Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are listening to The Dan Patrick Show on Fox
Sports Radio Final Hour.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
On this Friday. It's a meat Friday. And in case
you're wondering, and I know you are, what's on the menu.
We have beef strip, loin roast. We have roast, beef sliders,
corn on the cobb, asparagus and mashed potatoes. Who has
it better than we do? No, Steve Young, Hall of
(00:26):
Famer will join us. Hall of Famer John Fogerty, who
gave us so many great songs when he was lead
singer of Creeden's Clearwater Revival. His bat Shape guitar that
he performed center Field. That song is going into the
Baseball Hall of Fame and they're inducting the song as well.
He'll join us coming up here in a little bit.
(00:47):
Good morning if you're watching on Peacock. That's our streaming partner.
Thank you for downloading the app, and we say good
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Patrick Show, NASCAR on NBC. In Peacock, the Playoffs NASCAR
Cup Series closes out the regular season in prime time
(01:10):
on the High Banks of Daytona Saturday, seven Eastern on
NBC and Peacock Seaton. What's the poll question for the
final hour of this program we got up there right now?
Which quarterback had the wonkiest career? Steve Young, Kurt Warner,
Nick Foles. I feel like this is a little unfair.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
I don't know, people are like, why is Steve Young
on this list because he I don't know that they're
properly understanding exactly what the poll question about Nick Foles
is running away with this one at fifty nine percent,
then Kurt Warner, Steve Young only has about five percent
of that vote. But he did have a wonky career. Yes,
in terms of it was very successful, obvious Hall of Famer.
(01:52):
He's one of the greats of all time. But his
route to get there was abnormal.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Yeah, you start out in the US. He comes out
of BYU and then he goes to Tampa Bay. Tampa
Bay's terrible, and then the Niners trade for him and
he sits for four years. He doesn't become a pro
bowler until thirty one, and he has a six year
window where he put up Hall of Fame numbers. I mean,
(02:19):
that's not the traditional path to get into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. Kurt Warner kind of the same
way Greater you go from a nobody to then you're somebody.
Trent Green gets hurt, he comes in Greater Show on Turf, MVP,
win a Super Bowl, go to another Super Bowl. Then
all of a sudden you end up with the Giants
(02:41):
and you're backing up Eli Manning, and then you go
to Arizona and you take them to the super Bowl.
Those aren't direct routes to get into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame. But Kurt Warner and Steve Young took
those indirect routes. Nick Foles is not a Hall of Famer,
and that's why he's winning this all right. A couple
of phone calls John in Cincinnati, Hi John, it's on
your mind today.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
Hi Adbuh, long time listener called a few times. I
need your advice today. We are in the car on
the way to Antins, Ohio to drop my daughter off
her freshman year. She's going to be a broadcast journalism
a major. So we need your advice for me as
a dance dropping off and for her as an aspiring
journalism suiting can help us out.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
All right, John, you're proud of your daughter, and you
show her the great respect by not being emotional, uh
that you're confident she's going to be great. Let her see.
Now she's in the car probably hearing this, so it's
going to take away from that moment. But I always
wanted to show my kids, especially my three daughters, that
(03:43):
I trusted, I believed in them, and we gave them
kind of a great background or a head start and
getting to college and being able to handle everything that
goes along with that. So be confident, be proud of her,
and let her know that as far as your daughter
getting to Ohio University, volunteer for everything campus radio, campus newspaper,
(04:08):
if there's a local TV station that you can work
on weekends, you can work nights, whatever it is. You
must outwork everybody else and that'll give you a chance
to be able to do this for a living. But
good luck John with the trip, and to your daughter,
thank you so much. All right. Yeah, my voice would
(04:29):
quiver when I would say goodbye to my daughters. My
wife said, be strong, he said, you're going to be strong.
I'm like I am. I think I'm being strong Mike
and Wisconsin. Hi Mike, what's on your mind today? Hey?
Speaker 5 (04:43):
Dan?
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Hey Mike.
Speaker 6 (04:45):
I just saw there would Hello Dan, Hey.
Speaker 2 (04:48):
Mike, Hey Dan, Hey Mike, Hey Dan, see you, Mike. Oh,
have a good one, Annie who one of my favorite
guests of all time, Steve Young joining us on the program.
How are you feeling, Dan?
Speaker 7 (05:10):
Great? How are you, buddy?
Speaker 2 (05:12):
I'm good, I'm good. I saw you in the documentary
on the Cowboys.
