Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
How's the stream stream commencing broadcasting on a m five
seventy l A Sports and streaming on the iHeartRadio while it's.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
The longest running afternoon sports show in the city. No
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Speaker 1 (00:14):
This is Petros in Money, Thank You, Thank You, hosted
by Petros Papadacas, terrible person, He's the worst and Matt
money Smith.
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The pipes, the pipes, the pipe. Don't miss an episode.
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Speaker 1 (00:32):
Wherever you get your podcasts now Here's Petros Papadacus and
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Speaker 3 (00:48):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, Patro Money and five
seventy LA Sports. We're live everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
A full four hour show today, sensational time yesterday. Thanks
to everybody for coming out to the BJ's Restaurant in
Breue House and Irvine, especially our dear friend the Mayor
(01:10):
of Soritos. We were in Soritos yesterday Irvine. This coming Monday,
the Mayor of Sorito's Frank Yokayama, who presented us with
a glorious proclamation.
Speaker 2 (01:19):
The proclamation made it here. It's safe in our office
in the bullpen.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
On Katese's death, Dave Weese didn't leave it in the
booth after consuming two of the three pizzookies, two of
the three delicious, brand new, one Legendary Remix pizzas.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
Somebody's got to take one for the team.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
So thank you for allowing our proclamation to make it
back here since the both of us, at least I
forgot to grab it on my way out.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
No, I asked, and I said, the promotions people brought
it and I said, you guys are going to bring
it back. They said yes, and they did. They brought
it back and they brought back our ir machine. And
like you said, Matt, next Monday, we're going back out
to the BJS Live.
Speaker 4 (02:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
Petrosen Money Power Lunch, Petrosen Money Cafeteria, Petrosen Money Super
Supper starts at one o'clock the marketplace in her mind.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
One o'clock, one o'clock, one o'clock. It is a full
on lunch, but there are prizes we got. Well look
what we did yesterday, right, people, thought, what do they have.
We end up with three BJ's gift card.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
We're gonna go light, you know, Vonka Lemonade, it's gonna
be that. You know, I'm gonna wear a Hawaiian shirt.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Not the McConaughey Wolf of Wall Street mark to Martini Lunch.
That's not the idea. No, I'm not gonna do that.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
I'm sorry, I've never seen that movie.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
But we uh yesterday, we gave away a big time bat,
the Yoka do you know about? To Martini Lunch, the
Yamamoto MVP bat and an autographed ball from Anthony Bondo
World Series cap a Strauss helmet. We gave away tickets
to Chargers, Raiders, to Clippers. So Dave always he does
the smart thing right, and he brought back our proclem.
(03:00):
He under sells and overperforms, and so with suspect, that's
going to be the same thing this coming Monday for
a one to three Petrosen Money show in Irvine.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
One to three o'clock or one to three thirty. What
time does the Clipper game start? Does it start at
four thirty Pacific time or does it start at four o'clock?
Is a one to three as Matt said that is confirmed.
One to three.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
They're going to Philadelphia tough.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
To put a puzzuokie away at three o'clock and see
straight for the rest of the day. We wish you
luck and we will be there. So come on and
see us. Don't forget to follow us on social media
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(03:47):
responsibly by our executive producer and the host of many
other things, Tim Kates. He's produced a lot of shows
and he was All CIF Baseball at ninety.
Speaker 5 (03:58):
Six schues for RUSS shows All ci Facebook.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Is gonna mak. I look up at the TV and
I say, I thought we chased those crazy bald heads
out of the town. Okay, it is time still employed
for the final hour, fun fast effect. Yeah, we're three,
that's fact. Fun fact. Over five thousand coaches and administrators
have graduated from the Master's program at Concordia University Irvin's
(04:29):
Masters and Coaching and Athletics Administration. Find out more at
CUI dot edu slash coaching.
Speaker 3 (04:36):
Did you know Christopher McDonald, the guy that plays Shooter
McGavin from Happy Gilmore and Geena Davis were once a thing,
and we're engaged to be married. They broke off their engagement,
they did not get married, and yet a very short
(04:56):
while later were each cast independently. But I would assume
the director knew the story that they were once a
couple as the failing couple just a brief scene at
the start of the iconic film Thelma and Louise. Wow,
and we are your Thelma and Louise Show of record
and it's not close.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Yeah. I love Harvey Kaitel in that.
Speaker 3 (05:18):
Brad Pitt, come on, I mean, incredibly attractive in that film.
I like a head scarf. I've always liked a head scarf.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
Geena Davis came into restaurant when I was a young
man and we served her and I was like, Wow,
that's a big horse she's built. Have you ever seen
that movie where she's like a chick pirate? Yes? Yes,
I have ass kicking Cutthroat Island, I believe, Isn't it
is that what it was? Something?
Speaker 3 (05:43):
Yeah, sounds right Cutthroat Island, I can. I can see
it in my mind.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
I go to Jamaica in that, but there's no black
people around.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
Well, it's a different time. No, it'spirit piece, my man.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
I guess all right, it's tuber quick. Come to MS quick, hitch.
I'll make it quick, y'all. It is awards week in baseball.
