1 00:00:00,720 --> 00:00:03,560 Speaker 1: You are listening to the Dan Patrick Show on Fox 2 00:00:03,600 --> 00:00:04,400 Speaker 1: Sports Radio. 3 00:00:04,600 --> 00:00:07,440 Speaker 2: Greg Zankee, SEC Commissioner kind of enough to join us. 4 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:09,440 Speaker 2: It's been kind of busy here in the off season. 5 00:00:09,600 --> 00:00:13,960 Speaker 2: Never stops for you. Recap what happened last week, give 6 00:00:14,000 --> 00:00:15,520 Speaker 2: me the cliff notes version. 7 00:00:17,280 --> 00:00:20,079 Speaker 3: Spent a lot of time in overly air conditioned meeting 8 00:00:20,160 --> 00:00:25,840 Speaker 3: rooms in western Florida with athletics directors, head coaches, football, men's, 9 00:00:25,840 --> 00:00:28,960 Speaker 3: women's basketball, and our presidence and chancellors. Talked about our 10 00:00:28,960 --> 00:00:33,640 Speaker 3: football schedule, the college Football Playoff, potential settlement of a 11 00:00:33,680 --> 00:00:38,520 Speaker 3: set of lawsuits that would introduce a revenue sharing model 12 00:00:38,520 --> 00:00:43,760 Speaker 3: to college sports, and we talked about any other number 13 00:00:43,760 --> 00:00:47,120 Speaker 3: of issues like our softball tournament location that are probably 14 00:00:47,159 --> 00:00:49,280 Speaker 3: more mundane than you want to jump into on a 15 00:00:49,280 --> 00:00:52,440 Speaker 3: Monday morning, But happy to talk about softball and gymnastics 16 00:00:52,520 --> 00:00:55,320 Speaker 3: championships locations for the conference if you'd like. 17 00:00:55,560 --> 00:00:57,200 Speaker 2: Well, that's why I wanted to have you on. But 18 00:00:57,280 --> 00:01:00,000 Speaker 2: let's get some of these ancillary things out of the way. 19 00:01:00,200 --> 00:01:04,319 Speaker 2: That's fair, Okay. Let me start with basketball and then 20 00:01:04,319 --> 00:01:09,319 Speaker 2: we'll get to football. The discussions of seventy two, seventy 21 00:01:09,640 --> 00:01:14,120 Speaker 2: six teams, any discussion from the SEC portion of this. 22 00:01:14,800 --> 00:01:17,920 Speaker 3: I introduced the issue to our men's basketball coaches, which 23 00:01:17,920 --> 00:01:21,640 Speaker 3: I think we've talked about with that group before. I 24 00:01:21,680 --> 00:01:24,840 Speaker 3: would guess Dan, given the other issues we have on 25 00:01:24,840 --> 00:01:30,280 Speaker 3: our plate, that that conversation maybe lasted five minutes. My 26 00:01:30,400 --> 00:01:34,120 Speaker 3: points to them were, this is still a work in progress. 27 00:01:34,160 --> 00:01:36,480 Speaker 3: I didn't know that there was going to be kind 28 00:01:36,480 --> 00:01:39,200 Speaker 3: of a press gathering. This is not a criticism. Charlie 29 00:01:39,240 --> 00:01:42,679 Speaker 3: Baker spoke about tournament expanse I think the day after 30 00:01:42,880 --> 00:01:46,680 Speaker 3: our basketball coaches gathered. I mentioned it to our wins 31 00:01:46,680 --> 00:01:51,720 Speaker 3: basketball coaches as well. Briefly, didn't really go anywhere, and 32 00:01:51,760 --> 00:01:55,880 Speaker 3: so my introduction was, I just want you to be aware, 33 00:01:56,240 --> 00:01:59,240 Speaker 3: probably towards the end of the month this will come up. 34 00:01:59,600 --> 00:02:02,840 Speaker 3: I said. My view is, I think we should be 35 00:02:02,880 --> 00:02:07,880 Speaker 3: exploring tournament expansion. Whether or not it happens is actually 36 00:02:07,880 --> 00:02:11,280 Speaker 3: another point of evaluation. So have the conversation, deep dive 37 00:02:11,800 --> 00:02:15,600 Speaker 3: figure out if it works practically competitively economically. I think 38 00:02:15,600 --> 00:02:18,760 Speaker 3: the one issue for us is if it is expanded. 39 00:02:18,840 --> 00:02:21,160 Speaker 3: Let's pick the number of seventy six and I'll do 40 00:02:21,280 --> 00:02:24,079 Speaker 3: quick math for you. So fifty two of the seventy 41 00:02:24,120 --> 00:02:27,720 Speaker 3: six teams would be like in that traditional first round, 42 00:02:27,720 --> 00:02:30,960 Speaker 3: the other twenty four would play in twelve games. The 43 00:02:31,000 --> 00:02:33,440 Speaker 3: twelve winners meet up with the fifty two. There's or 44 00:02:33,520 --> 00:02:37,280 Speaker 3: sixty fourteen bracket. Right. That's like from my intermural director 45 00:02:37,360 --> 00:02:38,960 Speaker 3: days at you to the cop. That's how I know 46 00:02:39,000 --> 00:02:43,800 Speaker 3: how brackets work. I'm really interested and we're interested in 47 00:02:43,840 --> 00:02:47,160 Speaker 3: a league. Is who fills those twelve games those other 48 00:02:47,280 --> 00:02:50,680 Speaker 3: twenty four teams? The kind of Dayton model, if you will, 49 00:02:50,720 --> 00:02:53,400 Speaker 3: which is a men's basketball side is it's a combination 50 00:02:53,520 --> 00:02:58,200 Speaker 3: of the lowest aqs, the lowest rated aqs kind of 51 00:02:58,240 --> 00:03:02,040 Speaker 3: by placement of the committee, then the last at large 52 00:03:02,080 --> 00:03:05,919 Speaker 3: teams in and I kind of pivot to look look 53 00:03:05,960 --> 00:03:08,400 Speaker 3: to North Carolina State last year eleven seed. They were 54 00:03:08,400 --> 00:03:11,520 Speaker 3: in AQ, but they went to the final four. And 55 00:03:11,560 --> 00:03:14,520 Speaker 3: it's just kind of an indication that competitively, those top 56 00:03:14,560 --> 00:03:18,359 Speaker 3: fifty or so teams, you know, things fall right, injuries, 57 00:03:18,919 --> 00:03:21,679 Speaker 3: heel can make really good runs. So I'm not one 58 00:03:21,680 --> 00:03:25,160 Speaker 3: who thinks we should just follow the Dayton model automatically 59 00:03:25,240 --> 00:03:28,320 Speaker 3: have expanded if expansion takes place. So that was my 60 00:03:28,880 --> 00:03:29,720 Speaker 3: reference to our. 61 00:03:29,639 --> 00:03:34,200 Speaker 2: Coaches when our decisions made or voted on for expansion 62 00:03:34,440 --> 00:03:36,120 Speaker 2: for the college football playoffs. 63 00:03:37,120 --> 00:03:42,440 Speaker 3: Yeah, that's a good question. Buye agreement that the outer 64 00:03:42,600 --> 00:03:47,080 Speaker 3: boundary is November thirty, December one of this year for 65 00:03:47,160 --> 00:03:50,280 Speaker 3: the twenty six playoff. Now keep in mind, when we 66 00:03:50,360 --> 00:03:54,240 Speaker 3: went to twelve teams, the board said that'll be the 67 00:03:54,320 --> 00:03:58,320 Speaker 3: format for twenty twenty six. Let's start early if we can, 68 00:03:58,400 --> 00:04:02,280 Speaker 3: which we obviously did did overall in a successful way. 69 00:04:03,120 --> 00:04:06,119 Speaker 3: But what was introduced immediately is let's go through these 70 00:04:06,120 --> 00:04:10,000 Speaker 3: two years in conduct an evaluation. So we're in that 71 00:04:10,080 --> 00:04:14,960 Speaker 3: evaluation standpoint. A lot of talk about really fourteen or sixteen. 72 00:04:15,520 --> 00:04:17,720 Speaker 3: I think twelve is known as as kind of a 73 00:04:17,720 --> 00:04:21,760 Speaker 3: foundation point, but the conversation is about fourteen or sixteen. 74 00:04:21,800 --> 00:04:25,360 Speaker 3: And then how our team selected or placed into whatever 75 00:04:25,880 --> 00:04:30,240 Speaker 3: size bracket exists is the more the headline question. Okay, 76 00:04:30,240 --> 00:04:34,400 Speaker 3: but what model do you like? Well, I've been one 77 00:04:34,480 --> 00:04:37,719 Speaker 3: who said, over time, I'd give no allocation. So this 78 00:04:37,839 --> 00:04:40,520 Speaker 3: whole five seven thing that exists now, I just make 79 00:04:40,520 --> 00:04:44,240 Speaker 3: it the twelve best teams, and I was clear on that. Now, 80 00:04:44,240 --> 00:04:47,120 Speaker 3: when we get into rooms, we make political compromises, if 81 00:04:47,120 --> 00:04:51,240 Speaker 3: you will, small p not like Congress political compromises, but 82 00:04:52,080 --> 00:04:53,240 Speaker 3: to achieve an outcome. 83 00:04:53,560 --> 00:04:58,240 Speaker 2: But the sides on the top twelve teams selection committee. 