Speaker 7 (05:18):
Yeah, I haven't. I got to watch that. I haven't
seen it. Was it good? Was I?
Speaker 2 (05:25):
You're always good? But I didn't learn anything from it.
And I've been around it too long, so that's probably
on me that I've heard all the stories. Therefore you
knew everything. Yes, yes, but if you're young, if you're
thirty or younger, then you're probably saying, oh, that's when
we used to be really good.
Speaker 7 (05:45):
But yeah, it is weird. It's weird that the Cowboys
have struggled for so long, yet they're still America's team.
And Jerry's done a great job of that, right, He's
created this image. And I was talking to Jason Garrett
the other day ironically about it, like the you know
you you go out, you travel for the Cowboys, you
(06:06):
make the team, and now you're now you're special, but
you're you're actually not. You got to go earn it.
And I've always had the I always said that the
Cowboys should start with no stars on their helmet, and
then when they get the ten wins, put a star on.
And then when you get to the playoffs, you know,
or you get in the championshia and get another star
and then like because otherwise it feels like there's something
that's special about you, but it's but there's but it's not.
(06:28):
You have to go earn it. So it's a weird
dynamic with the Cowboys because of what they've done with
with the Americans team.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
But that was your rival when you were with the Niners.
Would you consider the Cowboys.
Speaker 7 (06:39):
You Oh yeah, are you kidding me? They were amazing?
They were they they were they were amazing, They were
they were they were a fantastic team, and beating them
was monumental. I mean, I was just and they were
as good as anyone you've ever seen. So that's just
a fact.
Speaker 2 (06:57):
But who was the the person and like that, that's
the the most important person on the Cowboys was who.
Speaker 7 (07:09):
I mean, they were loaded and you always say the
quarterback with Troy, but I mean it was in many ways,
you know, they had we gave him Charles Haley. I mean,
that was a great move, right nineteen eighty one, right one,
let's let's hand you a Hall of Fame defensive end
just in time, just speaker to make our lives in miserable.
(07:31):
That's awesome. That was just that was the best we've
ever made. That was great. But I mean emmittt was
the guy that ran, like you know, Emmat just you know,
that was that was what they did, right, They played
off of Emmett and then throwing the ball play action
and Michael down. I mean, there's just there was this
Hall of Famers everywhere, right, That's just the fact.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Yeah. And then Jimmy Johnson and you know it was
the architect there with and back then it felt like
he had more control or more say than Jerry did.
But does does Jerry know because it was what I
don't know how many six months ago, eight months ago
when you were on our show and you talked about that.
The problem is, Jerry Jones, that didn't come up in
(08:16):
the documentary.
Speaker 7 (08:21):
We did talk about it and it's pretty obvious. So
it's not like it's a hot take or anything, because
the owner has not empowered anybody else to go in
in the locker room and threaten to fire anyone. Because
if as a coach, you have to be able to
lock walk in the locker room and people have to
have not fear, but at least the respect that I
(08:43):
am going to make this team and if you know,
I'm going to form it in my image and if
I if you don't, you know, do what I ask?
Or like, do it well? Or do you know this
is a this is a place for elite performers. I'm
gonna have you're gonna go. And when you were not
walk in the locker room and nobody really believes that
you have that power, you can't. It's the foot you know,
(09:06):
you know NFL. It's just it's so intense and so competitive.
They lose something there. And I think Jimmy Johnson had it.
We all get that. We all recognized that Jerry didn't
like it. You know, we've kind of that was you know,
I don't think that's a hot take either, and has
never really, in my mind, empowered anybody to come in
(09:28):
and really take control of the team and be able
to run it, not run it, but able to coach
it with authority. And I think that's a that's a
big piece and any coach will tell you that it's
a big piece of being able to get a great
team together.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
He Steve Young, the Hall of Fame quarterback. If I
would have told you in Tampa you're going to go
to the Hall of Fame when you were with the Buccaneers,
what would you have said.
Speaker 7 (09:55):
I said, Well, James Wilder and Jimmy Giles are going
to be amazing because we had we had good play
like we were. We didn't win, but I always said
we weren't losers, like like James Waller. I don't know
that name at all, but these guys that I played
with were not losers. We just didn't have the superstructure
to go get it done. So I would have said,
(10:16):
how exactly is this going to happen? But I will
tell you that in the middle of it, I had
I think I had a coach Jimmy Ray, who you know,
turned to me a couple of times just said, look,
you're gonna be good. So just hanging there like you know,
we've got to get some help, but you're gonna be good.
