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January 11, 2023 61 mins
Welcome to the inaugural edition of Ranking The Purple from the Vikings Entertainment Network. Ranking The Purple is a new showcase of the team's most memorable moments and debating their level of significance throughout Minnesota Vikings history. Host Cy Amundson brought in KFAN's Eric Nordquist and Paul "Meatsauce" Lambert to recant some of the Vikings most unforgettable post season moments. From the "Minneapolis Miracle" to "41-doughnut", the guys give their opinions on some of the most iconic and infamous moments in Vikings history. Tune in and enjoy the beginning of a fun new series.

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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Oh would go good? Go comire? What's up? Viking fans,
Welcome to Ranking the Purple, a brand new show by
the Vikings Entertainment Network where we are going to attempt
to rank anything and everything Minnesota Vikings related. I'm your host,

(00:30):
Siaminson and I am joined in this first ever edition,
a playoff edition of Ranking the Purple by a couple
of friends of mine who I knew would be perfect
for this project. You know them from All Things caf
and I know them as two of my favorite I'm
gonna say, Viking opinionists, Is that a word? Can I

(00:51):
go with a opinionist? Ladies and gentlemen, Eric Nordquist, Paul
Meet Sauce Lambert, Thank you guys for doing the show.
Of course, I'm the wrong guy to ask if that's
a word, so Nordos might kind of go to guy
if a word? If that's if a word is a word? No,
I love this idea. SI, I'm not gonna sure. I
can't be sure that what you have said is completely

(01:14):
within the bounds of the English language, but it doesn't matter.
We're here to talk about our favorite football team, the
ups and downs, ins and outs of it. As the
playoffs lum ahead, so I'm happy to do it. I
love you guys as Sean Saturday. We've talked about that
Saturday's with Sauce. But the moment I knew you guys
would be perfect for a first episode was after the
Buffalo Bill. And let's be real. We could do an

(01:36):
episode about the best moments from this season, of course,
but we're gonna do the playoffs. But we could do
a whole show about just the moments in this season.
But one of those moments, the Buffalo win. I heard
you guys debating Justin Jefferson's catch and where it ranked
all time, and I knew you would fit in perfectly

(01:58):
because to me, none of us are analytical wonks. We
are all just passionate psycho paths who are willing to
tell you about the things that were most and least
important to us. No, I'd agree with that, and beyond
that argument, the argument was whether that win was the
greatest win in Viking's history. And that kind of sparked

(02:20):
the conversation, which it was, well, the Bills win, yes,
now history, so you change course on this or you
didn't change course on it? Because I explained, just common
sense just in lodging dictations. Entire thing that the Minneapolist
miracle in the playoffs, gravity of it, the implications of it,

(02:43):
all of those things that made it the better and
greater victory than a regular season win that just required
a bad fumble in a stupid moment by the Bill's
offense at the goal line. So I think the the
obvious answer is the Minneapoli this miracle. But you know
you live in the regular season. Guys like SI and
I and most of the Vikings fan base, we're thinking

(03:05):
more about the postseason. Sure, but I just don't know
how you I watched that. I don't know why it's
weird that you bring this up, because I watched that
game again this week on the NFL Plus app, which
is great where it just goes play to play to
play to play. The fact that the Minnesota Vikings didn't
they got the touchdown, they missed the extra point, and

(03:28):
then somehow, some way, the Buffalo Bills do not run
the ball with like four minutes left and the Vikings
have one time out. Everything that the Buffalo Bills needed
to do for that thing to happen happen. The fact
that they get that fumble on The one inch line
is that that game is one of the best, the

(03:48):
catch all of it, the miracle is one play, and
of course it helps that Sean Payton was skull chanting
and the whole thing fell apart on him. Anytime you
could see something weird happened to Sean Payton is great.
But it's the Buffalo Bills game and it's not even close.
No one thought the Vikings had win that game. Nobody.
This is a good point to start ranking playoff memories

(04:10):
because obviously we're gonna have to start with the Minnesota
Miracle here, but we should point out a couple of caveats. One,
this is a story despite the lack of Super Bowls,
this is a storied franchise with a really long history.
And if we were to go through every you know,
playoff possibility here while ranking, we'd be here a while.

(04:32):
So I made the decision, since we are all in
our thirties and we were all in our formative years
when we were introduced to Randy Moss, that we should
break this down and do it. This is part one.
We are ranking unforgettable playoff memories. Part one. Let's say
nineteen ninety to current and if we keep going, we

(04:55):
can do a part two and we'll do the Purple
People leaders and the Drew Pearson and all this stuff.
We'll get somebody in their late seventies in here, like
Charch right, We'll get an elderly man to come in
and help me. And so that's caveat number one that
we are going to do kind of the memories, the
unforgettable memories from our lifetime. I think Part two is

(05:17):
if we were the New England Patriots, this could just
be a celebration of victories, right, but we are We're
not the We all talked about this idea on the phone.
We can't just celebrate the good. A big part of
who we are is the terrible things we went through
as well. So this is unforgettable memories. It doesn't necessarily

(05:41):
mean best right. Well, I think you know what's interesting
about this concept when you talk about playoff moments is
you know, think about like Michael Phelps for a second,
Like nobody's talking about the guy that has thirteen silver
and or bronze Olympic medals like he is, you know,
the best of all time. Right. So that's where we

(06:03):
are as Vikings fans. Is all those regular season wins,
all those great Buffalo moments, the miracle at the met
and that we are celebrating a lot of We got
to the podium, but we didn't finish on top. Absolutely,
and I you know, I think with that in mind,
you already mentioned it. I obviously the Minnesota miracle is

(06:25):
going to live at number one on this list. So
and the amount of mini documentaries and clips, and it's
been covered and cover. We replayed the game on the
radio like two days later in its entirety to the
point where, like almost all of us, that's the beauty
of this team. Almost all of us, I think watched

(06:46):
it the following Monday on the NFL network. Like I
will even go back to the Bills game when I
rewatched it on my couch, knowing the the income, the
outcome of the game, the fumble at the goal line.
I mean you, that's the beauty of this team. Is
ever everything about it, It's just the best, Like you
just you knew what was happening, but it was still sweet.

