Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, this is the Doug Gottli Show years in
the Bonus with Doug Gottli.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Dog Gotlieb Show and the Bonus on Fox Sports Radio.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
H Jase do. I don't know if you know this.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
I have in part of my broadcasting career, coaching career
or whatever, I used to tour around the country and
go and talk to other college college basketball programs and
I had this portion of my speech called be the Cool,
and I think it's appropriate here. So the idea of
(00:42):
be the cool is that. And I remember when I
was a kid, and you know, like you're a middle
schooler to high schooler, and he's just you want to
be cool, right, And he thought like what is cool?
Speaker 3 (00:53):
Like, Man, I gotta have the cool hair, I gotta
have the cool shoes, I.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Gotta have the cool car, gotta have a cool girlfriend,
gotta have I did the cool. And what you learn
over time is success is cool. Right, Success is cool?
I mean Michael Jordan used to wear a suit to
every press conference.
Speaker 3 (01:14):
If somebody did that, now you'd be.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Like, man, you're trying too hard. You try to be
like MJ. Man whatever, right you try to you wear
a bow tie. You make sure your your shirt's always
tucked in, your chair is tucked in.
Speaker 4 (01:30):
Man.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
Some people think being cool is do what you want,
wear whatever you want, being a rebel and you can
do those things.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
I was watching Kirk Cousins. I've watched the interactions, and
I have to tell you there's no one who is
the cool more than Kirk Cousins. Because he's a dork, right,
it's dark. He's like a legit dad, nerdy dude. But
you know what, you can throw football and he usually
(01:59):
throws it to the team.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
He's very, very bright.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
He though obviously has an ego and an intelligence in business,
some of these decisions that he's made, he plays it
off as if he doesn't. And Kirk Cousins, who if
I told you that on Tuesdays he shuts off his
phone and goes for a walk with his wife. If
I told you that, you know he wears clothes that
she picked out and looks like she picked him out
(02:25):
at ARII or maybe Eddie Bauer. It looks like some
Eddie Bauer stuff. And I said, here's the guy, hey
in professional sports who walks into the locker room with
some Eddie Bauer clothes on after spending time with his
family and driving a reasonable suv. You'd say that's a dork.
(02:50):
And then when you watch how he's revered and thought
of now by his teammates, you'd say it's pretty cool.
The idea of cool when you're young and somehow impressionable
or immature or whatever is whatever's flashy, whatever slick, whatever
makes you look like nothing bothers you, nothing's wrong. The
(03:11):
reality is cool is success. Cool is success.
Speaker 3 (03:18):
You know that's the coolest.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Be sure to catch live editions of The Doug Gottlieb
Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on Fox
Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (03:31):
Let's find out what the Fox.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
Said and now.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
Fud say every day at this time of The Doug
Gotlieb Show.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
In the Bonus Podcast, we play for you a portion
of a previous show at Fox Sports Radio or Fox
Sports One. This is Dan Patrick talking about last night's hero,
Kirk Cousins. This is Dan Patrick talking with last night's
hero Kirk Cousins.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
You got pitch in London. Those are the go to guys.
When do you realize you're going to go to a
who has one other catch this year?
Speaker 6 (04:04):
Yeah, Drake got hurt on the play before had to
come out. So Caderill had been coming in all game
long when Drake needed a blow, so he's stopped in
like he had been for the whole game. And I
just go out, you know, read out the play and
it was man coverage, and Cadero's route versus man coverage
is not a winning route. But the corner was oft
enough that I thought, you know what, I guess my
(04:25):
better judgment. I'm just going to drive this ball into
him and not progress. And it was tight. We found
a way to complete it, and then from there it
was just all individual effort and other guys blocking for
him to be able to pull through and pull away.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Give me that mindset, that thought process. You know you're
going to get hit, you know you got to take
the hit, but you also have to throw the ball.
What is that feeling like for you know, all of
us who will never want to or will be able
to experience that.
Speaker 6 (04:56):
As long as there's a place to put the football,
that's all I'm thinking about is where's the completion? Can
I throw it with conviction? Where nowhere it's got to go?
Everything else doesn't really enter my mind or bother me.
Speaker 7 (05:10):
It's when you.
