Pablo Torre Finds Out - One Yard at a Time: A Mystery (PTFO Vault)

Episode Date: December 26, 2025

Under-recruited running back from a collapsed American city — with a single mom and a dream — wins the Super Bowl. Sounds familiar, right? But NFL coach Deland McCullough's story, as told through ...his book with Sarah Spain, has a twist all its own. (Thanks to a little help from Sir Mix-a-Lot.)(This episode originally aired May 27, 2025.)• Read "Runs in the Family"• Subscribe to Pablo Torre Finds Out on YouTube for more greatest hits• Subscribe to Pablo's newsletter for exclusive access, documents and invites Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, it's me, Pablo. So we've done, doing the math, 327 episodes of Pablo Torre finds out since we launched in September, 2003. And it is the end of 2025. And I could not be prouder of our tiny, little and extremely overworked newsroom that has created this bizarre sports news magazine show that is television, but also obviously an audio first podcast because we've punched above our weight, I think, especially this year. But the stuff that we did before, the previous, you know, hundreds of episodes, we have some
Starting point is 00:00:42 favorites that we are now concerned that you maybe have not heard yet, or maybe don't realize, or even better when you listen to it a second time. And so during the holiday break, we're bringing you our favorites from the PTFO Vault. And we also have a newsletter, by the way, www.pablo.show where I'll be doing some stuff over the holiday break, especially. Please subscribe and support our approach to independent sports journalism. But most of all, thank you. Thank you for making this show not just a weird experiment, but a community of people who support the kind of mission that we're on to hold to account extraordinarily rich and powerful people while also taste testing, you know, athlete branded weed. We contain multitudes, as does our vault. Please enjoy. Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out. I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is. He opens the door. He just said, my son, and it was like, oh, the tears start rolling again.
Starting point is 00:01:41 You know, because I've never been referred to as somebody's son. Right after this ad. You know, one of the things that I have to do at the top is say, first, thank you for doing this. Sarah Spain, hello. Yeah. And the other thing is to do a thing that is cruel, which is to say, say there's a twist in this story, which we're not going to give away because we're trying to be good at telling stories, but holy f*** it. Yeah, that's, that was my response when I first heard
Starting point is 00:02:17 the story, was pretty much holy shit. And now that story is a book, which is why you were here with us today. It is coming out. It is called runs in the family. What's the metaphor that you choose to use to describe the process of, of earthing this? Actually, I've been joking. I am throwing myself a book baby shower wherein I buy myself a push present. Because honestly, and though the labor maybe wasn't as painful as a human baby, but at the beginning I was like, to quote you earlier,
Starting point is 00:02:45 holy shit, why did I choose to do this? Yeah, I should say, I mean, to quote Tony Carnheiser, about his own hands. These fingers don't really type anymore. Well, I am worried about you after you did that interview where you said some of your articles, you actually change the words in sentences so that the ends of them would line up in a paragraph. So it looked nice.
Starting point is 00:03:08 I was like, oh, he should never write a book. Yeah, that whole thing about how you are not burdened by the neurosis of writing, I, for those not familiar, was making my paragraphs into like perfect symmetrical rectangles before I gave myself permission to write the next paragraph. Have you seen someone for that? You, it turns out. I'm seeing you for that.
Starting point is 00:03:30 And you have not helped. My bad. Could you give just like the logline of this movie before the thing that we're dancing around? Yeah, so the protagonist and co-author, his name's Dielan McCullough. He is currently the Raiders running backs coach. Coach Carroll and all of the upper management has done a great job of, first of all, putting together a great staff, I believe, but really, really, really good staff. and then getting, you know, we got obviously OTAs going on right now,
Starting point is 00:04:19 and it's been, it's been very encouraging. Let me say it like that. It's been very encouraging. He was most recently with Notre Dame helping them to the national championship. Previous to that, famously with the Kansas City Chiefs, helped them to a Super Bowl. Dealing, how special is it to be a part of this? I mean, it's unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:04:38 You know, I know I made a statement a couple days ago just about the dream that you have as a youth football player in high school in college about getting to this loved one. I didn't know Dealin before the Super Bowl with the Chiefs in which it was like, oh, that's the guy who he's been coaching, you know, Damien Williams, where they are just like scampering all over the field.
Starting point is 00:05:06 I wasn't familiar with him either, but a friend of mine in Chicago here played college football with him, which is how the story came to me. Sort of out of the blue and out of nowhere, he sat me down when we were grabbing drinks. I was like, oh, I got to tell you this crazy story. And within probably less than three minutes of the story,
Starting point is 00:05:22 chills almost in tears, and I was like, oh, we got to do something with this. So I just need you to know that what we're going to do with this today might seem like a story about a running backs coach at this point. A coach whose job, if you were not familiar, is basically devoted to teaching a running back how to shrug off and fight off all of the people who are desperately trying to stop them from moving forward as much as one single yard. But this story is about more than that. This story is also about a running back.
