Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are listening to the Dan Patrick Show on Fox
Sports Radio.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
It's the final hour on this Wednesday. We'll talk to
the fastest man in the world, Noah Lyles. He'll stop
by here momentarily. Today's Mercedes Benz Interview. The day brought
to you by Mercedes Benz Dream Days. Mercedes Benz Dream
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Class Todaan, C Class Sedan and Clecabriolet. Going on now
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(00:28):
Good morning. If you're watching on Peacock, our streaming partner,
or listening on our radio affiliates numbering over four hundred
cities around America. We'll have a new poll question in
the final hour of the program, still trying to determine
the manly estate in America. Jim Cantore from the Weather
Channel weighed in and he seemed to be I think
highlighting some of those places that you didn't expect to
(00:51):
be manly, the outer banks of North Carolina or the
city of Chicago. But we've got results forthcoming. Also, if
we were going to have a rap name in the
state of Maine, what would it be Fritzi is all
over this eight seven seven to three DP show email
address Dpadanpatrick dot com, Twitter handling DP show. He won
(01:11):
a gold in the one hundred meters and a bronze
in the two hundred meters while having COVID Noah Lyles
joining us on the program. Noah, congratulations. What's it like
when you race when you're expected to win as opposed
to you might surprise people and win.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
I'd say when you're expected to win, the pressure is
definitely a lot higher. People are always going to be
hanging on every word, and when they don't expect you
to win, you're more of a under the radar. It's
a lot less pressure. It's a lot easier to win
because you feel like you're just going against the grain
and saying, yeah, I can do this, as opposed to, oh,
I have to do this.
Speaker 2 (01:49):
What made you think that you had lost the one
hundred meters?
Speaker 3 (01:53):
To be honest, I could. Usually I have that innate
feeling that tells me, yeah, I won this race, and
it's good even when it comes down to very very
close races. I've had races all throughout the year that
have been you know, the smallest of margins. Usually I
have that feeling, and at the end of the race,
I just didn't have that feeling. I didn't know where
(02:15):
I was in the race, and I was just like,
you know, I this is one of those moments that
I'm just watching just like everybody else.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
How often do you practice that lean at the tape?
Speaker 3 (02:26):
I actually don't practice it. It's kind of natural, you know.
I just know what it takes. I know that if
you throw your arm out enough, it will throw the
chest further. I also know that the torso is what
they count, and then you know, just knowing those few facts,
it's all about timing. It's all about when you decide
(02:46):
to lean. A lot of people will lean too early
and some people won't lean early enough. So just kind
of getting down the timing, you know, you just kind
of learn it. It's kind of an innate feeling you had.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Who's the fastest man in world?
Speaker 3 (03:01):
That's me. I mean, that's what the title.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
But if I look at if I look at usaying
Bolt's time, is he still technically.
Speaker 3 (03:12):
Hey, you're talking about records. Now, you're asking who the
world record is. You know, we've always given the title
of fastest man to a world champion and an Olympic champion.
You know, we've it's just so happens for the last
you know, for eight sixteen years that that was both.
He had both. Usually you don't always have the person
that has the world record and the title at the
(03:34):
same time. But we in the sport of track fit
have always given it to the title of who has
the Olympic one hundred meter men's gold medal and who
has the World Championship hundred meter men gold medal.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
How long do you think it will take for somebody
to surpass Bolt's time in the hundred meters.
Speaker 3 (03:52):
I'm trying to get it done as soon as possible. Unfortunately,
I don't have a crystal ball, so I can't tell
you an exact date. But I mean, as athletes, we're
always looking to improve ourselves and we're always looking for
greater challenges. And I think everybody sees the world record
as one is incredible and two as I want that
to be me.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
When did you know you were fast?
Speaker 3 (04:13):
I mean I've kind of always known I was fast.
Both of my parents were runners. They both ran for
collegiately for Seeing Hall, and my dad even went professional
with Adidas and you know, there's just that, you know,
I'm faster than everybody on the playground, feeling that you
have and it just never went away. So throughout the years,
it just continued to grow more and more, and then
I got to a point where I was like, you
(04:34):
know what, I think I could be the great set this.
You know, I think if I really settled down and
work on everything, I possibly could be the best.
Speaker 2 (04:46):
What's that feeling like to run fast?
Speaker 4 (04:49):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (04:50):
It's a very you forque type of feeling. That's that's
why I feel it. It's very hard when a lot
of athletes leave the sport because they don't get that,
you know, adrenaline rush anymore. When you're running and you're
constantly feeling like you just go faster and faster. I
think the easiest way to describe it is if you
run down a hill, the hill kind of does most
of the work for you, so it feels like you
(05:10):
can just run forever. That's kind of what it feels like.
