Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
How's the stream stream commencing broadcasting on a five seventy
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This is petros In Money, Thank You, Thank You, hosted
by Petros Papadae.
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Gus terrible person, He's the worst, and Matt money Smith.
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The pipes, the pipes, the pipe.
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Don't miss an episode. We're with you.
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Yeah, follow the petros In Money Show wherever you get
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He was a wise man who invented beer.
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Love me You that person Money five seventy Sports Live
everywhere on the iHeartRadio app home of the World Series
champion Dodgers. Game one of the NLCS against the Brewers
is tonight live from Milwaukee. First pitch just after five pm.
Blake Snell, We'll get the start for the Dodgers. David
Vessel join us in the next segment. Galpin Motors Broadcast
Booth will have all of that action, beginning with Dodgers
(01:05):
on deck about forty five minutes from now Timkates will
get you ready as the Dodgers try to make it
back to back World Series championships. And that would be
the first time in a quarter century in the Major
League Baseball century. This century. Yeah, that's why I said century.
So there you go, the first time in.
Speaker 4 (01:23):
A quarter century in the Major League Baseball.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
Century, in this Major League Baseball.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
This is a century of League baseball.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
This is the two thousands.
Speaker 4 (01:32):
Here, this is the edge of Aquarius. I gotta read you.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
That would be the millennium. By the way, this would
be the odds.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
You're right, brought to you by your so called Toyota dealers.
Speaker 4 (01:45):
We make it easy. This says, hey, money, how's your weekend?
Kind of chill base jumps, killim and Jarl drank whiskey
with some aborigines in Nepal pee. How about you? I
was in Wittier.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
Jesus, I will say, when I hit the road, I
want to hit the road. Why do not sit in
the hotel?
Speaker 4 (02:06):
You don't? You just you just live a better life.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
I take I take advantage of, as you like to say,
the free travel trip. If it's going to be on
the company's dime, I'm not going to stay inside and
watch the telly. I'm going to go out and figure
out what the heck is going on.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
I have some information for you. This is the word
of the day.
Speaker 3 (02:29):
Here's my number along with his words. The word of
the day.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
All right, Matt, the Little Ball and the Glove. Very
close to the year that the Brewer's Fever, that we
song we played from nineteen seventy nine came out. The
Little Ball in the Glove Milwaukee Brewer logo, which I
did not know was an am going to be and
most people don't. Okay, yes, yeah, was introduced forty seven
(02:58):
years ago in nineteen seventy eight. The elusive M and
B in the Glove. I thought you'd like this, Matt
was designed by an art student at the University of
Wisconsin O Claire. Oh wow, a tricky rep scallion named
Tom Mindel, just a young art student at O Claire
(03:25):
designed the M and be the Little Ball and the Glove,
and they still never won a World series. That was
way back. The little glove of the ball, Little glove
of the ball, turn it up.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
I don't even remember what the hat was before that.
That's the only Brewers had I remember.
Speaker 4 (03:47):
It was actually a cardboard twelver.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
That they were like a.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Beautiful thank you.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
I do remember when they ditched it for that stupid
wheat stock.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
In the it's like, what are you doing? You get
the best hat in baseball.
Speaker 4 (04:24):
Now we do use barley for the beer. Look the ball.
It reminds me of the guy's reaction when he goes,
I don't lie his mine many sharks. There are many
sharks here. Have you been in the water with the
sharks before? And he goes, yes, so far, sure, lots
of time, so far, no scars. And the guy goes.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
Anyway, and I believe Claire is spelled like oh thelett.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
Yeah, like you Claire, just say oh Claire, yeah, oh Claire.
But if you were in France, you'd say like, oh Claire, okay,
like that, yeah, all right, it is time for the
number of the Jay.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
Here's my number.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
Number of the day. Number the day is zero. It
was a football miracle yesterday. P I would imagine as
somebody who played the game, you know how hard it
is to go through an entire football game without committing
a single penalty, not alone an NFL game without committing
a single penalty. I mean, in reality, it's nearly impossible,
(05:25):
especially when it's understood on damn near every snap there's
a hole by someone offensive lineman corner. It's just the
degree to which the referees choose to call it. They say,
on at least ten to fifteen percent of snaps, someone
is probably jumping a fraction of a second early to
try to time things up to give themselves an advantage.