Starting point is 00:05:59 A running back whose entire identity was a mystery. Because thanks to the laws in our country, as we will discuss, adoption as a concept way too often entails mystery. But what we know was that long before Dealin McCullough beat the Niners in the Super Bowl and became a successful NFL coach and also recently agreed to talk to Pablo. finds out for this episode, as you will hear throughout, he was born and put up for adoption in December 1972. And we also know that Dealin's adoptive parents lived in a place that would be economically decimated by the collapse of the steel industry by September 1977, when Dealin
Starting point is 00:06:44 was just four years old. And that place was Youngstown, Ohio. I don't believe this is happening after working here for social. many years, I've already believed that we're put out on the street and don't know what we're going to do. 5,000 steelworkers, many of them skilled veterans of 20 to 30 years, lost their jobs. In Youngstown and nearby Campbell, they have a name for the day disaster struck. They call it Black Monday. That is where Dealin McCullough comes from.
Starting point is 00:07:19 He's adopted by a young couple who's very much in love that already have a, a son welcomed to the family and the dad is this guy named A.C. McCullough, who's a popular local radio DJ in Youngstown. What kind of local DJ are we talking about? What's kind of the affect here for his adopted father? The guy who would announce on the radio if there was a snow day, the guy who would introduce you to the latest top 40 hit. And you'd get to hear the song for the first time. This is the 70s and 80s that he starts out. So the radio, in particular local radio, was such a huge part of people's everyday life. Yes.
Starting point is 00:08:00 All right, so we're ACN Kelly, and we have some special guests here this morning. So we want to say hi to Celeste from the shops of Borderman Park. So after some of the local concerts in Youngstown, folks would come over to their house for after parties to get a late night home-cooked meal and keep the party going. So Dealin was around Tiny Tim. Very old-fashioned now for young people. There would always be stacks of tickets to a variety of local, you know, bands or concerts that were happening in their house. But after about two years, the couple doesn't make it.
Starting point is 00:08:39 He leaves. And for Dealen, there's a particular pain in the fact that he hears his father's voice every day on the radio, but his father wants nothing to do with him in life. And then his mother brings in another husband, some other boyfriends, really hoping to provide a father figure, but her choices never really match her intentions. and they are abusive. One of them has a crack problem. Although there were men,
Starting point is 00:09:04 there was a couple guys there, they weren't, they didn't fit the bill as the true father figure. Like, wow, I want to do what this guy do and follow what his teachings and what his actions are. I didn't want to do that. You need to understand that there were so many people
Starting point is 00:09:20 struggling in Youngstown, trying to pay for heat and electricity, trying to put food on the table, trying to stay out of jail. People around him were struggling with so many big things. And so Deeland, how long has he known that he is adopted? At about seven years old, he's sitting on the floor at a friend's house.
Starting point is 00:09:40 His mom is talking with friends, and he's playing with a toy, and he overhears his mom, say, Pittsburgh. That's where we went to get Deelan when we adopted him. And he says, I'm adopted? And she says, yep, and then goes back to her conversation. and they try to talk about it again in the car very briefly and sort of shuts it down. And it becomes pretty clear to him that it's not really something to talk about. And for him, there was not really the privilege of let me do some navel gazing about my identity and where I come from, right?
Starting point is 00:10:12 It's like, how do I get by today and tomorrow and the next day and how does my family get by? So he really didn't talk about it with his mom again for 30 years. So to be very clear in terms of the kind of family that Dealin finds, it is not a football. family, right? This is a football story, but not a football family at the beginning. Well, yeah, his brother actually plays football too, and he's quite good. And at first, he's in the shadow of his brother. He grew up so shy. And because he had so much self-doubt, he sort of was okay being in the background on the football team. He just liked being out there. I mean, I still am very, to myself, very quiet. And what football is it gave me a release,
Starting point is 00:11:02 you know, at that time, because there were so many things that maybe I wanted to do or say that I couldn't, but I could do it on the football. football field. I can take it out there. You know, I can burn that energy. I can be. And then from somewhere within himself is this drive to work harder than everyone. I was writing letters to smaller schools, and I was pretty much set to go to the Navy. It's what, not to play football. I was going to enlisting the Navy. But then that hard work opened up a talent that showed my senior year on a really, really, really high level. He had been both a running back and a defensive back in high school, and there was a great running back ahead of him for most of his career.
