Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are listening to the Dan Patrick Show on Fox
Sports Radio.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Final Hour on this Tuesday, Dan and the Dan Nets
Dan Patrick Show come on in stay awhile voice is
a little damage to here, still battling whatever. I had
a couple of weeks ago in Las Vegas. But we
try join because every day is the Super Bowl eight
seven seven three DP show email address Dpadanpatrick dot com,
(00:25):
Twitter handle at tpshow. The calendars, the autograph calendars all gone.
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(00:48):
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the Day is always brought to you by Panini America,
the official trading cards of the program. Steve Young will
join us. Coming up in a little bit. Super Bowl
odds as of today rams Seahawks Packers bills, then the
Eagles and the Patriots have the same odds, followed by
(01:12):
the Broncos. I thought that the Patriots might move up
a little bit. They've got the Bills coming up this
next game in New England, Packers sneaking up there. Packers
have made a couple of statement wins, but it's Rams
and Seahawks followed by the Packers pull question Dilan in
for Seaton today, where are we gonna go with final
(01:35):
hour of the program.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
Well, we didn't get to it last hour, Dan, but
I threw an up Jackson Dart should start sliding and
getting out of bounds. Yes or no? Unsurprisingly, ninety say yes.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Here's Jackson Dart on not changing his style of play.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
Well, it sounds like a broken record, Jackson, just asking
you about the hits and taking them and protecting yourself
and things like that.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
Is there anything you would have done different on that one?
Speaker 4 (02:02):
No, look like I understand the question, but like this
is like this is football, Like I'm gonna get hit
if I'm in the pocket or outside the pocket, Like
it's I don't I feel like I've played this way
my whole entire life. This shouldn't be like any shock
or anybody. If you've followed along with my career and
(02:23):
I'm we're not playing like we're not playing soccer out here,
like you're gonna get hit.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
Things happen, it's part of the game.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Yeah, we'll talk to Steve Young about this because with
Jackson dark you can't control if you get hit in
the pocket, but you can control if you're outside the pocket,
and if you can get out of bounds, then get
out of bounds. I do like his style. I think
it's an aggressive style. But I've seen too many quarterbacks
think they can be a tough guy, be a football guy,
(02:51):
and they could take on these defensive players, and you can't.
I don't care who it is. Now. You do have
Cam Newton, you have Josh Allen. Those guys unicorns because
they're as big as the guys who are hitting them.
You're seeing Laura Jackson run less than he used to,
and I think that's a wise decision, Yes, Marvin.
Speaker 5 (03:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (03:10):
In the NFL you see a lot of You see
a lot of rookie quarterbacks try to unlearn what they've
been doing their entire careers, right, holding onto the ball
too long, running not running out of bounds. So you
have to teach them don't do this like you have
to unlearn.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
Then and that's the hard part, because you get away
with this in college. You don't get away with this
in the NFL. Devin mccordy, who played at a really
high level for the Patriots, joined us last hour and
he said, Hey, these guys are so much faster. This
is not college. It's so much like you don't have
that step that you think you have. And you have
(03:48):
a scouting report who is going to go out of bounds?
Who's going to take on contact here? And you can
tell with body language if a quarterback is going to
get out of bounds or not. And when Jackson Dart
was running, you could tell he was not going to
get out of bounds. Eight seven to seven three DP
show email address dpat Danpatrick dot com, Twitter handle at
DP show. So the Patriots have now won ten in
(04:11):
a row. They've got Buffalo at Baltimore at the Jets,
and then they host Miami. They can end up with
fourteen wins this year?
Speaker 5 (04:22):
Is that right?
Speaker 2 (04:24):
Fourteen wins probably have home field advantage throughout and those
superboards would probably change just a little bit there. All righty,
A couple of phone calls in here, Moe in Arizona, Hi, Mo,
what's on your mind today.
Speaker 7 (04:40):
Born and Bennett.
Speaker 5 (04:42):
Funny.
Speaker 7 (04:43):
I actually took my wife to Hooters for Mother's Day.
One day went presently well. I had to stare at
wind up staring at all the TVs until you figured out, like, hey,
you don't even watch hockey, what are you doing? Called
in about Lane kipping. Yeah, I do believe he did
talk to God. God told him how much the contract
was and then he made a decision.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
Thank you moo.
Speaker 8 (05:06):
Yeah, Paul, I think this Lane Kiffin contract thing is
a bit of a flawed topic. He's going to make
a little bit more at LSU and compared to Ole
miss it's the money they're going to support to build
the program to boy get the players. That's where the
money's involved.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Yeah, when they said that the salary was about the same,
it's really about the infrastructure at LSU and LSU football.
