All Episodes

July 11, 2025 • 31 mins

Doug riffs on a couple of the perplexing stories in sports this week. Doug reacts to Dan Patrick's take on Cooper Flagg. Doug chooses among deserving candidates Jason Stewart deems as most annoying. Plus, Will Clark makes the second straight installment of "Because We Can".

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, this is the Doug Gottlieb Show. Heres in
the bonus with Doug gottlie.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
What the bottle run? Welcome, Welcome in. I got some
stories here, Jase Doo and I want to run by
and you tell me which ones you like. Okay, we'll

(00:34):
talk about the h of course, full charger naj Harris
Uh suffers an eye injury to the fireworks because well
because he's a charger. I do you like this story
with the NBA analyst says that Deandreton hated Portland? Right?
He truly hated again, But that's Jason McIntyre is getting

(00:58):
quoted as an NBA analyst. How do we get to
that place? Do you know how we got to that place?
I have no idea. This is one of those things
to where like just be am I a hockey analyst
when I talk about hockey on the radio. I would
hope not, you know, like when we're running through stories

(01:21):
to talk about in the radio show. I love the
Pat Mahomes saying I'm not a big fan of eighteen games. Well,
you guys signed up in the new CBA which allows
them to play eighteen games. Is anybody ever gonna give back?
Any money. The answer is no. What about this one?
Did you see this? Dallas Turner transferred two hundred and

(01:42):
forty thousand dollars to a fraudulent account, Like, man, how
about that one? Did you read this story? Okay? So
he's a first round pick of the Minnesota Vikings and
he received a call from somebody impersonating a JP Morgan
chase on February nineteenth. So he transferred two hundred and

(02:06):
forty thousand dollars to the account. By the way, he
transferred it to Island Food Truck LLC and CNL LLC.
What why? Yeah? I mean again, something about this story
doesn't add up? Like, hey, I got it, Yeah, you

(02:29):
gotta send any money? Okay? Who am? JP? Morgan says? Sure?
What am I sending money to Island Food Truck LLC?
That story does not add up. I mean, either you're
really not a very bright person, or you thought you
were investing in something that's gonna make money and somebody

(02:50):
ran off with the money. Which one of those two
do you believe?

Speaker 3 (02:53):
Jasu, Yeah, probably the ladder.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
Yeah, yep, yep, uh. You know the We'll talk a
little bit in the pod about Kirk Cousins on the
quarterback series. But the one thing that's really interesting is
is there anything left for the series to focus on.
There's a tennis one, there's a golf one, there's a
football one, there's a basketball one. I don't know if

(03:18):
there's a hockey one. There is a Red Sox one.
I watched that one that was pretty good. We actually
have a docuseries following us for college basketball next year.
Has not been bought by Netflix, but they're one of
the bidders for it. What what else did Like if
we could, if you and I were sit down and go, hey,
let's produce a docu series which will let somebody in

(03:39):
on something they don't know about. What would what would
this the sport that has not been covered b.

Speaker 4 (03:44):
I've always said that there's a I don't even know
if it's a docu series as much as it's a
drama series. Like now that the w n b A
has gotten more relevant, it.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Would be going Sophie Sophie County.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
Stories reveal all the stories, the inner team romances, outer
team romances, the black verst white, straight versus first gay,
like there has to be stories of gays trying to
turn out the straits and just throw it all into
one drama series.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
I think that's pretty good. The only thing about it
is while it could make the w NBA more relevant,
it could break the w NBA as well, because they
like again, the players do not handle clearly can't handle
that level of attention on anybody.

Speaker 4 (04:36):
What was the NFL drama series that the that Goodell
put an end to playmakers?

Speaker 3 (04:42):
Playmakers?

Speaker 2 (04:43):
Yeah, but that was that was a fictional, nonfictional right,
and now again these are all docuseries.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
No specifically say that I wouldn't mind it. If this
was scripted drama, then you can do you.

Speaker 2 (04:54):
Want to scripted drum, you can get more. I don't
want scripted drama. I want unscripted. No, I know I want.
I think unscripted. It is plenty slicious, plenty plenty. And
by the way, whoever could do it? If you could
get Angel Reese miked up and fall around, she'd love it,
She'd love the attention. But I you know, I don't

(05:14):
know if it would help her as much as she'd
want help her. But I also think she'd do it.
Angel Reese, Sophie Cunningham. And then we need one somebody
who's kind of hardcore old school hates, all the hates,
the Caitlin Clark attention to be somebody on there as well,
would't that be amazing?

