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January 14, 2025 • 33 mins

College Football podcast with Inside intel on if Deion Sanders is going to take the Dallas Cowboys head coaching job and leave the Colorado Buffaloes. George Wrighster also answers the question why so few college coaches are making or rumored to make the jump with so many NFL openings. Is there NIL sand transfer portal stability headed to college football?

Notre Dame is getting $20 millions to play in the CFB Playoff Final vs Ohi State.and why that means the Fighting Irish will never join the ACC, SEC, Big Ten football conference.

Why can’t Penn State throw to their wide receivers? Is that a Drew Allar, offensive coordinator problem, or a personel problem?

Will Bill Belichick ever coach at North Carolina or will he leave for the Raiders or some other NFL job?

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Today I got intel on whether Dion Sanders to the
Cowboys is a real thing, and we'll talk about why
so few college football coaches are actually getting NFL head
coaching jobs and if this means that nil stability is
on the horizon and it's Chip Kelly a trendsetter, or
will he be back as a headman in college football

(00:23):
after this Ohio State season? And Notre Dame everybody wants
them to join a conference, but after this national championship run,
it is not happening, and I'll tell you why. And
college football coaches want the transfer portal Windels shrunk and
they have voted that and so much more here on
Unafraid Show. Make sure that you like, subscribe, get notifications,

(00:45):
and tell a friend about the show and share.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
Let's get to it. Dion Sanders to the Cowboys.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
Oh yeah, that's been a lot of talk about that
over the last few days. But I believe that that
shows that the Dallas Cowboys are on the no plan plan.
And that's honestly. It's no knock against Dion because Deon Sanders,
I believe is a good coach. The dude has shown
he can win. He has built a program at Colorado
four wins the first year. This year they were in

(01:26):
contention for the College Football Playoffs. But the question is,
is Deon cut out for the pro game? And we'll
answer that question. But I've talked to people around the
Dion circle and these are the same people that told
me he was headed to Colorado before it was even announced,
before the rumors came out, And honestly, they don't believe

(01:47):
at this point in time that there is anything to
it unless and I got this big unless, unless there
is an opportunity to coach sha Door as Shiloh. Now,
Shiloh's going to be the easy one because he's not
going to be a first round pick, not going to
be a second round pick. So at some point in time,
if he Dion got the Dallas Cowboys job, getting Shiloh

(02:09):
is the easy answer, But Sharduor could be a tougher task. Now,
the Cowboys don't have a top ten pick this year
in the NFL draft, so the question is can he
pull a lebron James and bully the NFL into not
drafting Shadeur until he got to make the pick and

(02:31):
to draft his son. Now, the difference between Bronni and
Shadour is Shaudur is going to be a first round pick.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
Bronni. Some people didn't think he was drafted.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
Whatever your thought is, it was a lot easier for
the Lakers to get Bronni than it is going to
be for wherever Dion takes a job, if he did
take an NFL job to get Shador Sanders without a
top five or top ten pick. But the reason why
I said that this that the Dallas Cowboys are on
the no plan plan is because Jerry Jones sat up

(03:04):
there and was like, Mike McCarthy, we love him, he's
our guy.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
There's no reason to let him go.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
But then you wouldn't let him interview for the Bears job,
and now he's out after contract negotiations broke down. So
the question is is this something that Dion Sanders could handle?
And I believe not because as good as Dion Sanders
was as a player, he's shown to be a good

(03:33):
leader of men in college. He strikes me in the
Nicks saving mold of he is a college football coach.
He is not an NFL coach. That's just the truth.
Because think about these rules, right, no slides. If your
money's being with hell if you get an F in

(03:53):
a class or a D in a class, no hoodies
in me, Like there are certain rules that he's trying
to instill to get some discipline in the players at Colorado,
but you don't have that, you know where you get
to be king, judge and jury like you my way
or the highway like you do in college, like you
can in the NFL.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
It just doesn't work that way.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
But then that break beggs to question about the kids
that committed to Colorado, Julie and Lewis, the quarterback who
they handed the keys to and everything else. So how
does that impact everything because he already left Jackson State,
then it would be at Colorado for two years and
then go into the NFL. I honestly would hate that.

