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 in this Monday best and worst
to the weekend. More phone calls coming up. Chris Fowler
on the call over the weekend Georgia and Alabama, and
he's on the call tonight with the Titans and the Dolphins.
We have two games tonight. It'll be the Titans and
the Dolphins, and then you have the Seahawks and the Lions.
So the Titans Dolphins, Dolphins giving two and a half,
(00:27):
the Lions giving four and odds are one of the
two games will be good. Chris Fowler will join us
coming up in a moment Sunday Night. Next Sunday Night,
two of the greatest franchises in NFL history. It'll be
the Cowboys and the Steelers. That'll be Sunday seven Eastern
on NBC in Peacock. All right, poll question for the
(00:47):
final hour is going to be what Seaton O'Connor. We
got a couple poll questions working rightly. Alrighty, we have
the worst loss of the weekend right now. The Jets
have about forty one percent of that vote, followed by
all miss Eagles Bills.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
Last place is Georgia. Nobody really thinks of that as
a bad loss. We also have up there, just for
my own personal benefit, which is worse how the Jets
lost or how the Broncos won. Right now, seventy six
percent have how the Jets lost. But that's a pretty
good number for saying that the Broncos lost poorly or
one poorly. And then we also have up there who
(01:22):
had better zoom swag James in Virginia or Big Poppy,
both of them looking like well, big Poppy looking like
several million dollars, James looking like a million bucks himself. Yeah, yeah,
right now, James and Virginia winning that pole question.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Well done, lad, let's go. You were talking about the Jets.
Apparently there's a problem with the pre snap cadence with
Aaron Rodgers. He didn't get to play last year with
his team only four plays. I don't know as far
as you know, camp or preseason, and he had his
you know, vacation that he went on. And now all
(01:58):
of a sudden they're pointing fingers here. So here's the
question to the head coach Robert Sawah about the pre
snap cadence of Aaron Rodgers last year.
Speaker 4 (02:08):
I think you guys with one or two in the
NFL itali is now this year, I think you're four.
Speaker 3 (02:12):
What needs to change to.
Speaker 5 (02:13):
Clean it up?
Speaker 6 (02:14):
Well, we got to figure it out whether or not
we're good enough to handle all the or ready to
handle all the kittens. Cadence had not been an issue
all camp. Felt like our operation had been operating pretty good.
Obviously today it took a major step back.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Okay, so that's the coach. After the loss, embarrassing loss
to the Broncos at home, Aaron Rodgers was asked going
about his pre snap cadence, the.
Speaker 7 (02:43):
Cadence specifically, Robert said, that might be something you has
to have to dial back a little bit.
Speaker 3 (02:47):
Is that something you think could potentially help the situation.
Speaker 8 (02:51):
That's one way to do it. The other ways hold
them accountable. I mean, we haven't had an issue. We've
had one false start. Morgan had one false start I
believe until this so it's been a weapon we use
every in practice. We don't you know, we rarely have
a full start and they have I don't know five
today it seemed like four or five. Yeah, it's it
seems like an outlayer. I don't know if we need
to make mass changes based on you know, kind of
(03:12):
an outlayer game.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Alrighty, alrighty. Now, if they win the game, this probably
isn't an issue. Now it could be an issue, but
you know it would be a footnote because you would
have won. Hey, we got to work on that, but
we still won. Aaron Rodgers has had the same pre
snap cadence for twenty years now. He will what is
(03:38):
it green nineteen green nineteen huh, that's it now when
he gets to the fourth quarter, could be green nineteen
green nineteen hut. And then he draws you offside. I
don't know if any quarterback has had more touchdowns drawing
you off sides and having a free play than Rogers says.
(04:01):
He is brilliant at doing this. I don't know why
it would come down to something like this, something silly
like this, something that you would think if you get
together with your offensive line and you say, hey, once again,
let me remind you this is what I do in
the first quarter, and I might change it up in
the fourth quarter. Yeah, it's gotta be a little more
(04:21):
complicated than that.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
Well, I mean, surely if it was that simple, like,
wouldn't defenses also be just as onto it as his
offensive line would be.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
Well, no, they know, like just about every team, there's
no surprise. When I played quarterback when I was growing up,
you know, it would be on two Like now, it's
just Green nineteen Green nineteen hut. So you know what
he's going to say until later in the game when
he then will vary it a little bit.
Speaker 3 (04:51):
And they were famously running an NFL style offense at
your high school.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
They were that that.
Speaker 3 (04:56):
That's one thing I know about your school is that
they ran a very complicated system.
Speaker 2 (05:00):
Wait a minute, I think you're making fun of me.
I think you're making we just went on too. Yeah. Yeah,
but it was a big secret in the huddle be
like on two. Now they all have their same calls.
I mean Dan Marino famously said was said, you knew
when they were going to snap the ball. Yeah, Pauline, Yeah.