84 00:04:58,440 --> 00:05:01,520 Speaker 3: Yeah, but I here's what I think. I think we've not. 85 00:05:02,000 --> 00:05:04,640 Speaker 3: We spent so much time expanding and working through our 86 00:05:04,680 --> 00:05:08,520 Speaker 3: own little side arguments about teams and oh, we can't 87 00:05:08,560 --> 00:05:10,680 Speaker 3: do this, we need this, you got to protect this 88 00:05:10,839 --> 00:05:14,680 Speaker 3: bowl game or that bowl game. We never went back 89 00:05:14,720 --> 00:05:18,280 Speaker 3: to the essence of decision making, which is how our 90 00:05:18,279 --> 00:05:22,880 Speaker 3: team selected. As everyone relocated over the last four or 91 00:05:22,880 --> 00:05:26,839 Speaker 3: five years, do the analyses that existed and worked for 92 00:05:26,920 --> 00:05:29,920 Speaker 3: the fourteen playoff in twenty fourteen still have the same 93 00:05:30,000 --> 00:05:33,400 Speaker 3: relevance and we're behind that curve in my opinion. That's 94 00:05:33,440 --> 00:05:37,320 Speaker 3: why other ideas are introduced and considered, and we've looked 95 00:05:37,320 --> 00:05:41,200 Speaker 3: at ideas. You know, this allocation of it's called automatic bids. 96 00:05:41,520 --> 00:05:46,279 Speaker 3: That's that's such a harsh term. I think allocations is 97 00:05:46,360 --> 00:05:49,680 Speaker 3: one where I like that word because we've already we 98 00:05:49,760 --> 00:05:52,440 Speaker 3: already allocated. And look at last year we had two 99 00:05:52,480 --> 00:05:54,400 Speaker 3: teams not in the top four. They get to move 100 00:05:54,520 --> 00:05:56,840 Speaker 3: up because of the political compromise. We have a team 101 00:05:56,880 --> 00:06:00,359 Speaker 3: outside the twelve that moves in, and then the teams 102 00:06:00,400 --> 00:06:03,200 Speaker 3: that are displaced look around and say, hey, wait a second, 103 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:07,039 Speaker 3: that doesn't make any sense any longer. That introduces the 104 00:06:07,160 --> 00:06:11,960 Speaker 3: questions around should that model continue or should that allocation 105 00:06:12,160 --> 00:06:14,640 Speaker 3: model expand where other teams are brought in. 106 00:06:15,440 --> 00:06:18,960 Speaker 2: Talking to Greg Sankie, SEC Commissioner, we've talked about this before. 107 00:06:19,640 --> 00:06:23,039 Speaker 2: You know, given the scheduling and hotel rooms and travel 108 00:06:23,240 --> 00:06:28,919 Speaker 2: of receding after the first round of games, can is 109 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:30,720 Speaker 2: that on the table at all anymore? 110 00:06:31,600 --> 00:06:34,200 Speaker 3: Well, not really receding, because almost what a week and 111 00:06:34,240 --> 00:06:38,279 Speaker 3: a half ago for the twenty five season, the college 112 00:06:38,279 --> 00:06:41,000 Speaker 3: Football Playoff Management Committee, which is the commissioners and the 113 00:06:41,040 --> 00:06:44,479 Speaker 3: Notre Dame Athletic Director, agreed to just go to straight 114 00:06:44,720 --> 00:06:48,760 Speaker 3: seating by ranking, So the movement of teams outside the 115 00:06:48,760 --> 00:06:51,000 Speaker 3: top four into the top four that won't happen in 116 00:06:51,000 --> 00:06:53,760 Speaker 3: twenty twenty five. You're going to get what you earn. 117 00:06:54,400 --> 00:06:58,320 Speaker 3: Same for home games. We've not gone back into the 118 00:06:58,360 --> 00:07:01,240 Speaker 3: receiving question. And Dan, you go back to June of 119 00:07:01,240 --> 00:07:05,000 Speaker 3: twenty one, which was like ancient history in college sports, 120 00:07:05,040 --> 00:07:08,320 Speaker 3: when the twelve team model was introduced, and we went 121 00:07:08,360 --> 00:07:10,880 Speaker 3: back through this about a month ago with everybody involved 122 00:07:10,880 --> 00:07:14,200 Speaker 3: on that management committee. One of the questions was should 123 00:07:14,240 --> 00:07:18,240 Speaker 3: we be in receding. We never really got back to 124 00:07:18,280 --> 00:07:21,480 Speaker 3: that because you remember the SEC had this little expansion 125 00:07:21,520 --> 00:07:24,960 Speaker 3: to sixteen, great disruption in the forest. Then we had 126 00:07:25,000 --> 00:07:28,520 Speaker 3: twenty two in expansion of the big ten. So he 127 00:07:28,640 --> 00:07:30,560 Speaker 3: waited around for a year, and now we've been in 128 00:07:30,640 --> 00:07:32,880 Speaker 3: hurry up mode since. So we haven't talked so much 129 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:38,160 Speaker 3: about receding as we did just about honoring the rankings 130 00:07:38,160 --> 00:07:38,880 Speaker 3: in the bracket. 131 00:07:39,480 --> 00:07:43,160 Speaker 2: Help me understand the report on Cooper Flag as he 132 00:07:43,200 --> 00:07:46,560 Speaker 2: made close to thirty million dollars is one year at Duke, 133 00:07:47,440 --> 00:07:51,760 Speaker 2: that's nil. Help me understand as the athlete moves forward 134 00:07:51,840 --> 00:07:57,840 Speaker 2: of the salaries and nil and any restrictions, any compromises 135 00:07:57,920 --> 00:08:01,640 Speaker 2: that will be there for these that's marquee athletes, let's 136 00:08:01,640 --> 00:08:02,480 Speaker 2: call them. 137 00:08:02,800 --> 00:08:07,080 Speaker 3: Without commenting on the Cooper Flag story, I haven't seen that, 138 00:08:07,240 --> 00:08:11,200 Speaker 3: and nobody's sending me financial documents to verify. As you 139 00:08:11,280 --> 00:08:16,360 Speaker 3: can imagine in this environment, a couple points One is 140 00:08:16,840 --> 00:08:20,960 Speaker 3: this settlement that's positioned in a set of lawsuits has 141 00:08:21,040 --> 00:08:24,120 Speaker 3: great impact on the answer to your question if the 142 00:08:24,160 --> 00:08:27,560 Speaker 3: settlement is approved for the first time at the college level, 143 00:08:27,560 --> 00:08:32,240 Speaker 3: and really quite innovative in the sports realm, would be 144 00:08:32,679 --> 00:08:36,360 Speaker 3: the process for overseeing third party name, image and likeness 145 00:08:36,440 --> 00:08:40,560 Speaker 3: to establish there's an appropriate range of compensation and fair 146 00:08:40,600 --> 00:08:46,360 Speaker 3: market excuse me, in real business purposes fulfill around name 147 00:08:46,400 --> 00:08:50,240 Speaker 3: image and likeness deals. That's not like novel. It just 148 00:08:50,360 --> 00:08:52,959 Speaker 3: hasn't existed as we've gone on this state by state 149 00:08:53,040 --> 00:08:58,160 Speaker 3: exploration of kind of reducing any regulatory system for college sports. 150 00:08:58,240 --> 00:08:58,600 Speaker 4: Nil. 151 00:08:58,960 --> 00:09:01,800 Speaker 3: So I think that's a step, and that's one component 152 00:09:01,840 --> 00:09:04,760 Speaker 3: third party name image and likeness. The second is what 153 00:09:04,880 --> 00:09:06,680 Speaker 3: I think will be kind of a name image and 154 00:09:06,760 --> 00:09:10,679 Speaker 3: likeness activity within a revenue sharing model where athletic programs 155 00:09:11,480 --> 00:09:15,120 Speaker 3: are providing that payment directly to student athletes. That can 156 00:09:15,280 --> 00:09:18,440 Speaker 3: be a better system. There has to be a commitment 157 00:09:18,440 --> 00:09:21,560 Speaker 3: to make it work. And I still am one who 158 00:09:21,640 --> 00:09:25,760 Speaker 3: thinks that notion of having fifty different state laws governing 159 00:09:26,320 --> 00:09:28,959 Speaker 3: is highly problematic. You're not going to have college World Series. 160 00:09:28,960 --> 00:09:31,880 Speaker 3: You can't run Final fours and national championships that way. 161 00:09:31,960 --> 00:09:35,760 Speaker 3: You run something more like high school championships where every 162 00:09:35,760 --> 00:09:39,120 Speaker 3: state kind of walls off it's and establishes its own rules. 163 00:09:39,320 --> 00:09:41,839 Speaker 3: And I think that has to be understood as a 164 00:09:41,880 --> 00:09:45,080 Speaker 3: significant point of concern. That's why the return of national 165 00:09:45,120 --> 00:09:47,720 Speaker 3: standards in the congressional conversation still has meaning. 166 00:09:48,600 --> 00:09:51,640 Speaker 2: What would stop me as a businessman. If I wanted 167 00:09:51,640 --> 00:09:56,439 Speaker 2: the top quarterback in college football to come to Alabama 168 00:09:57,160 --> 00:09:59,600 Speaker 2: and I want to give him twenty five million dollars 169 00:09:59,600 --> 00:09:59,920 Speaker 2: a year. 170 00:10:01,360 --> 00:10:03,720 Speaker 3: Right now, there hasn't been a lot. This is the 171 00:10:03,760 --> 00:10:07,360 Speaker 3: States migrate away from any oversight of their own laws 172 00:10:07,440 --> 00:10:10,640 Speaker 3: or any regulation. If the settlement is approved, I go 173 00:10:10,760 --> 00:10:13,840 Speaker 3: back to that third party oversight, and it would depend 174 00:10:13,920 --> 00:10:18,480 Speaker 3: on your classification. Assuming you have some affiliation, you've provided 175 00:10:18,840 --> 00:10:22,040 Speaker 3: money donations to the university involved. You then kick into 176 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:25,360 Speaker 3: this third party in aisle oversight and the ability for 177 00:10:25,480 --> 00:10:31,679 Speaker 3: somebody to be deemed at an appropriate real business purpose 178 00:10:31,840 --> 00:10:35,720 Speaker 3: and range of compensation level would be involved. And if 179 00:10:35,760 --> 00:10:38,480 Speaker 3: it doesn't, there'll be an opportunity to adjust your offer. 