Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Self education, I firmly believe is the only kind of
education there is. It's popping everybody and welcome. It's a
Frogman Friday on the Petros and Money Show on AM
five seventy LA, Sports Live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
(00:22):
Make sure you hit the follow button on the app
so you can get the latest notifications. Don McClain is
here and we here one hour in to the Don
McClain Show. Don will be here a couple days next
week as well. We love Don McClain filling in as
a guest host.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
Even when it's noted basketball season. No, what do we
need basketball for? That's right.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
We can chop it up about anything, Don. We're very
versatile guys. Yes, I'm a short yarnage running back from
college football twenty two years ago. Doesn't stop me from
being an expert and all kinds of things like baseball.
You're You're home of Showy Otani and the Dodgers. Tonight,
Bobby Miller and the Dodgers take on the Rays. Dodgers
(01:09):
on deck at six o'clock, first pitch of seventy TENU.
Do you know that Bobby Miller has a chess piece tattoo?
Don a chess piece. Yeah, do you know what a
chess piece is?
Speaker 2 (01:19):
H like the queen or the king or something.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
No, No, like a chest piece, not a tattoo of
a chess piece, like a queen.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
He's got a big tattoo across his chest.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
A chest piece. And I'm sure you see a lot
of these in today's NBA with the guys you work
out a tattoos. The guy takes off his jersey and
he's just got his chest blasted out at the age
of twenty two and a half.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Most of them. It's both arms, chest, stomach, both legs,
the whole body basically.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
And that's that's a long time to sit down, Yeah,
and get a tattoo. Did you ever consider it? Don No,
a chess piece or just anything.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
Any tattoo. Wasn't willing to commit to something for the
rest of my life?
Speaker 1 (02:06):
Beautiful, And there's a lot of commitment out there, of
course with the guys in the tattoos, but not as
much with the ladies. For the guys with the chess pieces. Anyway,
Bobby has a chess piece of a lion and a
tiger fighting each other. That's a lion. Here's a.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
Has he ever explained the significance of it.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
We played this for him, he says, this is what's
going on on your chest.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Let's keep him up at night.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
Chargers, Cowboys tomorrow. Thank you to everybody that showed up
for yesterday's event. I have been at every single event
we've ever done on this show. Yes I have. Matt's
missed a couple, but I have been to every single
event we've ever done on this show. That's right.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
I did one with you and that way is way
out there. Yeah, I did one with Doug Gottlieb. I've
done every event ever where. Was that the one you
and I did? Yeah? Hk's and Rancho Kuckam that was
way out there, no parking. People love that show, and
we let vixing for too long. They got mad at
(03:29):
us because we let vexing. Cigareites Whiskey and Wild Wild Women. Yeah,
fixed smoke, yes, loud music, and Wild Wild Women. That
was the name of the Cigareites, Whiskey and Wild Wild Women. Anyway.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
Yeah. So I've been to every event we've ever done
in the history of our show. Every event in the
last whatever seventeen twenty years that Matt and I had
been doing this and I really do think that yesterday's
Van's was the best one that we've ever done. And
fast times, Dave Weeese, all the people involved, Steve van Dorn,
what a philanthrope. Thank you to n Genie Buss. Thank
(04:10):
you to everybody who showed up for the last stop
of the Petcherson Money Summer Tour yesterday. To everybody who
attended all of the tour stops all summer long, including
Don McClain who came out a thousand oaks with his
family and a very prominent Ventura County family. Did you
not bring out there? You had the like that a
bunch of friends out door guards or something.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Yeah, Garlock, big fans of David vass So I was
giving him some love on that. Really yeah, big big,
Well they're huge Dodger fans, but they're really imagine has
like a well they're again, they're such big Dodger fans
that they watch every game the.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Fast a demographic, though they love interesting won't make it
easy for you. We want you to keep on winning
with our friends at Toyota log on m five seventy
la sports dot Com slash contest for a chance to
win a Dodger clubhouse, thousand dollars shopping spree driven by
your Southern California Toyota dealers. We make it easy, and
(05:12):
we'll get all the latest on Hayward and the Dodgers.
Dave Roberts are supposed to talk right now. We're supposed
to talk to David Vasse in the very next segment,
and we will have all of that as the show continues.