So to make sure I wasn't crazy, I went through
(05:46):
every single game yesterday to make sure that this wasn't
something that I don't know. It was just like a
week six thing, and yeah, you guessed it. The only
team that wasn't flagged for a single infraction was the
Kansas City Chiefs, whoa not one. The average number of
penalties per team yesterday was six and a half. There
are quite a few highlights making the rounds on social
(06:07):
media today wondering why that particular team who routinely is
pointed at as having been on the right side, the
favorable side of referees flags being thrown. You got Kelsey
with a blatant hold of a jersey that prevented a
defender from making a tackle at the line of scrimmage
(06:29):
and sprung it back for a big gain. You got
the offensive lineman Suamatailla with a face mask on a
pass rusher Juwan Taylor is pretty much a walking false start.
And for the first time p in nearly two years,
a team made it through an NFL game with zero penalties.
(06:50):
And it just happened to be the Chiefs. And I
bring it up because a lot of people today are
just looking at the highlight of the scrum after the game.
Speaker 4 (07:02):
Oh yeah, Juju Smith got punched.
Speaker 2 (07:04):
Yeah, Brian Branch slapped Juju, ripped his helmet off, tossed
him to the ground, and now we know why.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
He said, that's why you did all that TikTok.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
I'm sure the TikTok had a little bit.
Speaker 4 (07:16):
About I think it was about the chick TikTok. No,
he he said, why didn't you Juju on this beat?
Son of a bitch?
Speaker 2 (07:23):
What TV didn't show you? But when the game film
posts and everybody starts to get their hands on it,
you find out in a hurry. Uh, there was a
run to the opposite side. Brian Branch is just standing there,
not part of the play, and Juju Smith spears him
in the back. If you're a defensive player. And you
do that to a wide receiver, you're gonna get flagged
(07:44):
for hitting the defensive player. But when a wide receiver
does it to a safety or a nickelback, then yeah,
and Branch said, it happened right in front of the referee,
and he was sick of the officials letting all that
stuff go during the game. So that's why he decided
to take matters into his own hand and go, let
juju know even though the refs aren't going to hold
(08:05):
you accountable, I am the referee.
Speaker 4 (08:08):
Still very bad to.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
Do that, very bad, no doubt, don't want to do that.
He's been suspended a game, so not good.
Speaker 4 (08:14):
But also you seem very you know, preoccupied with the
Chiefs after a great victory from the Chargers.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Yes, yes, I am.
Speaker 4 (08:25):
Caylen Clark was there. Maybe that's why there was no
flat and and.
Speaker 2 (08:28):
And Taylor was there. The two of them were there. Uh.
The trick play that the Lions managed to run with
Jared Goff under center and then climbing out from under center,
motioning out wide and catching a touchdown passing the flat there. Uh,
they did not throw the flag on that play until
after the touchdown was scored and they then huddled in
(08:49):
the end zone to discuss it. Flagged it as an
illegal shift.
Speaker 4 (08:54):
Did you do you think that's because Caitlin Clark buzzed
down to the to the field let's go cheap.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
Yeah, I do, I do. I think it. I think
she said I didn't like that play. I want you
to make that play not com Yes, it's incredibly it is.
It is in illegal shift when you are under center
and then you just immediately motion out to a wide
receiver spot. But at the same time, if you're the referees,
it'd be great if they knew the rules where you
(09:22):
would flag that right away. Blow it dead, because once
the ball and when you score a touchdown, it becomes that.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
You know from formation, rules are complicated.
Speaker 2 (09:31):
They are so just a bad look. I would say
for the officials to not throw a single flag on
one side of the competition, especially when it happens to
be a team that many believe routinely gets away with
a crap ton of holes.
Speaker 4 (09:48):
Well, I know somebody that believes.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
I do believe, and there'll be more of I want
to believe later this hour.
Speaker 4 (09:56):
All right, it's time for Katie's song of the Day.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
This is the song of the day.
Speaker 4 (10:02):
Yeah, all right.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Song of the day is White Horses by Wolf Ellis
and they are playing tonight at the Wilturn Good Show.
Speaker 4 (10:09):
You guys haven't seen him?
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Yeah, right on.
Speaker 4 (10:12):
Good job, Katie. That was great and it's an I'm
a Horse Monday. So it all plug for wolf Alice.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
We love that.
Speaker 4 (10:20):
Well, who does it, Matt? I mean, there's no silver chair,
but I'll take it.
Speaker 2 (10:23):
Let's plug a band that's in town.
Speaker 4 (10:25):
Man fansitdown dot com. All right, We'll be right back
with David Bassey live from Family America, Fat White Family
Park coming up there.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
We've made it even easier to take LA Sports with
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Petro Some Money a five cent sports live everywhere on
the iHeartRadio Apple Modello meet you a lot of Monday
here on the Petrosen Money Show. It is not to
meet you A lot of it is not made with Modello.
