WEBVTT - MLB Unbreakable Records & On The Road Again | Ep #85

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<v Speaker 1>Fistball, funny shot of Hey, happy opening day. Let's go,

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<v Speaker 1>Let's go Yankee, Let's go match, Hey, let's go Subway series.

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<v Speaker 2>Look at that.

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<v Speaker 1>I'll sign up for that. I'll take you.

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<v Speaker 2>Look at that.

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<v Speaker 1>I'll text it out. My new bad boy, the new

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<v Speaker 1>gear is here. My Travis Matthew all geared up already

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<v Speaker 1>for baseball. Today's today. It's like a holiday. It's like

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<v Speaker 1>newdi magazine day. Welcome to Over Promised, our bonus show

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<v Speaker 1>and Rich. We're on Fox Sports Radio Monday through Friday,

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<v Speaker 1>two to four on the West, five to seven on

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<v Speaker 1>the East. Search Covino and Rich wherever you stream your podcast,

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<v Speaker 1>and welcome to episode eighty five of our bonus pot

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<v Speaker 1>over Promise.

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<v Speaker 2>Oh eighty five? Like, who do you think of number

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<v Speaker 2>eighty five? Oh?

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<v Speaker 1>Ocho Cinco No, the original Otro Sinco me Bro in

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<v Speaker 1>high school? There he is. Let's tell us eyebrows throw

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<v Speaker 1>it back. Yeah, I don't surf the web, eyebrows, Bro,

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<v Speaker 1>Look at that. Gous have a fucking caterpillar. That's your

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<v Speaker 1>worst one, right there? But yeah, Bro, Union High nationally

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<v Speaker 1>ranked champions, right there, national champs.

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<v Speaker 2>You played on four special teams plays, right.

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<v Speaker 1>That's right, man, look at me, ask me and my

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<v Speaker 1>greatest though on the sideline. You see that, that's where

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<v Speaker 1>I look at you. That was the best the other photo.

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<v Speaker 1>So anyway, welcome to the show again, number eighty five,

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<v Speaker 1>So you got eighty four other shows to catch up

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<v Speaker 1>on if you're new to our bonus show. This is

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<v Speaker 1>stuff we don't normally fit into Caveno and Rich on

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<v Speaker 1>Fox Sports.

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<v Speaker 3>Nice I broke this out. I have to hide it

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<v Speaker 3>from my kids. My most prized position. Our buddy doctor

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<v Speaker 3>Ed got.

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<v Speaker 1>This from you.

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<v Speaker 3>Look at this, bait boy, the nineteen eighty six Bets

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<v Speaker 3>Baseball signed by the whole team.

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<v Speaker 2>Once you bring about it, I will. It's a pretty

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<v Speaker 2>freaking cool item. Know, it's awesome.

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<v Speaker 1>My mom bought me this. There you go, Aaron Judge

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<v Speaker 1>behind me. Uncle Joe got me the mo Rivera. Yeah,

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<v Speaker 1>you see that. There it is, and above that that's

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<v Speaker 1>a signed Fred Durst Yankee hat right there. Anyway, it's

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<v Speaker 1>baseball season. Life changes. Something to watch every day. Let's go.

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<v Speaker 1>That's something that's not talked about enough. Baseball season. I've

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<v Speaker 1>always said this, While I do love honing in and

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<v Speaker 1>watching a game and really paying attention It's the ultimate

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<v Speaker 1>background sport. There's something about the spring of the summer

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<v Speaker 1>where it could be a Tuesday, a Thursday, or random

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<v Speaker 1>Friday night. You could be just Billy downing and playing

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<v Speaker 1>with your kids, having dinner with the family, games on

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<v Speaker 1>the background.

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<v Speaker 2>Just the sound of baseball.

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<v Speaker 3>I know that sounds corny as hell, but the sound

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<v Speaker 3>of baseball makes me feel happy.

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<v Speaker 1>Crack of the bat, crack of the bat. It's just

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<v Speaker 1>the voice.

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<v Speaker 3>It's the voices of your favorite local commentators. There's nothing

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<v Speaker 3>like it. So happy baseball to everybody. Be baseball.

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<v Speaker 1>In fact, we're gonna talk about this season later on

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<v Speaker 1>in this show. Oh wait, how excited is Michael Kay? Spot?

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<v Speaker 1>Do you have that video of Michael Kay? I know,

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<v Speaker 1>the Yankees have just begun their first game.

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<v Speaker 3>Then they broke a street where Michael Kay couldn't call

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<v Speaker 3>the first game because the Yankees were on ESPN today.

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<v Speaker 1>Right exactly. Yeah, I mean he's dancing. He danced to

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<v Speaker 1>the Yankee music and pure excitement. I'm trying to learn

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<v Speaker 1>the moves. But later on in the show, we're gonna

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<v Speaker 1>talk about the players that change teams, and we're gonna

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<v Speaker 1>play a game called on the Road. Again. Do you

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<v Speaker 1>know the path of some legendary players? Do you know

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<v Speaker 1>all the teams they played for? Plus Sweet sixteen? Bro.

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<v Speaker 1>We're gonna talk about college basketball here on the show, but.

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<v Speaker 2>Before we get into anything, we gotta.

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<v Speaker 1>Watch Michael Kay dance.

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<v Speaker 2>I'm hoping you can enjoy Michael Kay's dances because it's

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<v Speaker 2>opening day.

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<v Speaker 1>By the way, it really is Michael Kay dancing to

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<v Speaker 1>the Yankee team.

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<v Speaker 2>It's so funny. I sent that to my dad and

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<v Speaker 2>I was like, Yo, can we know what I thought

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<v Speaker 2>you would find this funny? He's like, Oh, is that really?

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<v Speaker 2>Michael k parents are terrible stuff like that.

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<v Speaker 1>It's not that I like to pretend like it is.

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<v Speaker 1>It has to be in my mind. And gonna kick

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<v Speaker 1>it off today with well, Bro, Bible, you're such a

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<v Speaker 1>bro my Bible.

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<v Speaker 2>Bro Bible.

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<v Speaker 1>Yeah, did a list of records in the MLB that

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<v Speaker 1>will never be broken? I have a lad I'm a

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<v Speaker 1>lad Bible, But we don't really need a stinking list.

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<v Speaker 1>I know the ones that stand out to me. You

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<v Speaker 1>know the ones that stand out to you.

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<v Speaker 2>I don't want to look at.

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<v Speaker 3>Their list because I know the records that you said

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<v Speaker 3>click for you.

