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April 11, 2025 41 mins

Dan reacts to the first round of the Masters and the early leaders. Golf Channel's Brandel Chamblee stops by to talk about the Masters, whether we'll see Tiger Woods back at a major again and who he might get into a fight with this weekend.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are listening to the Dan Patrick Show on Fox
Sports Radio.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
It's our two on this Friday. It's a meat Friday.
At that morale is high. We took part of the
menu that Scottie Scheffler had at the Champions dinner on
Tuesday in Augusta, and we've whipped that up. Firecrackers, shrimp,
Texas style chili, we got cowboy ribis, we got blackened swordfish,
and we got Azalea cocktails.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Who has it better than we knew? No?

Speaker 2 (00:30):
All right, come on in, we'll go to Augusta. Randall
Shamblee from Golf Channel will join us. Coming up here
in a little bit. I watched a lot of it
yesterday afternoon, justin Rose. He's been in this position before.
He matched a personal best seven under sixty five. So
he's got a three shot lead after the first round,
the fifth time he's had at least a share of

(00:51):
the lead after the first day at Augusta. That breaks
a record held by Jack Nicholas. His best finish in
any of those previous starts was a tie for fifth.
That's why if you look at the odds. According to
DraftKings this morning, the odds to win Scotty Scheffler plus
two hundred, Ludwig Oberg plus six hundred, Rice into Shambeau

(01:14):
plus six fifty, and then Justin Rose at plus seven fifty.
Rory dropped to plus twelve hundred double bog eat fifteen,
double bog eat seventeen. And I'm watching him on fifteen.
It's a great approach. Shot, goes over the flag, goes
through the green. Now it's on the back side. Now

(01:34):
you got to be careful because that green on fifteen
slope so hard in the front that if you get
it to a certain point, it's going into the water.
And here's one of the greatest players in the sport
and he thinks he's hit the perfect chip, and Jim
Nance said right away, uh, oh, it's gone, because you know,

(01:55):
if you've played it or you've watched it, you know,
if it gets to a certain point on the green,
it's gone. And playing Augusta, being around that sport for
a long time, Augusta is about your missus. Because everybody's
going to hit great shots. It's when you don't hit
a great shot, where did you put it? And can
you get up and down? That's why Fred Couples was

(02:15):
under part, Freddie is sixty five years of age, and
isn't golf unique that you can have somebody sixty five
playing against somebody who's twenty five in the same sport.
Bernhard longer all those years, he would usually do well
on that first day. It's because it's coarse knowledge. There's
no other sport that you have that seismic difference between

(02:38):
somebody's age and you're still playing in the same event.
Now with the Masters, if you've won the Masters, you
get to come back and play, and Freddie won back
in the early nineties. But local knowledge it's where you
hit it. When you don't hit it where you think
you're supposed to, it goes someplace and now you got
your miss Golf is about missus, and then what do

(03:00):
you do after that? Because if you played with somebody
who's really good and then they don't hit a great shot,
well they're still in play. Where when we hit a
bad shot, it's like I got to drop one or
I gotta, you know, knock this out. Play safe here
and we'll talk to Brandal Shambly about that. That local knowledge.
You're playing at the same place every single year. The

(03:22):
other majors of course, you know they rotate, but you
play it Augusta, you know exactly now they have changed it.
People got caught up. I know, Charles Barkley came on
the show. I had to set him straight. He's like,
I can't believe that they're Tiger proof and the masters.

Speaker 3 (03:38):
I said, Charles, shut up.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
They did this to Jack Nicholas in the early sixties
and he didn't know that they weren't doing. If anything,
by lengthening Augusta, they helped Tiger. If you want to
really penalize guys who hit it, you know a great distance,
tighten the fairways and put some rough in there. Now
all of a sudden you're going to get their attention.

(04:02):
But if you let those guys blast it out there,
Bryce and de Shambo's hitting drives of three hundred and
fifty yards, That's what Rory does too. That's a long ways.
When you're hitting driver and then you're hitting a short
iron into these par fives, it's a huge, huge advantage.

(04:22):
But you must put it in the right place because
if you don't, you were cooked. And I brought this
up a long time ago my caddy when I played
one day, he was the caddy for Sebi Biasteros Sevy
one in nineteen eighty. Well, I had this caddy and
actually the caddies traded golfers. On the first tea, they

(04:43):
were betting on us, and I got traded. And you know,
turns out my caddy caddied for Seve when he won
the Masters. And he said to me, when I tell
you something, do it, don't question. And I go, okay,
what didn't last long? We're on the second green and

(05:05):
he said, put it up here. I go up there
and he gave me this look like, oh my god,
and I said okay, okay, and I didn't quite and
of course he was telling me put it up here,
and it's going to roll right to the hole, and
it did. We get to twelve, twelve, winds blowing. Let

(05:25):
me take a drink here, hacking up along here do.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
The caddies there? Are they lifers? Are they the kind
of guys who never leave that job and everyone knows them.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
Yes, yes, you have a lot of guys who are
there that that's their job. But we get to twelve.
So twelve is one hundred and forty nine yards. The
wind is blowing. On thirteen t the wind is blowing
differently on twelve green with the flag, and the wind
is blowing differently on eleven green. So it's all right there,
and I'm looking around and my caddie goes to give

(06:00):
you a club. Don't look at it, just sling it.
So he gives it to.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
Me and I go, ah, it's wait too much club.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
He goes, So put it on the green, made the pot,
made a birdie on twelve and he said, do not
question me. And I so I did it twice and
I didn't do it again. But it's so local knowledge
is wonderful. And to get these guys who've been doing
it a long long time, looping for a long time,

(06:28):
and they'll just tell you take your medicine. Yeah, but
I think I can take your medicine. I could get
it right through that little there. Okay, go ahead, and
then you hit it into one of these trees and
ricochets through the woods.