Nate in La Hi, Nate, what's on your mind?
Speaker 9 (05:34):
Just a point on a lane tiff view points on
lane tiffy thing. Definitely taking advantage of a system that
as in college football. But I think for Alas they
needed to look at an Wikipedia page and see like
history repeats itself. Right, he wanted to coach the game.
But then he did the same thing with Florida Atlantic
to go I'm sorry to USC or Alabama to go
(05:57):
at Florida Atlantic. They wouldn't let him play in the playoffs.
And I just think it's a cautionary tale.
Speaker 5 (06:04):
Y let's see him.
Speaker 9 (06:05):
They're not gonna I'm gonna eat him Alaga.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
He doesn't produce, he's going to be successful. I truly
believe that Lane will be successful. And there's a lot
of talent there, and he knows how to coach offense.
And we've seen LSU with those offenses, what Joe Burrow
had when they won a national title. And if you
find your quarterback, you're going to find your wide receivers there.
(06:28):
There's a whole lot of talent there. Lane Kiffin had
his press conference yesterday and he talked about he wanted
to stay at Old Miss to coach in the playoffs.
Speaker 10 (06:39):
Leaving Old Miss was extremely difficult, and in that we
tried every single thing possible to continue to coach the
team through the playoffs. I mean, continue jos the players.
In the end, that was their decision and we totally.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
Respect that, Okay, And once again, we don't know those conversation,
but if it's true. There was a report that he
was trying to leverage that he was going to take
coaches with him if they didn't let him coach in
the playoffs. Then he told the athletic director, I'm going
to I'm going to take my staff with me, or
(07:16):
I'm and or I'm going to take players with me
to try to get them to acquiesce. And they said no.
And as long as Old Miss isn't punished because they
lost their coach, that's the only thing here. The College
Football Selection Committee, they they may lower Old Miss because
(07:37):
without your coach. We've seen them do this when teams
don't have their quarterbacks, and that is a big loss
to lose Lane Kiffin. As you get ready for the playoffs,
let's play the Lane Kiffin game. Oh maybe it's the
last Lane Kiffin game that will play for twenty twenty five.
Speaker 8 (07:54):
DA we played three Lane Kiffin games so far this year.
This is the last one here.
Speaker 5 (07:58):
It is.
Speaker 11 (08:01):
Four years from now, Lane Kiffen will be.
Speaker 8 (08:04):
There's four options at LSU, at another college coaching in
the NFL working in the media.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Who would like to go first? Marvin, I'm going to
start with you.
Speaker 6 (08:17):
He will be at college game day.
Speaker 2 (08:20):
Wow. Oh, so maybe he takes coach Saban's job after
he talked to God. Yep, he talked, he succeeds coach Saban. Dylan,
I four years, he's at LSU.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Still, it's his final stop.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Oh final coaching stop.
Speaker 3 (08:38):
Final stop. Where else would you want to be? Then,
he said to himself.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
But he said that before at other places. Todd, what
do you think?
Speaker 12 (08:46):
I agree with Dylan? He did six years at all Miss.
I can't see why he wouldn't through at least four.
Speaker 3 (08:50):
With the Tigers.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
I'm going to say Alabama. Oh specific, yeah, I'm going
to Alabama.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
There will be an opening there soon.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
We don't know that. No, no, you can't say that.
I can't spread these things allegedly. This is in the
Gambling podcast, where you can say whatever you want to.
Speaker 3 (09:14):
Okay, there may be an opening there and then there.
Speaker 2 (09:16):
There could be there could be yeah. No, uh, Paulie,
what are you going with?
Speaker 8 (09:22):
I think I'm gonna say LSU. Even though the bar
is high, he's taking over a wounded animal. I think
in four years from now he'll still be there.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
Todd has reminded me on numerous occasions. He has mock
headlines for Lane Kiffin, So Todd, go ahead.
Speaker 12 (09:38):
Let's roll them out. Bat and Scrooge Kiffen puts Coal
in former team stockings for little holiday one.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Alright, rebel with a cause.
Speaker 12 (09:47):
Lane shouldn't lament teaming up with Tigers, keeping the lane thing,
the lane thing, No surprise, Lane left swing and ol
Miss Oxford tries to match up for it, but to
no avail.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
I like, you know, got some base hits here, Missississi.
Speaker 12 (10:02):
Coach handles exit poorly and immaturely, Missississy.
Speaker 2 (10:07):
Calling him Mississi running from rebels.
Speaker 12 (10:11):
Lane daunts to death Valley Uh three more quick ones
a grove situation. Can Kiffin's former team survive loss of Lane?