180 00:10:39,559 --> 00:10:42,560 Speaker 2: I would love for conferences or maybe there's somebody who 181 00:10:42,559 --> 00:10:44,880 Speaker 2: can be like the NFL has somebody who does this 182 00:10:44,960 --> 00:10:49,080 Speaker 2: scheduling like I would love. You know, we might lose 183 00:10:49,120 --> 00:10:52,480 Speaker 2: Notre Dame in USC like I'm I don't know, maybe 184 00:10:52,559 --> 00:10:54,560 Speaker 2: I'm the get off my line, the old guy, but 185 00:10:55,080 --> 00:10:58,760 Speaker 2: you know, can you come up with scheduling that we 186 00:10:58,800 --> 00:11:03,920 Speaker 2: don't losexas versus Oklahoma or whatever? Oklahoma state? Oklahoma? I 187 00:11:03,920 --> 00:11:06,200 Speaker 2: should say, I got to want to lose these rights. 188 00:11:06,320 --> 00:11:09,240 Speaker 2: We don't have many left, and I don't know if 189 00:11:09,360 --> 00:11:13,560 Speaker 2: college football could ever have a schedule overseer. So we 190 00:11:13,679 --> 00:11:16,880 Speaker 2: do have marquee matchups. This is this is entertainment, it's 191 00:11:17,000 --> 00:11:21,000 Speaker 2: TV non conference. You know, what do you think of that? 192 00:11:21,920 --> 00:11:23,640 Speaker 3: I think a couple things. Let's go back to the 193 00:11:23,640 --> 00:11:27,600 Speaker 3: college football playoffs. So I've been the recipient of plenty 194 00:11:27,720 --> 00:11:30,120 Speaker 3: kind of side comments about good of the game, whatever 195 00:11:30,200 --> 00:11:35,679 Speaker 3: that means. And when programs like when wake Forest notifies 196 00:11:35,800 --> 00:11:38,840 Speaker 3: Old Miss the day before their first game of a 197 00:11:38,920 --> 00:11:41,520 Speaker 3: home and home series that we're not playing the one 198 00:11:41,559 --> 00:11:46,360 Speaker 3: back in Oxford, that's a problem. When when Nebraska cancels 199 00:11:46,559 --> 00:11:50,120 Speaker 3: an agreement to play Tennessee home and home and sites 200 00:11:50,160 --> 00:11:53,040 Speaker 3: and I'm not criticizing their athletic director, this is a reality. 201 00:11:53,120 --> 00:11:57,160 Speaker 3: Cites the college football playoff selection process as a fundamental 202 00:11:57,200 --> 00:12:02,120 Speaker 3: reason why we have to understand college football playoffs selection 203 00:12:02,400 --> 00:12:05,920 Speaker 3: process is threatening the regular season, not supporting it. Remember 204 00:12:05,920 --> 00:12:09,560 Speaker 3: all those conversations people had about, hey, if you expand 205 00:12:09,559 --> 00:12:11,840 Speaker 3: the playoff, you're going to diminish the regular season. I 206 00:12:11,840 --> 00:12:14,800 Speaker 3: think there is something to that. I just think everybody 207 00:12:14,880 --> 00:12:18,080 Speaker 3: missed that the regular season was being changed by the 208 00:12:18,080 --> 00:12:22,480 Speaker 3: college football playoff. So point one is whether people agree 209 00:12:22,559 --> 00:12:25,040 Speaker 3: or not. I think the first issue that has to 210 00:12:25,080 --> 00:12:32,319 Speaker 3: be addressed is the selection criteria incentivizing playing these highly competitive, 211 00:12:32,880 --> 00:12:37,760 Speaker 3: highly desired games, whether that's non conference or conference. That's one. 212 00:12:38,240 --> 00:12:41,560 Speaker 3: The second is, I think conference is coming together to 213 00:12:41,600 --> 00:12:45,840 Speaker 3: facilitate this scheduling is important, and I'll just take ourselves. 214 00:12:45,960 --> 00:12:50,200 Speaker 3: We facilitate four end of year non conference games last 215 00:12:50,400 --> 00:12:55,240 Speaker 3: week of the season. We've had schools actually leave our 216 00:12:55,320 --> 00:12:59,880 Speaker 3: league and come back, and we facilitated those games when 217 00:13:00,080 --> 00:13:03,439 Speaker 3: when they've wanted to play. So I think from my perspective, 218 00:13:03,640 --> 00:13:07,400 Speaker 3: I'm happy for a coordinated conversation to try to get 219 00:13:07,400 --> 00:13:09,240 Speaker 3: scheduling right. But I do think you have to go 220 00:13:09,360 --> 00:13:12,640 Speaker 3: back to at the forefront of everyone's mind is how 221 00:13:12,720 --> 00:13:15,920 Speaker 3: decisions about the postseason are going to be made. And 222 00:13:16,640 --> 00:13:19,680 Speaker 3: that's the point I've made more subtly than of late 223 00:13:20,280 --> 00:13:24,080 Speaker 3: and more directly in the most recent comments, because I 224 00:13:24,160 --> 00:13:27,760 Speaker 3: do think that leads the agenda of what must be 225 00:13:27,840 --> 00:13:31,559 Speaker 3: addressed in college football scheduling is how this postseason selection 226 00:13:31,720 --> 00:13:32,880 Speaker 3: guides people's thinking. 227 00:13:33,440 --> 00:13:34,960 Speaker 2: Give me the one thing that keeps you up at 228 00:13:35,040 --> 00:13:38,000 Speaker 2: night that has to do with where we're where we 229 00:13:38,080 --> 00:13:39,280 Speaker 2: are or where we're headed. 230 00:13:42,000 --> 00:13:43,880 Speaker 3: If I could, if I like, if I could have 231 00:13:44,000 --> 00:13:45,760 Speaker 3: one thing to keep me up at night, I'd sleep 232 00:13:45,800 --> 00:13:49,400 Speaker 3: like a baby. Again, so let's just stipulate that I would. 233 00:13:50,040 --> 00:13:52,520 Speaker 3: I would be out like a light. I wake up 234 00:13:52,640 --> 00:13:57,480 Speaker 3: every day on issues around the relationship with our student athletes, 235 00:13:57,960 --> 00:14:04,200 Speaker 3: and that's both the relationship. I'm concerned about the lifelong impact, 236 00:14:04,360 --> 00:14:07,280 Speaker 3: about the amount of money that flows into somebody's life 237 00:14:07,360 --> 00:14:10,680 Speaker 3: when the emotional maturity may not be there. You know, 238 00:14:10,679 --> 00:14:12,880 Speaker 3: how do you go take a fifty thousand dollars entry 239 00:14:12,960 --> 00:14:15,360 Speaker 3: level job and we run these ads that ninety eight 240 00:14:15,400 --> 00:14:18,160 Speaker 3: percent of the people on the athletic fields or courts 241 00:14:18,240 --> 00:14:21,800 Speaker 3: or tracks are going pro in something else, and you've 242 00:14:21,840 --> 00:14:27,520 Speaker 3: had your own personal economics or value inflated. How do 243 00:14:27,560 --> 00:14:30,600 Speaker 3: you learn those lifelong lessons? I think the transfer environment 244 00:14:31,000 --> 00:14:35,320 Speaker 3: is linked to that, perhaps the inability to walk through 245 00:14:35,440 --> 00:14:38,680 Speaker 3: some of the difficult moments in life. Hey, it's not 246 00:14:38,760 --> 00:14:41,480 Speaker 3: every transfer is a problematic transfer. And I speak as 247 00:14:41,480 --> 00:14:43,720 Speaker 3: somebody who transferred a couple of times. You're trying to 248 00:14:43,720 --> 00:14:46,520 Speaker 3: figure it out, especially if you're a first generation college student, 249 00:14:46,800 --> 00:14:50,040 Speaker 3: like you don't have somebody pulling you aside and helping 250 00:14:50,040 --> 00:14:53,080 Speaker 3: you understand, Hey, maybe if you stick it out, build 251 00:14:53,120 --> 00:14:57,600 Speaker 3: your legacy in one place, receive some economic benefit, have 252 00:14:57,880 --> 00:15:02,160 Speaker 3: educational and relational continuity, come out as a more prepared 253 00:15:02,200 --> 00:15:05,960 Speaker 3: adult for what's next in life. The combination of those 254 00:15:06,000 --> 00:15:11,000 Speaker 3: factor the economic relationship, the transfer decisions, and then the 255 00:15:11,080 --> 00:15:13,520 Speaker 3: lifelong impacts that come from that we're not going to 256 00:15:13,600 --> 00:15:15,280 Speaker 3: know for a while. Those are at the top of 257 00:15:15,320 --> 00:15:16,480 Speaker 3: what keeps me up at night. 