Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Two Pros and a Cup of Joe. Fox Sports Radio,
Brady Quinn, Jonas Knox with you here. Coming up on
this Thursday edition, we are going to talk NFL. Of course,
that's what we do, because we're going to talk about
what the future looks like for one quarterback in the
AFC because things are a little murky with this current team.
We're also going to talk about one coach who's doing
something different and one of us is not all that
(00:21):
optimistic that it's going to work. We will talk about
somebody who can't quit their bad habit in the NFL,
and this is probably going to be a Hall of
Famer as well too. We got goat conversations we had.
Plus we've got another edition of In case you missed it,
Arizona State head football coach Kenny Dillingham stops by and
the return of headliner Lie. It's all yours coming up
next here, Two Pros and a Cup of Joe on
(00:42):
a Thursday morning, Fox Sports Radio. You're listening to Fox
Sports Radio, and away we go. It is two Pros
(01:11):
and a Cup of Joe. Fox Sports Radio. Rady Quinn,
Jonas Knox with you here. No LeVar Arrington, but he'll
be back with us tomorrow for a football Friday here
on this show. You can listen to us as always
on the iHeartRadio app. You can find us on hundreds
of affiliates all across the country and wherever you are
making us a part of your Thursday morning, we appreciate it.
(01:35):
We'll be taking you all the way up until nine
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on YouTube and subscribe. Braden T. Quinn, the Hell's going on? Who?
Not a whole lot man? Just getting ready for the
football season.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
I've been I've been like a dork, you know, kind
of bunker down watching a bunch of film, preparing for
our big Week one matchup Ohio State hosting the Texas Longhorns.
So yeah, just trying to prepare for that week one
is always hard to prepare for because you've got to
watch a lot of tape on last year for a
bunch of different reasons. And then in some ways, you know,
(02:34):
like Notre Dame we talked yesterday, they announced CJ. Carrs
they're starting quarterback. He didn't have any tape, So, you know,
outside of trying to get some spring game footage, that's
really the extent.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Yeah, and I also wonder, what are you guys doing
the you have a Thursday game and then you come
back around and do a Saturday game as well too,
that you've done in the past.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
You're not doing that this year. Yeah, So it's funny
that all came about. I don't know if I ever
told you this. ESPN traded for Joe Buck like that happened.
So when Troy Aikman left to go to ESPN, when
he left Fox, it's god called Monday Night Football, Joe
Buck was still under contract, so in essence, there was
a trade, and in lieu of that trade, Fox got
(03:18):
back a Thursday night college football.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Who was it Minnesota Nebraska? Correct? So that was one
of the pieces they got back to make good on it.
That was the player to be named later in the
trade was Minnesota Nebraska.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
I guess yeah, yeah, like someone's doing the math right,
you know, you know, carry the one, you know, multiply.
There's obviously a number associated with how much revenue you
can drive from that or for advertising, sales, et cetera.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
But that was part of that deal.
Speaker 2 (03:50):
So we started that season, you know, in Minnesota during
a Thursday night game, which the eventually led to a
Week one game, and there was like an expectation of it.
I think we've maybe have done it like one other time,
but it's not every year. Usually it's just kind of
a big build up for Week one. I think the
other one was a Purdue game. It was Purdue Perduever's
(04:12):
Penn State. In fact, actually that was the game. No, no, no,
that was the game that was thrown in for it.
Perduever's Penn State was the game that was actually thrown
in for the trade because it wasn't Minnesota Nebraska.
Speaker 1 (04:22):
Because I think Minnesota Nebraska was that Matt rules first
game as coach.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
I want to say it was, yeah, because I got
a lot of this too. So the quarterback at the time, Simms.
I think that's who it was, Jeff Simms. Jeff Simms,
And if you had ever seen him in a T
shirt and shorts throw a football, you'd be like, my god,
(04:49):
like that kid is going to just dominate college football.
And for whatever reason, it just could not connect to
once you put the pads on. Once are playing the game,
and at times you'd see moments. But I remember watching
things man like and I'm always very like positive and optimistic.
I'm not sure that's how I'm like so viewed on
(05:11):
the show, but especially when it comes to quarterback play,
I try to be very like positive and optimistic about
what they're capable of.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
The Prisco uses for you that the quarterback defender, Yeah,
he's such a clown.