Speaker 2 (10:19):
Saban eight?
Speaker 12 (10:20):
So did Nick nudge Lane to Louisiana? And the last
one is Lane in the ass? Oh misthought they had.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
A long term coach, but they didn't.
Speaker 11 (10:28):
I was wondering if you're going to go there?
Speaker 2 (10:30):
Thank you to uh Terry in South Dakota. Hi, Terry,
what's on your mind today?
Speaker 13 (10:37):
Hey? First time caller, forty five years a football coach.
I just kind of was wondering your thoughts. You know,
there's lots of discussion about the state of college football,
you know, uh, the movement of players, the movement of coaches, nil,
all that, And I'm wondering what your thoughts are. Do
(11:00):
you think that there's no structure, really no rules because
the NC Double A has been sued and lost so
many times that they're a little bit afraid to put
in anything with any teeth that might set up something
(11:20):
more definite where you know, you can't enter the portal
if your team is still playing, you can't leave and
go to another school, at least without some sort of
a penalty, you know, because they don't really need another lawsuit.
Do you think that has anything to do with their
(11:42):
lack of ability to have a solid structure.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
I think it's too big for them. I think the
NC Double A should probably do secondary sports that I
think college basketball and college football should have maybe an
oversight committee. You should have a commissioner. You should have
somebody who is the authoritarian and will rule on these things.
You know, it's rare when you get an investigation with
(12:08):
a school. It's usually you know Dan Wetzel when he
was a Yahoo and he'd be like, ah, I got
this deep dive, and then all of a sudden, you know,
you'd have an investigation. You don't have that anymore. And
if college football is going to be the minor leagues
for professional football, then maybe have the same kind of
(12:28):
structure there. And let's get rid of the student athlete
that was coined back in the mid seventies. All the
student athletes and all it is always about the student athlete.
It's not. It's not about the student athlete. And I
think it's business. This is all business. You go to
college and if you want to get a degree, you
(12:50):
can get a degree. But you might go to college
and say, I'm this is one of my majoring in
football to go play in the NFL. And you have
every right to do that because we don't monitor these
other kids who go to college and go, I want
to be an electrical engineer, and then all of a sudden,
they don't become an electrical engineer and you're like, no,
(13:10):
that was wasted. Okay, yeah, I guess you could have
gone to college and gotten a degree. These players, they
don't care. A lot of these players don't care. They're there.
It's a means to an end that I have to
go to class, and they're going to go into the NFL.
They all think they have a chance.
Speaker 8 (13:29):
Yeah, Paully, the NCAA is like an organizing body that
has no authority over the colleges. Yeah, it's not even
close to what Roger Goodell does. Roger Goodell works for
the owners, but he works for the best for the
entire league, to make as much money as possible and
to provide for the fans.
Speaker 11 (13:45):
The nca doesn't do that.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
Allen in California, Hi, Allen, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 13 (13:53):
Hey?
Speaker 14 (13:53):
Dan five eight and a Traeger forged two thirty first time,
long time, a long, long time. And I remember when
I started listening to you guys that I had like
two subwolfers in my car, and now I have like
two child seats. So but look, with Army and Navy
coming up, I went to the game last year with
my son, and.
Speaker 5 (14:11):
I did it actually because of you guys.
Speaker 14 (14:13):
You know, I think it must have been five or
six years ago, at least you spent some time on
the show talking about that game, how it's rooting all
these traditions and the history there. And after you did that,
I spent a couple of weeks learning about the game,
and I decided I just have to go and see it.
Fast forward to last year and I took my nine
year old son and it was one hundred and twenty
fifth anniversary of the matchup. My brother was graduated from
(14:34):
the Naval Academy and we watched an underdog Navy team
fall off a win and it was such a cool
and special experience. And we only did it because you
talked about it one day, so you know, I wanted
to say thanks. And you know, with all these little
comments here and there about your eventual retirement, I wanted
to call and express some gratitude, you know, thank you
and the whole team for being with so many of
us in the car. You know, obviously I'm in California
(14:55):
for the drive to work for so long, the stories,
the guests, everything else.
Speaker 5 (15:00):
I'm not alone.
Speaker 14 (15:00):
I just say it's a huge part of our day,
So to you and FRITZYC and Paulie. Marvin has been
a great addition to the team.
Speaker 5 (15:06):
Thank you.
Speaker 9 (15:06):
You know you're a big part of our day.