And I think I took that as a flare or
(10:36):
a signal that, like, things are gonna be okay. But
hall of fame, you know. I mean, who who says
when their first year when they're losing, No, I'm a
Hall of Famer. Yeah, that's gonna be great. You know.
I'm killing it, man, It's going so good. I can't
wait to lose another twelve games.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
I think I think you were three and sixteen as
a star.
Speaker 7 (11:00):
Oh, thanks, Dan, I appreciate it. You're always on top
of that. Awesome. Hey, that was those are Those three
were hard fought.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
Man, they were Where do you stand on rookie quarterbacks? Uh?
Starting games?
Speaker 7 (11:17):
It's more it's more likely today because the difference between
college and pro has really narrowed because of the world changes.
You and I have talked about this at length, and
it's really limited defenses ability to launch their bodies and
patrol the field, and so it slowed the game down,
and so it's allowed for college type offenses to start
(11:39):
to infiltrate the NFL maybe and the innovators with you know,
Sean McVay and Kyle Shanahan and Andy Reid and Sean
Payton eight years ago when the when the world changes,
they were they thrived right because they were innovative in
into this new this new rule, this new game that's
got more space. And so you get to one of
(12:01):
those guys as a rookie, I think there's a chance
that things could go really well. And I think because
they now can run offenses, you can show up with
kayleb women and say, look, we're gonna run stuff that
you're comfortable with because they can't. Wasn't the case in
the old days. They couldn't run college stuff. They get smashed.
But today you can run college offenses. And really, if
(12:21):
you've watched the pros in the college game, they're very,
very similar. And in that way it helps rookie quarterbacks transition,
especially guys that are gonna make it. And it's a
sign that now go go back to Tampa Bay. You
might question about Tampa he still need lots of help.
And there are a dozen teams in the league that
I would not want my son to go play quarterback for.
(12:42):
But there's more. There were only seven or six or
five back in the day that I want my son
to go play quarterback. For so it's gotten a lot better.
Two thirds of the league I think, pretty good, imaginative,
and they've all come from that tree. Vandy Reid, Sean McVay,
Kyle Shanahan, and Sean p I mean, those are those
all the coaches that have infiltrated to the NFL with
(13:03):
all this innovation is pretty much every you know, bequitous
in the league today. So, but rookies have a shot
and because of.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
That, Rock Party went from a feel good story mister irrelevant,
you know, competing in big games and now you get
that big paycheck and now the expectations come with that.
Can you speak to that of what that feels like
or where the pressure? Now you've got to produce and
(13:31):
you got a lot of your weapons either traded away
or injured.
Speaker 7 (13:36):
It's a new hurdle. Every quarterback that is going to
be good or great is going to face those kinds
of hurdles. Right, You're going to get paid and in
the NFL, it's going to be a thing and now
you have to deal that. We deal with that with
your teammates because it's just so uneven in in pay
scale and how attention and uh and Brock has done
(13:58):
an amazing job, being very humble, very team oriented, very
I'm you know, one all for one on one for all,
and it's been really easy to you know, make that
true because he was getting paid less than everybody. So
that does that dynamic does change, Dan, and so you
have to kind of jump over that hurdle or walk
through that filter and play through it. And so that's
(14:20):
going to start this season, and that's a piece of it.
There are people that have failed at that transition and
never really got a hand, you know, kind of handle
on it. I think Brock's going to handle it really well.
Now you get to the part where you said, well,
who's going to help me? Do I have the guys?
And it's certainly different than two years ago. This team
was completely loaded less two years ago and today it's
(14:43):
had to transition, and some of it because they paid him.
So we get that. I've said this many times, but
this year is one of those years where if you're
a fan of the forty nine ers, the jerseys that
you're wearing right now in opening day, yeah, we get that.
You know, Kittle and Purty and Warner, you know, and
that kind of thing it in McCaffrey, but if we're
going to actually give him enough help and he's going
(15:05):
to be able to get to the you know, go
the distance or get close to the you know, the
super Bowl, you're gonna have to be wearing by Thanksgiving
jerseys that you don't know right now, Guys that showed
up either drafted like you know, or come on to
the team and all of a sudden they've made such big,
you know, addition to the team, you're not wearing their
(15:27):
jersey by Thanksgiving. And that's the kind of season we
have to have to actually be able to do it.