The Rookie of the Year was given out yesterday. Oh yeah,
I don't know who won.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
The Manager of the YU Dude, one of those Oakland
A's or West Sacramento A's Nick Kurtz that he beat
out the guy from down here, right, Jacob Wilson, Shacob
Wilson DS.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
I still don't know who those guys are. The Manager
of the Year announced today, Dave Roberts was not the
winner BS and tomorrow is the Say Young Awards. Joshinobu
Yamamoo is a finalist in the National League, but he's
not gonna win either. No, Thursday, the MVP will be announced.
The Dodger sha Otani is a finalist. He will win
(06:49):
in the National League. I believe that he will win. Well, Matt,
that's where the smart money's going. At the Circa in
Las Vegas, the Dallas Mavericks punched Nico harre Us into
the moon today. The Mavericks are three and eight to
start the season. I mean they got the number one
overall pick. I don't know why it's an ego's fault.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
I mean he got he was able to draft the
Cooper flag. You know that's going to sell you some
season tickets, get the people excited.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
Feels like he took one for the team and a
deal that was built way above his head in the
league office. That's how I read it, anyway, Had most
of your conspiracy theorists on Twitter Mico built the team
that went to the twenty twenty four Western Conference Finals.
Had he traded Luca Doncic to the Lakers last February,
nine months later, punched into the stratosphere.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
Feels like he got team doesn't make the playoffs. Season
ends in mid April, and you got from mid April
all the way until middle of October when the season
starts to be like you know they we should get
a new general manager in here. That the guy that's
the centerpiece of all our fans.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Let's take the public display of humiliating him now, all
the son the chance.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
Should we really bring him back into the arena again
next year? Yeah, let's do that for two weeks only
to drag him out, and then we'll fire him. Put
him right there in the middle of the news cycle
instead of off season when nobody really cares.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Let's strip him naked and let him run around to
the court all confused for a while with a black
fold off. I think that's a great idea. Let's do it.
The Lakers are eight and three.
Speaker 3 (08:22):
Man Lebron James playing his ass off. I cannot believe
how good he is in his twenty first season.
Speaker 2 (08:28):
They're playing so well that Lebron is ending his fake
sciatica holdout. They're in ok See tomorrow to take on
the tunder Luka. Doncic is happy so far with the
way the team has started.
Speaker 6 (08:39):
I think it's always great to start good. You know,
we get you on the long growth of this season,
so it's always great to start. And you know, it's
always next man up mentality. I know we were shorthanded.
I miss games here, miss games. Broun hasn't even played,
so you know, I think this team has a big potential.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
He brought Lebron.
Speaker 7 (09:01):
He's going to be practicing at South Bay at some
point this week. What's the I guess eagerness or something
like in the locker room. As you know, it seems
like we're getting closer and closer to him being back
on the floor with you guys.
Speaker 6 (09:12):
Yeah, we can't wait, all of us can't wait. It's Braun.
So it's always good to have him back, so hopefully soon.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
I don't believe you.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
That's you know, I don't believe you, is Bron. You
know we all want him back and he's on the floor.
He will be out there, and then that's what will
happen when he's out there.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
Not a liability at all. It's eight and three. It
is good to have good start, No, Bron, he hasn't
even played. No one even cares. No, it's been nice, right. Conversely,
the Clippers are three and seven. Yes, they've dropped five
in a row. Here is their coach, Tyleru after the
loss last night. Sounds like he's most worried about the
(10:00):
poker stuff.
Speaker 8 (10:01):
We all hit tough times, and like I said, I
like the way the team competed tonight as far as defensively,
I'm still got to clean up from things offensively. But
you know, it's not about how you starts, about how
you finished. So you know, we get some of my
guys back, it could be a different story.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
All right. Clippers, Holls the Nuggets tomorrow night. Right here
on Ampire seventy you can hear fully functional employee Adams
sweet awesome pregame and postgame show, and you can hear
them during it again. The Chargers are seven and three E.
They're headed to Jacksonville on Sunday to face the Jaguars
dog doors. Time now for the Jim Harbaugh reporters. We
hear from his weekly press conference, brought to you by
(10:39):
Vawel and Instant Oil Change Home about the fifteen minute
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Speaker 4 (10:50):
Prior best game, most complete game, just most consistent, especially
great on on third down. Uh, the obvious one there.
I mean we were nine stops in a row, you
know to start the game. Uh, the takeaways, I thought
we the rush and the coverage was coordinated really well.
(11:15):
You know, tight coverage guys, Uh, guys stepping up, making
making making plays. The pressure. Uh, those two things were
really coordinated.
Speaker 9 (11:24):
Well, especially here just with the with Ladd how much
do you think or the last four or five games
he started to benefit from the number of pass catchers
and options that you guys have maybe see some more
on one matchups and being ables with how much do
you think got started into sort of getting on pace
(11:46):
with the production.
Speaker 4 (11:47):
Yeah, it's it's it's been showing up, you know, weekly
that the ball could go anywhere. There's Justin does such
a tremendous job seeing the field. You know, saw a
few weeks ago, I mean Ronde Gatson was getting doubled
on a play and created a one on one matchup
for lad and it was a touchdown throw you Quentin.