Speaker 6 (05:11):
Feel like you're about to get hit and you don't.
Speaker 7 (05:13):
Have a place to go with the football.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
That's when I feel pretty uncomfortable and unsettled.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
You know, it's interesting how Kirk Cousins has gone from
a guy who we all thought couldn't win the big
game to suddenly now he's performing well in these standalone
primetime games. And oh yeah, by the way, the Quarterback
Reality show really helped give us a greater insight, you know,
real or somewhat imagine look into Kirk cousins life and
he became imminently likable. Right, he's playing the white dork
(05:45):
and he's doing it really well. And oh yet, by
the way, he's really good at football. Just proves all
you got to do is be yourself. That's all people
ever care about. Be yourself performed. Nobody cares about your
background or anything else. Here's Colin Cowvert. You said this
about the Mets baseman Pete Alonzo.
Speaker 8 (06:01):
Pete Alonso is the classic power hitter, great at the
home run derby, big bombs, lots of strikeouts, and as
this team has been on fire since June, Pete has
not had a great season, hitting two forty struck out
one hundred and seventy two times. But he's a free
agent and the Mets had offered him a deal and
(06:22):
Pete Alonzo had turned it down. And so this is
New York. It's not Saint Louis where everybody's nice. The
intensity in New York is different. So I don't know
if the city had turned on him, but he.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Wasn't.
Speaker 8 (06:35):
He wasn't in the family circle. It felt like he
was on his way out top of the ninth trailing
to nothing.
Speaker 3 (06:41):
Perfectly New York.
Speaker 8 (06:43):
A bum into a hero in about six seconds, and
that's what New York does.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
That's what all swirs does.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
But I would contend with you that there's you know,
people go, there's nothing better than in hockey, if you
score a goal, it's just one goal. In basketball, you
can get a three point play to or a four
point play right. In football, all you could score is seven.
Of course that he can return the outside kick and
then you know you can get a couple in a hurry.
(07:12):
But in baseball it's not one running get two, three,
four runs in one swing in the bat, and to
get a hit a three run home run is something.
It's bigger than as con was describing and all these
things we talked about in the radio show. But all
of these comebacks all seem to start the same with
walking the first patter.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
You re notice that first batter walks steal second base.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Now we talk, we now the pitcher gets out of
the stretch, they're in the wind up, and when you
see a collapse in an inning usually started with a walk.
Here's Jonas doxon Bretty Quinn at this exchange about Antonio Pierce.
Speaker 9 (07:49):
It comes out that he got an eight year show
cause penalty for the circumventing of restrictions during the.
Speaker 7 (08:01):
During the during the COVID dead period at Arizona State.
Speaker 9 (08:06):
So they want to let him know, like that is
a no no, because how dare you during COVID, you know,
have any sort of recruiting or workouts or anything like that.
Speaker 7 (08:17):
So he gets an eight year show cause.
Speaker 9 (08:19):
I mean, like like we couldn't do like a little
speakeasy in college football during the COVID period, all right,
nobody else was out there kind of you know, running roads.
Speaker 10 (08:29):
One of the tough parts about that period of time
is not every state was operating the same. Now I understand,
you know, nca kind of put on their restrictions for recruiting,
but you know, every state was kind.
Speaker 3 (08:42):
Of operating a little bit different.
Speaker 10 (08:44):
And I don't know how Arizona was operating at that point,
but I know how Florida was. And there's times where,
like what happens if you ran into a kid that
you happen to be recruiting that was out, you know,
you bumped into them, Like I mean, these allegations obviously
date back to clubs, different things that he was, you know,
taking recruits to and all that in Old Town Scotty
Which what a place, man, What a hell and a
(09:05):
place you're gonna go have a good time, good old
town Scottsdale, all.
Speaker 3 (09:09):
Right, Plenty to do there, plenty fun day.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
Okay, I'm just gonna tell you, I like Jonas and
those guys. They sound completely like clowns in this one.