(04:37):
And it's not that I hate it for Dion. I
just hate it in general because kids made commitments to Colorado,
They made commitments to Dion Sanders, and then for him
to leave at this point in time would be absolutely whack.
I hate it, But I do understand at the same
time that this is the business of college football and

(04:57):
this is you know what dealing with. But if we
are going to dislike it and knock it when kids
bounce and when kids leave and hop in the transfer
a portal, then we got to keep that same energy
when coaches do it, because coaches are literally the reason
why players started doing it and why they wanted that

(05:18):
same freedom. So it's not that I don't believe that
Dion that Deon Sanders would be an evil man if
he leaves. It just means I dislike the process. I
dislike the commitments being broken, whether it's the whether it's
the players, whether it's the coaches. And there is something
to everybody is trying to find, you know, economic stability,

(05:44):
good working conditions, somewhere that they want to live that's
geographically desirable, someplace that their family can thrive. I understand
all of those things. But that doesn't mean that it
doesn't feel as the young kids say that, it doesn't
mean it doesn't give me the itck, because it definitely
does give me the ick. And Dion Sanders is not
the only coach that has been rumored for an NFL

(06:08):
head coaching job. So there was rumors about Sark down
at Texas being interviewed for jobs. There's rumors of Marcus
Freeman from Notre Dame being interviewed for the Bears job.
But the question is why are so few college coaches
actually making the jump to the NFL when there are

(06:28):
so many openings, And I believe the answer is because
they're not being offered jobs because college football coaches have
not translated well to the NFL. And for every Jim
Harbaugh and Jimmy Johnson's success story, there's a graveyard of
Nick Saban's, Matt Ruhles, Urban Myers, Cliff Kingsbury, Chip Kelly's,

(06:53):
Bobby Petrino's. There's a graveyard of those names for every
success story. So because there's a totally different mentality that
it takes to coach NFL players than it takes to
coach college football players. Because if you're going to coach
college football players, coaches historically have been, like I said

(07:14):
about Dion the judge, the jury, my way or the highway.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
This is my program. Get the hell up out of here.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
I hire who I want, I who I do whatever
I want to do around here.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
I'm the king in the city. Well in the NFL.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Just like you saw with Arver Meyer, if the players
don't want a particular strength coach, he got to get
up out of here, the players make more than the coaches,
so that's a dynamic. It's much like the NBA, where
the players have more power than the coaches do in general,
and in college football, the coaches still have the power

(07:50):
even though that there's nil the transfer portal and everything else,
because there's still limiting factors surrounding the players. And when
you got a coach, let's say a Lincoln mytt Riley,
a Brian Kelly, these dudes still got sixty seventy million
dollars fully guaranteed on their contract. The school has to

(08:11):
acquiesce every single thing that they need to give them
a chance to win. Because them paying out Jimbo Fisher's
seventy million dollars in buyout money, that ain't happening. That
ain't happening. So you gotta find a way to make
the coach win. And you had the rumors about Marcus
Freeman interviewing for the Bears job, and I believe, just

(08:33):
like just like it was with Sark before they ended
up playing in their semifinal game down at Texas, I
believe that these leaks are intentional and trying to be
distractions on teams.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
I do.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
I believe that somebody either invested in their opponents, invested
in either Ohio State or invested in Penn State, or
invested in Ohio, whatever it is. They they wanted those
things to come out because we have seen historically when
coaches names start getting leaked with job opportunities, those teams

(09:11):
don't play well. So if you can get some rumors
and some instability or some doubt surrounding a team, you
are absolutely going to do it. And so I believe
that college football coaches, and this is what I've heard
whispers about as well, is that college football coaches are

(09:31):
actually interviewing in secret that you know how, the Bears
will announce. We interviewed Thomas Brown today, we interviewed Mike.

