Brian Kelly: ‘I’m from Boston – we don’t have strong accents’

“I’m from Boston. We don’t have strong accents.” – Brian Kelly

Ask anyone from the United States which city or region has the most distinct accent of any and in little to no time Boston is certain to be mentioned.

Brian Kelly was at LSU’s game in the Texas Bowl on Tuesday night and was interviewed during the game by the ESPN commentators.  He was asked about the accent he debuted when speaking at the LSU basketball game in early December and blamed the lack of accents by Bostonians as the recent he couldn’t say “family” properly.

He’s got to be being sarcastic, right?  Him saying it with such a straight face makes it seem like he’s being serious, though.

I don’t know his seriousness or lack-thereof but saying people from Boston don’t have accents is about as absurd as saying Chicagoans have nothing wrong with putting ketchup on a hot dog.

Related:

Brian Kelly gets roasted for his sudden southern accent

Brian Kelly through the years at Notre Dame

Watch: Brian Kelly debuts sudden new southern accent

Oh dear lord this is cringe-worthy

Brian Kelly and his family haven’t even unpacked their bags yet in Baton Rouge but there has already been a massive change for the former Notre Dame head coach.  After speaking at his introductory press conference on Wednesday afternoon, Kelly stopped by the LSU men’s basketball game that evening.  It was there he debuted his new southern accent while addressing the crowd at halftime.

Related: Notre Dame coaching staff tracker

Take a peek at the video below and start it at roughly the 30 second mark.  A fair warning to you that things are about to get really uncomfortable and awkward.

Who is that guy?

I’ve listened to Brian Kelly press conferences and interviews for more than a decade and never heard a single hint of an accent whatsoever.  Now all of a sudden he spends ten minutes in Louisiana and he belongs on the cast of “O Brother, Where Art Thou?”

Related: 5 reasons to love the Marcus Freeman hire

My level of discomfort sitting through those couple minutes was limitless.  Perhaps whatever the heck that voice was is why Kelly’s assistants at Notre Dame all decided to stay at Notre Dame.

Related:

See It – Brian Kelly arrives in Baton Rouge

 

Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes credits his ‘unique voice’ for drawing opponents offside

Mahomes’ frog-like cadence has been an underrated weapon for the Kansas City Chiefs.

The Houston Texans and Los Angeles Chargers were both drawn offside by Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes in the first two weeks of the 2020 NFL season. In total, the Chiefs have drawn five defensive offside flags against their opponents this year. So what exactly is causing teams to jump offsides so often for Kansas City?

It’s a two-fold process according to Mahomes.

“Yeah, we work on changing up the snap count all throughout training camp and there are some rough days where you get a lot of false starts and stuff like that,” Mahomes said. “But it always makes you better whenever the season comes along. So I have the unique advantage of having a kind of unique voice that’s able to get those guys to jump offside. So I try to utilize that as much as possible.”

Not only did the Chiefs and Mahomes practice using cadence and the snap count to draw teams offside this summer, but he has an innate advantage. Mahomes believes that his unique voice can help him get defenders to jump offside. If you can’t recall what Mahomes sounds like, both Andy Reid and Tyreek Hill have likened Mahomes’ voice to Kermit the Frog. I’d say Mahomes has got a little more southern twang to his voice, but there’s definitely something froggish about it.

Mahomes thinks this advantage in drawing offside penalties, could even carry over into the dust-up between the Chiefs and Ravens in Week 3.

“Obviously, you get to use verbal snap count on the road and especially when we’re playing places like Baltimore you’re not going to be able to use that because of the crowd, especially Monday night so that definitely is an advantage,” Mahomes explained. “The only thing that’s kind of a disadvantage, you have to change a lot of your code words on a lot of your audibles because everybody can kind of hear you on the TV copy and everything like that.”

Playing in a fanless stadium will only help Mahomes and the Chiefs continue to take advantage of the snap count and cadence. Baltimore’s defensive front has drawn two defensive offside penalties so far this season. They’ll have to be mighty disciplined as to not fall victim to the unique voice of Mahomes on Monday.

[vertical-gallery id=77258]