Speaker 3 (06:43):
Nothing like it.

Speaker 5 (06:44):
It's great.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Eight seven seven three DP show email address DP at
danpatrick dot com, Twitter handle a DP show everything on
sale danpatrick dot com fifty percent off NFL Draft will
be there at the bar famous for their wings.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
Just fly.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
It's the bar on homegrown way. We'll have drafts at
the draft. Yes see, are you.

Speaker 4 (07:07):
Is there a bar down the street called Just Drums
that just gets the other side of this.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
I don't know rival sister bar. Yeah, the Sharks and
the Jets Flats and drums. Stat of the Day brought
to you by Panini America, the official trading cards of
the program. We will talk to Brandall Shambley coming up.
Brent Mussberger just announced yesterday he's going into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. Brent will join us, coming up
in an hour from now. Your phone call is always welcome.

(07:33):
We had a mishap yesterday. The Danets were playing a
little pickleball and everybody had on their pickleball shoes except
for Todd, and Todd left his. They're called Tyrol. They're
the best shoes you can buy. They came in and
gave us these shoes. Well, Todd didn't have his next thing,
you know, and he's playing great, and then there was

(07:56):
a moment when he was trying to go Rafael Nadal
on everybody, and then the mishap happened because.

Speaker 6 (08:02):
The typical shoes and sneakers. And I did some research
after the fact unfortunately don't help with the different moves
and stopping and starting, and you move your feet in
different ways. And I should have used the very special
pickleball shoes that you guys were wearing, and then I
wouldn't have had that problem, and I wouldn't have been
at Urgent Care yesterday getting X ray.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
Give me the pain level, pain tolerance level that you're
on right now.

Speaker 6 (08:22):
As I'm sitting here, I'm fine. As soon as I
get up, It's like a nine to nine for sure.
I can't put any pressure at all on my left heel.
It's just I just can't at all. Okay, it feels
like there's a glass in.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
My wh I saw your car parked as close to
the door as possible, and I knew that you were
you were hurt.

Speaker 6 (08:40):
If there's a way I could have pulled the car
in right up to my desk, I would have done that.
But it just doesn't fit.

Speaker 7 (08:44):
Yeah, as someone who occasionally suffers from foot issues myself,
because I do and occasionally get gout, which is kind
of humiliating.

Speaker 5 (08:54):
To admit.

Speaker 7 (08:56):
It is, it's truly awful to have. You're just sitting
in every think it's fine in the minute you try
to stand up, your like foot feels like it's being
torn off your body.

Speaker 3 (09:04):
That's just terrible.

Speaker 7 (09:06):
That being said, we do have a poll question up there.
Which of Todd's injuries was I don't know, worse, I
guess is a word we're using more you humiliated? Yes,
offter You can read it to the context of what
we're discussing here. Worst Todd injury Todd's pickleball foot or
his whiffleball elbow. Right now, it's sixty three percent.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Of the vote.

Speaker 7 (09:28):
We've got whiffleball elbow that it's still more humiliating.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
All I know is when I came in now, they
played wiffleball the backroom. Guys play wiffleball out of the fieldhouse.
I come back later in the day and they go,
you missed it, logo, what do you mean? Todd was
unbelievable playing wiffleball. He was hitting you know shots, He
was great. And then next day I said, hey, man,

(09:53):
you killed it in wiffleball.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
He goes, yeah, but I got hurt. I said, who
gets hurt in wiffleball? But you did?

Speaker 6 (10:01):
Went vax rated on that too, And I was trying
to I was trying to convince that you and beat it.

Speaker 8 (10:06):
Do be sure.

Speaker 6 (10:07):
I don't need Tommy John. I know something not right
with my ligamon did not. I always like to get
checked the out, don't you doctor?

Speaker 8 (10:12):
I had to get looked at him.

Speaker 6 (10:13):
I couldn't get my arm at one point I couldn't
get full of motion of my arm after I've been
swinging a light that like that my hardest like's like
throwing a nerf ball when I was a kid growing up.
You keep throwing something that has like no weight to it,
puts a lot of pressure on your shoulder and arm.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
Should we just not include you with this? I like
to play.

Speaker 6 (10:29):
I just don't like what happens to me when I
do play. I enjoyed playing with the ball up until
the point that I couldn't bend my arm. And now
I'm limping and I'm on basically one foot right now
playing pickaball.

Speaker 3 (10:39):
This is why health insurance pisses me off. I never
go to the doctor ever. I never use it. I
never do anything. I have it just in case, like
one day something might happen.