So there's young players, rookies everywhere that have to be
big time to make it all work.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Didn't preseason used to matter to the to the starters?
Speaker 7 (15:42):
Well yeah, I mean preseason with look again, rule changes,
right o, tas are really cut down. Time with coaches
is cut down. Preseason is really just to kind of
get in shape. No one wants to hit, you know,
because they don't want to get hurt. They don't want
to play because they don't want to get hurt. And
the game is really today, Let's gather a bunch of
guys through free you know whatever it is. Put our
(16:03):
fifty fifty guys together and let's you know, throw it
out there in September, you know, first week of September.
And that's why I say the preseason today is the
first month of September. That's you just want to get
out of the preseason, which is September like four and
oh would be awesome. Three to one, rate two and
two fine, you know, in anything less because you just
(16:23):
don't know who you are, what it's going to be,
and it's a it's it's a wild West kind of
a thing in September. You just want to try to
manage through it because preseason is really a thing of
the past, and I think you're even seeing it now
because they've reduced a game guys don't play and yeah,
so it's you know, used to be four games. You
played three of them. You know, you started full pads
(16:45):
the first day, two a days like it's there was
a lot more hitting and they just they won the game.
Make the game, I think theoretically more safe, and I
think in some ways because you're not hitting each other
and putting yourself at risk and practice in all summer,
it's probably true less less risk. But I think that's
the rule. Changes have been tried to do that and
it's really affected. And that's why I've said the play today.
(17:07):
Guys that played before the rule changes would say, the
sophistication of the game has really been reduced. Is super
competitive still, absolutely, and I think the fans are like,
this is an amazing game because it's so competitive. But
the guys that played before the rule changes would say,
it's really I don't know, I'm not gonna say dumb down,
but it's it's had to be reduced in sophistication just
(17:30):
because I don't have the time to actually do everything.
And that's why the innovators, the guys I mentioned before,
are so amazing because they're able to innovate into the
game when there's such a reduced amount of time to
spend with the players.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
When will Aaron Rodgers look forty, look his age, Like,
what part of his game will we see age?
Speaker 7 (17:51):
We actually saw it coming off of the Achilles, because
that's when he was trying to recover and you know,
he didn't have his He's always been able to threaten
the line of scrimmage, and I think that's part of
his game as he ages, you're not going to threaten
the line of scrimmage nearly as much with your legs.
But I think he's back to a place where he
can now have confidence that that is, you know, his
(18:13):
body is is healed and well. And so I think
he's going to look you know, late thirties, right. I
don't think he's going to look that old. But but
the real the key to the game, Dan, and that's
the problem, is that there's so many yards, there's so
many touchdowns out there for free for quarterbacks who threaten
the line of scrimmage, and especially in the big games.
(18:35):
And so that's where he's going to have to decide
do I actually still do that because I don't. I
don't think it's possible to go the distance without the
ability in today's game, because you look at the Super
Bowl and the championship games are all won by guys
threatening the line of scrimmage and making those big plays
and creating that space and and so that's the challenge
(18:57):
for Aaron. But he'll have a I think he'll have
a very good seat, and I think the Steelers will
be classically Steelers will play great defense and and win
win games and you know, close ones, and he'll he'll
he'll have a better season than he's had. And uh,
and then they'll get into January and see if they
can make make some noise and I think that'll be
that'll be in a dynamic you know, you know focused,
(19:22):
you know Aaron Rodgers is gonna be in the mix,
just because again I go back. I don't mean to
be labor this, but he was. He was born and
bred in a more sophisticated era, so he can take advantage.
That's why he's still playing. That's why Tom wanted to play.
That's why Peyton wanted to Peyton was so pissed because
his arm fell off. Like He's like, I could still
do this for another ten years because I'm playing in
an era where they can't hit me. In the middle
(19:44):
of the field's unpatrolled and the flats are open. So
let's go. And I think that Aaron knows that.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
And Brady could still play, couldn't he He could still start?
Speaker 7 (19:53):
Yeah, I think to me, learning in a more sophisticated
air now playing today, as long as your arm is
that's Drew Brees lost his arm right, yeah, eight armed?
I mean, Tom, if his arm is still there, you
can I think you can still play. I don't know how.
I mean, at some point, you know, you slow down
(20:14):
enough where you can't make the throw that you need
to make, and it just shows up and defenses start
to creep, and then you start taking the air out
of the room and pretty soon you just can't. You know,
first down has become really hard. I mean, that's inevitable.
