Czechoslovakia as the nazis were clamping down on the countrys jews. He ended up saving the lives of 669 children. How did he do it . Youll hear all about it tonight from the man himself, who is now 105 years old. I work on the motto that if somethings not impossible, there must be a way of doing it. Safer nineyearold quarterback travis endicott, one of steve clarksons newest students. If hes good enough by the ripe old age of 12, he may be offered a divisionone College Football scholarship. Are they looking at seven, eightyearolds, nineyearolds . You know, without question, it has happened. Safer these wannabe Peyton Mannings are inspired by their professors clarksons alumni a roster of nfl quarterbacks who spend part of their offseason dishing out expertise to an awestruck platoon of undergraduates. Im steve kroft. Im lesley stahl. Im morley safer. Im bob simon. Im scott pelley. Those stories tonight on 60 minutes. Test cbs money watch update. Sponsored by . Good evening atlantic hawks owner will sell the team after admitting he wrote a racially charged email two years ago. The chinese online retailer ali baba expects to raise 24 billion plus this week, likely the biggest ipo ever. An apples big iphone 6 announcement is tuesday. Im jeff glor, cbs news. Check. This. Out. Oh my goodness. Do you know what that adds up to . A clean bum. This is going very well so far. [ cherry ] feel a clean so fresh it can only be cottonelle. E this is going very well so far. Financial noise financial noise financial noise financial noise oh, hi, cortana. You look. Nice. [ cortana ] thanks. This is the new htc one m8 for windows. Sleek. But, im more than just a pretty face. Me, too. I can check your calendar, then traffic to help you make your manipedi on time. And you sound great too. Well, i have two speakers for music. Oh. I only have one. Really . Yes. And im sitting on it. Pelley bp, the Company Responsible for the deepwater horizon disaster in 2010, is suddenly facing billions of dollars in higher fines. A federal judge ruled last thursday that bp was grossly negligent in the biggest Accidental Oil spill the world has ever seen, and that ruling means that fines could be quadrupled. Long before this ruling, bp had already paid billions in fines and in compensation to businesses hurt by the spill. But, as we first reported in may, bp is now crying foul, claiming its the victim of gulf coast swindlers who have the oil giant over a barrel. Bp says its being forced to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation to people who never saw oil anywhere but on tv. The explosion was a catastrophe. 11 crew members were killed. The gusher flowed 87 days. Bp put up billions to pay compensation, and hired attorney ken feinberg to sort out who was hurt by the spill and who was not. Ken feinberg one fellow down in alabama said to me, when i asked him for proof, he said, mr. Feinberg, we do things with a handshake down here. I said, thats fine, but a handshake wont get you compensation. Pelley why is it so important to hold everyone to that standard of proof . Feinberg because therell be another catastrophe, and a catastrophe after that. What happens the next time, in terms of a companys willingness to do something similar . Pelley feinberg has long experience. He ran the Compensation Program for victims of 9 11. In the bp disaster, he told us there were often two kinds of applicants, the deserving and the devious. What was the most outrageous claim you got . Feinberg i think there was a fellow in oslo, norway, if i remember correctly, who slipped on the ice while he was filing a claim and sought damages for a broken leg. Pelley people saw money and they tried to get it. Feinberg human nature goes with the territory. I think that if you had any type of Compensation Program anywhere, you get a fair number of people who try and game the system to try and recover compensation. Pelley feinberg says, out of more than a million claims, he found only a third were justified. His critics said too many claims were being denied. So, to avoid decades of Court Battles and uncertainty, bp agreed to a more lenient Compensation Program. But now, bp Vice President geoff morell says the oil giant is getting soaked by businesses with losses that are not linked to the spill. Geoff morell were talking about a Wireless PhoneCompany Store that burned to the ground and shut down before the spill, an rv park owner that was foreclosed upon before the spill. And i love this one a pontiac dealer who could no longer sell pontiacs because g. M. Had discontinued the line before the spill. Pelley those are all real examples and they are people who actually got a check . Morell those are all real examples and are, frankly, not exceptions but rather emblematic of a far larger problem. There are more than 1,000 claims just like them that had glaring red flags associated with them that should have been picked out by the claims