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<v Speaker 1>But it makes you think about how much the game

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<v Speaker 1>has changed, right, And that's why people are talking about

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<v Speaker 1>this list of records because they seem some of these

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<v Speaker 1>records seem unbeatable, like they're gonna last forever.

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<v Speaker 2>Give me your three, I'll give you my three.

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<v Speaker 1>Let's see if we agree, in my opinion, and that's

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<v Speaker 1>the beauty of baseball too. Somehow there's always a new

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<v Speaker 1>record that's broken, but some will stand the test of time.

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<v Speaker 1>Cy Young obviously right, you have to go back in time.

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<v Speaker 1>But Cy Young seven hundred and forty nine complete games.

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<v Speaker 1>There's no way the way the game works today that

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<v Speaker 1>you'll ever see anything remotely close seven complete game. I

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<v Speaker 1>would be shocked if a guy had forty nine. Last

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<v Speaker 1>year was a record low. In twenty twenty four, the

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<v Speaker 1>entire season, it was only twenty six complete games in

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<v Speaker 1>the whole league. So no one's gonna ever beat that.

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<v Speaker 1>I mean, we treat players differently their investments. Now, no

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<v Speaker 1>one's going to throw their arm out the way Asai

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<v Speaker 1>Young did back in the day. It's obvious I understand why,

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<v Speaker 1>but it's not being broken. The other one that stands

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<v Speaker 1>out to me again for the same reasons, It'll never

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<v Speaker 1>be broken because people don't play the game this way.

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<v Speaker 1>Cal Ripkins two thousand, six hundred and thirty two career

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<v Speaker 1>games consecutive game streak.

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<v Speaker 3>Will never be broken. Almost almost got broken by Kevin Costler. Wife.

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<v Speaker 3>Is that a number like the current day iron horse?

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<v Speaker 3>Cal Ripkin, I.

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<v Speaker 2>Kevin is an iron horse, if you know what I mean?

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<v Speaker 2>Guess what?

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<v Speaker 1>Only four players last year in twenty twenty four, but

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<v Speaker 1>he played a full season one hundred.

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<v Speaker 2>And sixty t two games. So the do you you know?

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<v Speaker 1>Nick Costianos of the Phillies, Matt Olsen of the Braves,

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<v Speaker 1>Azuna of the Braves, and Pete Alonzo. I was gonna say,

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<v Speaker 1>polar bear, Pete of your New York Mets. So only

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<v Speaker 1>four players played every game last year. And to think

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<v Speaker 1>you weren't going to bring him back the nerve? Could

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<v Speaker 1>he have done any more? He came and clutched. He

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<v Speaker 1>played every game disrespect of Pete Alonzo. So cal Ripkens record, yep,

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<v Speaker 1>that's never gonna be broken. Only four players played a

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<v Speaker 1>complete season last year, and it's an obvious one, but

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<v Speaker 1>it's not gonna happen. I know records are made to

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<v Speaker 1>be broken, but not the way the game's played, has

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<v Speaker 1>changes evolved. Nolan Ryan's five thousand, seven hundred and fourteen strikeouns, Oh,

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<v Speaker 1>I do we.

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<v Speaker 3>Can say Nolan Ryan punches landed on someone else's face.

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<v Speaker 3>I mean, I don't think that'll be broken a E eight.

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<v Speaker 1>On the twenty eight consecutive punches on Novivntor's dome. But

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<v Speaker 1>just to give a perspective of current players, you know,

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<v Speaker 1>I want to take a guest who has the most

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<v Speaker 1>strikeouts of current players?

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<v Speaker 2>Current?

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<v Speaker 3>I mean, because he's still active like a shureser with

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<v Speaker 3>he's up one thousand, I mean Verlander.

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<v Speaker 1>For I put it, I call him Verlander. You put

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<v Speaker 1>the emphasis on the Lander. Verlander three thousand, four hundred

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<v Speaker 1>and ten. Okay, shures are three thousand, four hundred and seven.

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<v Speaker 1>So they're very close.

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<v Speaker 3>When they were both on the Mets, that felt experiment.

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<v Speaker 3>I remember every game they pitched, they would.

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<v Speaker 1>Yeah, they're still back and forth, only three separated. Who

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<v Speaker 1>do you think is gonna end up with more Lander?

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<v Speaker 1>You think Verlander has more? Kershaw is going for three

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<v Speaker 1>thousand this year, He's he's at two thousand and nine

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<v Speaker 1>to sixty eight, Hey, Kershaw, Kershaw, But again, Verlander thirty

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<v Speaker 1>four hundred'd be lucky and Ryan they got over fifty

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<v Speaker 1>seven hundred career strikeouts based on happening those two studs.

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<v Speaker 1>And by the way, our video guy spot loves how

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<v Speaker 1>in baseball it's just so normal to call guys studs.

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<v Speaker 4>It's true on the ass's up studying man men calling

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<v Speaker 4>other girl men's stud But when you hear two studs

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<v Speaker 4>like Sureser and Verlander, I think thirty five hondo might

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<v Speaker 4>be the new Like holy shit, because if guys like

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<v Speaker 4>that that played ten twenty years at an elite level,

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<v Speaker 4>they're just getting close to thirty five hundred.

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<v Speaker 1>I don't think anyone will ever get four thousand. No, yeah,

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<v Speaker 1>I don't think so. Thirty five numbers. We understand why.

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<v Speaker 1>But you gotta tip your sweet new powder blue Ocean

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<v Speaker 1>Yankees at in honor to the guys who hold these records.

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<v Speaker 3>They're amazing. I got three records. Now, these aren't the

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<v Speaker 3>obvious ones. I have some that I think are obvious

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<v Speaker 3>because there are records that will be broken. I'm convinced

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<v Speaker 3>that the home run record, whether or not you acknowledge

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<v Speaker 3>McGuire or Bonds or Marris, whatever one you acknowledge, I

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<v Speaker 3>think a guy like Aaron Judge, if healthy and.

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<v Speaker 2>Gets hot, I feel like a guy like that could

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<v Speaker 2>put up seventy five. I really do.

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<v Speaker 1>I think that, especially with the emphasis on home runs

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<v Speaker 1>and the lack of emphasis on banning batting.

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<v Speaker 3>Average downmphasis on home run so see, I think something

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<v Speaker 3>like that will be broken.

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<v Speaker 2>What won't be broken?