(12:11):
I thought he did a great job, you know, catching
and run after catch and the perimeter. You know, the
more the more things that the defense has to defense,
you know, the the.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
Harder it is for him.
Speaker 4 (12:25):
And you know, the the options are are showing up.
Playmakers are making plays. Competitors welcome, playmakers welcome.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (12:34):
And that's uh, that's a very good thing for us.
Bodes well for us.
Speaker 7 (12:38):
Just uh.
Speaker 9 (12:41):
At that point early in the games, as Ankles taped
any concern there at all of his physical status.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
I do have an update on his physical status. He
is still a beast.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
Yeah, a little bit of comedy there from who does
not give you injury updates? So when he volunteered to
say you.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Want an update on Justin, I'll give it to you
right now. Speech. It's bigger of having a beastly season.
Two years in a row of the great Sam Donald.
The Rams seven and two are hosting Sam Donald and
the Seattle Seahawk is well. I was getting older and
in college football.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
That's the game of the It's the game of the year.
And I know we already discussed it a little bit,
but you're talking about an NFC Conference Championship preview. One
of our dear friends, Sam Donald, one of the best
friends of the show when he was at USC, I
mean would come on.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
All the time. He came a couple times, maybe once.
Speaker 3 (13:43):
He Matthew Stafford, who again, ever since Kelly stopped doing
that podcast, things have gotten better. Twenty touchdowns, no interceptions
over the last six. Can't argue it.
Speaker 2 (13:53):
My wife's brot sabotaging my career through the internet. On
the field, UCLA's three and six, three and three in
the Big Ten. They got to play Ohio State on Saturday.
They're thirty and a half point underdogs in the shoe.
What to do?
Speaker 3 (14:06):
Don't worry though, it's only the NBC Game of the week,
seven thirty Eastern on Saturday.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Hey, thirty and a half. It's a big number. USC.
On the other hand, seven and two, five and one,
they're at home versus Iowa on Saturday afternoon. Everybody's gonna
be at that game. Trojans are six and a half.
Who point home favorite. We talked about that one a
little earlier.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
Big cold front out there in Iowa these days out
in Davenport, so you might see a lot of those
you know, husky broad shouldered islands out at the coliseum,
enjoying the southern California autumn, if you will. We can't
wait for this game. It's going to be an epic
atmosphere in the coliseum.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
I already know it. Our team knows it. We're going
to prepare hard, be ready to play. Thank you, coach.
I can take a lot out of that. Very motivational.
Speaker 3 (14:54):
I can really take a lot away from that.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Speaking of motivational coaches, there's that, and then there's Bill Belichick.
North Carolina has wake for us this weekend. If the
rumors swirl that the Giants are interested, big win last week,
Bill Belichick. Here's Bill today. Great for course, that's all
I got this week?
Speaker 4 (15:11):
Did that? Has anyone asked you the players, recruits want
to know about the future.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
I've been asked about it from time to time. But yeah,
I look, I've been down this road before. I'm focused
on wait for.
Speaker 8 (15:25):
Us, that's it, and that's my commitment of this team.
And next week it'll be to our next opponent and
so forth.
Speaker 2 (15:32):
But whatever we done, you know, I'm here to do
best I can for this team.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Now.
Speaker 3 (15:35):
Do I want to be the Giants head coach? Of
course I do. This is a goddamn nightmare I'm doing
out here. Boy, he's digging me a hole I can't
get out of.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Of course I want to be in New York and Matt,
thanks for talking punk I am. It's worth repeating. The
Anaheim Ducks are red hot. Your team is ice cold. Uh.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
They have won seven in a row. They're in first
place in the Pacific Division eleven three and one through
the first fifteen games this season. We no longer have
the Kings here, so the Ducks will be spotlighted, especially
when they're kicking ass. They'll be in Colorado taking on
the Avalanche tonight. Young talent Beckett Seneca nineteen, just like
(16:22):
we said yesterday right, Leo Carlson twenty Cutter Gautier twenty one.
He's John Paul's brother. They're really good and we are
so excited. They suck for so long. Yeah, these are
all like top five picks.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Yeah, we'll be right back with more. Petrosen Money on
amphi seventy LA Sports. You're a home of the Dodgers.
We're going all the way to seven to night.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
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Speaker 3 (17:06):
Money and five seventy LA Sports live everywhere on the
iHeartRadio app going until seven pm and we're talking football pee.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
Oh, We're so happy. We always check in with him
a few times a year because he's the best farmer
National champion in Florida State. They've fallen on hard times,
a farmer NFL cornerback. You hear him on Sirius XM
Radio daily. You hear him on his Cover three podcast,
which is wildly popular. True brought to you by bet online.
(17:35):
Check out bet online for updated college football Playoff, Heisman
and College Football Week twelve lines. It is the one
and Only Danny Canal once again on Pettersen Money on
M five seventy LA Sports. What's cracking, Danny? How are you, gentlemen?
How are we doing?