Speaker 3 (05:34):
What's that chick's name? Dijon A. Carrington?

Speaker 2 (05:38):
Sure I had some dejon A.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
Yeah, she seemn't really love the camera.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
She does? She does? I like that.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Be sure to catch live editions of The Doug Gottlieb
Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on Fox
Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
Let get to what the Fox Says, and now every
day of this time that Doug Gotlib show. In the
Bonus podcast, we play for your previous porshit of a
Fox Sports Trader or a Fox Sports one show. We
call it what does the Fox Say? This is Dan
Patrick talk about Cooper Flagg's debut.

Speaker 5 (06:15):
And it is the first day of the tournament Summer League.
Did watch a little bit of that with Cooper Flag
Ronnie James, And you know, there's a lot of report
cards that'll come in on Cooper Flag. And I look
at this and sometimes I overreact to the Summer League
and probably will with Cooper Flag, he.

Speaker 3 (06:35):
Shot twenty one times.

Speaker 5 (06:36):
I think he might have had one game at Duke
where he took more than twenty one shots in a game.
I was surprised at the volume. But what I look
for is where are those shots. I don't think he's
a three point shooter yet, but he's eighteen years of age.
I mean, Vince Carter didn't become one until what year fifteen?
Jason Kidd became a pretty good, reliable three point shooter

(06:58):
Lebron it took him a while, Brook Slow Paz took
him a while to become a good three point shooting
big man. So it's gonna take a little while for
Cooper Flag obviously, but he was getting his shot. But
he gave me intangibles. He gave me offense, defense, gave
me a passing, he gave me rebounding. But he also
gave me court presence.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
That's what I'm looking for.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Yeah, I mean, there's there's a thing there. And we
talked about a little bit in the open of the
radio show. But I understand if you see the raw numbers,
like why didn't shoot the ball up? Okay, he missed.
He missed a dunk or two, right, it's kind of
part of it, Like you make a dunk, missed a duck.

(07:44):
But when you evaluate a basketball player, you cannot solely
evaluate based upon whether the ball goes in or doesn't
go in. And again, just you're gonna have to trust
me on this one. I understand that you can listen

(08:07):
to the podcast you want, four games whatever, like, okay,
it's fine. I thought we did a good job the
most part of evaluating guys that we had the ability
to evaluate, and then we've done a better job this year.
And one of the things you learn in evaluating, especially
now with the with the portal, so much of it's

(08:27):
done with video and everybody has a highlight taping. You
watch that highlight tap, you're like, holy shit, why is
this guy still available? And then you watch the whole
game and you're like, oh, okay, well he's just got
a guy. If you watched, for example, Bronnie James had
two buckets in a row with Cooper Flag guarding him.

(08:48):
You know, one where they kind of go below the
handoff and he steps into a three one really nice
step back in the mid range. You're like, if you
just watch those two, you're like, hmm, okay, he had
a nice drive having kickoff for a dunk as well.
You're like, whooh, okay, there was a play in which
he was tremendous defensive, but you look at the whole
game and he doesn't stick out. Cooper Flag, on the

(09:11):
other hand, a miss shots, but he jumps out to
you as one confident, two skilled to get his shot three.
You can tell there's something there. Does he have to
have a little bit better shots? Section? Sure? Is he
gonna play against better players? Yeah? Do they have to
figure out how can we actually use him at this level?
But court presence is a very smart way of saying,

(09:34):
like they just a dude jumps off the page at you,
whereas just a regular guy doesn't unless it's in highlight
for him. Here's Jason McIntyre talk about DeAndre Ayton.

Speaker 6 (09:46):
The Lakers made a big splash here in the last
week picking.

Speaker 1 (09:49):
Up DeAndre Ayton, and.

Speaker 6 (09:51):
I know a lot of people instantly poop pooed this
deal as out, this is no big deal.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
Hayton's a malcontent.