Speaker 5 (15:08):
We enjoy it all and just really appreciate you guys.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
Thank you Allan, if you get the opportunity go to
West Point and that is that's a unique experience when
Army plays Navy in Philadelphia or if they you know,
wherever they hold it Boltemore, it is great. But West Point,
there's so much history there and it's just different. It's
a different feel. You could spend hours there just walking around.
(15:35):
And when those cadets come in, Man, you'll never feel
prouder as an American. You will not wearing good hands
with those you know, cadets at Army, Navy, Air Force.
We'll take a break. The great Steve Young will join
us get his thoughts on a couple of things, including
advice to Jackson Dart and how would he feel if
(15:56):
the coach at his alma mater, BYU would have to
leave to take the Penn State job during the season.
We're back after this.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
Be sure to catch the live edition of The Dan
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Speaker 5 (16:16):
Hey, It's Rob Parker and Calvin Washington from The Odd
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Speaker 7 (16:21):
And in addition to hearing us live weeknights from seven
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That's right. You can now watch the Odd Couple live
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All you gotta do search Odd Couple FSR on YouTube
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Speaker 2 (16:46):
I think he's the best NFL analyst in America. He's
a Hall of Famer. He's Steve Young, three time super
Bowl champ. Back on the program. I thought about you
with Byu, with your head coach and perhaps maybe trual
interest with Penn State. So let me ask you the
question that old miss Lsu have had to deal with.
(17:07):
How would you feel if you're a head coach? What
happened to take a job while the seasons still going on?
Speaker 5 (17:15):
Well, first of all, something's really wrong that allows for
this kind of madness, you know, So we got to
fix that. I don't know, you know, I don't know
how to fix it. They got to fix that. It's insane.
It would be super painful. I mean, there's a there's
a symbiotic kind of beautiful thing going on between you know,
(17:37):
everything by U and Klane and what he's doing, and
there's like and I think he has the love for
it too, So the pain would be a pretty extreme
I suspect that everything's being done on the other side
to try to make sure that everything gets you know
that he stays. But I guess in some ways, Dan,
it's cool that you know b Yu. Then there's the
(17:58):
Big twelve and obviously super competitive and looks like they
can do something. Really you know consistently pretty well that
the Penn State wants our coach. I mean, that's a
that's a cool thing too in some ways, So I mean,
but don't be confused. It would be like ripping. They'd
have to rip him. They're gonna have to rip him
from our bloody hands. You know. That's the kind of
(18:19):
I think about it.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
And I also thought about you last night, knowing we
were going to have you on when Jackson darts running
the ball and he decides that he's not going to
get out of bounds a little earlier, and his philosophy
or his mindset is, Hey, I'm going to continue to
do this. I'm a football player. It's not soccer. What
would you say to Jackson Dart Well?
Speaker 5 (18:42):
Some of it. I think as a quarterback, you have
to give your teammates a sense that you're in for
it all and you know, and you got to you
got you're not the toughest guy on the team because
you know, there's always someone dupper. But everyone needs to
trust that you are going to be good for it physically, mentally, emotionally,
(19:03):
and that's what in the locker room is vital. So
I think he's trying to build that kind of you know,
and that's smart, but it's also it could be stupid,
like you have to be able to be able to
say that and be that and then yet protect yourself
and be you know, you don't have to ram into
the linebackers for no reason. You don't have to look
(19:24):
for an extra yard when it doesn't matter, and you know,
get out of balance. And everyone on the team would say, Jackson,
you appreciate your toughness. We appreciate the way that you
want to, you know, represent but you got to stop
and and and you got to stay healthy and as
a pro player, you really need to learn how to
do that. I love when emm it's meant to just
(19:44):
say no when the journey is over and then get
to the ground and be done and move on. And
I think that that's something he's going to have to learn. Well.
He tries to let everybody know I'm tough, and you
know there's a there's a a fine line that he
needs to find.
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Well, you can show your t oftenness by being out
there for seventeen regular season games. That that's really difficult
to do, just to stay healthy for seventeen games. I
don't need to add to the degree of difficulty here.
Speaker 5 (20:12):
But he's young, he's trying to set he wants to
be around for a long time. And so in the
locker room, because you've got to understand, Dan, everybody in
the locker room has to go and ram into somebody.
And to get that inspiration and have the quarterback be
somebody that's willing to put himself at risk is somehow
inspiring in some ways. So it's like it's again, I
(20:35):
get you and and being healthy is the most important thing.
