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September 30, 2025 7 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
All right, six thirty nine. It's the Andy Everage Show
on the ticket. They're in the top of the sixth
in New York Yankees a one nothing lead on Volpi's
home run and Boston's got one on and one out
and they're in the top of the sixth. As I
said there, all right. When teams win big football games,

(00:22):
for some reason, it has been a tradition over the
years for the fans, especially the students, to storm the
field and it's not safe, and especially it's not safe
for the visiting players who are trying to get back
to their locker room without being harassed or have something
thrown on them or get hit in the head or
something like that. Keep your helmet on, please. But the

(00:43):
other home tradition is, especially in this situation, is for
the fans to tear down the goalpost, to take them
down to the local river and throw them in the pond.
All miss has come up with a potential solution that
I think has lost suit written all over it, because
somebody may get seriously injured with this. But apparently they

(01:06):
have attached to the goal post some kind of an
electrical device that basically turns the goal post into an
electric fence. So if you jump on the goalpost, you're
gonna get shocked. And guess what, if you're touching the
guy that gets touching and touching the goal post, you're

(01:27):
going to get shocked too.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
That is awesome and hilarious. Oh, I mean those things
are expensive to replace.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
For one, Yeah, it's like one hundred thousand dollars or something,
I think for a goal post.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
Something like that. You know, hey, if they want to
tear it down, that's fine. You know they're gonna be like, hey.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
We're going to go to the local frat and take
up a collection to replace the thing.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
Yeah, why did my college tuition at ole Miss go
up an extra one hundred and two hundred dollars?

Speaker 1 (01:56):
Wow, we need new goal posts.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
We need new goal post I I I get it.
I know it's a thing, and I'm gonna sound curmudgeon
old guy, but it's getting annoying to the point to
where it seems like everybody is doing it, Like I
think it was. What was it the other day when
Illinois Illinois beat USC and they're ranked twenty third in

(02:19):
the nation and US was twenty first or something like that,
and they went and stormed the field. I'm like, why, Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
You beat USC It's a big ten game. Get used
to it. You're gonna play them a lot in the future. Yeah, congratulate,
like I understand.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Last year Vanderbilt they beat Alabama, all right, yeah cool.
I don't remember what Alabama was ranked, but that's a
big time they were. But that's a big time you know.
Get if utsa down the road beats a top twenty
five team or top twenty team.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Yeah, I can't tell you. The city of San Antonio
is guarding those goalposts with their life. We're not tearing
down goalposts in the Alamo.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
Dunald Well, but there's no way to get it out
of the album good.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
They can find a way, but it's it's not like
you're gonna go up in the stands. You got to
go out one of the doors. But that's just ridiculous.
So yeah, but anyway, ole Miss decided that that was
I saw them on I saw a video of it today,
but I remember them talking about it when I was watching.
I guess I was watching a little bit of the

(03:25):
preview gift show on Saturday of the They were at
ole Miss and they were showing the new gadgets that
they had there.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
Yeah, well again I props to them. That's fine. You
know you talked about it. What was it yesterday? The
uh the Virginia game where that the student runs up
to the Florida State quarterback and legit just double birds
and right in front of him. And it's like that
that's the unnecessary part, the potential of you don't know what,

(03:56):
whether they're underage or of legal age, you you know,
partake in adult liquid that somebody doesn't stop people from
the bar taking.

Speaker 1 (04:06):
Well, they're vendor.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
But that's what I'm saying is you know, if one
particular student decides to do that and gets a little
bit more courage, maybe they get up it in a
player's face and then you have an altercation. So it's
like I get that the fans want to be a
part of it, but I just we don't see it
in the professionals, and I don't understand why it's an

(04:30):
accepted thing when it's in college. That's my biggest well.

Speaker 1 (04:35):
It's it's you know, the student body tearing down the
golf post, celebrating at the town square, throw the golf
posts in the river. You know that stuff has been
going on for a long time, and it shouldn't go
on at all because, I mean, those goal posts are
heavy and you can hit in the head with it.
I don't care how many people are carrying it, but
it just kind of seems to be a ride of
passage when teams win games from time to time, and

(04:59):
especially big that they weren't expected to win.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Like if you want to rush the field, okay, that's fine,
but I forgot who it was. But when we were
talking about like court storming, Okay, the PA announcers, you know, indicates, hey, wait,
like two minutes, give us two minutes so we can
get all the players off the field or if nothing else,
get the opponents off the field and then you can

(05:23):
go celebrate.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
Well, it's when the Celtics and Lakers in their series
back in the eighties, when Boston won Game six or seven,
whatever it was in Boston Garden. Kareem's trying to get
off the court and fans are harassing him and yelling
obscenities in his face, and he punched him out.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Yeah, now you.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Can't do that. Now you get you get charged with assault. Now.
But here's the thing too, if the drunk college fan
that nobody recognizes gets in the face of a player,
there's nothing that's going to happen to him. But if
the player who's got a jersey on and a helmet
on and pads on and we know exactly who he is,
does something, he is going to be identified and he's

(06:01):
going to be in more trouble trying to get away
from the problem that the fans correct created in the
first place.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
Well, I mean you bring that up, I'm thinking about
it as far as in baseball. Think about baseball. When
Hank Aaron broke the home run record and you see
the video of legit fans almost too.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
There was two fans that ran on the field and
they had planned it for a year, and they knew
they were going to go to jail, and they knew
they were going to pay a ten thousand dollars fine
for trespassing. But guess what, every time you see that
home run, those two guys are in the video. Yeah,
because you unless they unless they figure out a way
to ceg them out in the future, that's just not
gonna that. They're going to be there forever. And that's
why they did it. And they probably made money off

(06:42):
the fact that they got to to escort Hank Aaron
around the bases.

Speaker 2 (06:46):
Yeah, so I I in the day and age of
trying to protect the players and protect the fans and
everybody being safe. My biggest thing is again just I
understand that it's in the moment, but wait, like two minutes,
what's what's two more minutes?

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Wait? But then you're then what's the point going on
the field? I mean, you've got to do it as
soon as the buzzer goes off. That's the way they
want to do it, all right, one more segment to go.
We wrap up the day next and six forty six
on the ticket
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