258 00:15:17,080 --> 00:15:20,280 Speaker 2: I propose this well to myself, but on my show 259 00:15:20,360 --> 00:15:24,240 Speaker 2: probably ten years ago, that if you have players who 260 00:15:24,440 --> 00:15:26,800 Speaker 2: are coming to school because they think they're going to 261 00:15:26,840 --> 00:15:30,240 Speaker 2: be a professional athlete, can you have some kind of 262 00:15:30,240 --> 00:15:36,520 Speaker 2: curriculum that helps them with investing, balancing a checkbook, real estate, 263 00:15:37,560 --> 00:15:40,960 Speaker 2: think taxes, things that have to do that are you know, 264 00:15:41,120 --> 00:15:44,680 Speaker 2: the history of Mesopotamia. While I took the course hasn't 265 00:15:44,680 --> 00:15:48,160 Speaker 2: helped me today. But if you're taking something that does 266 00:15:48,280 --> 00:15:51,480 Speaker 2: prepare you, and college is supposed to prepare you. If 267 00:15:51,520 --> 00:15:54,760 Speaker 2: I go to college and we have, you know, some 268 00:15:54,840 --> 00:15:58,040 Speaker 2: kind of symbiotic relationship of I'm coming to use you, 269 00:15:58,040 --> 00:16:01,440 Speaker 2: you're using me. I don't have any interesting staying in school, 270 00:16:01,840 --> 00:16:05,480 Speaker 2: but can you help them with things that will help 271 00:16:05,520 --> 00:16:07,160 Speaker 2: them in what they want to do. 272 00:16:08,120 --> 00:16:11,280 Speaker 3: A few points like I studied the Mesopotamian thing and 273 00:16:11,320 --> 00:16:13,360 Speaker 3: had the same reaction. Then I went to the British 274 00:16:13,440 --> 00:16:16,960 Speaker 3: Museum and there's a section on Mesopotamia and I'm like, hey, 275 00:16:17,320 --> 00:16:19,960 Speaker 3: I read about this when I was fourteen or something 276 00:16:20,040 --> 00:16:25,000 Speaker 3: like that. That's one second. I think if it's if 277 00:16:25,040 --> 00:16:28,160 Speaker 3: it's only in life, do what you want and not 278 00:16:28,400 --> 00:16:31,280 Speaker 3: challenge you to broaden your horizons, I think we lose 279 00:16:31,320 --> 00:16:34,840 Speaker 3: an opportunity to help young people grow. So I would 280 00:16:34,920 --> 00:16:42,520 Speaker 3: never suggest we just walk away from a broad educational experience. Third, sure, 281 00:16:42,560 --> 00:16:44,840 Speaker 3: could we pivot and there are plenty of electives, There 282 00:16:44,760 --> 00:16:47,240 Speaker 3: are plenty of ways to learn. But our athletics departments 283 00:16:47,280 --> 00:16:51,160 Speaker 3: provide pretty deep financial literacy programs. In fact, I've debated 284 00:16:51,200 --> 00:16:54,960 Speaker 3: with current student athletes like should I not pay taxes 285 00:16:55,040 --> 00:16:57,600 Speaker 3: right now on my earnings and wait and paint at 286 00:16:57,600 --> 00:16:59,320 Speaker 3: the end of the year and then going to quarterly 287 00:17:00,080 --> 00:17:03,640 Speaker 3: tax payments for kind of ten ninety nine work so 288 00:17:03,680 --> 00:17:06,480 Speaker 3: that I can invest that money. I'm talking about nineteen 289 00:17:06,480 --> 00:17:09,960 Speaker 3: and twenty year olds in business classes and taking financial 290 00:17:10,000 --> 00:17:14,200 Speaker 3: literacy classes through their athletics department. It's not the lack 291 00:17:14,320 --> 00:17:18,800 Speaker 3: of provision of education, information and contexts that people involved 292 00:17:18,800 --> 00:17:22,880 Speaker 3: have to receive that whether it's Mesopotamia, real estate deals, 293 00:17:23,000 --> 00:17:25,439 Speaker 3: or how to balance your checkbook, it's not just that 294 00:17:25,520 --> 00:17:29,280 Speaker 3: the educational opportunity and the information is provided. They have 295 00:17:29,320 --> 00:17:33,960 Speaker 3: a responsibility to understand. They have to consume that information, 296 00:17:34,160 --> 00:17:36,919 Speaker 3: internalize it music. And I would say too for the 297 00:17:36,920 --> 00:17:40,080 Speaker 3: people around the student athlete, for the young person involved 298 00:17:40,119 --> 00:17:43,400 Speaker 3: in college athletics. You know, the notion that what's happening 299 00:17:44,000 --> 00:17:47,960 Speaker 3: around nil payments just continues all the way through life, 300 00:17:48,440 --> 00:17:52,919 Speaker 3: I think can be kind of a perceived pot of 301 00:17:52,960 --> 00:17:54,960 Speaker 3: gold at the end of a rainbow, that it's just 302 00:17:55,000 --> 00:17:57,959 Speaker 3: going to continue. And I think we all know that 303 00:17:58,200 --> 00:18:01,800 Speaker 3: hard work, dedication, perce taking a risk here and there, 304 00:18:01,800 --> 00:18:04,399 Speaker 3: betting on yourself, those are the things through the next 305 00:18:04,760 --> 00:18:07,520 Speaker 3: forty years of life that sets you up for success, 306 00:18:07,680 --> 00:18:11,480 Speaker 3: not that defined area between you know, eighteen and twenty two. 307 00:18:11,480 --> 00:18:14,160 Speaker 3: In fact, there's a John Grisham novel called Bleachers about 308 00:18:14,160 --> 00:18:17,119 Speaker 3: a high school football player. And I'll paraphrase one of 309 00:18:17,160 --> 00:18:19,399 Speaker 3: the lines in this novel and hey, it's a novel, 310 00:18:19,400 --> 00:18:21,240 Speaker 3: but it's pretty wise, which is the worst thing that 311 00:18:21,280 --> 00:18:23,960 Speaker 3: can happen to somebody is that become the biggest deal 312 00:18:24,000 --> 00:18:26,160 Speaker 3: ever when they're eighteen or nineteen years old, because there's 313 00:18:26,200 --> 00:18:27,439 Speaker 3: a whole lifetime ahead of you. 314 00:18:28,840 --> 00:18:33,000 Speaker 2: Big twelve ACC commissioners on your Christmas card list, you guys. 315 00:18:33,040 --> 00:18:37,359 Speaker 3: So yeah, hey, disagreements. Finally, one of my great conversations 316 00:18:37,400 --> 00:18:40,400 Speaker 3: a oneth Togo. Roy Kramer, who was SEC Commissioner number six, 317 00:18:40,480 --> 00:18:43,040 Speaker 3: was telling me stories about going to me with Jim 318 00:18:43,080 --> 00:18:46,120 Speaker 3: Delaney and Tom Hansen, who was the PAC twelve commissioner, 319 00:18:46,160 --> 00:18:47,840 Speaker 3: and like he said, we walk out of that room 320 00:18:47,880 --> 00:18:49,440 Speaker 3: and we hated each other, and then we went home, 321 00:18:49,560 --> 00:18:51,680 Speaker 3: we got to work and figured it out. I think 322 00:18:51,760 --> 00:18:55,840 Speaker 3: disagreement's absolutely fine. It makes us better. And I think 323 00:18:55,880 --> 00:18:57,840 Speaker 3: for the fact that we comment about each other, we 324 00:18:58,440 --> 00:19:02,200 Speaker 3: have a conversation as the four us tomorrow and yeah, 325 00:19:02,240 --> 00:19:04,199 Speaker 3: we rub each other all from time or time, but 326 00:19:04,240 --> 00:19:06,280 Speaker 3: we do have a responsibility to work together, and I 327 00:19:06,280 --> 00:19:09,959 Speaker 3: think each each of us understands that responsibility. 328 00:19:09,960 --> 00:19:11,680 Speaker 2: Play nice, thanks for joining us. 329 00:19:11,800 --> 00:19:13,639 Speaker 3: Okay, we'll go to the sandbox and see what we 330 00:19:13,640 --> 00:19:13,879 Speaker 3: can do. 331 00:19:13,920 --> 00:19:16,840 Speaker 2: And it's Greg Sanky, SEC Commissioner. We'll take a break. 332 00:19:16,880 --> 00:19:18,800 Speaker 2: We're back after this. Dan Patrick Show. 333 00:19:18,960 --> 00:19:21,840 Speaker 1: Fox Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in 334 00:19:21,880 --> 00:19:25,240 Speaker 1: the nation. Catch all of our shows at Foxsports Radio 335 00:19:25,359 --> 00:19:29,480 Speaker 1: dot com and within the iHeartRadio app. Search FSR to 336 00:19:29,560 --> 00:19:30,240 Speaker 1: listen live. 337 00:19:30,560 --> 00:19:33,760 Speaker 5: Hey, Steve Covino and I'm Rich David and together We're 338 00:19:33,800 --> 00:19:35,720 Speaker 5: Covino and Rich on Fox Sports Radio. 339 00:19:36,040 --> 00:19:38,280 Speaker 6: You could catch us weekdays from five to seven pm 340 00:19:38,320 --> 00:19:41,119 Speaker 6: Eastern two to four Pacific on Fox Sports Radio and 341 00:19:41,119 --> 00:19:42,840 Speaker 6: of course the iHeartRadio app. 342 00:19:43,000 --> 00:19:44,760 Speaker 5: Why should you listen to Covino and Rich. 343 00:19:44,840 --> 00:19:48,560 Speaker 6: We talk about everything life, sports, relationships, what's going on 344 00:19:48,600 --> 00:19:49,040 Speaker 6: in the world. 345 00:19:49,080 --> 00:19:50,720 Speaker 5: We have a lot of fun talking about the stories 346 00:19:50,720 --> 00:19:53,520 Speaker 5: behind the stories in the world of sports and pop culture, 347 00:19:53,680 --> 00:19:56,600 Speaker 5: stories that well other shows don't seem to have the 348 00:19:56,600 --> 00:19:57,440 Speaker 5: time to discuss. 