The other Super Bowl winner is Tershawn Wharton, who spent four years with the Kansas City Chiefs, a part of two championship runs and four seasons ending in a Super Bowl appearance.
The goal is to increase competition across the board and create leaders who forge a path for those around them.
And while each Super Bowl winner brings a lesson or insight from their race for a ring, there is some recency bias and acknowledgment of how chasing four championship game appearances shapes a person when it comes to Wharton.
"I think one of the great things I love about Turk so far, what I've seen is he's got constant feedback," noted coach Dave Canales. "He's talking to the guys that are out there when he's not out there. When he does go, he jogs off, and he's sharing something with coach (Todd) Wash.
"That kind of focus and intentionality, the guy's been to four Super Bowls, won two. There's a reason that that culture, he's bringing that part of it to our team by just showing guys that all these walkthrough reps matter.
"Every time you get out there, go with everything you've got. He's chasing the ball down the right way, with the understanding that you may only get four reps in this rack. Go for it. Find your conditioning. Find your technique work, and let's continue to talk and improve our processes."
The process can range from club to club, coach to coach. But the pillars should be the same. To Wharton, there are five pillars to creating championship DNA and, more importantly, capitalizing on it.