Speaker 7 (10:47):
Todd's in the hospital four times a week to getting
some random knee pain like whatever. This is that day
and we both have to pay the same health insurance
and try to be crazy.

Speaker 6 (10:55):
It is extremely unfair if you think about it that way.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
At least I'm using and they never use it. I
never Oh my god, yeah no it hurts. But whatever,
you just figure it out. No big deal.

Speaker 7 (11:03):
I'll just ignore everything. Todd's there constantly, same health and shot.

Speaker 6 (11:07):
You know, when the doctor says, don't show up, I'll
still knock on the door anywhere I think I still
need an appointment. I'm convinced of it.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Okay, this has to do with your upbringing too, Oh, no, quester.

Speaker 6 (11:14):
But I went for a throat culture every week because
of it. If I had the slightest cough, I'd be
rushed for to see if I had strapped throat. And
my mom once convinced one of our doctors to give
me a shot and the tushes what they did back
in the in the seventies, and everything was fine.

Speaker 3 (11:26):
He wasn't going to do that.

Speaker 6 (11:27):
She went back in the room said something to him,
and next thing I know, my brother and I had
our pants down and we're getting a needle in our tush.
What is that all about?

Speaker 3 (11:34):
They don't do that anymore do they They.

Speaker 6 (11:36):
Don't, thankfully, because that's that's painful. You would think because
of it's a little meaty back there, that's a good spot.
It's not.

Speaker 8 (11:43):
It's really not your tush.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
Yes, yes, I'd like to add to the you add
the tush push before I had rectal thermometers to Oh man.

Speaker 4 (11:52):
I'd like to add to the pole. Remember when we
were doing a photo shoot for like Eddie Bauer shirts,
Todd went down when he seat and tackled him literally
was ready Flannels in Los Angeles shot a docile floor
throwing around the football video. Todd went down on one
knee after the catch, came up almost screaming in pain,
and had a serious uh rib injury. And then there's

(12:15):
of course the hotel in Las Vegas where he fell.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Oh yeah, he got up in the middle of the night, right, Yeah.

Speaker 6 (12:23):
I'm way too big and old of this point to
be taking flight in the darkness in the middle of
the night because I banged my foot in a part
of furniture that I didn't know existed there.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
I would have loved to have seen you flying through
the air. That was the middle of the night, no
clothes on.

Speaker 6 (12:36):
I was a stupid man instead of Superman. I'm just
flying with no cape with a pair of socks, and
that's it.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
Stupid man.

Speaker 6 (12:43):
And the headband that I like to wear, my goat
headband that I like to wear.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
A bit stupid man, stupid man. A couple of phone
calls in here before we take a break. Johnny in Kentucky,
Hi Johnny, what's on your mind today?

Speaker 9 (12:55):
Hey?

Speaker 10 (12:56):
Ben Patrick Show. I tried to get on the say
say you first time a long long long time.

Speaker 9 (13:02):
Really just wanted to call today my birthday. If I
can't get you, guys, give me a sign, a little
happy birthday song and another shout out to my birthday
bro Marvin, good brother, good brother dead, thank you for
put Marvin on. Congratulations sellers for the Emmy Award nine.
And I do got a story real quick. I'm making fast, I.

Speaker 10 (13:21):
Promises, so I call it every year on my birthday.
Oh can hear me?

Speaker 3 (13:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (13:28):
All right?

Speaker 10 (13:28):
Calling every year on my birthday twenty sixteen, eighty fourteenth.
Mrio was feeling it for two days. Finally got through.
I called the time fully got through super hype. Mario
enterest puts me on hold, comes back, bangs the line
on me, so thanks changing the time. I'm forgiving him.
I'm here now. Thank you, love the show.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
Fellas, Thank you Johnny.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
How about a birthday greeting Johnny birthday? Thanks talking to you, Johnny,
giving you a shout out more? Yeah, Marvin says to
me one day, He goes, uh, hey, you know, I

(14:10):
don't want people to think there's a we have a
Rooney rule here. I go, what are you talking about?
He goes, I don't know. It feels like some people
on social media saying we have a Rooney rule. I go, no,
you earn this? Oh absolutely?

Speaker 8 (14:24):
Oh Dan went woke and.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Whoa.

Speaker 11 (14:28):
I was like, I was back here. I was a
BRG for like three years before I got.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Out here, and then I got mad. I'm like, no, yeah,
you're so valuable for this show. Like, no, it's not
the d none of that stuff there.

Speaker 3 (14:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
Marvin says that. I go, no, you're I said, you
tell me you're joking. You go, yeah, yeah, I'm joking.
I like, you know you got the job because you
were the right person.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
For the job.

Speaker 8 (14:55):
Oh, I didn't call myself d I Oh I know
I earned it.

Speaker 3 (14:57):
Okay, good. I never want you to think that.

Speaker 12 (15:00):
Never I mean it helps that your Dan's nephew. But anyway,
you're my brownie, James. Yeah, be nice.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
Yeah, all right, let me take a break. We're gonna
head to Augusta. We'll talk to Randall. Chamblee sounds like
something you drink. What are you drinking? Are you drinking
the chambla? Yes, I am. He should come out with
his own wine. How's the Chamblee twenty twenty two? Oh,
it's delish, all right? And then Brent Musburger will join

(15:34):
us top of next hour. We're back after this Dan
Patrick show.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
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 13 (15:49):
Hey, Steve Covino and I'm Rich David and together we're
Covino and Rich on Fox Sports Radio.

