Older Roy
Older Benny
Narrators 1, 2, and 3 (N1, N2, N3)*
Historians 1, 2 (H1, H2)*
Roy Riegels, a football player*
Benny Lom, a football player*
Coach Nibs Price, the Golden Bears coach*
Roy Riegels was a star of his football team. But in the most important game of the year, he made a huge mistake. Would it ruin his life?
Learning Objectives: Students will analyze how the point of view of a character changes over time and identify the theme of the play.
Prologue
Georgia Tech Sports Blog-AJC.com
Older Roy: Have you ever made a bad mistake?
Older Benny: How about a bad mistake in front of more than 66,000 people?
Older Roy: I made a mistake once that meant my football team lost the most important game they’d ever played.
Older Benny: He really did. And it felt like the whole world was watching.
Older Roy: Want to hear what happened?
Scene 1
University of California (UC), Berkeley, December 1928
N1: The UC Berkeley football team, the California Golden Bears, trots off the field.
N2: They’re sweaty and panting after a hard day of practice.
N3: Next up is the Rose Bowl.
H1: In the 1920s, the Rose Bowl was the most important game in college football.
H2: The country’s two best teams played each other on New Year’s Day.
H1: In the 1929 Rose Bowl, the California Golden Bears faced off against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets.
Roy Riegels: We’ve got to win this, Benny.
Benny Lom: With my speed and your defense, we can do it.
Roy: Think so?
Benny: I know so.
N1: The coach calls the team over.
Coach Nibs Price: Ready for the big game, boys?
Golden Bears Team: Ready!
Coach Price: Now, what do we know about the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets?
Benny: They haven’t lost a single game.
Roy: And we’ve lost one and tied two. But if we can keep them from scoring, we can beat them.
Coach Price: Exactly! Here’s to the next Rose Bowl champions . . . the California Golden Bears!
Golden Bears Team (singing):
We’re sons of California,
A loyal company,
All shout for California,
While we strive for victory!
HOORAY!
Scene 2
The Rose Bowl Stadium, January 1, 1929
A1: Welcome to the 1929 Rose Bowl!
Yellow Jackets Fans: Go Yellow Jackets!
Golden Bears Fans: Gooooooo Bears!
N2: More than 66,000 fans crowd the stadium, yelling and cheering.
N3: Millions more are listening to the game on the radio.
H2: Remember, this was before television.
H1: Radio announcers described what was happening on the field live on the air.
A2: It’s almost halftime. The score is still 0-0.
A1: Who will be crowned the best college football team in the entire country—the Yellow Jackets or the Golden Bears?
N1: Suddenly, on the field, a Yellow Jackets player drops the football.
Roy: I’ve got it!
N2: Roy grabs the ball and starts running down the field toward the Yellow Jackets’ goalposts.
N3: A Yellow Jackets player shoves him.
N1: Roy spins around and keeps running. But now, he . . .
A2: . . . is going the WRONG WAY!
A1: This is a first in football history!
Golden Bears Fans: Nooooooooo!
N2: Benny races after Roy, yelling at him.
Benny: Roy! Stop! What are you doing?
Roy: I’m about to score a touchdown!
N3: Roy continues to thunder down the field . . .
N1: . . . toward his own team’s goal!
N2: Finally, Benny stops Roy, bumping him sideways and grabbing him.
Benny: Roy! Look where you are! You’re running the wrong way.
Roy (stunned): What?!
A2: Riegels has been stopped by his own teammate!
A1: Now the Yellow Jackets have their chance and . . . SCORE!
Yellow Jackets Fans: Wooooo!
Scene 3
The Golden Bears locker room, halftime
N3: The team gathers glumly, muttering.
N1: Roy slumps on a bench in despair.
Coach Price: Keep your focus, boys. The game’s not over yet.
Roy (holding his head in his hands): It’s over for me. I can’t go out there again.
Coach Price: Roy, you have to.
Roy: Coach, I can’t do it. I’ve ruined you, I’ve ruined myself, I’ve ruined the team. I couldn’t face that crowd to save my life.
Benny: Come on, Roy. We can still win this.
Coach Price: Roy, it was just a mistake. Go out there and fix it.
H2: Roy Riegels did go back onto the field, as the crowd jeered and booed.
H1: He played one of the best second halves of his life.
H2: But in the end, the Golden Bears lost the Rose Bowl to the Yellow Jackets.
H1: Without Roy’s mistake, they would have won the game.
Scene 4
UC Berkeley, a few days later
N2: Benny and Roy are on their way to class.
Student 1: There he is—Wrong Way Riegels!
Student 2 (laughing): Hey, Roy! Chemistry class is the other way!
Student 3: I baked you a cake, Roy! Your favorite—an upside-down cake!
Benny: Cut it out!
Student 1: We’re just having fun.
Benny: It’s not fun for Roy.
N3: Roy and Benny duck into a building, away from the teasing and laughter.
Roy: I can’t take this, Benny. They’ll make fun of me for the rest of my life.
Benny: Oh, come on. It could have happened to anybody.
Roy: But it didn’t. It happened to me. I’m never playing football again.
Benny: What are you talking about? It was just one lousy blunder.
Roy: But it cost us the Rose Bowl.
N1: Benny puts his hands on Roy’s shoulders and looks him in the eyes.
Benny: Roy, you just got turned around. That’s all. You’re the best player on the team!
N2: Roy sighs and shakes his head.
Scene 5
The Golden Bears locker room, August 1929
H2: Each year before the start of football season, teams met to choose a new captain.
H1: The captain was picked for his skill, hard work, and ability to unite the team.