This isn't about well the restrictions were. They literally he
literally set up visits when they weren't allowed and had
no regard for any of the rules. Then set up
adults the parents to go to a strip club. So
(09:34):
I look, we can sit here and get onto the
NCAA and we could go back to COVID times, and
I told this about about the COVID stuff, like, look,
you can disagree all you want, but there's one thing
to fight, the rules. And they go, hey, I don't
think this is an appropriate rule and whatever. There's nothing
to say, fuck you to the rules and fuck you
to anything that's like, by the way, like this had
(09:56):
been done previously.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
That's what happened. Obviously. The Louisville thing was different.
Speaker 2 (10:00):
Colorado football going back to the nineties, they got put
on severe probation because Eric b Enemy, one of the
assistant coaches and others they were taking. They were taking uh,
I think players to strip clubs. So like Antonio Pierce's
whatever you want to think of him. He was a
friend of mine when we worked at ESPN, But like
that's clownshit and acting like.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
Wow is old town Scottie.
Speaker 2 (10:20):
Oh my god, we took him to a club, Like, no, dude,
you set parents up to go to strip clubs. It's
these They are pretty easy rules to follow. Trust me,
I know I follow them. You know, just give people
money that's not ever been allowed. And oh yeah, by
the way, it's not as much as we say, well,
it's about COVID and you couldn't make contact and whatever.
(10:41):
There's dead periods. Now, there's time in which you're not
allowed to bring people. And if you look at Arizona State,
they had blaytant disregard for all of it, and that
was all Antonio Pearce is like, mah, fuck it. I
came from the NFL. We're gonna do what the fuck
we want. We don't care. Okay, you'll never coach in
college again. And the way it's going in Vegas might
not coach in the NFL. That's where the Fox said.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
I'd say, be sure to catch live editions of The
Doug Gottlieb Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific
on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (11:14):
Let's find out who are what is annoying Jason Stewart.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
And now it's.
Speaker 3 (11:21):
Your annoying.
Speaker 7 (11:27):
Doug. I'm thinking about changing the name of this segment
to maybe it's me. Maybe I'm just getting old and
maybe things are just passing me by because I see
things and I just don't get it. I went to
school for broadcast journalism. I'm a big proponent in the
(11:48):
freedom of the press. I really stick firm about journalism
you and I spoke about Christine Brennan and this whole
thing with a w earlier in the week. You didn't
like the way she phrased the question. I don't even
know if I like her or her views. I've never
(12:08):
really been a big fan, but I thought that she
was a victim in this mess. Well it's come full circle, Doug.
Christine Brennan's now doing the woke mob apology to her.
She now is apologizing for everything that she did, and
I guess the tour took a stop on Sarah Spain's podcast.
(12:31):
I need you to listen to this question, Doug, and
tell me what annoys you most about. This is the
first question right off the bat. Welcome Christine Brennan to
my show. And this is the first question.
Speaker 11 (12:44):
So you mentioned earlier when you were asking those questions
of DJJ Carrington, you kept saying there were these videos, right,
So that's not the larger game footage. That's the videos
that have been clipped off in our online that you're
reacting to and then asking questions about. I get that
we all do that, right, but what do you think
the responsibility is of the media when it becomes clear
that the way those clips and the way that content
is framed will very much impact not just the treatment
(13:06):
of the players, but even their safety. You mentioned feeling
for black players and understanding that we as white women
could never understand what their experience is. If you understand
that and have that empathy for them, don't you think
journalistically the idea of minimizing harm, of seeking out truth
in most honest and good faith way, it prioritized that
(13:26):
over being able to just say I would ask that
question a million times and ignoring the context within which
you're asking it.
Speaker 3 (13:34):
That was a question.
Speaker 7 (13:39):
So just to get this straight, journalists now as they
cover the WNBA need to run every single question through
a filter and make sure that the question that they're
asking is not going to cause physical harm or security
risks for the player. We need to have what's the
(14:03):
word kit gloves, kit gloves, sand kid gloves handle all
of these women with and I mean, I don't know
where do you start with this one. You've said on
this podcast and on the air many times they want
to be treated equally.
Speaker 3 (14:18):
No they don't.
Speaker 7 (14:18):
Then something like this happens and we're supposed to completely reevaluate,
reimagine how we cover sports.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
I still don't even understand what exactly Christine Brennan did
that was wrong, what she's apologizing for, what Sarah Spain
is talking about. Can we stop with the fucking bullshit
about how somehow a white woman can't understand what a
black woman is experiencing in life.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
Can we stop with that shit?