A reward for those with the fighting spirit. Modello the
mark of a fighter we got Game one tonight pat
in Milwaukee on AM five to seventy LA Sports. You're
a home of the World Series champion Dodgers Game two tomorrow,
(11:18):
both at the same time five eight pm. And we
make our way out there right now. Courtesy of our
friends at Service Titan Southern California Commercial Oh hold on
Katie Southern California. Commercial and residential contractors using service Titan
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(11:40):
Individual results may vary.
Speaker 4 (11:41):
Now go I would have waited an awkward three seconds
to teach you and lessen joining us. Now it's David
basse On snails Inladay, Spectrum Sports Net, LA MLB Network,
the hardest working reporter in baseball and the best, and
(12:03):
he's back at the scene of a crime, of course,
not the first guy to go down the slide though,
for the Dodgers this week. I guess, Dave, how are you?
What's going on?
Speaker 5 (12:15):
Oh Petros? Nobody has brought up the slide incident once
since I've been here.
Speaker 4 (12:19):
I know, I know, but Steven Nelson anyway, I don't
know let's talk about Let's talk about why Otani's not
pitching in game one in game two. I know you're
excited about snell Zilla Day, but what's the plan with Otani.
I know he's not going down the slide.
Speaker 5 (12:37):
No, he's not going down to slide. He's actually playing
catch in the outfield right now, getting ready for his start,
whether that be Game three or Game four. Dave Roberts
would not specify that. And look, the Dodgers have gotten
to great links publicly to defend O'tani's one for eighteen
NLDS performance. They're all chalking it up to the great
(13:00):
Luzardo and Christopher Sanchez and Ranger Suarez, which is warranted.
It's been proven that O'tani doesn't stare well against lefties
with that three quarter arm slot. But this series is
tailor made for Otani to be able to perform well
because the Brewers are going to throw mediocre lefties at him,
(13:21):
and they're going to throw some right handers that can
throw ninety five plus. But many people around the Dodgers
are expecting him to break out in this series offensively.
And even though Dave Roberts wouldn't say this publicly, you
have to imagine part of the reason why the Dodgers
didn't want Otani pitching tonight or tomorrow is to focus
(13:45):
on the hitting to get his hitting going. It's been
shown this season that Otani doesn't do well on the
days that he pitches offensively and even the days after
that he pitches, So you would have to imagine this
is a product of multi layer reasoning. But part of
it is to focus on the hitting.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
Dave a lot of people pointing to the fact that
Dodgers are close to basically prohibited favorites in this series,
but then they say, Okay, how do I reconcile that
with them going zero and six against the Brewers? What
happened in those six games and what should we pay
attention to from them and what should we ignore from them?
Speaker 5 (14:26):
Well, first of all, those six games took place in
a matter of ten days before the All Star break,
and that's when the Dodgers were playing their worst. In
the middle and beginning of July. They did not have
Blake Snell. Tyler Glasnow made his first start during that
six game stretch. Max Monthly was hurt, Keith k Hernandez
(14:48):
was hurt, Luke Trevino was pitching in the bullpen at
that point in time, so it's so different. And talking
to Miguel Rojas earlier today, what benefitted the Dodgers is
they got a taste of how aggressive the Brewers can
be on the basis and they're going to be on
their toes. You can't just feel the ground ball if
they fit the center a right field and be lackadaisical
(15:11):
about it, because they will take the extra ninety feat
Dave Roberts mentioned this, Miguel Rojas, the coaches have all
mentioned this in the last twenty four hours that if
there's a runner on base, you better be very mindful
of the batted runner, the trail runner, because they may
try to take an extra ninety feet if you don't
(15:32):
make the right decision or come up with it cleanly.
That's the way the Brewers play like a college baseball team.
They take advantage of lackadaisical defense miscues. They have forced
the opposition to make more errors and Brewers teams than
any other games that the opposition plays in. So that's
(15:52):
what the Dodgers are up against. If they slug and
are patient and hit two three run home runs, that's
going to be a moot point because the Brewers cannot
splug with the Dodgers.
Speaker 4 (16:04):
David Vesse back in Wisconsin, brought to you my service
Titan dot Com. I remember the twenty eighteen NLCS. I
remember being in Wisconsin doing a game at Camp Randall,
and you and I did a show and you were
running around the field. Matt was on a trip with
the Chargers, and I don't remember much else about it.