When you're running at top and speed and you're pulling
out ahead of everybody. It's just like, oh my god,
this is that I'm the fastest. I'm the fastest.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
What's the strangest thing you've thought about while you've been running,
while it didn't in a race, can your mind wander
at all?
Speaker 3 (05:30):
It can? It could definitely wander. I've had races where,
you know, me and my brother are both professional runners
and coming through high school. I think there was this
time where we were running and he was winning at
a certain point in the race and I railed out
yelled out, oh you want to play, and I just
(05:51):
took off on him.
Speaker 5 (05:53):
Yeah, that was.
Speaker 3 (05:53):
Pretty random of a thing to say in the middle
of the race.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
We're talking to Noah Les one hundred meter gold met
in Paris. Is there a like depression set in after
the Olympics with this is so big and now it's
over and then you got to wait four more years
for another Olympics.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
No, there's definitely. That's definitely a thing. I can't I
can't remember the exact word for it, but you almost
like the Olympic syndrome, you know, coming from such a high,
it's very hard sometimes for athletes to come down off
of that because you've you've worked for four years and
maybe more, and because of that, you don't know where
(06:33):
to go once you got up to the top, because
most people can only imagine getting to the top. They
don't think of, oh once, what's on the other side.
I think me knowing what I want to do with
the gold medal with the title has helped me in
a sense, also knowing who I am as a person,
knowing that if I got the medal or didn't, I'm
still going to be the same. No, I'm still going
to go out and attempt to run as fast as
(06:55):
I can. I'm still going to try and be a
creator and vinor lover of the sport. But know that
I'm the same guy who's gonna get on with my
friends and play video games and take out the trash.
You know that's still me. All those were just a
form of me, and knowing that helps me to say, hey,
I'm perfectly fine going back home and nobody knowing who
I am, and then at the same time walking outside
(07:17):
and everybody.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
Know Anybody tried to steer you to play football.
Speaker 3 (07:23):
Oh, tons, tons of times, tons of times throughout high school.
They were just like, oh, yeah, we'll get you on
a wide receiver. We'll just put you on a go round.
Nobody will touch you. But my mom was very strict
on not having us, you know, do football. She was
very concerned about injuries, concussions, all that stuff, and rightfully so.
But personally, I'm not that big into physical contact sports.
(07:47):
I think like basketball is the closest physical contact sport
I'll get to. But my brother, I tell you he
was born to be a wide receiver.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
But he's not. He's a professional tracker.
Speaker 3 (08:00):
Fleet he is, he is. We want a different route,
That's just how it is.
Speaker 2 (08:05):
And like, uh, we have a plan for you versus
Tyreek Hill. Plan both. Yeah, how about you both wear
football uniforms.
Speaker 3 (08:18):
It's not a little two gimmicky me. I mean he's
the one who changes.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Okay, yeah, but we have to we have to make it.
This is for TV. No, I'm going to produce this.
So maybe that or you both hold a football and race,
or how about because see sixty meters, I know why
he wants to do fifty yards because even if he loses,
he's gonna lose. It'll be close. But one hundred meters
(08:44):
that there's no interest in that. But you have everything
to lose. But you would still do this with Tyreek Hill.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
I'm not right. Look, he challenged me, So that means
he wants the crown of fastest Man, so you have
to race the race that gives you the crown. There
might be leeway for adjustments. But if you think we're
running anything that has yards in it, and you're sorely mistaken.
But we can definitely have conversations. I'd have no problem
(09:13):
having conversations about it. But you're right, this is entertainment. No,
we won't be running with pads on. But hey, I
don't have a problem laying down a track in the
middle of a football stadium and saying, hey, let's pack
this place out.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
Okay, But I brought this up to you, Saint Bolt.
I don't know how long ago when Tyreek Hill wanted
a piece of Usain Bolt, and I said, would you
be willing to put up one of your gold medals?
And you would not put up your gold medal in
one hundred meters versus Tyreek Hill.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
What does he earn to deserve that status? He plays football,
and he's a great football player. But you don't get
to jump the line just because you think you're best.
There's tons of those people out there.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
What if you got his Super Bowl ring?
Speaker 3 (10:00):
I don't want a Super Bowl, right, I'm very, very
content with my Olympic medals.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Well, DK Metcalf at least did try to do this professionally.
I mean he took the steps. But yeah, if I'm Tyreek,
if I can get this to forty yards, then I
think he would probably sign up for that. But one
hundred meters. See, that's the difference. Though. You get to
top end speed and you stay at top end speed.