Speaker 9 (05:22):
I found an old Packers story from about five years
ago that had kind of a deep dive on Aaron Rodgers,
and it basically says like he was setting up the
whole time, like the Green nineteen hut, like conditioning the
defense that it's on one all day until the time
it's not on one.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
Yeah, but maybe if he played in the preseason, they
could have worked this out. Yes, smart, hope.
Speaker 3 (05:46):
You enjoyed Egypt, Aaron, Well, the trip was worth it.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
Yeah, yes, mart.
Speaker 5 (05:52):
I love the fact that they have a standalone game
next Sunday morning against the Vikings. They played a London
game at nine thirty am, so you're gonna hear the
it's gonna be on full blast to see how many
penalties they get.
Speaker 2 (06:05):
Well, he is gonna have to be careful with that
defensive line coming after him because the Vikings have been
they've been pinning their ears back. I don't know, like,
is it your dog pins his ears bag? Huh?
Speaker 9 (06:20):
I've heard that one for years.
Speaker 2 (06:21):
Oh, they're pinning their ears back, checking, don't. I don't
know where we came up with that. There's a few
of those where you go, how did we come up
with that one?
Speaker 5 (06:30):
Getting boat raced?
Speaker 2 (06:32):
That one sounds weird or holy mackerel? Like why a mackerel?
All right, we already talked about holy cow last week,
but holy mackerel. I don't know where that one came from.
Police diving into.
Speaker 9 (06:51):
Yeah, I gotta pin this down. I find a no, no, okay,
your ears.
Speaker 2 (06:57):
Okay?
Speaker 3 (06:58):
We're looking.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
There's a few rigents to Okay Gabe in San Antonio, Hi, Gabe,
what's on your mind? Best and worst?
Speaker 10 (07:06):
Hey? Answer Bess rwis on the fourth question of worst
NFL lost yesterday. As a Cowboys fan, it's gotta beat Eagles,
but Bes and Worris, my best stand is is all
the good finish it. This weekend started on Friday night
with Miami Virginia Tech and just kind of went through.
I'll be honest. I changed the Alabama Georgia game quickly
(07:29):
and saw Georgia was coming back, and I put it
back on real quick. But the worst was Alabama will
be up three spots to number one, jumping Texas when
Texas dominated the Misissippi State. I didn't quite understand that one.
But did that have a good day, have a good week?
Did the talk to usert?
Speaker 2 (07:45):
All right? Gabe, No, I get it. You beat Georgia.
Georgia hadn't lost over forty regular season games, so I'm
fine with them leap frogging everybody else beating Georgia. That
was one of the and we talked about it late
last week. I said it's a perception game. In fact, Friday,
I said perception for Jaln Milroe to now be the
(08:07):
Heisman Trophy candidate, leading candidate. And then you know Kaylin
Debor with Nick Saban on campus with his wife and
she's picking games. This is perception where it's all of
a sudden, it's like, Okay, that guy can coach that guy.
You know, we don't have to worry about the future.
But you're watching that game back and forth, and it
was it was wild. Chris Fowler was on the call.
(08:28):
He joins us, Now, how's the voice today, Chris?
Speaker 11 (08:32):
It was about sixty percent Sunday morning. It improved yesterday.
I expected to be close to one hundred percent for
tonight here in Miami.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
When did you think, Chris on the call for the
Dolphins and the Titans, when did you get a sense
of this was actually going to be a competitive game?
Speaker 12 (08:53):
Good question. It was twenty eight nothing eighteen minutes in, and.
Speaker 11 (08:56):
We were there's a lot to talk about though, because
we'd never seen a Jeor defense looked worse the Klein
de Moore era in a big home game and Jalen
Milroe becoming the Heisman front runner with live odds in
the second quarter and it's twenty eight nothing. There was
a lot of compelling stuff, but you want to see
a competitive game. As they began to claw back, you
I think we get to thirty to fifteen. At that point,
(09:18):
Alabama man scored a touchdown in a long time. They
had a field goal and a safety, but they had
stopped scoring touchdowns, and Georgia had cut the lead in half.
And at that point you figured, Okay, they've got a
quarterback and throw the ball downfield when he's not thrown
it to the other team and Georgia has the championship
DNA and you never quit.
Speaker 12 (09:35):
And also you.
Speaker 11 (09:36):
Could just sense that Miami human nature, I mean Alabama
human nature was just throttling back. It was so easy,
so shockingly easy. And we didn't think it was going
to come down to what happened with the leagues changing
twice in the last minute. But you had to hope
it would be competitive because George is Georgia.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
Not going to roll over and just to have that
And I said, it's a perception game, more so for
Alabama with an new coach and Jalen Milroe who was
really good at the end of last year and kind
of having a coming out party. I mean, you had
these moments there that it feels like every Heisman winner
needs one of these games. Did Jalen Milroe maybe distinguish
(10:16):
himself as he is clearly the front runner in your eyes?
Speaker 12 (10:21):
No, I don't know, it's early.