Speaker 10 (17:54):
It's great to catch up with you guys. You know,
you did have to mention that about Florida State, which
kind of hurts its things a little bit, and it
almost things worse because I thought, like coming into the season,
I had really low expectations. Their win total was seven
and a half's like, we're probably gonna be in for
an average year. Then they beat Alabama to gets everybody's
hopes up and then we suck. It's like that's the
(18:14):
worst case. Like I would have rather just been bad
all year than have been like, oh, we can beat anybody,
and now we can't beat anybody. So that's been an
emotional roller coach for Rye, to say the least.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
It's a real deflator when you beat one of the
better teams in the country in the first game and
everybody wants that coach fired, and then everything just kind
of peters out from there. But speaking of that, you
know with Norvell, with Mike Norvell, it feels like keeping
your coach is like the new not firing your coach.
Firing the coach was popular. Keeping the coaches like counterculture.
(18:48):
We see that happening in Wisconsin too. Why the coaches
get fired in September? Now? Is it the playoffs? Is
it the portal? Is it Signetti? What is the reason
that the carousel gets started so early? In sad It
used to be really hard to get fired in September, Danny.
Speaker 10 (19:06):
Yes, it's because our business of college football is the
wackiest thing I've ever seen. Like, none of it makes sense.
None of it makes financial sense, that's for sure. When
we've done like there have been one hundred and eighty
million dollars spent on fired coaches to pay them not
to coach, Like that makes zero sense whatsoever. Expectations are
(19:30):
off the charts, like you mentioned, and in the case
of like a James Franklin, they were like, I picked
him to be my national champion. They had all the
answers until they didn't. But even still, I kind of
when they fired him. When they did, I was like,
I hope you guys have your next coach lined up
because a lot of these decisions are made very emotionally
and rationally. And the two guys that everyone at Penn
(19:54):
State told me they were going to go get were
Kurk Signetti and Matt Ruhle. You know, Kurk Signetti the
hottest coach because he's win in Indiana and Matt Rule
because he played at Penn State. Well, both those coaches
are off the market. So what are you gonna do now?
Like good land there and now they're going on to
the next one. Well, what happens when that coach either
turns you down or go somewhere else? You just find
yourself in the cycle. And I do think that it's
(20:17):
going to take a while, probably five years or more
for fans to realize and administrations too, that this is
a new economy that we live in, not only financially
but with parody has arrived. The days of just rattling
off nine, ten eleven win seasons are done. Like everyone
else is able to pay the players now with rep share, Like,
(20:38):
so that's how you're able to get teams come out
of nowhere and all of a sudden be competitive because
they can buy players too. So everyone has a roster
that is more competitive. So that's why the point spreads
every week are closer to the NFL point spreads, Like
you're seeing more ones under a touchdown. And I think
that's a great thing for college football, but it's not
(21:00):
great for coaches at program that traditionally have rattled off nine,
ten to eleven wins seasons, because it's going to take
those fans a while to realize, you know what, nine
and three is really a pretty good year. Eight and
four is a solid year, you know, and seven and
five is kind of an average year. But that seems
like it's fireable offense.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
Now.
Speaker 10 (21:17):
It's just crazy how much things have changed, Danny.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Is is it? How?
Speaker 3 (21:21):
I guess I should say, how big of an issue
is it for UCLA? If you've got Penn State and
Florida and LSU and all of these spots out there,
does that affect their hiring at all? Or are they
shopping from a different pool? And then second part of
that question is does it matter as much anymore? With
what you said, you just got to be able to
write a big check. Do you not need that huge
(21:42):
name coach to recruit anymore?
Speaker 1 (21:44):
No?
Speaker 10 (21:44):
So I think UCLA I think you nail it their money.
I think they're going for a different pool of coach.
They're not looking to write a check to somebody that
make them a top five highest paid coach in college football,
which I think is what LSU and Florida and Penn
State are probably going to have to do to quote
get their guy right. UCLA, I think we'll find somebody
(22:06):
because and I think this is actually could be actually
a really good thing for UCLA as opposed to guaranteeing
all this money and backing up a check. Maybe go
out and find a good football coach. Is that a
group of five school or a coordinator, and you could strike.
You could strike somebody. You could strike while the iron's
hot on somebody and you don't have to back up
the truck. Some of the most successful hires of the
(22:27):
twenty one cycle were guys that were coordinators that were
given their first opportunity. Mike Elko, who is the head
coach at Texas A and m who is having their
best season they've had in forty years. He was a
coordinator and took the Duke head job that was you know,
and then he went from Duke after two years to
Texas A and M. But like that twenty one cycle,
(22:47):
he was a coordinator. Dan Lanning was a defensive coordinator
at Georgia before he took the job at Oregon. There's
just there's no formula. It's kind of like trying to
predict a first round quarterback. It's really a coin flip.
I think it's the same in the coaching cycle. Guys
can look like the perfect candidate, like Luke Fickle did
at Wisconsin, like Brian Kelly did LSU. You just never know.
(23:10):
But you can make a big financial mistake where if
you go with somebody a little lesser known, but you
do your due diligence and you find somebody who can
win in your location, who can you know, actually coach
players and get the most out of them, build a
chemistry and a team bond that seems like it's so
lost now. I think you could luck into that if
you're UCLA, find somebody who's a really good coach, and
(23:31):
then guess what you can do with the leftover money.
