Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Thanks for listening to The Doug Gotleep Show podcast. Be
sure to catch us live every weekday three to five,
twelve two Pacific on Fox Sports Radio. Find your local
station for the Doug Gottlieb Show at Foxsports Radio dot com,
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Speaker 2 (00:21):
Welcome in. We've got a great show for you, really
really good. Jay stud did an excellent job putting together.
Kelly Ford is gonna join us. He's got the k
Ford Ratings Index. It uses a series of computer models
to not just pick games, but also tell you what
games will be close, one of the most intriguing, one
of the best defensive games. All that stuff that's coming
(00:42):
up this hour, this hour, it's not coming this hour. No,
we'll just get what we used on the podcast. I
don't know that. Well, then it's coming up next hour.
In the podcast, my bad, we have Doug Landville this hour.
Of course, you can hear him on the car all
of the Dodgers Brewers game from the Ravine tonight chase
(01:05):
A You.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
Going, oh no, that's a huge pain in the ass.
I steer clear of expensive things are a massive waste
of time, and that the Dodger playoff games are the
very summation of that. I want to be on my couch.
I want to be on my Twitter criticizing everything the
Dodgers do.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
It's time for Dodger baseball. Dougie Glamville will join us
at twenty five after the hour, and he's got his
own wife site called Welcome to Glanville. I love this
part of the show, though we do it every Thursday.
It's a way of talking about sports and other stuff
(01:48):
from a foe gone year. We call it. Don't call
it a throwback Thursday.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
Don't call it a throwback Thursday's year.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
I'll take it from here. I'll take it from here
two thousand and five. I need you to go back
in time twenty years ago. What were you doing in
two thousand and five, for the sake of this exercise,
what were you doing in October mid October of two
thousand and five, I'll tell you what. Notre Dame fans
and USC fans were doing blue jack. They were biting
(02:24):
off their fingernails. A close one in South Bend, one
of the most memorable college football games of all time.
It's called the Bush Push. You guys know the details
on this, and I'll probably want you fill in the
example the fill in the colors here, But you know
USC was riding a twenty seven game winning street going
(02:45):
into South Bend that day. Notre Dame's team was coached
by Charlie Weiss. Maybe you've heard of them, And the
quarterback that day was Brady Quinn maybe you've heard of him.
Matt Liner was the quarterback for the Trojans and Reggie
Bush was a feature back for the Trojans. Now it
all comes down to the final play of the game,
(03:06):
and you guys could tell me if I'm wrong, But
the clock expired was some kind of funky I guess,
some kind of funky reversal of the clock where they
put a second back on and the Trojans were down
on the goal line, and then Matt Lioner tried a
quarterback sneak and was helped by Reggie Bush. That extra play,
(03:27):
that extra second on the clock helped the Trojans to
a thirty four to thirty one win, preserving their twenty
eight game winning streak. They would later play that year
in the National Championship game where Vince Young would beat
them and Texas would be the National Championships Anything, any
anything I got wrong there, Dan Byer.
Speaker 5 (03:49):
Yeah, two thousand and five.
Speaker 6 (03:50):
Yeah, it was a great year in college football for
the Vince Young led Texas Lunghorns, but Ohio State had
them beat for about forty minutes their sixty minute game.
The problem was they didn't beat him for the twenty
minutes that they needed to beat them at the start
and at the finish, and that's how Texas ended up
remaining unbeaten at that point and then going to the
(04:11):
National Championship and winning it all.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Well, the other part of that Notre DAMESC game was
Notre Dame had been down. Charlie Weiss was the coach.
I think it was Charlie's second year, and the response
to that game was such that Charlie Weiss got a
gargantuan contract extension despite the fact they didn't actually win
the game. The actually win the game, and that was
probably peaked Charlie Weiss at Notre Dame. I love Charlie.
(04:36):
Charlie comes on the show. He's super opinionated. You know,
we have a good personal and professional relationship. But again
that that was the moment and the Bush Bush ended
that moment. That was also you mentioned the year that
(04:57):
Vince Young had as people look back with Reggie Bush
giving back his highstband to give it to Vince Young.
I remember that night, the last regular season game. They
played A and M, and Vince Young played very, very
average football and they survived in won and then US
he played UCLA and Reggie Bush just jumped off the screen.
He was so good. He was amazing.