Speaker 2 (05:28):
So before the game I'm watching him warm up, I'm going, oh, whoa, Okay,
Like Matt Ruhle's there. They're gonna bring in this whole
new era. And we saw him that week. We also
had Nebraska Week two when they went to Colorado. That
was I believe coach Prime's first year and in Colorado
it was just it was awful, like he couldn't catch
a shotgun snap. I think he fumbled two to three
(05:51):
shotgun snaps and in the Minnesota game he threw a
really bad pick, just couldn't seem to not stare down
where he was throwing the football, and it was it
was ugly, Like it got to the point where like
that was an ugly game and it was just ugly
in general. And I just remember thinking to myself, yep,
but the card had the horse there a little bit,
(06:12):
so uh yeah, I'm usually somewhat more reserved before I
go over the top, you know, behind the scenes with
some of the guys on Big New Kickoff about certain players,
but he was one that like he looked, he looked
every bit the part, just until you put the helmets
shoulder pack.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
I mean the Nebraska Minnesota game. Nebraska should have won
that game and that that and then you had Nebraska
fans that were like, ah, here we go. This is
just the continuing on with the Scott Frost. Are we
lose close games, there's mistakes late, et cetera, et cetera,
And Matt Verol's just sitting there having to wear it
because you know, Sims was turning the ball over late
in that game. Like that was you know, just sort
(06:49):
of how that went. I mean, you mentioned quarterbacks that
look good in a T shirt and shorts and for
whatever reason it doesn't really work out on the field.
One of those maybe ascribed as Anthony Richardson, who we
talked about yesterday. You know, he's doesn't get the starting
nod that goes to Daniel Jones. Anthony Richardson's agent was
(07:10):
not happy about it, had some public comments that we
discussed yesterday. You've even heard the quarterback coach in Indianapolis,
Cam Turner, who spoke about working with Anthony Richardson. And
maybe this is not the most ideal messaging from the
quarterback coach there in Indy.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
As a position coach, you know, you want to see
your guys succeed and be successful, but naturally, and you know,
I feel like I tried everything I can do, you know,
and I feel like he's given a great effort in
that aspect too. And I don't think either way it's
one or the other. I just think, you know, right
now is not where the consistency is just not where
we wanted it to be.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
So now all that being said, what are we doing,
because now we're starting to hear reports out there that
maybe it might be time to move on. Maybe does
it make sense at this point that they've you know,
if you've got teams that are potential landing spots that
people have sort of thrown out there the usual suspects,
(08:07):
quarterback whispers that can fix whatever is going on with
Anthony Richardson, who, by the way, I'll still say top
three maybe top throw I've ever seen in the NFL
was the one he had in the Week one opener
against Houston last year off his back foot. Was it
like seventy yards sixty probably, but yeah, I mean it was.
It was a heave. It was unbelievable. Then he dropped
(08:29):
it on a dotah the way, just incredible.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
The hard thing for me with this is, you know,
they make the announcement for Daniel Jones as the starting quarterback.
The guy's two years into his career in the league
and already some an article pops up on CBS Sports
Prisco didn't write it, but someone wrote it, and they're saying, like,
all right, five teams to watch landing spots. They're gonna
move on from him, like geez, like the body's not
(08:52):
even cold yet. And I started to think about it
more and more, maybe it's not the worst idea to
throw out the thought of just both sides going their
separate ways. I mean, clearly they're done with Anthony Richardson
in regards to him being their starter. Otherwise you wouldn't
announce dan On Jones, wouldn't bring Daniel Jones the first place.
(09:13):
So anything they say contrary to that is just them
kind of play nice to make sure Anthony Richardson doesn't
go around the locker room and be a cancer like
that's always the concern with a player that doesn't win
the starting job, whether it's you know, a quarterback or
anyone else. So there's elements of that that are at
play and trying to make things cope acetic in the
(09:34):
locker room. But there's also the thought of why not
get what you can for him now if he's not
your guy, and even though you wasted a top five
pick on him, go and get whatever you can. Now
someone's gonna look at him the same way you did,
and he's got a little bit more experience. Now they're
gonna get him on that same rookie contract. They get
(09:54):
an opportunity to look at him for at least a year.
If you do it now, and then they can make
a decision on picking him his fifth year option, which
is expensive, but you know, not as expensive as signing
on to.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Something bigger than that.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
And so even if they don't pick up the fifth
year option, you still have another year where you could
be able to evaluate him and then decide if he
ends up becoming the guy who starts for few plays
really well you get franchise tag him. So there's like
all sorts of elements to this actually making a lot
of sense for an organization to take a flyer and say, hey,
what do he has one for him? You're done with them,
(10:29):
We'll give you a third and a conditional sixth. Maybe
it can become a fifth if he plays like you
could throw that sort of deal at Chris Ballad and say,
how do you want to cut your losses? And the Rams,
who obviously are in a bit of a need despite
the fact that everyone's hyping up ob Us in the
backups behind Matthew Stafford the Saints, I mean, even though
(10:53):
they drafted Tyler Shuck, It's like, I mean, why not
at this point you still have an announced a starting quarterback.