Speaker 6 (09:56):
He would come out of games and slam chairs down,
He'd be late to rehab. This is how much DeAndre
Ayton hated it in Portland. He forfeited ten million dollars
to get out of town. Let's just say DeAndre Ayton
through his first seven seasons is kind of sort of
a top eight center in the league.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
I mean, listen, look at these stats right here, fifteen
and ten and fifty.

Speaker 6 (10:16):
Percent shooting in the last seven seasons. Jokich is an MVP,
Giannis is an MVP. AD's all NBA duell Embiid has
an MVP. These are all great players. DeAndre Ayton's in
that class with them. He just obviously was in Portland,
so nobody paid attention.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Jason's so excited, patience behind stay off the weed. Yeah, look,
DeAndre Ayton is not a bad basketball player. But part
of the malcontent stuff he's talking about is going back,
obviously Tuesdays in Phoenix this year. He was on a

(10:59):
bad team in Portland. He's not a room protector defensively,
and he's not really a lob threat. What he is
is a guy you can throw the ball to on
rolls and he can really score. And the reason that
he's making far less money than those are the guys
is he doesn't affect winning that much. Now, it could

(11:21):
be easy to point out that the Phoenix Suns went
to the NBA Finals with DeAndre Ayden as their starting center.
This did happen, but it's also important to point out,
also important to point out that DeAndre Ayton got run
out out of Phoenix. DeAndre Aton is You just can't

(11:44):
look at stats and raw data and say this is
who he is. One, there's a reason he was available for,
you know, less than twenty million dollars a year. Right,
there's a reason that guys are available for that much.
And he's not old, and he hasn't been in some
of its attitude, but a lot of it is. Again,
if you watch highlight tapes, that's one player. If you

(12:07):
just watch him scoring ninety basketball is played without the
ball in your hands, and those are the parts that
the DeAndre Atan just doesn't affect the game that much.
So yeah, Jay, breathe, breathe. Here's Rob Parker. He had
this message for RG three.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
Here's my biggest thing to start.

Speaker 7 (12:30):
First of all, you don't have to be involved in
everything that people like. You don't have to respond to everything.
Number number But that's number two. Number one. Why would
you retweet a racist picture like that and give it
any more exposure or life?

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Am I Kelvin? Am I wrong?

Speaker 1 (12:48):
How do you how do you retweet that picture?

Speaker 7 (12:53):
No, if you want to, if some brought your attention,
I'm not going to uh give the person who just
did that more exposure by putting it on my timeline
and my millions of follow over how many people? He asked,
what is he thinking?

Speaker 2 (13:10):
He was talking about RG three what he put on
his timeline.

Speaker 4 (13:13):
Yeah, so there's this long, convoluted thing with this story, right.
RG three initially came out and said that Angel Reese's
camp told him that she hates Caitlin Clark personally. Angel
Reese put out a tweet saying, all these lies people
talking about talking to people in my inner circle. At

(13:35):
some point, some very derogatory racist image was posted on Twitter.
RG three reposted it and maybe took it down, and
then followed up with tweets that said, you should never
depict anyone as a monkey. That's racist, And then he

(13:58):
doubled down on the fact that someone in the inner
circle told him that she hates Caitlin Clark personally. But
I think the most important thing in this entire story, Doug,
is that our ESPN's Ryan Clark had the final work.

Speaker 8 (14:11):
By his own admission, he says, if you don't support
people that don't look like you, then you're a part
of the problem. Let me be clear, if you never
support people that look like you, you are also a
part of the problem. God made us with the responsibility
for inclusion and compassion and empathy and love for all people.

(14:35):
We also have that same responsibility for our people. I
know people were mad that I apologized for my initial statements,
but I wanted to make sure people had clarity about
what I was saying. But while we're on apologies, we
all owe Rob Parker an apology because though he was early,

(14:56):
he was right about RG three.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Mmmm mmmm. So he's calling him a cornball brother, right,
do we know what? Like? Are we all good with whatever?
What a cornball brother is? I?

Speaker 4 (15:18):
I honestly don't know what the term is. I just
think that a couple of white guys talking about this
probably is out of school. But I just find it
funny that Ryan Clark wanted the last word and he
paid tribute to our guy, Rob Parker.