(07:09):
Like they could put that game on right now and
I think I would watch it over anything else that's
gonna be on TV tonight it's not even close. Yeah.
I think the entire Vikings team actually watched a replay
of the Minneapolis Miracle on Monday, given what we saw
in Philly that following weekend. So I mean that's yeah,
you could reliving reliving those memories. There's there's no doubt

(07:30):
about how fun it is, which makes us a cool concept.
When they when we won that game, I remember, I
was living in someone's basement, and that's a big brag.
I'm living. I'm living in someone's basement and they're not
even a relative. I rented a basement from someone with
my future wife, and I have two people over. And

(07:52):
I remember not even not even being able to properly
emotionally react to the moment. I was so in shocked
because it was so in contrast, like we expected the collapse.
We don't. The collapse is what happens to us. The
overcoming the collapse in one of the most iconic ways
in NFL history, that is not what happens to us.

(08:14):
So I was I almost blacked out emotionally. But when
I came to all I remember is one of my friends,
Joe Gill, on his knees with his hands in the air,
like like the end of Shawshank where they have that
shot where the right and he was just like holding
a long note, but he was screaming the F word.

(08:35):
So we all agree, miracle at one, right, and we
can move on and I can throw some other ones
at that. Yeah, okay, so let's do this. Let me
start throwing moments at you, memories, things that I put
on my list. We'll talk him through, and then at
the end we'll come up with our definitive. Let's go
with a one through five when this is all said

(08:56):
and done. Okay, perfect, So I'm the I'm gonna throw
out first the Randy Moss Moon and Lambo eight and
eight team backs into the playoffs. We are severely the underdog.
You got the Afros, you got the whole bit. Moss
torches the Packers, does the moon, Joe Buck loses his mind.

(09:20):
That one pretty meaningful for me. Yeah. I think that
one was incredible because, like you said, they were eight
and eight. Everyone thought it was a Brett Farve led
Packer team. Everybody thought they would get rolled over by
that team. I think Randy was dealing with like a
hamstring injury and he torched them. They had Kelly Campbell

(09:41):
on that team. That's an incredible moment because it's a
playoff game against the bitter rival of this team. But
it was also like in when Lambo Lambo is still
great going to Lambo's fun, but Lambo doesn't have that
mystique it used to having. There's a pre Randy Moss
Lambo and then post Randy Moss Lambo. Once he went

(10:03):
there in ninety eight and destroyed him, and every time
he ever went there he basically destroyed them. But that game,
I mean he burned Al Harris multiple times on the corner.
It was just that was an incredible moment because everybody
thought they'd lose thirty five nothing. If you think about
it from forty one donut in two thousand to where
we got in two thousand and four, you have the

(10:24):
loss of Corey Stringer in two thousand and one, the
team's not very good at times. And two thousand and four,
by the way, was a near MVP season for Dante
Culpeppers saved for the year that Peyton Manning had and
so but but then the team struggled all year to
the point where it was we need W's just to
get into this mix. And then it was you know,
the Moon's amazing, and that's the you know, the despicable moment,

(10:47):
or however the heck Joe block put it. But think
about Mo Williams right out of the gates early on
in that game. Oh yeah, loose out of the backfield
and goes for a sixty eight yard touchdown. Yeah. Well,
I think the Vikings were up like seven, ten or twenty,
did nothing before the Packers even had a pulse. So
we just punched them right in the Sturnham right minute
one and didn't look back. No, that's in my top

(11:10):
five when we put it all together, that game, in
that moment is going to be part of it. I mean,
that game kicked ass. I also think, and I don't
know the number off the top of my head, but
hadn't they won like thirty something straight regular season home
games at Lambeau before Randy with their ninety eight, Like
Randy ruined the Packers. I was at So I was

(11:33):
at this game. I was at the Moon game, and
I told this story on other shows before. But we
waited too long to get tickets, and then some tickets came.
They were like the only tickets available left, so we
were sixth row end zone of the end zone that
Randy Moss mooned, and I'd never I didn't go to

(11:54):
a lot of games grown up, so just to go
was incredible. But to be there for the the fly
over and when they introduced Brett Farven Lambeau like you,
it's it's just this and then all of a sudden,
just punch him in the face. Punch him in the face.
I said this on the tailgate earlier this year, when

(12:15):
if you'd if you'd have panned up from Randy Moss's
moon into the audience, there was a twenty year old
siamins And doing the running Man in the stands six
rows up. So I am, this one's gonna be a
hard one to top for me. And I think the
other thing is we're all in. We're all like young

(12:37):
men at that point, and I think sports has evolved
so much with social media and the like. The things
that were so buttoned up years ago aren't as buttoned
up anymore. So I think for all of us when
he did that moon, it was like, well, I thought
it was hilarious. I thought, I mean, I think that

(12:59):
was an interesting moment when you think about culturally where
the NFL was back then and where it is now, right,
that game also led most of our generation to hate
Joe Buck. We hated it. Everybody couldn't stand him because
that's our guy. How dare you rip him? And then
of course Randy I think in the media after the

(13:19):
game probably told Sid like, listen, they do that every
time the bus pulls up to the game. They moved
us so like it was that and you know, I mean,
it is what it is. I get kids are watching,
but it was pretty harmless for the most part. Like
he if he'd actually done it, then would be a
completely different thing. Then the FCC would probably have a
whole different set of rules. But like, yeah, it got

(13:42):
a whole generation to despise Joe Buck. Like all Minnesota
Vikings fans even if why don't you like Joe Buck,
I just don't like him the mirror or the mooning bit,
I can't stand him. Well that's an awful reason. Well yeah,
but you don't get it, like it just I think
a lot of Vikings fans after that, a lot of
people despised him because of that moment. I'd think Joe

(14:06):
Buck is the ultimate pros pro in terms of goods incredible. Yeah,
and for six years I couldn't stand him. Yeah, but
he always had to live up to his dad's memory
as well in his dad's career, and he's and he's
even talked about it too. Where you know, a ton
of Vikings fans hate me because of this. He knows
about it, and I think he handles it the best

(14:27):
by just laughing about it because he couldn't care less.
He's he's making a fair dollar doing his thing, and
if anything, his profile has only risen since then. But
at the time, yeah, I was annoyed by it. Absolutely
screw him. That's our guy. And that leads you to
another unforgettable memory. Uh, this is not an on the
field memory, but it's technically a playoff memory. The Randy

(14:50):
Moss straight cash home he quote. I mean the amount
of T shirts that have been made with that question.
Here's my question for you. The I think the only
thing atops it is the Prince Cold quote. Is that
the most iconic Minnesota quote of the last thirty years? Probably? Yeah,