This guy's got a ton of upside, just you kick
the tires, see what he looks like for a year.
The Raiders would be an interesting one too. Gino Smith
is there and probably for the next year two based
on his contract, but after that. Pete Carroll loves kind
of finding guys who got chip on their shoulder, you know,
(11:13):
raw talent ability, they're just incredible.
Speaker 1 (11:16):
I mean this he fits that category.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
I mean there's a few teams, but I do find
it interesting that if you really look at it, it
would make the most sense for the Colts to cut
ties now, but also the team that's trading for him,
you're just to be able to get him in the
building at a cheaper price and see what.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
You got in him. Because it does feel and I
know LeVar was kind of dismissive yesterday the idea that like, well,
you know, he took a playoff. He you know, he
called himself out of a game because he was tired,
and it's like, well, that's just one play. It does
feel like there's still remnants of that and that reputation
has already been set and it feels like they've made
(11:53):
up their mind and that's maybe a level of trust
in that guy that you're not going to get back
based on that moment where it's like, dude, you don't
do that. Nobody ever does that. Nobody's ever heard of that.
I mean you heard, you know, Pat McAfee talk about it.
You talked about it, for God's sakes, and how that
landed in the building. So if that's the case, he
just needs a fresh start, just go somewhere else where
(12:14):
you don't have that stain or you don't have that
in your background, and then work from there. And I'm
with you. My only what I would be curious about
is is there sort of a sentimental aspect of it
to where the daughters took over the team. Jim Mersey
was the one who was all in on Anthony Richardson,
(12:36):
And now that he's not there, do they feel like,
you know, he was a big believer in him. Do
we really want to cut ties now you know the
wound is still fresh. Do we really want to move
on from him? Maybe we just keep him in the building.
And who knows, Daniel Jones suffers an injury which he
has in the past, or there's poor play or whatever
(12:58):
it is, maybe he gets an opportunity that would be
my only curiosity or the only thing that I would
wonder would be pulling them away from the idea of
trading with this point, because I'm with you, it makes
all the sense in the world. It's not happening there.
And if Daniel Jones stay healthy, stays healthy and plays average,
he's never getting on the field, correct, I mean, if
he just keeps them in ball games this point.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
But as far as the ownership, they could potentially have
bigger things to worry about besides, you know, just what
this looks like with Anthony Richardson, Like as much as
that's a thought that I think is legitimate, and they're
probably thinking, you know, to themselves, like, yeah, we'd love
to keep him around. My father obviously was was you know,
a part of this draft process and doing this. There
(13:42):
also comes a point time where like, well, you know,
when they got benched last year, I'd assume mister Ersay
had some sort of thoughts on it, and that was
probably part of the conversation too, because you know, him
going and taking a playoff to your point. You know,
So when I got there to talk to the team
about what had happened that season, how they got to
(14:05):
this point, a lot just wanted to move on, but
even then you could still tell like, hey, Joe Flacco's
in there for his professionalism and he's a veteran, And
it felt more like Shane Stikeen was going to lose
the veterans in the locker room if he didn't do
something to make sure this kid understood what he had
done and how bad it looked to all the veterans
(14:27):
on the team. So to your point about the remnants,
that there's still being some piece of that lasting without
a doubt, Like, I think there's a lot of veterans
in that locker room who don't take Anthony Richardson as serious,
at least based on my conversations at the end of
the season preparing for that game, And one of the
things that they were concerned by is like, is he
(14:48):
going to put in the work eutthic, He's going to
do all the things. You know, you're listening to a
quarterback coach talk about consistency. He's not just talking about
on the field. We talked yesterday about how poorus third
nine percentage passing is, which is really as a quarter
back in the NFL, that's how you stay in the game, Like,
that's how you stay a starter, Like if you are
consistent enough moving the six on third down, you're gonna
(15:09):
get points. You're eventually gonna score in the red zone.
You're eventually gonna you know, kick field goals, You're gonna
get points. And that down, more than any is where
you make all your money. And if you can't be
better than forty two percent completion percentage, that's what he
was last year, that's a problem. And I trust me,
it's not just on the field play. It's off the
field too. Showing up early every day, staying late every day,
(15:31):
doing all those things with the other guys, wide receivers,
going through route concepts, like all those things you need
to be doing. There's a big question mark about whether
or not he understands that aspect of it.