administrator, and instead were ultimately awarded more than 500 million. Pelley thats how bp adds it up, but the new claims administrator, pat juneau, says bp is getting what it asked for. Juneaus Deepwater Horizon Claims Center replaced ken feinberg same job, new rules. Bp makes it sound like youre throwing millions of dollars away to people who have no stake in the oil spill whatsoever. Pat juneau i have an obligation as a courtappointed official by the federal court to implement what these two parties wrote. Pelley the parties are bp and, on the other side, lawyers representing victims. They negotiated a settlement with a fairly simple formula. Bp agreed to pay businesses whose income dropped after the spill and then rebounded one year later. Trouble was, some attorneys soliciting clients took that to mean any business with a loss of any kind. Your losses dont have to be directly traceable to the oil spill. Do i have to prove the oil spill directly harmed my business . The answer is no. A business does not have to prove that their loss was directly caused by that event. Morell there was a proliferation of these kinds of ads. And there was almost a pied piperlike recruitment of claimants, and compounding that problem was the fact that the claims administrator, the facility, began to pay these claims. Pelley one attorneys flyer reads, the craziest thing about the settlement is that you can be compensated for losses that are unrelated to the spill. Bps attorney ted olson has a word for that. Ted olson i think thats fraud. We want to compensate legitimate claimants, but this heres an incentive to encourage people to commit fraud, and that. That is wrong. Pelley so bp launched its own ad campaign, which pointed to 60,000 that went to colorectal surgeons 300 miles from the coast, and 173,000 paid to an Escort Service in florida. Bp also claims 8 million was approved for companies that clean up after hurricanes. Their income was down after the spill because there were no hurricanes that made landfall that year. Pat juneau, the claims administrator, told us that he questioned the eligibility formula at the start, because it didnt require proof of a link to the spill. He asked bp about that. And bp replied in the court record that if the numbers fit the formula, all losses are presumed to be attributable to the oil spill, even if the decline was wholly unrelated to the oil spill. With that, juneau decided that if a business lost money, he was not allowed to ask why. Jim roy its a black and white formula, a deal is a deal, scott. Pelley jim roy is a lawyer for the victims. He helped negotiate the eligibility formula with bp. Roy well, i think bp has buyers remorse. Bp told the court that it believed that this was going to be a 7. 8 billion settlement. But i think its going to be considerably more than the amount of money that bp said it was going to cost. Pelley we called dozens of the applicants that bp says took unfair advantage of the deal, but all of them declined to be interviewed. Do you think that might be because theyre feeling sort of sheepish about receiving that check . Roy no, i think there are two things going on. I think, one, most of these businesses understand that they want their lives to stay private. And number two, the last thing they want is to go on 60 minutes with scott pelley to broadcast anything about them personally. Pelley but there could be another reason on the claim form that applicants sign under penalty of perjury, it says that they assert Economic Loss due to the spill. Bp lawyer ted olson says it shouldnt matter that the formula to calculate the loss doesnt consider the cause. Olson you had to have been hurt by the oil spill. Pelley bps accounting expert, holly sharp, testified in 2012 that once a business meets the formula, all losses are presumed to be caused by the spill with no analysis required to determine whether the declines might have been due, at least in part, to other causes. I mean, it just seems that thats what bp agreed to. You made your bed, and now youre lying in it. Olson the part that you just quoted for me started off with, once you meet the formula. The formula is that, first of all, you have to establish that you were injured as a result of this. Otherwise, anyone can walk in and say, i had a bad year. Pay me money. Pelley and thats exactly whats happening. Olson thats exactly whats happening. Pelley the front page of the Settlement Claim form says, the claim is for those that assert Economic Loss due to the spill. What does due to the spill mean to you . Roy caused. But if they qualify, whatever that calculation is, they should be paid. You may, in hindsight, judge that just doesnt seem right. I may judge in hindsight, although i dont, that that just doesnt seem right. But thats the deal bp asked for; thats the deal bp got. And the deal bp got was for the entire states of mississippi, louisiana and alabama. Pelley claims administrator