Speaker 11 (10:23):
I think he distinguish himself as a guy that has
really grown and improved since last year, Right, Dan, I
mean the question was he makes electric plays.
Speaker 12 (10:30):
He also makes mistakes in big moments.
Speaker 11 (10:33):
He beat Georgia in Atlanta in the SEC championship game,
he was clutch late. He goes against Michigan, he has
a crucial fumble midfield. Not his fault at the end
of the game, but he had the ball in his
hands that he couldn't get in the end zone. He
took that very hard. I think the coaching regime change
for him was really really important and valuable. Remember he
got benched a year ago. Okay, he plays poorly against Texas,
(10:56):
his home state. He doesn't play against USF and he
spends the rest of the year trying to rebuild his confidence.
But he's still got that in his head. They sat
me down, okay, and they embarrassed me. Now, I think
with this new coaching staff, Nick Sheridan is a play
caller for Kaitlyn d Bor, but it's still Kaitlyn d
Bor's offense.
Speaker 12 (11:16):
It's a beautiful offense for the passing scheme.
Speaker 11 (11:18):
They've coached him beautifully in the offseason, a lot of
smart people around him. Hey, when you get pressured, don't
run backwards eleven yards, don't take these disastrous sacks, protect
the ball, do your job. And he's taken that coaching
really well. And I think we saw the freedom and
a confidence and a belief in himself that maybe could
(11:39):
only happen with a fresh start in that way and
being surrounded by a lot of smart offensive people.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
We're talking to Chris Fowler on the call for the
Titans Dolphins coming up tonight. He was there with Georgia
and Alabama. We know that Ryan Williams is seventeen years
of age. We're suggesting that he changes number to seventeen,
and then the next year is eighteen, next year's nineteen,
and then next year's is twenty. What do you think, Chris?
Speaker 11 (12:06):
The number two is a big number at Alabama. It's
we're the number two on offensive defense. Both freshmen made
the big plays, and that Zamian Brown made the pick
to secure it at the end.
Speaker 12 (12:15):
No, he's just so.
Speaker 11 (12:16):
Different, Dan, I can't even describe. It doesn't even come
through on TV. Look at the stats. You can hear
he's seventeen, But just to be around him and hear
what his teammates have to say and his coaches, it's
so exciting to see it. Dude, it comes along. Who's
just different? I wrote back down here to Miami with
the Desmond Howard after the game. He knows receivers and
(12:37):
it was just so interesting to hear his perspective.
Speaker 12 (12:40):
He did about three different things on that last catch
for a textad, and that was just wow, are you
kidding me?
Speaker 11 (12:46):
Getting open body control to make that contorted catch, split
defenders outrun them.
Speaker 12 (12:52):
I mean. And I talked to him pregame, and.
Speaker 11 (12:53):
I said, I don't usually talk to college players pregame.
It's kind of something. I try to give him space,
but he came over and was just hugging Holly Row
and saying.
Speaker 12 (13:02):
Hello, are you kidding me?
Speaker 11 (13:04):
This guy is that age and he's in his first
really big game and that's how chilled he is.
Speaker 12 (13:09):
Before kickoff against Georgia and I.
Speaker 11 (13:11):
Said, you know, you don't look like, this is too
big for you, and he goes, no, sir, you look
like you were ready for this from birth. And he said,
I am, I am, And he goes out in place
like it. And you know when you lead your team
in catches and yards your first four games of your
career and your team is Alabama, It's just we haven't
seen that. It's so exciting for us in college. You
(13:32):
know the draft guys already, where would we take him?
How easy if you got him for three years? We've
got him three years of this.
Speaker 2 (13:38):
Have you ever called a game where you can't hear yourself?
Speaker 11 (13:44):
We couldn't hear ourselves Saturday night, biscul. We have a
technical problem. I don't think you mean that.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
I mean you no, no, no, I'm talking about the
Oh so you had technical difficulties.
Speaker 12 (13:55):
We had a.
Speaker 11 (13:55):
Power We had a generator die on us. I mean
the crew did an amazing job, the generators.
Speaker 12 (13:59):
You were lying that.
Speaker 11 (14:00):
I mean it could have been a disaster, like no broadcasts.
One dies and they bring in the backup game day
generator with.
Speaker 12 (14:07):
A police escort.
Speaker 11 (14:08):
They get it to the stadium and you know, everything
is computerized, and imagine a laptop dies and it doesn't
shut down properly. You had to bring it back to life.
Well now that's times a million with these electronic trucks.
So we got up and running. But no, we could
not hear ourselves in the open. For example, your mic
just kind of goes out. But the crowd noise was
(14:31):
as loud as I've heard it at Alabama, which is
not I would say, one of the loudest places on
earth for football. It's a huge place, but it's only
the fifth biggest stadium in the SEC, and it's not
known for being I don't think what have the loudest.
But they were unhinged and it was pandemonium in there
when it was twenty eight to nothing and again at
the end of the last play. So I hope we
could be heard on the air.