Speaker 14 (15:55):
You could catch us weekdays from five to seven pm
Eastern two to four Pacific on Fox Sports d and
of course the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 13 (16:02):
Why should you listen to Covino and Rich.

Speaker 14 (16:04):
We talk about everything life, sports, relationships, what's going on
in the world.

Speaker 13 (16:08):
We have a lot of fun talking about the stories
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culture stories that well other shows don't seem to have
the time to discuss.

Speaker 14 (16:16):
And the fact that we've been friends for the last
twenty years and still work together. I mean that says something.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
Right, So check us out.

Speaker 13 (16:22):
We like to get you involved too, take your phone calls,
chop it up.

Speaker 14 (16:26):
As they say, I'd say, the most interactive show on
Fox Sports Radio, maybe the most interactive show on planetar.

Speaker 13 (16:31):
Be sure to check out Covino and Rich live on
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social media that's Covino and Rich.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
Love watching Gulf Central live from use at the Ryder
Cup or a major, the Masters, and then I'm always
watching Brandal Shambili because chances are he's going to say
something to piss somebody off.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
He's really really good at that.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
But I watched yesterday, Randall, I don't think you upset
anybody yesterday.

Speaker 3 (17:05):
What's going on? You're going soft on us?

Speaker 5 (17:08):
I don't know. I kind of had an off day.
I guess. Yeah, I don't know that I've pissed anybody
off this whole week. Dan, I'm on great behavior.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
Yeah, I don't like that I brought this up.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
When you see certain guys like Freddie Couples is sixty
five and he shoots a one under, but you know
the familiarity there.

Speaker 3 (17:27):
He's not going to hit it where everybody hits it.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
But as Payne Stewart once said to me, our game
is about missus where we miss and being able to
get up and down as opposed to wear the average
golfer misses.

Speaker 3 (17:39):
But that local knowledge.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
How much does that play in with Freddie, you know,
being up there at least hanging in on the leaderboard.

Speaker 5 (17:47):
Yeah, I think in a huge way. I mean, there
are a lot of things that I think helped the
elderly out Augusta National. The fairways there are fifty five
yards wide. Yesterday was just an ideal day for scoring,
It wasn't I mean, yeah, the course in Spots was firm,
like fifteen. But it was a goldilocks day, you know.
It was, it was pretty warm, wind wasn't blowing. And

(18:10):
then Freddy's just he's an unbelievably good golfer, and he's
aged so well because the swing is long and it's
languid and it's loose. It's kind of crazy, you know,
if you think about it. Yesterday yesterday was really a
crazy day, sneaky, one of the crazier days. I think
I've seen you. And he had a guy that won
twice last year, shooting ninety. You had a guy on
Social Security that shot seventy one. And when we talk

(18:33):
about somebody relieving themselves or going into Raysed Creek, I
should say normally it's because they hit a shot in there,
not because they went in there to relieve themselves, like
the US amateur Chap did yesterday. He said, though I'll
give him a lot of credit. He said it was
the largest amount of clause he got all week. And
then Rory with the double boge's coming back.

Speaker 2 (18:53):
So he's not in trouble, is he? Because you got
to be careful with your demeanor at Agusta. Certainly the
page do.

Speaker 5 (19:00):
What about the golfers, I'm sure that got The committee
wasn't too happy with him. He said he forgot to
go to the bathroom. I don't know how one does that,
but you know, you have to be. I guess judicious.
There was a porter potty on the thirteenth tee. I
guess he forgot. And anyway, you know, what are you
gonna do? What are you gonna do when you playing
with it? What you gotta go? You gotta go. But

(19:21):
Ray's creek And then what else? What else happened crazy yesterday?

Speaker 2 (19:27):
Well Rory on fifteen and like I was telling people
that that looked like a perfect shot. His his second
shot in it goes right over the stick. Now it's
on the back. Now it's tricky because it can be
it borders on that's unbelievable or oh my god. And
then Nance said right away it's gone because it got

(19:48):
to that certain point it had a little bit of momentum.
And then Jim says, it's gone. It's in the water.

Speaker 5 (19:53):
Yeah, I mean after it didn't check that first bounce,
he knew it was gone. You know, the players that
had hit that shot concern servatively or good, I mean
it checked the first bounce, or they just were really careful,
like Scotti. Scheffer hit it back there and he was
really careful. He landed on the on the fringe. He
left it. Really it's hard to believe it, but it's
a chip shot where you've got to be conservative and

(20:14):
as firm as that green is, they all knew it.
It was such a head shot. I mean, Rory, you know,
I'm I would imagine you know better than me. But
pulling for Rory, and almost everybody in the world of
golf pulls for Rory is maybe it's a kin to you.
Tell me, if there's a decent analogy, I may use
it to deny. Would it be like being a Buffalo
Bills fan? You know, they they're awesome, right, and they

(20:39):
just can't quite win the big game. And for the
last ten years, Rory's been there all the time, and
then he makes these blunders, these head scratchers in major championships.
You know, he's so inconsistent in majors on the one hand,
and on the other he's pretty damn consistent, and you
just can't quite figure him out.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
Well, Rich, the great host of the program, says, and
you got a little bit frosty, I think when he
said we might look at this and say, Rory lost
the tournament with that double bow git fifteen and double
bow git seventeen, And then you kind of fired back
at him So why do you think Rory is still

(21:19):
in this thing?