Starting point is 00:11:40 So he was sort of like, oh, I'm just not good enough. That guy graduates, and all of a sudden he gets a lot more touches and is blowing people out of the water as a senior. And I was able to get, you know, some offers. Bob Stoops is trying to come after him, Jim Tressel, guys who are now essentially Hall of Famers, but were at the beginning of their careers. There's this moment, too, for him where he's deeply embarrassed
Starting point is 00:12:02 by his family's situation. He understands how hard it is for his mom, but he also is so embarrassed to have these big-name coaches in his living room where they have a giant orange extension cord snaking out of the house through the window and into their neighbors to borrow electricity because they can't afford it. They don't have hot water. He doesn't have a phone until a senior year, which becomes very important as he's taking recruiting calls
Starting point is 00:12:25 that they actually do have a working phone. So he's sitting in class, he looks out the window, and he sees this cherry apple red Mercedes. me and my buddies, we look out the one of them, like, everybody's pointing, like, and look at this car. It was a candy, apple, red, and gold, Mercedes. You know, it was something that we had never seen. Something like that before.
Starting point is 00:12:45 And a moment later, he gets a pink slip to go to the office, and the guy that came out of the car was actually there to see him. And it was like a movie turned around, like he turned around slow and the camera was on him, whatever. And he looked at me and he said, hey, I'm Sherman Smith, running back coach for Miami University. Sherman Smith had played for the Seahawks and stayed after to coach and had just left Seattle for Miami of Ohio to go coach at his alma mater
Starting point is 00:13:09 and he drove out this car that he bought from an up-and-coming rapper named Sir Mixelot. Oh my God. I'm flabbergasted that Sir Mixalot is in this story. Yeah, yeah, me too. I like big bucks and I cannot lie. You other brothers can't deny. Now when a girl walks in with an idiot, bitty-waste and a round thing in your face, you get sprung. But yeah, he goes something.
Starting point is 00:13:32 the office and meets this guy Sherman and he realizes that this aura is coming from someone who had really made it was from Youngstown, was like him, but had gone on to the NFL. And now he was talking to a guy that had been a star at the highest level and who believed that he might be that too. So the idea that, again, you know, Sherman Smith played eight seasons at running back for the Seahawks was a second round pick in the 76 draft was the guy with Sir Mixalot's car, which is really like the first line in any biography we need to give. But like how does visiting Miami of Ohio even work? Well, Sherman drives back to Youngstown to pick them up and then takes them there over Christmas
Starting point is 00:14:13 break. And a lot of folks are home, but there's a couple of teammates around, introduced him to the rest of the coaching staff, walked him around. Like, he loved the school, the facilities, the campus. And then also the character that Sherman showed Adele's Adoptive mom, just a good guy who cared about his education, wanted to be a good role model for him. That really impacted them, too. Adele wanted to make sure he went somewhere that if he got hurt or if it didn't work out, he still got an education. Right. And so positionally, then, what is the, what's the job? Well, he's going to be a running back. And it's in the weeks before he arrives, they tell him, we're actually going to put you at Flanker. He's going to get a lot of playing time. And he was in
Starting point is 00:14:54 practice one day. They're getting ready for their last kind of scrimmage. And... I'm watching one of the backup running backs, and he is just doing outstanding. And it's against the backups, but I'm just sitting here and like a tear went down my face, and I said, man, I'm a running back. I'm a running back. I'm a running back. And so we went to meet with Sherman Smith and said, I'd rather take a red shirt ear and really work to be a running back than be a flanker.
Starting point is 00:15:24 So we did that. He actually stepped away from playing time to get to do the thing he wanted to do most. which meant being on the scout team, being a red shirt, and having to sit and watch for a whole season. And presumably he believes that the coaching staff believes in him. And so Sherman Smith, the coach, his leadership style is best described as what? Just a real players coach, an inspiring guy with really high standards, extremely high standards.
Starting point is 00:15:53 He would say to every team at the beginning of the season, None of you asked me to be a father, but I'm going to treat you like you're my sons. He cared as much about how do I make these players full human beings that are going to be successful in life as he did about the football side. All of which is to say that for Dealin McCullough, who grew up searching for a father figure and never got one, you can guess why this style of coaching felt like more than a cliche. And so even though Dealin is mostly working with assistants, because the starters are the ones who get most of the time with the running backs coach and the head coach,
Starting point is 00:16:32 he still goes after practice and spends a lot of time just connecting with Sherman and really asking him for advice. Before Deeland ever gets to take a single snap at Miami of Ohio, the same thing that happened with Deelan's biological father and Deelan's adoptive radio DJ father proceeds to happen once again with his new mentor in college. Sherman Smith leaves. because not long after recruiting Dealin McCullough to Miami of Ohio,
Starting point is 00:17:03 Sherman himself got recruited by the University of Illinois, where he would become an assistant coach at a way bigger program in the Big Ten. And he doesn't want to go at first, but the rest of the coaching staff says, like, this is a great opportunity. You've got to go. And so as Sherman Smith goes a different way, eventually making it all the way up to the coaching staff of Pete Carroll's Seattle Seahawks, his old team,
Starting point is 00:17:27 Dealin McCullough understands. He does why his new mentor had to go. And while the two of them will stay in touch from afar, Dealing finds himself again back on his own, fighting to push ahead by himself, one yard at a time. Dardy, off the McCullough. He comes to the near side.