You can invest that in the players who matter more
than the coaches. Like that's the thing that's kind of crazy.
I just wonder how long it's going to take a
football program to be like, you know what, as opposed
to paying a head coach ten million bucks eleven million bucks,
let me pay them five for four and put the
rest into the roster because those are the players that
(23:53):
are actually playing like they matter more than coaches. It's
something that's kind of been flipped on its head. Now.
It's going to take teams. You know, think about how
much players make in the NFL. They don't make more
than coaches. Quarterbacks make three times more than the head coach.
You know, the best defensive players like twice or three
times as much. We still haven't flipped that script in college,
(24:15):
but I do think, you know, before long, teams are
going to figure that out and be like, we can
get a really solid coach, but we can get them
really good players and we can win with that formula.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
Do you think Jedfish would crawl down the I five
with his tennis racket on his back to come back
to UCLA? Oh man?
Speaker 10 (24:32):
You know. I actually I was on with the radio
station in Seattle last week and they were very worried
about Jedfish coming down there, and they're like, what's the
better job, and what's you know, I don't know a better.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
Job, but he might not like it up there. It's
too foggy, exactly.
Speaker 10 (24:47):
And I mean they were telling me that his wife
liked it better in La like she's she's like, you know,
like and that is we always talk about these jobs
and what coaches want and where they're going to go.
I'll tell you what a significant portion of that decision
and is probably going to come from a spouse, you know.
Like I talked to rhtt Lashley a few weeks ago
when he stayed in SMU, which was a pretty big
shock because SMU is in the acc Like he's making now,
(25:10):
he's making big money. But he could have left for Auburn.
He could have left for Arkansas places that he played
at Arkansas and he coached at Auburn, like two places
that had a lot of resources. And you know what
he told me, He said, I got four kids, they're
all in school. My wife is happy here. He's like,
I didn't have a reason to leave, you know. And
I think most people from the outside and without knowing
that would have been like, why in the world would
(25:31):
he stay at SMU. He's happy, like, you know. And
then on the flip side, maybe there is somebody and
I don't know if it's Jetfish, I don't know his
personal situation. Maybe his wife is like, hey, any opportunity
you got to get out of here, let's take it.
You know, you just don't know what is happening, you know,
in guy's personal lives sometimes or even where a guy
may want to coach. You know, you might feel like, hey,
(25:52):
I have better resources to players, access to players in
the state of California, and you can draw from Arizona
and possibly Texas. The weather is, maybe I can recruit better.
To ula, you just don't know what's going into these decisions.
But to Jetfish specifically, I mean I've seen his resume.
He has been a kind of career, you know, a
hopper from one place too. Yeah, I hadn't been anywhere
(26:14):
long exactly, and maybe he just strikes while the iron totts.
He's in an opportunity. I mean, it's still a great job.
I know it's not at the top tier if some
of these jobs we're talking about, but I still think,
and you know what else makes it attractive. They haven't
won anything recently. So you go in there and you
get nine wins, you're a hero. You know you're talking
you can get to the playoffs and they might be
putting a statue out in front of you know, so
(26:35):
I do think some of that comes into play as well.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
The Great Danny Canal check out the cover three podcast,
XM Radio Daily and a Hero to our show brought
to you by bet Online. It's all there, Danny, But
it does feel like, just not to be labor the point,
but it's great stuff you have on the coaching carousel,
and it is kind of the story of the year
in college football beyond what's happening on the field. It
(26:58):
feels like, I guess you answered it with the coordinator thing.
It feels like there's lots more jobs out there than
there are coaches.
Speaker 10 (27:07):
It does, but there are some really good coordinators that
are out there that maybe they're not household names. You know.
Colin Klein is becoming a household name. He's the offensive
coordinator at Texas A and M. He has done a
phenomenal job. Will Stein at Oregon, their offensive coordinator, has
done a phenomenal job. Like, there's guys out there, but
(27:28):
I think you get a little bit nervous if you're
the hiring, you know, if you're either the consulting firm
or you're the athletic director, whoever's making the decision. You
want somebody that's had success as a head coach. But
I think that can be overvalued sometimes, Like see the interview.
People get him in the room, find out, I mean,
what their plan is. These guys, some of them are
(27:49):
so impressive, and you just sometimes they miss out on
opportunities because they're not a head coach yet. I think
Spencer Danielson at Boise State would be somebody I would call.
You know, He's done a phenomenal job at Boise. Now
I don't know does he fit you know, a Los Angeles?
Does he fit that market? I don't know, yeah, exactly.
So like there's some you know, I think it's interesting
(28:10):
because I've heard that narrative because some of these coaches
are staying. There's still some good football coaches out there,
Like they're not that hard to find. You just have
to do your due diligence and it has to be
a good fit, like culturally, Like I think that's what
we saw with Brian Kelly, who I got blinded a
little bit by the success he had everywhere he had been.
He won at Grand Valley State, he won at Cincinnati.
(28:32):
He won it.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
Notre Dame.