But right now, it's time for the number of the day,
because that's what Dawn said he has. Here's remember number
(05:32):
of the day.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Number of the Dave p is one. The NCAA's Football
Oversight Committee is recommending eliminating the fifteen day spring transfer
portal window, which would leave just one window open for
football players to put their name in that portal.
Speaker 1 (05:50):
Oh, that makes a little bit more sense.
Speaker 2 (05:52):
Under the proposal, football players can only enter the transfer
portal during a thirty day window that begins after the
completion of conference championship games, which this year will be
December ninth through January seventh. Under the current transfer policy,
players can also enter the portal from April sixteenth to
the thirtieth. The proposal would eliminate the April window. The
(06:14):
change would come on the heels of another alteration in
the portal windows, limiting the window from forty five to
thirty days. I like it. This portal thing is out
of control.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Well, it's just too much. I mean, it's too much
for those coaches do it. Yeah, one portal is too much.
I mean it's right if the players, if the coaches
can move, the players should be able to We all understand.
I don't disagree with that, but the double portal is
it's too much for broadcasters to manage. You look at
the magazines, and none of them are right because half
(06:44):
the guys are gone.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
You look at the players. It's not right for them
because look, every single guy. And maybe this isn't the
case in basketball because there's fewer positions and fewer guys
on the roster. Yeah, and not everything works out for everybody.
And almost every football player from Joe Montana, anybody I've
(07:08):
ever sat with and had a real candid conversation, from
Joe Montana to the backup punter, almost every football player
I've ever known feels like they got ft right. Something
happened something there, and you don't your career doesn't end
in the greatest way. But every guy that stayed in
(07:29):
and tried to fight for something and continue to develop.
Maybe they didn't like the coach, maybe they didn't like
the position coach, maybe their girlfriend dumped them. Maybe the
straight coach said something to them one day, you have
to persevere through these things, these ups and downs, and
you do that and something good happens for you. Almost
to a man, every guy I ever saw at every place,
(07:50):
and I've done this a long time and followed a
lot of careers, and you see that, Wow, that guy
hung in there. Something positive happened for that guy. And
with the transfer portal, especially the double portal, and we
live in that kind of society, microwave society, instant gratification,
(08:11):
too many guys, and of course transferring has worked out
for some guys and it doesn't hold the stigma that
it used to. I mean, dj Ouing is going to
start for Florida State in Dublin on tomorrow. He used
to beware Clemson Bosco, Clemson, Oregon State, now Florida State,
and that's different cornerback. Nil money involved, But a lot
(08:35):
of guys just transfer because they didn't like something somebody
said to him, or maybe there's one guy that you
don't want to compete with, and there's too much opportunity
to quit, I guess is the way I would.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
Well, there's that, and you're right about that, pee, But
I also think, and you kind of said it real
quickly there. I think what puts real strain on the
coaches and their recruiting of the portal is is the
nil money. There's a lot of players, whether they're having
a great career year, whatever, are going into the portal
(09:06):
to get nil, just to get more money. And it's
it's interesting. I had I had a conversation with a
coach on a treadmill at the Pac twelve tournament last
year and good player. We were both on the treadmill
or we're both as we were all accounted if and
he wouldn't move. We were just both because sometimes if
you're on the treadmill, somebody comes up talks to you.