Speaker 6 (05:20):
Two thousand and five in the National Football League for
me was a It was a great one because it
really was the emergence of the Seahawks. They would go
on to the Super Bowl that season, but in years
of trying to climb up that mountain, of trying to
break through, of trying to become the team that they
(05:41):
had hoped to be, they went thirteen and three that year,
ran through the NFC, and ended up, you know, losing
to the Steelers in Super Bowl forty. But for the
twenty two thousand and five portion of this, Seahawks were
really one of the best teams in all of football
that year, with an unstoppable offense by Sean Alexander.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
The San Antonio Spurs won the NBA Championship in seven
games against the Detroit Pistons. It was one of the
lowest rated NBA Finals series ever because people were bored.
People were bored by the Pistons, bored by the Spurs,
and they missed what had happened the previous year, which
(06:26):
was Shaq and Lebron, I mean Shaq and Kobe, and
of course they fell apart as a team and then
fell apart in the NBA Finals. Pistons went to back
to back finals, but then they lost to the Spurs.
Sons were the best team in the NBA. Was that
the year Dan Byer that the Sons? That was the
(06:49):
four to one year? I think it was the next
year that Sons actually had the lead in the series,
winning the game in San Antonio, and then big Shot
Bob kind of a push Steve Nash in the scoreboard
and ma Mario stottam Boris DL came off the bench
and they lost the next game.
Speaker 6 (07:02):
Yeah, I can't necessarily remember the exact year, so I'll
just take your word for whatever year that actually did happen.
I do know what happened in two thousand and five
that the Illinois Fighting Alna in men's basketball were on
quite a run. They were though, upset at the end
of the year by Ohio State at the end of
the regular season, ending their perfect season, but they made
(07:26):
a heck of a run in the NCAA Tournament, including
an enormous comeback against Arizona and the Elite Eight at
the Rosemont Horizon in suburban Chicago and in Rosemont, Illinois
right Biohare Airport, Jason Stewart and I can tell you
about the luxurious accommodations they.
Speaker 5 (07:44):
Have for you in Terminal one, the meat Walker.
Speaker 6 (07:48):
But then ultimately Illinois's run fell short to Roy Williams,
who got to cut down the nets for a first
time as a head coach. Is North Carolina beat him.
Uist Yeah in Saint Louis in that National championship game,
uther Dee Williams, yep, d Brown, Darren Lawrence, Darren.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
I sat with Michelle Beadle during the final four. We
had really good seats and I didn't know Beadle at
all at that point in time. She was on She
had done these shows that were on I want to say,
like direct TV, where she went around touring ballparks and
you know all the different architecture. That's that was my
(08:26):
knowledge of her. So I sit down next to Beads
and this is like my third year working at ESPN,
and she goes, I've seen your final four. That's not it.
Great job, and she was being very sarcastic but very
dry witted, and I was like, who is this chick?
Who is like hi?
Speaker 7 (08:48):
Uh?
Speaker 2 (08:48):
But anyway, Beads was super talented. But I remember that
in Saint Louis. I want to say, Illinois shot forty
threes in the in the championship game, made it close,
but North Carolina was the better team.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
So also in October of that year, it was something
very memorable. May have been the first week in November.
You know, the White Sox broke an eighty eight year
World Series championship streak, and you know, you're happy for
the guys, Aaron Rowland and a J. Perzinski, Mark Burley,
we all know the guys. But maybe the most cringey
moment of the year was when remember the White Sox
(09:22):
caught on fire that year and they started to play
Don't Stop Believing, maybe the most cliched sports anthem in
the history of songs. Yes, And then they invited Steve Perry,
the former lead singer of Journey, to their post season
parade celebration, and somebody came up with the great idea
of doing an a cappella version of Don't Stop Believing.
(09:44):
Since they got Steve Perry, let's all do it, let's
all sing along. So this is a bunch of ballplayers
and Steve Perry.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Fus small they can share a night.
Speaker 8 (09:55):
It goes on and changeous, up and down the bolliv shine.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Searching and.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Just a little, uh, just a little snippet for you.
Find it on YouTube. You'll love it. It's very cringey,
uh and awful.
Speaker 6 (10:20):
I do think there was a tough task guest by
Steve Perry for to have the other guys sing the
words they didn't know. Impossible, you know, like come on,
you know no, look, we only know Don't Stop Believing.
That song You're took on such a life of its own, because,
as you said, very cliched, but I would say in
the in the up until that point, it was a
(10:41):
good song in Journey's catalog, like it wasn't close to
like the anthem that it has become at this time.