And I think that that's why I say Jackson can
be healthy for seventeen weeks, take care of himself, be smart,
and give off the representation he's, you know, a tough
guy and to be counted on and trusted. So he's
just young. He's trying to figure it out, and he's
(20:55):
being a little you know, over zealous, and he needs
to to figure out how to avoid stupidity, Like stupidity
is just you're right, the locker room will they don't
like stupid either. So it's like you gotta be you
gotta have it all.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
Okay, But take me back when you're beginning your career
in San Francisco, you want to prove that you're a
tough guy. But part of this was learning how to
go through your progressions right. So you didn't run as
often as you did. So I don't know how many
designed runs you had with San Francisco.
Speaker 5 (21:33):
Not a lot, I mean, but that's what Bill watsh
I mean, he's I'd scramble around and run for a
first down or even a touchdown, and I go the sidelines.
He goes, what are you doing? But I'm like, why,
I'm scoring. I'm scoring. He goes, yeah, but noh knows
where to going, Like, you know, that's fine right now
(21:53):
for once, but what are we gonna do like for
the rest of the And so it's really the same.
It's the same thing that Jackson's got to figure out
is the game is sophisticated passing from the pocket. That's quarterback.
Now today's quarterback. You have to threat the line of
scrimmage with your feet and you have to go get
those free yards. They're everywhere, and you know, I wish
(22:13):
I played today. I keep telling that you that over
and overs like it would be awesome. But again, you've
got to develop the sophistication in the pocket and yet
move the football, yet win games yet you know, so
this transition into the pro game and becoming a player
that people can count on as a quarterback, it's not
for the you know, faint of heart, and it's got
(22:35):
all kinds of angles on it, and you're bringing up
the really important ones.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Do you think you would rush for ten thousand yards
in today's NFL.
Speaker 5 (22:46):
Over a career. No, no, no, because I think the
game again, it's not like it's not a numbers, it's
not a totality. You're not gonna you know, you're not
gonna run for one hundred and twenty yards a game.
It's like, that's not the game today. The game is
still a sophisticated passing from the pocket. But again those
spitting out and even Justin Herberts realized that think about
(23:09):
the players that you know. Joe Burrow realizes that you
have to especially in the biggest games, your legs are
going to go win the football game, especially because it's
a closers league today. It's not you know, you're in
the third quarter of the ten point lead, like things
are looking pretty good. It's like, no, you got people
come back from that in two minutes in today's game.
(23:30):
So it's like the NBA, you have to be a
closer and in that way, that's with your legs. And
so it's not ten thousand yards, it's really vital, important
difference making two thousand, five, three thousand yards, you know
what I mean, it's not the numbers aren't going to
be like that.
Speaker 2 (23:47):
Steve Young, Hall of Famer and former ESPN NFL analyst,
What do you see when you look at Drake May.
Speaker 5 (23:57):
Someone who gets it? I mean as a quarterback, That's
the best way I could say it. The game makes
sense to him. Twenty two people on a field running around, crazy, chaotic.
His brain obviously slows down instead of speeds up. The
more crazy it gets.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
It's ill teachable to slow the brain down down.
Speaker 5 (24:20):
That's a genetic It's like you think about it, Dan,
the normal human reaction is you know, tension pressure. You know,
your heartbeat goes up, your brain diminishes, it gets focused more.
But you know, you don't have the you don't have
(24:41):
the presence. Think about when you're under people are screaming
at you. Like the pressure diminishes you. It makes you,
it focuses you, but it diminishes you. You don't you're
not as present. It's not like you're in your backyard
hanging around playing ball. But Patrick Mahomes for whatever reason,
that's that's how his body reacts to it. And I
(25:02):
think there is to be really good in the game,
that has to be a genetic blessing, so that as
things getting worse and crazier, your brain somehow says, ah, no,
we're good and uh and there's a piece to it
and uh. And I think that people always say, well, what
makes a great quarterback? I think that's probably the number
(25:23):
number one or number one a number one being a
condition that you have to have and I don't I
don't think you learn it. I think you can get
better at it. I think things can calm down over time.
But I think it's just a genetic reaction to kind
of the the thing that's happened in front of you.
And that's just the pressure that happened, you know, the
physical reaction.
Speaker 2 (25:43):
Well, Gretzky, you would talk about how the game slowed down. Yeah,
and you're talking about hockey, but like, how do you
how do you slow down hockey where you're taking And
he talked about taking snapshots like it'd be like a
quick picture here, quick picture here, quick picture here, and
it allowed him to kind of understand, you know, the situation.
Speaker 5 (26:04):
I love that that makes sense to me. That's what
That's what it feels like. And I think that that's why.
That's why the when people, you know, when you're forced
to retire at a young age, no matter what it is,
even if Tom Brady's forty five, you so have half
your life left, you just you miss it because it's
something that is intuitive to you. It's like, you know
how hard it is, you know how difficult it is
(26:27):
to be good at it or even great at it,
and yet like it all makes sense, you know, and
like nothing else in your life can make as much sense.