pat juneau is rejecting about 40 of claims when companies cant prove an Economic Loss of some kind. But he has approved more than 3 billion in claims so far, so, in a nutshell, if theyve got the right numbers, they get a check . Juneau im obliged to pay. Honor and pay those claims. Pelley bp essentially is saying that youre facilitating fraud. Juneau i have never in my life. Im 76 years old, ive been to a lot of rodeos in my life. I dont facilitate fraud. Fraud offends me. Pelley but doesnt this do violence to common sense when youre paying claims to people who have no loss associated with the spill . How could that possibly be the intent of the agreement . Juneau you do understand that i wasnt there when these parties agreed to this agreement. And thats what they agreed to. Morell but no company would ever agree to a settlement that compensates people who were not harmed by their actions, and we most certainly did not agree to such a settlement. Roy bp doesnt like the deal it cut now. Im sorry about that. I cant help that. But i was in the room when this section of the deal was negotiated. Others on our team were there, too. Thats what we saw and heard, no doubt about it. Pelley the battle, of course, is in the federal courts. Bp has won a few on the size of some of the checks. But its lost every attempt to reinterpret the formula that decides who is eligible. Here in new orleans, one federal judge said that bp was essentially trying to rewrite the deal. A federal appeals judge said that there was nothing fundamentally unreasonable about the deal that bp agreed to but now wishes it had not. Bp is now asking the Appeals Court for one more hearing. Is this a matter of bps attorneys just having been hoodwinked . You accepted a deal without fully realizing what it meant, and now youre stuck with it . Olson no one could have anticipated that the system would go completely off the tracks, but thats why you have appellate courts. And thats why we have the supreme court. Bp will take this as far as it is necessary to go to make sure that this Settlement Agreement is construed properly. Pelley did you guys take bp to the cleaners on this . Roy no, sir. Bp got a good settlement. And bp was represented by very, very good lawyers who were worthy adversaries, who fought tooth and nail for their client. And it was a hardfought settlement. Their own lawyer said it was a very generous settlement. Pelley thats not what theyre saying now. Therere saying its a little too generous. Roy it is what it is. Pelley now, bp complains it feels like its the visiting Team Fighting a Home Field Advantage along a gulf coast that remembers vividly scenes like this. Juneau if the inference is that were giving preferential treatment and putting the screws to somebody here myself or this court thats grossly untrue. Its offensive, certainly offensive to me. And it shouldnt be said and it has no place in this litigation. Pelley shortly after our story first aired, the federal Appeals Court denied bps request for another hearing on who is eligible for an award. And just this past week, bp asked another court to consider removing pat juneau as the claims administrator. Long before he heard from the lawyers, scott heard from a remarkable oil worker who survived the blast. Go to 60minutesovertime. Com sponsored by lyrica. Me is mich, im 55 years old and i have diabetic nerve pain. The pain was terrible. My feet hurt so bad. It felt like hot pins and needles coming from the inside out of my skin. When i did go see the doctor, and he prescribed lyrica. It helped me. [ male announcer ] its known that diabetes damages nerves. Lyrica is fdaapproved to treat diabetic nerve pain. Lyrica is not for everyone. It may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. Tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. Or, swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, changes in eyesight, including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or skin sores from diabetes. Common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. 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It concerns a young londoner named Nicholas Winton who went to prague, and ended up saving the lives of 669 children, mostly jews, from almost certain death. As we first reported last april, his story begins at the end of 1938, with europe on the brink of war. In germany, violence against jews was escalating, and the infamous munich agreement paved the way for hitlers armies to march unopposed into czechoslovakia. In london, Nicholas Winton had been following events and knew that refugees fleeing the nazis were in dire straits. He went to czechoslovakia to see if there was anything he could do to help. Whats strange is that, for almost 50 years, he hardly told anyone about what he had accomplished, and for 50 years, the children knew nothing about who had saved them or how. We begin on october 1, 1938. Nazi troops marched