I felt that their ballads of open arms and faithfully
were much more popular than Don't Stop Believing Fair.
Speaker 5 (10:55):
I think that's fair.
Speaker 6 (10:56):
Before we jump over to music and movies and whatnot,
I do you have to mention the year in golf
in two thousand and five, and I won't bore you
with all the details except to tell you that Tiger
Woods won two majors, but probably had the shot that
we most remember on the sixteenth hole in the final
round at Augusta National. Missus the green on sixteen and
has the chip in with the ball just sitting there
(11:19):
at the edge, and then Verne Lundquist on the call
one of the great moments in all of golf. What's
lost in that is Tiger went bogey bogie at the
end of the round to actually fall into a playoff
with Chris DeMarco. That shot, though, with the way that
the Nike logo on the ball fell into the cup
something that we I don't know. I feel like it
(11:39):
happened just yesterday, but it was twenty years ago.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
Golf in movies that year the year's two thousand and
five Star Wars Episode three, so the last of the
prequels came out Revenge of the Sith was the number
one movie. Harry Potter Galbet of Fire, War of the Worlds,
which I've never seen. I was third Chronicles of Narnia
Lion which in the Wardrobe. I remember that book when
(12:05):
I was like fourth grade, never saw the movie. And
Wedding Crashers was fifth. Wedding Crashers. Good movie. Batman begins
that year. That was a good one. Meet the Falkers
was that year. Matt at Gascar, which we talked about
yesterday on the show.
Speaker 8 (12:21):
The movie The Hell the New York Tiants.
Speaker 3 (12:24):
The movie Crash won Best Picture that year, and that
was well ahead of its time of art coming out
of Hollywood that wanted to make sure we all knew
that America is racist. Still we are still very racist,
and we're going to spend two hours with many examples.
Broke Back Mountain was also a critically acclaimed movie that year.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
I can't quit you.
Speaker 9 (12:50):
I saw that movie. I saw that movie in theaters
with my mom.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
That's uncomfortable.
Speaker 8 (12:56):
Yes it was. She was like, let's go see this movie.
Speaker 2 (12:59):
I mean, it's better than singing with like your but
your best friend probably leave the chair in between, like
hands are brushing up against each other and you're like.
Speaker 9 (13:07):
Noah, watch the trailer first.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
I didn't know.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
I didn't know.
Speaker 8 (13:12):
No, if you're gonna go with your buddy, you should probably,
but did.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
You know what it was about? I did not know. No.
Speaker 9 (13:18):
My mom also took me The Big Lebowski, Like I
got into many like odd ball movies with my mom.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
It's like, it's a good movie, but it is about yes, so,
but yeah, that's one. Like did you have the talk afterwards?
Speaker 8 (13:33):
I was, I was Sam old enough?
Speaker 2 (13:36):
Is there something you want to tell me?
Speaker 8 (13:38):
I was, It's okay, I was old enough to.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
Like woman, that's that's great.
Speaker 8 (13:44):
She found a man.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
That's okay too.
Speaker 5 (13:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (13:48):
No, we we've are We had already covered all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
So we shout out to moms and uncomfortable conversations.
Speaker 9 (13:52):
Yeah's uncomfortable movie and uncomfortable combos, kind of bringing it
back to sports.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
Without that movie, we would not have had that great
comeback by Roger. Remember Dave Stewart called Roger Clemens out
for being on Lloyd's in two thousand and five, and
then Roger Clemens's owner response was, yeah, broke back mountain, uh,
inferring that the late Dave Stewart was was homosexual.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
Wait, Dave Stewart's not dead, is he?
Speaker 5 (14:17):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (14:17):
If he's still living, I'm sorry Dave Stewart, And he was.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Dave Stewart has not gotten the call yet. And Dave
Stewart also happily married me. Like, yeah, I just don't
let the voice fool you. I did not know he
said that. Broke back then Google it all right, d
that's don't call it the throwback Thursday.
Speaker 4 (14:36):
Don't call it a throwback thack Thursday.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
I kiss the duck out with Joe Fox Sports. Ready,
let's get to Dan Buyers. Some breaking news.
Speaker 4 (14:46):
Breaking news from Fox Sports.
Speaker 6 (14:48):
Indiana University and head football coach Kurt Signetti have agreed
on a new eight year contract extension that will pay
him more than an eleven and a half million dollars
over the the length of the eight year deal. It
runs through twenty thirty three. Kurt Signetti not going anywhere,
staying in Bloomington.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
Wow. Wait wait wait is eleven point per year annual
compensation of a less six million dollars?