Speaker 12 (14:50):
We get that complaint last night sometimes.
Speaker 11 (14:52):
That you guys are the crowd was too loud, But
I was screaming as loud as they possibly could.
Speaker 12 (14:57):
Some of those last clubs. I can't do it anything, Moore, How.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Do you explain Florida State?
Speaker 12 (15:03):
Hmm, I don't know.
Speaker 11 (15:05):
It just gets it gets rougher, it seems by the week.
And SMU going in there and it's weird to think
of that being a conference game. But I don't know
how to explain and accept the confidence and belief or
powerful in sports, you know, and momentum. I think when
you have it, it's magical. When you don't, it's fatal.
I don't know what's going on there. There's still way
too much talent for them to play like that. But
(15:27):
when you have programs where they expect high results and goals,
when those goals aren't in play all of a sudden,
it's really a test of culture and culture in the
portal Europe and you're bringing in twenty five thirty new guys.
Sometimes is challenging for coaches. I don't know what's going on.
It's they don't even play Miami down here in Miami
coming up and look out. I mean, they better find
(15:49):
some heart and some resilience and some belief in a hurry,
or it's going to get way out of hand if
it isn't already.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
The difference in calling a game a college game and
then going into the NFL game tempo, any any difference
in how you're going to call the game or the
feel of a game.
Speaker 11 (16:07):
Yeah, I think it's a difference in every game feels different.
I know you want to be authentic to that. I mean,
I called a game in Buffalo last Monday. I had
never seen a game in that stadium. That's a college
like environment that bills fans were tremendous and I had
a lot of fun doing it, even though it was
a blowout. You know, there are subplots and storylines here.
The over under is thirty six and a half. You
(16:28):
got two really struggling offenses, so we might celebrate it
first down in a way that you would typically do it.
You know, Tyler Huntley arrives about ten days ago. He's
starting from Miami at quarterback. Will Levis has had massive
turnover problems, and you've got two head coaches who are
the play callers, who are very smart people and very
(16:49):
intent on getting things going.
Speaker 2 (16:50):
No.
Speaker 12 (16:50):
Look, so here's the board, I mean the board for
an NFL. It's blurry. I'm sorry, I'm not blurry in
my head.
Speaker 11 (16:57):
But everything else if you could have seen that charge,
you notice is about half the players that are on
a college chart.
Speaker 12 (17:03):
So the names are are much easier to get to know.
Speaker 11 (17:06):
The tempo is different, and I think that you know,
sometimes the energy in the stadium is different. I made
a joke that with Kirk Saturday that it's going to
be hard to top this when you go down and
talk about the Dolphins and Titans one and five combined
coming in. But I think that I get excited doing this.
I love working with Lewis Rideck and Nanarlowski and Lawa
(17:28):
ret LEGI it's a fun team.
Speaker 12 (17:30):
I learn a lot every week about the NFL. I
think I know something about football, but this is a language.
Speaker 11 (17:34):
It's different and new, and there's so much to learn
and know and so many smart people surround.
Speaker 12 (17:39):
This production that I have to get a kick out
of it.
Speaker 11 (17:43):
Yeah, you're not going to hear a Ryan Williams game
winning touchdown call tonight, probably that energy level, But.
Speaker 12 (17:51):
You never know.
Speaker 11 (17:52):
We did this game a year ago, Dan and Tennessee
had an historic comeback. I mean, I mean they're down
fourteen and said three minutes to play and they win
the game in regulation, which had never happened in eight
hundred games of that situation. So anything's possible and we'll
be ready for it once again.
Speaker 2 (18:10):
Ryan Williams is seventeen.
Speaker 11 (18:11):
I know, I know viewers get they're giving us a
hard time about saying that, but he should be playing
for Sarah and high school and Mobile in Alabama. He's
out making plays against the Kirby Smart defense and making
them look silly, so it is worth repeating.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
I think what was interesting is he skips his senior year.
That you're the player of the year sophomore junior year
and then you reclassify, and usually you got guys who
want to go to have a gap year and then
go in. Certainly in basketball. I mean, he's seventeen saying
and he's not going to turn eighteen till after the
football season's over.
Speaker 12 (18:51):
It's happening a little bit more and more because the
nil money has changed things.
Speaker 11 (18:54):
You can get paid in college, and so it's a
good reason to reclassifate if you're able to do it.
Speaker 12 (18:59):
Georgia has a seven ten year old guy defensive linement.
He didn't get in the game.
Speaker 11 (19:03):
He might have got out there a couple snaps, but
Williams being a star at that age and being when
Kaylen Devor got there and has this meeting with the
team late at night and he speaks to the entire
football team and they're trying to figure out who's this
guy and what's our future look like. The minute that
complete team meeting ends, Caylen goes right into the wide
(19:25):
receiver room because he had broken up in groups. He
goes right into that room. First, it wasn't an accident
to get in the plane. And the first thing you
have to do as a new coach these days is
re recruit your roster. Because Williams did decommit like a
lot of guys, you de commit to sit back and
weigh your options and just like just hit the pause button.