You're no, no. This was a head coach, so and
(09:28):
we were just walking and talking and in uh and
he's and he said, it's unfortunate because this player loves
our school, loves our program, loves his teammates, loves his
coaching staff. But he's got to go on the portal
because we can't pay him what he will get when
he gets into the portal.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
That's another part of it, And that's part of it.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Like so if you have two times where you can
test it and go on the portal and try and
get more money, there's more players that they're going to
be looking for more money. And it's just say, it
goes round and round. And I think this doesn't solve
what I just said. Yeah, it cuts down on it
and it limits it. Like you know, Pete, to your point,
(10:11):
when the football season is over, whether somebody said something
wrong to you, like you said, whether you didn't play,
whether it looks like the guy who's playing ahead of
you a stand for two more years and you're never
gonna play, you know, right after the season, if you
should transfer or not. Yeah, why why if you had
a bad season for whatever reason, why all of a sudden,
(10:34):
next spring.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
You're negotiating money.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Yeah, oh the next spring. Oh you know what. I
take that part out, Yeah, just take it out.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
One of the most interesting things that I heard said
about the portal was from Mick Cronin when he was
here not long ago, and he said, I'm almost not kidding,
but I say jokingly to Russ Turner, we want to
give you a million dollars of our nil money, and
the guy uc Irvine, you're a good coach, Take our
(11:02):
players when they're young, develop them, try to be all
big West or whatever, and then in a couple of
years you come up to UCLA, up the four h five.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
I'll tell you this pe and we haven't talked about
him in a while.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
But I couldn't believe. I'm candid that was Trent.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
My kid looks like he's going to be a mid
major player because he's a little behind physically, he's not
as mature. He doesn't look as old as a lot
of these guys, so he's probably not. Probably he is
going to start at the mid major level. But because
I've gotten to all these coaches, just like you know,
all the college football coaches, to a man, every one
of them, we're not going to recruit him now, don
(11:38):
We're not going to offer him, but we will be
recruiting him in two years. Every single one of them
said the same thing. Because what you just said, go
to the mid major.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Everybody else will you because you'll mature, You'll we can't
afford the scholarship spot to somebody.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
We have to bring in another transfer. Yeah, we can't
be young, we have to be older. We don't have
time to develop freshmen. So that is the model now
in basketball. Now football, layer go mid major, hopefully mature,
Hopefully you develop, and then we're gonna come get you
after two years.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
It's interesting and kind of tragic in a lot of ways,
you know, for both sides of it, right, because what
if you love where you were, now you got to go,
you know. But football is interesting because you can still
bring in a freshman class, you know. I mean you
still not as many, right, but you're still like, you
have to have a base of guys that came in together,
(12:30):
work together, grow together. That has to be your team.
It still has to be. You can put all these
other elements in it, but if you don't have that foundation,
you're not going to have success. And I guess the
big glaring like wow, it can be done is Michigan
because they don't have big, giant recruiting rankings. They didn't
have huge transfers coming in or out. They were developed
(12:51):
team that eight people with their offensive line. As the
year went on, every fourth quarter they just started chomping
people up, and they guy would get hurt and go
out and somebody else would come in. And they had
continuity in that way, not that it's easy to develop,
but they were kind of the gold standard. And yeah,
car Ball's gone, right, it'll be interesting to see Nick
(13:13):
Saban's gone. You know, you got Brian Kelly sitting around
at LSU. It'll be interesting to see. You know, what
it's going to be like this year. No one knows
what it's gonna be.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Once they opened the doors of NIL. The money is
the root of all evil, and you're just seeing it
that it's making people do stuff they don't want to
do for money. And it's like I think about in
a guy I had last year in the draft in
Jim Hawky is you don't think he could have left
UCLA and went to Kentucky or Kansas had gotten paid,
(13:42):
because at that time UCLA was struggling with the NIL piece.
Now they're good and mixed, done a great job of
fundraising and doing all that so that they can compete,
But two years ago they weren't. And Hi may he
didn't tell me this, but I know, just because I
know the game, he could have left UCLA and went
to one of the other you know, Duke wherever and
(14:02):
gotten paid. And he didn't, and he stayed. And this
is to your point from a few minutes ago. He
stayed and it worked out exactly how it was supposed
to top twenty pick in the NBA because he didn't
go chasing small money and now he's going to get
the big money.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
Yeah, and you wish that that was a great example
for everybody, But the small money is not so small,
no to chase for a lot of these guys, and
it's worth it.
Speaker 2 (14:26):
Well, we've had I mean, I mean, I keep going
back to basketball. But you know, we had three guys
last year that were entered the draft but kept their eligibility.
Three of them went back where five years ago they
would have stayed in the draft, but the money was
so big for them to go back to school. We
told him, you have to go back like they're making
more so a standard two way contract p He ended
(14:49):
up making about five hundred and fifty. These guys are
making more than five point fifty.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
Everybody's Rodney.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Would you take a pay cut to be a second rounder,
be a two way guy?
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Everybody's Rodney. Everybody wants to go back to school. Uh,
real quick with his words. The word of the day.
Today's word of the day is the Denver Post Colorado
head football coach Coach Prime, Dion Sanders, his band Sean Keeler,
(15:18):
a Denver columnist, for asking questions from asking any questions
to anybody at Colorado, not coach Prime, not any players,
not the equipment manager, nobody, because of sustained personal attacks
on Dion Sanders. A sports information staffer at Colorado, cited
(15:43):
his use of phrases such as false prophet, deposition, Dion
planet Prime, Bruce Lee of BS and the Dion kool
Aid and circus.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Sounds like he is getting after him pretty good.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
I mean, that's a pretty bad look. Though banning a
columnist it could not be a worst look. Us. He
tried this last year with Luca Evans. How did that
work out? Not well?