Like I you know, the day you retire, the next
day you wake up, you're like, what are you good at? Nothing?
You know?
Speaker 7 (26:41):
But what do you what?
Speaker 5 (26:41):
Are You're great at? This thing? That is amazing and
So that's the Wayne Gretzky what you just said about
him is that's that's the beauty of when it all
kind of slows down and makes sense to you, despite
how insane it all is, is the coolest thing in
the world. That's the best.
Speaker 2 (26:58):
How good are your Niners?
Speaker 5 (27:02):
I mean, how well are they coached? I mean they
lose all their stars on defense, especially, they have people
out most of the season on offense. And you know,
also Mac Jones is a guy that everybody wants in
the league, just like sam Donold was look at. You know,
it's like, let's just tip our cap to the coaching
number one, and let's tip our cap to the culture
(27:23):
of the place, locker room leadership. Obviously, they've got guys
in the room that pull things together. And so how
good are they good enough to threaten and make people?
Really you can talk about a tough out and they're
going to be in the playoffs. I think you can
almost count on that. And so who wants to play
(27:44):
the forty nine ers? I don't know nobody. So you know,
that's that's for where they where they are with the
personnel and what's happened, it's pretty remarkable. I think we've
got to tip our cap to to really everyone an
organization right now to be nine or four.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
Is Christian diccaffrey a Hall of Famer already?
Speaker 5 (28:03):
It feels like it. I mean, he's a He's a
guy that's Roger Craig. Roger Craig is the first guy
that I can remember that kind of took the role
of running back and then expanded it. And that's what
Christian now in the game today. How many times I
talk you about the world changes and how open the
field is and how you know the innovative minds are
(28:24):
the ones that dominate today. That you know, those innovative
minds led by Kyle, Sean McVay, you know, Danny Reid
and you know Sean Payton went first ones to kind
of really do it all. You need players to go
fulfill that innovation, that that new space and that is
not an iback running downhill. It's a fact that can
(28:46):
do kind of everything and line up everywhere and every
week come up with something a little new. The coach
has come up, you know, that has figured out that
you can go and you know perform like yeah, hand
it to me that oh yeah, you want to You
need somebody do that. I got you. Uh, And that's
why to me, the game changes all of things about
(29:08):
people that change the game, and that when you write
the book, you can't write the book without their name
in it. And uh. And you can't write the book
about the game today and running back without Christian mccaffany.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
There was a moment in the Steelers Bills game where
Aaron Rodgers reacted and it looked like the receiver went
the wrong way and it was supposed to be you know,
maybe an in cut and he but Tony Romo pointed
it out. He's like, oh, the receiver went the because
Aaron's reaction. How often does that happen or did that
(29:40):
happen to you where you might change the play or
there's a subtle nuance with it. You got to pick
it up a signal or a word and they end
up running the wrong route.
Speaker 5 (29:51):
Well, first of all, communication out to receivers, especially in audible,
especially you know that was at a home game, so
that's a little different. But you know you're in a
dome and you I remember, yeah, I'd signal at that
Jerry Wright signal and he'd be like what what And
You're like, you know, he give a signal and he's like,
I don't have to understand, you know, and like he
said off and then I throw in the ball even
(30:14):
like what we're supposed to do, and I'm like, I
don't know, but I could just tell where you're going.
So I think the thing that happens on the field
very rarely does a guy turn right instead of left,
you know what I mean. Like, but the subtlety of
the route, especially and especially when you're coming back the
ball protecting a quarterback from interceptions because he as you
(30:37):
throw a football, you need people that understand that you
need to be the first one to it despite the
fact that the route might say, the line might say
a certain thing. It's all those kind of small, you know, adjustments,
and that's why I you know, the West Coast offense
really started this process, and now I think Peyton Manning
(30:58):
really extended it by communication with the receivers that made
it so that no matter what happened, there was an
adjustment that both knew and subtleties. And now the game
is very much about that. And that's why Aaron Rodgers
a third Blurrish for so long. So I think Aaron
expects himself to be perfect and he expects everyone around
(31:18):
to be perfect, and so some of that reaction is
pretty natural.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
Which quarterbacks under the most pressure to win a Super
Bowl this year?
Speaker 5 (31:30):
Well, in some ways, you know, Lamar Jackson because and
Josh Allen, I don't know. Wow, okay, already we have
a list. Uh, I'd say Josh Allen just because Lamar's like,
they're not they're not they're not full full force yet.