And so Caylen gets on a plane and they aret
(19:49):
zipping around to these places and Mobile, Alabama was like
destination one. To go down there and visit with the
family and assure him that we're still going to throw
the ball. Look, we didn't watch Shington ramadoonsday, Jale Poulpe.
We had great receivers. It's a receiver pass game, friendly offense.
And talk to the family, here's who I am, and
(20:11):
get them on board. And they did it, and you
see what happened on Saturday night. It was an important
re recruiting job that he did right away. And that's
that's how he knew how important The seventeen year old
kid was.
Speaker 2 (20:22):
Yeah, that's a great point. Have fun tonight. Good luck
with an encore there, Chris. But thanks for joining us.
Speaker 11 (20:29):
Did you love defense? Yeah, it's the place to be
tonight on Monday night. Man and joya maniseut again.
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Hi buddy, that's Chris Faller, Voice of ESPN ABC. Yeah
you go. You'd like to go from Titans Dolphins to Georgia,
Alabama instead of the other way around. Let me take
a break back after this. Fox Sports Radio has the
best sports talk lineup in the nation. Catch all of
our shows at Foxsports Radio dot com and within the
(20:54):
iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to listen live. Hall of Fame
to Kembe Mutumbo has passed away the age of fifty
eight from brain cancer, and the NBA Commissioner Adam Silver
issued a statement talking about the Kembe and he was
also a global ambassador to the NBA and what a
(21:18):
joyous person to be around, always in a good mood,
always unless you were going to take it inside and
you were playing against him, and then he was not
in my house. But a joyous person. I think Defensive
Player of the Year four times, played for six different teams.
You probably have his resume there in front of you, PAULI,
(21:39):
I'm just going off memory. Yeah.
Speaker 9 (21:41):
He also kind of came out of nowhere with Georgetown
eighty eight eighty nine. He joined them right after the
Patrick Ewing Alonza morning time, and he instantly became a
star in the East.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
I remember John Thompson he would just say Mutumbo say.
He was letting the media know, hey, you guys think
you're going to get off the hook with Georgetown basketball
and facing a great big man, and he would just Saymtumbo.
That was it. He was letting everybody know, we got
somebody coming in who's pretty unique. And he'd just say
(22:14):
Mtumbo and then we saw him. I remember when was
it Denver won that first round matchup. It was a
best of three, I think our best of five and
Mtumbo ended up with the basketball on the floor underneath
the hoop and he's just holding it then. Probably one
(22:35):
of my favorite memories of him, but to Kembe Mutumbo
at the age of fifty eight, great defensive player, rebounder,
and certainly a great personality in the game final or
you got poll questions there seating you want to give
me an update on that, we do.
Speaker 3 (22:53):
We got many pole questions right now, the most important one,
by the way, better zoom swag James in Virginia or
David or he's big Poppy, both of them zooming in
right now. It's sixty one percent of the vote. James
and Virginia killing.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
Yeah, we finally got him on zoom and he had
his colors on. He was flying the commander's colors. Yeah, yeah,
he uh.
Speaker 3 (23:14):
He looked great. He looks like a million the commanders,
pollute the commanders. We also have up there. Sorry, hold on,
let's say worst loss of the weekend, Bill's Eagles, Jets
all miss or Georgia right now. The Jets running away
with that one. About forty six percent of that vote.
That's a tough one.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
Yeah. Ten nine, yeah, ten nine in home at home
to the Broncos.
Speaker 3 (23:36):
Now you have you have seven completions or something like
that going into the half of negative seven yards and
then and you win the game. That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
But I'm wondering if if I look at both of
these teams, when Sean Payton comes in and says, Nathaniel
Hackett did one of the worst coaching jobs in NFL history. Okay,
so Sean took over their offense hasn't been dynamic. We're
in year two and bo Nicks had one of the
worst winning performances in NFL history. And then I look
(24:08):
at the Jets who have Nathaniel Hackett their Jet. Their
offense hasn't been dynamic. Maybe the common denominator is Nathaniel Hackett. Here,
Dan Well just saying, just saying, maybe saying the obvious there.
Yeh see.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
Is this a case where you ever see a team
that's so bad they make a good team, they're playing bad? Yeah,
they Yeah, They're like you're playing to another team and
you're like, man, these guys are so terrible. Then now
I'm playing terrible because these guys are so terrible.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Yeah, they ugly it up. Yah. Yes, it's like you
you end up playing their style, their brand of football. Yes, Martin, how.
Speaker 5 (24:47):
Awkward should it? How awkward can it be for the defense?
Look at the offense, like we held them to ten points? Yeah, hey,
you guys couldn't score a touchdown, not five touchdowns?
Speaker 3 (24:58):
A touchdown?