Speaker 2 (16:15):
Well, especially when look, the hype train is huge at Colorado.
They lost eight games, and they lost eight games, and
if they don't win again this year like it, sooner
or later, the hype train's going to leave the station
because you're not winning.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
And this doesn't mean anything like this. The media stuff,
especially the Denver post. But what he did to his
assistants last year, especially the offensive coordinator who's now the
head coach at San Diego State, Sean Lewis, that's what
that's what's going to kill him. That's going to be
the end of his career, because no one's going to
come and coach for you when you do that. And
(16:50):
you can't coach college football by yourself. You have eighty
five scholarships and one hundred and twenty guys on the team, right,
you have to have a serious staff of very serious
people that know exactly what your message is. What's your message?
This columnist can't be in the building. My God, in Heaven, God,
I hope North Dakota State beats them?
Speaker 2 (17:10):
Is that who they play?
Speaker 1 (17:11):
First? The Bison? Katie's got the song of the day.
Are you ready, Katie? This is this song of the day?
Speaker 3 (17:21):
Yeah all right. Song of the Day is Twisted by
Stevie Nicks and Lindsay Buckingham. Because earlier this week I
went and saw Twisters and oh yeah the movie, Yeah
yeah yeah, And so I picked this one because it
was in the first Twister.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Was the last time you walked into a movie theater?
Don nom Platoon. Huh Hamburger. Hello. People don't realize how
many nom movies came out when we were younger. I
mean every movie was a non movie every weekend, Nom
Nom Nom Nom. All right, we'll be right back with
David Vass. Thank you, Katie. David Vass live from Dodger Stadium.
(17:59):
What did Dave robert say about Jason Hayward? Well know, next,
thanks everybody for listening. It's a frog Man Friday on
the Petrosen Money Show. The leading scorer in the history
of UCLA basketball and one of the greatest basketball analysts
that ever lived, Don McClain is here. We got Dodgers
(18:24):
raised tonight, and that brings us to David Vasse. All right,
David Vasse live from Dodger Stadium. A wild day yesterday
and Dodger Talk with full calls because Jason Hayward has
been DFA meaning the Dodgers chose Chris Taylor over Hayward.
Is that? And Dave Roberts finally had the media with
(18:49):
him to address the whole situation. David Vass is our
Dodger reporter, Spectrum Sports Net AM five seventy LA Sports
MLB Network. There's nobody better than at the real underscore
on the Sokol Toyota Dealers Celebrity Hotline, the season is
far from over. As Dave likes to say, Dave, what
was the vibe when Dave Roberts spoke We didn't know
(19:10):
anything about it.
Speaker 4 (19:12):
Yeah, Dave Roberts was a little down. It was an
emotional decision for him, and he's a person that had
to be in the room to deliver the message to
Jason Hayward, as was Andrew Friedman and Brandon Gomes. So
obviously the players are a little emotional about it, but obviously,
you know, if you take the emotion out of it,
(19:34):
this move makes sense roster wise for the Dodgers because
not only is it about Chris Taylor coming back, he
was healthy, ready to go. They could not hold him
off for eight days. But the Dodgers may be considering
calling up one of their top hitting prospects, Dalton Rushing,
when the roster expands to twenty seven, as possibly a
(19:57):
greater left handed bat off the bench. And we may
see Dalton Rushing at some point in September. So this
isn't just strictly as I like to say, Petro's a
linear move. With having to choose between Chris Taylor and
Jason Hayward. The Dodgers, obviously, and Andrew Friedman, I shouldn't
say the Dodgers, Andrew Friedman, Brandon Gomes believe that they
(20:19):
may have a better option from the left side than
a veteran in Hayward. But obviously, when you go beneath
the numbers, the impact that Hayward has had in that
clubhouse goes beyond a six hundred ops.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
Having said that, Dave, like I when I heard yesterday
the news that they were doing that, I was surprised, Like,
were you surprised? Was everyone else surprised? What all you
said does make sense, But just for like the fans
and even like guys in that club, like, were they
surprised at the move?