(15:11):
I can't think of anything else that immediately does it.
He was Randy, I mean he was he was just
his own, his own singular entity within the frame of
a pro football franchise, and you know, the as television
has gone over the course of time, and even as
people like us are doing stuff like this, he was.
I mean, he was otherworldly I think in terms of

(15:34):
his image within the league, and he always had interesting
things to say, no doubt well, and when he said
the straight cash homie bit, I think that was a
moment where like a lot of people thought like, well,
we're towards the end of this, like even people who
loved him because ninety eight. I know, I keep referencing that.
I was at that game in ninety eight against Tampa

(15:54):
where he caught two touchdowns, and that was like I
liked football when I was a kid. I played it
obviously because of my huge size, but like in ninety eight,
I was like, this is my favorite thing on the planet.
This is the greatest moment. I think I was ninety eight.
I was sixteen years old. And then, like I think,
even as good as he was, I think we just

(16:16):
got tired of him. Now we've seen other people like
Jimmy Butler wear out. They're welcome in a year. I
think Randy after about four or five years, and I
think with the straight cash onything happened. I think a
lot of people were like, I don't know. If this
guy gets traded, which I think he did a year
or two later, who cares. But like when he said
I'm rich, I don't write checks straight cash homie, as

(16:38):
he's getting into his car, it's freezing cold out wasn't
at the end of the year, but like it was
in between playoff games, it was. It was response, Yeah,
it was before the field. I believe I'm you know,
I'm not. I'm not great at being accurate, but I
believe it was after Lambeau, before Philly. Yeah. Oh wow,

(16:59):
yah see okay, I thought it was two different Well yeah,
then he got that was all four. He was traded
a year after that. Like, I just think enough people
had gotten tired of his antics. But say what you want,
Like if somebody came up to it was like, hey man,
you just got paid twenty God find twenty five grand.
How are you going to pay for that straight cash homie?
Like it's just a brilliant comeback. And it's still in

(17:20):
the Minnesota lexicon today and it's eighteen years eighteen nineteen
plus years later. It's sweet, we almost got so the
Philly game. The next Philly game, we were a little overmatched,
but we hung in that game, and we almost got
an unbelievable memory from that game based on all this,
because there was all this swirling negativity around that and

(17:42):
his comment and all this stuff. And they were setting
up for a field goal, and they'd worked on, I believe,
a fake field goal, and essentially what was supposed to
happen is Randy Moss was supposed to look like angry
and frustrated and moping off the field on the field goal.
But they were to have only set up with ten people,
so it was this trick and then he was gonna

(18:04):
set up on the outside as the wide receiver and go.
But then there was a miscommunication and it fell apart.
But he entice almost used all that energy as a
as a as a trick play. And I always I'll
always remember that we gotta go. We're already there, so
we gotta stick in ninety eight because there's a couple
for me around ninety eight before after YadA, YadA YadA.

(18:31):
Let's just get the one that's terrible out of the way.
Let's get the missed kick, Let's let's get the loss
to the Falcons. It is an unforget I mean, it
is the thing that, like, like you said, it formed
who we are as football team. It's twenty five years
ago and it still makes me mad, Like I if
I I almost walked out, Like it still makes me mad.

(18:53):
It's the I mean we as I said, it was
ninety eight. It was the year Randy Moss. Everybody thought
like this is what football is. We dominated Dallas on Thanksgiving.
They destroyed the Cardinals in the playoff game, and it's like, well,
of course they're gonna they were double digit favorites and
they rolled over the miss kicked by Gary Anderson. And

(19:15):
it's Mike Morris, who used to be on the Power
Trip with us, has said multiple times Gary Anderson didn't
miss a kick all year in that includes practice. And
here we are. Yeah, I mean, if we're not doing
best memories and it's unforgettable memories, that that might be too.
Only to the Minneapolis miracle that was That was sadness.

(19:37):
I remember going back with time and trying to think,
like why why did Denny kneel on it with thirty
seconds left? Dan, when we had a chance potentially even
to get to work in another long potential field goal
there taking it to ot and at the time we're
all kind of in shock that he misses the kick,
and as we look back on it, obviously that's the

(19:57):
a topic. But if you think as I think about
when I was a kid, I was annoyed that he
missed it, but we still had the touchdown lead, and
so kind of the frustrating factor that you you end
up conceding. I mean, it was knife through butter on
that final scoring drive that they had to tie that
thing up, and I was I was in Sioux Falls
at a friend's house. I think I had just turned fourteen.

(20:20):
There may have been tears involved. It was very embarrassing,
but that felt like the year. I mean, you know,
you mentioned that Cardinals game, and I'm pretty sure it
was the Leroy Horde game. He had like three touchdowns
in that game, just like the type of season and
guys like Leroy Horde. And you know the three deep
poster that I got from Burger King, I had thee Yeah,

(20:41):
everybody did, absolutely and I were burger king a lot,
so they thought we lived there. But yeah, yeah, I was.
I was a burger king so often that several of
my friends got three deep posters just because of my
regular patronage of b K getting the original chicken sandwich
with chas and just a hint of extra mayo. But
beside that, uh no, that was that was for me.

(21:05):
You know, you say formative years, and I think that's
the key to it, is whether it was the old
training camps down to man Cato, just growing up going
there really since it was about six or seven years old,
seeing these mythical gods right in front of me up
at Blakesley and down to man Cato, and then just
this rookie who captivated everything stopped when you saw number

(21:26):
eighteen eventually number eighty four taking the field from man
Cato and then eventually into games, and just I was
in love, Like it's just weird to say it as
just a as a young sports fan, and I was
in love and I was obsessed. And whether it was
the loss to Tampa during the regular season and then
in the end watching the clock tick out on us

(21:48):
and Borden Anderson sends them onto the Super Bowl, that
was that was painful and I don't even know, like
it felt like destiny the way things played out for
John Elway and the Broncos those two seasons they went,
but I just feel with the way that the Falcons look,
that we would have had a better shot in that game.
And it's just it's frustrating again saying that was our year.