Starting point is 00:17:52 He's at the 3530. And out of bounds, inside the 15. yard line. He might break that Miami record today if they keep giving him the ball. And that is ultimately how it happened, by the way. By his senior year of college, skipping ahead now to 2005, Dealin McCullough would in fact break that Miami record, the school's all-time rushing record,
Starting point is 00:18:15 after leading team in rushing for four straight seasons. His whole bet had paid off. But it also imprinted permanent expectations of a different kind. Well, everyone was convinced he was getting drafted. This was a guy whose numbers were up there with the top running back prospects, and he was sitting with his agent on draft night watching,
Starting point is 00:18:41 expecting to be called maybe third or fourth round. Yeah, and you look at the statistics. I mean, hard to do better than that. And so where does he get drafted? The Cincinnati Bengals call him early in the draft, and they're like, hey, man, you excited? He's like, yeah. And they're like, all right, we're thinking about you.
Starting point is 00:18:58 He's like, whoa, okay. He doesn't get drafted. A couple teams call right when the draft ends and, you know, extend the training camp offers. He ends up with the Bengals. It is the best situation because of their depth chart. He is going to make the surprise move of an undrafted guy making that roster. He's leading the NFL in preseason rushing yards.
Starting point is 00:19:18 And then... With two minutes left in our final preseason game of that, you know, that my rookie year, my knee get blown up and several, like all the ligaments get blown up. Every kind of damage, you know, compound fracture, MCLAC, all that stuff. And he, over the next couple years,
Starting point is 00:19:37 really puts his time in to try to make it back to the NFL. Then the CFL, and at one point even gives a little time to the XFL. And then I just stopped playing. Because I kept on saying, people say, I can't do this. It was always for me proving people wrong, moving people wrong and nobody would think I can come back after three knee surgeries and I did. But at that point, I said, you know what, it's time for me to transition to something different. He really wanted to try to make it work as a player.
Starting point is 00:20:07 But ultimately, this guy just keeps getting handed a tough deal and finding a way through it, finding resilience. And he actually wanted to get into education to help kids who had come up in tough times like he did. So while he's trying to make it in football, he's working. his way at residential centers for at-risk youth. Then he goes into teaching and he's trying to help kids and then he becomes a principal. So like all these ways he's trying to learn how to be an impactful male figure in the lives of young people, especially those who have tough childhoods. And football starts sneaking its way and everybody hears that he was the big football player.
Starting point is 00:20:45 So he starts coaching and he realizes he can use football to uplift kids and make it even more compelling for them to want to stay in school and learn these lessons by using this sport that he loves. Yeah, it's just hard. It's Sarah to escape this notion that there's a gravitational pull on Dealen. He tries to leave Youngstown, Ohio, makes it out because Sherman Smith ends up convincing him that Miami of Ohio is the place where Youngstown, Ohio kids can use it as a springboard to go to the NFL, but then the NFL, choose him up, spits him out, and he tries to then fight what seems like destiny at this point, because where does he wind up after trying to be an educator outside of the football field? Well, football pulls him back, and of course he ends up at Miami of
Starting point is 00:21:29 Ohio is where he gets his first college coaching gig. And he's not there for too long. He has pretty immediate success, gets recruited to go coach at Indiana, has success there, helps a couple running backs to the NFL, and he gets nominated for coach of the year honors. And he starts doing some coaching internships in the NFL and really starts to set his sights on some bigger programs and the opportunities at the pro level. He ends up doing one of his coaching internships actually with the Seattle Seahawks, which is where Coach Sherman Smith was, coaching under Pete Carroll, and he gets a chance to really use his skill set. In some of the other internships, they kind of just had him watch, but Coach Sherman Smith puts him right in there. And he starts to
Starting point is 00:22:11 recognize pretty immediately Dealin does that his coaching style is really similar to his old coach. he really picked up a lot of messages from him as, I'm going to be a role model and a leader. I'm going to treat these guys like full human beings. I'm not trying to scare them into anything. I'm going to give them respect, and they're going to give me respect in turn. The guys think that he's being a giant kiss-ass,
Starting point is 00:22:28 that he's just really trying to impress everyone and show them that he's deserving of a spot in the NFL, and they're making fun of him for copying everything Sherman does. You walk like him, you talk like him, you want to be him. And he kind of is at first a little embarrassed, and then he realizes, I don't care if they know that this is how bad I want it. And he literally starts changing his passwords to I will coach in the NFL. He's trying to, like, manifest it that hard.