Speaker 9 (24:59):
Yeah, I know we didn't hit it here, but we
sometimes do. Worst win of the weekend, we go really
deep cut. I would say that the Chiefs win was
worse than any loss this weekend, Like if they lose
Rashi Rice for the season off a tackle by Mahomes
when see what we're talking about, U, he shouldn't be
tackling anybody.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
There should be a long no fetal position.
Speaker 9 (25:21):
Yes, when he throws the interception, he should walk to
the sidelines and grab the microsoft surface.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
But you know these quarterbacks are so competitive. You just
threw the pick, and now you're angry, and now you
want to go tackle somebody and lived it, lived it,
see another play.
Speaker 3 (25:37):
Yes, it is kind of a worst case scenario in
that situation, but there is sort of a reason why, Like, hey, quarterback,
there's many reasons why you shouldn't be out there trying
to tackle people and throwing that shoulder out there is
just like I get that. There's this thing like nah man,
his teammates love that. Look, he's proven himself. He's in
this too. He's getting in the trenches doing the dirty work.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Whatever not.
Speaker 3 (25:59):
Do you get the hell out of here? Why are
you doing that?
Speaker 2 (26:02):
Jacob and Phoenix? Hey Jake, what's on your mind? Hey Dan?
Speaker 7 (26:07):
Best and worst. I'd like to start with as a
little shout out to the best Yu Cougar's five to
oh a top of the Big twelve, unexpected, but the
worst of the weekend the ways heavy is Jaden and
Cliff coming in to Arizona and smacking the Cardinals. Also
one hundred and sixty two games later, the d Backs
postseason fate relies on a brave King's doubleheader and not
(26:30):
shaking hands and splitting today's doubleheader. Then, lastly, our hockey
team beginning the preseason hockey in Utah this year.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
Thanks Dan, Thank you Jacob. I don't know if he
was in a good mood or a bad mood there,
but uh, Cliff Kingsbury comes back and he shows those
Cardinals I can run an offense with a good quarterback
and Jade and Daniels like these are historical numbers that
Jade and Daniels so first quarterback in the history of
(26:59):
the NFL to have two consecutive games with a completion
percentage of eighty five percent or better. He's the first
rookie quarterback to lead his team to thirty eight or
more points in consecutive starts since Russell Wilson did. He
also wrote Tom Brady's record for the highest completion percentage
(27:19):
by a player in his team's first four games of
the season. The guy he surpassed Tom Brady stat of.
Speaker 6 (27:27):
The day, stat of the day, that bus stat of
the day, stat of the day here comes that what
stat of the day.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
Also, Sam Darnold is the sixth different quarterback to have
at least two touchdown passes and a passer rating of
one oh five or better in each of his team's
first four games of a season. So two touchdown passes
passer rating of one oh five or higher. He joins
Tom Brady, who did it twice, Peyton Man it once,
(28:00):
Aaron Rodgers twice, Matt Ryan once, and Russell Wilson Junior
the third. So it feels like everybody looks at Sam
Donald this way. Well, he couldn't win with the Jets
or Carolina. He was a backup in San Francisco. Now
he finally is surrounded by a really good offensive minded
(28:21):
coach and a really good team. And now you're starting
to see Sam Donald I think is only twenty seven.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
Yes, Mark, I believe to him from the start, of.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
Course you did. I'm hearing more of that today from
the analyst there. I knew it. I knew it. You
get him on a good team. He can show you
and be like, okay, Pro Bowl to come on.
Speaker 3 (28:39):
Yeah, this is a guy who just needed a chance.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
Yeah, just needed to get away from these bad organizations.
Speaker 3 (28:45):
He finally surrounded with some talent.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
Here he can show what he can do. Yes. I
mentioned the expression pinning back their ears pinning their ears back,
and I said to Paulie, I got a challenge for you.
Where did this come from? I thought, maybe it's dogs
go back and are they pinning their ears back like
a dog?
Speaker 9 (29:03):
So in modern day the past twenty years, pinning their
ears back has become a sports phrase, mostly used for
a defensive lineman, like you know a team's going to pass,
let's pin our ears back and go after them like
without abandon. That'd be the way it's used. However, it
makes no sense based off the actual history of pinning
their ears back. To have one's ears pinned back and
(29:23):
to pin one's ears back is two different phrases. According
to English Heritage Dictionary, to have one's ears pinned back
means you're being severely scolded in athletic contest, like you're
the one being scolded, being roughed up. To have one's
ears pulled back, pin back. They said it was from
like wrestling and other contact sports, so if you got
(29:46):
roughed up, you had your ears pinned back, and it
said it was also a punishment for people back in
the day. To pin one's ears back means to it's
an action that means a person is being scolded or
bettered by somebody. So it's a combination. It's usually you're
the victim of something if your ears are being pinned back,
(30:07):
not the person going willy nilly on others. But it's
morphed into that.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
Okay, And we saw that.
