JERSEY CITY, N.J. – The guy who built the Seattle Seahawks into a young Super Bowl team with apparent staying power is a 42-year-old Wisconsinite who went to the University of St. Thomas to study history and secondary education.
Of course, John Schneider also crossed the border to play football. But that dream didn't last beyond a couple of shoulder injuries during his freshman year.
Two years later, with his passion for the game still eating away at him, he said he took a wild chance by writing a letter to then-Packers General Manager Ron Wolf, asking if he could join the team as a scout. Then, as Schneider tells it, he went to the chapel on campus and prayed. Hard.
That led to a summer internship with the Packers, which led to a spot under the legendary Wolf's wing, which, long story short, led to the Seahawks walking around The Westin Jersey City hotel talking about playing the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII at MetLife Stadium on Sunday.
The guy who brought many of them together, including franchise quarterback Russell Wilson and defensive/verbal leader Richard Sherman, was Schneider, the team's general manager and brain trust partner with coach Pete Carroll since 2010.
"I was with John for a while in Green Bay, so you kind of get a feeling for what you think a guy can do," Seahawks offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell said. "There are a lot of ways to get your foot in the door in this business. He's done a really nice job for himself."
That would be an understatement. With 21 years in the NFL, he literally has spent half his life working toward those three hours or so that will come on Sunday.
"I like to call it a machine," receiver and former Vikings star Percy Harvin said of the team that Schneider and Carroll have built. "One person down, the next person up. That's just how we work. Everybody is ready to play."