But as far as just you know, if your arm
is still in pretty good shape, you can play for
a while.
Speaker 2 (20:29):
Great to talk to you is always. Thanks for joining us, Yeah,
you're the man. Steve Young Hall of Famer, will take
a break. Another Hall of Famer, John Fogerty, will join
us the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer right after this.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
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.
Speaker 8 (20:53):
He's Mike Krmen, I'm Dan Bayern. We have a fantasy
football podcast called I Want Your Flexed.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
That's right, Dan.
Speaker 9 (21:00):
Every week we're gonna scour the waiver wire to find
the pickups to turbo boost your fantasy lineup, sit starts,
fantasy football players rankings to get you ready to dominate
the competition.
Speaker 8 (21:11):
Listen to I Want your flex with Mike Carmon and
me Dan Byer on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast and
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
He's still out there on the road rocking. John Fogerty, singer, songwriter,
Hall of Famer, just turned eighty in May, and today
a new album, Legacy, is being released as he re
recorded some of his most beloved songs with the help
of his sons, Shane and Tyler. Have you seen the Rain?
(21:39):
Fortunate Son, Proud Mary, bad Moon Rising? But a big
baseball fan. His song center Field the only song to
be officially inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. As
we make way for John Fogerty, former lead singer of
Creeden's Clearwater Revival. John, great to talk to you again.
What was your reaction when you realize that the bat,
(22:01):
guitar and the song center Field were becoming part of
the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Speaker 10 (22:07):
Oh, that was right around maybe a couple months before
it actually happened. It was right around the time that
it occurred. I didn't get a lot of time to
think about all the implications, you know, I was certainly
very proud, still proud.
Speaker 2 (22:25):
And then whose idea was it to make a guitar
out of a baseball bat or resemble a baseball bat.
Speaker 11 (22:31):
Oh, that was my idea.
Speaker 10 (22:34):
I'd written center Field, you know, more or less, deciding
that that's kind of where my mind had been over
the all the years of my life, you know, and
it just felt comfortable about you know, Centerfield as an
album was kind of a comeback for me, you might say,
(22:54):
career wise, and the place to me that was sort
of ground zero was center field. It seemed like, especially
on a lot of teams, the alpha male on the
team seemed to be the center fielder, you know, like
Willie Mays with the Giants, or back in the day
Babe Ruth before they moved him to right field.
Speaker 11 (23:14):
I think.
Speaker 10 (23:16):
Joe Demajho, Mickey Mannle, you know, go on. But anyway,
and so I wrote the song and then eventually decided
to name the album center Field. Actually it's the reverse.
I named the album center Field and didn't have a salt.
And then I came up with that guitar lick, you know,
(23:38):
and realized that I started I started just saying the
things I said in life. I'd watched the Saturday Game
of the Week baseball. You know, there was one game
on TV on Saturday, and I'd sit down and watch
that and I'd be yelling at the screen screen, you know,
like we do with something good happened or bad. And
(24:01):
sometimes it'd be a phenom, you know, and something going
not going well with the team you're rooting for, and
I'd be yelling.
Speaker 11 (24:09):
Put me in, coach, put me.
Speaker 12 (24:10):
You know.
Speaker 10 (24:11):
It's just you know, how you enjoy and interact with
the game. And all of that stuff started coming out
when I was playing that guitar League and I realized
I had a song that.
Speaker 11 (24:23):
Could be center field. So that came first.
Speaker 10 (24:27):
The album came out in eighty five and it was
a big success and all that, and I decided, well,
you know, I'm going to.
Speaker 11 (24:34):
Be touring pretty soon.
Speaker 10 (24:35):
Wow, it'd be cool to be able to play center
field on a baseball bat.
Speaker 11 (24:41):
So that's how it started for me.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
Now, clear up something, because I think I asked you
about this a while ago that you say brown eyed
handsome man, and I thought you were talking about Joe
Demagio because he played center field, and you said, it's
not about Joe Demagio, it's about Jackie rob.
Speaker 10 (25:01):
Absolutely, I realize he's not the center fielder. And I
guess I took a little tributary in the musical world there, but.
Speaker 11 (25:12):
It just seemed important to me.