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<v Speaker 3>I heard our buddy Matt dog Russo I brought this

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<v Speaker 3>up on the Fox Sports radio show yesterday. They talked

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<v Speaker 3>about if he gives you one hundred and eighty innings,

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<v Speaker 3>that would be fantastic. Last year, guys that led the

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<v Speaker 3>league were just breaking two hundred innings pitch. Now, I'm

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<v Speaker 3>not going back to the eighteen hundreds where guys pitched

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<v Speaker 3>six hundred innings. But when we were kids. Phil neicro

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<v Speaker 3>I was born in nineteen seventy nine. That year, Phil

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<v Speaker 3>negro for the Braves throughout three hundred and forty two

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<v Speaker 3>innings and he was twenty Get this, give you No.

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<v Speaker 3>Twenty one and twenty because he had forty one games

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<v Speaker 3>pitched and decisions knuckleballers.

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<v Speaker 1>He played till he was one hundred and fifty five

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<v Speaker 1>years old. I think so, Yeah, different time.

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<v Speaker 3>A guy like Phil nicro throwing more than double the

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<v Speaker 3>innings you're hoping out of cy young candidates this year.

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<v Speaker 3>So I would say innings pitched is just a thing

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<v Speaker 3>of the past, like that's you're never even gonna and

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<v Speaker 3>Phil Neicro, by the way, not a record, It just

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<v Speaker 3>happens to be in recent history.

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<v Speaker 1>And again I was looking up some stats like Dwayne stats.

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<v Speaker 1>Great great announcer, but did you mention the emergence of

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<v Speaker 1>middle relief pitchers.

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<v Speaker 2>Therefore, you know that's just not how the game is played.

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<v Speaker 3>I think stats like holds and saves are vulnerable to

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<v Speaker 3>be broken. Yeah right, so, but unbreakable. How about this one?

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<v Speaker 3>You gave him props the other day on Fox Sports Radio.

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<v Speaker 3>A speedster, a guy that seems lightning quick, like Elie

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<v Speaker 3>de la Cruz had half the stolen bases Ricky Henderson

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<v Speaker 3>had when he had one hundred and thirty stolen bases

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<v Speaker 3>in nineteen eighty.

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<v Speaker 2>Elie de la Cruz led the league last year, I

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<v Speaker 2>think was sixty seven.

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<v Speaker 3>Sixty seven, Yeah, dude, practically half of what Ricky had

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<v Speaker 3>in the eighties. And we thought last year, like man,

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<v Speaker 3>he was a speedster. Do you think he's gonna double

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<v Speaker 3>that number.

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<v Speaker 1>No way now Henderson. That's why he's legend. It's unbelievable.

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<v Speaker 3>That'll never and everyone, as you saw the A's wearing

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<v Speaker 3>them twenty four in honor of him opening day, rats.

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<v Speaker 1>And the Ricky the last one.

0:11:05.120 --> 0:11:06.839
<v Speaker 3>It's less of a record, but the last guy to

0:11:06.920 --> 0:11:11.320
<v Speaker 3>do with Ted Williams batting four hundred with the emphasis sorry,

0:11:11.320 --> 0:11:14.440
<v Speaker 3>do you mean the vato local Ted Williams, I'm sorry,

0:11:14.760 --> 0:11:16.040
<v Speaker 3>the adult Williams.

0:11:16.080 --> 0:11:17.920
<v Speaker 1>There was a story that came out of this week.

0:11:18.679 --> 0:11:21.520
<v Speaker 1>It went viral this week that his mom was Mexican.

0:11:21.559 --> 0:11:22.439
<v Speaker 1>A lot of people don't know that.

0:11:22.840 --> 0:11:23.360
<v Speaker 2>Vot To Williams.

0:11:23.520 --> 0:11:26.880
<v Speaker 3>H yah, Votto Williams so Voto Williams batting four hundred.

0:11:27.960 --> 0:11:30.200
<v Speaker 3>I looked up the guys that got closest, and you know,

0:11:30.200 --> 0:11:33.920
<v Speaker 3>it's funny. We all remember this. George Brett batted three

0:11:33.880 --> 0:11:36.839
<v Speaker 3>to ninety. Tony Gwynn took it into the summer, he

0:11:36.920 --> 0:11:39.920
<v Speaker 3>batted three ninety four in the nineties. Larry Walker in

0:11:40.000 --> 0:11:43.320
<v Speaker 3>that elevation in Colorado batted three seventy nine.

0:11:43.679 --> 0:11:44.800
<v Speaker 2>And those guys were close.

0:11:45.160 --> 0:11:50.760
<v Speaker 3>Nowadays, the Arise and the Arises and the Jeff mcneils,

0:11:51.000 --> 0:11:54.240
<v Speaker 3>I'm thinking of the guys. The Mayhew guys are leading

0:11:54.240 --> 0:11:55.800
<v Speaker 3>the league batting three to twenty.

0:11:56.400 --> 0:12:00.600
<v Speaker 1>The idea is emphasis on batting average anymore. Yes, and

0:12:00.679 --> 0:12:03.520
<v Speaker 1>I think there was a record low across the league

0:12:03.520 --> 0:12:05.680
<v Speaker 1>as far as team averages.

0:12:06.000 --> 0:12:09.200
<v Speaker 3>I think there was some ridiculous thing like around ten

0:12:09.240 --> 0:12:10.520
<v Speaker 3>guys batted over three hundred.

0:12:10.559 --> 0:12:12.960
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, it's ridiculous. So you know what, I agree, no

0:12:13.000 --> 0:12:16.000
<v Speaker 1>one's coming for one sniffing for I don't know anyone's

0:12:16.000 --> 0:12:17.200
<v Speaker 1>gonna sniff three fifty.

0:12:18.160 --> 0:12:18.680
<v Speaker 2>I agree.

0:12:18.800 --> 0:12:21.920
<v Speaker 1>So so bro Bible put their list out. Those are

0:12:21.920 --> 0:12:24.400
<v Speaker 1>the ones that come to mind for us. What comes

0:12:24.440 --> 0:12:27.400
<v Speaker 1>to mind for you say something about sniffing and studs

0:12:27.559 --> 0:12:30.240
<v Speaker 1>against sniffing and studs even sniff four hundred?

0:12:30.480 --> 0:12:33.320
<v Speaker 3>I said, Now, besides baseball, let me take a quick

0:12:33.360 --> 0:12:37.160
<v Speaker 3>moment to tell everyone that's a sweet sixteen continues today.

0:12:37.480 --> 0:12:41.640
<v Speaker 2>Some people say in the nil ruining the tournament.

0:12:41.800 --> 0:12:43.720
<v Speaker 3>But then there's other people like our buddy Jared Smith,

0:12:43.760 --> 0:12:46.120
<v Speaker 3>who lives in Vegas, one of our pals at Fox Sports,

0:12:46.200 --> 0:12:49.120
<v Speaker 3>was saying, what are we mad that? Like the better

0:12:49.160 --> 0:12:52.320
<v Speaker 3>teams are there? Like some people want to Cinderella team.