into the sudetenland, the germanspeaking region of czechoslovakia. Prague, the czech capital, was flooded with desperate people trying to escape. A fortunate few were able to send their children abroad. These parents, mostly czech jews, sensed war was coming and wanted to get their children out. By chance, a cameraman filmed a man holding a boy, a 29 yearold londoner. His name . Nicholas winton. Nicholas winton all i knew was that the people that i met couldnt get out. And they were looking of ways of at least getting their children out. Simon Nicholas Winton is one of the few people who can bear witness to those days because hes 105 years old. He told us he went to prague to see if he might be able to save some people. But what made you think you could do it . Winton i work on the motto that if somethings not impossible, there must be a way of doing it. Simon back in london, winton was a successful stockbroker, living the good life with a passion for sports. But he was deeply concerned about news reports from czechoslovakia of german persecution. Winton i went out into the camps where the people who had been displaced were put, and it was winter and it was cold. Simon emigration wasnt an option. The worlds doors were closed to the refugees. Conditions in the camps were brutal for the 150,000 people trapped there, especially for the children. And no one focused on them, until Nicholas Winton. But what did he do . We went to jerusalem, to yad vashem, israels memorial to the victims of the holocaust, and asked dr. David silberklang, a Senior Historian there. David silberklang winton went, set up shop in a hotel in the center of the old city in prague and began looking into, how can i organize getting some of these refugees, particularly the children, out of here . Simon what kind of experience did he have to qualify him for this immense bureaucratic task . Silberklang none. Simon winton set up a Small Organization with one aim to get as many kids out as fast as possible. Silberklang people started coming to him in increasing numbers. He didnt have time in the day to meet them all. Hed work till 2 00 in the morning, get up early in the morning to meet the next people as more and more were coming saying, take my child. Take my child. Simon by the time he returned to london, he had a list of hundreds of children and set out to convince british authorities to take him seriously. He did it by taking stationary from an established refugee organization, adding childrens section, and making himself chairman. Winton so that, eventually, they had to adopt me. Simon so, in fact, you managed to do what you did through a little deception, a little smoke and mirrors . Winton yes, to a certain extent, yes. Simon it required quite a bit of ingenuity. Winton no, it just required a Printing Press to get the. The notepaper printed. Simon the childrens section operated from a tiny office in central london. Wintons mother was in charge. The staff were all volunteers. During the day, winton worked as a stockbroker. Evenings, he wrestled with the british bureaucracy. Did you approach any other countries to take some of the children . Winton the americans. But the americans wouldnt take any, which was a pity. We couldve got a lot more out. Simon winton had written president roosevelt, asking the u. S. To take in more children. A minor official at the u. S. Embassy in london wrote back the u. S. Was unable to help. Britain agreed to accept the children, but only if winton found families willing to take them in. So he circulated the childrens pictures to advertise them. But even after a family chose a child, british authorities were slow in issuing travel documents. So winton started having them forged. He also spread some money around. Winton took a bit of blackmail on my part. Simon you were indulging in blackmail and forgery to get the children out . Winton ive never heard it put like that before. laughter simon but you seem to be enjoying it. Winton it worked, thats the main thing. Simon the first 20 children left prague on march 14, 1939. The next day, german troops occupied prague and the rest of czechoslovakia. Hitler rode through the streets triumphant. Hugo meisl was ten years old. Do you remember the germans coming into czechoslovakia . Hugo meisl not only do i remember, i personally saw hitler standing up in the car. And the children were expected to say heil hitler and so forth. I remember as if yesterday. Simon it wasnt long before violence against jews, property confiscations and forced labor that began in the sudetenland spread throughout czechoslovakia. But the nazis allowed wintons trains to leave in keeping with their policy to cleanse europe of jews. Hugo meisls parents decided it was time to put him and his brother on one of the trains. Meisl i remember that they told us that we were going to england, maybe two or three months. It would be a holiday for us. And that they would join us very