Speaker 2 (15:30):
It is amazing. The whole thing is amazing. The whole
thing is amazing. I have my own thoughts on the
on the the Rob Parker thing, which I'll share with
you in a second, Well, actually I could share with
you here. You know, I thought the part that was
honestly where stephen A lost me a long time ago.

(15:53):
It was if you have a if you have a
a show which wants to focus on race, and you
have a black calmness who you selected to be on
the show, and then he says something, If you disagree

(16:14):
with it, you're allowed to disagree with it. But it
was the left him, hung him out to dry, hung
him out to dry, and wasn't like, again, that is
actually the show that you can have that discussion on.
That was like the perfect place. You know. Look, sometimes

(16:35):
it's like you said, two white guy's talking about it. No,
that not the show doesn't make sense. But Rob Parker
on first take back in the day, like that was
the one where they could have gone back and forth.
I haven't heard that in the black community community right,
which is what Rob Parker said. But yeah, I mean
Ryan Clark is he's taking that show to make it

(16:58):
into his career where everything becomes about race. That's what
the Fox said.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
Be sure to catch live editions of The Doug Gottlieb
Show weekdays at three pm Eastern noon Pacific on Fox
Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
Let's find out who what is annoying Jason Stewart.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
And now it's your annoying.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
It, Doug.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
Just so our listeners are up to speed on this,
and tell me if I'm mischaracterizing on your take on
the So we had this conversation last week about fireworks,
and my takeaway is that it's for simple rubes, and
yours is like, yeah, I agree with that, but I
want to be a simple rube on July fourth, I like,

(17:49):
I want to do that.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
I want to blow things up.

Speaker 4 (17:51):
Yeah, but after July fourth, don't be simple rubes because
I have dogs and I need you to end your
delinkquency after July fourth.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
No, I gave people the weekend because fourth July was
on a Friday. Just again, to be fair, some of
it is time dependent, but once you get after the weekend, really,
once you get to Sunday night, like, we're good here.

Speaker 4 (18:17):
Nase Harris is a new running back for the Chargers,
formerly of the Steelers. I like the guy. I think
we've found him on the show a couple of times.
He seems like a nice kid, but he got into
a fireworks accident. Now every bit of information that we
received over the last twenty four hours about this has
been through his agent, So you take that with a

(18:38):
grain of salt. Right, He says, Nase suffered superficial injury
to his eye during a fireworks incident. And I guess
it came out later that there were multiple injuries to
other people in this incident. But the agent says he'll
be ready to go for training camp.

Speaker 3 (18:58):
Again. This from the agent, so.

Speaker 4 (19:00):
After the whole JPP thing happened, and you think that
that would be like a very obvious cautionary tale for
any NFL player or for anybody, any any person in general,
that maybe I shouldn't fuck with fireworks. Naje Harris suffers
a firework injury on July fourth.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Uh, yeah, I once. I I with a superficial injury.
By the way, superficial is a word that I don't
think people know that what it means. I know that
because I was asked by like, oh, what about Nase Harris, right,
And I was like, well, it's just a superficial injury,
Like well, that's bad, Like, well, no, it's not. Superficial

(19:45):
means it looks worse than it actually is. Right, By
the way, A superficial injury is a wound that primarily
affects the outermost layer of the skin, the epidermis, without
penetrating deeper injuries. Right, it's light cuts, light earns, scrapes,
it'll heal. You're fine. Now. The fact that it comes
from his agent does like every agent is going to

(20:07):
downplay how bad anything is. But that actually is the
point you made to start, which is interesting, which is
we've had Nase Harrison. Najie Haris is a really bright dude.
His his success or failure in the NFL is not
based upon his intelligence. I think it's more based upon
his talent. Right with the idea that he was a

(20:29):
stud at Alabama because he was behind the best offensively,
he's a good not great player, and then behind a
more average to blow average offensive line with Pittsburgh Steelers.
He was just a guy, right, But no one's ever
said like, hey, he's a dope. No, actually quite the opposite.
But to your point, here's a smart guy, right West
Coast guy seems to have his head on his shoulders,

(20:52):
who did something really stupid or went to a party
where other guys were doing something really stupid, which tracks
it tracks it's the even smart people like to be dumb. Sometimes.
The problem with fireworks is when you're dumb around fireworks,
you can get really badly hurt.