Speaker 5 (21:20):
Because he's playing great. I mean, right up until the
blunder at fifteen, he could have been seven under par
pretty easily, and he was four under par, and he
had really kind of gotten nothing out of the round.
He hit so many good shots and not capitalized on them.
He played great coming in here, and Rory tends to
play his best golf when he's kind of out of it,

(21:42):
and he's not out of it. I maintain that the
lead is really Scotti Scheffler. You know, that's the person
you got to beat. No disrespect to Justin Rose. It's
hard to sustain that level of golf that he played
yesterday for four days. He just made a bow get
the fifth. He's hit some of the worst shots I've
seen somebody hit who's leading a golf tournament. Early in
around number two fourth old par three pins up front,

(22:05):
he laid the sod over his approach shot fifty yards
shore the green. I've never seen anybody do that. And
he got up and down for par, so he kind
of smoking mirrors and then he blogging five. So my
point is he's four back of Scotti Schiffer. Well, you
don't think Rory can make up four shots over three days.
And if I'm Rory, I'm sitting there thinking I got
to go out and get twelve hundred par over the
next four days and that should do it. So No,

(22:26):
I don't think he shot himself out of it, but
he made pretty much all the mistakes he could make yesterday.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
How does Augusta keep this so the scores don't get
out of hand? When you see Deshambo hitting at three
hundred and fifty yards and then you got a short
iron into a part five Rory with that and as
you said, you can blast it there if you miss
a fair way. That's saying a lot about your driving
ability or lack thereof. But what does Augusta do continue

(22:57):
to do to keep it in a certain number if
that's important to them.

Speaker 5 (23:01):
Well, the golf course has a lot of lenks to it.
You know that Augusta, more than any other golf course
I think in the country, has managed to sort of
keep up with the technological and I would say bzique
changes in the game of golf. The scoring average yesterday
was seventy three point four. Last year was seventy three
point nine. I mean you go back forty years, that's
kind of what the scoring average was, so they kept

(23:24):
in step. The greens are firm. They're the most undulating,
difficult greens in the game of golf. There's plenty of
trouble to wreak havoc out there.

Speaker 6 (23:32):
So the.

Speaker 5 (23:35):
Difficult part of Gustin National is to go around there
not to have some huge blunder because if you make
a mistake, you make it double, you make a triple,
and eventually the winner is the guy who just doesn't
make a double bogie for the week. I mean, with
few exceptions. And that's why Scotti Shiffler is so unique.
You know, what makes Scotty great is not any one thing.
It's like what makes any great athlete. It's not any

(23:56):
one thing. It's just a number of things. He's long,
he's straight, great irons, great chipper, and he's very judicious.
He's very methodical about how he plays the game, and
much in the tiger Woods or Jack Nicholas Bain.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
But Wndersey or has he graduated in now he's one
of the great golfers of all time.

Speaker 5 (24:15):
Oh gosh, you know he's he got to get into
rarefied air. They are five, six, seven major championships, twenty
five thirty thirty five, forty wins. I mean he's he's
a five year run away from, you know, having that
sort of moniker attached to him. I mean, this is
what they look like, though, Dan on the way to

(24:38):
being called that. They look like this.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
Yeah, And I'm always careful because you see these guys
and they're like unbelievable.

Speaker 3 (24:45):
Then all of a sudden, you go, where did that
guy go?

Speaker 5 (24:47):
Right right? It happened with Jordan speak Yes, where did
that guy go? It happened with Justin Thomas. He's like,
where did that guy go? Dustin Johnson? Where did that
guy go? John Romps extent right now? And it's really
hard to sustain that. And the reason I think we're
inclined to say Scottie Scheffler is going to be less
inclined to have those big valleys is because he's not

(25:12):
a swing tinkerer. He doesn't think that there's something better
next door or somebody knows something, and he's got such
a well balanced family life. I just can't see him
jumping to live I can't see him jumping to swing teachers.
I can't see him trying to transform his body and
getting injured and all of those things. You know, those

(25:34):
are sort of life existential hurdles. I don't think he'll
be susceptible to.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
He's Randall Shambley Golf Channel leads studio analyst and you
can watch Live for the Masters. After the round is concluded,
you look at the live guys and I wondered about coming,
you know, playing that style of golf in that environment
and then dialing it up to play in this and
John Rahm. You know, I think he played pretty well.

Speaker 5 (26:00):
Durrell.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
I think he had a couple of bad holes. Deshambo
I watched him, but the difference between Deshambo and John
Rahm going from Live to Augusta was what yesterday.