(10:31):
Most people get to top end speed and then all
of a sudden it doesn't last long. That feels like
that's the difference between being football fast and being track fast.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
It is, but even in track, you get to top
end speed faster than the football players.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
They just don't know if your slow start though. Explain
your slow start or what is perceived. Is it calculated
that your start is slower because you were i think
in last place after what fifty or sixty meters at
the Olympics.
Speaker 3 (11:00):
Yeah, I'd say it's a perception compared to the field
that I'm racing against. Yes, it looks slow compared to
the world. It's at the top of the list. I mean,
you're not going to find a faster starter out there
if you're just picking people off the street or even
anybody who's probably at a collegiate level or so on
(11:21):
and so forth. But yeah, it's perceived slow because I'm
going up against the fastest men on the planet. But
you know, we all have our gifts and that's why
we run one hundred meters, because just because you start
in the first thirty meters in last doesn't mean that
you're going to end up that way at the one
hundred meter mark. And it's all about who crosses the
tape first.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
Your reaction to NBA players reaction to you talking about
you're not truly a world champ in your sport, but
you are in your sport.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Yeah, what was the question?
Speaker 2 (11:56):
What is your reaction to? What their reaction was to
you had to say, you know, Kevin Durant and Anthony Edwards,
there were, you know, some guys who took some shots
at you.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
To be honest, I think everybody missed the point which
happens when you just have fifteen second clips. I mean,
can you tell me what the question was asked that
proposed that answer.
Speaker 2 (12:19):
I'm not sure what. Yeah, but you were talking about, hey,
how can you be you're a world champ because you're
going against the world whereas the NBA is not going
against the entire world or Major League Baseball.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
But that wasn't what the actual question that was proposed
to me was about. That was a very fifteen second
clip of what the whole answer was. That question that
was asked to me was what is it like going
back to the US and not being recognized for your
accomplishments like a lot of the other sports and countries
(12:54):
that they have in other other places. And I said,
it hurts because the US such a wide array of
sports and great athletes, and unfortunately we give the title
of world champion to other sports. And that hurts me
because I feel that we have world champions and the
(13:16):
ones that they're giving it to are national champions. And
that in basketball was an example. There are other sports
that do it as well, and it just hurts that
because you do have world champions like me, and you
know there are you know, even there's even a world
championship basketball team that goes out, you know, that's not
a part of the elms. And there's also people who
do in gymnastics, tennis, you know, they based everybody who's
(13:40):
on the world stage, you know. And that's the message
that was trying to get it across. They were just
an example of what the question that was asking me
was posing.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
That's fair. Where's the gold medal?
Speaker 3 (13:54):
It's it's right over there here. Why you want to
see it?
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, give me the medal. Yeah, go get it.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
Yeah, it's kind of cool. I got a piece of
paras in it. It makes it real special.
Speaker 2 (14:10):
Here we go, very shining. Now you haven't shined that up,
have you.
Speaker 3 (14:16):
No, I haven't shined it up. Became like this. It's
actually a little dingier than when I first got it.
Speaker 2 (14:23):
You know what, you should show up to the race
with Tyreek Hill, no shirt on and just the gold
medal around your neck, just just kind of announce your
presence there.
Speaker 3 (14:32):
Noah, Hey, I'll I'll have everybody carry it like a
like a boxer. I'll bring and Olympic medals and I'll
just have somebody carrying on. Somebody's gonna have a heavy.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
Keep keep fighting a good fight. Thanks for joining us,
and again congratulate me. That's Noah Lyles, fastest man in
the world, and uh, he's got everything to lose if
he's going to against Tyreek Hill. But I would just say,
you want to run a hundred let's run a hundred.
Other than that, everything else is a gimmick. I'm the
(15:10):
fastest man in the world at this distance. And if
you want to come for the title, come for the belt.
Here you go. And Tyreek's not going to do that.
He's not gonna do one hundred meters, but forty meters
forty yard dash, you got a chance, you know. But
he didn't sound too nervous, that's put it that way. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (15:31):
See that dude's a lot of fun right there. I
love just say a big smile, he'd be I want
that ring.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
A super Bowl. Oh, he's fun. He had a lot
of fun, a lot of personality.
Speaker 7 (15:43):
All right.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
I got phone calls here, people talking about which state
is the manlyest state? And also if you were a
rapper from the state of Maine, what would your rap
name be. Yes, we're going to have all of that
coming up right after this.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
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Speaker 8 (16:09):
Hey, it's Ben, host of the Fifth Hour with Ben
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(16:32):
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Speaker 2 (16:39):
Paralympics Starting next Wednesday, August twenty eighth on NBC and Peacock.
