A quick one for a challenge or a streak keeper or a mid winter cache itch or.....
Peyton Manning’s calls of “Omaha” at the line of scrimmage became popular towards the end of his career. We’ve understood the call and why he does it, but The Sheriff himself gave an explanation at the Adobe Summit in March. “Omaha was just a indicator word,” Manning said to the crowd. “It was a trigger word that meant we had changed the play, there was low time on the clock, and that ball needed to be snapped right now to kind of let my offensive lineman know that ‘Hey, we'd gone to Plan B, there's low time on the clock.’ It's a rhythmic three-syllable word, ‘O-ma-ha, set hut.’”
In this case Plan"A" was a very difficult hide. We've moved to plan "B" and with low time on the clock did not have time to update the attributes......McKinley O-ma-ha, set hut
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