Speaker 2 (09:41):
McCarthy, that we interviewed whoever. Well, they're not gonna interview.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
They're not gonna put out that they're gonna interview the
college football coaches because it is bad for the college
football coach in terms of recruiting, because if he interviews
and he doesn't get the job, now arrival or somebody
in their conference can recruit against them and say, hey, Yo,
this dude got one foot out the door. Anyway, I'm

(10:07):
staying around here, so why don't you come over here
with me because I'm not going nowhere. Even though that
that may not be the truth, if the right offer
comes up for them, it just hasn't been publicly said.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
And that's a difference.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
But people have wondered if this means with college football
coaches not getting jobs, not ere interviewing that nil and
stability is on the horizon. And the answer to that
is yes, stability and in terms of the transfer portal,

(10:41):
stability and nil was always on the horizon because the
market was always going to correct itself. If if the leadership,
and I'm talking about the head of the NCAA until
there is a College Football Commissioner, which I will be
interviewing for that, they that the leadership, whether it's the

(11:06):
head of the nc double A, whether it is the
head of the conferences, in your Greg Sanki's, your your your,
your Tony Battiti's and the rest of the crew, if
your leadership makes common sense changes every single year and
doesn't try these big sweeping changes, just tweak a little bit,
tweak a little bit, and then in five years you

(11:26):
will actually be in a good place because players are
going to see and I said this from the beginning,
is that the market will correct itself, that players will
start to see, hold up, transferring is not necessarily the
best thing for me, and coaches are starting to see
that stability matters more that just jumping from job to

(11:50):
job because that will either pay more or it's got
a better logo on like those are those advantages are
going to shrink a little bit. We have seen just
this year in the college football playoffs. We've seen SMU
make the playoff, Indiana make the playoff. Did they win
their games, no, but just the fact that you can
see those logos in there Arizona State, now those players,

(12:14):
now those coaches can go out and recruit and say, look,
we're a team that can make the college football Playoff
and have a chance to win a national championship. We
need you here, five star, we need you here. All
you four stars or these three stars that we feel
are misranked, we need you to come here because if
you come here and get developed and build, now you

(12:38):
know what, we can pay you nil money and we're
gonna give you a chance to win a national championship.
And you don't have to sit on the bench at
Penn State. You don't have to sit on the bench
at Ohio State because we know that you're just as
good as those guys, and that's the way it's gonna work.
So you're gonna have more parody, more weird results year
in and year out. And that actually means that college

(13:00):
football is not broken, that it is in a good place.
But one of the trends you saw last year that
you saw it happen with Boston College's head coach, you
saw it happen with Chip Kelly at UCLA was he
left a head coaching job voluntarily and took the job

(13:21):
at Ohio State. Now, I do not believe that Chip
Kelly's a trendsetter because number one, he has been interviewing
or wants to interview for head coaching jobs again. So yes,
he is absolutely wanting to get back in the head
coaching fault. He was in a situation where he wants

(13:43):
a head coaching job, he just didn't want it where
he was at UCLA. And it's a lot and people
are like, well, how could he take that sort of
pay cut? It's a lot easier to go from like
five six million dollars to two million dollars a year
when you all Ala have made close to one hundred
million dollars. If that is going to bring more happiness

(14:05):
and enjoyment to your life and career, you know what,
you will make that that three million dollar sacrifice because
it may only be for one year. Because when you
got that all of that type of money in the bank,
it is a lot easier to make decisions not based
upon money, because now you're like, Okay, where am I
going to be happy? Where's the opportunity at Now? Chip

(14:28):
didn't like his situation at UCLA, And is some of.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
That his fault? Yes, because he created a lot of it.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
He brought the coaches on staff, he recruited the players
he recruited. There wasn't a lot of energy around the program. Now,
is Chip a very good ball coach? Yes, look at
Ohio State's record, look at their offense. But he's a
ball coach and not an extrast coach. And I think
that that's that's gonna leave Chip Kelly in a weird
spot in the world of college football because even when

(14:58):
he was at Oregon, there were a lot of ore
and boosters who weren't happy because he's not a glad hen.
The boosters kind of coach. He's a go out on
the field and get wins type of coach, so he
either has to and he's not a huge recruiter when
it comes to early recruiting of freshman sophomores.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
And this is the game now.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
So if Chip Kelly does get another college football head
coaching job, he either has to hire a general manager
who's going to be doing a lot of this leg
work and hire coaches and buy into a philosophy of
recruiting a different way than he's done it, or it's
not gonna work no matter where he goes. So, like

(15:41):
you know, a strength, a man, strengths flow from the
same well as his weaknesses. So Chip Kelly strength is
a ball coach x'es and o's. He's a good leader,
knows how to you know, handle and manage a locker room,
everything else. But the extras are the difference between winning
and losing in big time college football.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
Now just the truth.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
But speaking of extras, Notre Dame, when I say the
boys got his own money, the boy has got his
own money. So Notre Dame has fully funded their nil
for next year and probably some years after that, depending
on how much they're out there paying with this National

(16:23):
Championship appearance, and for them, there is no reason to
ever join a conference.