The race to NASCAR's playoffs continues in Daytona. Don't miss
the drama, the excitement, the characters. Saturday, seven Eastern on
NBC and Peacock. All right, we'll get to a phone
calls manly estate people trying to defend their turf. But
(17:00):
we were talking yesterday when the show ended, and somehow
stumbled upon a if you were from Maine, what would
your rap name be? Fritzy? This is in his wheelhouse, So, Fritzie,
I'm gonna let you start off. Just give the audience
a sampling of what your rap name would be if
you were from Maine.
Speaker 7 (17:19):
I have a few of them, you're want to just
stick to one.
Speaker 9 (17:22):
I was working on this yesterday based on expressions of
what they say in Maine. So one of them, for example,
would be TJ kawcaw to say something as wicked, frigging incredible.
Speaker 7 (17:31):
In Maine, you say caw call. Are you familiar with that? Okay?
Speaker 9 (17:35):
So tjkaw call would be one name I have from away.
Fritzy not from around Maine. An outsider. You're quote, you're
considered from away is what they sing in Maine. Lil
gesum crowbar an expression of exasperation. They say gesum crowbar,
dj humdinger, wicked, remarkable or outstanding person. You call someone
(17:55):
a humdinger in Main, so dj humdinger.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
And the last one was I got a couple. I've
been thinking about this way too much. My rap name.
Let me get to the last one here, Let me
get to the last one here. Let's get this. This
didn't go as I thought it was going to. But
what's your last one? On?
Speaker 7 (18:11):
Old dirty banger?
Speaker 2 (18:16):
Okay? Odb All? Right? Uh, Paulie your rap name? If
you were from the state of name, I went kind
of obvious.
Speaker 10 (18:25):
I went with Lobster Rolls with a Z on the end,
Lopster Rolls, okay, and ah Lobster, but then you need
to like Biggie Small's had three or four rap names.
So I started my career as Lopster Rolls. And then
I go with LLL Coolban, you know, old school ll
Coolby l Bean Okay, okay, ll Coolby all right? Got anymore?
Speaker 1 (18:49):
That's it?
Speaker 2 (18:50):
And then like a good idea. Yesterday it seemed like
a good idea. We were flowing, uh Setan Seaton, how
about you? You got a rap name? Yeah, Kene Funk Funk.
Speaker 6 (19:03):
And then people somebody on Twitter did says bangers only,
which is pretty nice, you know, like a good song
as a banger a bangal.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Okay, all right, can of funk?
Speaker 7 (19:12):
Can of funk?
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Marvin? Do you have a rap name if you were
from the state of Maine?
Speaker 11 (19:17):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Because I gave this a little or no thought. Marv
Ski all right, Marv Ski, Yeah, No, I got that's
Sunday River. Is that a main Yeah? Sure, Sunday River.
Speaker 6 (19:32):
Hey Dan, do you have a rap name that you
wouldn't know?
Speaker 2 (19:36):
No? You know, I don't. I don't unless I had it. Yesterday,
but we were, we were I thought flowing Big Daddy Maine,
Big Daddy Main could Big Daddy Cane? Okay, big Daddy Cane.
Once again, this seemed like a really good idea yesterday
and today with the big build up. I don't think
(19:57):
we you know, the build up.
Speaker 6 (20:00):
The problem is usually the build up when it's spontaneous,
just like this is a lot of fun when we
tease for two and a half hours that we have
main themed rap names.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
That's usually and does all right, what.
Speaker 7 (20:11):
About soup dark but a French onion soup your head yesterday?
Speaker 2 (20:15):
But may is not like I think I'd sit this
one out the rest of it. Uh, j D and Tulsa,
you got bars.
Speaker 5 (20:28):
A couple of Hey, I.
Speaker 12 (20:32):
Just said a couple of things. I didn't know if
Alaska was being omitted from the poll for any reason.
Maybe then it was just I guess unfair. But Alaska
should definitely be up there, I think. And then I
think that the best main rap name would be maniac.
Speaker 4 (20:53):
So that's all I had.
Speaker 2 (20:54):
Okay, all right, Well, thank you JD. Yeah, Alaska's emeritus.
As far as the mainly estate Alaska, it stands alone.
Barry and Santa fe Hi, Barry, what's on your mind?
Speaker 4 (21:06):
Good morning? So is good morning, chet Roe. I have
a main rap name, and uh I will only respond
to the future to orn O, flow.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Deep or Maine. Okay, very deep, cunt, Thank you, Barry,
and good luck with your mets. A couple of phone
calls on the manly of state, Kyle and Iowa joining us. Hey, Kyle,
what's on your mind?
Speaker 13 (21:34):
Six foot a corn fed two hundred pounds?