Speaker 9 (30:12):
It's like the word tremendous. One hundred years ago, the
word tremendous was a negative. It was like a tremendous
meant something bad happened. It was a tremendous fall from
grace or a tremendous disaster. And then in the past
fifty years, tremendous became a positive. Things phrases changed, bonus
covers there.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
Okay, So is this this show tremendous? It is now
in a good way. Yeah, Okay. Joey in Portland, Hi Joey,
what's on your mind today?
Speaker 4 (30:43):
Hey Dan, thank you for taking my call. Yeah, best
and worship of the weekend. Actually the best investor. Following
in Polly's footsteps, Ashon Janty Boise State, my alma mater.
Awesome game on Saturday, and I hoped to see him
invited to New York in December if he keeps up
(31:04):
a good year. And then my best my wife and
I celebrating our seventh wedding anniversary.
Speaker 7 (31:09):
Thanks week.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
All right, how about a round of applause for Joey
See Love Love. You're thirty behind me, Come on, you
can get there. Also, I came up with I think
is a great idea, maybe a great invention. And I
don't know how I came up with this or why
I came up with this. Now I'm going to take
(31:32):
a break, but I have an invention that I think
could help all dads or potential dads. How about we
take a break? Is it a brain play of the day?
Is oh, no last call for phone calls? What we
learn what's in store tomorrow?
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Right after this, be sure to catch the live edition
of The Dan Patrick Show weekdays at nine am Eastern
six am Pacific on Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio WAP.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
Perhaps a little recency bias, but the odds On favored
for offensive Rookie of the Year. According to DraftKings, it's
Jaden Daniels, followed by the Giants Malik Neighbors, Marvin Harrison
Junior the Third and Caleb Williams Coach of the Year
Odds Kevin O'Connell of the Vikings, Mike McDonald of Seattle,
(32:24):
Dan Quinn of the Commanders, and Jim Harbaugh. M what
about John Harbaugh after those back to back wins? I
saw where Jack Harbaugh, the dad came into the press
conference last night after the Ravens win.
Speaker 13 (32:41):
Oh no, no, thank you every day.
Speaker 12 (33:00):
That's okay. I appreciate you guys. Thanks Dad, He's l.
Speaker 2 (33:07):
Thanks Dad. He's eighty five years of age. Jim Harball
is going to be like his dad when he gets
to be eighty five. He already feels like he's eighty five. Jim,
Jim acts like an old man and a young guy
as well. But who has it better than us? No, buddy,
(33:28):
love it, love it all right. Let's see Bryant in Virginia.
Hey Brian, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 5 (33:36):
Hey?
Speaker 14 (33:37):
Dp uh tying in the tremendous disaster workflay on our
unfortunate our Broncos, the first pretty Broncos. I have a
stat of today. I take no pleasure in giving. But
can I get the original Saturday?
Speaker 2 (33:51):
Okay, Marvin.
Speaker 14 (33:57):
Time, But twenty thirteen Broccos at a points record, but
also have thirteen games where they score thirty.
Speaker 12 (34:12):
Points or more.
Speaker 14 (34:13):
Not to be outdone. That's the same amount of thirty
point games or twenty two Denver Broncos have combined.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
Time Scat of the day brought to you by Benini
in America the official trading cards of the program.
Speaker 3 (34:38):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (34:38):
Speaking of a punk rock Seaton was in Vegas for
a Was it a punk rock convention?
Speaker 3 (34:45):
No, there's like a punk rock museum in Las Vegas.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
Okay, I saw the sign for that at the super Bowl.
What do they have in the punk rock museum they have?
Speaker 3 (34:54):
It's weird. They have so much stuff. It's overwhelming, and
at the same time, it's like a drop in the
bucket of every everything that they really could have, if
that makes sense. They have everything from like like a
bag of weed that was found in Joe Strummer's pocket
when he died, to like the original like prints that
they used to press vinyl records for a bunch of
(35:15):
huge albums. They have this room called the Jam Room
where you can go in and all of these other
musicians have donated guitars and amps and stuff like that.
So like I went in and grabbed like Pat Smear's guitar,
right and he was in a band called the Germs
and then later was in Nirvana, so you could play
like his guitar. So like, I played a bunch of
Nirvana songs on Pat Smear's guitar, which was.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
Like so awesome.
Speaker 3 (35:38):
They have like the guitar that like the guy from
like Trevor from Face to Face recorded these albums and
you could just plug that in and play Face to
Face songs if you want to play whatever you wanted.
Speaker 2 (35:46):
Like, it was awesome. It was.
Speaker 3 (35:48):
They have so much stuff in there, is really really cool.
Speaker 2 (35:50):
Okay, yeah, so they they Joe Strummer's family said, you know,
don't get rid of the weed when he died.
Speaker 3 (35:58):
It's shocking that that survived that all these years. But yeah,
I guess they must have done a very good job
of preserving a lot of his stuff after he passed.