Speaker 10 (28:33):
You're like, oh, this guy's a winner. LSU is a
different place, Like it's a different culture. And when you
go in there and you fake an accent and you
get off to the right wrong foot from the get go,
it's like, uh oh, And it's still a people business.
And he apparently treated some people the wrong way and
they didn't like it. Now there's a lawsuit. It's getting
uglier and uglier. I do think some of it is fit.
That's why I think the interview process is so important
(28:55):
of really getting time with people as opposed to zoom
calls or having it. I can't stand the consulting firms.
When you know, schools farm out a consulting firm, like
you gotta be Kidney Beard an athletic director. That's your
job is to hire the coach, Like, do a good job.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
That's not my fault. Did you blame the firm?
Speaker 3 (29:12):
Right?
Speaker 2 (29:13):
That is why they do it.
Speaker 10 (29:14):
That is why they do it.
Speaker 3 (29:15):
But I can't stand, Hey, Danny, when you talk about
fit is great of a quarterback, you know, developer or
figuring out who can play quarterback as he was. There
was excitement around Lincoln Riley, but I'm sure you know it,
just it's never really felt like a great fit here.
You don't really feel him in the market, like he's
out there like, hey, this is the head coach of USC.
(29:35):
I don't know if that's just his personality. But they're
pretty good. I mean, they lost a Notre Dame and
they were rolling until that dumbass trick play showed up,
and you know, it was a tight game against Illinois,
like they could end up in the playoff. Do you
think he sticks around or do you think he tries
to cash that in and go find to Like what
you said that, I don't know spot that might be
(29:56):
a better fit for him.
Speaker 10 (29:57):
You know, he is an interesting guy. I've always been
joid talking to him. But I don't think he's the
most outgoing, Like you know, some guys are just naturally
people like, they're good around people, they're good in front
of crowds. He's a little bit awkward with that. But
I do think he can coach football. But can he
get a team to come together? Can he inspire the guys?
(30:20):
You know, And that's a question. I think the remains
to be seen, and I still think they have a
really good opportunity. You know, this year, they have Iowa
this weekend. That'll be a good physical test. But I
feel like they already passed that physical test against Michigan,
who definitely has better players than Iowa does. The game
at Oregon, Oregon has proved so far, like it's going
(30:41):
to be a tough out. USC will be underdogs in
that game, but I don't think it's crazy to think
they couldn't win that game. And then you've got UCLA
in a rivalry game. They should win that one, Like,
I don't think it's that crazy. So if you're tendant
to like winning cures any personality issues, any cultural fits
like that, that solves everything, you know. So I think
that's the bottom line of what Lincoln Riley has to
(31:01):
do is win this year. And I do think nine
and three, Like, let's say they fall short of ten
and two and they're nine and three, just outside the playoffs.
I think you can look at it and be like,
all right, this was a good foundational year we can
build on. We've seen improvement. We've seen him, you know,
at least come closer to the expectations. And it goes
back to what I was talking about, like nine and three,
it's a really good season, and I know sometimes it
(31:23):
doesn't feel like that. And the Illinois games probably won.
You look at it and like, man, but I mean
that's Illinois is a tougher out than they've ever been.
So I probably just talking in circles around Lincoln Riley
to your question again, I heard the sound. I'm sure
you guys played it back. I him asked about other jobs,
and it sounded almost identical to what he said when
he was at Oklahoma. And I'm not going, you know,
(31:44):
I mean, I get that, yeah, exactly like I don't.
Nothing would surprise me from that perspective. And if you
do want to reset the clock and have a fresh
fan base who feels you're the hero and you're tired of,
you know, being on the hot seat, which he probably
comes into next year if they do fall short of
the playoff, then maybe he does. But I don't. I
don't have a good feel for you know what direction
(32:06):
Lincoln Riley would go.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
None of us do, because he's a dead fish. You
don't got to be like Pete Carroll, but you gotta
do something anyway. We love you, Danny. Always great stuff
and always a great pleasure. To have your perspective on
the world of college football. We will talk to you
soon and remain diligent and strong in your beliefs.
Speaker 10 (32:30):
I appreciate that. Petros, You're the best money always goot
catching up with you guys.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
We'll see you.
Speaker 3 (32:33):
Thank you, Debny, get out Danny does it for bet online.
Check out bet online for updated college football playoff Heisman
in College Football Week twelve lines.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
We'll be right back with your dead and a live guy.
Birthday of the Day.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
Hello PMS listener. Did you know AM five seventy LA
Sports has a wide range of LA Sports podcasts.
Speaker 2 (32:58):
There's Rogan and Rondee.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
That one is my favorite, Dodger Talk with David Vassei,
the Dodger Podcast of record, Clipper Talk Without a Musk,
follow us all, and many more. Just go to A
five seventy LA Sports on the iHeartRadio app. What a
two ed Mono Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
A big thank you to Tim Kats and Katie our engineer.
Everything is in place for tomorrow's show that starts at
three o'clock, which talk because tomorrow we'll have Clippers versus
the House Nuggets. That pregame starts at six thirty. Clippers
lost last night. They've lost a lot of games.