Starting point is 00:22:51 Wait, hold on. So as Dieland is like, there's a little swim fan in this, admittedly, a little swim fanning of the National Football League. But this coaching internship with the NFL with the Seahawks then serves to get him where as his next stop in college? USC comes calling, one of the greatest programs in all of college football history. So he's on a plane with his family. He's got kids at this point.
Starting point is 00:23:14 and ends up in Southern California. And he is getting some major side eye when he arrives. He's got some very unique coaching styles. He likes to fill footballs with water to make them really heavy and harder to hold. And then when you get back to the normal football, you're clenching it tighter. He's got a big pylon with a stick, and he's jabbing guys as they're trying to run by to poke the ball out to get them to practice holding on. And that running back's crew is ready to go. And he has yet another really successful squad.
Starting point is 00:23:44 All of which is to say that there is now real pride in Dealin's gravitational field at this point. Deeland has already interned for Pete Carroll with the Seahawks where his old mentor, Sherman Smith, was on staff and eager to reunite with him before Sherman himself retired from coaching. Permanently imprinting Dealin's speeches, by the way, with Sherman's lessons about responsibility. and now Dealin found himself responsible for the running backs at Pete Carroll's old employer, the University of Southern California, at age 44, not to mention his own biological kids. And he realizes there's still a part of him
Starting point is 00:24:36 that very much wants to know who he is. And he starts looking on websites and sort of isn't fully committed. And then there's a moment that his mom calls him where the lawyer that helped her facilitate his adoption has passed away, and she can get a box of records from his office. And Deeland, you should know, had zero idea that this box even existed. And his adoptive mother at this moment, where he used to tell him about some other things inside this box that Deeland at age 44 did not know. Things like the orphanage where you were adopted, and he's like, wait, an orphanage? But the orphanage was.
Starting point is 00:25:17 just the beginning. She reveals his name was originally John. And he said, why, why John? She said, I don't know, it's maybe religious or something, who knows? And pretty soon it becomes apparent that the only people who could actually answer these questions with any clarity were the parents that Deeland did not know. And so Dealin McCullough resolves to find out. And so first he starts looking in Ohio and ultimately is able to get the call back that
Starting point is 00:25:45 they found his papers. but the woman on the other end says, I can't tell you them, I can't send them to you. And he says, what do you mean? And he realizes that she's holding papers for a different state. You remember I said his mom said, Pittsburgh. That's where we went to pick up Dealin when we adopted him.
Starting point is 00:26:00 So even though he grew up in Ohio, he was actually born and adopted in Pennsylvania, and the laws were different in that state. But then Deelan discovers something crucial. While he was busy coaching running backs, lawmakers in Pennsylvania, it turns out, had finally pushed a thing called HB162 through their legislature. And this was a long arduous process, but they pushed forward one yard at a time.
Starting point is 00:26:31 Thank you very much. As I'm sure everyone's aware, today we'll be holding a discussion about a bill intended to give adoptees access to their original birth records here in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The legislation that we're here to discuss is House Bill 162, which has been introduced by the good gentleman from Center County, Representative Kerry Benninghoff. And in fairness to Deeland, I also had zero idea that adopted children in various states in America prior to HB162 and various state bills like it were not allowed to view their own birth records.
Starting point is 00:27:06 That this was, in fact, illegal until recently. In fact, the only reason I found out about it at all was from talking to Deeland and Sarah, and recently. searching this story ourselves. So now just try to imagine how Dealin McCullough felt as he sat there waiting at age 44. November 2017, I'm sitting in my office. I was at USC. And I just said, man, I wonder what's going on with this adoption paper. It just hit me that day. And then when I got home, I'm just going through the Maryland. And it was, and I got it right here. It was there. Well, first, he is sort of surprised at how thin the envelope is and figures it must be something telling them they couldn't find it. And imagine getting the mail and it's like, you know, 10% off at bed bath and
Starting point is 00:27:57 beyond and then your birth certificate. Like that's how unassuming this letter was. So the top of it says non-certified, I mean, non-certified copy of original birth record, date of birth December 1st, 1972. It has the date that it was issued in November 2017. And then it says, name given at birth, John Kenneth Briggs, sex, male, place of birth, Allegheny County parent, Farrell Denise Briggs, age 16. So they all start Googling. He plugs in Carol D. Briggs in a couple places and ends up finding her, sends her a message on Facebook and essentially just says, did you have a baby that you gave up for adoption in Pennsylvania in 1971? I got a message on my phone saying message read.
