The inclement photographer
"The most important thing is to put the weather out of my mind," the guy says. "I don't care how cold or nasty it is, I treat it as I would any other game. It's all mental -- whether you let the elements get to you, or whether you ignore them and do your job to the best of your ability, that's in your mind. That's up to you."
He sounds like Butkus back in the day, like somebody with taped ankles and a snarl on his face. He sounds like someone immortalized in an NFL Films close-up, frostbitten fingers chapped and bleeding as he points across the line of scrimmage at his intended target. But he's not a player at all. He's the guy on the other side of the camera. Literally. He's the one standing on the sideline looking through a viewfinder, his frostbitten fingers chapped and bleeding as he focuses and zooms. He's Don Marx, 35-year veteran NFL Films cameraman, and when the weather gets tough he bears down. [ESPN Page 2 - Neel: The inclement photographer]