0:12:52.440 --> 0:12:54.760
<v Speaker 3>There's no Cinderella this year, so it's just the better

0:12:54.800 --> 0:12:55.959
<v Speaker 3>teams are winning, and it's like.

0:12:55.920 --> 0:12:59.840
<v Speaker 1>Oh, team better than the snow white team the snow

0:13:00.040 --> 0:13:01.480
<v Speaker 1>It stinks. Everybody's hating.

0:13:01.520 --> 0:13:04.320
<v Speaker 3>On spot Spot you saw a meme and it was

0:13:04.440 --> 0:13:08.520
<v Speaker 3>the rules of rooting for college sports and what team

0:13:08.600 --> 0:13:10.959
<v Speaker 3>in school you root for? And I always found this

0:13:10.960 --> 0:13:12.840
<v Speaker 3>funny because our buddy Matt, who lives in New York

0:13:12.880 --> 0:13:16.600
<v Speaker 3>are Pound McColl's husband. Matt has a tar heels tattoo,

0:13:17.320 --> 0:13:18.200
<v Speaker 3>and I'm like, oh.

0:13:18.120 --> 0:13:22.520
<v Speaker 2>Dude, North Carolina, you went there Chapel Hill. No he didn't.

0:13:24.080 --> 0:13:25.520
<v Speaker 3>Do you have a tattoo when you didn't go there.

0:13:25.520 --> 0:13:27.400
<v Speaker 3>He's like, well, my dad went there and played ball.

0:13:27.480 --> 0:13:29.320
<v Speaker 3>And I'm like, hey, but you didn't go there. Imagine

0:13:29.320 --> 0:13:30.599
<v Speaker 3>having an ou tattoo.

0:13:30.640 --> 0:13:31.440
<v Speaker 2>This is my tattoo.

0:13:32.160 --> 0:13:33.200
<v Speaker 1>Spot. Did he go to Maryland?

0:13:33.280 --> 0:13:38.240
<v Speaker 2>I did? But well, the.

0:13:38.600 --> 0:13:41.640
<v Speaker 1>Matt example is odd. I'm not saying it's not, but

0:13:41.679 --> 0:13:45.360
<v Speaker 1>at least there's a connection. So he is his dad alive, yes, No,

0:13:45.520 --> 0:13:47.439
<v Speaker 1>his dad just recently passed, well, you know, in a

0:13:47.520 --> 0:13:50.800
<v Speaker 1>way to honor his dad. There is a connection. At

0:13:50.880 --> 0:13:53.040
<v Speaker 1>least that makes sense. So like my brother in law,

0:13:53.120 --> 0:13:56.880
<v Speaker 1>Chris right, he's a big Ohio state guy, but you

0:13:56.880 --> 0:13:58.880
<v Speaker 1>would think, oh, man, did you go to Ohio State?

0:13:59.440 --> 0:14:02.120
<v Speaker 2>No? Did your dad go to No? Do you have

0:14:02.240 --> 0:14:03.960
<v Speaker 2>any affiliation or connection at all?

0:14:05.000 --> 0:14:07.680
<v Speaker 1>No? So it's just like you made some random choice

0:14:07.760 --> 0:14:11.840
<v Speaker 1>when you were eight years old? Did that you from Ohio?

0:14:12.040 --> 0:14:13.360
<v Speaker 2>Some people did.

0:14:13.200 --> 0:14:15.600
<v Speaker 3>That with professional teams, right, But I look at this way,

0:14:15.720 --> 0:14:16.880
<v Speaker 3>I think there's got to be a reason.

0:14:17.000 --> 0:14:18.480
<v Speaker 2>There's a little difference. I made some rules.

0:14:18.520 --> 0:14:23.360
<v Speaker 3>Number one, if you have a tattoo or something permanent pointment,

0:14:24.440 --> 0:14:28.480
<v Speaker 3>you need to have a family legacy or you have

0:14:28.840 --> 0:14:30.200
<v Speaker 3>have to have gone there yourself.

0:14:30.480 --> 0:14:31.320
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, I don't get that.

0:14:31.320 --> 0:14:35.160
<v Speaker 1>That's why I don't have a college basketball team. Remember

0:14:35.160 --> 0:14:39.880
<v Speaker 1>when Saint John's was Well, they're decent again, but back

0:14:39.880 --> 0:14:41.880
<v Speaker 1>in the day, of course, you know, at least there

0:14:41.920 --> 0:14:46.280
<v Speaker 1>was some sort of connection there because we were from

0:14:46.280 --> 0:14:50.200
<v Speaker 1>the East coast. That was really it. Otherwise I went

0:14:50.200 --> 0:14:52.840
<v Speaker 1>to Montclair State University in New Jersey.

0:14:53.400 --> 0:14:56.080
<v Speaker 2>I have no connection to any of these big schools,

0:14:56.160 --> 0:14:59.080
<v Speaker 2>these teams, so I can't root that hard. But hold on,

0:14:59.120 --> 0:15:02.640
<v Speaker 2>I'll root for players. What was their mascot again, the Redhawk.

0:15:03.320 --> 0:15:05.120
<v Speaker 2>That's why you have that tattooed on your inner thigh.

0:15:05.240 --> 0:15:08.440
<v Speaker 2>The real ms U. Yeah, yeah, I didn't never know.

0:15:08.680 --> 0:15:10.720
<v Speaker 2>To me, I do always find it odd to have

0:15:10.960 --> 0:15:12.800
<v Speaker 2>people root.

0:15:13.160 --> 0:15:16.240
<v Speaker 5>Can I bring in one exception? One exception of this?

0:15:16.360 --> 0:15:20.200
<v Speaker 5>So growing up I did play basketball, Believe it or not.

0:15:20.320 --> 0:15:23.680
<v Speaker 1>This nerve doesn't count. This athletic stud that you see before.

0:15:23.720 --> 0:15:26.640
<v Speaker 1>You used to play basketball. But as a kid and

0:15:26.840 --> 0:15:29.360
<v Speaker 1>in I don't know what it's called pe pee league.

0:15:29.760 --> 0:15:31.840
<v Speaker 1>You know that you were in pee wee Hermany p

0:15:32.080 --> 0:15:36.560
<v Speaker 1>Hermany didn't are you? Are you credited with the mamba

0:15:36.640 --> 0:15:37.480
<v Speaker 1>mentality that.