Starting point is 00:28:45 So my heart was like, oh, shoot, start beating like, oh, I'm beating crazy. And first she accepts the message but doesn't answer, and then he sends a follow-up question mark. And she messaged back, yes. So I was in a meeting at that time, and I got up and walked out of the meeting. So I said, what did you name the baby? And she said, John, and she spelled it the exact same way it is on here. and the water work started at that point.
Starting point is 00:29:15 So she had been a 16-year-old honor student, had had an oopsie, and her family sent her off to an orphanage slash home for mothers and girls in Pennsylvania to have the baby in private, be pregnant in private, and then go back to school with no one the wiser. She didn't tell anyone but her parents
Starting point is 00:29:33 and her one cousin. She didn't even tell the dad because he was already off to college and she felt responsible. I said, where are you? She said, Youngstown. I told her where I lost her. I was lived in Youngstown.
Starting point is 00:29:44 You know, come to find out, we were only 10 minutes from each other. Probably passed him in the aisles at the grocery store. Man. They were in the exact same place. And it just happened to be that the family that adopted him out of Pennsylvania as a family that lived in Youngstown. Yeah, this is where I just commend Dealing the reporter, by the way, Sarah. Like, you're a good journalist.
Starting point is 00:30:03 Like, Dealin just like... He found out, Pablo. Dealing McCullough finds out is an impressive, an impressive... feet. And one, by the way, that I imagine, I'm just trying to put myself in his shoes for a second, because this is overwhelming, I must imagine, on some level, to know that his mom was actually around very nearby this whole time. At first, he thinks, well, wait, if you're in Youngstown, do I have siblings? Like, I might know them, right? If you had other kids, I might have grown up with them. Who else in my family might I have known? And she did not get married. She didn't have any other
Starting point is 00:30:44 kids. And she'd been looking for him for years. And it's just really heartwarming how much joy she felt in not only finding out he was okay and successful, but now she has a son and grandkids and this extended family. And the logical next question, obviously, as he continues to find out, is, all right, who's my birth dad? Yeah. He says, it doesn't list a father on my birth certificate. And he asks her, Do you know who my father is? And she said, your dad is a man by the name of Sherman Smith. When she said that, I was like, my mind was blown. It's just a sort of twist you dream of, you know?
Starting point is 00:31:39 It's just jealousy is what I feel. I feel jealousy. I feel awe. I feel like I'm watching a weird version of The Sixth Sense in which, you know, Dealin has been seeing his dad the whole time, actually. And that's wild. Your dad is a man by the name of Sherman Smith. And like I said, when she said that, I was like, my mind was blown.
Starting point is 00:32:05 And she said, like, I was like, you can hear, she could obviously hear me kind of choke up and get emotional. She said, well, what's wrong? I said, oh, I know him. He recruited me. He was my coach, and he's been my mentor over the last 20, whatever years. 20 plus years. How does Deeland then tell Sherman what he has found out? Right. He's nervous about it and isn't sure what to say, but he asks his birth mom, Carol,
Starting point is 00:32:37 if he can be the one to tell him. So I reached out to him, I sent him a text, and I say, hey, coach, I need to talk to you about son. 45 years later, he's going to get a phone call from someone who says, I'm your son, that he knows. I just kind of jump right into it. I say, hey, what's going on? Oh, hey, what's going on? I said, you know, I'm adopted. Yeah, I know you adopted. I said, I found my biological mom.
Starting point is 00:32:59 So my dad is really strong in this faith. He's, oh, man, you know, God is good, man. That's a blessing, all these different things like that. And I said, well, it's a little bit more. He said, what's that? And I just kind of ran straight through it. I said, her name is Carol Briggs. And when I asked her who was my dad, she said,
Starting point is 00:33:17 I just ran straight just like that. and was silent on the other hand. So I'm excited. He's blown away. And then he made him a couple seconds. Maybe less than a minute later, he said, dealing, I need to get off the phone. I need to process this.
Starting point is 00:33:36 He's spent his entire life wondering about his birth parents. But for Sherman, it's zero to 45-year-old son with no warning. He hasn't been looking for that. he has a happy wife and family and kids, but he almost doesn't want to imagine that he could be the kind of person who made a choice that resulted in other people having to be responsible.
Starting point is 00:33:59 He had always told his players, there's no such thing as irresponsibility. When you're irresponsible, someone else becomes responsible for what you didn't do. He has led a life leading young men and telling them how to be, and then he recognizes that he might not have been the guy he always thought he was.