Speaker 5 (26:12):
I feel like John ram fills extra pressure in major championships.
You know, he's been criticized for being sort of a
turncoat because he had critical remarks about Live initially and
said he had never leave the tour than he did,
so he's been a little critical. He goes over there,
he plays well, and then he comes and plays poorly
in the major championships. So I almost feel like there's

(26:33):
a lot of pressure on him to perform and Bryson.
On the other hand, I feel like I feel like
he uses live events to prepare for major championships. He
doesn't really seem to be in him. You know. You
go look and it's not like he's not lighting them up.
You know, this is a guy won the US Open
last year, almost won three of the four major championships,
and he hasn't won a live event this year, and

(26:54):
live is nowhere near the competition that he would face
the major championships. But like, he really gets up for majors.
He's got no pressure on him. It's like the oposit
He freeze it up and gets after it.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
I think he's great to watch, but it feels like
he's he'll take on anybody. Like he probably says I'm
the best golfer in the world. He probably I don't
care what Scotty Scheffler does. I'm still better than him.
Like that confidence he exudes it, yeah, I mean does.

Speaker 5 (27:21):
It's really fun to watch him. You know, he plays
the game with such audacity, such he's like a gambler.
On the one hand, he's like John Daly, you know,
in that he he goes after everything. But on the
other hand, he's like Ben Hogan now, but you couldn't
find two more incooncourse figures. You know, he's he's relentless

(27:41):
in his pursuit of perfection. But then when he gets
on the golf course he plays with absolute reckless abandon.
He swings at every single pitch as hard as he can.
He couldn't be more different than Scotty Scheffler in the
way he plays the game. But the preparation you got
to tip your cap for it. He's you know, he's
out there well after dark a lot of nights. When

(28:02):
we're doing life for him, we just turn around and
there's Bryson on the range getting after it.

Speaker 2 (28:05):
I was amazed watching your coverage last night. It's eight o'clock.
He's been done for three hours or you know, two
and a half hours. He's out there hammering drives. And
you said there's no more daylight here.

Speaker 3 (28:19):
I think they have.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
Do they have lights on the driving range there for him?
Because he was the only guy who looked like he
was out there.

Speaker 5 (28:25):
You know, it's funny. I didn't turn around to look,
but he was. He was lit like there were lights
out there. I don't know that he needs lights because
he's got the track man or the Quadji's squad right there.
So he just hits and then looks down and that
he doesn't need it. And you know it's it's dinner
time and it's bedtime.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
But can you hit too many balls when you're out there?

Speaker 5 (28:48):
Yes, every other player in this field would say yes
to that question, but not him. You know, there's a
there's a there's a ball count going for the week
and almost everybody. It's pretty pretty cool to watch. The
first year I can remember there's a ball count. There's
a there's a group of datus you know, statisticians that
count the balls of every player out there. Data Golf.

Speaker 3 (29:08):
It's a good follow up on the driving range.

Speaker 5 (29:10):
Yeah, yeah, Dada Golf does this. So I looked at
it yesterday and it had everybody listed and you know,
the most balls to the lease balls hit and you
go over here to the lease balls hits, and it's
all the guys that are playing the best. They're not
they got it. They're not looking for it.

Speaker 1 (29:24):
They got it.

Speaker 5 (29:24):
And then you know these statisticians, they're brilliant. They do
a correlation to where the fewest balls correlates to how
well they're playing coming into the week. The most balls
correlates to the guys that are playing except for Bryson,
you know, And and he's out there hitting thousands of
balls over the course of the week. You'd think you'd
be sore, You'd think you'd be tired all of these things.

(29:46):
You don't want a major championship, But he does it
every dad gum day. You know, as far as I
can tell, he he doesn't have kids, he doesn't have
a wife, he doesn't have a girlfriend. It's just you know,
with those golf balls, and he's like Hogan. This is
something Ben Hogan would be doing.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
Do you hold out any hope of Tiger's return, and
if so, what will he look like?

Speaker 5 (30:10):
You know, watching I don't know if you you probably
watched some of the TGL It was kind of cool
to watch and Tiger was swinging great in that thing.
And I have had all the hope he was going
to come back and play some good golf this year.
Let's hope. I mean, he's going to be like this
year's probably gone, so it'll be fifty before we see
him again. But as we've seen with Freddy this week,
you know, and as we saw with Phil Mickelson a

(30:31):
few years ago. These guys can still play some great
golf in their fifties. Tigers ball speed. When I was
watching him in the TGL this year, Dan was it
was almost it was close to one hundred and eighty
miles an hour, and he was pushing off that right foot,
which you know got mangled in that last accident. So
you know, I won't I won't say no, but it's

(30:51):
really far fetched, you know.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
At this point, I'll leave you with this. I did
a story on Byron Nelson. So when he was alive,
he went down to his ranch and he couldn't swing
the club anymore. You know, he was a lot older,
but he wanted to hold the golf club. And so
we're out on the ranch and uh Hogan was still alive,

(31:13):
and I said to uh Byron, I said, do you
think you could call Ben Hogan and I could do
a feature We were doing Legends of the PGA Tour.

Speaker 3 (31:25):
And he looked at me.

Speaker 2 (31:25):
He goes, oh, no, no, And I said, but I
just you know, I guess he didn't live very far
from Byron. And I'm thinking, hey, if Byron would call
Ben Hogan, maybe Ben Hogan would do a sit down
interview with. But Byron looked at me and he's one
of the nice He's a gentleman. He was one of
the nicest people. And he just gave me this look

(31:47):
like that might be the dumbest question I've heard. I
nobody messes. Nobody messes with Ben, nobody wants to call him.