0:15:37.560 --> 0:15:39.880
<v Speaker 5>You Yes, let's started. It was the spot man you

0:15:39.920 --> 0:15:43.280
<v Speaker 5>passed on to Kobe. We played together and whatever that

0:15:43.320 --> 0:15:46.960
<v Speaker 5>was called. But anyway, I remember being well, our team

0:15:47.080 --> 0:15:52.400
<v Speaker 5>name was the Redmond, which is Saint John's. So growing

0:15:52.480 --> 0:15:55.760
<v Speaker 5>up I like started following Saint John's a little bit

0:15:55.760 --> 0:15:57.160
<v Speaker 5>because I'm like, oh, I'm a Redman. Ah, I have

0:15:57.200 --> 0:16:00.720
<v Speaker 5>Redmond gear. You start wearing that and you kind of.

0:16:00.640 --> 0:16:01.840
<v Speaker 2>Get here from the East Coast.

0:16:02.000 --> 0:16:04.640
<v Speaker 1>That's the only okay I could get with that one.

0:16:06.320 --> 0:16:08.320
<v Speaker 5>If I never went on to play in college, or

0:16:08.400 --> 0:16:10.880
<v Speaker 5>never went to a college that had its own you know,

0:16:11.000 --> 0:16:14.760
<v Speaker 5>my Mammoth program, I might have stuck being a Redmond.

0:16:14.800 --> 0:16:15.000
<v Speaker 1>Fact.

0:16:15.000 --> 0:16:16.680
<v Speaker 3>I could see that because even in pro sports, like

0:16:17.360 --> 0:16:19.760
<v Speaker 3>some of. My wife bought a Colorado Rockies hat. I'm like,

0:16:19.760 --> 0:16:21.960
<v Speaker 3>what do we do? We're Mets fans in this family.

0:16:22.560 --> 0:16:24.800
<v Speaker 3>My son is on the Rocky, so she's like, when

0:16:24.800 --> 0:16:26.240
<v Speaker 3>we go to his games, I just bought it to,

0:16:26.560 --> 0:16:27.120
<v Speaker 3>you know, for him.

0:16:27.120 --> 0:16:31.560
<v Speaker 2>I'm like, okay, yeah. Supporter of.

0:16:33.040 --> 0:16:36.320
<v Speaker 3>One Last Rule, Pirates favorite show. I went to Syracuse.

0:16:37.200 --> 0:16:39.800
<v Speaker 3>There are the locals and townies as we call them.

0:16:39.840 --> 0:16:41.640
<v Speaker 3>They're root for Syracuse because if you live in a

0:16:41.640 --> 0:16:43.680
<v Speaker 3>city or a town that doesn't have that doesn't of

0:16:43.680 --> 0:16:45.960
<v Speaker 3>our pro team, even if you don't go there, that's

0:16:46.080 --> 0:16:48.000
<v Speaker 3>city rallies around the team.

0:16:48.040 --> 0:16:49.840
<v Speaker 1>Makes sense, Like like if you.

0:16:49.800 --> 0:16:53.320
<v Speaker 3>Grew up in Baldwinsville or you know, by the Lakes

0:16:53.400 --> 0:16:56.600
<v Speaker 3>up there, and you're in the surrounding Cicero or any

0:16:56.600 --> 0:16:59.960
<v Speaker 3>of those upstate towns, Yeah, you root for Syracuse because

0:17:00.120 --> 0:17:02.200
<v Speaker 3>it's the big the big draw. So I think if

0:17:02.200 --> 0:17:04.680
<v Speaker 3>you're a local towny you could be a fan.

0:17:04.960 --> 0:17:05.800
<v Speaker 2>Absolutely agree.

0:17:06.000 --> 0:17:09.199
<v Speaker 3>So there you go, Happy Sweet sixteen. But what they

0:17:09.240 --> 0:17:10.639
<v Speaker 3>got these to the official rules and I think you

0:17:10.720 --> 0:17:13.840
<v Speaker 3>touched on them. Yeah, they root for it's their alma mater. Okay, fair,

0:17:13.880 --> 0:17:16.760
<v Speaker 3>They have a close family member who went there. They

0:17:16.840 --> 0:17:19.240
<v Speaker 3>live there from the state and root for their state school.

0:17:19.320 --> 0:17:20.959
<v Speaker 5>We nailed this, I mean, looking at it. The one

0:17:20.960 --> 0:17:25.080
<v Speaker 5>you didn't touch on is you worked for the school school.

0:17:25.720 --> 0:17:27.719
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, an employee or an alumni.

0:17:27.800 --> 0:17:30.600
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, they employ you and and put food on the

0:17:30.800 --> 0:17:31.760
<v Speaker 1>table for your family.

0:17:32.000 --> 0:17:35.760
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, absolutely reason to root for them.

0:17:36.240 --> 0:17:40.440
<v Speaker 1>Enjoy your college basketball, Enjoy the madness, dipsy dude, dunkaroo,

0:17:42.000 --> 0:17:46.440
<v Speaker 1>enjoy it this weekend again, I'm Cavino. That is rich

0:17:46.760 --> 0:17:52.040
<v Speaker 1>and not only college basketball, but back to baseball. Back

0:17:52.080 --> 0:17:54.080
<v Speaker 1>to baseball. I mean, it is opening Day.

0:17:54.480 --> 0:17:57.320
<v Speaker 3>I wanted to just give everyone the refresher course because

0:17:57.359 --> 0:17:59.560
<v Speaker 3>we do this at the beginning of every NFL season too,

0:17:59.560 --> 0:18:01.520
<v Speaker 3>because you're ahead, might be up your ass. You're busy

0:18:01.560 --> 0:18:04.720
<v Speaker 3>with kids and responsibilities and work and doing it around

0:18:04.760 --> 0:18:08.600
<v Speaker 3>your house. Not everyone catches every offseason move, so I

0:18:08.640 --> 0:18:10.120
<v Speaker 3>just want to throw a couple of the names out

0:18:10.119 --> 0:18:11.960
<v Speaker 3>there of like, oh, that's right, this guy's on a

0:18:12.000 --> 0:18:12.680
<v Speaker 3>new team.

0:18:12.600 --> 0:18:15.640
<v Speaker 1>Which makes it more exciting, Like, man, I'm really excited

0:18:15.720 --> 0:18:18.200
<v Speaker 1>to see how they do, how it all plays out.

0:18:18.520 --> 0:18:22.080
<v Speaker 1>The number one move is Soto to your Mets. That's

0:18:22.080 --> 0:18:23.960
<v Speaker 1>by far. If you don't know that one, you don't

0:18:23.960 --> 0:18:24.680
<v Speaker 1>follow sports.

