weekend report 003: the OBJ movement
you can’t outrun your past
The way I’ve been missing football, you’d think I actually played it.
Sundays, (Monday & Thursday nights) were always a core part of my routine so without it, it feels like something is missing.
But, this weekend, we got a version of it back.
The Fanatics Flag Football game isn’t the NFL, but it carries pieces of it. It’s also a chance to see some of our favorite players on the same field, in different dynamics playing together in a way you normally wouldn’t across the 32 NFL clubs.
To me, it feels a little more relaxed, but still competitive enough to remind you what you’ve been missing.
It’s not the same, but it doesn’t have to be.
And seeing a super athletic roster, like Tom Brady and Jalen Hurts on the same team, makes you realize how rare it is to see talent like that share the field in that way.
Also Saquon and Odell. Players you’re used to watching in completely different contexts, now part of the same game.
Even seeing someone like iShowSpeed out there, who isn’t from the league but is clearly athletic in his own right, added another layer to it.
But specifically, seeing Odell’s one-handed catch in 2026 felt like a blast from the past.
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And watching him play in the flag football game reminded me of his career. For a second, I honestly thought he had retired. I’ve always associated him with the Giants, so seeing him out there again really brought me back.
From being drafted to the Giants to becoming one of the most recognizable players in the league, Odell basically had a very strong association with New York (and still does).
After his iconic one-handed catch during his rookie season, his name was everywhere. It wasn’t just a great play, it became part of the culture, and in a lot of ways, that moment accelerated everything.
Kids started to look up to him, dye their hair blonde, and talk about the catch on recess. It felt like a movement.
But with that came a version of him people didn’t always understand.
He was emotional. You’d see it on the sidelines, sometimes even during the game. Odell had a ton of frustration, passion and intensity, but It didn’t always come across the right way, and it always became the headline.
It’s also hard to separate that from how much he cared. Two very high emotions on both ends.
When you love something that deeply, your emotions are going to show. Especially in a sport like football, where everything is physical, fast, and constantly under a microscope.
But at the same time, there’s something to be said about staying composed and regulated in those moments.
When the Giants traded him, it definitely changed how that chapter ended.
But moments like his one-handed catch don’t really belong to just one point in time. That play alone feels like a snapshot of a different era of football.
And I think that’s the part that sticks.
Not just the highlights, but the reminder that careers aren’t always clean or linear. You can be incredibly talented, widely celebrated, and still misunderstood.
And regardless of how everything played out, I still hope one day he gets to retire as a Giant.
Because maybe the past isn’t something you outgrow or leave behind.
Maybe it’s something you come back to over time, and each time, it looks a little different because you are.






I love this!!! 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