(22:09):
I look at ninety eight and I look at two
thousand and nine as the two years in which I
can say that that we truly fumbled our way out
of the winner circle, because I truly believe we make
either of those games. We're beating the Broncos in ninety
eight and we're definitely beating those Colds absolutely. The one
of my really good friends is a Broncos fan lifelong,

(22:33):
and he maintains that we would have thumped them, and
he's and he's not a guy who rolls over on
his team. He's a very defensive of his team guy.
The other thing that's really tough about that one before
we move on, is I think because of the age
we were, you were at that point where're like, oh,

(22:53):
this is football. Oh you just will see you next
year when we again score the most points in NFL history,
and you know, and then the thing that makes that
tougher and tougher and tougher is every year that goes by,
you're more saddled with the reality of how rare that
opportunity was. And that's what that one is, the one

(23:16):
that burned then and some of like I the O
nine interception by far which we'll get to in here
as well, that one was hard, but this one, it
just it's just a different burn as the years go by. Well,
as our good friend and mutual friend John Krissel says
he doesn't have PTSD from the war. He has PTSD

(23:38):
because of the vikings. And it's such a great quote
one it's because it's just shows. It's just a sport,
like it just it's entertainment. It's funny. But he's right,
like the O nine bit not to jump topics, but
like it's fine. I looked at a buddy of mine
and was like, we're going to the super Bowl. They
have Brett Farve is gonna lead us down the field.
We just have to kick, have a Ryan Longwell field goal.

(24:01):
We're going to win. All we need is a field goal.
We're to win the Super Bowl. Dude. When he go
to the Super Bowl, sorry, when he completed that first
pass to Sydney Rice, I for the first time in
my head yeah, I thought, it's the first time I
let it. We are going And then when they panned
over to Ryan like I said that, but I'm still

(24:24):
like and then when they panned over to Ryan Longwell
and he was just just the look he just had
this like, don't worry about it. I'm good at kicking
field goals. I'm gonna thump this thing like You're right,
you bought in. That was the killer, was the moment
that you especially with how that game transpired, where it

(24:46):
just it felt so out of control and all of
a sudden, here you go. Here it is. I can't
add anything to it because now now I'm getting annoyed.
And yes I didn't say it from an unforgettable moment standpoint.
You know, it's these are like snowflakes now where the
fatalism is coming into my heart as a Vikings fan.

(25:09):
And you mentioned it as these years stack on years,
and you appreciate how rare these opportunities are. We'll get to,
you know again, twenty seventeen with the miracle into the
Philly disaster, and then ninety eight and o nine when
when they had that twelve men on the field penalty.
I mean, I just I fell over. It feels like

(25:30):
and mentally and potentially physically at twenty people in my
house down in Prior Lake at the time. And when
you get that, when they get that ball, it's over
like that, there was nothing. And even to the point
where I'm sitting there like this, I'm someone in shock
in real time as far starts to far side of

(25:50):
the field scramble up and it's just like, well, what
on earth are you doing? Point okay, just get out
of bounds, Just get out of bounds. And then it's
the it's the cock and fire situation. And as soon
as that happened, I'm just I'm looking to the left
side of the TV screen to find the New Orleans
Saints player that's gonna pick that thing off. It just

(26:11):
just moments like that cut me to the core about
how close it was. And you know, in some ways
even more so as shock wears off and time goes on,
you just look back and you got the chance to
watch that Super Bowl and you saw how dead those
Colts were, and you knew that that matchup was beautiful
for us, and you knew that Adrian was going to
run all over them, and the way that they manhandled

(26:32):
those Colts and you know, brilliant move on sidekick out
a halftime and all that, and Hank Basket screwed that
up and he's well he's messed up a few other
things after that too. But that's a different conversation altogether.
But just the way just how much that cuts, uh,
it makes that certainly one of the unforgettable moments. They
were basically, what are we three or four into this

(26:54):
thing now? I mean we even got to rank them,
We're almost done. Yeah, it's we were hitting the ones
that feel the best and hurt the most early and often.
It that about Joe Webb in twenty twelve. Huh yeah,
I wash. Can we can we technically qualify Adrian's performance

(27:14):
in Week seventeen against the Packers in a must win game?
Could that technic like if we could include that as
a technical playoff game? Yeah? That was a winning end.
I would say that the four games leading up to
that where you needed to win all four. Yeah, and
Adrian in the midst of that that MVP campaign, Yeah,
he and he would be again now twenty twelve, the

(27:36):
last time a non QB got the NFL MVP Award
comes so close to Dickerson's record. You find out that
like half of Christian Ponder's body is some shade of
purple like his jersey, and then Joe Webb's bounced passing
it to Jenkins inside of twenty and it's like, this
game's over. No, we don't, we don't got a shot.

(27:57):
And there have been more games like that, unfortunately than
games that come down to the wire. But and that's
why maybe there's so much hope in this type of
conversation in twenty twenty two is different because we've been
we've been down to the wire in so many of
these games and it's ended up going the right way,
which kind of again, as we talk about ninety eight
oh nine and some of these spots, like it's almost

(28:19):
making us uncomfortable right now. We don't know how to
handle being clutched. It's very weird. I remember when ap
in that week seventeen going into that game. I remember
them having so little time left on the clock and
being at midfield. And in the modern NFL, I think
the percentage that a coach throws the ball in that
situation was I don't know, one hundred and seventy percent

(28:42):
of the time. And they handed it off to the
guy that everybody and he runs at forty yards down
and do you remember the press comp or the on
field interview and afterwards with him and they're like, You're like,
he came up eight yard show. He's like, hey, what
he couldn't even believe that he did all that and
couldn't get the record it was. That was not playoffs,

(29:05):
but that was a truly great moment. I've got I've
got a positive one for you, and I want to
see if it even clicks in your brain, because as
I was putting this show together, I had this memory
from childhood that I thought about a lot over the
years but was just too dumb to research. And I
kind of convinced myself no, if that would have happened,

(29:27):
we would talk about it all the time. Clearly it
was a regular season game. Do you remember the nineteen
ninety seven miracle win against the Giants in the playoffs? Absolutely?
Kind of Brad Brad Johnson, I believe is a QB
that year and Randall Cunningham is on the roster and

(29:49):
he comes in for a couple of games, but he's
starting a playoff game against the Giants. I believe in
New York and it was yeah, yeah, it's ugly, like
he fumbles it like four times, and in the third
quarter we're down nineteen to three, and the only way
we get back into it is the Giants fumble, and

(30:10):
they fumble and we recover it so close to the
goal line that all we have to do is give
it to Leroy Horde and he gets in. But even still,
it's twenty two thirteen with four and a half minutes
to play third and four. Vikings run the ball, don't
get it, and in a move that would dramatically offend

(30:33):
all modern today football minds, we punt it down nine
with four and a half to play, but they get
a three and out and then here comes Randall Cunningham
down the field, hits Jake read On. What was it
nor to like a forty yard touchdown? It was a
it was a thirty yard score if I remember right, yeah,
and then side kick on side yeah yeah yeah, yeah yeah.

