Toby McBride put pen to paper, officially signing his letter of intent to play football at Colorado State University.
The moment was meaningful. Football scholarships weren't plentiful for the boys from the small town of Fort Morgan, Colorado. Yet it ended up being about more than just Toby's future. Because on that day, the school also reached out to Toby's younger brother to extend what turned out to be Trey McBride's first scholarship offer.
Toby had told the CSU coaches that Trey, even at such a precocious age, was better than the kids they were already offering.
But Trey didn't see it like that. Not then.
"Coming from where we grew up, people didn't go to college and play football," Trey said. "That wasn't a thing. I excelled in every sport and didn't think about (college). I just wanted to be the best at whatever sport that was going on."
That included any competition with Toby, two years older than Trey. If they were dunking a basketball in the backyard, Trey wanted to top anything Toby might do. On the football field, if Toby got a sack, Trey wanted two. If Toby scored two touchdowns, Trey wanted three.
NFL players have emerged from Fort Morgan – located about 80 miles northeast of Denver and about 85 miles east of Fort Collins, where CSU resides -- prior to Trey McBride. Players like Broncos tight end Joel Dressen and Buccaneers center Ryan Jensen came from the same high school and played at Colorado State.
There was something about Trey, however. Toby was a junior when Trey was a freshman, and the two paired as the varsity starters at defensive end. "We just wreaked havoc," Toby said.
"Knowing he was starting really young, which even in a small farm town is unheard of, was a tell he was going to be special," Toby added.
Trey played tight end as well but didn't really get his chance there until midway through his sophomore season (a theme that would repeat itself in the NFL.) Eventually, he followed Toby to CSU despite a couple of dozen offers and blossomed into a second-round pick of the Cardinals.
Toby, in one way or another, has been a part of the journey the whole way, including last year's breakout season for Trey. The Cardinals see Trey McBride as a cornerstone of the current rebuild. Toby sees a player whose ceiling remains high.
Trey has the confidence he can fulfill expectations. If only that 14-year-old kid who got that initial phone call from Colorado State could see his current version now.
"I always knew I could do this but I think I was the only one who believed in myself," Trey said. "I wouldn't be surprised but I would be …"
Trey trails off, before adding "… surprised. If that makes any sense."