Speaker 4 (21:07):
So you talked about this on the radio show. It's
a there's this long piece as Ramona Showborne tends to
be long. Yes with Brian Windhorst today. Yeah, I think
she's given, she's reached that point of full autonomy. You
could write as many words as you want, Ramona, and
so among the you know, poetic illusions and you know,

(21:31):
describing how musty it was the morning that Luca was
traded and all that stuff. She did give some good
details with Windhorst about the dynamic between the Lakers and Lebron,
and you had your opinion on it. But this, remember
my initial kind of angle on this was that Lebron

(21:53):
James's relationship with Laker fans has always been transactional. There's
been zero emotion. He's the he is the two consenting
adults that have a transactional sexual relationship. I buy you dinner,
you have sex with me. We're consensing adults and we
go on with our lives. Lakers fans do not feel

(22:14):
any emotion towards the guy, and he doesn't feel any
emotion towards the Laker fans, and this story, the bottom
line is this, the Lakers kind of made it clear
indirectly that they probably didn't need him back, didn't want
him for any longer than next year. And you know,
they had a meeting with Luca without Lebron, and there

(22:35):
were feelings hurt, and then all of a sudden, Lebron
opted in for the I guess the only reason was
to stick it to the Lakers, and by extension, stick
it to the Lakers fans because they don't have a
whole lot of room to spend and everything else. So again,
if this is if this is Lebron's last act as

(22:56):
a Laker, then it's the last act was a fuck
you to Lakers fans that I never really cared about anyways.

Speaker 2 (23:04):
Uh yeah, I think that's a it's it's a great point.
I think this is you. You're not listening to me anymore,
So I'm going to pout about it, you know, and
I'm gonna stick it to you by making fifty three
million dollars. None of that, by the way, speaks to
I win a champ. I want to win a championship. Ken,
I don't I understand that when you read this article

(23:26):
and I as Jay Stud's like you got to read it.
I read it. You read it and you're like, wow,
that kind of moving off of Lebron I do get it. Well,
let's go back to last summer, you know, where they
were all forced to kind of lie and put out
these feelers and say lots of people were, oh, lots

(23:47):
of teams were thinking about drafting Bronnie James. I'm going
to restate this. They did not have to draft Bronnie
James and still get Bronnie James. They did so because
it looks better, feels better, and that's what Rich Paul
and his crew, that's what they wanted. They very easily
could have signed him as an undrafted player and he

(24:09):
could have had the exact what he could add whatever
you wanted in terms of contract as well. That was
for optics alone. And oh yeah, by the way, it
also costs the Lakers probably four or five million dollars.
That's the value of a second round draft pick, maybe
a little bit less late. But again you're like, why
is the second round draft pick valuable? Because whoever you

(24:30):
drafted the second round that doesn't hurt you against the
salary cap, so it has those picks are actually bought
and sold on a yearly basis. Additionally, in a game
of four year guaranteed contract. I just think there's some
you know that the the James group, Uh, everywhere they

(24:51):
go they try and take it over, and again the
downside to that is when they no longer want you
to take it over, and then they don't want you
part of any decision making because every decision Lebron wants
to have his hands in, yet doesn't want to get

(25:13):
the responsibility for if that makes any sense. So I
do read this and I understand that it looks damn
Lakers just they turned off on and they're all Team Luca.
But I do think a portion of it is how
they've handled it before. And I can tell you that
the Bronni James thing just does not say well with
a lot of people.

Speaker 4 (25:34):
In the week, there was reporting on and I don't
even know if it was reporting, It was just people
started watching that new Quarterback season on Netflix, and the
big news item was that Cousins says he felt misled
by the Falcons when they drafted Pennix and then they
go a little further. Well, Charles Robinson took a couple
more quotes from the series. I don't know if these

(25:56):
episodes are being delayed and released or whatever, but the
new the new quotes provided by Charles Robinson is Kirk
Cousins saying I heard somebody describing it as when you
see someone dating the person you used to date in
like high school or college, You're like, I used to
throw to Jordan Addison and Justin Jefferson, and now someone

(26:16):
else is doing that. That's interesting, he says. And then
he goes on to be like, you know, I've been
asked why, why did what was it about Atlanta that
wanted that made you want to leave? And he's like,
that's the wrong question. I didn't want to leave. And
then he goes into how Minnesota wouldn't offer him more
than more than one year or as a low ball offer.