shortly thereafter. Simon and you believed them. Meisl absolutely. Simon were your parents emotional when they said goodbye to you . Meisl no, i re. Ive asked myself that question many times, how my parents. Had the strength . chokes up im sorry. It never occurred to me that what they were saying to us was not true. In other words, that they realized that they. They would not be joining us within a short period of time. Simon over the spring and summer of 1939, seven trains carried over 600 children through the heart of nazi germany to holland, where they took a ferry to the english coast. From there, they caught a train to london. An eighth train carrying 250 more was scheduled to leave prague on september 1. But thats the day the war began. Winton they were all at the station, even on the train, waiting to go, and war was declared. So the train never left. Never heard really what happened to all those children. Simon but theres reason to suspect that not many of them survived . Winton i think thats true, yes. Simon two years after that last train, the nazis began implementing the final solution, their plan to slaughter all the jews of europe. Czech jews were rounded up and shipped to theresienstadt, an old military garrison town about an hour north of prague, their first stop on the road to annihilation. These tracks were the exit from theresienstadt, the only exit. The tracks led east. The trains were called polish transports destination auschwitz. Some 90,000 people took that oneway ride, among them, almost all the children sir nicholas wasnt able to get out in time, their parents, and the parents of the children already in england. After the war, you went back to czechoslovakia. Was there one instant where you accepted the fact that your parents were dead . Meisl when films were being shown of people walking in concentration camps, auschwitz and so forth, there were so many shots being taken by the germans and. And so forth never stopped looking. Simon the name of every czech jew murdered in the holocaust is painted on the walls of pragues pinkas synagogue. Over 77,300 names, including arnostka and pavel meisl, hugos parents. And Nicholas Winton . During the war, he volunteered for an ambulance unit for the red cross, then trained pilots for the royal air force. He got married, raised a family, earned a comfortable living. For 50 years, he told hardly anyone what he had done. Winton i didnt really keep it secret; i just didnt talk about it. Simon all this time, youre in england, and then you go back to czechoslovakia. Then, you go to israel. You still had no idea how your departure from czechoslovakia had been organized . Meisl absolutely no idea. Simon and you learned that by seeing it on television . Meisl thats right. Simon in 1988, the bbc learned about wintons story and invited him to be part of a program. He had no idea that the people sitting around him were people he had saved. Can i ask, is there anyone in our audience tonight who owes their life to Nicholas Winton . If so, could you stand up, please . Mr. Winton, would you like to turn around . On behalf of all of them, thank you very much indeed. applause winton i suppose it was the most emotional moment of my life, suddenly being confronted with all these children who werent, by any means, children anymore. Simon no, they werent. And for the first time, they looked at you and knew that you were the reason that they were alive. Winton yeah. True. Milena grenfellbaines i wore this around my neck, and this is the actual pass that we were given to come to england. And i am another of the children that you saved. applause simon Lady Milena Grenfell Baines describes winton as one of the most modest people shes ever met. Why do you think he didnt say anything for 50 years . Grenfellbaines i think it was in his nature. He really felt that hed done all he could, and having got those children settled, he felt, been there, done that. My jobs done. Ive got other things to do. Simon other things. For the last 50 years, wintons been helping mentally handicapped people and building homes for the elderly. Winton weve just opened our second old peoples home, and its full. And its doing very well. And there are plenty of old people like me to go in. Simon yes, but youre not there, youre at home. Winton oh, id hate to go into one of my own homes. laughter dont print that. Sir Nicholas Winton. Simon in 2003, winton was knighted and became sir Nicholas Winton. In the czech republic, hes become a national hero. He was celebrated in a documentary called nickys family, but he isnt really comfortable with all the adulation. Winton im not interested in the past. I think theres too much emphasis nowadays on the past and what has happened, and nobody is concentrated on the present and the future. Simon in 1939, Nicholas Winton used a twoweek vacation to go to prague and ended up saving the lives of 669 children. In the decades since, of