Speaker 1 (15:42):
Did you see Quintin Nelson's comments after the news came
out that they go with Daniel Jones, like he just
seems a guy who's really over the whole thing. He's like, yeah,
I'll be honest with you, it's a little frustrating, like
we're having another quarterback change. Like he's been there since
twenty eighteen. He's seen so many guys going in and
out of the building. There to be the starting quarterback.
It's just wild. It was reminiscent.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
It was reminiscent a little bit of Joe Thomas, you know,
when I hear some of those comments about what he
was dealing with with so many quarterbacks in Cleveland, and obviously,
you know, I was a part of that, and I
think that the toughest part about hearing it was like,
you know, Cleveland and they still haven't been to this day,
They've never been. And I would say, I guess outside
(16:26):
of Deshaun Watson, they've never really built out out around
a quarterback. I mean, they drafted Baker Mayfield, there were
some moves made there, but then they didn't believe in
him enough to give him a second contract. So maybe
outside of their number one overall pick, and then after
they paid Watson, which those are two pretty big financial commitments,
there really hasn't been a time where they fully invested
(16:49):
into a guy.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
So I don't know.
Speaker 2 (16:52):
I mean, it's it is reminiscent of that kind of
going back to those days with Joe and everything he experienced,
especially in the latter part of his career. But he's
playing through injuries and you're just trying to get through games.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
I mean Jacoby Brissette, Philip Rivers, they traded for Carson Wentz.
After Carson Wentz, y'all see, obviously had luck too. Me, yeah,
he was there. Luck Remember Matt Ryan, Matt Ryan's you know,
Frank Reich experience was there too. Sam Ellinger got three
starts at one point. Like it's just been like a
(17:26):
revolving door of guys. And then they go high in
the draft, probably getting a little bit desperate there and
they take Anthony Richardson and all this happened. So who knows,
maybe we've seen it happen before. Listen, it's it's the
era of second chances for quarterbacks in the NFL. They're
getting opportunities and guys are going out there and they're
making careers of themselves. So Gino Smith, Baker Mayfield maybe
(17:47):
not hap them with Daniel Jones here, so it is
two pros and a cup of Joe. On Fox Sports Radio,
LeVar Arrington is not here. That's just a habit. I
want to point that out. That is a habit. LeVar
is not here. It's just gonna be Brady Quinn and
I taking you all the way up until nine am
Eastern Time, six o'clock Pacific, So we are gonna have
the usuals. We've got another edition of In case you
missed it. We've also got Leaves Leftovers. We are going
(18:07):
to catch up with Kenny Dillingham coming up an hour
two of the program, head coach of Arizona State, the
eleventh ranked team of the country. We're going to talk
to him in hour two. We're also going to have
the return of headliner Lie later on. We'll give out
the details on that. All of it is yours here
on this three hour extravaganza. Coming on next here though,
we are going to tell you about how somebody in
(18:28):
the NFL has got a really bad habit. They just
don't want to talk about it right here on FSR.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
Be sure to catch live editions of Two Pros and
a Cup of Joe with Brady Quinn, LeVar Errington, and
Jonas Knox weekdays at six am Eastern three am Pacific
on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
He's Mike Carmen, I'm Dan Bayern.
Speaker 5 (18:51):
We have a brand new fantasy football podcast called I
Want Your Flex. Twice a week every Tuesday and Friday,
we come up with new episodes to not only look
back at what happened, what you need to do at
that minute, and also look ahead of what's coming up
in the fantasy football world.
Speaker 1 (19:08):
That's right, Dan.
Speaker 6 (19:09):
Every week we're going to scour the waiver wire to
find the pickups to turbo boost your fantasy lineup, sit starts,
fantasy football players rankings to get you ready to dominate
the competition.
Speaker 5 (19:20):
Listen to I Want Your Flex with Mike Carmon and
met Dan Beyer on the iHeartRadio app Apple Podcast and
Wherever you Be your podcasts, two Pros and a cup of.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Joe Fox Sports Radio, Brady Quinn, Jonas Knox with the hair.
We are going to discuss somebody in the NFL who's
got a little bit of a bad habit. They don't
want to talk about it, though we will. That'll be
yours here coming up in just a couple of moments
from now. Right now, though, it is time for the
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Drave to laugh, tig to laugh, carry, carry goodbye, Big
(19:53):
Jake doesn't again a to run.
Speaker 7 (19:55):
Humber for Jim Carlos Stanton and the Yankees have a
five three late here the.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Man is on fire Yankees Radio Network on the call.
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Com the way tire buying should be surprised. That was
the play of the day. Surprised. Why are you surprise?