0:18:24.720 --> 0:18:27.119
<v Speaker 3>That's the one that everyone knows because he got seven

0:18:27.200 --> 0:18:30.480
<v Speaker 3>hundred and sixty five million dollars and he showed his

0:18:30.560 --> 0:18:31.320
<v Speaker 3>belly a little bit.

0:18:31.359 --> 0:18:34.040
<v Speaker 1>But I would say the Yankees have two or three

0:18:34.040 --> 0:18:37.040
<v Speaker 1>of the next biggest move I mean, of course Goldschmid

0:18:37.200 --> 0:18:38.959
<v Speaker 1>and Bellinger.

0:18:38.440 --> 0:18:40.920
<v Speaker 3>Bellinger, but I think, I think, I think you're downplaying

0:18:40.960 --> 0:18:42.280
<v Speaker 3>Max Freedo.

0:18:42.320 --> 0:18:46.120
<v Speaker 1>He's the biggest, or Williams him or Williams Max free.

0:18:46.119 --> 0:18:48.560
<v Speaker 3>Fed You're not a National League guy. When he's on

0:18:48.640 --> 0:18:51.160
<v Speaker 3>fire for the Braves, that's a big loss with the Braves.

0:18:51.359 --> 0:18:53.639
<v Speaker 3>You know, he's a local LA kid.

0:18:53.840 --> 0:18:55.280
<v Speaker 2>I can't wait to see what he does.

0:18:55.320 --> 0:19:00.800
<v Speaker 3>Max freed Probably Kyle Tucker to the Cubs. I think

0:19:00.800 --> 0:19:02.359
<v Speaker 3>that's a big one. That's why people are you know,

0:19:02.359 --> 0:19:04.800
<v Speaker 3>he's a top five or six candidate for MVP in

0:19:04.840 --> 0:19:07.480
<v Speaker 3>the National League. So the young Kyle Tucker going to

0:19:07.520 --> 0:19:09.680
<v Speaker 3>be emerging in the National League goes from the AL

0:19:09.720 --> 0:19:13.840
<v Speaker 3>to the NL. A couple others in the pitching world,

0:19:13.880 --> 0:19:15.120
<v Speaker 3>Snell to.

0:19:15.119 --> 0:19:20.040
<v Speaker 1>The Dodgers, and yeah, the Dodgers have what like eighteen

0:19:20.080 --> 0:19:20.760
<v Speaker 1>starting fishers.

0:19:21.920 --> 0:19:25.240
<v Speaker 3>Corbin Burns to the Diamondbacks And for the Red Sox fans,

0:19:25.320 --> 0:19:27.280
<v Speaker 3>is they try to not just rebuild. They try to

0:19:27.280 --> 0:19:28.960
<v Speaker 3>compete this year and they a lot of people are

0:19:28.960 --> 0:19:30.120
<v Speaker 3>predicting their playoff team.

0:19:30.640 --> 0:19:33.080
<v Speaker 2>Alex Bregman to the Red Sox. Bregman is a big

0:19:33.119 --> 0:19:34.800
<v Speaker 2>time player, and that's a big get.

0:19:34.880 --> 0:19:38.280
<v Speaker 1>There's a little controversy there. Rold As Chapman also Red

0:19:38.320 --> 0:19:43.640
<v Speaker 1>Sox this year, and I hope Chappie hats the Yankees. Chappie,

0:19:45.640 --> 0:19:49.440
<v Speaker 1>Devers and Bregman were going to battle for third base. Remember,

0:19:49.480 --> 0:19:53.399
<v Speaker 1>there was controversy there. But as of yesterday, I believe

0:19:53.440 --> 0:19:58.080
<v Speaker 1>Bragman was announced the everyday third baseman. Devs the H

0:19:58.480 --> 0:20:00.560
<v Speaker 1>So I don't know how happy he is about that.

0:20:01.040 --> 0:20:01.399
<v Speaker 2>I don't know.

0:20:01.480 --> 0:20:03.040
<v Speaker 3>I mean, listen, if you're a competitor, you want to

0:20:03.080 --> 0:20:05.520
<v Speaker 3>be out there, but if you're getting paid in your

0:20:05.560 --> 0:20:10.000
<v Speaker 3>devor's like I know this, some guys we're not pros

0:20:10.080 --> 0:20:12.200
<v Speaker 3>by any means. But do you remember ever in high

0:20:12.200 --> 0:20:14.399
<v Speaker 3>school or college or anything, being like, oh, you'll be

0:20:14.440 --> 0:20:15.240
<v Speaker 3>the DH today.

0:20:15.840 --> 0:20:17.840
<v Speaker 2>You feel locked in when you're not in the field.

0:20:18.600 --> 0:20:20.600
<v Speaker 2>I mean that's always the story. It also sounds like

0:20:20.640 --> 0:20:22.600
<v Speaker 2>you don't feel like you're locked in. I mean that's

0:20:22.640 --> 0:20:23.439
<v Speaker 2>always the story.

0:20:23.840 --> 0:20:27.080
<v Speaker 1>But that's what makes the season even more exciting more

0:20:27.119 --> 0:20:31.879
<v Speaker 1>superstars than ever before. Big teams involved tuning into the Mets,

0:20:31.920 --> 0:20:34.560
<v Speaker 1>the Dodgers, the Phillies, The Al East is stacked.

0:20:34.640 --> 0:20:35.640
<v Speaker 2>Let's go my Yankees.

0:20:35.680 --> 0:20:38.520
<v Speaker 1>But the star power is like we haven't seen in

0:20:38.600 --> 0:20:41.359
<v Speaker 1>years this season, So enjoy it. All begins today if

0:20:41.440 --> 0:20:43.399
<v Speaker 1>we play a quick round, and that brings us to

0:20:43.480 --> 0:20:45.399
<v Speaker 1>when you think about all the moves that were made

0:20:45.440 --> 0:20:47.600
<v Speaker 1>and all the players on different teams, it's one of

0:20:47.680 --> 0:20:50.639
<v Speaker 1>our favorite games. We call it on the road again.

0:20:50.840 --> 0:20:55.280
<v Speaker 1>Oh yeah, So the premise is simple. I name game

0:20:55.440 --> 0:21:00.119
<v Speaker 1>an MLB legend, and you just give me his career path. Now,

0:21:00.240 --> 0:21:02.479
<v Speaker 1>if you really want to nail it, you give it

0:21:02.480 --> 0:21:04.600
<v Speaker 1>in consecutive order. But I'm not going to hold you

0:21:04.640 --> 0:21:06.480
<v Speaker 1>to it. All right, Okay, I got.