Speaker 2 (21:39):
All right, and.
Speaker 13 (21:41):
I gotta go back to that guy that was from
Maine talking about, Oh, the rules you gotta have is
you got to have a truck. You know, I know
a lot of guys that have trucks that aren't worth
a tinker's darn. So uh okay, And you know here
we do things like bail hay and plant corn and farm.
So throw a little fawn out to the guys in Iowa.
(22:04):
And uh. You know, when I think about Maine being
hard and tough, I just almost think of like a
pillow fight. You know what I'm saying. I'm out I'm
out here rebuilding a road right now.
Speaker 5 (22:15):
Boss.
Speaker 6 (22:18):
So all right, okay, that's that's something unique to only
Iowa too. By the way, Yeah, big eut roads building
a road, building roads. That's something unique that Iowans just.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
Nobody else bails. Hey either Troy in North Dakota, Hy Troy,
what's on your mind?
Speaker 4 (22:38):
Hey, Bud?
Speaker 14 (22:40):
Hey, five eleven, five eleven, I'm still working on it. Yeah,
gonna put a vote in for North Dakota. Cold, very cold, cold,
whatever you imagine it to be, just think colder. But
there is a silver lining. The what we say around
(23:01):
here keeps south the riff raff. And the example is
my neighbor's place just came up for sale today, two bedroom,
one bath on an acre for sixty thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
Thank you man, Thank you, Troy. I've been to North Dakota,
in South Dakota, and I'll coke sign on those. There's
some conditions that you've got to be manly. Tom in California,
Hi Tom, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 15 (23:28):
Morning? Dan? Good morning Dan Ats. I'm a handful of
Times caller from southern California desert, but I'm a transplanted maner.
So when Seaton made the comment that nobody had voted
for Maine, I was motivated and I jumped on the
website and voted immediately, Dan, I got a quick question
for you. During the break leading up to the eight
o'clock hour, I saw a picture of what might be
(23:51):
your camp with the cabin on one side and the
four red Adirondack chairs on the other side. Is that
your place?
Speaker 2 (24:01):
Who knows? Who knows?
Speaker 15 (24:02):
Tom oh Okay, I understand, but let me make it,
make it very clear. You live in a camp, not
a cottage, not a summer home, not a cabin. In Maine,
it's called a camp. And let me share with you
why I think Maine is the manly estate has to
do the way us maners were brought up. Now, we
(24:23):
a camp in our family, and when I was a
young boy, my dad used to love to say, I
got a little project for you. Well, the little project
turned out to be digging up a leeching bed. So
I was meant to ask you, do you have sewer
service or do you have your own septic system?
Speaker 2 (24:43):
We just have an out house here, Tom. That's the
way we do it in Maine. And by the way,
it's called main cabin masters, not main camp masters. Just
gonna throw that out. There's maybe a technicality here, but yes,
they do a call it camps. But the Main Cabin
Masters show, it's called cabin Yes.
Speaker 6 (25:01):
I was under the impression that a camp is usually
a three season like structure. Usually they they might have
running water, they might not. They probably don't have plumbing
for you know, like a restroom.
Speaker 11 (25:17):
You know.
Speaker 6 (25:17):
I always thought that a camp was a very specific thing.
Does that is that to imply that no one in
Maine has a house or a cabin. They only have camps.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
They have camps. I think that's what they like to
call it. I think you have a cabin.
Speaker 6 (25:31):
I think you very clearly have a cabin.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Well, the Cabin Masters did come over, so technically I
have a cabin.
Speaker 6 (25:39):
It would be funny if Main they had a show
called Main camp Masters, and then people tuned in You're like,
they're not camping, They're building houses.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
What the hell I thought this was going to be camping? Uh?
Robin Orlando, Hi, Rob, what's on your mind?
Speaker 5 (25:53):
Dad? I feel like I need to step in and
salvage of the main rap name thing. Give me a second.
I got I got three or four quick ones here, Luta, Crisp,
Biggie Skeets, two Soft Crew, and my favorite insane flannel posse.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
Okay, you salvage it there, you salvage it there at
the end. But thank you, thank you for your contributions. Yes, Todd,
what's on your mind today?
Speaker 7 (26:22):
What about the Big Daddy Man? I could see you
rolling with that. Oh you did say that.
Speaker 2 (26:27):
We said that, we did that one. Yeah, it was
on the show. Sometimes it's good, sometimes it's good. Ton, Yes, Paul,
I'm reading.