(16:26):
Do most of the Dodgers that are here. Does anybody
remember that twenty eighteen nlcsence there other than Dave Roberts.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
I asked a few guys around the team that were here,
Keith j Hernandez, Max Monthy, Dave Roberts, and they all
said the same thing. They remember the catch that Chris
Taylor made and left field in Game seven. The second
most popular answer was yaciol fweet three run home run
(16:54):
in that Game seven, and the third most popular answer
was Justin Turners go ahead a home run against Justin
Jeffris in Game two here in Milwaukee. Jeffries was talking
trash the game before, they remember that, saying the Dodgers
were lucky, and Justin Turner shut him up in Game two,
(17:17):
So those were the three most memorable moments. And I
actually was on the bus with the players back from
the workout last night, and Clayton Kershaw gracious enough to
allow me to sit in the second row of the
bus in front of him, And I even announced to
the guys that weren't on the team that I remember
who closed out the last three outs of Game seven
(17:39):
in Milwaukee. That ANLCS and it was Kershaw. And I
started a bat like a goat in front of the
whole team and smell Zilla loved it.
Speaker 2 (17:48):
My god, man, David, could it be Otani that does
that in this series? Is that part of the thinking
because you've talked about it, right him coming out of
you know, can you imagine him coming to get the
last three outs in the World Series? I mean, the
NLCS is basically like the World Series. Is that what
we might be looking at? If he doesn't start Game
(18:08):
three or starts Game four or something like that.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
Yeah, it's on the table. If it wins seven games,
I could see that. But if he's pitching Game three
or Game four, I'm not sure there would be enough
time for him to do that. But certainly I wouldn't
rule anything out. But with the emergence of Roki Sasaki.
I feel like the Dodgers to feel very comfortable with
(18:33):
Rokie doing what he did in Game four and pitching
three innings.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
Well detailed and very very poignant information from our own
David Vassay. Have a great show tonight, Dave. We'll hear
you on Morongo Casino, Dodgers on Deck with Tim Kats,
Dodger Talk, Dodger Clubhouse, Game one of the NLCS tonight
in Milwaukee, a place where Vassay's in laws have a
family history. You know, the whole thing, not just the slot. Okay,
(19:01):
We love you, Dave, have a good.
Speaker 5 (19:02):
One, all right, Thank you, guys, love you too.
Speaker 4 (19:05):
All right.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
We want to see the Phonsie statue.
Speaker 4 (19:09):
Yet it's not my favorite tone.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Well you could be there for it's a blue collar tone.
Speaker 4 (19:17):
Well, what's wrong with that. We'll be back with more
petross and money on AM five seventy LA Sports. We
all have your Dad and a live guy Birthday of
the Day, and then we'll get it to Tim Kaits.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Hello, PMS listener. Did you know AM five seventy LA
Sports has a wide range of LA Sports podcasts.
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There's Rogan and Rondee.
Speaker 4 (19:48):
That one is my favorite.
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Dodger Talk with David Vasse, the Dodger podcast of record,
Clipper Talk without a Musk, follow us all and many more.
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Just go to Am five seventy LA Sports on the
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Speaker 4 (20:02):
Welcome back, everybody. A dramatic day for a dramatic time
in baseball. NLCS, Dodgers Brewers on a Modello meets you.
A lot of Monday coming up next, But first Matt
and I have the Dead and a Live Guy Birthday
of the Day before Tim Kaits who will man Scam
in the morning at six am takes over with Morongo
(20:23):
Casino Dodgers on Deck.
Speaker 2 (20:25):
Yeah, big thank you to David Vessa. He's out there.
You'll hear from him as well. First pitch, like you
said Blake Snell on the mound. Postgame Dodger Talk has
been a lot of fun through this run as the
Dodgers punch their ticket to the NLCS and await the
winner of the Blue Jays if they get out of
this series. Blue Jays Mariners, which is Seattle up six
to three and already up one game to none right now,
(20:45):
both of these being played in Toronto before it shifts
back to Seattle for three.
Speaker 4 (20:49):
You still should have watched Double Jeopardy.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
But you know, all right, I don't know if I
had double jet I don't have unlike you. I don't
have coox in my life to entertain me, you know, Matt.
You know, I just go with what I.
Speaker 4 (21:01):
Have, all right? For your dead guy birthday in the day,
the musical nickname given to him was God. And we
don't blasphem in here, you know, I don't have no blaspheme,
but they do call Art Tatum God. He would have
been one hundred and sixteen today, like a musical god.
(21:26):
That's what he was called by his fellow musicians. The
mostly blind jazz pianist Art Tatum widely regarded as the
greatest jazz pianist ever. Born in Toledo, Ohio, bad vision, cataracts,
good contacy, objects, and distinguished color. He grew up in Toledo,
where he played professionally. He knew how to play by
(21:48):
year as a child. He's just one of those people.