Speaker 10 (25:14):
That's a line that's in a Chuck Berry song, Brown
Eyed Handsome Man, and he talks about round and third
headed and for home, and so I just sort of
borrowed that in my homage to Jackie Robinson. After all,
if I'm writing a baseball song, you better be in there.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
We're talking to John Fogerty, formerly of Creden's Clearwater Revival
rock and roll Hall of Famer, has a new album
called Legacy that comes out today, some re recordings with
his sons Shane and Tyler. You got fortunate son. Have
you seen the rain? Proud Mary? So tell me what
went into this project.
Speaker 10 (25:54):
Well, you know, I recently got my songs back the
ownership a couple of years ago, and that's a great
big deal to any songwriter, of course, or any writer
of any kind of material. And so finally, after more
than fifty years of trying, I finally got the ownership
(26:17):
of those songs back. It was actually facilitated by my
dear wife, Julie. She's the one that really manifested this
and made it happen. You know, she's a force of
nature and God bless her. So with that in mind,
finally accomplishing that, it just seemed kind of a natural
(26:39):
progression to hear in the present. You know, I just
turned eighty this year, and the idea basically was what
do you do?
Speaker 11 (26:50):
What kind of a gift would I like?
Speaker 10 (26:52):
So I decided to give myself a gift and record
a lot of the old preden songs I had written
so many years ago again and hopefully it would be
seen as a gift also to my fans. And that
was the motivation, this time involving my family, meaning my
(27:15):
wife and certainly my sons Shane and Tyler, who are
in my band, and they helped produce the record as well.
Speaker 11 (27:24):
So it was a.
Speaker 10 (27:26):
Family endeavor and you know a lot of love in
that respect making this record.
Speaker 2 (27:34):
Take me back to Woodstock. What day were you on
with Creeden's Clearwater Revival.
Speaker 10 (27:40):
Well, it was supposed to be on Saturday night. The
man on the phone had promised me that a prime spot,
you know, the headlining spot on Saturday night. It's going
to be nine o'clock. Man, that's prime time, but things
got later and later and later. This was, of course,
(28:01):
during the era of hippies. I'm not sure anybody actually
had a watch, but the whole program got later and later,
and somewhere around midnight of Saturday, the Grateful Dead went on,
and then they sort of stalled around on stage for
a while. Nobody quite knew what was going on. I
(28:21):
believe Credence went on Sunday morning early.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
Around Were you there when Hendrick set his guitar on fire?
Speaker 11 (28:33):
No, that was actually Monday morning.
Speaker 10 (28:36):
That was after the whole night of Sunday, you know,
the whole festivities of the Sunday evening going into twelve
am and one and two and three, then the sun
came up, and that's Monday morning when Jimmy went on.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
The difference in your voice now at eighty as opposed
to thirty, Oh well.
Speaker 10 (28:57):
I know my falsesetto is not quite as wrong and
pure as it used to be. You know, it's a
little different around the edges, I think, but it's certainly
as strong. I'm certainly as loud as I ever was,
and that's probably as much to I've been a runner
all my life, and so I think all those miles
(29:18):
of running kind of helped my stamina.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
Well, congrats on a great run, and it's not over.
He's a rock and roll Hall of Famer as a
songwriter and of course as a singer. My best to
the family, certainly, Julie and John. Thank you for joining us.
Speaker 11 (29:34):
Thank you, Dan, It's always great to see you.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
John Fogerty, the album is Legacy being released today. I
met him. I'm trying to think how many years ago.
This almost ten years ago at Howard Stern's sixtieth birthday
party and Gary delabat Howard's longtime producer, invited me to
come on and introduce Dave Grohl, and I said, okay.
(30:02):
But I get there and immediately I'm told by somebody, Hey,
John Fogerty wants to meet you. I'm thinking, all right,
this is I mean, it's the Howard Stern Show. So
I'm you know, somebody's punking me here, you know, Baba
Booie's gonna jump out, or you know, stuttering John or somebody.
And I go back, you know, through these hallways, and
(30:26):
all of a sudden, I just walked up to a
door and knock on the door, and John's wife answers.
I said, I'm supposed to say hello to John, and
she goes, he's been waiting for you. I walk in
and there he is. He's got his plaid shirt, his
signature plaid shirt on and he listens every morning in
(30:48):
Los Angeles. And I said, okay, this has already proven
to be a great night. Then I go back into
this kind of a green room and I got slam
from Guns n' Roses, and I got Dave Grohle. You know,
you got all these people and they're kind of getting
ready to go on and have their performances. And I
(31:09):
walk up to Dave Grohl and I said, hey, I'm
introducing you. He goes, I don't know anything about sports.