(30:59):
Chris As gets it and then it was like it's
kind of like the Sydney Rice thing. There's one of
those similar moments. They get the on said kick, but
then Cunningham hits Carter and all of a sudden We're
in field goal range and they march it all the
way down for a really close field goal and they
went a crazy But we never talked about that game.
It was incredible. Yeah, the final drive is actually it's

(31:21):
a little reminiscent of the final drive in twenty fifteen
against the Seahawks at the College Stadium. The only difference
is that Eddie Murray made the kick. You had the
p guy flag that I think Jake Reid got somebody.
There was a pass interference penalty. It was Robert Smith
with his sixteen yard dagger run with like forty seconds left.

(31:43):
Eddie Murray obviously kicks him through to the next round. No,
but that again, this is and that's one of the
weird line and Vikings fans can remember this. As I
joked about the nineties games, first round eggit's in the
playoffs under Denny Green. My point was, though, is the

(32:03):
we were three and three in home playoff games in
the nineties. The Dome was not always the massive home
field advantage that really US Bank Stadium has been, and
the Dome was post Randy Moss. I mean, that's almost
like a line that you can put in this franchise's
history is pre Randy and post Randy because you know,

(32:24):
from a sellouts perspective, merchandise, eyeballs on a general interest
love and obsession and fandom with this team blew up
at ninety eight, but you had one of the great
playoff moments in Viking's history take place just a year prior,
where there we had no business losing that game, And
that was always the struggle with these teams in the nineties.

(32:44):
Is all that talent, but there were just little little
missing pieces here and there that led to this team's
demise in many ways many seasons. But for them to
overcome that was absolutely incredible. Now, again, as has taken
place in Viking's history, you have the highs and then
you get your butts kicked in next week, which the

(33:04):
Vikings did, right, I believe it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, and
so and so. But though, but a moment like that,
I don't remember it as vividly as I do the
loss to the Falcons and ninety eight certainly, but I
do remember just losing my mind in that game. What
am I watching? How the hell is this happening? And

(33:27):
it did? And so that, yeah, that was that was
an amazing moment. No, doubt playoff football is the absolute best.
I was just thinking about you know you have on
your list. The Kyle Rudolph catch was incredible, Yodo and
I went nuts for that, like I think we I
think maybe that was the last time we hugged, Like
that's how into what we got for that, And of
course we know how that ended. But like as you

(33:48):
and I were talking side, I'm not trying to change
the subject, but like that kind of Rudolph catch, the
world changed, like thirty days later, Like you forget that
that was in the year twel twenty because a year later, ever,
a year month, forty five days later, everything changed. Like

(34:08):
that was such a cool moment, like the Saints rivalry.
Of course with the twenty seventeen bit. Three years later,
we play and we go down there, nobody expects us
to win and you say what you want about the
vox and PA's going, no, we're gonna win, and you're like, well, yeah,
but you have to say that, and he's like, no, no, no, no,
they are going to win. And the course the throw
from Kirk Cousins, which I think a lot of people

(34:30):
have been on thank you with him throw to Adam
feeling man maybe the one of the best, like non
touchdown throws in Vikings history. It was you couldn't hand
it to him in a better in a better situation.
It was incredible. That game in itself was I mean order,
and I went ballistic after that Kyle Rudolph touchdown push

(34:53):
off or not, who cares? We earned that. Yeah, I'm
glad you brought that up because that that throw to
Adam Feeling by the way, covering him getting smoked by
Adam Thieland was Patrick Robinson who a few years earlier
was the cornerback that had a I think a fifty
yard pick six in that Philly game off a case Keenum.
And so the six degrees of Vikings football, we finally

(35:17):
got one back on Patrick, I guess, although you know
one was for maybe slightly higher stakes, but that moment
was cool and Zimmer now, you know, you think about
the Zimmer area and the defenses and working with what
he had him rushing the Neil Hunter and Everson Griffin
up the middle from the d tackles spots was a
complete game changer as well. Four staple in the fourth

(35:40):
quarter that I think Jalen Holmes, former Viking recovered that. Yes,
so that game was amazing, but then good times, bad times.
We go to San Francisco and I think we got
a touchdown early in that one, and then suddenly, like
Marcus Sherrill's never fumbles, he muffs that punt and adjusted.
It went down from there and Jimmy g had a

(36:01):
chance to go to the Super Bowl and all he
had to do was hit Emmanuel Sanders wide open on
a deep post. Couldn't hit him, and Mahomes host hoisted
his first super Bowl win. But yeah, from the highs
of being in the Bayou to the battering in the
bay just another postseason in Minnesota Viking's history. You could
almost rank memories just from that game with everything you

(36:24):
guys listed, the Cousins throw, the Rudolph catch, the Zimmer strategy,
all that stuff. A friend of mine, a diehard Saints fan,
one of the things I love about that win, and
this is so petty, it's so gross and so petty,
but that he believes the Minnesota miracle doesn't bother him.
Because the Minnesota miracle, he didn't believe that that was

(36:46):
a very good Saints team. He didn't believe they were
going the distance. There are a lot of Saints fans
who believed that team that lost to us in that
opening round was one of the better teams they had
and Drew Brees's run and I take such a petty
sat faction in winning nay because of that. That's that
that one will maybe gross its way up to the

(37:07):
list when we start ranking all these at the very end.
For me, well how about that too. I mean, you
think about the Saints, and you know Drew Brees by
all accounts, one of the great QB's in NFL history,
there's no doubt. So a lot of my hatred goes
to the Jonathan Vilma's of the world, the Greg Williams,
Sean Payton's, just thinking back to bounty Gate and oh nine,
to my general frustration with how that game took place.