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Okay, because we could do the opposite, which is the reality.
Right when you play in a sport which has been
predominantly dominated by African Americans, there's also an experience of
being a minority, of breaking through, of breaking through stereotypes
when you're a white man or a white woman playing basketball, right,
(15:05):
But nobody gives a shit about that because they're like, well,
your experience, however it is, doesn't measure up to mind.
Just stop with it. Nobody fucking cares anymore. Like, listen,
this is the reality to it. No one cares. Caitlin
Clark isn't popular just because she's white. This being white
has that attracted people to her? Maybe this being straight
(15:27):
attracted to her?
Speaker 3 (15:28):
Maybe hey, maybe not sure.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
But it's also like, if we want to get into
skin color, I would say skin color helped Magic Johnson
out a great deal because magic Johnson was a completely likable, affable,
superstar talent with a brilliant smile, and he's used he's
used that smile and the success in the basketball for
we become a billionaire in business. And like, look if
(15:52):
we followed Magic Johnson and we're honest about it, Like
Magic Johnson doesn't blow you away with his tweets and
with some of the things he said in the way
he's handl himself. You're well, Matti Johnson is a business genius,
like is he or is he just magic? And he
surrounds himself with people who know what he doesn't know
and he makes a ton of money doing it just
being magic, right.
Speaker 3 (16:12):
Like I don't.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
It's fucking insane. This whole this whole thing's insane. That's
actually what we need. We need to call this. You're insane.
The WNBA is insane. The whole thing is fucking annoying.
Nobody cared about the WNBA before Caitlin Clark. Now some
people care, and now many of the people who care
are being.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
Annoyed by the fact that you have to couch any.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Sort of praise towards a player because she's white and
it may offend black people. That she's actually really good
at a sport that they previously dominated.
Speaker 7 (16:46):
And just missed anything just to put a button on this. Yes,
Jamel Hill, she had to, Uh, I know Jamel, I
actually liked Jamel, but she had to weigh in on
this excellent interview by Sarah here. I've known Christine for
years and have admired her work, but I was extremely
disappointed in her interview with DJA Carrington. While I don't
(17:06):
think her WNBA credentials should be revoked, I do understand
why the players questioned her intent. So there's been a
weird cycle of Christine Brennan asked the question and then
the w NBA PA said we need to revoke her
credentials and that was awful. And then Christine Brennan got
flooded with tweets at her from journalists basically defending her
(17:31):
right as a journalist to ask those questions. And Christine
Brennan quote tweeted all of them and retweeted all of
them and said thank you. And now it's gone back
the other way to where she now she needs to
go on the woke mob apology to her. Now she's
succumbing to the mob that she's admitting she did wrong.
You should have heard the answer to that question that
(17:51):
Sarah just posed. It was something about media training. Nbations
should use their resources to train w NBA media. Like
it's pathetic and sad, and again, maybe it's me. Maybe
it's me. Maybe the world is changing and I'm reluctant
to change.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
With it, but in changing in what way? And by
the way, just so we're aware. Okay, you're right about
the woke mob. The the Trump mob does the same thing. Right,
anybody who's considered a Republican has to bowot to peat
and go like, no, no, we might we might have
won that election.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
Right.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
They both do the same thing, and it's fucking embarrassing
that nobody has the balls to stand up and go
like she knew anything wrong.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
She asked some bad questions, but like what.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
I mean, Ken Cox's the most popular women's basketball player,
arguably the most popular female athlete we've ever had. Right,
Serena Williams is probably the most accomplished her in Martina
average lover. Right, those are like the most accomplished female athletes.
Obviously you can go through uh Biles as a gymnast,
you know, is incredible, but you know, considering the level
(18:57):
of dominance and popularity, I don't think think Serena was
actually all that popular.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
She was more she was more respected. Right.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
She was like Kobe, where people didn't really like her,
but they're like, damn, she's so good. What do you
what are you actually going to say?
Speaker 3 (19:11):
Right?
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Whereas Caitlin is she's not the best player, but she's
really good. She's taken the sport and the world by
kind of storm, and she's continued to improve and excel.