Speaker 10 (26:36):
I'm gonna go back to Noah Lyles for a second
with Tyreek Hill, And I've been reading a lot about
this because Lyle's been dealing with it and talking about it,
and Tyreek Hill he's been talking about this, like you said,
since we talked with Usain both on our show and
Usain Bolt's like, yeah, sure, if you're Noah Liles, do
you do this? Because I know he's making good dough,
but track and field runners never make great dough. I
(26:57):
mean Usain has, but he's an anomaly. If you're Noah Lyles,
you look towards this as an event and participate to
some level.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
He can't.
Speaker 10 (27:06):
I know he has a lot to lose, but he
can make a nice chunk of dough in March with
something like this.
Speaker 2 (27:11):
Yeah, but it only lasts ten seconds. Yeah, the build up,
that's the problem. Well, but Floyd Mayweather and Connor McGregor,
there was the build up, the undercard, and then the
fight was gonna go on a little bit longer because
Floyd's gonna let it go on a little bit longer.
Connor is not known for being a boxer, so you
at least had something and people tuned into it for
(27:33):
the undercard. I don't know. If you have an undercard
where you have other races with other elite athletes, then maybe,
but it's kind of tough to do a build up
and then it's ten seconds and then it's over. So
you need preliminary events.
Speaker 10 (27:47):
So maybe like the discus winner versus Josh Allen, so
you could throw a football or a discus farther.
Speaker 2 (27:53):
A combined event. You start putting together a little bit
of a okay, right, So the superstars bring that back
world of sports. Some celebrities, Yeah, celebrity athletes. There gonna
jump in Kendall in New York. Hey, Kendall, what's on
your mind today? All Right?
Speaker 16 (28:11):
I have the killer rap name from Maine.
Speaker 7 (28:14):
You ready? Yeah?
Speaker 15 (28:17):
Okay?
Speaker 4 (28:18):
DJ Poland swings.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
All right, set of DJ Poland Springs all right, all right,
we're making progress here. Leo and Albany, Leo and Albany.
Hi Leo, Hey, how you doing, folks?
Speaker 16 (28:37):
Yeah, I got a good one. My name is Leo,
my main Man.
Speaker 2 (28:47):
Thank you Leo main Man. Well again, this was a
good idea yesterday.
Speaker 6 (28:53):
Yes, some people are saying that yours should be the
main event because you're in Maine and you have great hair.
Main event a man. So it could be m A
n E right right or m A I N E
whichever it goes both ways. Yeah, yeah, but main event,
great hair in Maine.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Blake in New Orleans, Hi, Blake, what's on your mind?
Speaker 12 (29:14):
Hey, good morning.
Speaker 16 (29:15):
I wanted to call in about the mainly estate. Usually
people who brag about being rich are the people who
are leverage to the max, whereas the people that are
really quiet will usually surprise you with what's in there?
Four ok? Four one K. So the people who are
calling into the show remain bragging about me being mainly
are kind of making the point, making your point that
(29:37):
they're not. They're not that mainly.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Oh, I'm not going to turn against my home state
of Maine. Here they are. I've witnessed manly up here.
Just saying, but you know, there's other places around the
country where you go. I don't know if I could
survive here. North Dakota is definitely one of those places
where I just don't know if I could. South Dakota,
upper part of Minnesota might have a hard time with that.
(30:04):
Dean in Texas, hy Dean, what's on your mind?
Speaker 16 (30:07):
Hey?
Speaker 12 (30:08):
Dan?
Speaker 11 (30:08):
How are you in North Dakota? I was in the
Air Force in North Dakota working on the min and
Men three missiles. There's nowhere to hide out there. Cold
is cold, but yeah, hey, I have My thought is
you were talking to Diana Russini yesterday about Aaron Rodgers,
and it got me thinking, if Aaron Rodgers would have
(30:28):
kissed and made up with Green Bay and they started
the season with his four plays and out and then
love took him through the playoffs, would we be talking
about Aaron Rodgers the same way we're talking about him now.
Speaker 2 (30:43):
Well, it depends on if somebody was going to sign
him after an injury. The Jets already had him under contract,
and so that's the difference is he played four plays
and now we had the entire season off season to
think about Rogers coming back and helping the Jets, where
if he had gotten injured four plays in with the Packers,
Jordan Love took over, then who's going to sign Aaron
(31:05):
Rodgers the following season?
Speaker 10 (31:07):
Yeah, Pauling, Yeah, you really have to go back to
when Jordan Love was drafted by the Packers. Aaron Rodgers
coming off a season for him, he was only through
twenty six touchdowns for him, that's an off year and
he had sixty two percent passing that after they drafted
Jordan Love the next season, he was a seventy one
percent passer, forty eight touchdowns and five picks. Yeah, I
mean that's all time season he had. But they had
(31:28):
already changed directions and they really couldn't go back. At
some point you have to morph to Jordan Love or
it's a wasted first round draft pick.