So but the Bills and where they've been and how
they how they've been really representing the NFL in excellence
(31:53):
for a while. Josh is special. He does things in
the game is he's perfect for He's the prototype Patrick
And so yeah, I don't pressure is a funny thing
because I don't think he feels that necessarily. Just feels
like that's the next mountain to climb, and we got
(32:14):
it and I'm climbing it. And that's why how you
It's not like I have this weight on me and
I can't wake up in the morning and I feel like,
you know, it's more I can't wait to get to
that mountain that I haven't been able to climb, and
I'm i'm I'm I'm going to get there. This time,
I'm gonna I'm gonna be at the top. I'm gonna
take the picture, you know, the top of Everest with
the flag, the camera in by four minutes of Fame.
(32:37):
It's happening. And so I think I would say Josh
is the one that probably feels that the most.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
Matthew Stafford a dinosaur. Is this the last of the
pocket passer?
Speaker 5 (32:51):
Yeah? Yes. And way I say that is there's you
have to threaten the line of scrimmage. There's too many
free arcs. Matthew learned the game in a more sophisticated era,
and so he takes advantage of that. He learned it
when no one was open. The middle of the field
was patrolled, and you know the death zone, you know,
(33:13):
plats weren't open all the time. People could hit the
quarterback however they wanted to do. He learned, and so
he's been taking advantage. He's he's abusing, that's it. He's
abusing the game today because and that's why Tom Brady
wanted to play forever. That's why Peyton wanted to play forever.
That's why Drew Brees wanted to play forever. You know,
because they knew that they had a sophistication that they
(33:34):
could take advantage of it. And so yes, Matthew is
the last of those guys that are around, and I
was Aaron Rodgers. Those two of the last that have
been around in a more sophisticated era. And now you know,
but Aaron I was still the landscript. So it's not
the same. But the dinosaur is. I'm somebody that's going
to throw the ball so you know, spectacularly from the pocket.
(33:54):
But I just can't get those yards. It'll it'll eat
you up over time. You can't. You might you might
be good, you might be great if you can't win
Super Bowls and and and dominate. If you're going to
start in twenty twenty five as a rookie and not
somebody that can look at those yards. It's just it's
it's too hard. You've made the degree of difficulty like
an Olympic dive. Like it's it's you know, it's what
(34:17):
the fight? What's the hard dive? I can't remember how
they do it? What? Uh?
Speaker 2 (34:24):
What's I look in your office and it doesn't seem.
Speaker 5 (34:28):
Well that's Christmas time. Let me what will we work?
It's like Santa Santa's workshop. Just let it, let it happen.
Why you have to start getting personal and like trying
to dig at me, man, I'm just trying to get
stuff done.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
I'm just looking at you know. There's no football related
stuff there. I didn't know you're what's right off my head?
Speaker 5 (34:46):
What what is this record?
Speaker 2 (34:48):
Okay, got a helmet, that's one thing.
Speaker 5 (34:51):
Well, all it's a museum. You want me to be
like an you're trying to dine a store me. I
see what you're saying. It's like we want a museum.
Am So we come in in a wax figure like, No,
my house is not. If you walk through my house,
you would not know I played. I'm not going to
burden my kids with that. Like you know, this is
a that's a helmet signed by all the Hall of Famers.
(35:12):
Seems kind of special. So we'll just wing that one out.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
But yeah, but when when your daughters, when they have
boyfriends who come over, those dudes want to see what
you're what you got here? Let's not kid anybody, Well
I got the shotgun for that. I got I got
that up on the wall. Okay, all right, okay, so
you got your little shot there Okay, all right, you
(35:37):
got a little helmet there. Well, that's that's great. Congratulations
on a wonderful career. Thank you, thank you for what
I could have been Dodgers.
Speaker 5 (35:46):
I mean that's where I really yeah.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
I mean, well you know my research staff they had
you playing for the Dodgers. What I could have been, bro,
I could have been, It could have been to before Tommy,
thanks for joining us as always, you're the best buddy.
That is Steve Young all of famer. I think he's
(36:09):
the best analyst covering the NFL. Always great to have
him on. We'll take a break. We're back after this.
Last call for phone calls? What we learn? What's in
store tomorrow? Right after this.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
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 (36:32):
Last call for phone calls? What we learn? What's in
store tomorrow? Hoping this voice sounds a little better tomorrow,
little choppy Today, College football rankings. Tonight we'll talk to
Chris Fowler, the voice of college football. He'll join us
on the program tomorrow. Uh Tony in California, Hi, Tony,
(36:53):
what's on your mind today?
Speaker 15 (36:57):
Hey, how's it going?