But I think she's incredibly likable. And yet it's like,
you can't be like this is honestly here, here's what I'll.
Speaker 3 (19:28):
Tell you what it is. I think that she's being
treated like white middle aged men. That's what it is.
Speaker 12 (19:38):
Like.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
Wait, now, white women are bad. White men were bad first,
then white women were bad.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
Like there's bad people of all skin colors, of all racists,
there's people with nefarious intent. You know, throughout the world,
most people are really good. Sometimes you just have to go, hey,
she's awesome, and that's all we need to do with
Kaitlin Clark.
Speaker 3 (20:01):
Who else is anoying you?
Speaker 7 (20:03):
So this is a callback, Sam, and you are my witness.
I was complaining about this well before the Dodgers were impacted. Okay,
on Monday, I came on and I said, I don't
understand why Major League Baseball doesn't reseed after the wildcot Round.
I just don't get it. I don't get it.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
Say that. You did say that.
Speaker 7 (20:21):
So what happens the worst case scenario? The Mets pull
off their upset. They're the sixth seed, they were the
team that crept into the playoffs. They're the last seed
in the NL playoffs. The Dodgers played one hundred and
sixty two games and were the best record in Major
League Baseball. And what do they get in return? They
get to play the Padres, the fourth best team in
(20:42):
the National League, and the Phillies get to play the
sixth seed. It makes no sense. And I again, if
Major League Baseball wants to improve their relevancy, they need
to give their best teams the best chance to advance
to the World Series. This is not that. This happened
last year.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
With the I'm gonna disagree. I'm gonn disagree with you.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
I understand what you're saying, but Mets, Phillies and Dodgers
Padres is way better than Padres Phillies, Mets, Dodgers.
Speaker 7 (21:15):
What about Arizona and Texas as a world series? Okay,
that's what I'm saying. Major League Baseball needs show hey
against Judge this year.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
No question.
Speaker 7 (21:27):
So you're giving the lower seed a chance to upset
the show hey before you even get started. That's my problem. Like,
I just don't understand why the league one step and
be like we need to somehow facilitate the best teams
in these moments and they don't. But you're right, No,
this next series, the Padres and Dodgers are going to
be an amazing series. But that's not my beef, that's
(21:50):
not my.
Speaker 3 (21:50):
Beaf, understand you beef.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
I would just say that in for baseball, for Major
League Baseball, it could not have worked out better in
terms of ratings. That's Phillies is going to be awesome, awesome,
two obnoxious fan bases, you know, separated by what an
hour and a half with no traffic, which never happens,
so two and a half hours. And then the same
(22:12):
can be said by the Padres and the Dodgers, two
obnoxious franchises separated by I guess it probably went two
and a half.
Speaker 3 (22:22):
Probably two and a half two half hours.
Speaker 7 (22:25):
Yeah. And the problem is if Kansas City plays San
Diego in the World Series, don't come complaining to me.
So Colin Kaepernick, there's a lot to go with Colin Kaepernick,
But he actually did an interview with Jimmy Fallon, of
all people, Jimmy Fallon bad Way asked this question and
then Kaepernick went ahead and lied to him, and everyone's
(22:48):
fine with it.
Speaker 10 (22:48):
Here it is there are rumors that you've been offered
coaching jobs in the NFL.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
Is this true? Would you want to coach? It is
not true. I'm shocked it is not true.
Speaker 4 (23:01):
I actually found out the same way everyone else did
on social media. Oh I got a coaching offer? Yeah,
no coach offering?
Speaker 1 (23:10):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (23:10):
And would you ever coach in the future.
Speaker 4 (23:13):
No, No, no interest in coaching for me. I need
the adrenaline rush of playing and being in it, or
I can have more impact in other places with my time.
Speaker 7 (23:23):
So if I'm Jim Harbaugh, I'm looking at this and
I'm like, that's fucked up. What a dick move. And
Jim Harbaugh never said he offered him a job. There
wasn't any reports that he was offered jobs. That's a
lot Jim Harbass said, I reached out to Colin Kaepernick,
I think in January or February, whenever I took this job,
(23:44):
and I just asked him if he'd be interested in coaching.
