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From the article.
Down the normal enforcer in Hernandez, Beachum brought the nastiness. The line followed suit, keeping Aaron Donald sack-less in a quick-fire offense behind backup Colt McCoy.
“That was the first time I had ever seen that,” Smith said of Beachum. “As a matter of fact, he was going back and forth and I was trying to pull him away like, ‘Beach, come on. We got to get in the huddle.’ He pushed me off like, “You go over there. I know what I’m doing.’
“I’ve never seen him act like that. It was cool. We know he’s a really good player, he’s a dog. I take him as a guy that’ll just go out and get his job done and do work. But it’s obvious he can do that and talk that noise if people want to go that route as well. It showed me a little bit of a different side of him.”
But while his line mate was surprised to see that side of Beachum, the same couldn’t be said about his head coach.
“He’s from Texas,” Kingsbury said. “We get down in Texas like that. You piss off a Texas country boy, it’s going to be on.
“He usually doesn’t talk that violently if you will, but he has it in him, there’s no question.”