Speaker 3 (33:35):
It's five in a row, six of seven. I think, yeah,
that sounds right. I believe they have the second worst
record in basketball right now. Only New Orleans is worse.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
Next Monday, We're gonna celebrate how bad the Clippers are
by doing a show at one o'clock. It is Petros
and Money Cafeteria, the marketplace in Irvine corner of jam
Marie Road and Irvine Boulevard. We're gonna have Roger's tickets,
We're gonna have Clippers tickets, Dog Orgs, We're gonna have
BJ's gift cards to give away. And don't forget podcast
(34:07):
this show on the iHeartRadio app or stream it live.
For what we say here matters right now, Matt's got
the dead guy. Birthday of it.
Speaker 3 (34:17):
Well, it's an easy one on Veterans Day, and again,
thank you to all the veterans happy would have been
one hundred and fortieth.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
We always knew it was George S. Patton.
Speaker 3 (34:26):
I didn't know it was George Smith Patton Junior, one
of the greatest but also controversial American generals, certainly the last.
Speaker 2 (34:33):
One relative of yours.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
Of course, if you've never seen the George C. Scott vehicle.
Many scenes we could have pulled to kick this one off,
but with the you know, my.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
Old football coach, Paul Hackett, it's a big fan of
this movie, of that, and it's a great movie. And
I appreciate it because I grew up with a lot
of old souls. Maybe, but most of my teammates they
just weren't feeding in the same way.
Speaker 3 (34:59):
Yeah, I can see that, But this one of the
great scenes.
Speaker 2 (35:04):
Had to explain that it was World War Two? Was
this not? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (35:09):
No?
Speaker 2 (35:09):
Is that Hitler?
Speaker 5 (35:11):
No?
Speaker 3 (35:13):
A cheeky brit perhaps pushing back on patents. Well, it's determination,
right when given an assignment that they think is not
able to be accomplished, don't.
Speaker 11 (35:22):
You would want to fall back and regroup. Not me, Freddie.
I don't like to pay for the same real estate twice, But.
Speaker 2 (35:28):
What about you?
Speaker 7 (35:29):
Then you can't pull them out of the line and
caught them up one hundred miles and then expect them
to attack without risk.
Speaker 11 (35:34):
I trained these men, so they'll do what I tell.
Speaker 1 (35:37):
Them to do.
Speaker 9 (35:38):
Perhaps we hadn't realized that you were quite so popular
with your troops.
Speaker 11 (35:41):
General, I'm not They'll do it because they're good soldiers
and because they realize as I do, that we can
still lose this war.
Speaker 3 (35:52):
Yeah, born into a military family of parents, grandparents, ancestors.
Speaker 2 (35:56):
So yeah, he's local. That's the crazy thing about it.
You think he was raised in like Charles or something
like that. Gabriel he was raising writing Glendale for a
while American Revolution, Civil War. His ancestors, previous generations decorated,
celebrated his heroes. So he said, there was really only
one path for me, and that was to chase glory.
Speaker 3 (36:16):
He had an undying ambition to become a warrior, to
achieve greatness on the battlefield. When he was a child,
he immersed himself in books on war strategy and war history.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
Started at the Virginia Robins versus the Barbarians on this
field one thousand years ago.
Speaker 3 (36:34):
He was at VMI Virginia Military Institute, then transferred to
West Point, graduated nineteen at nine, nowhere near the top
of his class, but at the top of his class
when it came to kicking ass and leading men. He
was a soldier, soldier, a guy with dedication, physical courage,
and leadership skills. Started in the cavalry and he excelled
immediately nineteen sixteen punitive expedition into Mexico under General John J.
Speaker 2 (36:58):
Pershing.
Speaker 3 (37:00):
He earned his stripes and attention for his aggressive pursuit
of Ponchovis forces WW one the Great War. Pat mcomes
a star. He ran the newly formed Take Corps, crushed
it in battle. He used a bunch of rickshaws back
then with a megaphone for sound effects, boldness, innovation, He
(37:21):
got into the ass off and personally directing attacks from
the front despite being wounded in action.
Speaker 2 (37:27):
His courage never wavered.
Speaker 3 (37:28):
Tactical insight successes earned him distinction and rapid promotion. He
believed in mobility, shock, and relentless offense. It's a career,
Mike leechout there, Well, let's just keep it coming, man,
keep the pressure on principles that would define his command.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
And say that he was more sound defensively than Leech.
I think everybody is right.
Speaker 3 (37:49):
The style that he defined in that in the Great
War would kind of defined the next World War. In
WW two he was a difference maker. Africa tangled and
turred the tide against German. You mentioned it, Field Marshall,
Irwin Rommel to.
Speaker 2 (38:06):
Your bast Ravan Bastard.
Speaker 3 (38:10):
Commander of the seventh Army in Sicily, he executed one
of the most aggressive and risky, amphibious invasions of the war,
out maneuver the Axis. Sports told him there anyway doing
it anyway, I'm gonna capture Paul Merril.
Speaker 2 (38:21):
We're trying to get a hold of you, George. I'm
not here.
Speaker 3 (38:24):
Clart send its voicemail that, of course, was he's not.