Speaker 4 (20:52):
I'll say this, Don It wasn't a total surprise, but
I'm surprised the Dodgers actually did it because of but Hayward.
And what they told is Hayward meant to the clubhouse
and talking to a couple of guys they said, yeah,
it's tough. I mean he did. He did mean something
to some guys more than others. That's the best way
(21:13):
to put it. He's been on the team since the
beginning of last year. They brought him back again. He's
Freddie Freeman's locker made he's Freddie Freeman's best friend. That's
also a layer to this. But hey, the Dodgers treated
a j Ellis who is more interactive with his pitcher
in Clayton Kershaw than Freddie and Hayward are as players.
(21:33):
So I was surprised the Dodgers actually pulled the trigger,
but I wasn't surprised that it was Hayward considering the
production and just how he really hasn't been playing a
lot and outside of that marvelous pinch hit home run
the other night, there really hasn't been a many opportunities
(21:53):
and be a lot of production.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
David Masse is our guest Kershaw's going to pitch tomorrow,
mentioning him. Is he fighting down Warren crime out there?
What's going on with that?
Speaker 4 (22:05):
Yeah? So I was talking to well, I'll let me
set the scene. The razor in town and two of
the players the Dodgers traded for Tyler Glass now are
here and active, Johnny de Luca out of Agora and
Ryan Pepio, who's not pitching in this series, but we'll
pitch on Monday. So Johnny de Luca is an everyday
player now for the race. He's a right handed hitter,
(22:26):
so he will be playing tomorrow night when Kershaw takes
the mount and Kershaw and I were, you know, talking
shop over here on the in front of the Dodger dugout.
Johnny de Luca is out here talking to first base
coach Clayton McCullough and then all of a sudden, De
lucas starting to make his way towards Kershaw, and Kershaw
waved him off, and he said, hey, we're not friends
(22:48):
until after tomorrow. I'm facing you tomorrow, oh after that,
so we're not friends. He said, we're not friends right now.
So he doesn't want any of these former teammates talking
to him if he's going to face them. So I
appreciated that, Dave.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
I've asked you this in the past, and I didn't
go back. And look how many years it's been where
at this point in the season, the Dodgers have had
like a lead in the division that is insurmountable up
fifteen eighteen whatever, however many games and now they're in
a race and it seems like it's going to be
different because they are in a race. They want to
(23:23):
win the division and get home field and all that.
Do you send any of that that it's a little
different in that clubhouse now because they're only up at
four games or whatever it is this deep into the season.
Speaker 4 (23:36):
Yeah, And a lot of guys are saying it's a
good thing because the last two Septembers they didn't have
a lot to play for except personal statistics. So Dave
Roberts has said he's in playoff managing mode. The players
say that this is going to keep them sharper and
moving forward because they do have to keep playing through
September with the Padres and Diamondbacks right on their heels.
(23:58):
And look, what was the last time the played a
huge September series. That's what's going to happen over Labor
Day weekends. Are headed to Phoenix to play a four
game series in the desert against the Diamondbacks. So I
don't remember that since twenty twenty one when the Giants
and Dodgers were going down the stretch. So it's exciting
for everybody involved, and in the long term, we'll see
(24:21):
whether or not it's served the Dodgers better than the
last two Septembers, because what they do in October is
going to determine whether or not this season was a
success or not, and whether or not being in a
tight race benefited them. We can't answer that question yet.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
The Great David Vassy is our guest Dodgers Versus Rays tonight. Dave,
can you give us some perspective on the kind of
Dodger history that Otani is knocking on with the forty
and forty and do you find that people are really
locked into this chase and understand what's going on.
Speaker 4 (25:00):
I'm not sure people really understand what's going on. But
he's one home run and one stolen base away from
being the first Dodger to be a forty to forty player,
and really, right now is the odds on favorite to
win the National League MVP, which would make him only
the second player in baseball history to win MVPs in
(25:25):
both leagues. Frank Robinson is the only other player to
do that. So in a lot of ways, even though
he's not pitching, he is again trying to make history,
and he's one home run and one stolen base away
from making history as far as being the first Dodger
to go forty forty.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
So a big deal.
Speaker 4 (25:48):
Big deal. Forty forty is a big deal, even with
these new rules. I mean, he's not a small guy.