Starting point is 00:34:15 And so at first he's not overjoyed the way Dealin would hope. He needs some time. I initially took that as a blow. But then I quickly flipped because he sent me a text here a little bit later on. And he said, hey, man, Carol knew she had a baby. You knew you had parents out there. I knew nothing. And then he starts thinking about how the story isn't his, it's Deelan's. How Deelan has spent his whole life looking for this piece of himself
Starting point is 00:34:43 and how he needed to stop centering himself and consider what it meant to Deelan. to find him and really consider that it could be true. They get a paternity test. It's 99.99999%. And as he's waiting for those results, he realizes that he will, in fact, be very sad if he is not his father. By this point, he's come around to the idea
Starting point is 00:35:04 that they've had this connection, that this story is almost faded. How long does it take for Sherman Smith, the coach, to become Sherman Smith the dad? How does the language around that change, given their relationship has been long and intimate, but in this, again, non-biological way? It isn't crystallized until they see each other in person for the first time after knowing their connection as father's son. Dieland's actually got recruiting trips that allow him to get near Tennessee and where Sherman lives in retirement
Starting point is 00:35:39 and goes there for the very first time to see his dad as his dad. There's this just incredible moment and I cry every time I think about it, I cried writing it, I cried the first time Dylan said it, but Dealing goes to see him for the first time in person after they know of their connection as father's son. And he's nervous and sitting in the car
Starting point is 00:36:00 and Sherman looks out the window and sees him sitting and he's like, oh, this cat's nervous. Like he's just sitting out in his car not coming up even though we've known each other for years. And when Dealing gets to the doorstep. I get up on the porch and he opens the door. He just said, my son. And it was like, oh, the tears start rolling again.
Starting point is 00:36:19 Because I'd never been referred to as somebody's son. He embraced me fully, four arms while open and said, my son. He embraced me and it was, here we go. His adoptive dad left when he's two. He hasn't had a dad since. And he didn't realize how much he was carrying feelings of, am I enough, am I worthy, does someone want to claim me? And for this man, this ideal.
Starting point is 00:36:45 of a person to embrace him and call him his son, he just sort of let his inner child release and cry and be embraced by this man. And so now we're in the present, Sarah, and they have this relationship, they have talked to you about it. You're updating your reporting. What's it been like?
Starting point is 00:37:14 What's it been like since they got to have that, I mean, truly cinematic, level of of embrace? It's been joyful, mostly, and also complicated. And for me, doing the story the first time, we did a lot of work on it, but nothing like writing a book. So the hours and hours of interviews, all the people I talk to, all the detail I unravel. And I mean, there's a twist with his brother that I didn't know the first time I reported it, that I think is day one stuff if I was talking to someone and his brother didn't think it was day one stuff. So I didn't find out until I start writing the book that there's a whole other parental twist that goes on in his family, even before
Starting point is 00:37:58 what happens with his dad. And so you have to read the book for that. There's a tease that we're not given away in this interview. But yeah, as I'm doing more of these interviews and I'm talking to everyone in the family, I am working so hard to understand each perspective. You've got an adoptive mom in Adele who sacrificed so much to raise these two boys as a single mom. thinking that she was going to have this partner in AC, the radio DJ, and instead she's alone, post-industrial collapse, not a lot of money, and they turn out so well, they become these successful young men. And then here come these birth parents who have a lot of judgment at first about what he went through as a kid. They wanted the best for him. Both Sherman as someone
Starting point is 00:38:40 who cared about him and had met him as a young man, and then Carol, who gave him away with the expectation he would end up in a two-family home. Everything would be, you know, this idyllic setting you imagine an adoptive family that really wants a baby and can't have one of their own. And instead, he has this really tough childhood. And so it's almost a role reversal of a lot of adoption stories you hear, right, where the birth parents are struggling or fighting something. They give up a baby, and here come the saviors to fix everything. And instead, you've got these two incredible, well-adjusted, successful adults, looking at this woman who did her very best,
Starting point is 00:39:14 but still struggled at times. And so to really understand, like, what he got from Adele, his adoptive mom, and then what almost certainly came to him through DNA, how similar he is to Sherman, even though they didn't meet until he was 17 years old, and even though he wasn't his life as a mentor, but not all the time.
Starting point is 00:39:34 Like, how he became, I mean, the same exact life. It's surreal. I mean, it really is. We both from Youngstown. We both went to Miami. We both go into the Hall of Fame at Miami. We both go and play pro ball. We both of our careers in because of knee injuries.