Speaker 2 (38:27):
Doing what we told you not to, are you? No?
Speaker 3 (38:29):
No, there was the slapping incident. Oh, come on, shell
shocked soldier. They said you gotta get rid of him.
Ike said, no chance. Just wait too, you guys get
rid of.
Speaker 2 (38:38):
Him, not me. Caepe them where he is.
Speaker 3 (38:41):
You've got command of the third Army in forty four
following D Day, and his leadership pretty much just kicked
absolute ass across France and into Germany. It was legendary.
A matter of weeks they liberated damn near everything, advancing
faster than supply lines. Battle of the Bults. His rapid
pivot northward relieved the besieged town of Baston and demonstrated
(39:04):
his unmatched operational agility and decisiveness. He's one of our
great battlefield commanders, but he wouldn't play politics. Incredibly outspoken,
so there were a lot of clashes. He was given
command of the occupation forces in Germany, but that did
not go well. Sadly, it's where he died, was killed
in a car crash in Mannheim, Germany. Patent thought to
(39:26):
be probably the greatest battlefield motivational American general ever. He
would have been won forty today, one hundred and forty George.
Speaker 2 (39:34):
Beatt today read book. There's going to be a heck
of a day for you, Matt. What have you got?
Speaker 10 (39:42):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (39:42):
Well?
Speaker 2 (39:42):
First, happy birthday to our friend Mark Sanchez, who's had
a rough year. Yes, happy today. Mark always been good
to us and beating out Canadian musician Peaches is Lee
Hany Come on, man, let's go lift twa. There's Matt's
arms and then there's Lee Haynes. You found my muse.
(40:07):
Those two things that are up in the sky like
Oryan's belt five eleven to sixty now sixty six years old.
Speaker 3 (40:19):
Today, it's barely got me in height, It's got me
a little bit in the way.
Speaker 2 (40:22):
Gapped teeth and muscles that you wouldn't believe ebony muscles, glistening, rippling, protruding.
Born and raised in Spartanburg, South Carolina, he went to
Spartanburg Methodist College. Let's go Pioneers, the big blue devout
(40:45):
Christian who's worked for the Trinity Broadcasting Network with his
own program. Because no man could be so swollen without
divide intervention. Clearly, Matt and I grew up at a
time to explain to some of you young people when
to be so abnormally grossly one might say incongruently swollen
(41:13):
was not considered grotesque. It was actually considered to be
pretty cool. Should cover muscle fitness this month just Sawdly Haine.
He's freaking awesome. Due Lee Haney was a hero to us,
all proven in twenty fourteen when he was inducted into
the International Sports Hall of Fame. We all agree it
(41:34):
took way too long. Hani was so swollen that he
won Mister Olympia a record eight times.
Speaker 3 (41:44):
Shaw Man breakdown that's worth freaking out over.
Speaker 2 (41:47):
The all time record is shared though with another bodybuilding icon,
another black man, flex wheeler, Ronnie Coleman. Oh, Ronnie Coleman,
of course, Aren'tinold's in there and Lou Ferrigno. But along
with those guys, Lee Haney is considered to be one
of the world's most swollen dudes. When dudes were more
(42:11):
swollen than they'd ever been before or since. He was
in the.
Speaker 5 (42:17):
Swoll wheelhouse of swollness. And it can't even be questioned, No,
they do not. You're just you can't. You can't possibly
be built like that. No one is ever going to
be as swoll as Lee Hanes. You know the risks.
Speaker 2 (42:31):
I mean in that time you could get a full
back us. He had one named west Bender. I believe
he was a raider for a while. Uh Burrows high
right here in burd Bank. He was so illegitimately swollen,
and people I couldn't believe that he could move. He
was so stiff, but he was swollen. We was It
(42:55):
was that time, hany HAINI just to show you how
accepted he was, was Bill Clinton's chairman of the Presidential
Council on Physical Fitness. He did that for three years.
Haiti's married, two kids and swoll real swollen and also swollen.
(43:18):
Where does Lee Hani live? Atlanta? Because he was too
swoll for any other smaller southern town. Lee Haney the
swolest man ever flex his pecks? What happened to the
peck deck machine? Lee Haney came in and ripped it
out of the wall with his freaking swoll pack? Why
(43:40):
is your head two inches dinner than it used to be?
Lee Haney stuck his head between my head between his pecks,
and he flexed and shred my head like a vice.
Speaker 3 (43:48):
Gret five eleven two sixty.
Speaker 2 (43:53):
Body fat? What happened to Nico Harrison? Lee Haney punched
him into the moon? What oh God, plea hate me?
The greatest bodybuilder of all time? In my humble opinion,
you gonna go drink my weight gain real quick. You
guys don't know. Matt's getting pretty small pretty soon. He's
(44:14):
gonna grow a Joe Weeder mustache. Oh yeah, all swoll
seventy year old, swollen body with a big stash colored
hair like Hartman.
Speaker 3 (44:23):
Get my squat's right, you know my techniques, A little.
Speaker 2 (44:25):
Wat legging, Matt. You got to get the harness. We'll
be back tomorrow. You got one, Yeah, three o'clock, Stay
with us. F one Radio