Speaker 5 (15:14):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (15:16):
Wow, that is wow. That's fascinating, right. We just had
that conversation with Rich Wimberger about you know if you're Signetti, like,
why go anywhere else. This is the other issue with
firing guys early is all those teams that are having
good years know their coaches are going to be in
the crosshairs and so they you know, it's like Nebraska,
if they decide they want to keep Matt Ruhle, they
(15:37):
got like another month, month and a half to make
him sign some gargantuan contract. Otherwise they'll lose him and
start over.
Speaker 7 (15:46):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
A lot of people getting rich off these coaching firings,
and Signetti has definitely earned his keep. It just seems
like a ton of money.
Speaker 6 (15:54):
Yeah, with that eleven point six per year, that's top
five amongst coaches in college football.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Again, I'm not trying to get in anybody's pockets, and
obviously Indiana has deep ones. That's how they're able to
feel these teams. I do think though, there's got to
be a world where some of these coaches go like, hey,
five is enough, five millions enough. You can put some
money in an annuity for when I'm done, But I
would I would much prefer five more in to the
collective so we can get even better players because then
(16:23):
you keep winning. But that's just me.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
Fox Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in
the nation. Catch all of our shows at foxsports Radio
dot com and within the iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to
listen live.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Doug Gotlib Show Fox Sports Radio. By the way, if
you're listening last segment, we're talking about two thousand and five.
This song was released in two thousand. Fucker Narls Barkley,
didn't she used to be Narls Barkley. He has a
new website called Welcome to Glanville. He's the one only
Doug Glanville. You can hear him on the call of
(16:59):
to night's Game three of the NLCS. He's actually live
on the field at Chavez Ravine at Beautiful Dodger Stadium.
Doug Showey hasn't hit, you know, I mean he had
the one signal that was RBI right. Mookie hasn't done
much of anything, and yet the Dodgers starting pitching has
(17:22):
dominated through two games. Now they throw Tyler Glass now
out there. What's the confidence level like with the Brewers,
considering how much they've struggled with that starting pitching of
the Dodgers.
Speaker 10 (17:32):
Well, they know that their game is based on a
lot more than scoring you know, ten runs a game.
I mean they win games by execution, they win games
by defense, They win games by running the bases. And
even though it was the dominant performance by Blake Snell
in Game one, they had the tying run at third
in the winning run at second base, when all was
(17:53):
said and done, they were still in that game in
a position to win. So, you know, these starters as
Dodgers are tough. I mean, that's what they're paid for.
That's what bleak style was brought in for. And the
only way they can really neutralize that is finding a
way to get to that starter sooner because then you
get into the bullpen earlier. And that's big in game
(18:14):
three because if you get in the bullpen early in
Game three, that could be that has implications in game
four and five because now you're a little bit thinner.
So now that's the game they're going to have to
figure out how to play. But look, these are great
frontline starters, that's what the Dodgers are about, and they
have some great hitters besides Otani and Bets that can
actually do the job as well.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
What have they done to Otani because that actually their
attack of Otani has been successful. They what have they
done well?
Speaker 7 (18:42):
They trying to get lefties as much.
Speaker 10 (18:44):
As they can, whether it's he's starting at left the opener,
they find ways to give him that look, which which
brings him down a little bit. He had a decent
year against lefties, but he's chasing a lot. And when
Otani does naturally chase, it's kind of his game. And
then he starts to swing a lot. First pitch he
jumps on that first pitch. Well, those first pitch swings
have led their very quick outs, and they've also led
(19:05):
him like later in the counts to being you know, chasing.
So they're doing a lot of like breaking balls away,
fastballs up and in, and he's just he's not getting
to those balls. So even then they're still intentionally walking him.
So that tells you to that they don't trust that
you can keep doing this. But in the meantime it's
been a bit positive about like how they've been able
(19:26):
to approach him.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
How they match up a glasshow.
Speaker 10 (19:30):
M well, you know, glass was a little different style
of you know, will he if he gets his walks up,
that could be good for the brewers. They can use
their legs. They like the pressure teams on the bases.
You know, I see that I throw a bunch in
if I was them, just like slap a bunt in there,
just to mix it up. Glasso can get into trouble
and not be as efficient and that leads up to
the pitch count going up and makes it harder for
(19:51):
him to stay in the game. But the bar has
been set by Yamamoto and Snow so there's a lot
of Dodger pitchers that are trying to match.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
That get the two to zero lead there. There can't
be a ton of confidence in that bullpen. If you're
Dave Roberts, what does he do if he gets late?