(26:37):
It's really interesting on two aspects. I thought this Netflix
quarterback series would be boring. I think they could have
subtitled it three white zeros who play quarterback. And then
Kirk is taking a strange media approach. I remember when
we had him on back in on the Jim Rome Show,

(26:58):
back at Michigan State. I thought his whole thing was like,
I want to be a doctor after I'm done playing.
He seemed like a different guy, like he's just he's
a smart guy. But I don't know if he was
not given media training on this or what, because these
quotes just come off as like a just something that
you shouldn't say out loud in front of like regular
working people, Like I can see if you're sitting at

(27:19):
a dinner table with other quarterbacks that have eight figures
in the bank, then you start complaining about low ball
offerers and all these things when you've already got hundreds
of millions of dollars in the bank. But to me,
this is a strange media strategy. Agreeing to do this series,
you would think that you would want to kind of
get ready for the next part of your life, broadcast life.

(27:41):
And then he's admitting these things that are really kind
of putting him in a bad light and showing that
he doesn't have a whole lot of self awareness. Interesting
and odd decision.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Here, super interesting in odd decision, right, I mean, that's
that's just a weird one to me, super weird one.
I think that this is it's I think the kirk
Cousins thing, though he does the Tuesday no phone walk

(28:16):
with us, why you spend time with her? I think
that's admirable. Can I think his religious background is admirable.
I think this is augy shucks, But there is always
I don't know how you feel about organized religion, but
there's always a all right, what's really the angle here?
And I do think that as much as that, as

(28:39):
much as he it tries to be the aug I
was kind of done wrong here. This is when you
made that much money and you've dictated your terms as
much as he's dictated his terms. I don't have any
sympathy for Kirk Cousins, and I do think there's a
little bit of of just a little bit of local

(29:05):
pastor to that. I'm not sure I totally buy the
sale as much as I bought the sale in the
in the first season of the QB.

Speaker 4 (29:14):
Now J Harris having a fireworks injury, the Kirk Cousins situation,
the Lebron James situation.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
Kirk Cousins, Lebron James. I'm gonna go with Kirk Cousins,
because again, Kirk Cousins talking about something where he's not
really being totally honest about even where the vikings were
with him?

Speaker 1 (29:37):
Is why are we doing this because we can?

Speaker 4 (29:48):
Hey, for a second straight day, William neuschwer Clark one
of my all time favorite baseball hitters. He's gonna make
because we can. Because when he gets on his podcast
with Eric.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Burns, he's just whatever the fuck.

Speaker 4 (30:01):
He just lets it rip. And in the crosshairs this
time is I want to say his name is Dave Fleming. Now,
Dave Fleming originally was the Red Sox play by play
guy that went on the Boston radio station and told
the story about how Raphael Devers was blown off Will Clark. Yesterday,
Will Clark confirmed that he did that, and now now

(30:24):
he's got a problem with Fleming's representation of the whole thing.

Speaker 9 (30:27):
I just got to tell you right now, I says,
it's a bunch of bullshit.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
That's first off.

Speaker 9 (30:32):
Second off, you know, hey, look, you know that was
that was, let's see, my first encounter with Raphael Devers.
So I didn't even know him before, you know, those
two or three days that I spent in San Francisco.
So you know, Raffee and I are fine.

Speaker 3 (30:48):
I'm gonna work with him.

Speaker 9 (30:49):
You know, whenever I get around to first base and
all that, and Will Fleming, you can go fuck off, motherfucker.
All right, you wanna fucking take a Converse station and
we're having and then blow it out of proportion because
you're fucking East Coast piece of shit reporter.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Fuck off.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
O great is that guy? Oh my god? What can
we play it for you? Because we can't. Oh, Will Clark,
he was a gem as a hitter and uh yeah,
oh I love that Silver Talk. That's it for the
end of Modus Podcast. It's Doug Gottlip Show, Fox Sports Radio.
Advertise With Us

Host

Doug Gottlieb

Doug Gottlieb

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.