(37:30):
But think about this, twenty seventeen, we smack them with
the miracle. Twenty eighteen, they get back into the NFC
title game and it's the nickel I think, was it
Tommy Lee Lewis the obvious PI call? They take that out,
they go to ot rams when they go to the
Super Bowl, loose to the Patriots. But then twenty nineteen,

(37:51):
twenty nineteen is they're winding out the clock on Drew
Brees's career. They feel that and this this was the
this was the team right there, and they a fantastic
and their defense has been pretty good the last couple
of years, and their long time decordinator Dennis Allen's now
their coach post Payton. But that defense was so good

(38:11):
with Cam Jordan and I mean just an older and
smarter Marshawn Lattimore. And of course I don't remember if
it was eighteen or nineteen, but Michael Thomas set that
receiving yards in a reception record. I mean, so that
team had it all and we smacked him in the
face again. Don't give us those fish lips and that

(38:31):
fakes goal, chant Peyton, because you're gonna lose. Can we
stick in the Saints? Because there's another secret moment that
is buried under devastation. There's a forty one donut Randy
Moss squirts the water bottle. The week before is a
Saints game, and that game, that was another game. I

(38:52):
was lucky to be at the energy in that building
that was such a slaughtering. And there's three moments too,
fifty three and a sixty eight yards and they were
those They were though throw the screen, he catches it,
and hey, I'm the fastest man you've ever seen. They
were like beautiful touchdowns. And then you have Robert Tate.

(39:15):
Do you guys remember Robert Tate? Oh of course, yeah, yeah,
six round out of Cincinnati wide receiver. He's where's number
eighty three his first two years in the league. We
make him a cornerback. The Saints talked serious trash about
that Robert Tate, I believe. I mean it was a blowout,
but he iced to the end of that game with

(39:37):
an interception, which is a great moment. But you remember
John Randall, Right, the sash, the crawl around on all fours,
the lifting the leg, Oh my gosh, that is lifting
the can I make lifting the leg on a quarterback?
The top memory for me that is that is the
funniest thing. John Randall is the absolute man and I

(40:00):
love that he's still like in such a funny way
on Packer Week, like his social media. He is the funniest,
most aggressive. I love everything about it. And that moment
was he's our paid manny, if you think about it,
I mean, he's our paid manny. He's got a great personality.
He's super nice. He I mean not that Peyton Manning

(40:22):
still lives in Indie, but like he still lives here.
John Randall could live anywhere in the world and he
still lives here. And he's as die hard about it
as the three of us are. And he's just he's
such a great pillar for this team and the franchise
and what he does with the Legends group and all that.
But any I mean John, I can do a whole
bit on I mean John Randall's bit when he I mean,

(40:44):
you go back to like this has anything to do
with the Vikes. But I remember he's on the Seahawks
and Matt Hasselbeck in the playoffs said we're taking the ball,
We're gonna score, and then he throws him an exception.
Like people forget that was I think Randalls was that
Randall's first year on the Seahawks. But I mean, that's
a complete disaster in Seahawks. I mean, think of the
bits the Seahawks fans could do. They were gonna win

(41:07):
two Super Bowls, but they threw the ball at the one.
But I digress. Oh yeah, now, and you know what's
in last thing from two thousand and forty one, don't it.
I think actually, if we should do most Forgettable playoff memories,
that would be one of them. For my last thing
with the Saints. If you ever wondered were they getting
the Vikings plays in their headsets? Did the Giants cheat

(41:30):
with carry Collins and company? Sean Payton, a member of
the Giants staff. I just want you to think about that. Oh,
I didn't know. I didn't know. I'm throwing it out there.
I'm not accusing him of anything, but whether it was
Valley Gate No. Nine and the fact that he was
on the Giant staff in two thousand, I personally am
sensing a trend, and that's why I don't care much

(41:52):
for that man. No, he's gonna be on YouTube. You
would be. You just you need your own chance and
just to heave out some perfectly anecdotal evidence and let
the people decide. I love it. Yeah, you should do
Vikings conspiracy theories. Yeah, brought to you by Reynolds rat Yeah,

(42:14):
get our get Randy. You and Randy could do it.
You share Vikings conspiracies and let our friend Randy share
actual conspiracies and see what you're more loony. Yeah, I'll
do Vikings bits. You'll do secret moon bases and mermaids. Perfect. Yeah. Yeah,
there's there's one other really cool moment. It's not an

(42:35):
on the field moment, and it's a cool moment in
the one horrible moment we haven't really spoken about speaking
of the Seahawks in that playoff game at TCF. TCF, right,
that was the name of that. Yeah, yeah, so at
that time it's TCF Bud Grant in the oldest weather

(43:02):
you can imagine walking out in short sleeves for the
coin toss is such. We're all so I think, insecure
about our state and so defensive about our state and
so die hard about our state. When somebody provides a
rallying point, like we talked about the Prince quote when

(43:23):
Prince said that about you know, it keeps the bad
guys out, We're like, you're damn right, it does. Like, yeah,
we're so so that man walking out there, I promise
there wasn't a goose bumpless arm anywhere in America for
a Viking fan when he walked out, just elderly in
short sleeves before that game. That was incredible. That was incredible.

(43:46):
That's maybe a I mean, non game related that may
be the top Vikings moment of all time. It's that
in drafting Randy Moss, which completely changed the route that
the franchise went. But yeah, the Bud Grant moment. Everybody's
talking about how cold it was, how it was like
Ice Bowl too. What was it like minus fifteen to
start the game, the whole bit, and there out walks

(44:09):
a gentleman in nothing but pants and a short sleeve shirt. Yeah,
it was. It was crazy. And the way that the
way that I've done this and from an unforgettable playoff moments,
I kind of just think about the seasons in totality,
and with twenty fifteen, you know, the the awful situation
with Adrian Peterson a year prior, he comes back, leads

(44:32):
the league in rushing again, and you know, love it
or hate it that everyone's moved on from the previous regime.
But twenty fifteen I think was really the first year
in which you got to see like, oh my goodness, uh,
Mike Zimmer might be onto something with this defense. And
I just thought, of course, you know, the reason that
he was hired to coach here is there was a toughness,

(44:52):
There was a meanness, There was a grit to him,
and I think the twenty fifteen season embodied some of
those l mints of his personality in the culture. So
coming in here, it's cold, his hell outside, you got
that that wind popping in from the west side of TCF.
I mean that thing was absolutely bones cold, and pa
where I'm up in the booth with him and he's

(45:14):
doing the call. He demanded that the windows stay open.
We need to hear that crowd noise, We need to
be part of this. I mean that's just that's the
Rube element of how we operate. And absolutely, and the
conditions were awful. The conditions were terrible. The game itself.
I mean, Blair Walsh was an MVP until that other

(45:35):
thing happened. Uh, he keeps us in it with those
field goals, and you got Captain Munnerlyn that goes for
the ball instead of trying to sack Russell Wilson, and
I think that led to the only touchdown of the game.
Whether it was may Have a Baldwin or Jermaine Curse,
I don't remember, but I mean, just all of those
moments and then you finally have that drive that I