Considering you know, you have a rookie who you now
placed as a closer, but in his first opportunity to
close in the NLCS, he failed. Training had to come in.
(20:20):
What do you think they do late innings tonight?
Speaker 10 (20:22):
They still have They still have a group of pictures
that you know they they trust to be back end
leverage guys. I mean, and really in this postseason, every
game is in, every inning is leverage. So whether it's
Bonda or scenarios where they have to bring someone in dryer,
they can do that. And yes, Szaki trying in. They're
picking up a lot of those outsleet and you know
they'll probably still get the opportunity. It helps a lot
(20:45):
when your starters are going to eat because you only
have an inning to cover, so if someone gets in trouble,
you can pick a different matchup as needed. That's the
big advantage. It's like one inning, seven relievers versus six
innings and severally very different equation. Then that's why your
starters are so critical.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
Okay, do you get this? It doesn't sound in your voice,
but I could be miss mishearing it. You don't think
it's an inevitability that the Dodgers win this series, But
do you get that sense on the field, like we're
around these teams, do you get the Dodgers just there's
just they got too.
Speaker 10 (21:22):
Much well, I mean, look, from day one, the Dodgers
were sort of set here they're going to win this all,
especially with the moves they made to acquire even more talent.
But as it's executed on the field, it's been different.
I mean there's look that the Brews can lean into
their record against the Dodgers during the regular season, which
was six and oh that's six games, and the Brewers
(21:42):
won all of them, and a lot of them they
won late late in the game, you know, heroics, close
games and extra innings and things like that. Now, yes,
is it a different season, sure, But do they have
some body of work to point two that says we
can beat this team. Absolutely, And and it's not by
accident that they have the most wins in Major League
based they did it by pitching and running and aggressive
(22:03):
and catching the ball. So there is that to lean into.
Speaker 7 (22:06):
And yes, the.
Speaker 10 (22:07):
Dodgers are looted and they're getting Blake Spell at his
best and I'm a motor at their best.
Speaker 7 (22:12):
But they had to be. They had to be to.
Speaker 10 (22:15):
Win Game one. That just tells you how you know
close the Brewers are. So I don't count them out
by any strets. But yes, is it a mountain to climb? Absolutely,
because the Dodgers are just a talented tube and a
lot of experience and a lot of weapons.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
The other series is so wild, right, I mean, Mariners
lambased the Blue Jays in Toronto and they come back
home and the Blue Jays wake up eighteen hits yesterday,
like eighteen like that was it. It's thrashing. What do
you make of the lack of any sort of of
close matchup at the end of a game so far
(22:49):
through three ALCS games.
Speaker 10 (22:51):
Well, the thing about the Blue Jays that's interesting about
them is this is a team that doesn't strike out.
You know, by today's standards, they're a team that it's
the ball and play.
Speaker 7 (23:01):
Now.
Speaker 10 (23:01):
The problem with that is that you can make weak
contact and put the ball in play and it means nothing.
But if you start making hard contact, you put up
thirteen runs. So that's the nature of a team that
is a contact team that will, you know, put the
ball in play for better or for worse, and for
most part of the season it's been for better. You
(23:22):
look at the Mariners and you see a team that
has a rotation that's similarly speable like the Dodgers. It's
like you kind of know who you're rolling out there.
So when they're on, then you get the shutdown innings,
you get the response. So it's an interesting match up
because they're kind of different teams. The Mariniths have swing
and myths, you know, they're.
Speaker 7 (23:42):
Kind of athletics. The Blue Jays defend, they.
Speaker 10 (23:45):
Put the ball in play, and they hit for average.
You know, it's the real They're different teams and sometimes
when the game plays out, they're on opposite ends of
the spectrum when the score is finally tallyed.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
Doug Laville join us live from Chavez inside of Game
three of the NLCS between the Dodgers and the Milwaukee
Brewers help settle debate for us. Was the mistake to
take Snell out Game one? Again? I know we're looking
back a couple of games, just we've been talking about
(24:17):
it all week on and off air. In your mind
at the time, did you think it was a mistake.
Speaker 7 (24:23):
I think it was a mistake.
Speaker 10 (24:24):
I mean I I just said, all right, well this
this is standard practice. It's nothing out of the ordinary.