Speaker 5 (31:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (31:37):
And I think a quarterback once you kind of settle
in and it becomes your team, then you become in
Bolden and you wanted to be more of your team.
Aaron Rodgers. It must crush him that he's watching Tom
Brady win all these super Bowls or Patrick Mahomes is
moving past him, and he probably was thinking, I don't
get many more chances. I want to build a roster.
(32:00):
I want us to use a first round pick on
a wide receiver and not another quarterback who's going to
maybe take my job. I understand that frustration, but this
is a well run organization to do what they've done
to have, you know, two great quarterbacks, two of the
top maybe fifteen, top ten quarterbacks of all time, and
you're set at that position for thirty years.
Speaker 7 (32:23):
Now.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
Granted you got two super bowls out of it, and
we look at that as a disappointment maybe, but at
some point, I think you have to say, you know,
the Niners did this with Joe Montana. If the Niners
can move on from Joe Montana, anybody can. You know
the Patriots did this with Tom Brady. At some point
you just say we need to hit a reset here.
(32:45):
And Tom Brady looked around and said, all right, which
team is underachieved? That they're quarterback away? And he looked
at that defense he realized that he had a couple
of really good wide receivers and he was able to
win a Super Bowl. You know, Rogers probably looking around, going, Okay,
where do I want to go. Jet's got a lot
of talent, They're going to pay me. I'm going to
go into New York and I get a chance to
(33:07):
do something that will be historical and win a Super
Bowl with the Jets. So I get it. But these
franchises at some point, you know, case in point, the
Saints were going to draft Patrick Mahomes and they still
had Drew Brees playing at a very high level. They
were probably willing to move on from Drew Brees because
(33:27):
they were going to take Patrick Mahomes. He went the
pick before and changed history. All right, let me take
a break, last call for phone calls? What we learn?
What's in store tomorrow?
Speaker 1 (33:37):
Right after this, be sure to catch the live edition
of The Dan Patrick Show weekdays at nine am Eastern
six am Pacific on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio
wap A.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
Last call for phone calls, What we learn? What's in
store tomorrow? Just got word that John Heater, who played
Napoleon Dynamite, is set to join us on program. I
think we're coming up on twenty years for Napoleon Dynamite.
Does that sound right? That's the anniversary, Yeah, twentieth anniversary
of the movie. All right, So John Heater, who played
(34:10):
Napoleon Dynamite, won't join us on the program.
Speaker 10 (34:13):
Yes, Paul, I've seen that movie. I actually saw it
once with you Dan. We were in a bar and
it was playing, and we'd also we've both seen it.
We're in Arizona and they were replaying it.
Speaker 2 (34:21):
It's a fascinating movie.
Speaker 10 (34:22):
I would love to know how that gets pitched and made.
It is as non traditional as it gets, and it
became huge.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
It became a big thing, and also you get typecast, like,
I'm curious, at what point did John realize I'm always
going to be known as Napoleon Dynamite and wherever you go,
somebody's gonna say, hey, listen to my impersonation of Napoleon Dynamite.
When I watched it the first time, it's one of
those where you go, they're gonna pull this off. It
(34:52):
just felt like the premise was like, Okay, Pedro for
president and he's out there feeding a lama to awkward.
The dance scene is still my favorite. When you know,
the talent show for those who are vying for school
president and Napoleon gets up there, still can't go wrong.
Got his ugs on or whatever those moon boots were
(35:14):
that he had on. They were great all right, So
he'll join us on the program tomorrow. Tyler in Detroit
joins us. Now, good morning, Tyler, what's on your mindpp? Hey,
ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the stage. Trees Company, Trees Company,
(35:35):
that's your rap name? Trees Company. Craig in California, Craig,
what's on your mind?
Speaker 15 (35:43):
Good morning? Good morning. I think I got to drop
the mic name.
Speaker 2 (35:47):
Okay, the method Maine? Is that a method?
Speaker 7 (35:53):
Man?
Speaker 2 (35:53):
Method Maine? Okay, let's try to salvage this because once
again it sounded like a good idea. I build it
up too much, guilty of great expectations. Zach and Portland. Hi, Zach,
what's on your mind?
Speaker 7 (36:08):
Hey?
Speaker 16 (36:08):
DP six?
Speaker 4 (36:13):
Thanks, I'm hoping I got the name you're looking for here.
Speaker 15 (36:18):
MC crabs with a Z.
Speaker 2 (36:23):
Okay, MC crabs with a Z.
Speaker 7 (36:27):
Not sure if you want to be noticed that?