Coach Price: OK, boys, time to pick a captain.
Benny: I vote for Roy.
Roy (shocked): What? Benny, no! Nobody is going to want—
Golden Bears Team (loudly): Roy! Roy! Roy!
Roy: After what I did, I shouldn’t even be on this team.
Coach Price: You hear them, Roy. Your team thinks you’re the right one to lead us to a winning season . . . and I agree!
Golden Bears Team: Roy! Roy! Roy!
Coach Price: Congratulations, Roy. You’re our new captain.
N3: Roy stares at his teammates, amazed.
H2: As captain, Roy Riegels led the Golden Bears to a triumphant season, with 7 wins, 1 loss, and 1 tie.
Scene 6
The Riegels home, some years later
H1: Roy Riegels went on to become a teacher and a coach of high school and college football teams.
H2: He and his wife had four children.
N1: One night, as the family finishes dinner, his daughter Alexa hands Roy the newspaper.
Alexa: Dad, it’s a story about somebody who did the same thing you did.
Barbara: Oh, I heard about that. A high school football player.
Roy (reading): Poor kid. He must feel terrible.
Helen: Tell us the story again, Dad!
Roy (laughing): OK, OK. Well, it was the 1929 Rose Bowl . . .
N2: His daughters listen wide-eyed as Roy tells them the whole story.
Roy: And then Benny—Benny! My own teammate!—had to block me! To keep me from scoring for the other team.
N3: Everyone is laughing, but Roy laughs the loudest.
Roy: I’ll tell you something, girls. If I had to do it all over again . . .
Alexa: What, Dad?
Roy: I’d still run the wrong way! Because I was sure it was the right way.
N1: They all laugh even harder.
Roy: You know what? I’m going to write this kid a letter.
Barbara: What will you say?
Roy: That I know exactly how he feels. At the time, I thought it was the end of the world. But I got over it.
Helen: How did you do that, Dad?
Roy: I realized my mistake was just a bad thing that happened. It had nothing to do with who I was.
N2: Roy takes pen and paper, and writes an encouraging letter to the high school kid.
N3: He signs it, “Your friend, Roy Riegels.”
Epilogue
H1: Over the years, Roy kept writing letters to other players who made the same mistake he did.
H2: In 1991, two years before he died, Roy was inducted into the Rose Bowl Hall of Fame.
H1: His wrong-way run is still called one of the most memorable moments in football history.
Older Benny: So the next time you make a mistake, don’t give up! Think about my friend Roy.
Older Roy: If I can move on from my mistake, so can you.
Write to Win
Write a conversation between Roy and Older Roy in which they talk about Roy’s mistake. What can the older character teach the younger one? Send it to “Roy Contest” by April 1, 2023. Five winners will each receive a copy of Scholastic Year in Sports 2023 by James Buckley Jr. Visit the Storyworks Contests page for more information.
This play was originally published in the February 2023 issue.
Table of Contents
Close Reading, Critical Thinking
4. Differentiate and Customize
Striving Readers, Advanced Readers, Multilingual Learners
1. Preparing to Read
Introduce the Story (5 minutes)
Build Knowledge, Introduce Vocabulary, and Set a Purpose for Reading
2. Reading the Play
Close-Reading Questions
Critical-Thinking Questions
3. Skill Building and Writing
Featured Skill: Point of View
Distribute or assign the Point of View Skill Builder. Have students complete it independently or together with a partner. This skill builder will help prepare students to respond to the writing prompt on page 26. Then you can send their work to our writing contest (see page 2 of the magazine for details)!
To ensure students understand how Roy’s point of view changes from the beginning to the end of the play, have students highlight Roy’s negative feelings and emotions in Scenes 3-5 in one color. Then have them highlight Roy’s thoughts about his mistake in Scene 6 and the Epilogue in a different color. Lead a small-group discussion comparing and contrasting how he feels in each situation, pointing out how his feelings have changed.
Ask students to consider the time period of the play (1929). Have students identify details from the play about football during this time (the importance of the Rose Bowl, the way fans viewed or listened to the game, the number of viewers or listeners). Then have them consider football today (live coverage on TV, 24-hour sports coverage and talk shows, social media). Ask students: Do you think Roy's mistake would have been better or worse for him if it had happened today? Write a paragraph supporting your choice with reasons and evidence.
To make sure students have enough knowledge on the American game of football, be sure to review the Background Builder Slideshow on the rules of football before reading. As you read the play together, you may want to stop and refer to the game rules during Scene 2. Have students illustrate and label the scene to ensure they understand the mistake that Roy makes. For students who truly lack background knowledge on the game of football, it might be helpful to compare the game to soccer (which is referred to as football in many other countries), and explain what Roy’s mistake would have been in a soccer game (he kicked the ball toward the other team’s goal, and his own teammate had to stop him from scoring for the other team).
What to Do When Mistakes Make You Quake: A Kid's Guide to Accepting Imperfection is an interactive book that delves into the emotions underlying our fear of mistakes. It is described as “the complete resource for educating, motivating, and empowering children to cope with mistakes—so they can explore new territory without fear!”
This video from CBC Kids explores what we can learn from our mistakes. (Note: The video starts after a short ad.)
This article from Edutopia explores ways to create an atmosphere in your classroom where students feel free to take risks and learn from their mistakes. Ideas include celebrating perseverance, sharing your own mistakes, and introducing “Failure Fridays.”
For those who may not be familiar with how football is played, the NFL UK has put together this animated beginner’s guide to American football. (Note: The video starts after a short ad.) For students who want to know more about the history of the game, check out the book The History of NFL Football for Kids.