Speaker 2 (16:28):
Why would you join a conference? You are Notre Dame.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
You don't have to win an extra game in the
conference championship game. You can literally set your entire schedule,
play whoever you want. You gotta deal with NBC that
pays you damn near the same amount that it pays
other conferences. You are in a conference when it comes
to your non football sports, and you just had the

(16:53):
Big Ten, The ACC, the SEC all try to strong
arm you and threaten you with money and a first
round by in the College Football Playoff about joining a
conference and put that pressure on you. And Notre Dame responded,
and Marcus Freeman responded by making the College Football Playoff championship.

(17:15):
And that's twenty million dollars that they are going to
make from the College Football Playoff already twenty million dollars
just in payouts. Now, you might say, oh, George, that's.

Speaker 2 (17:27):
Only part of a.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
College football athletic department budget. Yes, right, only part of it.
But let's look at how the math works. They already
have their NBC deal and everything else that's paying them
forty forty some million from everything, Right, the Big ten
schools are making apparently in between sixty and one hundred

(17:52):
million over the next few years. Well, Notre Dame already
is making forties of millions plus the NCAA tournament money
that they that they get, and you counter that with
what Ohio State is getting. So Ohio State is making
twenty million dollars from this college football playoff too, But

(18:13):
the difference is is that that money gets split eighteen
ways in the Big Ten. Now, yes, Indiana, Oregon, and
Penn State make up for a lot of that money,
but because they paid for them themselves and contribute something
to the Marylands, the USCS, the UCLAs of the world,

(18:35):
the Minnesota's, and everybody else. But Notre Dame is coming
out on the winning end because they're making more money
than they were already making. And if they can navigate
their schedule year in and year out to eleven wins,
they're going to make the college football playoffs at eleven
and one every single year. So there's going to be

(18:57):
no reason for them to join a It would make
zero sense.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
But now the.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Question is if Notre Dame does win a national championship,
what does that say about their former coach, Brian Kelly,
because this is the same guy who said that Notre
Dame no chance to win a national championship because of
the resources academic restrictions. It will make Brian Kelly look goofy.

(19:29):
Even Notre Dame just making it to the National Championship
makes Notre Dame it look great, and it makes Brian
Kelly look like a liar. I'm talking about a liar,
just about college football because Brian Kelly, look at what
he's doing down at LSU. He went down to LSU
to run away from the difficulties of Notre Dame, and

(19:50):
despite them being a college football blue blood, despite him
playing in the National Championship prior to that, he was like,
they don't have the resources, the academic restrictions are too high.

Speaker 2 (19:59):
You can't win there. I'm going to LSU.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
And then he said, after he got off of that
fake accent, he said.

Speaker 2 (20:06):
Judge me.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Year three at LSU. Well, here's the judgment. Nine to four.
You lost to USC, you lost to Texas A and M,
you lost to Alabama, and you lost to Florida. Three
of those four teams aren't even ranked at the end
of the year, aren't even ranked.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
It would be different.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
If you lost to Texas, Georgia and yeah, yeah, if
you lost to Texas, Georgia and Tennessee, all three teams
that made the College Football Playoff. But no, you lost
to teams that were running around five hundred at Bama,
Florida and USC and Texas and HM didn't finish ranked.

(20:51):
What are we talking about here? So yes, Brian.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Kelly would look goofy.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
He will look like a liar football wise, and he
he is going to be if he were not having
that guaranteed contract down there.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Oh, he would be on the hot.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Seat right now down at LSU. But he's going to
have time to fix it and we'll see if he does.
Speaking of college football coaches, though the college football Coaches
they have voted unanimously to show support for the FBS

(21:29):
that there would be to a proposal that would reduce
college football's transfer window from a from the two windows
in the winter and then in the spring, to a
single ten day period in January to preserve the integrity
of bowl season and put some guardrails on a system
that a lot of coaches say is currently broken.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
And during their.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
Meeting at the twenty twenty five AFCA convention. That's where
all the coaches get together and you know, they get
jobs and talk to each other and everything else. The
coaches supported a move to a single portal window from
January second to January twelfth, and that would start in
the twenty five to twenty six academic year. Now, that

(22:15):
would eliminate the December and the April window for transfer portals.
And now the recommendation goes to the NC DOUBLEA Oversight Committee,
which is ultimately the NC DOUBLEA Division one Council would
need final approval after that, which is far from guarantee.