Speaker 5 (36:58):
Guys?
Speaker 2 (36:58):
What's up?
Speaker 5 (36:59):
Hey?
Speaker 15 (36:59):
Aytn Hey, So just give it some perspective on Louisiana.
So I grew up in San Diego and then I
went to college in Louisiana. Different kind of place, Lane Kiffin. Total,
no brainer to go there, man. Louisiana's it's the place
to be man as far as cars college football goes.
(37:20):
But I went there. He kind of got to layoff
the guy for the God quote. Man, I went there
from San Diego. I know looking back that God brought
me there to get saved and also introduced me to
the religion of college football.
Speaker 2 (37:32):
Okay, you're welcome, play made. Thank you to Than's pay off. Yeah,
we know. LSU's a great place. Nobody's denied that. Once again.
He's gonna win there. It may win a national championship.
It's just the mess of leading up to it. That's
all he can go. He can make as much money
(37:55):
as he wants. I couldn't care less, but you know,
there's some casualties left in his wake. That's all. Dave
in San Diego, Hi, Dave, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 13 (38:05):
You're doing?
Speaker 5 (38:06):
Thank you?
Speaker 16 (38:06):
For taking my call. Then I just want to make
one quick point that I haven't heard anybody really talk about.
And if you're a coach, changing jobs in Kiffen's is
an example, but it works with all these guys. The
big thing is recruiting, right, So one of the things
if you're getting kids in from the portal or the
(38:30):
high school kids and all this commitment time and they
make these dates. No one's talking about the fact that
most universities right now are getting close to the end
of their semester the holiday time they come back. If
you can't get guys enrolled transfers in time, then you're
kind of out of luck in terms of recruiting. So
(38:51):
these coaches sometimes it doesn't time out when they want
to take a job. But their whole point is that
they got to get the best as players they can,
not to mention, put their staff together.
Speaker 1 (39:06):
There's going to be in this.
Speaker 2 (39:08):
Yeah we got, Yeah, we got that. We've talked about that.
I understand college football needs an overhaul. You just need
you need to look at the bigger picture here. What
makes the most sense for the future of college football.
You know, it's like with college basketball. Hey, let's expand it, Okay,
how much more do you expansion do you have? With
(39:28):
the march madness where it dilutes. It used to mean
something when you've made the tournament. Now if you don't
make the tournament, it's like, what's wrong with you? And
then you know you have Jim Beheim He goes, they
should expand it to ninety six. Well, yeah, you're saying
that from a coach's perspective, But I still think and
I'm okay, if you want to have more, you know,
(39:51):
play in games or first round games. I mean, they
don't even acknowledge them as real games, you know, the
way they label them. You know, the first four, it's
just these are the first games. You know you're kind
of in, but you're not really in.
Speaker 6 (40:05):
Yes, Mark, nothing more annoying than Team sixty nine coach
getting upset. You had four months to make the tournament.
He won seventeen games, euro upset.
Speaker 2 (40:15):
Paulie. This day in sports History.
Speaker 11 (40:17):
Got a couple for you.
Speaker 8 (40:17):
In nineteen sixty three, MLB got rid of oversized catchers,
missed mits. I found some pictures.
Speaker 11 (40:23):
They used to be like eight inches bigger than they
are now.
Speaker 8 (40:26):
Dan Marino nineteen eighty four with the Dolphins through his
fortieth touchdown pass of the season.
Speaker 11 (40:30):
That was a record at the time.
Speaker 8 (40:31):
And let's see Clyde Drexler of your Rockets became the
fourth NBA player to reach two thousand career steals.
Speaker 11 (40:38):
How about that for Clyde.
Speaker 2 (40:42):
On this date in nineteen ninety five, Patrick Waugh is
in a blowout and he allowed nine goals in a
loss to the Range or the Red Wings here. Mario
Tromblay was the Canadians coach and Roua demanded the trade.
He ended up with the Avalanche and on a Stanley
Cup that same season, so they left him in like,
(41:03):
we're gonna teach you a lesson, mister Todd, what did
you learn if he was a currents Old missplayer.
Speaker 12 (41:08):
Devin mccordy would vote to keep Layane Kippen as head
coach throughout the playoffs for the Rebels.
Speaker 2 (41:12):
Dylan, what'd you learn today?
Speaker 3 (41:14):
It's too soon to hat Drake Man the Patriots.
Speaker 6 (41:17):
Marvin, you think Joe Burrows the best passer in the league?
Speaker 11 (41:20):
Paul Steve Young has no memorabilia in his office.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
Thanks for joining us. We'll talk to you tomorrow. Dan
Patrick Show