349 00:19:57,640 --> 00:19:59,120 Speaker 6: And the fact that we've been friends for the last 350 00:19:59,119 --> 00:20:02,000 Speaker 6: twenty years and still work together. I mean that says something. 351 00:20:01,840 --> 00:20:04,000 Speaker 5: Right, So check us out. We like to get you 352 00:20:04,080 --> 00:20:07,320 Speaker 5: involved too, take your phone calls, chop it up. As 353 00:20:07,320 --> 00:20:09,960 Speaker 5: they say, I'd say the most interactive show on Fox 354 00:20:10,000 --> 00:20:11,119 Speaker 5: Sports Radio, maybe the. 355 00:20:11,119 --> 00:20:12,440 Speaker 6: Most interactive show on planetar. 356 00:20:12,520 --> 00:20:14,320 Speaker 5: Be sure to check out Cavino and Rich live on 357 00:20:14,359 --> 00:20:16,840 Speaker 5: Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app from five to 358 00:20:16,880 --> 00:20:19,520 Speaker 5: seven pm Eastern, two to four Pacific, and if you 359 00:20:19,520 --> 00:20:21,800 Speaker 5: miss any of the live show, just search Covin on 360 00:20:21,880 --> 00:20:23,679 Speaker 5: Rich wherever you get your podcast, and of course on 361 00:20:23,760 --> 00:20:26,119 Speaker 5: social media that's Covino and Rich. 362 00:20:27,480 --> 00:20:30,440 Speaker 2: I don't think Greg Sanke, the SEC commissioner, is all 363 00:20:30,480 --> 00:20:33,359 Speaker 2: in favor of the automatic qualifiers. I think he wants 364 00:20:33,400 --> 00:20:37,240 Speaker 2: the twelve best college football teams to be in the playoffs, 365 00:20:37,640 --> 00:20:40,600 Speaker 2: and of course they're for selfish reasons, because he doesn't 366 00:20:40,600 --> 00:20:43,080 Speaker 2: want a limit on the number of teams the SEC 367 00:20:43,119 --> 00:20:45,119 Speaker 2: can sent to the playoffs. Do I think they're going 368 00:20:45,200 --> 00:20:47,720 Speaker 2: to go to fourteen, No, I think they'll go to sixteen. 369 00:20:48,160 --> 00:20:50,680 Speaker 2: The question is will it be for twenty twenty six? 370 00:20:50,720 --> 00:20:54,480 Speaker 2: Are they going to expand March Madness from sixty eight 371 00:20:54,480 --> 00:20:57,200 Speaker 2: to seventy two to seventy six? I think they will 372 00:20:57,240 --> 00:21:00,399 Speaker 2: expand to seventy two, maybe seventy six. And all it 373 00:21:00,440 --> 00:21:03,720 Speaker 2: means is, you know the Tuesdays and Wednesdays before the 374 00:21:03,760 --> 00:21:06,480 Speaker 2: tournament really starts, you know, when you start to fill 375 00:21:06,480 --> 00:21:09,359 Speaker 2: out your brackets, like those games count, not the first 376 00:21:09,400 --> 00:21:13,600 Speaker 2: four in. They'll just add more games to those Tuesdays 377 00:21:13,600 --> 00:21:16,960 Speaker 2: and Wednesdays, those more play in games. Uh, And I'm 378 00:21:16,960 --> 00:21:21,439 Speaker 2: fine with that. We've already gotten to this point. I 379 00:21:21,520 --> 00:21:25,280 Speaker 2: just don't want it to get to ninety six. Jim 380 00:21:25,320 --> 00:21:28,919 Speaker 2: Beyheim brought up ninety six, and I go, Jim, I 381 00:21:28,920 --> 00:21:34,720 Speaker 2: don't think so ninety six. Like have a little exclusivity 382 00:21:34,800 --> 00:21:38,800 Speaker 2: with this. Let me see a couple of by the way, 383 00:21:38,920 --> 00:21:45,320 Speaker 2: I believe on this date in twenty seventeen, palk Off 384 00:21:45,440 --> 00:21:52,879 Speaker 2: palk Off, Really, yeah, falk Off, was it twenty sixteen? Yeah, 385 00:21:53,760 --> 00:21:57,280 Speaker 2: nine years ago, and Fritzy you still I'm in trouble 386 00:21:57,280 --> 00:21:58,200 Speaker 2: with the run you are? 387 00:21:58,400 --> 00:21:58,719 Speaker 3: You are? 388 00:21:59,800 --> 00:22:03,000 Speaker 2: Look I understand Eminem was great at stretching a word 389 00:22:03,080 --> 00:22:06,400 Speaker 2: and made it fit, so it did rhyme, but yours 390 00:22:07,520 --> 00:22:11,960 Speaker 2: fork Off. Palk Off said of pork Off, like. 391 00:22:12,320 --> 00:22:14,480 Speaker 7: It's almost an auditory disorder of some story. 392 00:22:14,560 --> 00:22:18,280 Speaker 2: Well you I didn't think you were hearing correctly because 393 00:22:18,320 --> 00:22:20,320 Speaker 2: you I mean, it was just so weird that you 394 00:22:20,480 --> 00:22:23,320 Speaker 2: kept going, no, don't you get it? And I'm going, no, 395 00:22:23,640 --> 00:22:24,399 Speaker 2: you don't get it. 396 00:22:24,480 --> 00:22:26,720 Speaker 8: I think my problem is it dof been hearing and listening. 397 00:22:27,720 --> 00:22:29,560 Speaker 8: I could hear stuff, but listen. 398 00:22:29,720 --> 00:22:30,400 Speaker 7: A whole the time. 399 00:22:32,119 --> 00:22:35,040 Speaker 2: Oh twenty sixteen. 400 00:22:34,640 --> 00:22:37,760 Speaker 9: Wow, what are we doing for the big ten year anniversary? 401 00:22:37,960 --> 00:22:38,120 Speaker 10: Oh? 402 00:22:38,240 --> 00:22:41,240 Speaker 2: I don't know. Yeah, I don't know how you celebrate 403 00:22:41,280 --> 00:22:42,399 Speaker 2: that next June. 404 00:22:43,040 --> 00:22:45,920 Speaker 7: Some restaurant with rhyming words. They have rhyming restaurants. 405 00:22:45,960 --> 00:22:47,800 Speaker 2: I don't know, walk off a rhyme time at time, 406 00:22:47,840 --> 00:22:51,560 Speaker 2: but they didn't. They didn't rhyme. That's the thing, walk 407 00:22:51,680 --> 00:22:54,159 Speaker 2: it's a work in progress. When you said palk off 408 00:22:54,760 --> 00:22:55,760 Speaker 2: for pork. 409 00:22:57,880 --> 00:23:00,640 Speaker 8: Yeah, I was trying to fit it into the triangle, 410 00:23:00,680 --> 00:23:02,120 Speaker 8: into the little circular box thing. 411 00:23:02,280 --> 00:23:03,880 Speaker 2: Yeah, square pack. 412 00:23:04,840 --> 00:23:05,040 Speaker 4: Yeah. 413 00:23:05,040 --> 00:23:07,240 Speaker 11: The crazy part about that segment too, is we've aired 414 00:23:07,520 --> 00:23:09,159 Speaker 11: you know, we've aired like the same like say, like 415 00:23:09,240 --> 00:23:12,840 Speaker 11: sixty seconds of it. Yeah, a few times it actually 416 00:23:12,880 --> 00:23:16,080 Speaker 11: goes on for like seven minutes or something. The whole discussion, 417 00:23:16,080 --> 00:23:20,480 Speaker 11: it's a way more involved discussion with dozens of examples 418 00:23:20,480 --> 00:23:21,280 Speaker 11: of this going wrong. 419 00:23:21,680 --> 00:23:25,480 Speaker 2: Marvin, how about we post that on the newsletter social media. 420 00:23:26,000 --> 00:23:26,640 Speaker 2: We'll put that out. 421 00:23:26,640 --> 00:23:28,200 Speaker 8: And when you're stubborn and you don't want to accept 422 00:23:28,200 --> 00:23:29,920 Speaker 8: that you're wrong and you just kind of go all 423 00:23:29,960 --> 00:23:31,920 Speaker 8: in on it and it continues to just take a 424 00:23:31,960 --> 00:23:32,879 Speaker 8: deeper hole type of time. 425 00:23:33,119 --> 00:23:37,359 Speaker 2: Uh, let me see Toby in California. Hi, Toby, thanks 426 00:23:37,359 --> 00:23:38,840 Speaker 2: for holding what's on your mind today? 427 00:23:39,960 --> 00:23:42,760 Speaker 12: Hey, Dan, I wanted to give you a best of 428 00:23:42,800 --> 00:23:46,880 Speaker 12: the weekend Best of the weekend is on Friday night, 429 00:23:46,960 --> 00:23:51,639 Speaker 12: I got to umpire the Savannah Bananas at Angels Stadium 430 00:23:52,119 --> 00:23:55,520 Speaker 12: and if you have a chance to go, highly recommended. 431 00:23:56,080 --> 00:23:59,040 Speaker 12: Most fun I've ever had on a baseball field. And 432 00:23:59,080 --> 00:24:01,120 Speaker 12: then I wanted to talk to you about a few 433 00:24:01,119 --> 00:24:05,080 Speaker 12: months ago you talked about connections with your fans, and 434 00:24:05,160 --> 00:24:06,960 Speaker 12: I feel like I have a connection with the show 435 00:24:07,080 --> 00:24:12,560 Speaker 12: more than anyone. With my kids, I do best and 436 00:24:12,600 --> 00:24:16,320 Speaker 12: worst every single day, and then I ask him every 437 00:24:16,359 --> 00:24:20,640 Speaker 12: single day what they learned today. And then every time 438 00:24:20,680 --> 00:24:22,840 Speaker 12: I pick up my daughters from school because I'm I'm 439 00:24:22,920 --> 00:24:25,520 Speaker 12: usually a podcast listener, they say, do we get a 440 00:24:25,560 --> 00:24:28,879 Speaker 12: listen to podcasts again of Dan Patrick? And they know 441 00:24:28,960 --> 00:24:30,480 Speaker 12: all the stat of the day songs. 