Bernie Kosar was a quarterback for the Cleveland Browns football team from 1985 until getting cut in the 1993 season by then coach of the Browns, Bill Belicheck. Kosar would win the Super Bowl with the Dallas Cowboys following the 1993 season before playing three more seasons as a backup for the Miami Dolphins.
Craig Stout and Bernie Kosar co-wrote the book 'Bernie Kosar: Learning To Scramble', which was released in September of 2017 through regional publisher Cleveland Landmarks Press. 'Learning To Scramble' follows an autobiographical bent that covers parts of the college and professional career of Kosar, some of the adventures or misadventures in business, family, and football that Bernie Kosar the man had in navigating interpersonal relationships while trying to produce results in his life that reflected his values.
Through February of 2018, Bill Belicheck had won five Super Bowls with the New England Patriots. Back in 1993 when Bernie Kosar was released mid-season by Belicheck and the Cleveland Browns, none of this success was anticipated or really mattered to the fans of the Browns' franchise. In 'Learning To Scramble', Kosar treads carefully on this relationship in acknowledging that his (Kosar's) health had been hampered by broken bones, ankles, ribs, and other injuries to the point that the famous explanation of diminished skills for Kosar's release were justified.
Kosar would join the Dallas Cowboys as coached by his former University of Miami coach Jimmie Johnson, where both would win a Super Bowl. After having played for Johnson at the University of Miami and then the Dolphins, Kosar was a backup for the Miami Dolphins when Johnson coached there. In the intervening time, Kosar had success quarterbacking the Cleveland Browns, who he had taken to the playoffs in his first five seasons in the National Football League (NFL).
Gary Danielson served as a player and mentor to Bernie Kosar during the rookie season of Kosar's career in Cleveland. Kosar credits Danielson for being an aid to him during his early years, which included Danielson serving as a backup for at least two seasons beyond that rookie campaign. Kosar would recount this and the football values of tenacious commitment to focus that he and his teammates shared when the Browns' teams were winning.
Kosar spoke of the trust players have on the field, which included how he communicated authoritatively with players. This included with runningbacks Earnest Byner and Kevin Mack, wide receiver Reggie Langhorne, and tight end Ozzie Newsome. The trust and authoritative tone were borne of an obsessive commitment based on that shared value along with obtaining what Kosar called the discretionary effort of competition that presses through individual walls of pain or unreasonable exhaustion.
The notion of commanding trust in football meant thinking the same way on how to run routs, when to move from one defensive read or offensive play call to another, or not freelancing a route change that hasn't been practiced hundreds of times before. These values applied in football, though did not translate to matters of the heart.
By not applying football principles of interaction to family matters, Kosar explained many several inherently reckless familial matters involving his father, his brother, and the relationship he had with his wife and his mother-in-law. The relationship goals were different and driven largely in a world of dysfunction, though this is me placing my interpretation upon the anecdotes, personal outcomes, and motivations described through the book. In part, the familial tales and business relationships serve not so much as a story about football as it was a tale about even big tough football players are subject to human mistakes.
Overall, I found the narrative style of 'Learning To Scramble' refreshing, candid, and concisely stated. The nineteen chapters were divided into themes that rolled up into value statements that included anecdotes that contributed to the larger purpose of the stories shared. I recommend the book to fans of football from the mid-1980s through the early-1990s, fans of the Cleveland Browns, and ultimately fans of the game as played largely at its highest level. Further, I recommend the book to high school and college kids looking trying to figure out how to navigate the world using the life experiences of someone who didn't have all the answers or best influences yet did the best he could.
I rate 'Bernie Kosar: Learning to Scramble' at 3.75-stars on a scale of 1-star to 5-stars.