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    Score

    NFL great Peyton Manning reveals secrets of success at record-breaking Touchdown for Teach

    Marcy de Luna
    Nov 16, 2017 | 2:48 pm

    It’s not every day that you get advice on such topics as achieving your best and overcoming adversity from a legendary NFL quarterback. But a sold-out crowd of 480 at the fifth annual Touchdown for Teach event, chaired by Carol and Mike Linn and DeeDee and Wallis Marsh, got to experience just that when Peyton Manning took the stage at the River Oaks Country Club ballroom.

    Despite some grumbling by guests about tight security measures both at a VIP pre-event and inside the ballroom (a sign warned "no cell phone photos with Manning, no videos, no autographs"), it was all quickly forgotten as executive director Kelly Krohn warmly welcomed everyone to the fundraiser. Susan Sarofim, who with Mary Yenik co-founded Touchdown for Teach, eloquently spoke about the importance of the organization. H-E-B Houston president Scott McClelland charmed the crowd as he thanked the nonprofit for honoring him with a special award for his longtime support.

    And Manning, a five-time NFL Most Valuable Player, 14-time Pro Bowler, and the first quarterback to win a Super Bowl with two different teams (Super Bowl XLI with the Indianapolis Colts in 2007 and Super Bowl 50 with the Denver Broncos 2016), downright captivated the audience when he took part in a question-and-answer session with former Houston Oilers running back and sports broadcaster Spencer Tillman.

    Questions covered a variety of topics, from career experiences to how important mentors are in life. We picked up a few pointers from Manning along the way.

    On the topic of mentors, Manning gave an example on the importance they played during his career. "At no point should we ever think that we have it all figured out and don’t need to be mentored and coached. Eli (Peyton Manning's brother, Eli Manning, quarterback for the New York Giants) and I had a common coach, now the head (football) coach at Duke University, David Cutcliffe. Every offseason, we would go back to him and he would coach us, like we were 18-year-old freshman, on the most basic, mundane fundamentals of playing quarterback.

    "You might ask, ‘Why does a 14-year NFL veteran need to learn how to take a snap?' The little things matter. If you ever think they don’t, that’s when you’ve got to worry about your game beginning to slide."

    Manning's career achievements, including being named "Sportsman of the Year" by Sports Illustrated in 2013, didn't come without a lot of hard work and planning, he said.

    “Preparation is where I felt like I could get a little bit of an edge on the competition. I wasn’t going to out throw everybody. And I wasn’t going to out run anybody. But I thought that if I could maybe know where they were going to go before the ball was snapped, it would give me a little bit of edge.

    "When I was in high school my dad gave me a quote by a great coach for the Pittsburgh Steelers, Chuck Noll, ‘Pressure is something you feel when you don't know what you're doing.’ It applies to school, football, business, and life. And it was my goal. I was going to know what I was doing.

    "Did I get nervous before a game? Absolutely. It means you care. It means it matters to you. Did I ever feel pressure? No, because I did everything I could to get ready for that game. And that’s what gave me peace of mind at night.”

    What does it really take to be great? According to Manning, four things.

    “Having ability is certainly a part of it. Having a strong work ethic is important. Then you have to have a passion for and really love what you’re doing. Eli and I used to say, and we would never tell the owners of the Broncos, Giants, or Colts this, but we would have played for free. We loved it that much.

    "And the fourth thing, which might separate the average from the good from the great, is a feeling of accountability. People are counting on you. When you get drafted ... they always ask you, ‘What are you going to do with this money you just made?’ My answer was, ‘I’m going to go earn it.’”

    Manning was not without his share of challenges in his career. Upper body atrophy led to three surgeries in 2011, knocking him out for the season, costing his job with the Colts, and leaving him to wonder if he'd ever play again.

    “It was the greatest adversity I ever faced professionally. When you go through adversity, you learn a lot about yourself. How you handle it is important. I never said, 'this isn’t fair.’ I tried to have a good attitude about it. I had to learn to play football in a new physical state. I couldn’t throw the football the same way I used to. But I was pretty flexible and I was not stubborn. I had to change teams, but I got play four more years. I feel like I passed that test.”

    The evening raised a record breaking $1.1 million for Touchdown for Teach, which works to give educators in low-income school’s strategies in de-escalation and conflict resolution. The nonprofit will net the entire amount thanks to Fayez Sarofim, who generously underwrote the entire event.