He started in church and then had his own radio show,
and Duke Ellington and Fatz Waller took interest in him
because he was considered to be a musical genius at
a very young age. The nineteen thirty two, he went
to New York. He had a bastard who did have Yeah,
(22:09):
he did. His only child was a bastard who had
a military career and died in the eighties. Afraid to fly.
He came to California by train and became huge in California,
played at clubs, played at bing Crosby's parties, and recorded
for Decca. He and his wife went on the Queen
Mary all the way to England, where he went on
the BBC, and he was the toast of the country.
(22:32):
He was actually married twice. It was said since Milwaukee
and the Dodgers are played. It was said that he
drank paps blue ribbon by the case, but no drugs.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
That's a lot of beer.
Speaker 4 (22:45):
Yeah. He didn't like to be let around in front
of crowds, so he walked out really slow to his piano.
When he performed, he was said to be kind and
generous and humble, and critics still argue and ray and
really quibble about his style and how great he was
(23:07):
or what the what the deal really was. He wasn't
a healthy man. He died at forty seven at Hollywood Presbyterian.
In nineteen fifty six, an MIT student coined the phrase
in a computation musicology Tatum. Because of his speed, It
(23:27):
is known as the word for the fastest pulse present
in a piece of music art Tatum. Yeah, Tatum, real good,
but almost some people say too.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
Good, like hard to process, too.
Speaker 4 (23:44):
Good, Like he just played so fast and he improvised
in a very different way, and like he was so
good that his excellence could kind of lull you to sleep,
sort of like you know, you sort of get used
to watching Otani hit a home run every time. Yeah,
I'll go for that every time though.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
That'd be great, love to hit a double every time.
You're a loted guy. Peete Chris Carter whose guys all
of Hollywood sixty nine to day, huh, And he's a
local dude born in Bellflower was a grom surfer. Growing up, surfed,
(24:22):
played some Little league baseball, went to Long Beach State,
got his journalism degree, and then landed a gig his
dream gig. Moved to Sant Clementy and was writing for
Surfing Magazine. Works his way up to the top, and
he's the freaking editor of Surfing Magazine. In the early eighties.
At twenty eight, had been there for thirteen years. In
(24:43):
eighty three, he starts dating his future wife, Dory, who
worked at Walt Disney, and Katzenberg liked his writing style,
so he hires him to write TV movies for the
Disney Channel. And happened to be playing in one of
the famous Hollywood softball games in Brentwood, a league that
(25:05):
I fortunately was in for a moment playing for the
Playboy Channel.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
And here the two were synonymous.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
Yes, he and the Playboy Channel. We were those night
calls ladies, and I formed a serious infield. They were
playing NBC and tartakov and he starts chatting after the game,
and Tartakoff's like, Hey, I want to hire you. So
he writes a bunch of pilots. One called Copter cop
(25:34):
another called cool Culture. It was kind of a.
Speaker 4 (25:36):
Surfing thing, surf dudes attitude.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
None of them were ever greenlit, but Peter Roth got
his hands on Cool Culture and loved it, and when
he took over TV production at Fox, Carter was one
of his first hires. Carter said, I got something. It's
kind of part Twilight Zone, part coull Shack. The night Stalker. Yes.
Originally Fox said okay, we like it, but can you
(26:00):
do it with vampires? And Carter was like, no, man
UFOs man. So his eighteen page treatment was titled The
X Files. It was pitched to Fox execs and they
rejected it. Peter Roth was not in that meeting. He said,
I'm going in with you. We're going back, he demanded
they green lighted. They did. He was given a budget
(26:22):
of two million dollars for the pilot. They put him
in the death time slot Friday night Primetime and it
was huge. Took off immediately, got a twenty four episode order.
Over nine seasons, multiple Emmy Award nominations, developed a massive
fan base around the world. Hugely successful feature film won
the Golden Globe for Best Drama Series, broke the record
(26:43):
for a network to pay for reruns six hundred thousand
dollars per episode to put him on FX. He then
did Millennium. Critics loved it. Got off to a great start,
but fizzled after three seasons. He revived The X Files twice,
first and O eight for the film I Want to Leave,
and later for two limited television seasons sixteen and eighteen.
Speaker 4 (27:04):
Oh those really got Adam Oslem going.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
They really did. He is considered one of the most
influential television creators of all time. Kind of started that
science fiction genre that, of course is so popular now.
Happy birthday, Chris Carter. Well we'll be back on. Yeah, well,
way to go.
Speaker 4 (27:22):
Congratulations to Santa Margarita and Carson Palmer on the victory
over Modern Day seven to six six seven, and coming
up next Morongo Casino Dodgers on deck at the NLCS
and it's in Milwaukee. We'll be back on tomorrow at
two