442 00:24:30,880 --> 00:24:31,600 Speaker 2: Love your show. 443 00:24:32,560 --> 00:24:34,480 Speaker 12: Love you guys are more than just a sports show. 444 00:24:34,520 --> 00:24:37,600 Speaker 12: You guys are a connection show. And I appreciate all 445 00:24:37,600 --> 00:24:38,440 Speaker 12: that you do for us. 446 00:24:38,560 --> 00:24:41,359 Speaker 2: Thank you, Toby. And one other thing that you should 447 00:24:41,400 --> 00:24:44,480 Speaker 2: always ask your children who has it better than we do? 448 00:24:44,800 --> 00:24:51,880 Speaker 2: And then you want them to say nobody, Bob and Montana, Hi, Bob, 449 00:24:51,920 --> 00:24:54,159 Speaker 2: we got your video. Bob took a pie to the 450 00:24:54,200 --> 00:24:57,919 Speaker 2: face he thought we were winning the Sports Emmy. And Bob, 451 00:24:58,480 --> 00:25:02,160 Speaker 2: thank you for Uh, I guess paying up your bet. 452 00:25:03,040 --> 00:25:06,280 Speaker 4: Hey, Hey, no problem there, DP, Hey, well you stole 453 00:25:06,359 --> 00:25:08,080 Speaker 4: half my thunder there. I was going to call and 454 00:25:08,080 --> 00:25:11,120 Speaker 4: wish you guys a happy ninth anniversary for Sausage Off Day. 455 00:25:11,640 --> 00:25:12,480 Speaker 4: But that's fine. 456 00:25:12,880 --> 00:25:13,320 Speaker 10: Uh. 457 00:25:13,440 --> 00:25:16,240 Speaker 4: Speaking of thunder, I'll move right into my second topic, 458 00:25:16,680 --> 00:25:18,840 Speaker 4: in the spirit of in the spirit of me losing 459 00:25:18,840 --> 00:25:22,480 Speaker 4: to the Miami losing the Miami Heat, losing to the 460 00:25:22,600 --> 00:25:25,679 Speaker 4: Nuggets two years ago, and Marvin took me up on 461 00:25:25,720 --> 00:25:28,640 Speaker 4: a pie to the face bent, then I'll just take 462 00:25:28,680 --> 00:25:32,560 Speaker 4: the Pacers straight up right now against OKAC. I'm hoping 463 00:25:32,800 --> 00:25:34,560 Speaker 4: Marvin will take me up again, but if he doesn't 464 00:25:34,560 --> 00:25:36,320 Speaker 4: want to, one of the other guys are yourself is 465 00:25:36,359 --> 00:25:37,040 Speaker 4: fine as well? 466 00:25:37,119 --> 00:25:39,199 Speaker 2: All right, Bob, Marvin will take you up on that, 467 00:25:39,800 --> 00:25:43,800 Speaker 2: Marvin Marvin, all right, thank you, Bob. Paul in Indiana, 468 00:25:43,920 --> 00:25:45,200 Speaker 2: Hi Paul, what's on your mind? 469 00:25:46,280 --> 00:25:53,240 Speaker 10: Oh Dan? Thanks for taking my call six seventy oh. 470 00:25:53,320 --> 00:25:55,440 Speaker 10: Then a couple of years ago. If this line Don 471 00:25:55,520 --> 00:25:58,280 Speaker 10: is fit perfectly again, that's what I'd like to say. 472 00:25:59,359 --> 00:26:01,800 Speaker 10: I need to Payers are going to win because I 473 00:26:01,880 --> 00:26:04,160 Speaker 10: could kill it in my plums. They turned a nice 474 00:26:04,240 --> 00:26:06,960 Speaker 10: pace of blue, a sque time to take them to 475 00:26:07,000 --> 00:26:10,879 Speaker 10: the farmers market, which is in big final boom many. 476 00:26:11,080 --> 00:26:15,200 Speaker 2: Thank you, Paul, congratulations. Call back in a couple of weeks. 477 00:26:15,400 --> 00:26:17,360 Speaker 2: Oh no, let me know how your plums are doing. 478 00:26:18,160 --> 00:26:20,919 Speaker 2: Dave in Denver, Hi, Dave, what's on your mind today? 479 00:26:22,440 --> 00:26:22,800 Speaker 12: What up? 480 00:26:22,880 --> 00:26:23,080 Speaker 10: VP? 481 00:26:23,720 --> 00:26:28,760 Speaker 13: Six foot one seventy five? So this might be the 482 00:26:28,800 --> 00:26:32,520 Speaker 13: first time in DP show history that the Seattle Manners 483 00:26:32,560 --> 00:26:36,399 Speaker 13: are going to get two best of the weekends. The 484 00:26:36,440 --> 00:26:40,200 Speaker 13: first one is Cole Young getting called up and getting 485 00:26:40,200 --> 00:26:42,439 Speaker 13: a walk off in the bottom of the eleventh, and 486 00:26:42,480 --> 00:26:44,680 Speaker 13: then the second one is kyl Rawley in this twenty 487 00:26:44,680 --> 00:26:47,320 Speaker 13: third deer, which is typer first in the MLB. 488 00:26:48,560 --> 00:26:50,800 Speaker 2: I know, go figure, the guy who has more home 489 00:26:50,880 --> 00:26:55,040 Speaker 2: runs than Judge and Shoe Autani is cal Rawleig And 490 00:26:55,160 --> 00:26:57,200 Speaker 2: if you go back since the start of the twenty 491 00:26:57,240 --> 00:27:00,760 Speaker 2: twenty three season, he's hit eleven go ahead home runs 492 00:27:00,800 --> 00:27:04,560 Speaker 2: in the seventh inning or later. That's four more than 493 00:27:04,680 --> 00:27:10,240 Speaker 2: any other player over that span. Who how stand of 494 00:27:10,280 --> 00:27:10,600 Speaker 2: the day? 495 00:27:10,920 --> 00:27:14,560 Speaker 1: Stand of a day? Stant out a day, stant. 496 00:27:14,320 --> 00:27:14,920 Speaker 11: Of a day. 497 00:27:16,000 --> 00:27:20,239 Speaker 2: This is the Stanle of the Day, brought to you 498 00:27:20,320 --> 00:27:23,320 Speaker 2: by Penine America, the official trading cards of the Dan 499 00:27:23,400 --> 00:27:26,879 Speaker 2: Patrick Shows. Zach and Knoxville. Welcome back, Zach. What's on 500 00:27:26,920 --> 00:27:27,320 Speaker 2: your mind? 501 00:27:28,960 --> 00:27:30,560 Speaker 14: ADB, thanks for taking my call. 502 00:27:31,600 --> 00:27:32,439 Speaker 2: I hate to do this. 503 00:27:32,480 --> 00:27:34,000 Speaker 14: I didn't know it was going to be with Marvin, 504 00:27:34,080 --> 00:27:36,320 Speaker 14: but I do agree with the Andrew McCutcheon take. But 505 00:27:36,480 --> 00:27:39,600 Speaker 14: I was actually calling for a pie to the face 506 00:27:39,760 --> 00:27:42,840 Speaker 14: for the Facers to win straight up. So does Marvin 507 00:27:42,840 --> 00:27:44,120 Speaker 14: wanted Michael d lay down? 508 00:27:46,560 --> 00:27:51,200 Speaker 2: Do you want to double down there? Okay, Thunder iron Jack? Yeah. Wait, 509 00:27:51,280 --> 00:27:55,159 Speaker 2: so you're saying Andrew McCutcheon's in the Hall of very good, 510 00:27:55,359 --> 00:27:58,119 Speaker 2: all of very good, correct? I know you want an MVP, 511 00:27:58,480 --> 00:28:01,879 Speaker 2: but I think we're being a little too lenient with 512 00:28:02,119 --> 00:28:07,359 Speaker 2: very good. Yes, Paul, I have Andrew mccutchen's career. He 513 00:28:07,440 --> 00:28:11,040 Speaker 2: came out hot five All Star games from age twenty 514 00:28:11,080 --> 00:28:14,439 Speaker 2: four to twenty eight, and then since the age of 515 00:28:14,440 --> 00:28:16,360 Speaker 2: twenty eight, he has not made an All Star Game 516 00:28:16,640 --> 00:28:20,520 Speaker 2: or been a top ten MVP candidate. He was cruising 517 00:28:20,640 --> 00:28:23,359 Speaker 2: his first seven years. How many hits does he have? 518 00:28:25,920 --> 00:28:32,399 Speaker 15: I've got twenty two hundred, the two seventy three hitter. Yeah, okay, 519 00:28:32,760 --> 00:28:34,320 Speaker 15: he's not on the cusp of the Hall of Fame. 520 00:28:34,400 --> 00:28:38,720 Speaker 2: He's the Hall of Good, which is in a different location. Yes, 521 00:28:38,760 --> 00:28:40,160 Speaker 2: it is, Marvin. 522 00:28:40,560 --> 00:28:42,200 Speaker 16: So the Hall of Very Good is for guys like 523 00:28:42,480 --> 00:28:46,440 Speaker 16: Dale Murphy and Steve Garvey, guys that get seventy three 524 00:28:46,440 --> 00:28:47,720 Speaker 16: percent of the votes at the Hall of Fame. 525 00:28:47,840 --> 00:28:49,640 Speaker 9: Yeah, okay, Yeah. 526 00:28:49,880 --> 00:28:56,240 Speaker 2: Would you put Andrew McCutchen in with Dale Murphy? No? Okay, 527 00:28:56,840 --> 00:28:57,960 Speaker 2: Steve Garvey. 528 00:28:59,160 --> 00:29:00,280 Speaker 16: No, okay, So. 529 00:29:02,000 --> 00:29:06,000 Speaker 2: We solved it. It's done, Yes, Tom, I was just. 530 00:29:05,920 --> 00:29:06,520 Speaker 7: Looking at the list. 531 00:29:06,600 --> 00:29:10,240 Speaker 8: Kirk Gibson erics, Tim Salmon never made an All Star team, 532 00:29:10,320 --> 00:29:14,720 Speaker 8: Blie Levin, Ferjie Jenkins, Robin yet. Uh actually, Bli Levan 533 00:29:14,720 --> 00:29:17,000 Speaker 8: and Fergie only two, Robin Young three. 534 00:29:17,360 --> 00:29:20,400 Speaker 7: So what does that affect your decision on the cutching 535 00:29:20,440 --> 00:29:21,320 Speaker 7: As far as five. 536 00:29:21,080 --> 00:29:24,400 Speaker 2: All Star Robin Young had three thousand hits, That is true. 537 00:29:24,440 --> 00:29:25,920 Speaker 7: If you take the three thousand hits away. 538 00:29:25,720 --> 00:29:30,560 Speaker 8: Anyway, all Star teams with three thousand. 