(22:37):
I understand the sentiment, but this should never be done.
Look at the dates that they proposed, January second through
January twelfth. First of all, a lot of these schools
start like this year, they started January sixth, and I
think last year the school started around January second.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
I'm talking about.

Speaker 1 (22:59):
That's what happened with my kids school and other kids school,
particularly if you're on the quarter system as opposed to
the semester system. So imagine a world where you can
only hop in the transfer portal during a time where
school has already started for at least a week of that,

(23:20):
and now you gotta hop in the transfer portal. Now
it takes time after you hop in the portal to
find a place because you might have to take some visits,
have a couple of days to make a decision, and
then go. Now we're all all the way at the
end of January, and now these kids can't get into
school because there's a significant problem with the calendar. There's

(23:44):
a problem with when college football starts and ends, and
when the transfer portal starts and ends, and when the
academic calendar starts and ends. So the answer to the
question should probably be to move the college football season back.

(24:04):
And when I say back, I mean back to an
earlier start. So instead of starting like next year, what
August twenty third, maybe is the first game. Maybe you
start a week earlier, in the middle of August, or
you start at the beginning of August. Because now that
can get your season over, you can get your bowl

(24:26):
games in and then still end up having a transfer
portal window, and you can back the transfer portal window up.
So it's while people are on break the way when
the act because if we're talking about student athletes, these
students should come first because the other problem that we've

(24:46):
been talking about is when these kids continue to transfer,
a lot of their academic credits are getting lost, they're
not finding the same majors, and they're not graduating. So
and also the other part that we're not thinking about that,
well suck. Excuse me that we are thinking about that.

(25:08):
The coaches who were at the AFCA convention, they're trying
to make it easier on them, when in reality is
coaches continue to leave all year around, and a lot
of them leave after the season is over with. So

(25:28):
that puts significant pressure on the players because now if
my coach leaves, I gotta find a new spot. Like,
for instance, I knew a kid who signed with Washington
State coming out of high school, so excited everything else.
Coach leaves, goes to Wake Forest, and now you're like, oh, wow,

(25:52):
what the hell is supposed to happen to me? The
kid ended up at Wake Forest? But what does that
do to wash into State's recruiting class? What does that
do if the coach was like, ah, I like you
for Washington State, but don't really love you in the
acc at Wake Forest, that's a whole different conversation. And
a lot of kids get stuck in situations like that,

(26:15):
and the coaches, I understand where they want to make
their life easier.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
But for the head coaches.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
And I've said this over and over again, if you're
making two three million dollars or more per year, I
don't want to hear you complaining. I don't You're getting
paid the big bucks to figure it out. You're getting
paid the big bucks to deal with the problems.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
Is it hard?

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Yes, every job has problem. My job got problems. Nurses, firefighters, teachers, dentists.
Everybody's job has problems. And the more money that you make,
the more problems that you get to hand them.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
So we don't want to hear it all. Right, Next
thing up, we got to visit.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
Penn State for a second, because this has been talked
about at nauseum. So Penn State played their college football
semifinal game and did not have a sink against Notre
Dame and didn't have a single solitary wide receiver catch
in the entire game. So there has been a lot

(27:23):
of heaping of praise on Drew Aler. There has been
a lot of negative reaction toward Harrison Wallace, Julian Fleming,
and the rest of the wide receiver corp. And they
are the ones getting to blame. But I am here

(27:45):
to inform you this is a three person problem. This
is Andy kote Nikki, their offensive coordinator. This is his problem,
This is the wide receiver's problem. But even more than
anything else, this is a Drew Aller problem. And Drew Aller,

(28:05):
who we've been told is the second coming of everything.
And I was never a Drew Dollier fan, but I
do believe he got better this season.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
And now I'm like, ooh, I'm intrigued. Until the semi
final game and I was like, ugh, that's the Drew holler.
I remember.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
Now the kid is good, right, He's talented, he's big,
he's strong, and I'm happy he stayed in school because
now he gets a chance to fix those holes in
his game. Drew Aller is a lot more conservative with
the football in general. That's why he does not throw
a lot of interceptions. So he's risk of verse, which