Speaker 5 (31:56):
I commend you for the ass. Gary Player famously called
him sometime, you know, after he'd want a couple of
majors and said, you know, I'm having problems with this
or that in my game. And Ben Hogan said, whose
clubs do you play? Gary? And he said, well, I'm
playing Slazenger And he said, oh, he said, what don't
you call mister Slazenger and asked him he was a

(32:18):
hard ass. I loves you to interview him and' id
love to see if you could get him to laugh
and open up because he was He was a tough
character to crack.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
And people are still looking at his swing as the
holding is the greatest, is the greatest golf swing ever.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
Now I would put Sam Snead up there.

Speaker 5 (32:36):
Too, Yeah, I mean, look Sam Steed.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
Athleticism, athleticism. Sam Snead, even when he was in his
seventies yeah.

Speaker 5 (32:44):
Yeah, there was a sort of a lyrical charm to
Sam sneed swing. You know, folks see, but with Hogan,
it had everything. It had powered, had the geometry, it
had the artistry. It was like he was Mikhail Berushnikoff.
You know, It's like you just couldn't believe somebody could
swing with golf club that good. Nobody today comes close
to swing on golf clothes as Ben Hogan.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
Nobody.

Speaker 5 (33:02):
He didn't have track, man, he didn't have a video.
I don't know how he did it, Dan, I don't
know how.

Speaker 3 (33:07):
You think it's the greatest golf swing ever.

Speaker 5 (33:10):
Yeah, A Tiger two thousand is the is the closest thing,
in my opinion, you know, that's a that's a dead heat.
I think Hogan gets him in the end. But because
you know, Tiger had every asset of the game. But
from a from a if you said who could you
who would you most like to swing golf? Good Lord
Ben Hogan? Yeah, I don't believe.

Speaker 2 (33:30):
I look at Hogan like Leonardo da Vinci, so ahead
of his time and what he did, and Hogan did
that to the golf swing.

Speaker 5 (33:39):
And yeah, yeah, you know there's an issue you can
probably find this, you go back and you look. You know,
Hogan famously won the fifty US Open after that accident,
and he tied with I'm not mistaken, Lloyd Mangram, who
had won the forty six years opener George Fozia, right,
two phenomenal golfers, And you go watch them tee off
on the first whole the playoffs, and you know, George hits,

(34:02):
Lloyd Mangram hits, and then Hogan hits. And if you
just were watching the video of those three golfers who
are all tied in the US Open, you would think,
comparatively speaking, and I don't mean this disparagingly, you would
think the first two were drunks at the driving range.
And then because the symmetry, the movement, the grace, the power,

(34:23):
every movement had a purpose in hogan swing. It's the
most beautiful thing in the history of golf, no question
about that in my mind.

Speaker 3 (34:31):
Played ice today.

Speaker 5 (34:33):
I don't know, trying to piss somebody off, Okay, I
don't want to disappointed for the week.

Speaker 15 (34:38):
Dan, I don't know, take a shot at Nicholson. That's
gotten too easy. Does he ever come up and say
something to you? Did he come up and say something
to you.

Speaker 5 (34:50):
Well, you know, we have mutual friends, good friends. His
kind of best friends are kind of my good friends.
And we have a time or two talked about getting
the g other and having a you know, a powwow.
It hadn't happened yet. I like Phil, you know, I
like I miss his golf. I think he's a smart guy,
and I think if he were setting across from me,

(35:10):
we would have a good natured back and forth. I
don't think he's bitter. I don't think he holds grudges,
but you know, I miss his golf. I wish you
were back here playing the tour. I wish he hadn't.

Speaker 3 (35:20):
Left, Yeah, because he was going to be Arnie.

Speaker 5 (35:22):
He was going to be wasn't And I'll tell you this,
he would be setting in that lead chair doing commentary
killing it now is. He'd be making forty fifty million
dollars a year and he I think he'd be great
in the book. He'd beat a Ryder Cup captain. Yeah,
I know, entertaining us and all that. Yeah, So I
do golf misses him.

Speaker 3 (35:39):
I think, Thank you, Brandal, have great weekend.

Speaker 5 (35:42):
Thank you too. Always a pleasure to be on the show.

Speaker 2 (35:44):
Randal Shambley Golf Channel leads studio analyst. Yeah, I was
told by a source that Phil was going to take
over for Faldo, but he wanted to play in the majors,
so this would before he went to live and it
just never materialized. All right, Well, take a break, phone
calls coming up, Brent Musburger coming up, top of the hour.

Speaker 1 (36:06):
Back after this, be sure to catch the live edition
of The Dan Patrick Show weekdays at nine am Eastern
six am Pacific on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (36:17):
The Dan Patrick Show headed to Green Bay Drafts. At
the Draft with their friends from Miller like fifty years
still iconic. It's the original Miller lit, the top pick
for beer lovers.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
All right.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
When you think of Augusta, Augusta's the star year and
in year out, doesn't matter who's playing, it's still Augusta.
All the other majors they rotate different venues, Augusta is Augusta.

