In All the Moves I Had, Berry brings readers inside a football career that spanned four decades and featured a Who's Who of the NFL. As a receiver for the Baltimore Colts of the 1950s and 1960s, he nearly scientifically developed an inventory of moves and fakes to get open, and intensely studied defensive backs and their coverage techniques--pioneering these integral parts of today's passing-game preparation. In this book he breaks down, play-by-play, his historic performance in the contest that secured pro football's popularity--the 1958 final that was the NFL's first to end in overtime and first to be nationally televised. He recounts coaching for the Dallas Cowboys and head coaching the New England Patriots, a team he took to the Super Bowl. One of today's senior members of Pro Football Hall of Fame, Raymond Berry is a national treasure of football history, strategy, technique, and--just as important--friendship, family, love, and faith.
"He was his own man. He was poised, as though he had pondered everything a little harder than anyone else. . . .He was deconstructing and reinventing the position of wide receiver." --Mark Bowden in The Best Game Ever
"He didn't play a game of football, he engineered it."--legendary Los Angeles Times sportswriter Jim Murray
"The best." --Johnny Unitas