My daughters play lacrosse. I said, well, I'm yeah, that
has nothing to do with the introduction. He goes, yeah,
this is what I want you to say that I
grew up listening to Howard on a Ham radio and
(31:29):
I said okay, And then I just wanted to get
it over with because I mean I had already have
my highlight. I met John Fogerty, go out Saaleo to
Robin Salo to Howard, introduced Dave Grohl and then I'm
out the door. But you know, one of those surreal moments,
because there's John Fogerty, rock and roll Hall of Famer
and gave us so many great songs with credence. Jeff
(31:52):
and Florida. Hi, Jeff, what's on your mind today? Hey?
Speaker 6 (31:58):
I was selling the guy on the phone. I had
kind of an interesting story about John Fogerty. In a
very round about kind of way. I introduced him to Julie.
Speaker 2 (32:13):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (32:18):
I was living in Fort Wayne, Indiana at the time,
and she was a hairdresser and.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
She was, oh, thank you, Jeff.
Speaker 3 (32:33):
Okay, like he was getting through one more layer of
screening before he really told the story. This is the
part where you tell the story about how.
Speaker 12 (32:41):
You did that.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
Yeah, that was why you called in to tell me
the story about how you set up This is where
you want to do that part of it. AnyWho, Okay,
if you're watching on Peacock, we're going out to the
grills and to meet Friday and so we'll have that
for you coming up. Last off for phone calls. What
we learn what's in store tomorrow or no, I don't
(33:03):
know what's in store tomorrow. We'll tell you what's in
store for Monday to day in sports history, We'll try
to do all of those things coming out.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
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 iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to
listen live.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
Here we go, Marvin. Ever since I was a time neighboy,
A don't one, nokundi adnd.
Speaker 7 (33:30):
I took us to dinner and I'll cover it down.
Speaker 11 (33:33):
I doang and.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
Last go for phone calls. What we learn, what's in
store for Monday. Chris Collinsworth on Monday, and the former
college coach Rick Neuheisel will recap the college football weekend.
By the way, Tommy Davit though was seventeen of twenty
and the Giants went over the patreot It's his passer
rating is the highest by any Giants QB with at
(34:05):
least ten attempts in a preseason game in the last decade.
Okay of the Jay, Start of the Jay. We love
your Stata the Day status. Thank you, Pandora stat of
the Day. He brought to you by Panini America. The
official trading cards of the Dan Patrick Show. Tommy DeVito,
(34:25):
mister August. All right, final results of the poll question Seaton.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
We had a more wonky career. Let's see if that
has changed up a little bit. Not still nick Foles,
Still nick Foles. Steve Young has gone down to less
than five percent of that vote. We also put up
there based on meat Friday, corn is better on the
cob or off? Oh you want to guess on the
cob on the cops? Got about u Paul percent?
Speaker 2 (34:55):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely yes street corn. Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (35:01):
You need a little salt, little butter.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
Uh. Morgan in Maryland, Hey Morgan, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 7 (35:08):
Hey?
Speaker 13 (35:08):
DK, I have two things, one about the Cowboys and
one about Marvin's proposal question. So, if Jerry Jones is
on TV, I'm not a Cowboys fan by any means,
but I'm watching him because some of his decision making
and things that he does is just so bizarre. He
reminds me of like my four year old sometimes, like
do you know that probably wasn't the best decision, or
you shouldn't have done that, And he will never admit
(35:30):
that he's wrong, He'll just keep on going. And then
Marvin's proposal question, my husband did ask my parents, you
know permission to marry me. But I was already four
and a half months pregnant and it wasn't a secret,
So like, was it a new point?
Speaker 4 (35:46):
Then?
Speaker 2 (35:49):
Uh, he should have asked for permission for something else.
Speaker 13 (35:53):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (35:57):
Thank you, Morgan, Thank you. I have a great week end.
Zach and Knoxville. Hi, Zach, what's on your mind today?
Speaker 5 (36:05):
KADP thanks for taking my call to continue on with
the Jerry Jones topic.
Speaker 6 (36:11):
I kind of compare what he's doing right now to coach.
Speaker 5 (36:14):
K at the beginning of the one and done era
and wasn't really willing.
Speaker 6 (36:19):
To switch up his style.
Speaker 5 (36:20):
And I think that's what Jerry's been doing for the
last twenty or thirty years. And do you see Stephen
changing it up once Jerry moves on?
Speaker 2 (36:30):
Yeah, it's a good question. I don't know Stephen Jones.