But like the game is built on relievers. Now, I
mean last year in the postseason, the Dodgers had way
more innings pitched by their relievers than their starters. So
it's not beyond the pale that that's how that could go.
Speaker 7 (24:42):
But the way they.
Speaker 10 (24:43):
Approached it wasn't like here's the Zaki, here's the ball.
Speaker 7 (24:46):
Go finish it.
Speaker 10 (24:47):
They always they had backup and that just tells you
that you know, they're focusing on just getting out. And
but yes, Flake though was the best I've certainly ever
seen them, one of the best performances we've seen in years.
It felt like a perfect game.
Speaker 7 (25:02):
It was.
Speaker 10 (25:02):
It was a one hit in there, but it just
felt like they had no answers. He was throwing multiple
change ups, they had command of everything, and he threw
the fastball in ninety eight ninety seven.
Speaker 7 (25:12):
So guy like that. But yeah, you know he got out.
Speaker 10 (25:15):
It worked out for them, and they have Snell again
the next time they need him.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
Yeah, Doug, you're the best man. Welcome to Glanville's a
new website. Of course you can hear him tonight on
the Call of the NLCS. Really appreciate your time and
joining us here on Fox Sports Radio.
Speaker 7 (25:30):
All right, Doug, thanks all, I appreciate it, right.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
Doug Glanville. He's awesome. He's awesome. You know, he's got
strong enough opinions, but he's also reasonable. He's not unreasonable
like Jay Stewart. Jay Stewart is just a complete raving
you know, fan lunatic. I'm kidding Jay, Wow, Jay stews
figured out you would we figure out your market. Mike issues.
Trying to get your your your feeling tonight because I'm
not going to see your cow herd. But there are
(25:53):
I've been times in Dodger playoff runs where it's the
opposite of what you're feeling.
Speaker 3 (25:57):
Yeah, I feel pretty good Tyler Glass now, like the
last time he pitched, I think was maybe his best
outing of the season, which is like has become something
contagious with this starting staff. It's almost like they have
a built in competition for who can outdo the next guy.
So I'll take Glass now tonight.
Speaker 5 (26:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (26:19):
The Brewers are trying to play it cute with the
opener and stuff. They're paying, trying to play twenty twenty
three ball. I think that that has kind of that
time is coming coming gone. I will say this about
Pat Murphy. Nobody looks like a major league baseball manager
like Pat Murphy.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
Yeah, yep.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
I said the opposite about Gabe Kapler, like he was
much too pretty and fit and tanned and concerned about
his presentation. Pat Murphy is just a baseball manager, you know.
Speaker 5 (26:53):
He cold.
Speaker 3 (26:53):
You could you could put him in the seventies and
people wouldn't even think twice.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
Yeah, yeah, I do think that Jim Leland was also.
You know, there's there's a bunch of different ways to
be the manager. I agree with you, he looks like
the baseball manager, but I was thinking the Jim Leyland grilling,
grilling a cigarette, grilling a heater there in the dugout
also makes me think manager Don Zimmer, the late Don Zimmer.
Shout out to Don Zimmer, who Pedro threw down that
(27:22):
one time. But that's a good call on Pat Murphy.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
Something to look for today. Mookie Bets has not gotten
a hit in this series, and most Dodger fans know
that when Mookie Bets is not doing well, he gets
the case of the pop ups right He like pops
it up to the second basement or a white flight
up right field, and they're basically non competitive at bats.
Look for Mookie to have very competitive at bats tonight.
(27:50):
And I will say this as another wild card in
this game tonight. That ballpark was not made for three
o'clock starts. In other words, the shadows play a major
role in these early twilight games, which kind of nullifies
the home field advantage. I think it's kind of chaos
because you don't know where the shadows will be and when,
(28:12):
so that's a kind of a I don't know, taking
away the home field advantage a little bit tonight for
the Dodgers.
Speaker 2 (28:18):
Just something to look for with the shadow, the big shadows.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
Yeah, and you don't know when they'll be coming up
who and when?
Speaker 2 (28:24):
Right now? What's the weather? Weather? Back to being sunny,
because I know it was like it was like the
end of the world rain a couple days ago.
Speaker 3 (28:32):
Wasn't it sunny seventy five right now?
Speaker 5 (28:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (28:35):
Yeah, now it's California weather.
Speaker 8 (28:37):
We got two inches of rain, Doug.
Speaker 5 (28:39):
It was amazing.