539 00:29:30,360 --> 00:29:33,040 Speaker 2: Then he well maybe he was a shortstop and Cal 540 00:29:33,120 --> 00:29:35,560 Speaker 2: Ripken always made it, and then he was a center fielder, 541 00:29:35,680 --> 00:29:37,680 Speaker 2: which you know, if he had those hits all in 542 00:29:37,680 --> 00:29:42,120 Speaker 2: one season, definitely, if you take away three thousand he hits, 543 00:29:42,120 --> 00:29:48,320 Speaker 2: he has none even accomplished it. Yeah, yes, Marvin. 544 00:29:48,000 --> 00:29:50,280 Speaker 16: But Joe Montana and Joe Namath are in the same 545 00:29:50,280 --> 00:29:50,760 Speaker 16: Hall of Fame. 546 00:29:51,600 --> 00:29:53,400 Speaker 2: Okay, but I've said Joe name, it's not a Hall 547 00:29:53,440 --> 00:29:56,959 Speaker 2: of Famer, but they're in though I know, but I'm saying, 548 00:29:57,120 --> 00:30:00,160 Speaker 2: as much as I love Joe, he doesn't have Hall 549 00:30:00,200 --> 00:30:03,080 Speaker 2: of Fame credentials. He's in because of his name and 550 00:30:03,120 --> 00:30:05,320 Speaker 2: he won maybe the biggest game in NFL history. 551 00:30:05,320 --> 00:30:07,240 Speaker 16: And Andrew mccutchin's in because of the work he did. 552 00:30:07,280 --> 00:30:10,800 Speaker 2: He's just a good baseball player. There's nothing wrong with that. 553 00:30:11,160 --> 00:30:12,040 Speaker 16: So just Hall of Good. 554 00:30:12,080 --> 00:30:15,160 Speaker 2: He's yeah, he's a Hall of Good. I think we 555 00:30:15,240 --> 00:30:18,440 Speaker 2: got we gotta have boundaries here, and it just feels 556 00:30:18,440 --> 00:30:20,280 Speaker 2: like everybody's going to if you're not a Hall of Famer, 557 00:30:20,320 --> 00:30:21,400 Speaker 2: you're in the Hall of very Good. 558 00:30:22,280 --> 00:30:24,680 Speaker 16: Yes, mar Oh, I didn't say that. I think the 559 00:30:24,720 --> 00:30:26,920 Speaker 16: five All Star Games, in an MVP Award, another top 560 00:30:27,000 --> 00:30:30,080 Speaker 16: three MVP finish got him in the Hall of Very Good. 561 00:30:30,240 --> 00:30:32,920 Speaker 2: But that's just me, Okay, that's you, I know, all right. 562 00:30:33,280 --> 00:30:36,000 Speaker 2: I mean, nobody is sticking up for Andrew McCutcheon today, 563 00:30:36,000 --> 00:30:39,000 Speaker 2: but you are. And you know, I don't know if 564 00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:42,520 Speaker 2: anybody else in America is doing this segment. Probably the 565 00:30:42,560 --> 00:30:45,440 Speaker 2: reason why once again. We don't win sports emmis. All right, 566 00:30:45,480 --> 00:30:47,040 Speaker 2: let me take a break. When we come back. Got 567 00:30:47,040 --> 00:30:50,640 Speaker 2: a quick NFL game, more phone calls as well. We're 568 00:30:50,680 --> 00:30:51,360 Speaker 2: back after this. 569 00:30:52,200 --> 00:30:54,320 Speaker 1: Be sure to catch the live edition of The Dan 570 00:30:54,440 --> 00:30:58,040 Speaker 1: Patrick Show weekdays at nine am Eastern six am Pacific 571 00:30:58,320 --> 00:31:01,320 Speaker 1: on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio WAPP. 572 00:31:02,000 --> 00:31:06,240 Speaker 2: Raven's running back Derrick Henry on the program tomorrow. Got 573 00:31:06,240 --> 00:31:11,520 Speaker 2: a new contract extension. You can't have an old contract extension, 574 00:31:11,600 --> 00:31:14,320 Speaker 2: right because whenever you hear any you got a new 575 00:31:14,400 --> 00:31:18,840 Speaker 2: contract extension. Isn't it just a contract extension. I don't 576 00:31:18,840 --> 00:31:20,440 Speaker 2: know if I need new in there. 577 00:31:20,560 --> 00:31:22,880 Speaker 7: And his quarterback and coach have Tier one pressure. As 578 00:31:22,880 --> 00:31:23,400 Speaker 7: we discussed this. 579 00:31:23,520 --> 00:31:23,720 Speaker 4: They do. 580 00:31:23,920 --> 00:31:26,760 Speaker 2: They got a lot of pressure on them in Baltimore. 581 00:31:27,160 --> 00:31:30,440 Speaker 2: All right, Time for a quick NFL game and then 582 00:31:30,480 --> 00:31:35,400 Speaker 2: I have some amazing stats for you coming up. All right, 583 00:31:35,840 --> 00:31:39,720 Speaker 2: So Paulie, quick NFL gang. Got some theme music here, 584 00:31:40,120 --> 00:31:41,200 Speaker 2: here we go, all right. 585 00:31:41,560 --> 00:31:46,280 Speaker 15: The Madden twenty six cover has been announced by EA Sports. 586 00:31:46,680 --> 00:31:50,640 Speaker 15: Two part question, who is on the cover and what 587 00:31:51,160 --> 00:31:51,760 Speaker 15: is the picture? 588 00:31:51,800 --> 00:31:52,480 Speaker 9: Specifically? 589 00:31:52,920 --> 00:31:54,760 Speaker 2: Stefan Diggs on the. 590 00:31:55,000 --> 00:32:03,560 Speaker 9: O two soon that's snarky, respect. 591 00:32:03,440 --> 00:32:05,760 Speaker 2: Jaydon Daniels that's a good one. 592 00:32:06,280 --> 00:32:08,680 Speaker 9: He is not on the cover should have been. That's good. 593 00:32:09,480 --> 00:32:11,240 Speaker 2: It was on the cover of the year before. Do 594 00:32:11,360 --> 00:32:11,800 Speaker 2: we know that? 595 00:32:13,160 --> 00:32:13,200 Speaker 15: No? 596 00:32:15,000 --> 00:32:19,840 Speaker 9: Okay, I want to hint. 597 00:32:20,400 --> 00:32:24,200 Speaker 15: The cover picture is a very specific play from last. 598 00:32:23,920 --> 00:32:28,800 Speaker 2: Season, very specific, very. 599 00:32:30,200 --> 00:32:30,640 Speaker 9: I got it. 600 00:32:30,640 --> 00:32:36,640 Speaker 2: Oh uh, the push push Jalen Hurts. Now you're getting 601 00:32:36,640 --> 00:32:40,160 Speaker 2: closer that backwards leap. 602 00:32:40,400 --> 00:32:42,880 Speaker 15: Saquon Barkley is on the cover of Madden twenty twenty 603 00:32:42,920 --> 00:32:44,200 Speaker 15: six and he's mid. 604 00:32:44,040 --> 00:32:47,880 Speaker 2: Air that spinning Joan Gang. 605 00:32:49,720 --> 00:32:50,960 Speaker 9: Wow, it's a great cover. 606 00:32:51,560 --> 00:32:54,360 Speaker 2: Had did anybody ask him if he had practiced that 607 00:32:54,440 --> 00:32:57,760 Speaker 2: before or done that in a game before. We didn't 608 00:32:57,760 --> 00:33:00,200 Speaker 2: have him on after that, but I'd like to ask 609 00:33:00,280 --> 00:33:04,920 Speaker 2: him that if he ever did that before in a game. Okay, 610 00:33:06,200 --> 00:33:09,040 Speaker 2: this day in sports history, Okay, here's some numbers for you. 611 00:33:10,200 --> 00:33:14,480 Speaker 2: This player is in his third season. He's already become 612 00:33:14,520 --> 00:33:17,480 Speaker 2: the first baseball player since nineteen hundred to have eighty 613 00:33:17,520 --> 00:33:21,120 Speaker 2: extra base hits, eighty stolen bases, and at least eighty 614 00:33:21,160 --> 00:33:24,280 Speaker 2: walks in his first two hundred games. He's the first 615 00:33:24,320 --> 00:33:28,360 Speaker 2: player to have over one hundred stolen bases in thirty 616 00:33:28,360 --> 00:33:31,120 Speaker 2: home runs in his first two seasons, first player ever 617 00:33:32,200 --> 00:33:36,360 Speaker 2: he also, well, that'll give it away, Give it away, 618 00:33:36,440 --> 00:33:39,800 Speaker 2: give it away. Now, in three hundred and eight career games, 619 00:33:40,000 --> 00:33:42,480 Speaker 2: he has struck out four hundred and thirty four times, 620 00:33:42,880 --> 00:33:48,040 Speaker 2: which matches Tony Gwinn's career strikeout total. Tony played in 621 00:33:48,800 --> 00:33:53,320 Speaker 2: four hundred and forty games, so over two thousand more games, 622 00:33:53,320 --> 00:33:56,400 Speaker 2: and they struck out the same number of times. Marvin, 623 00:33:56,440 --> 00:34:02,680 Speaker 2: Who am I talking about? Ellie delacrue la Cruz? Is correct, amundo, 624 00:34:02,840 --> 00:34:05,200 Speaker 2: because I was gonna say. He also holds the record, 625 00:34:05,200 --> 00:34:08,200 Speaker 2: which I didn't know they had records the fastest throw 626 00:34:08,280 --> 00:34:12,280 Speaker 2: from shortstop to first base. Any they want to guess 627 00:34:12,360 --> 00:34:15,880 Speaker 2: what Ellie Dela Cruz did with one throw from shortstop 628 00:34:15,920 --> 00:34:18,279 Speaker 2: to first base, Marvin, I'll go back to you. 629 00:34:19,760 --> 00:34:21,680 Speaker 16: One hundred and eight miles an hour. 630 00:34:22,640 --> 00:34:24,400 Speaker 2: I'm gonna give it to you. It's one oh six 631 00:34:24,440 --> 00:34:28,600 Speaker 2: point nine on your FM dial. One hundred and six 632 00:34:28,719 --> 00:34:34,960 Speaker 2: miles an hour. Ellie Dela Cruz, Well the first basel ouch, 633 00:34:35,480 --> 00:34:39,120 Speaker 2: that's gonna hurt. Let me see what I have here? 634 00:34:39,480 --> 00:34:42,560 Speaker 2: Uh Steven Ohio, Hi, Steve, what's on your mind today? 635 00:34:44,640 --> 00:34:44,839 Speaker 1: Oh? 636 00:34:44,920 --> 00:34:46,600 Speaker 2: Oregon, Oregon? Steve? 