(20:25):
Was there a bigger play like the Cubs and Brewers? Yeah,
I mean, you know, bases loaded, Cubs clinging on to
a one run lead. Yeah. William Contreras at the plate,
Daniel Palencia sputtering, throws him one hundred miles an hour fastball.
Contreras goes opposite, but he doesn't go opposite for long
(20:47):
because Nico Horner is there to make the stab and
the Cubs will That's right, that's right. I'm talking about.
Speaker 7 (20:52):
How would Harry Kerry say, here's the pitch to contraras
lot God coups Well, cobs Well, cobs Well.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
And the great thing is that, all of a sudden,
the Cub fans feel like they've got some momentum not real,
lokting there's still six games back and the division race
is over. It's over. It's not even like it's not
even Milwaukee. How many games left? There's a lot left,
but they're not catching Milwaukee. What's a lot left? Like
twenty something like that. In between twenty and thirty? I think,
(21:31):
how many do they play against each other?
Speaker 2 (21:34):
Ah?
Speaker 5 (21:34):
This is it?
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Okay? So I was the final series? Okay? So I
mean a day game today and then that's it.
Speaker 2 (21:42):
The Cubs had a hugely in the beginning of the season. Maybe,
you know, and the Brewis obviously came back and took over.
Maybe it swings the other way. Maybe the Brewers fall
apart down the stretch.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
I can't see it. They're really good. They are really
good that it's probably not going to happen. I'm just
trying to provide some optimism.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Yeah, no, I appreciate especially for people who are like
looking at going to Cubs home games and one of
my tickets, Hey, you know those.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
They just need the four seed. If they could keep
that four seed, the top wild card spot, you get
three games at Wrigley, which would be important, three playoff
games very important. Tell you a lot of lines, a
lot of uh, a lot of uh, you know, clothes
and see people would be like people would be speeding
(22:26):
to get to some of those guys. They definitely would,
and you know it would be speeding to get to
those games. Miles Garrett, because that's what he does. He's
got a heavy foot. He is a big man. He's
got eight eight speeding tickets since he's gotten into the league.
Yeah it's twenty seventeen. Okay, he's a big guy.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
Like should people with bigger feet, bigger people, like, should
they get the benefit of the doubt. I mean, it
is hard to hold your foot up the whole time
off the gas pedal. I mean, maybe it's not his problem.
Maybe it's more than manufacturing of how we make vehicles.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
Lee, What is he Miles gart is? What is he driving?
Because I know he flipped the Porsche a couple of
years ago there was that port. You know, I've never
been in a Porsche before, but I'm assuming they're not
big enough to hold Miles Garrett.
Speaker 8 (23:11):
Yeah, it was the Porsche that he flipped, but it
was a Ferrari that he was sighted at one hundred
and the sixty miles per hour zone with all right?
Speaker 1 (23:18):
Is that big enough for a guy like Miles Garrett
to not be able to use the excuse of I'm
a monster and my feet are too big for the pedals.
I've never sat in either car. They're just way out
of my price range. So I don't know if anybody
here has experience, Brady a Ferrari? How roomy is a Ferrari?
(23:39):
Are we talking like a I don't know, never driven
in one. I don't think I've ever sit in one either.
I'm not a car guy, and I don't really care.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
Like the I'm trying to think the fastest car that
I would have fallen in the footsteps of old Miles Garrett.
There was probably there's like some souped up corvette that
a gentleman that I was working with doing some car
deals with he brought out. I don't feels like a
Z six or what it was, but I remember taking
that out out on the highway and I got to
(24:08):
pretty fast. Be not as fast as I think he
was reportedly going, but yeah, pretty pretty fast.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
So yesterday Miles Garrett was talking with the media in
Cleveland and they asked some questions about his bad habit,
and he did not partake what is it like to
be in that car and seeing that some medominal preep
up to more than one.
Speaker 5 (24:32):
Pound, I'd honestly rather talk about football and his team
than anything I'm doing off field other than the back
to school you know, I bet that I did the
other day.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
But still, I mean, people want to know. I want
to know about that. People want to know a lot
of things. So I don't know who's asking the question there.
I think I know who that is.
Speaker 2 (24:54):
No, no, no, no, it's not Grossy, it's not Mary Kay.
I don't want to say because I couldn't wrong, but
I can. I can picture the face, I remember the voice.