I don't know if I've ever met him, but I mean,
his dad was a brilliant businessman, has been a brilliant businessman.
But that doesn't mean he's always made the right decisions here.
But maybe Steven, maybe he will delegate and truly delegate. Yes, Mark,
(36:50):
quick question. Maybe it's a little bit too late.
Speaker 1 (36:52):
But if not the Cowboys, who do you guys consider
to be America's team?
Speaker 2 (36:58):
Well, I don't consider the Cowboys to be American. I
know that.
Speaker 3 (37:00):
That's why I said, if not the Cowboys.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
Yeah, I don't have an America's team. You have to, oh,
I do. Are the Kansas City Chiefs America's team?
Speaker 14 (37:15):
The front runners? Then then they come that should not
be America's team by any stretch?
Speaker 2 (37:20):
Okay, who should be? God?
Speaker 14 (37:23):
If I had to pick one, I might say like
the Steelers or the Packers. I also would throw the
Bills in there, even though it's just an upstate or
western New York. But I think people can rally behind
the Bills finally winning one Satan.
Speaker 3 (37:34):
What is there a difference between being America's team and
the most popular team in America?
Speaker 2 (37:44):
Is that maybe not?
Speaker 3 (37:45):
I don't know that America's Team's not even a real thing.
It's just something that the Cowboys made up, so it
doesn't even really exist, and that the most popular team
just sort of fluctuates. If there was an American team,
it's obviously the Patriots.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
Of course, this day in sports history, Paul.
Speaker 15 (38:04):
Let's see what I got for you. I got nineteen
fifty one, seventy five thousand people attended a Harlem Globetrotter's game,
largest crowd at that point ever to see a basketball
game in person. In person seems redundant. And in nineteen
ninety eight, nineteen eighty nine, Nolan Ryan became the first
major league pitcher to strike out five thousand batters.
Speaker 7 (38:23):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (38:24):
He struck out Ricky Henderson. Nineteen sixty five, one Marochelle
Giants pitcher hit the Dodgers catcher John Roseboro in the
head with his bat and then you had a brawl
between those two teams that lasted almost fifteen minutes. But
Marichelle was at the plate and Roseboro was catching. Sandy
(38:47):
Kofax I believe was on the mound for that incident.
Speaker 12 (38:51):
There.
Speaker 2 (38:53):
We got college football coming up tomorrow. Got a lot
of games highlighted by the game in Dublin, Iowa State case.
Speaker 15 (39:00):
Yes, Paul, you have a bunch more too, like Idaho
State UNLV, even little ones like UCA Davis versus Mercer
and NC Central versus Southern, all on national TV. A
lot of National TV games on all the channels.
Speaker 2 (39:13):
That sounds great. Yeah, got golf coming up this weekend.
As well with the tour championship. It's see Nick in Indianapolis. Hi, Nick,
how are you say?
Speaker 1 (39:24):
DP?
Speaker 12 (39:25):
First time?
Speaker 16 (39:25):
Long time? And I have a little stab. I'm not
a Cowboys fan, but I have something that's a double
alma mater I share with this guy high school and
my brother's so coaches there in college. So Zach Martin.
He was a two time state champion under Armor, All American,
two team NCAA second team NCAA All American, first round
(39:47):
draft pick by the Cowboys at Notre Dame, seven time
first team All Pro, nine time Pro bowler. He was
part of the twenty ten All Decade Team. He had
seven holding penel these in eleven years. He had many
All Pro that he did holding penalties. I just think
that's pretty remarkable.
Speaker 2 (40:07):
That's awesome. Thank you for that, Nick, Zach Martin, he'sure
Hall of Famer. Let me sneak in James and Virginia
real quick, James.
Speaker 12 (40:16):
Oh, thank you for taking my call. Brother. Happy Friday, DP,
Dan Netsman, I just want to let you guys know, DP,
you are an honorary grandfather, Dan, that's your honorary uncles.
Because I got a first time, first time here DP.
He went from the Great Leaders Virginia.
Speaker 2 (40:33):
Yeah, we put eight.
Speaker 12 (40:35):
Inches, weighing seven pounds twelve ounces. It is the blue
eyed Dreamer, James Hunter Edwards, the four.
Speaker 2 (40:44):
I love it from what we learned. Brought to you
by tire rack dot Com The way tire buying should be.
Congrats to James, Hail to the commanders. Have a great
weekend everybody. We'll talk to you on Monday, a