Starting point is 00:39:52 Both of us right after playing football, go into education. Both of our first jobs in college was at Miami. Our next job was both in the Big Ten. Won a Super Bowl, lost a Super Bowl, both of them to Tom Brady, had son. Son goes to Miami of Ohio, plays defensive back, Like, is a teacher. Like, it's just, it's remarkable. At the center of that Venn diagram along all of these, like, overlapping circles,
Starting point is 00:40:18 is at least one dude, in this case, Pete Carroll, who happens to be the guy who employed both of these men as coaches in the NFL. Yeah. Can you catch us up to just the unending gravitational field around Dealin McCullough and his life? Yeah, I mean, he just took a job. with the Raiders. And he is now coaching under the boy wonder who I guess never ages and retires, Pete Carroll, who could be both the head coach of his dad as a running backs coach and now the head coach of Dealing with the Raiders. And it is funny to hear Dealin tell us about what
Starting point is 00:40:57 Pete Carroll had detected back when Dealin was an intern with the Seahawks and Sherman Smith was a coach on the staff. Because Pete Carroll kind of sniff this out before, you know, the DNA test did. like in the beginning one of the staff meetings, Coach Carroll, you know, he'd go into his thing and he just looked down and he said, hey, you know what? Something's going on here. He said, we're sitting up watching you two guys
Starting point is 00:41:21 looking across the field of two guys working with the running backs. You guys walk the same, point the same, talk the same. He said, it's just crazy, and we just laughed. And so understanding that we are both a product of what made us and also of everything around us also implies choice, which is like the through line of this book, is yes, you are handed certain genes,
Starting point is 00:41:58 yes, you are handed certain family, certain circumstances, but your choice at every turn impacts, whether you make it out, whether you make it right, whether you make it good, whether like Dealin, you decide to end a bunch of cycles that you don't think serve you or your kids. I don't want to be a father who abandons his family. I don't want to be abusive. I don't want to be somebody who doesn't stick around. I want to be the opposite of what I saw. And I think especially with adoption, that's very poignant.
Starting point is 00:42:25 Because with adoption, it's I could be anyone. I could live anywhere. I could be named anything. Like, instead, he said at every turn, I'm in charge, and this is my choice. Yeah, that's the thing I realize about the way I've been hearing this story up till really now, which is I thought that this was a story about a guy sucked into a gravitational field beyond his control. And then you realize that actually, he is the one making these calls himself.
Starting point is 00:42:52 And part of what it is to live in this profoundly, seemingly scripted, unscripted story is that the choices he makes are the ones that bring him back to who he is. We always say you don't get to choose your family. And he did. God. Put that in the trailer. Put that in the trailer for the movie, Sarah. I mean, is it hard to not think about the family?
Starting point is 00:43:17 movie. I mean, look, we talked about managing the surprise and the reveal. Well, and here's your final fun fact. Two of the executive producers on the film we are planning to make, but have not yet assigned a studio two, are Russell Wilson and Sierra. Just like Sir Mixelot, I'm just dropping that in. I was going to say. And guess what? The potential for this film is unlimited. Oh, my God. Does Sir Mixalot know this story? Does he know what you're up to, Sarah. Gosh, he does know what I'm up to. He used to be a regular listener to Spain and Fitz on ESPN Radio.
Starting point is 00:43:57 So this is where I need to report that I have now spent a chunk of my Memorial Day weekend reaching out to Sir Mixalot for comment. Comment on whether he does, in fact, know what Sarah Spain is up to lately with this book, with this story, and also whether Sir Mixalot is aware that former NFL coach, Sherman Smith, bought his kids. Candy Apple, red and gold Mercedes. And then used it to recruit a running back that Sherman Smith would only realize decades later was actually his baby. A baby he didn't know about.
Starting point is 00:44:38 But a baby, he got back. I mean, I just want to let that one sit for a second. I remember that I posted about the car and it being Sir Mixalots on Twitter and tagged him. I don't think he responded, though. I remember the last exchange I had with Sir Mixalot was not surprisingly about butts. I'm searching for this in February 3rd, 2020, at Sarah Spain. Don't know what prompted it. Quote, are we talking butts today?
Starting point is 00:45:13 Question mark. I'm in. And you replied via quote tweet, we always know we can count on you. Damn. At the real mix, winking emoji. But I don't know if that's true anymore, honestly. Because what I'm also here to report is that Sir Mix-a-Lot
Starting point is 00:45:33 has not yet gotten back to me. I sent him and his manager a whole bunch of texts over the weekend. I even dialed his hotline per what I thought were very clear instructions. And I got nothing. And so Sir Mixalot, near the end here. If you are listening, sir, we have our own hotline, actually, that we would like you to call. So please dial the PTFO tip hotline at 51385 Pablo. That is 51385 Pablo.
Starting point is 00:46:10 A very real number you can call. And please do get back to us. This has been a lot to find out today, Sarah. I have a feeling that that is not in the book, that exchange. Yes, that Twitter exchange is not in the book, but lots of other good stuff is. So, you know, read it, buy it, order it, tell your friends. Sarah, thank you for making the choice to do this with me. It's been a real pleasure.
Starting point is 00:46:38 Thanks for having me. This has been Pablo Torre finds out a Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time. Do you do.

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