(45:55):
mentioned was like that ninety seven game where you get
the clutch pass uh to Kyle Rudolf, he gets PI
on Cam Chancellor and it's just and and Teddy hadn't looked,
and God bless him. Teddy didn't. Was not the guy,
it didn't look like that day that was going to
drive us back. But he did, and he put one
freaking drive together and it was Adrian for eight or

(46:16):
nine yards puts it on the left hash and and
the rest is obviously history. But that game, the coldness
and and just the gravity of it into the playoffs,
the opportunity potentially that next week. I can't remember whether
it was Carolina or Arizona that we would have went
to that year. May have been Carolina, I think I
think it was going to be they won the Super Bowl,

(46:36):
didn't they Well, they went, they played and they lost
to Peyton. That was when everybody ripped Cam Newton for
not jumping on that fumbles. He just stood yeah, correct
and so but but it all started that day with
we're toughness, We're called we're mild Salso where Tator dot
hot dish, we're custom knit sweaters up here, and we

(46:59):
don't know so provincial if you're not one of us
then stay out. But when Bud Grant rolled out there
in short sleeves, it's like I am he man, hear
me roar, and it was. It was incredible. Yeah. The
the other thing about that is, you know, Teddy Bridgewater
is you know where he's at in his career now,

(47:19):
But that that was the moment where Teddy had developed
this reputation prior to that game of like, you know,
he might not quite be there yet where we think
he's going to get to as an overall quarterback and
a talent, but he has the thing we need, which
is money on the line. Go get the money. I mean,
he'd done it a number And so to your point, Nordo,

(47:42):
I think the other thing had you made that kick,
I think the other thing you're dealing with in that
moment you go, wait, do we have a do we
have a stud quarterback? And we know the rest is history,
and we all remember how well he was throwing the
ball around in that preseason and really starting to get
down the field. But that was against the Rams or
Chargers in twenty sixteen, may have been Chargers, and it

(48:06):
was the third preseason game he hits Kyle Rudolph on
just a missile dime over the middle. Again, it's a
preseason game for a touchdown. He hits the showers and
it's like we are onto something, guys, he's here, and
tragedy strikes in August thirtieth, maybe days later, yeah, two
days later, right, you guys are all at the fair. Yeah,

(48:31):
we freaked out and wasted a first round pick on
Sam Bradford and they turned the Eagles turn that into
Derek Barnett who gets a strip sack on Cave's keenom
when he was driving the game. I mean, it's just
a size. Right, you should do a podcast and just
you should be the guy who walks into a room,
farts and then walks out. That's what you're doing with

(48:52):
all of these awful memories. Remember this then, yes, Norto,
we all remember that it was horrible. It was horrible,
was the character Debbie Downer? Yeah, that's nor down nor
negative negative. I like it the I love this team,

(49:16):
but I'm so heartbroken. Say I'm so, I'm so heartbroken too.
I've got to I've got to end on. I've got
to refocus on by Grant. That is, there is nothing
more Minnesotan than the X Vike, like you would have
to have an ice house that doubled as a hot
dish restaurant, or like, I don't know, a snowmobile that
was covered moose. I don't know what more Minnesota E

(49:40):
Minnesota thing can exist than that Bud Grant thing. But
that's that's that's that's about as Minnesota as it gets.
What tell me, guys, I've laid him out. There's a
couple here, you know, we've got the the Cowboys ass
kicking was a fun one, you know, that was that
was that was a on when it gets lost in

(50:01):
the mix. I was very nervous before that game and
to see if the pants on the ground bit right
after right, that's where I was going. Ever, you remember
pants on the ground and far of doing it in
the locker room. Kevin Kevin O'Connell Yeah, otold Parcy Kevin
O'Connell's post game. If you got anybody watching, if you haven't,

(50:22):
if you haven't been watching his post games, go back
and watch all of them. It's like a season of
a TV show because of how crazy this year has been.
It's a great watch. But they all pale in comparison
to pants on They brought the pants on the ground
guy in You remember that? Yeah? They did? Yeah, that
was That was a fun game. Who is the who's

(50:44):
the cowboy linebacker? Who is real sad that we ran
the score up on him? Oh? Oh gosh. I can't
remember what his name was. But somebody had a real
problem with getting thumped in the NFL. Right right when
they threw it was time. I don't remember. No, it wasn't. No,
it wasn't Sean Lee might be too early, but no,

(51:06):
hold on, right when they threw it, let me look
it up. But right when they threw the pass to Tahi,
he turns to the Vikings bench as the plays going
over his head and it's like, what are you doing?
Like you're up? What did we win? Thirty eight three? Hum?
But it was a beatdown. Keith brookiee Brookie, that's absolutely.

(51:32):
He complained during the game, and then he complained after
the game, and even Jerry Jones because not Jerry Jones,
Jimmy Johnson on the Fox thing the Cowboys have made
him a ton of money. Said if you don't like it,
stop it, and he said it about the Cowboys or
it after that game? Sorry, go on, Well, no, I
was just I was just trying to think because they

(51:54):
other than oh wait, we we have the ysate, Samuel
will pick six, Brian Westbrook gets loose. I just again,
more negative than positive. As a team that was five
and eight in the playoffs the last twenty two seasons,
I think I think we've covered it all, man, I
mean we've we've lived all the highs and lows. We've
gone surfing for sure with this team over the last

(52:16):
couple of decades. Absolutely, here's the big question then, since
we have danced on both sides of the line, and
it's unforgettable memories, not best memories, and three guys three votes,
that's it's an easy tiebreaker situation. I think we can
all agree one two our Minnesota miracle ninety eight miss

(52:36):
kick situation. Sadness right, those are one two. But yeah,
I have to because we have a playoff game coming up.
Ask me in three months which one is more unforgettable
to me? I think, if you're being honest, No, I
don't know. I was gonna say, I think, if you're
being honest, the one is one. But it's not. I

(52:58):
take that back. The stepan big thing, I think it try.
I think it it just escapes Minnesota. I mean, it's
it's got to be considered. That is like the Franko
Harris catch. The I mean it's it's gonna be played
for one hundred years. The the Miss kick isn't gonna
be played for a hundred years, you know, out in