But they had a lot of Joe Strummer stuff in there,
a lot of like social Distortion stuff. They have this
whole setup where Mike Ness from Social Distortion gave them
like two couches, a lamp, and like a table, like
(36:21):
a living room table kind of thing where he was
just like, oh, I used to sit here and I
wrote like these albums here sitting on this. This was
in my living room at the time. So you could
just like go sit on Mike Ness's couches. You're like, oh,
this is where he wrote whatever.
Speaker 2 (36:32):
But was that where Kurt Cobain was passed out on
that couch?
Speaker 3 (36:38):
So that's another couch that they have everything in the museum,
well not everything, but a lot of stuff you can
like see in touch, but there's another couch there. And
then the museum is owned by a guy named Fat Mike,
who was in a band called No Effects and Fat Records,
and he's a big within the punk rock community. He
is the Mount Rushmore. He's a big deal. And he
(36:58):
had this studio in the nineties and Thatt Couch was
in the studios and I think in like nineteen ninety two,
Kirk Cobain was producing an album for the Melvins and
they have this picture of him sleeping or passed out,
not exactly sure which it is if you know kirk
Ovates could have very likely could have been drug drug
(37:19):
very likely was on drugs because I believe he was
then fired later that day from producing the album because
of perhaps said.
Speaker 2 (37:27):
Use how about this day in sports history? And then
if you want to write the headline today for tomorrow
with the games, Paulie, This day in sports.
Speaker 9 (37:35):
History nineteen twenty seven, George Herman ruth overrated. He hit
home run number sixty to break his own record, and
that stood until nineteen sixty one. Nineteen seventy two, Roberto
Clemente of the Pirates got his hit three thousand, and
it was the last one because he was killed in
Venezuela in the offseason. Nineteen seventy three, Hank Aaron finished
(37:57):
the season one short a Bay Roofs record of seven
hundred and fourteen home runs. He did it in the
nineteen seventy four season and lastly two thousand and two,
Chris McAllister the Ravens return to missfield goal one hundred
and eight yards to set an NFL record.
Speaker 2 (38:11):
Okay, on this date, nineteen eighty four, the Rams recorded
three safeties in a win against the Giants. Yeah, how rando?
Is that?
Speaker 12 (38:22):
All right?
Speaker 2 (38:22):
Right? The headline today for tomorrow, Todd, which game? I'm
gonna go with the Titans game? And I'm gonna say,
just when you forgot the Titans expecting them to have
a nice game. Okay, so remember the Titans. Okay, don't
forget the Titans.
Speaker 12 (38:36):
Don't forget them.
Speaker 2 (38:37):
Okay, seating you got a headline today for tomorrow? How
about you?
Speaker 3 (38:45):
These guys are lying, they're not any good.
Speaker 2 (38:49):
I always feel like I'm surprising you with this question.
Speaker 1 (38:52):
Now, gonna lie.
Speaker 3 (38:52):
It's a surprise every single time we do it. Hey,
why don't we write the headlines?
Speaker 2 (38:56):
Oh crap, we're doing that again, Marvin. Right, today's headline
tomorrow where there's a will, there's a fumble, that's just me. Wow, Paulie,
let us alone, bloop bloop carved something out of that.
(39:19):
Let's see. Oh, I had the invention for future dance.
You go to the hospital and when your wife is
getting prepped or maybe an epidural, and they should give
you like that little thing that lights up when you
go to Applebee's or those restaurants where yeah, your table
is ready, because they always say to the dad, hey,
(39:40):
just you know, go out and then uh, you know,
come back a little bit. This way, you don't miss
the birth of your first child like I almost did
because they said just walk around, go have breakfast, and
I'm just if I had my Applebee's buzzer on me
then they would just go, it's go time when you're
there your family, Yes, Olive Garden, do they do that? Ye? Yeah,
(40:05):
So what do you think when you go in they
give you whatever that buzzer is and you just carried
it around or have it in your pocket. It avoids disaster. Yes,
so you don't miss the birth of your child, Seaton.
Speaker 3 (40:17):
I do appreciate because the rest of this is a
little boring. I'm gonna go walk around or something. Let
me know when it's go time.
Speaker 1 (40:24):
I do.
Speaker 3 (40:25):
I like starting it that way, while like you're the
person who's having that baby is like stuck any Like,
you know, baby, I'm a little bored. Take a stroll. Okay,
do you know what? Just just page me real quick
when our chimmy chung is already.
Speaker 2 (40:37):
This invention brought to you by tire rack dot com,
the official tire expert of the Dan Patrick Show. Go
to tire rack dot com slash Dan. Try the Tire
Decision Guide. You got free Road Hazard Protection, mobile tire installation,
ti rac dot com the way tire buying should be.
Thanks for joining us on this Monday, Enjoy the games.
Look forward to talking to you tomorrow. For Fritzie Seaton,
(40:57):
Mar Paula yours truly, we'll talk to you Tuesday