FLORHAM PARK, N.J. -- Aaron Glenn vowed vengeance. It came after one of his lowest moments in professional football. He didn't tell reporters, and he didn't announce it on social media because that wasn't a thing in 1994. He told one of his New York Jets teammates, Victor Green, and they kept it quiet for years.
"AG had a mean streak to him," Green recalled last week. "He never forgot the plays that were made on him, and he always tried to get you back."
This was an all-timer, one of the most memorable gadget plays in NFL history -- and Glenn happened to fall victim to Dan Marino's wizardry.
Naturally, we're talking about the "Fake Spike" play, when the Miami Dolphins legendary quarterback, in the final seconds of a critical AFC East showdown, made the Jets believe he was going to c