    Seen in the crowd were Alice and Keith Mosing, Hallie Vanderhider and her son Michael Vanderhider, Laurie and Tracy Krohn, Soraya McClelland, Lori Sarofim, Raye White, Gary Petersen, Bobbie Nau, Dr. Sippi and Ajay Khuran, Pierce Bush, Fady Armanious and Bill Baldwin, Carolyn Faulk, Pat Studdert, Myra Wilson, Robin Simons, Jo Ann Petersen, Gaye Lynn and Stuart Zarrow, ​Margaret Alkek Williams and Jim Daniel, KHOU meteorologist Chita Craft and her husband, Lane Craft, Shelley and Tracy Ludwick, Philamena Baird, Sean Pendergast, Becca Cason Thrash and John Thrash, Diane Lokey Farb, Vivian Wise, Donna and Tony Vallone, and Leisa Holland-Nelson.

    Hallie Vanderhider, Michael Vanderhider.

    Houston, Touchdown for Teach with Peyton Manning, Hallie Vanderhider, Michael Vanderhider
    Photo by Dave Rossman
    Hallie Vanderhider, Michael Vanderhider.
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    the pen is mightier

    Houston's literary elite celebrate the power of books at annual gala

    Tarra Gaines
    Feb 23, 2026 | 11:20 am
    Gala Chairs Breen and Holly Haire, Inprint Executive Director Rich Levy, Featured Speaker Lauren Groff
    Photo by Wilson Parish Photography
    Inprint Gala Chairs Breen and Holly Haire, Inprint Executive Director Rich Levy, Featured Speaker Lauren Groff

    The super power of storytelling was the theme of the evening at the River Oaks Country Club, as Houston’s glittering literati made this year’s Inprint Poets and Writers Ball an epic tale to tell. Chaired by Holly and Breen Haire and attended by 370 literature-loving Houstonians, the gala raised more than $450,000 for Inprint’s many readings, workshops, and educational programs as well as support for Houston-based emerging writers.

    Special guest speaker, the acclaimed and best selling author of Matrix, Fates & Furies, Arcadia, and The Monsters of Templeton, Lauren Groff, noted what a unique organization Inprint is and what a rarity of an occasion it is to celebrate the literary arts together.

    “This does not happen anywhere else,” she remarked of the gala early in her rousing talk about the power of the written word in a time when books are being banned and censored. She emphasized that storytelling makes us human and helps us “define who we are.”

    But before Groff’s words of hope for the future of books and the beguiling dinner designed by Robert Del Grande, the James Beard Award-winning Chef Emeritus of The Annie Café & Bar, the evening began with one of the gala’s most beloved traditions. Guests were treated to intimate salon readings from up and coming writers and poets. This year’s crop of authors, all with strong Inprint and Houston ties, were Rosa Boshier González reading a funny, literary work of speculative fiction; award-winning poet and writing professor Rohan Chhetri; and fellow poet, Julia Guez, reading a selection of lyrical, short poems. All three also told stories of how Inprint fellowship and awards gave them the power to chase their writerly dreams.

    Gala Chairs Breen and Holly Haire, Inprint Executive Director Rich Levy, Featured Speaker Lauren Groff

    Photo by Wilson Parish Photography

    Inprint Gala Chairs Breen and Holly Haire, Inprint Executive Director Rich Levy, Featured Speaker Lauren Groff.

    This year’s gala was also the chance for long time friends to celebrate the work of Inprint executive director, Rich Levy, who retires at the end of the 2025-2026 season, after leading the organization to unprecedented heights for 31 years.

    In keeping with the philosophy that not all heroes wear capes, the Inprint board presented Levy with a red cape in honor of his many years of super powered support and promotion of the literary arts in Houston. As a sign to Levy’s lasting legacy, Inprint Presidents Council member Franci Neely, was joined by board president Chinhui Juhn, board member and former president Kevin Lewis, and advisory board member Michael Zilkha to announced the establishment of The Rich Levy Inprint Poetry Buskers Endowment. With more than $132,000 in seed money already raised, this endowment will support in perpetuity the Poetry Busters program to bring poets to the people around Houston.

    With another nod to the future, the Houston arts leader, educator, and writer chosen to next lead Inprint, Giuseppe Taurino, was in attendance, and took a quick bow to guests. Taurino, who now serves as executive director of Writers in the Schools (WITS) Houston, was selected to lead Inprint in a national search.

    Also seen partying with the poets were Christina Bryan and Trey Peacock, Yini Collette, Kimberly Cutchall and Matt Henneman, Mary S and Jack Dawson, Consuelo Duroc-Danner, Vicky and Anthony Estrera, Debbie Gary, Marc Grossberg, Eddie Allen, Caroline Kerr and Andy Lusk, Sabria Lewis, Valerae Lewis and Michael O’Reilly, Katie Padden and Rick Evans, Noelle and Eric Reed, Lillie Robertson, Katie Sammons and Terry Lohrenz, Nikita and Atman Shukla, Limor and Stuart Smith, Diana Strassmann and Jeff Smisek, Nina Zilkha, Michelle and Rishi Varma.

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