running down the sideline. I'll just be right behind him, running, screaming, jumping up and down this pandemonium. Oh, the staining exploded. Going down the sideline, he looked at me and was like, we did it. It was awesome. It was one of my favorite memories of all time. It was the best feeling ever. I'd agree with that. Some people left the stadium and missed the Music City miracle. Did you know that the owner may have not have seen it? Our suite was next to a big double suite. That big double suite belonged to Bud Adams, the owner of the Tennessee Titans. With 16 seconds left, Buffalo kicks the field ball. And the stadium's a suck dry area. Everybody in our suite, everybody in the other suite are putting stuff down and getting ready and heading to the doors and people are leaving. And then they make the kick. And it's a short kick. Kevin Dyson, wide open, catches it for 75 yards and the place explodes. And everybody comes running back into the suites. The last person in is Mr. Bud Adams. Not in there when it happened. That's a good story. We hear Pat say, he's got something. He's got something. He's got something. I think he's got something. And then Yolanda and I are just going crazy in the car. So I can see the jumbotron, they kick off and the fans are booing and yelling and they stop. And I was like, okay. And then I spin around and I picked up Dyson about the 50 yard line. There was a silence, you know, when they reviewed the play. Everybody got real quiet, 70,000 people. And then I remember I turned around real quick. I knew that the referee was going to say it was either good or bad. And he said it was good and people were dazzling after that. I remember I got knocked down in the aisle. So I'm on the concrete. It's wet. It's cold. My knuckles were bleeding. My clothes were stained. And all of that just added to the moment and the feel. Not only is the Music City of America one of the most famous plays in NFL history. It also changed this franchise's history and even the city's history. For anybody who thought pro football might not work in the Mid-South or in the middle of Tennessee area, it proved them wrong. I remember watching strangers just hugging each other. Like people crying, weeping. You know, looking out at the stands, seeing the fans hugging and celebrating and some of them in tears. You know, I think it really put the Titans on the map. Music City miracle, you really can't put a price tag on what that meant to the organization, what it meant to the fandom here in the area. I will be remembered as part of the Music City of Miracle as long as football is played. But the play, it isn't mine. It's yours. It belongs to all of us.