I'm pretty sure I know who that is. And there
were times when he would ask him off the wall question,
like the way or or the way he'd go about
trying to get you in answer a topic that either
(25:14):
you didn't want to talk about or you know, just
trying to solicit a different response what others have tried.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
I like the approach because it wasn't like he was
saying in a judgmental tone. It was almost like a hey,
so what's it like, dude, I've never been in that? Like,
what does that feel like it's like, so, what is
it like to go to that fan? It was like
when Hunter Biden was talking about doing crack recently and
he was describing how to do crack, and it was like, hey, yeah,
so what's it like? Like like when you see this
(25:43):
spinometer go up over one hundred? What is it like?
I mean, it was a hell of an effort, but
unfortunately he's not interested in talking about it. What are
the driving laws in Ohio? Because I know out here
in California you can only take driving school once in
eighteen months. Three speeding tickets in my life. Thankfully I
didn't get a point on my record because I just
(26:04):
did driving school. But what is it out there? This
guy's got eight since twenty seventeen. There's no way that
he's not on a suspended license. I don't get it.
What's he doing throwing a bunch of cash at somebody?
What do you guys do?
Speaker 2 (26:19):
Actually, the local or Fraternal Order of Police will probably
got a nice donation at some point.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
I honestly, i've the last ticket I actually got for speeding,
and I can't remember if I.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
I know he gave me a ticket for this.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
I was I was driving up as my last trip up,
moving from South Florida to Ohio.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
It was like i'd like the final.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Hour and a half of the drive, and that was
what made it even worse, was I'd made it that
long without actually getting a ticket, and I forget how
how I was only going like ten over or something.
I was like, this is almost like debatable, like why
are you even giving me this ticket?
Speaker 1 (26:58):
But I don't know. I paid it.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
I think the rest was, you know, all good to go,
and that was it. So I'm not sure. I mean,
I know, your first or second ticket in a year,
it's like a minor misdemeanor. Yeah, I think your third
is when you start to get in a more major
fine violation area and then obviously.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
With excessive speed, which is what this was. I don't
eve think you have to have eight.
Speaker 2 (27:20):
I think like this falls into the cattal or feltly speeding.
So I have no idea how he's gotten out of us.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
I thought of a fourth. I got a speeding ticket
in South Carolina on the twenty six in a rental
car because my wife girlfriend at the time, went back
and we were leaving Charleston to go to a South
Carolina game and got pulled over and it rather so
I've actually had four speeding tickets, so I'm halfway there.
But that's in like, you know, a lot of years
(27:48):
of driving, and Miles Scott, that's a lot four speed.
What do you drive fifty at a sixty five? Lorena,
I'm kind.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
Of granny ish, but I have my moments, but four
tickets getting caught four times is a lot.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Jonas well, hold on, that goes back to those days
in South Carolina. How long ago was that Jonas? Twenty
years Yeah, like fifteen twenty years ago. Yeah, that's not
that bad. One every four years, five years. Miles Garrett's
averaging one every year. Now that's bad. And they're like
well over the speed limit. And he's had an accident,
like a bad accident where you flip the car. He
(28:23):
still just like go whatever, just keep on going.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
I mean, I'll say this, I'm not trying to make
excuses for players, but there is this I don't know, man,
there's this feeling of invincibility when you play in the NFL,
and you are trying to find that at times places
outside of that, you know, and sometimes you find yourself
doing stupid stuff like speeding even though you shouldn't and
(28:50):
you know you shouldn't, and you've you know, you've been there,
kind of done that before, had an accent or so,
I mean, all those things line up. So I'm not
trying to say that, I'm saying it's okay, but I
can understand how he got to that point, like I
can understand why he's still doing it.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
So I don't know, it's it's to me kind of.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
It's one of those things where you'd love for him
not to do that, but some guys have these different
outlets that that's what they're gonna do, but that's what
they do.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
In their free time. Lee, how many speeding tickets have
you had in your life?
Speaker 8 (29:22):
In my whole life? Probably two or three? Three four max?
I think three max? Really, I mean how bad? How egregious?
Speaker 6 (29:32):
Uh?
Speaker 8 (29:34):
I don't think anything too bad. I don't think anything
over eighty, although not that I haven't driven over eighty.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
Where did you dump out the flask when the cop
walked up?
Speaker 8 (29:44):
I've had some clothes, not not that I was like
under the influence, but I've had Uh.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
Was a time I was okay, there was a time
keep walking yourself back from that.
Speaker 8 (29:58):
There was a time when my I was over the
age and my girlfriend wasn't and it was in a
park car in a in a on private property, but
the cops came on the property and uh made me
dump out all the Uh.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
Why do I feel like you'd be the type of like, hey, man,
I know my rights. Man, now you can't you can't
come here.
Speaker 1 (30:18):
You keep your trespassing. Man, you need a warrant.