(53:18):
the NFL world. So for me one two, I'm gonna go.
I'm gonna go Miracle one, the Miss in ninety eight two. Yeah,
I'm cool with dad. I mean, you think about great
works for me, playoff history. You know, uh why check
to Dice in the Music City Miracle. You think about that.
That's the kind of conversation you're having, Um, Minneapolis Miracle

(53:41):
number one me in Sue falls crying at age fourteen,
that's gonna be number two. Yeah, So then do we
have to I think I'll just keep pushing and you
guys push back. So you gotta, I think the next
one because of what it means in Lambeau against a

(54:06):
team that was better than us that year and all
the iconic imagery and like we said, quotes that came
out of it is the Moss is the Moss Moon Game?
The beatdown? Is that number three for us? Now the
other ones that are floating around here that I think
could go into that number three spot is you have
the ninety seven Cunningham comeback, which I really want to

(54:27):
stump for that because I think it's this amazing forgotten
moment for me. That would go three and Moss would
go four. But I'm open to being pushed around Rootolf.
The Rootolph game had so many moments, and I think
those are the three that are really vying for this
third spot. Are you know Rudolph, the Moss Moon and

(54:48):
the Cunningham comeback? Is there any way I can convince
either of you to come to the Cunningham comeback deserves
more respect side. No, I'm in on it. I'm in
on of it. Yeah, it works for me. Yeah, I
think the Moss Moon is three simply because anytime you
could get a playoff memory over the Packers, I think
it gets higher on the list. Yep, that's fair. So

(55:12):
I can't, I can. You're you're kind You're the tiebreaker
if I'm going Cunningham. And it's funny the moment Saw
said that, I was like, yeah, you're right, but I'm
gonna hold firm here over on Cunningham. So that's well,
here's the here's the problem is I'm going I'm going
right off and I hate to be negative. Um, and
this is just the state of being, you know, in

(55:33):
love with the franchise that's seen more losses and wins
Farvo nine. I mean, it's just the the across the body. Uh,
that moment. It has to be in top five because
it's just I just saying far Vo nine. If I
was asking Jay behind the camera right now what I
mean by far Vo nine, Um, it's not going to

(55:53):
take him more than a millisecond to know and kind
of deer up a little bit, just like that moment
make me want to tear up a little bit. So
for me, it's you know, it's it's absolutely the two
thousand and nine NFC title game because it's one of
two that was our year things for me in my lifetime,
that's a really good point. So so then Sauce, I'm

(56:17):
with you. Here's the thing. I'm with you. I'm gonna
cast I'm gonna cast a deciding vote here and I ah,
this is why I would be a horrible judge. I'd
be the worst judge, like those judges who have to
decide stuff at the you know, I couldn't decide on
any of it. When you don't do a jury, you're
like just asking people like you're asking the bailiff. I

(56:38):
don't know. Do you trust her? What is right? She
seems nice? Like I got I got nothing. I'll I'll
agree to far Vo nine at three, but to me
for it to be a top five four and five,
there have been enough positive moments here. So if we
go miracle one UH ninety eight to Farvo ninety three,

(57:06):
the big conversation here, I think moss is four? So
which one getting the mosses? The moss moon is four?
Which one's getting the boot here? Is it the forgotten
Cunningham moment? Or is it the the Kyle Rudolph game.
I'll argue this the Cunningham moment launched. I mean doing

(57:30):
that he stays around, that might be like a veer
off the timeline. If that doesn't happen, who knows how
the offseason takes place, and then what sort of situation.
Good point. So I want to argue for that. But
there's two of you. If either of you want to
push hard for the for the Saints game, I'm here.
I'm here to hear that yeah, well the Saints game

(57:50):
go ahead, nortal. Well, I love it. I love the
Saints game. I did not love. What happened is we
got just absolutely slaughtered at San Francisco. I think you
know that everyone was talking about our Stefanski was already
thinking about going to Cleveland like that day. Just a
just a weird situation in saying France. But that's that's
a little bit of recency bias. Um. And again, I

(58:13):
you know, without going two down, two down the line
of Vikings war, how many times in playoff history are
you going to get an onside kick into a game
winning field goal? Um, I would be I'd be prone
to lean. Eddie Murray. Well, think about ye. Think about
if next week in the playoffs in TCO, if the

(58:34):
Vikings are down twenty two to ten, or excuse me,
twenty two to thirteen and the other team has the ball,
which would be very on brand with this season for
that to happen and us still win. But if that
happens in this year, going with your recency bias argument,
we are all Bennett, We're like, this is one of
the all time. So I think I think that's I

(58:56):
think you're right. I think you got to avoid recency bias.
And if if Sauce is okay with it, I think
Cunningham comeback rounds out the top five. I think you're right.
I like all those. Yeah, I mean, the the Rutolph
bit was incredible, But like if you said, if the
Rootolph thing, I mean, let's just talk it like it.
You know, we can make it up as we go.

(59:16):
But if the Rutolph thing happens in ninety seven and
the Cunningham like comeback happens in twenty twenty, then yeah,
you're right. The recency bias is what makes us not
think a lot about the Cunningham comeback. And that's why
I think it should be in the top fun fat
little win against the Giants, and then the next year
it's fifteen and one, A star is born with Randy

(59:39):
Moss and all of that. So it can be easily forgotten,
but not here. Not here, because we take these lists
seriously and we're not ranking just for the hell of it. Okay,
so we appreciate history. We are not in a completely
biased by just what the closest moment was. We go
back into the annals of time, we do the proper research,

(59:59):
so here's where we land. I love it. I think
we I actually think we did. I was a little
nervous about playoff memories and us, you know, Nordo negative
and all, like I was where you were at Nordo.
I thought that's where we were gonna live. But we
have a pretty good list here. Minnesota Miracle one, uh
ninety eight, Miss Kick Too, Fargo nine three, The Moss Moon,

(01:00:19):
Lambo Destruction four, and the Cunningham. The Cunningham comeback really
spices things up. It makes it a nice list. So
that's our top five. Well, Flare Walsh off the list,
that's that's exactly the list. Yeah, seven, which is where
that's that's a good spot. So guys, thank you so
much for doing this. You do with Kings. Everybody listening,

(01:00:43):
consume all the things they do. But I would say,
if I could take a moment personally, consume Saturdays with Sauce. Guys.
I've told you both this. I love that show. It's
so great, it's so fun. It's a lot like this.
It's just you guys talking about the things you care about.
So check out both those guys on all things they do.
K F A N Thank you, M
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