Richie Zyontz is the man that deserves credit for getting the ball rolling on a documentary honoring the impact John Madden had on the game of football long after his retirement. Zynotz is the lead NFL producer for FOX Sports. He also happens to be one of Madden’s very best friends.
The two text daily. Madden introduced Zynotz to the woman he would go on to marry in a ceremony that happened at the former Raider coach’s home with the man himself standing by Zynotz’s side as his best man.
While Joel Santos and Tom Rinaldi are credited as co-producers and co-directors of All Madden, the documentary that will air on Christmas Day on FOX, it was Richie Zyontz that approached FOX Sports boss Eric Shanks with the idea.
“I had thought about this for a long time and it bothers me that people think history began last year or last week,” he told The Athletic’s Richard Deitsch. “Flavors of the day come and go, but Madden is a giant who forever changed the way sports are presented on TV. Shanks loves and respects John as much as I do, so it took no convincing.”
One person that did take some convincing was Madden himself. The former coach was always willing to be a part of the project. Zynotz, Santos, and Rinaldi were not entirely sure they could get him to appear on camera and share his memories of his impact on the broadcasting world.
“We knew John would cooperate, but would he participate?” Rinaldi said. “It was a huge question for us. Would he sit for an interview, the first lengthy on-camera interview of any kind in well more than a decade, essentially since he left the stage? When you’re fixed in the public’s mind for so long looking and sounding a certain way, you’re almost not permitted to age and only because you’re fixed in this one image.”
“He hadn’t been on camera in eight or nine years, and while that mind remains a steel trap, he has hearing issues and his voice understandably isn’t as strong as the voice we all remember,” Zynotz added.
The crew started with an introductory visit just to get John Madden reminiscing and telling stories. They wanted him to be comfortable with his ability to speak on some of the topics that they wanted to hear him address.
After that, filming sessions began. Rinaldi notes that some tweaking had to be done, but in the end, he thinks the audience will be very satisfied with the version of John Madden they see and hear.
“One of the challenges of the interview is John’s voice,” Rinaldi continued. “At times at the end of a longer answer, it wouldn’t be as strong as it was at the start of the answer. So he would take a drink or have lozenges and things like that. We’ve since gone up and had a few short audio sessions with John to have him amplify a particular answer. But overall, I think everyone who has seen and heard John, they’d say that’s John Madden.”
A special treat for Madden himself will be hearing from participants just how much he has impacted the NFL. The crew filmed 38 interviews for the documentary. No one they asked turned them down and they had every one of them deliver a personal message to the former coach and broadcasting icon.
Those messages have been cut together into a 50-minute montage that will be delivered to John Madden on Christmas Day so that he can watch them with his family.