Speaker 8 (28:41):
It's a great storm.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
That's a I love a good storm. Love a good storm.
I'm enjoying in Wisconsin's falls as it was like a
like a week and a half into real fall, and
it is beautiful. I drove to we were recruiting last
night in suburb of Milwaukee and Brookfield, and while with
Tosa and the drive down, it was like sun was setting,
(29:05):
leaves are turning. It's amazing. But don't get me wrong,
seventy five and sunny every day is pretty pretty damn amazing.
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up on the Doug Gotlib Show, So who makes more
(29:26):
than eleven point eight million dollars that Kirk Segnetty just
signed for with Indiana. We'll find out next.
Speaker 4 (29:31):
Be sure to catch the live edition of The Doug
Gottlieb Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on
Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Doug Gottlieb Show, Fox Sports Radio. I'm going to due
knowledge of Scala man. This is freshm year in high school. So,
who loved this song?
Speaker 7 (29:59):
Love?
Speaker 4 (30:00):
Very nice?
Speaker 2 (30:01):
Nice, nice, very nice. This is the Doug Gotlip Show.
We're leading you up, getting you ready for Game three baseball.
Make sure you check out the brand new YouTube channel
and the show. Just check out Doug Gottlieb Show on
YouTube again. That's Doug Gottlieb Show. Be sure to hit
the subscribe button. Don't just stop there. Hit the thumbs
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with my takes. If you hate him, doesn't matter. Check
(30:22):
out the brand new YouTube channel again, That's Doug Gottlieb
Show and subscribe. Let's get to Dan Byer with the Press.
Speaker 4 (30:29):
The press.
Speaker 6 (30:33):
The big breaking news in the world of college football.
Kurt Signetti is staying in Indiana's The school and Signetti
have agreed on an eight year extension. It'll pay I'm
eleven point six million dollars annually ninety two point eight
million dollars over the eight years of the contract, making
him the third highest paid head coach in college football.
(30:55):
The extension runs through twenty thirty three. Is eleven point
six million. Seems to be.
Speaker 5 (31:03):
Put in a in a spot dog that.
Speaker 6 (31:05):
It's just just north of Lincoln Riley at USC who
is making eleven point five four million dollars. So Signetti
at eleven point six Only Ryan Day at Ohio State
and Kirby Smart at Georgia make more on an annual
basis now than Kurt Signetti when.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
They both won national championships. That's the difference, right yep
So and Kirk Signetty got them to the College Fall
Playoff last year. They look like they're going to the
College Fall Playoff this year. He's done a remarkable job again.
I just I understand that one of the biggest reasons
guys signed these Carcantrin contracts. Is, Hey, if I have
a bad year, then you got to pay me to
(31:44):
walk away. But people are getting paid. I just, I
just they're gonna have enough money. I guess to field
a team, to have a good team. But for optics,
I would put that money in an annuity. Make five million,
you know, give me two or three extra every year
and do annuity and put the rest in play for players.
Speaker 6 (32:05):
Here's some news from the world of the NFL. Chargers
are gonna honor their Hall of Famer Antonio Gates. He
will be honored during halftime of their game against the
Colts coming up this Sunday, or at least during the game,
honored with his Hall of Fame ring during festivities in
Los Angeles.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
Okay, I like that, the old Hall of Fame ring.
Do you get to the Hall of Fame ring? I mean,
do you wear that? I mean, I got that's when
you they have the ring and the jacket.
Speaker 6 (32:37):
I think I would probably be more apt to wear
the Hall of Fame ring than a Super Bowl ring. Yeah,
I'd want to display the Super Bowl rings. I also,
just again, it's for a guy who spent you know,
so much time in San Diego. Now it's the same team,
some more of the same fans, but maybe not all
(32:59):
of the fans. But it's always a It was really
weird when the Rams would honor Hall of famers that
played in Saint Louis.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
Yes, but that's super weird.
Speaker 3 (33:06):
Yes, very complicated. And I will say this, so you're
telling me that there you're choosing to honor a great
on a day when they wear their Savannah banana uniforms
I put on.
Speaker 5 (33:16):
They look great. I love those.
Speaker 2 (33:19):
They do look like Savannah banaz. That was a very
but the uniform police came two thumbs up that standbyre
by the way, he's the uniform police. It's a lot.
It's a lot of yellow. What would it look like
with white pants. I don't like yellow with the blue pants.
That looks good on pictures, not in person. I wonder
what it looks like with the white pants.