And then Jim Harbaugh's next sentence is, Kaepernick is not
going to be a coach on this staff and he's
not going to be a player. There wasn't a offer.
There's no formal offer. So it's like Kaepernick goes on
this talk show and says, I was never offered a job. Well,
no shit, but but why not clarify what the story
(24:07):
is that my old coach reached out to me and
try to give me an opportunity.
Speaker 2 (24:11):
What a dick, huge, huge, huge issue with this one.
I mean, not with you, with him, I mean just
it's so bizarre.
Speaker 7 (24:24):
I found out like everyone else did on the internet. Yeah, oh,
poor guy. What a victim, What a fucking victim in this.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
I mean, look, part of the thing of finding out
on the internet like everybody else did, is like one,
if you're not around, and two oftentimes it gets sped
by somebody who's on the inside and just trying to
make people look bad.
Speaker 3 (24:46):
You know.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
It's not like the GM Picks of the phone goes, Hey,
we want to put this out on the internet before
the guy comes in and tell him?
Speaker 3 (24:52):
Who else is annoying you?
Speaker 7 (24:53):
No, that's it, so Kaepernick. And then Sarah Spain and
this this sixty thing.
Speaker 3 (25:01):
Sarah Spain easy annoying.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Why are we doing this?
Speaker 9 (25:09):
I do.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
Because we can't, by the way, let me let me
tell you.
Speaker 2 (25:15):
And and I actually I haven't spoken with Sarah Spain
in a long time, but I at what we're at
the time. We're friendly, maybe even friends. But it is
interesting that she's become the spokeswoman for the Woke Bob.
When she first got her start on air, she was
a producer in Chicago, and she was like the raunchy girl,
you know, and now she's like miss Women's Rights, which
(25:38):
is just interesting.
Speaker 3 (25:40):
No, that's opposite opposite. Alrid Shirt. Howard Shirt was always raunchy, right,
and then.
Speaker 7 (25:46):
He but then he became kind of he kind of
turned into more of a you know, he he went
away from the raunchiness. You know. So speaking of raunchy,
this isn't very raunchy, but it's got a lot of
blue language. Max Rosby told a story on the Barstool Podcast.
Still like playing for coach Gruden, did you get pissed
off at you because you were you were too good
(26:07):
at defense?
Speaker 3 (26:08):
In practice his offense, he would get irritated.
Speaker 12 (26:10):
We had a he literally threatened to cut me on
the middle of the field one of my first training camp.
And his thing like, he's an offensive coach, and I've
always had offensive coaches till Ap got here. But he
would get so mad about batting balls, like we'll be
in practice doing team and he refused to let us
bat the ball. But I would tell him, I'm like,
(26:31):
why the fuck are we practicing not baut the balls?
But in a game they're going to be doing the
same shit, so what's the point. But he's an offensive guy,
so he wants his shit to he wants practice to
move a certain way. So I'm not even thinking. I'm
just trying to make plays and whatever. I'm a third string,
I'm just trying to do everything. So it was like
a second week of training camp. I've swat a ball
down and I'm fucking hype celebrating and he's all looking
(26:51):
at me, all irritated. Whatever happens again, boom swat a
ball down. Then it happens at the end of practice.
I swatted for the third time. He's like, stop fucking
stop swading the fucking ball, Doup, because I fucking caught
your ass.
Speaker 3 (27:03):
I swear to God him one more time.
Speaker 12 (27:05):
I'm looking at him like, all right, just go back
to the battle like he's shutting out back and said, motherfucker.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
Yeah that one was. I mean, look, it's funny. Max
Strosby is hilarious in telling that story. But you know,
the Gruden thing is interesting. Can he come? Can you
think jayse dude? Do you think he never come back
from it?
Speaker 7 (27:33):
I don't. I don't know if he's going to be
in the NFL, but I could see him at like
what like Notre Dame or something, or maybe a less
reputable university. I don't know about the NFL. You can't.
It's hard to sue the league and then get ahead
of coaching job. But sure, I guess Bryan Ford is
doing that.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
Sure is that's it for?
Speaker 2 (27:48):
Because we can check out the radio show every day
three to five Eastern twelve to two Pacific on your
iHeartRadio app. Download ready download this podcast. I'm Doug outing