course, the children had children, who then had children and so on, and the numbers multiplied. If you want to summarize it in one sentence guy takes a two week vacation. Grenfellbaines and ends up with 15,000 children . Yes. Simon its a pretty good story. Grenfellbaines its a great story. Winton theyve got children and grandchildren and great grandchildren. Simon and none of them would be here if it hadnt been for sir nick. Winton thats right. Yeah, yeah. Terrible responsibility, isnt it . Welcome to the the sports update. Im james brown with scores around the nfl. Today the patriots blew a half time lead in miami while aubry rushes to 102 yard force a score and the jets win. Cleveland wince its 10th straight seasonopener, the bengals blew a lead before coming back to win. No cam newton but carolina prevails over tampa bayment for more sports news and information go to cbssports. Com. This flu season. Remember this. Your immune system doesnt work the way it did when rock was young. So we made fluzone highdose vaccine. For people 65 . Fluzone highdose vaccine has a high high higher. Dose of antigen. For a stronger immune response. Fluzone highdose vaccine is approved for people 65 and older. Its not for anyone whos had a severe allergic reaction to any vaccine component, including eggs, egg products, or to a prior dose of any flu vaccine. Tell your doctor if youve had guillainbarre syndrome. Side effects include pain, swelling and redness at the injection site; muscle aches, fatigue, headache and fever. Other side effects may occur. If you have other symptoms or problems following vaccination, call your doctor immediately. Vaccination may not protect everyone. So if you hopped around the clock, ask your Health Care Provider about fluzone highdose vaccine. Fluzone highdose vaccine. Stahl quarterbacks are the superheroes of one of americas favorite pastimes. You fathers out there mightve once dreamt of becoming one of those cool commanders of the gridiron. Your sons might now dream of future glory. Tonight, we meet the man who sometimes makes their dreams come true steve clarkson, quarterback guru, the man parents of eight and nineyear olds turn to and despite the obvious dangers of the game spend ten of thousands of dollars seeking the magic touch thats sent more than 25 clarkson quarterbacks to the n. F. L. And as morley safer reported last december, clarkson is so successful that College Recruiters are offering Football Scholarships to some of his students, some as young as 13. cheering one, two, three, steelers safer it all starts here in the peewee leagues. These minimonsters games are the n. F. L. In miniature, from cheerleaders to bonecrunching tackles. Nineyearold quarterback travis endicott, one of steve clarksons newest students. If hes good enough by the ripe old age of 12, he may be offered a divisionone College Football scholarship. Are they looking at seven, eightyearolds, nineyearolds . Steve clarkson you know, without question, it has happened. And thats the new line, so to speak. Safer the new normal . Clarkson the new normal. A little faster now. Be a little more comfortable. Spin it safer these wannabe Peyton Mannings are inspired by their professors clarksons alumni, a roster of nfl quarterbacks who spend part of their offseason dishing out expertise to an awestruck platoon of undergraduates. Clarkson my biggest Success Stories are the guys that come back, whether its Ben Roethlisberger or matt leinart, jimmy clausen, josh freeman, or jake locker. They all come back and they participate, and they help take these kids and share their experiences as to what it was like when they were, you know, ten, 11, 12, 13 years old. Safer twelveyearold Aaron Mclaughlin is one of clarksons promising new prospects. Clarkson good. You want to be able to step completely square, closed off, so that back hip catches what . That front leg, and then you finish square to your target. Aaron mclaughlin stay. Four, five. Clarkson well done safer aarons father, craig mclaughlin, takes his son from atlanta to los angeles once a month for private lessons. Clarkson it should be continuous. When i get to here, you see how tight i kept this. And i stayed right up on top, and im here. Safer at 400 an hour, apart from the inherent dangers of football, its a risky investment. Theres only a 6 chance of making a College Football team. And then, only eight in 10,000 will make it to the pros. Whose idea was it to bring clarkson into your lives . Craig mclaughlin that was actually my idea. My son is now going into the sixth grade and he had always shown talent in his position as a quarterback, but i really wanted to understand how talented he was and get someone that had National Exposure and the experience that steve has with quarterbacks and see how aaron evaluated. Safer and how much of a change have you noticed in your talents since you started with him . Aaron mclaughlin ive noticed a big change. Ive