0:21:06.320 --> 0:21:06.919
<v Speaker 2>You tell me.

0:21:07.240 --> 0:21:09.159
<v Speaker 1>Just tell me all the teams that he played on

0:21:09.200 --> 0:21:11.640
<v Speaker 1>sea how and you can get I got two for you,

0:21:11.640 --> 0:21:12.359
<v Speaker 1>you got two for me.

0:21:12.600 --> 0:21:14.719
<v Speaker 3>We did not discuss this ahead of time, so this

0:21:14.760 --> 0:21:16.840
<v Speaker 3>could be a fail or we could impress you.

0:21:16.920 --> 0:21:18.159
<v Speaker 1>Let's say, who do you go?

0:21:18.680 --> 0:21:19.000
<v Speaker 2>All right?

0:21:19.080 --> 0:21:21.760
<v Speaker 1>You give me yours, give me we'll go one one

0:21:21.800 --> 0:21:23.120
<v Speaker 1>for one and then we'll keep going.

0:21:23.119 --> 0:21:28.359
<v Speaker 2>On the road again. Kenny lofton.

0:21:31.080 --> 0:21:36.160
<v Speaker 3>Kenny Lofton was on the Braves, he was on the Indians.

0:21:37.119 --> 0:21:39.920
<v Speaker 3>Kenny Lofton was on within on the White Sox.

0:21:40.840 --> 0:21:44.560
<v Speaker 1>Kenny Lofton was on the White Sox for one year.

0:21:45.840 --> 0:21:49.239
<v Speaker 1>Kenny Lofton was on by the way, he was on

0:21:49.320 --> 0:21:50.280
<v Speaker 1>eleven teams.

0:21:50.560 --> 0:21:52.480
<v Speaker 2>So, yeah, good luck, you got three.

0:21:52.840 --> 0:21:56.640
<v Speaker 3>Was it was Kenny Lofton, I said, Braves, Indians, White Sox.

0:21:56.720 --> 0:21:57.480
<v Speaker 3>Was Kenny Lofton.

0:21:57.520 --> 0:21:59.680
<v Speaker 1>Oh, you played ten years with the Indians, so I'll

0:21:59.720 --> 0:22:00.360
<v Speaker 1>just give you that.

0:22:00.400 --> 0:22:06.560
<v Speaker 2>He started his career as an Indian. Ooh, actually.

0:22:07.960 --> 0:22:11.240
<v Speaker 1>He started his career somewhere else, but paid ten years

0:22:11.280 --> 0:22:12.440
<v Speaker 1>early on with the Indians.

0:22:12.640 --> 0:22:16.480
<v Speaker 3>Kenny Lofton played for the Rays. I'm having a little

0:22:16.560 --> 0:22:22.720
<v Speaker 3>Kenny loft in trouble here. Damn its Cubs. No man, no, no, yeah,

0:22:22.720 --> 0:22:25.960
<v Speaker 3>Cubs year. Okay, I'm pitching. He flow got like four,

0:22:26.200 --> 0:22:29.439
<v Speaker 3>I got four Braves, Indians, White Sox, Cubs on the

0:22:29.520 --> 0:22:30.040
<v Speaker 3>road again.

0:22:30.640 --> 0:22:31.880
<v Speaker 2>Just for the sake of time.

0:22:32.000 --> 0:22:36.400
<v Speaker 1>Ten teams, huh, Cleveland, ten years, I thought, Dodgers, one year,

0:22:37.000 --> 0:22:41.040
<v Speaker 1>Atlanta one year, he said that, Philadelphia one year, White Sox,

0:22:41.080 --> 0:22:44.440
<v Speaker 1>he said, one year, Pittsburgh, one year, Texas, one year

0:22:44.640 --> 0:22:45.280
<v Speaker 1>the Yankees.

0:22:45.359 --> 0:22:46.920
<v Speaker 2>You knew he played on the Yankees for a year.

0:22:47.000 --> 0:22:49.320
<v Speaker 1>I've totally forgot that. The Cubs, you said one year,

0:22:49.440 --> 0:22:52.760
<v Speaker 1>the Giants one year. And he actually began his career

0:22:53.520 --> 0:22:57.080
<v Speaker 1>in nineteen ninety one with Houston the NL for one year.

0:22:57.880 --> 0:23:01.080
<v Speaker 1>I mean I brought him up because here's a guy,

0:23:01.160 --> 0:23:05.080
<v Speaker 1>a legendary player who played on eleven different teams as nuts.

0:23:05.640 --> 0:23:07.200
<v Speaker 1>So you got like four or five out of a

0:23:07.480 --> 0:23:09.399
<v Speaker 1>that's a tough one, Okay, I'm gonna start you with

0:23:09.440 --> 0:23:11.679
<v Speaker 1>an easy one. It gets tricky towards the end.

0:23:13.680 --> 0:23:16.639
<v Speaker 3>Paying tribute to him today for the A's who have

0:23:16.720 --> 0:23:20.120
<v Speaker 3>no home, the Ricky rest in peace, Number twenty four,

0:23:20.200 --> 0:23:21.600
<v Speaker 3>Ricky Henderson.

0:23:21.440 --> 0:23:28.000
<v Speaker 1>Wow, the Ricky Ready. Oakland Athletic yep. Started his career

0:23:28.040 --> 0:23:32.480
<v Speaker 1>there so a yep, the Yankees. Yep. Are we going

0:23:32.560 --> 0:23:36.360
<v Speaker 1>like two stints with the A's just to show your impressiveness.

0:23:36.680 --> 0:23:39.160
<v Speaker 1>I mean he went back and forth with the A's.

0:23:39.280 --> 0:23:43.280
<v Speaker 1>But he also played for the Dodgers. He played for

0:23:43.560 --> 0:23:45.040
<v Speaker 1>the Mets. Yep.

0:23:45.480 --> 0:23:47.199
<v Speaker 2>He played for the Padres.

0:23:47.400 --> 0:23:52.200
<v Speaker 3>Yes, did I get them all? Or is there one more?

0:23:52.240 --> 0:23:58.159
<v Speaker 3>I think you're missing two Oakland the Yankees back to Oakland. Oh,

0:23:58.200 --> 0:24:06.479
<v Speaker 3>you're missing three Dodgers. Padres, Seattle, Seattle. You're missing two wow,

0:24:06.800 --> 0:24:09.800
<v Speaker 3>two more teams. And this is how the game works.

0:24:10.000 --> 0:24:13.760
<v Speaker 3>You visually picture the player in their uniform.

0:24:15.040 --> 0:24:18.000
<v Speaker 2>And was he was a hired gun for a world series.