Speaker 5 (33:40):
Yellow.
Speaker 3 (33:40):
That's just unseme way to me.
Speaker 6 (33:43):
I think they're gonna look sharp. I don't mind the
jerseys and pants matching in football. Some people have a
real big problem with it. I think it works for
some teams, like I think it works for the Seahawks
when they wear they're all navies. I think that that's
a lot better than their navies with their gray pants.
Some may disagree, but that's the way that I feel.
(34:05):
Bengals defensive Entrey Hendrickson not like little play tonight because
of a neck injury as Cincinnati hosts these Steelers. Speaking
of uniforms, Bengals wearing their white Bengal Tiger uniforms tonight,
all white. Yes, I just saw that the center field
stripe helmets will be the white, and uh yeah, I
would assume that would go with go with the flow.
Speaker 5 (34:29):
White.
Speaker 2 (34:30):
I like all the Bengals uniforms. I thought last I
thought the Packer match up with them with the uniforms
was spectacular. I think this will be spectacular. But I
do like the all whites. I like every part of
the Bengals uniforms. I wish I liked the Bengals. I
wish it was the Bengal fans. I really liked them.
Speaker 7 (34:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (34:46):
The Milwaukee Brewers have banned the fan that was caught
on video saying call ice towards a Dodgers fan during
Game two of the NLCS earlier this week in Milwaukee.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
Can you imagine how unhappy she would be if she
was at Chevez Ravinda tonight, right, all these Latinos and
white people getting long, cheering, booing, yelling.
Speaker 5 (35:09):
After that that she watched her job too, She's yeah,
she lost her job.
Speaker 6 (35:13):
She's no longer on the board of directors for a
Make a Wish. Yes, I was gonna say popular charity,
but yes, no, no, it's make a Wish. And my
joke was I think a lot of her Make a
Wish for the special needs kids is a day watching
me get a pedicure. So I'm gonna take the donations
get a pedicure and you could watch me. That's yes,
(35:35):
your make a Wish? What's today?
Speaker 7 (35:37):
Wow?
Speaker 2 (35:39):
Just again, like what's wrong with people? All right? Like
what's wrong with you? Call ice? Like, dude, you deserve
it is your job. I'm sorry. I just I don't know.
I I think you guys know, I grew up in Orange, California,
and I don't know what was brail like when when
(35:59):
you grew up there, Jason, Like I grew up right
next to body of Omadina, Like I went to a
bilingual elementary school till till fourth grade. Like I just
it's such an odd thing for Ian it's it's just
odd to live outside of southern California when you know
we don't have the uh potpourri of of races and
(36:20):
faces we have in SoCal odd for me, No, no, no,
I was just having this conversation with my son. Literally,
he's like, I live in Oklahoma, and Dad, everybody's everybody's
weather black. That's that's it. He's so used to you know,
he speaks Spanish really well.
Speaker 7 (36:34):
Is it?
Speaker 6 (36:35):
Is it worse that it took her like two or
three sentences to come up with cal ice as opposed
to maybe just her coming out and saying it right away,
but like you could tell like it was building up
and then she was losing. She was not winning the
panel that she just all right, let's cross that line.
And he got kicked out of the game, like guys like,
I don't know, I don't know I got kicked out,
(36:56):
but I did.
Speaker 9 (36:57):
So he was a Navy veteran. Yeah, huh yeah, yeah,
real nice lady with your Karen haircut.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
Oh it's so bad.
Speaker 5 (37:05):
It was a Karen cut.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
So bad.
Speaker 5 (37:08):
If it was, there's no doubt about that.
Speaker 6 (37:12):
Yankee skipper Aaron Boone said that outfielder Aaron Judge won't
need surgery on his injured elbow, but Anthony Volpe had
shoulder surgery their shortstop Garrett Cole. I'm both not likely
to be ready for the start of the season in
twenty twenty six. Same with Carlos Rodan and finally news
just in Cowboys word receiver Ceedee Lamb says he will
(37:33):
play Sunday against the Commanders. In fact, says he probably
could have gone against the Panthers, but they just wanted
to make sure that everything was okay. Ceedee lam would
go for Dallas on Sunday. That's the press, press.
Speaker 5 (37:45):
Bag, get out there and pressed.
Speaker 2 (37:46):
That was the press, like the Steelers, big, like the
Blue Jays and the Dodgers. Check out the podcast. It's live,
It's available right now. Doug Gotlieb Show, Fox Sports Radio