“Never Heard A Coach Sound Like This” – Former Cowboys QB Accuses ESPN’s Chase Daniel Of Blatantly Lying To His Audience

Chase Daniel (Photo via YouTube)
Veteran NFL quarterback Ben DiNucci called out ESPN analyst Chase Daniel after the latter shared a fascinating in-depth video on his YouTube channel.

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Chase Daniel was a backup NFL quarterback from 2009 to 2022, winning a Super Bowl 44 championship ring with the New Orleans Saints as a backup to Drew Brees in 2009. Daniel also played for the Kansas City Chiefs, Philadelphia Eagles, Chicago Bears, Detroit Lions and Los Angeles Chargers.

Daniel was hired by ESPN in August after his abrupt departure from FS1. He co-hosted “The Facility” with Emmanuel Acho, LeSean McCoy and James Jones, but was laid off after the network canceled the show.

Aside from his role as an NFL and college football analyst at ESPN, Chase Daniel runs a popular YouTube channel (over 110,000 subscribers) where he provides detailed quarterback and game film breakdowns.

In a new YouTube video, Daniel explained to fans how a quarterback communicates with his coaches through the digital radio in their helmets. You can have a look at Daniel’s analysis below:


But veteran journeyman quarterback Ben DiNucci took a shot at Chase Daniel by claiming that he’s never heard coaches communicate like this to starting QBs, backups or even third-stringers:

 

Chase Daniel Appeared In 74 NFL Games

Chase Daniel (Photo by Abbie Parr/Getty Images)
Daniel never really got a chance to prove himself as a starting quarterback in the NFL, because the teams he landed on always had a healthy and capable QB1.

Of course, Chase Daniel never got to start over Drew Brees in New Orleans. He started one game for Kansas City in Week 17 of the 2013 season against the San Diego Chargers, as Alex Smith was rested with a playoff spot locked up.

Daniel also got the nod for Week 17 against the Bolts in 2014, throwing for 157 yards as the Chiefs spoiled the Chargers’ playoff hopes in a 27-16 win. All told, Daniel appeared in 74 NFL games and threw nine touchdowns against seven picks.