(28:45):
is good in protecting the football. But when you are
throwing the ball to wide receivers sometimes you gotta throw
in tight windows. He's shown that he can do it,
but the willingness to do it is not always there,
and then there is blame the go on Kotenikki, the
offensive coordinator. If Arizona State can throw the ball to

(29:08):
their wide receivers with with the without Tyson with with
Tyson out, who was their leading wide receiver by far,
if they can throw the ball to their whiteouts in
the College Football Playoff, if they can scheme them open
against Texas right against Texas, why can't you against Notre

(29:33):
Dame Penn State. That's the question because there's so much
focus on getting ty Warren the ball, and a lot
of these plays are like one read plays because you
see Drewaller. If Ty Warren's not there on certain plays
or the you know, the the way the play is designed.
If one person is not open, he's chucking it out

(29:55):
of bounds or if there's pressure. Now that's when Drew
Aller is able to make plays and and he dumps
it down to a running back something like that because
he's so much better when the play breaks down. So
this is a problem that Penn State has to get fixed.
You can bring in Jeremiah Smith. You can bring in

(30:15):
USC's wide receivers, Oregon's wide receivers, the best wide receivers
in the country, and until you fix the philosophy, it's
not gonna work until you fix the mentality of the
quarterback and the philosophy of the OC, who I do
believe is a good OC. But remember, everybody has stuff
that they have to fix. I'm a work in progress.

(30:36):
You will work in progress. So this isn't downing them.
This is just the reality of the situation, all right,
Lasting up, What is the point of the Bill Belichick
to the Raiders rumors? Because we've been hearing these time
and time again, and Bill, I'm here to tell you that,

(30:58):
at least for the foreseeable future, Bill Belichick has given
up on the NFL. And there's a lot of people
who are sitting there saying, oh, he gave a middle
finger to the NFL. He's not going. No, the NFL
gave Bill Belichick the middle finger. If he could have
gotten an NFL head coaching job, he would have taken it.

(31:19):
But when that became not a reality and u NC
became a reality, he was like, oh, all right, I'm
in on this new challenge. And I do believe that
Bill Belichick is in on building a college football program.
He's an old man over seventy years old and with

(31:39):
a young, twenty something girlfriend. That means that he's up
for new challenges. The dude is not don't have no
problem or willingness to deal with the youth.

Speaker 2 (31:49):
This is going to invigorate him his soul.

Speaker 1 (31:53):
This is going to make Bill Belichick live longer coaching
at North Carolina because remember Mac Brown said, being around
the players, being around the youthful energy, everything else, that
that's the thing that makes him his life so great.

Speaker 2 (32:08):
It gives him purpose.

Speaker 1 (32:10):
Bill Belichick has a new purpose and going to the
Raiders ain't gonna fulfill that purpose. So let's stop talking
about it. And I know that Tom Brady is running
the show over there and everything else with the Raiders,
but let's just stop. Bill Belichick is going to be
the head coach in North Carolina. He's building a staff,
he's already starting recruiting, and he ain't the type of

(32:32):
guy to just bail in the middle of things, just saying,
but you guys, though I appreciate your time, I appreciate
your energy. Thanks for watching here on the Unafraid Show
College Football piece out, catch you guys later. All right,
you can put this part in the middle because I

(32:53):
forgot to do it a couple of times, so you
can put it in at two different times.

Speaker 2 (32:55):
In the video.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
Hold on, guys, gonna give you a second to like, subscribe,
get notifications, and hop down in there in them comments
and let me know what you're thinking. And you can
put that in twice in the video. Actually, i'll say
it again away it's different. Hey, y'all, I'm gonna give
you a second to pause, So go share the video.

(33:20):
Go share this with somebody that loves college football and
needs to hear this, like you need to hear it.

Speaker 2 (33:29):
I'm gonna record and you got hold on.

Speaker 1 (33:35):
Hold on, I'm gonna give you, guys a second. Hop
down there in the comments, leave a comment, and then
share with a friend this college football content somebody that
needs to hear it and loves college football like you do.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
All right, let's get back to it.
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