been throwing the ball better. My footwork has been better. I used to kind of trip myself when id do drops. I havent done that at all. Safer its a major financial commitment for you and your family, correct . Craig mclaughlin correct. I dont know what the future has to hold, but the one thing is. Is that hes going to know that his parents, when he set his mind to something, we believe in him. And hes going to have that sense of confidence. Safer that sense of confidence that inspires parents and kids has a lot to do with the College Scholarship offers that clarksons orchestrated for seventh and eighth graders. Last year, clarkson secured a scholarship offer from the university of washington for 14 yearold tate martell. Tate martell my goal was always to try to get a scholarship. And when it came, i was just shocked. Safer how long is it that youve wanted to be a bigtime quarterback . Martell id talk about the n. F. L. When i was, like, four years old. I guess id run around my house. I see pictures a me running around my house in a 49ers helmet butt naked. Safer that naked passion eventually led tates parents to seek out clarkson. How did it affect your game . Martell oh, ive improved in, like, massive ways, especially my ability to play consistently throughout the game, especially, like, in the fourth quarter, being able to throw the same way in the first like i do in the fourth. Safer when you got this offer, you werent even in high school yet, correct . Martell i was going into eighth grade. Safer it may be a mans game, but the mamas are just as passionate as the papas. Pamela poes son, m. C. Poe, is a junior and starting quarterback for Cathedral High School in los angeles, an nflsize squad with 16 repeat, 16 coaches. Do you worry about him when hes on the field . Pamela poe im his mom, of course i do. Thats why i tell him hes got to have speed and get out of the way. laughter safer two years ago, ms. Poe sent her son from nashville to los angeles to live with the clarkson family. A lot of mothers are going to look at you and say, you know, what gives with her . I mean, the dangers of the game after all, its only a game. And isnt it a bit excessive . Pamela poe this is a passion that m. C. Has had. And when i have a child that had the opportunity to come out to california and train to develop himself into being a better quarterback, i do not feel that it was excessive because it was what. It was the right thing for m. C. Safer but what people might find excessive is you took him out of school and sent him to california to live with steve. Pamela poe m. C. s a different child. Here he is, 14 years old, left his family, his brothers, his friends, but he knew he wanted to do this. He was that driven, thats the kind of child m. C. Is. Safer one of clarksons premiere students whos already received a scholarship offer is 17yearold brady white. White is ranked among the top 100 highschool quarterbacks in the country. Under those friday night lights, clarkson shuttles between his students games. Clarkson brady is a once in a lifetime kid. His skill set is really one of the best ive seen. Safer music to your ears, right . Andrea white right, its. You know, its a dream to hear that. And you hope that its. That it comes true. Steves a lot of the reason why brady has the mechanics and the talent and the passion that he does. Safer andrea and deron white, bradys parents, are clarkson faithfuls. But this is a dangerous game, and the quarterback always has a target on his chest, right . Deron white driving down the streets a dangerous event in california, as well. So, how many people get to play and start at quarterback in high school, and then go on to college and play in front of millions of fans, in front of tv and the environment and. Andrea white doing what they love. Deron white yeah, that. Thats a dream come true. Clarkson here we go. Safer clarksons job is to feed the football machine with a new crop of dreamers. Clarkson now were getting somewhere. Safer its a welloiled machine of camps and clinics, where you can learn fancy footwork and an exotic language. Clarkson we didnt see it. Now he takes another three, and then, bang, hit it in the second window. Safer he teaches 40 or 50 kids at a time, employing a routine of skills and drills from proper poses to pirouettes, all in the name of perfecting the pass. Clarkson whoo. Thats it, spin it safer and he briefs parents on the risky road to stardom. Clarkson theyre going to read about their son. Theyre going to go to a game and theyre going to hear awful things about their son. Like, i remember my dad telling me one time i was so bad at a game at fresno state, and i threw five interceptions, he had to boo, too, just so that he wouldnt get beat up. laughter so, yeah, i know its tough. We call this a single high beater. Safer that firsthand knowledge of failure led to clarksons success as a teacher. Clarkson when i started this business, there