Speaker 2 (36:29):
Yeah, you gotta do it. Duel head of selling, Yeah,
I don't. I mean more of a lobster state than crabs,
I would think. I hope. How about this Dane sports history, Paul,
I'll try to sell with it.
Speaker 10 (36:45):
In nineteen twenty nine, Dan, the Chicago Cardinals football team,
was the first NFL team to ever travel out of
town for training camp. Instead of Chicago, they were in Coldwater, Michigan.
How about that nineteen eighty four of Victoria Roche, a
reserve outfielder, became the first girl to ever compete in
the Little League World Series. Game two thousand and nine,
the Dallas Cowboys played their first game in the new
state of Arlington, Texas. Big Shaker, the huge, horrendous scoreboard,
(37:09):
got a piece of a kick for a punter, and
they had a repunt.
Speaker 2 (37:14):
First game. Yeah, I don't think they thought that they
could hit the JumboTron. And then every punter who came,
you know, to Dallas tried to hit the jumbo tron.
It became like hey, and then all of a sudden
you realized that they could do that. Let's see, on
this date twenty sixteen, Kevin Durant had thirty the US
won the gold medal. So I'm in Rio de Janeiro
(37:36):
on this date in twenty sixteen, time flies. How about
this one nineteen oh one, a pitcher with the Orioles,
Joe McGuinty, suspended for life in Major League Baseball. He
punched and spit on an umpire, and his lifetime band
later reduced to twelve days. How do you go from
(37:58):
a lifetime twelve days? Yeah, just shy two weeks. That's
a company Yeah, spitting and punching lifetime ban alright, twelve
Yeah you're out forever. Wow. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (38:14):
Wrap up the manliest state poll question there, Seaton. Oh boy,
is this making people very upset, very upset. Let's see
the manly est state, Alaska off the board. Match Your
options are Arizona, Maine, North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, and Texas
(38:34):
Montana thirty percent of the vote running away with it.
Texas has nineteen, North Dakota, nineteen Wyoming in there at
about thirteen.
Speaker 2 (38:45):
Maine has offished, has come in second. I know you'll
be happy to know that Maine is nice little come back. Yeah.
Speaker 6 (38:52):
It is either the second least manly or you know,
the fifth of sixth most manly states.
Speaker 2 (38:58):
That's pretty good. Arizona US snow votes.
Speaker 4 (39:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (39:02):
I don't think you have to be tough to live
in Arizona.
Speaker 10 (39:05):
You know, there's a big difference between Scottsdale, Arizona and Yuma, Arizona.
I mean it's drastically different.
Speaker 2 (39:12):
Yeah, but we weren't making the distinction of Let me
just pick out a little small area. I'm talking about
the state of Maine in North Dakota.
Speaker 5 (39:22):
Not.
Speaker 2 (39:22):
Hey, there's Yuma, Arizona.
Speaker 6 (39:25):
It's hot, Okay, Well, I mean yeah, you could throw
Austin and Portland in there too and be like, okay,
not really. Yeah, Portland, Maine isn't exactly scaring anybody. Well,
oh well, I don't know unless it's the culinary art,
if you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
Yeah, you get hurt on a pup roll. It's pretty
scary in these kitchens.
Speaker 3 (39:42):
I'll tell you that.
Speaker 2 (39:43):
We know how to do some things. Yeah, you try
to survive a pub crawl in Portland May good luck? Hey,
good luck eating all those great oysters themselves.
Speaker 14 (39:58):
Oh god.
Speaker 2 (40:00):
David in Phoenix, David, what's that on your mind?
Speaker 15 (40:04):
Hey?
Speaker 2 (40:05):
Dan?
Speaker 7 (40:05):
Great show.
Speaker 2 (40:06):
Uh, we're kind of tough in Arizona.
Speaker 5 (40:10):
Anyways.
Speaker 15 (40:11):
A rap name Lobster.
Speaker 2 (40:13):
Mobster, Lobster Mobster. All right, we'll take that under advisement. Yes, Marvin,
I want to change mine low Maine okay.
Speaker 6 (40:23):
Well, Maine, all right, okay, all right, except the album's
not like nine hundred and eighty degrees.
Speaker 2 (40:32):
It's like, you know, twenty yeah, seven degrees. Yeah two
live J Crew. Okay, all right, don't let that one
under the wire.
Speaker 6 (40:45):
Catalog is a big catalog guy, like, oh how about
JC many pennies.
Speaker 9 (40:55):
Todd Noah Lawles won't put up his gold mill in
a race with Tybreek Hill, and he no interest in
winning Tyreek super Bowl Ring.
Speaker 2 (41:03):
What we learned brought to you by the Hottest Rookies'
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(41:24):
to do better tomorrow