Speaker 3 (36:44):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
And you look forward to seeing, you know, I mean
there's other courses where you go Saint Andrew's, you know,
it's interesting, and Pebble Beach is you know, obviously great.
There's a lot of courses that are wonderful. But Augusta,
you know he exactly what it is because you can
turn on a golf event and go where are they playing.

(37:06):
You don't do that with Augusta. But other sports, when
you think of the venue, like Madison Square gardens, that
venue is the important part of it. You're not playing
the Knicks, you're playing in the garden, or you're not
playing against Saint John's you're playing in the garden. You're
not playing against the Rangers, You're playing in the garden.
Fenway is iconic that when you look at that, you

(37:28):
know exactly.

Speaker 3 (37:29):
Where you are.

Speaker 2 (37:30):
And I encourage you to go to Fenway because once
you walk in and you look at that green monster,
you're going to think the same thing that everybody else does. Damn,
I think I could hit one out here, but that
one is one that stands out Lambeau because of where
it is in a neighborhood and the history there. And

(37:55):
it was no frills first time I went there. You're
sitting on benches. I don't know if they upgraded, but
I think the press box and maybe some sweets there.

Speaker 3 (38:04):
Notre Dame.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
Notre Dame's another one they did add to Notre Dame.
But if you're thinking about the Cowboys with their first
stadium with the hole in the roof, oh no, see
anything else where the venue is more important than the
actual sport being played there.

Speaker 4 (38:24):
Yes, Paul, growing up watching the Rose Bowl as a
college football fan, the teams were interchangeable. The Rose Bowl
and the pomp and circumstance around it, that great shot
when the sun was going down. The venue is a star.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
I love the Rose Bowl because and where it's situated,
where you know, it's kind of in a neighborhood where
you're kind of driving down all of a sudden, boom,
there's the Rose Bowl, and it's just there's something about
it being on the sidelines there. Went to see the
Rose Bowl with Michigan one year and it was just awesome.
So that would be up there.

Speaker 8 (38:58):
Yeah, Marvin, speaking of Michigan, what about the Big House?

Speaker 3 (39:02):
Yeah, but I don't know if it's.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
I think it's about Michigan football. I don't know if
it's hey, we're playing in the Big House, it's you're
playing Michigan.

Speaker 11 (39:14):
Yes, I feel the same way about Lambeau. The Packers
are just as important as Lambeau.

Speaker 3 (39:19):
Yeah, Okay, I'll buy that.

Speaker 4 (39:21):
Yeah, Paul, I think the Big House in Michigan was
that in the seventies and eighties, and then other college
football programs caught up in number of seats in the building.

Speaker 2 (39:29):
Well, the Buckeyes with the horseshoe is iconic, but it's
still playing. It's Ohio State football there the Coliseum. The
Coliseum is way too big. When you watch a USC game,
it's just way too big, so you don't have that intimacy.
And it was built for the Olympics, yes, Ton Wimbledon, where.

Speaker 6 (39:49):
It's more the event or the venue as opposed to
specific tennis players in at center court.

Speaker 3 (39:53):
Yeah, yeah, I think so.

Speaker 2 (39:55):
You know when you see that burned out grass, you know,
late in the event, and it's like, yep, I'm trying
to think any other venue that comes to mind.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 7 (40:07):
What's crazy about the Colosseum is that it's gigantic and
it still has thirty thousand less seats than the Big House.

Speaker 2 (40:13):
I thought that the Colosseum had ninety two thousand. I
thought it was like seventy something. I might be wrong, Okay,
well I could be wrong. I thought that was like
ninety two thousand. The Big House is over one hundred.
Big House is like, yeah, like one almost one. Yeah,
Tennessee Neel and I think they're over a hunding. How

(40:34):
many stadiums are over one hundred thousand? Yes, pauly See.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
And I went to the Michigan game years ago and
we were walking up. It was my second time there,
his first, where it's kind of recessed into the ground.
So from the outside you're like, that's it. It's not
as big, and then you get inside it's actually better inside.

Speaker 14 (40:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:50):
A lot of stadiums are built down, so when when
you go in it, you're like, it doesn't look that large,
But when you're in then you realize the enormous.

Speaker 1 (41:00):
Yes.

Speaker 6 (41:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (41:00):
When you're driving on the road, you just kind of
see like, oh, there's a stadium over there. You see
the big m and you're like oh okay, and then yeah,
you got to kind of walk down into it.

Speaker 3 (41:08):
You're like, dang, this place is gigantic. Yeah more Oh.

Speaker 11 (41:12):
I was making the motion like you're going down all
the stadiums. Okay, alright, I was getting excited. Come on,
I thought you were doing a Ja Morant grenade.

Speaker 2 (41:22):
Not this time, you know, what you had, Shaq and
Kenny and Charles who talked about the uh A celebration
of Ja Morant. It seems like that's more important than
winning games, you know, his celebration.

Speaker 3 (41:36):
Hey, I got another one.

Speaker 2 (41:38):
Gotta put the gun down now, I got a grenade.
Hall of Famer Brent Mussburger joined. Just coming up in
ten minutes, final hour,
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