was nobody that did this. There were tennis coaches, there were batting coaches, there are pitching coaches. But there was never a quarterback coach. It was not just teaching the art of quarterbacking, but it was also kind of a creative marketing, like how do you take this guy and make him a star . Whats going on, man . Safer starmaking through College ConnectionsCollege Coaches like steve sarkisian, a clarkson graduate and new head coach at usc, want to know about his newest batch of talent. In clarksons 25 years of training, over 100 of his clients have made it as Division One College or nfl quarterbacks. Clarkson was one of the nations top quarterbacks at san jose state, but just couldnt make it to the nfl. So he went into the guru business, and word soon spread about his success. Parents across the country sought him out. Among them, joe montana, who sent his two sons to the clarkson camp. Thats some endorsement. But some n. F. L. Fathers arent so keen about football for kids, period. Bart scott, a Cbs Sports Network analyst, played for 11 years as an nfl linebacker. Roethlisberger goes down safer . And was a quarterbacks worst nightmare. And what a violent hit ben took. Safer one of your prime jobs was to sack the quarterback. Bart scott inflict pain that was my job description. Safer well, you sure inflicted pain on Ben Roethlisberger. That kind of determination to inflict pain, as you say, does that apply to. To kids football, as well . Scott of course, especially. You know, i remember when i was a kid, i started playing football when i was eight years old. You know, we used to come back and show the opposing teams colors that, you know, that had rubbed off on our helmets, meaning that we had really hit them really good. It was a badge of honor. Safer scott had no interest in that badge of honor for his son. He went on the record saying he didnt want his kid playing football. So how can you let your kid play football . Scott laughs you know what . You know, i. I didnt want my son to play football. But when my son wanted to play and his mother signed him up, what i decided to do was become the football coach so i can make sure that hes being taught the proper techniques to defend himself, to protect himself. Safer what worries parents most is the risk of brain injuries. Nevertheless, as these high schools hardest hits videos show, the kids themselves do not hold back. Beyond the dangers of the game, scott worries about the impact of big College Footballs latest recruiting tactic get them while theyre young. Scott universities and people who. Who are in that business will stop at anything to make a profit. You know, everybody wants to be ahead of the curve. I remember the kid tyson jackson, i believe out of lsu, received a scholarship when he was born because he was a ten poundbaby. Im like, really, how do you know this kid doesnt have two left feet . Safer actually, it was a 15 pound baby named herman johnson. The scholarship offer may be a myth, but johnson did grow up to become a 400poundguard with a scholarship from lsu. But your football scholarship is just about as rare as your 15 pound baby, and clarkson may love the game but. This is a very, very tough racket . Clarkson theres no question its tough. But its no different than from the. The person that wants to be an actor. You know, they go to school for that, and chances are theyre going to be serving coffee at starbucks or someplace. Safer do you prepare them for disappointment . Clarkson you dont ever really prepare for disappointment. I think what you try to do is youre preparing them for multiple choices, so that, you know, hey, look, youre always taught as a quarterback, we go to the line of scrimmage and we see one thing, but we have to be prepared to change the play. So imagine, what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar . Imagine, loving your numbers. Introducing oncedaily invokana®. 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Yeah [ male announcer ] and more of a journey. Keep going strong. And as you look for a Medicare Supplement insurance plan. Expect the same kind of commitment you demand of yourself. Aarp Medicare Supplement insurance plans insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. Go long. Insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. Captioning funded by cbs and ford captioned by Media Access Group at wgbh access. Wgbh. Org announcer previously on big brother. Caleb revealed to frankie that he was lockheedmartin back doored. Im going to put frankie up. I felt like cody was trying to. So cody tried to diffuse the situation. I think that was more paranoia. And he warned the hit man about what happened. Thats fine, i understand. Im just like that is not happening. Hello houseguest . After julie announced the second double eviction of the summer. You are going to experience a whole week of big brother in the next 60 minutes. Nicole was sent back