Speaker 8 (30:21):
I'm very much not that guy.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
Really, you seem like you you would get drunk and
be a little bit biligering and be that guy. Just
some of the times I've seen you.
Speaker 8 (30:27):
Drunk the piece man, I know, I'm very much Hello officer,
Thank you officer.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
All that kind of stuff.
Speaker 8 (30:34):
You throw your keys on your dash, yeah, no, I've
I've had great I've had lots of catch and releases.
I'd say where I've been pulled over and they said, hey,
you know, letting you off with a warning.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Just describe yourself as an animal.
Speaker 2 (30:49):
Ly, by the way, throwing your keys on the dash
is like no longer relevant because most people.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
Yeah, well yeah, there's a keyfob, So just if there
are anywhere in the car, you still take off exactly
speak for yourselves.
Speaker 8 (31:03):
It's still I think it's a sign of just respect
and just like kind of like, hey, I know the
I know the protocol kind of thing for the officers.
So they're like, all right, this guy knows what's going on.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
By the now, they got a scary job, right, they're
walking up on a car and like, who knows what
kind of animal can be inside? Like you, yeah, you know,
got chubacho over there and saw Oh.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
By the way, how about your guy? Kenny Pickett not
partaken in the preseason. Finally, it seems like his hamstring injury.
It does seem like Kenny Pickett's hamstring injury has lasted
a little bit longer than Dylan Gabriel's. It look that
that can happen. I mean, obviously you don't want to
be out there.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
If you're in a quarterback the competition not one hundred percent,
you know you're not gonna get Here's the problem about
the NFL. You get no brownie points, especially in that organization,
for playing bang banged up.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Just ask Baker Mayfield.
Speaker 2 (31:53):
He went through into almost the entire season playing banged up,
and that's how they get in this whole contract snap
who ends up in Tampa eventually, So I understand that.
I'm more concerned about how they go about evaluating him
to be the backup. And look, they're paying about two
point six million for this year, it's guaranteed, so there,
if they move on from him, they're going to be
(32:14):
probably on the hook for that, which again you can
look at the Deshaun Watson contract and go, well, what's
two point six million to throw on top of what
we've already kind of wasted away here, So that doesn't
matter as much. But do they want to go into
the season with a veteran backup or do they trust
your door Dylan Gabriell one of the two to be
that guy, And if they both show out well in
this final preseason game, it you know, draws the question
(32:38):
of like where does can you pick itt fit in
this whole conversation at being a backup quarterback or even
being on the roster.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
He hasn't played, so yeah, why wouldn't they just move on?
Like make it easier? And I don't look, Kellen Moore
coached him and Philly. I don't know if that's a
potential in New Orleans or if they have enough qu quarterbacks,
or maybe it's telling that Kellen Moore didn't try and
get him before Cleveland made the move to try and
get him. Maybe that's telling of whatever Kellen Moore saw
(33:09):
when he was in Philly last year. But I just, yeah,
it just it feels like I don't know how you
roll with him as the backup when he hasn't played,
Like he just hasn't been out there.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
Can I give you three other teams that I think
are kind of interesting, like I'll be trying to call
and talk to you about a trade potentially the Dallas Cowboys.
I mean again, I love Joe Milton, like he's to
me similar in the aspect of Anthony Richard, and he's
still raw but has a ton of ability. But that'd
be a spot where, like they need a backup. Dak's
(33:39):
had injury problems in the past, and to me and
maybe not other people, that's a playoff roster and it's
probably not if he's Dak.
Speaker 1 (33:48):
Prescott's not healthy.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
So find a veteran guy who maybe there's some potential
upside there, a guy who could run that system.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
Baltimore would be an interesting one. I mean, behind Lamar Jackson, there's.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Not much there, So I would keep keeping on on
the Baltimore Ravens again in the event that anything happens
to Lamar Jackson, that is for sure a playoff team,
if not a potential super Bowl team. So you don't
want to drop a game to you know, here or there,
which impacts your seeding, which impacts your the potential of
hosting the NFC Championship game, and you guys get in
(34:20):
the super Bowl. And the other one is Jacksonville. You know,
Mac Jones moved on to San Francisco forty nine ers
and behind Trevor Lawrence probably won't have a guy who's
got a little bit of experience, you know, Mullens does.
He's Slaters the backup now, but I don't know how
confident they feel with him. That's one of the destination
that for a team in Jacksonville, I think is in
(34:41):
a I would say a tight division in the sense
of probably between Jacksonville and Houston. You know, I can't
say much for Tennessee and Indianapolis, but for those two
teams buying for the division.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
Same thing.