He's not Ronald Acunye junior. He's a freight train and
he's a remarkable stest. Him in and not pitching has
allowed him to really focus on the video. Behind the scenes,
I've been told to really pick apart pictures, pick off moves,
(26:09):
and really study it. So it's more than him just
being a great athlete. He's putting in the homework and time.
I've been told to really look at the video and
study these pictures to be able to steal forty bases.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
All right, Dave, Well, great information as always. Anybody very
interesting on the pregame show. You got Jay Hay, what
do you got?
Speaker 4 (26:31):
I got the manager Dave Roberts, who all right, Yeah,
we're gonna shed a different light on what his job
is really all about, because I feel like fans kind
of underappreciate what it's like to be Dave Roberts.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
We appreciate you, Dave. Thanks Dave, have a great night. Hey.
Speaker 4 (26:52):
By the way, big surprise coming on Sports and at
LA tonight. The facial hair of Eric Harrows, Oh, great,
Captain Morgan, like.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
Did Karros have a beard ever in college? In your day? Good?
Speaker 2 (27:03):
A beard or mustache?
Speaker 4 (27:06):
I said, it's very Captain Morgan, like.
Speaker 2 (27:09):
That's it. That's like a fu manchew, isn't it.
Speaker 4 (27:13):
It's very Phil Jackson, stash and soul patch nothing else.
Speaker 1 (27:19):
Oh wow, amazing, Wow, all right, Dave, Well, thank you
and have a wonderful night. We'll be listening.
Speaker 4 (27:29):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
Guys.
Speaker 2 (27:29):
See Caron Carol's changing up the look. Huh, weren't you
supposed to have a foot race with him? Yeah, like
twenty years ago that.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
Never came to fruition. No, it's never too late, right.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
I think I can't speak for him, but that race
would have to be condensed down to about a ten
yard race.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
It couldn't be a long one plenty five. I mean,
I want to see some stride.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
The stride's not looking good. That new hip, you know,
Oh that's right, you have a fake hip. But Carrols
has got to be stilted as hell. He's a first basement,
for God's sakes. I don't know. Everyone ages differently.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Pee well, look, I'm not the one that ever sanctioned
a foot race in the first place.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
That was Jim Rome.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
Really, we'll be right back. This is not the juggle.
Welcome back, Pettersen Money on AMPHI seventy LA Sports podcastable
(28:44):
on the iHeartRadio app. It's a frog Man Friday around here,
which makes us happy. We got the weekend coming up.
Call him before the storm for you. Uh Man prog
Man prog Man. Oh, Collin college football. It's old hat
to met Donna. H. He's still gotta do it. Yeah,
I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna do it big. Next
(29:05):
week I have a game Arizona State, Wyoming.
Speaker 2 (29:08):
The secret text doesn't all fine, brought to you by
your so called Toyota dealers. We make it easy down
still thinking about the Bachelorette had me laughing out loud.
Don is a true masculine American male, part of a
dying breed. Unfortunately, John Wayne Chuck Norris North Torrence High
(29:31):
School really, Charles Bronson, Clyt Eastwood, Well, I'm honored in
that company.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
Don McLay, thank God for Dawn. He truly feels our
pain regarding the Bachelorette.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
I really do. I can't stand it. Come on, like,
there's things I'll entertain and at least list and too.
I got no time for the bill.
Speaker 1 (30:02):
I say this, I don't feel seen by you when
you attack the bachelor at him that way. I will
say this before we go to break. We do have
a little bit of a college football whip in the
next hour, just a little fun one because there's only
a few games next week, or on next week there's
a bunch of games, but on Saturday there's only a
few games, so we'll do a college football whip, quick hits,
(30:24):
fun fact, the Dead, and a live guy. Birthday of
the Day tonight is Salute to Troy, which is the
big dinner, the football introduction at USC. Really, Oh yeah
you going? No, I haven't been since I was a
no Pete Carroll gave my dad an award and I
went to that one. But Salute to Troy is where
Sarkesian went nuts and there was like a three man
(30:45):
wrestling match between him, JK. McKay and Pat Aiden over
the mic behind the stage, stuff that legends are made of.
It's where the USC guy jumped off the balcony and
broke his ankles and said that he was saving his nephew. Saluta.
Troy is always something pretty interesting. People get drunk. Usually
we'd be like, Wow, listen to the dB coach. He's drunk,
(31:07):
he's slurring his words. But other controversies have been bigger
over the years.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
Not anymore.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
We'll be back with more great sports talk backs.