0:24:18.760 --> 0:24:20.240
<v Speaker 2>I heard gun for a world series.

0:24:22.680 --> 0:24:26.040
<v Speaker 1>Blue Jays man, I would have never got that. The

0:24:26.080 --> 0:24:29.000
<v Speaker 1>Boston Red Sox was second to last year.

0:24:29.640 --> 0:24:33.200
<v Speaker 2>I remember Blue Jays. I forgot. That's crazy.

0:24:33.600 --> 0:24:39.639
<v Speaker 1>Give me the road again, extra, let's do it another

0:24:40.000 --> 0:24:47.440
<v Speaker 1>Legendaries Hall of Famer Reginald Reggie Jackson, Reggie, alright.

0:24:47.160 --> 0:24:50.359
<v Speaker 3>Of course, the A's I must kill the Queen, the

0:24:50.359 --> 0:24:59.680
<v Speaker 3>California Angels of Anaheim, of California Yankees. Yeah, A's Yankees Angels.

0:25:00.440 --> 0:25:03.639
<v Speaker 3>Reggie hold on.

0:25:03.880 --> 0:25:07.280
<v Speaker 1>Ten years with Oakland, you said the Angels, I must

0:25:07.359 --> 0:25:10.000
<v Speaker 1>kill the queen. Right, yes, in the eighties, five years

0:25:10.119 --> 0:25:13.359
<v Speaker 1>with California, Reggie, you said, Yankees, how many teams total?

0:25:13.400 --> 0:25:14.000
<v Speaker 2>We five?

0:25:14.320 --> 0:25:17.160
<v Speaker 1>One more team, so I'm miss say, twenty one years

0:25:17.160 --> 0:25:18.840
<v Speaker 1>in the bigs, you're missing one more team. He played

0:25:18.880 --> 0:25:27.080
<v Speaker 1>for four teams. Yeah, A's Angels, Yankees. And this is

0:25:27.080 --> 0:25:30.399
<v Speaker 1>the American League, nationally, American League is the catch because

0:25:30.400 --> 0:25:34.119
<v Speaker 1>you people forget.

0:25:32.680 --> 0:25:38.400
<v Speaker 2>Did Reggie, No, don't wait, did Reggie play for the Indians.

0:25:38.680 --> 0:25:44.080
<v Speaker 1>Nope, fuck, what is it? Baltimore one year? He played

0:25:44.359 --> 0:25:50.000
<v Speaker 1>in seventy six with Baltimore. Baltimore retired as in Oakland

0:25:50.080 --> 0:25:52.320
<v Speaker 1>A in eighty seven.

0:25:52.560 --> 0:25:54.359
<v Speaker 3>Let me give you one more. We'll go on the

0:25:54.480 --> 0:25:57.760
<v Speaker 3>road again. How many teams could you name? We'll watch

0:25:57.760 --> 0:25:58.879
<v Speaker 3>all our baseball highlights.

0:25:58.960 --> 0:25:59.160
<v Speaker 2>Yeah.

0:26:00.080 --> 0:26:02.640
<v Speaker 3>A guy with a great mustachio, the guy that brought

0:26:02.640 --> 0:26:04.679
<v Speaker 3>baseball back after nine to eleven. The guy that was

0:26:04.720 --> 0:26:07.280
<v Speaker 3>discovered by the relationship with Tommy Lasorda.

0:26:07.880 --> 0:26:11.440
<v Speaker 2>Mike Piazza. Mike Piazza was a Dodger. Yep, that's where

0:26:11.440 --> 0:26:12.080
<v Speaker 2>it started. Yep.

0:26:12.160 --> 0:26:17.119
<v Speaker 1>Lasorda gave him a shot. He was a padre. He

0:26:17.240 --> 0:26:21.800
<v Speaker 1>was a padre for a second. Yeah, one year. Obviously

0:26:21.960 --> 0:26:24.840
<v Speaker 1>he was a met yep, and I got it.

0:26:25.160 --> 0:26:28.040
<v Speaker 2>You ready? Oh really athletic.

0:26:28.640 --> 0:26:30.960
<v Speaker 3>He ended his his career at thirty eight years old

0:26:31.040 --> 0:26:33.040
<v Speaker 3>one year with the A's and I'm forgetting one.

0:26:33.160 --> 0:26:33.880
<v Speaker 1>You're missing one.

0:26:33.880 --> 0:26:35.199
<v Speaker 2>You know why. I'll give the hint.

0:26:35.720 --> 0:26:38.840
<v Speaker 1>It was for like a week, no way, but he

0:26:38.840 --> 0:26:39.199
<v Speaker 1>played there.

0:26:39.240 --> 0:26:40.439
<v Speaker 3>It was, I'll give you the hint. It was in

0:26:40.520 --> 0:26:43.199
<v Speaker 3>between the Dodgers and the Mets. He got traded and

0:26:43.200 --> 0:26:45.240
<v Speaker 3>then the mist it will switch through. I got I

0:26:45.280 --> 0:26:48.080
<v Speaker 3>think Rangers of Florida Marlins.

0:26:48.160 --> 0:26:52.639
<v Speaker 1>Ah, yeah, he was a Marlin for like a and

0:26:52.720 --> 0:26:54.480
<v Speaker 1>I can picture it now that you say, you know,

0:26:54.520 --> 0:26:57.800
<v Speaker 1>he had nineteen plate appearances. Yeah, the Marlins. It's so

0:26:57.920 --> 0:27:00.560
<v Speaker 1>weird how you can visualize it. But that's how you play.

0:27:00.640 --> 0:27:02.720
<v Speaker 1>On the road again, one of our favorite games. We

0:27:02.840 --> 0:27:05.280
<v Speaker 1>play it just for fun every once in a while.

0:27:05.600 --> 0:27:07.680
<v Speaker 1>Like if I say, Randy Johnson, I'll leave it to you, guys,

0:27:07.720 --> 0:27:09.400
<v Speaker 1>Randy Johnson on the road again.

0:27:09.760 --> 0:27:10.679
<v Speaker 2>You tell me, let me know.

0:27:10.800 --> 0:27:15.119
<v Speaker 1>Hit us up at Covino and Rich at Fox Sports Radio.

0:27:15.320 --> 0:27:17.040
<v Speaker 2>Enjoy the season, guys, it's gonna be a great one.

0:27:17.240 --> 0:27:18.520
<v Speaker 2>Enjoy until next time.

0:27:18.880 --> 0:27:22.919
<v Speaker 1>A Rivendecci baby, see you in the overprivland.

0:27:24.280 --> 0:27:25.080
<v Speaker 2>Let's go BA,