Speaker 2 (34:55):
You wouldn't win like two or three games to be
the difference in you winning and losing. That Division and
get in the playoffs.
Speaker 1 (35:01):
I wonder what Kenny Pickett must have been thinking when
he's like, all right, I'm with the Browns and then
they go and draft two quarterbacks. I wonder if he's
looking around going Jesus, man, are we really what are
we doing here? And then now he could be the
odd man out based on not playing and those other
guys playing pretty well, so we'll get to see what happens.
By the way, Fox one is now live. It's the
(35:23):
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(35:45):
Go to Fox one for complete terms and condition. Fox
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here on Two Pros and a Cup of Joe, we're
gonna tell you about well, somebody who knows how to
pick him. He's identified somebody that's the one, and he's
going to make a lot of money off of it.
(36:06):
It's yours right here on FSR.
Speaker 4 (36:08):
Be sure to catch live editions of Two Pros and
a Cup of Joe with Brady Quinn, LeVar Errington, and
Jonas Knox weekdays at six am Eastern, three am Pacific.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
Two Pros and a Cup of Joe, Fox Sports Radio
Brady Quinn, Jonas Knox with you here coming off top
of X Hour a little over ten minutes from now.
Kind of an interesting strategy by one coach in the
NFL we will discuss here on FSR before we get
to another edition of In case you missed it, though,
a reminder that everyone knows first impressions start with the
(36:40):
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Speaker 4 (36:52):
Sometimes you can't get to everything in the world of
sports or entertainment. Good thing, the guys are here to
bring you in.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
You missed it, and for that we turn it over
to our executive producer, Lee did Da Da Lap.
Speaker 9 (37:06):
Good more than everybody. Good morning Jodas, Good morning Brady. Guys,
in casey missed it, big news in the world of boxing.
Jake Paul is going to be facing off against Javonte
Tank Davis in a Netflix boxing match at the State
Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia on November fourteenth.
Speaker 8 (37:22):
This is going to be about nearly one year to
the day since his fight with Mike Tyson.
Speaker 1 (37:26):
All right, okay, so this is like a real one, right, Yeah,
sixty pound weight advantage? Is that the difference? Yeah, Tank David.
I didn't think that. I don't think they announced the
weight class yet. Well, Tank Davis normally fights at one
forties tiny, like he's a really small guy, and Jake
(37:46):
Paul last fought, I think it was like one n nine,
like two hundred pounds or something like that, So I
don't know, like what you just meet in the middle
and go one seventy. It's like it's still DeVonta. Davis
is like one punch power, like he's one of the
best in the sport. But you know, I don't know
(38:08):
that he's got the power to make up that sort
of a weight difference. And he's also he's not real active.
He doesn't he doesn't throw a lot of punches, so
there's probably gonna be people that are not going to
be happy with the fight just because he doesn't have
a style to where he's throwing a lot of punches.
He's throwing a hundred punches around or something like that.
So I just can't see it being that appealing. But
I mean, at least it's a legitimate boxer. You know,
(38:31):
there's that.
Speaker 2 (38:32):
So look, you can say whatever you want about Jake
Paul for a kid who grew up I think on Disney,
I mean, he's now fighting legitimate boxers. Yeah, it's come
a long way from what it originally started out as.
And you've talked about too, just as impact on the
boxing industry. There's supposedly his talks, he's got one lined
up with Anthony Joshua after this if he accepts, maybe
(38:55):
like a twenty twenty six card, But I mean that'd
be a huge fight, and that is a guy who's
way closer to his weight class.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
Yeah, and also for anybody that's you know, critical of
you know, while he's fighting all these guys, most boxers
coming up fight a lot of fighters that they're way
better than, Like they call him cans because you develop
the fighters from you know, they start fighting four rounders
that they go six to eight to ten, and then
they sort of work their way up. He's doing it.
(39:24):
He's just doing it against really well known guys from
other sports like MMA, and he's making a ton of
money at it. It's just like it's the same thing.
He's just he's making a ton of money and he's
getting better and better, and he really does. Everybody that
you talk to that trains him, legitimate boxing people all
say he's got skills and he works his ass off.
So I agree he deserves all the credit he should get.
(39:46):
And we're not going to see Mike Tyson's bare ass
in this one. I can't imagine.
Speaker 2 (39:51):
So that's what I knew, man, that's what I knew. Yes,
that's when you are so those ass cheeks and like
he's out.
Speaker 1 (39:58):
He doesn't really mean this, he doesn't really want this.
It's not about that life. Nope, those ass cheeks came out.