637 00:34:46,640 --> 00:34:51,160 Speaker 17: Oh hey, jan Yeah, this is me six foot one. Uh, 638 00:34:51,560 --> 00:34:54,399 Speaker 17: that's the weekend is Oregon State Beavers lost first game 639 00:34:54,440 --> 00:34:57,480 Speaker 17: on Friday yesterday, won two games by a combined score 640 00:34:57,600 --> 00:35:01,279 Speaker 17: of thirty four to four, with tree runs in one inning, 641 00:35:01,360 --> 00:35:07,640 Speaker 17: all on suicide squeezes. Okay, so they're playing in the 642 00:35:07,680 --> 00:35:10,480 Speaker 17: final against us USC today in the regional final. 643 00:35:10,640 --> 00:35:16,719 Speaker 2: All right, sound a little more excited, Steve, sound librarian, 644 00:35:16,840 --> 00:35:19,160 Speaker 2: little little dead. Yeah, it could have been. It could 645 00:35:19,160 --> 00:35:22,360 Speaker 2: have been in a library there. Just really excited. 646 00:35:22,360 --> 00:35:24,880 Speaker 9: I just want to I can't wait for it. 647 00:35:24,920 --> 00:35:27,879 Speaker 15: This day in sports history, Paul George Herman Babe Ruth 648 00:35:27,880 --> 00:35:29,440 Speaker 15: announced his retirement. 649 00:35:29,320 --> 00:35:35,480 Speaker 2: Raid and against Farmers nineteen elect This is a sad one. 650 00:35:35,560 --> 00:35:38,200 Speaker 9: Nineteen forty one. Lou Garrig died in New York. 651 00:35:39,239 --> 00:35:42,560 Speaker 15: And let's see, oh, Randy Johnson achieved the first no 652 00:35:42,680 --> 00:35:45,839 Speaker 15: hitter in Seattle Mariner history nineteen ninety and this guy 653 00:35:45,920 --> 00:35:48,799 Speaker 15: was a thing. Nineteen ninety five, Hideo Nomo got his 654 00:35:48,800 --> 00:35:50,120 Speaker 15: first major league victory. 655 00:35:51,200 --> 00:35:54,120 Speaker 2: He was a thing, wasn't it. Dennis Leary, who does 656 00:35:54,160 --> 00:35:57,960 Speaker 2: the Lou Garrig joke? Oh no, Like, how did you 657 00:35:58,000 --> 00:35:59,799 Speaker 2: not see it coming? It's got your name written all 658 00:35:59,840 --> 00:36:04,919 Speaker 2: over louke Gerric, Yeah, I think it was Dennis Leary, 659 00:36:05,680 --> 00:36:10,360 Speaker 2: Sir uh Ken Griffey Junior. He was made his debut 660 00:36:10,360 --> 00:36:15,080 Speaker 2: in nineteen eighty seven and uh oh this was the 661 00:36:15,360 --> 00:36:19,680 Speaker 2: anniversary twenty ten. Armando Galla Raga lost his bid for 662 00:36:19,680 --> 00:36:22,920 Speaker 2: a perfect game two ounce in the ninth. Oh no, 663 00:36:23,480 --> 00:36:27,440 Speaker 2: Jim is the worst. Jim Joyce, Oh boy? And I 664 00:36:27,480 --> 00:36:30,840 Speaker 2: think there was a thirty for thirty called the Imperfect Game. 665 00:36:31,800 --> 00:36:34,720 Speaker 2: Great title. Yeah, that one that was a bummer. 666 00:36:35,520 --> 00:36:37,400 Speaker 7: I had some Joyce words for Jim after making that 667 00:36:37,440 --> 00:36:42,120 Speaker 7: big hmm. How anythink he did to that? It's hard 668 00:36:42,160 --> 00:36:43,719 Speaker 7: to ask me, so I didn't show it. 669 00:36:43,760 --> 00:36:48,080 Speaker 2: DoD you had yea minus. No, don you had fifteen 670 00:36:48,160 --> 00:36:51,799 Speaker 2: years to give me a line, fifteen years to get 671 00:36:51,800 --> 00:36:52,680 Speaker 2: ready for that moment. 672 00:36:53,640 --> 00:36:55,799 Speaker 7: Joyce words for Jim. Sticking with that one, this. 673 00:36:55,880 --> 00:36:59,319 Speaker 2: Is like choice words. Yeah, no, Jim Joyce and that 674 00:36:59,400 --> 00:37:02,520 Speaker 2: rhymes that thing that rhyme Joyce and choice. How would 675 00:37:02,560 --> 00:37:04,920 Speaker 2: you rate yourself today? What kind of grade would you 676 00:37:04,960 --> 00:37:09,120 Speaker 2: give you? Well? Markley and Greg sank those are good guests. 677 00:37:09,160 --> 00:37:10,920 Speaker 2: The only reason to get in the yes, Yes, I 678 00:37:10,960 --> 00:37:12,480 Speaker 2: think I would say it's just c. 679 00:37:12,719 --> 00:37:14,479 Speaker 8: And Barkley loves you so that he kind of books 680 00:37:14,520 --> 00:37:16,800 Speaker 8: himself book a quick call and he says yes. 681 00:37:16,719 --> 00:37:19,600 Speaker 2: And Sankie, you know, loves the show, so maybe be 682 00:37:19,680 --> 00:37:22,400 Speaker 2: miney to see plus No, I'm gonna give you a 683 00:37:22,400 --> 00:37:26,840 Speaker 2: ce greater Yes I am, Yes, I am plus yeah 684 00:37:26,880 --> 00:37:27,560 Speaker 2: and no no. 685 00:37:27,600 --> 00:37:30,399 Speaker 7: C plus dress up to sea a little bit. 686 00:37:31,600 --> 00:37:33,840 Speaker 2: But you know, just so people know, it's not just 687 00:37:33,920 --> 00:37:36,520 Speaker 2: the guest you book, it's everything else that you provide. 688 00:37:36,560 --> 00:37:38,320 Speaker 8: And it's only Monday, so we can only hopefully go 689 00:37:38,400 --> 00:37:40,040 Speaker 8: up from here. We've got another four days before the 690 00:37:40,080 --> 00:37:43,160 Speaker 8: next weekend to improve. You want to look at that one? 691 00:37:44,040 --> 00:37:45,160 Speaker 8: Popped it back to you in the studio. 692 00:37:45,320 --> 00:37:49,400 Speaker 2: Okay, thank you, tod Well. Derek Henry's on the show tomorrow. 693 00:37:49,760 --> 00:37:52,719 Speaker 2: This is a good relationship with the show. The show 694 00:37:52,800 --> 00:37:55,160 Speaker 2: kind of books itself. Really good to think about it. 695 00:37:56,400 --> 00:37:57,359 Speaker 2: Do I need you? 696 00:37:57,480 --> 00:38:00,120 Speaker 7: I don't think so what do I do here? I've 697 00:38:00,120 --> 00:38:02,160 Speaker 7: read a sports entertise, what I try to crack a couple? 698 00:38:02,320 --> 00:38:05,239 Speaker 2: But I like you for all the other things. It's 699 00:38:05,239 --> 00:38:07,680 Speaker 2: not just the booking. It's like, you know, everything else 700 00:38:07,719 --> 00:38:08,680 Speaker 2: that you provide. 701 00:38:08,360 --> 00:38:08,799 Speaker 9: With the show. 702 00:38:08,880 --> 00:38:10,560 Speaker 7: That's kind of your to say yes for. 703 00:38:10,560 --> 00:38:14,240 Speaker 2: A day where you were the Sea C minus tomorrow. 704 00:38:14,239 --> 00:38:15,120 Speaker 2: It's only Monday. 705 00:38:15,160 --> 00:38:16,480 Speaker 7: I'm just getting stony. 706 00:38:17,680 --> 00:38:17,759 Speaker 3: Uh. 707 00:38:18,040 --> 00:38:22,120 Speaker 2: Got to see my grandson on Sunday. Yeah, little guy, 708 00:38:22,719 --> 00:38:25,719 Speaker 2: little guy. Yeah. You know when they're only a couple 709 00:38:25,719 --> 00:38:27,680 Speaker 2: of days old and they're trying to open their eyes, 710 00:38:28,160 --> 00:38:30,440 Speaker 2: you know. I mean I've had that feeling before, and 711 00:38:30,520 --> 00:38:31,840 Speaker 2: hold their head. I know they're. 712 00:38:34,160 --> 00:38:35,440 Speaker 9: Yeah, one of the cheeks. 713 00:38:35,760 --> 00:38:36,280 Speaker 2: Oh. 714 00:38:36,880 --> 00:38:37,440 Speaker 4: It was great. 715 00:38:37,600 --> 00:38:40,160 Speaker 2: It was great. But you know, my son, I already 716 00:38:40,320 --> 00:38:42,319 Speaker 2: know it all when it comes to child rearing. You know, 717 00:38:42,600 --> 00:38:45,760 Speaker 2: he's been a parent for a little over two years 718 00:38:45,760 --> 00:38:47,600 Speaker 2: and he's telling my wife and you guys got a 719 00:38:47,600 --> 00:38:51,279 Speaker 2: hold hold his head. I'm like, Jack, we we've done 720 00:38:51,320 --> 00:38:54,680 Speaker 2: this before. You turned out. Okay, right, I. 721 00:38:54,719 --> 00:38:56,239 Speaker 7: Thought, how you do the diaper? What are you doing? 722 00:38:56,560 --> 00:38:56,799 Speaker 3: Yes? 723 00:38:57,920 --> 00:38:59,400 Speaker 16: How hard did you cry? 724 00:38:59,560 --> 00:39:04,000 Speaker 2: I didn't cry yesterday. I did not When when he 725 00:39:04,080 --> 00:39:06,400 Speaker 2: sent me the picture, I was a mess. 726 00:39:06,719 --> 00:39:09,359 Speaker 16: It was amazing being there when your first grandchild was born. 727 00:39:09,440 --> 00:39:11,080 Speaker 16: We were all sitting at dinner in Arizona. 728 00:39:12,800 --> 00:39:16,040 Speaker 2: I went outside. I said, I can't, I can't let 729 00:39:16,080 --> 00:39:18,520 Speaker 2: all these people to table see me bawling. And then 730 00:39:18,560 --> 00:39:22,160 Speaker 2: I go they've all seen me crying. That was great, 731 00:39:22,440 --> 00:39:28,560 Speaker 2: great moment. That's what we learned. I didn't cry yesterday. 732 00:39:28,760 --> 00:39:32,480 Speaker 2: I'm growing up. Rapid Radios, the official walkie talkie of 733 00:39:32,520 --> 00:39:36,479 Speaker 2: the DP Show, works on a nationwide LTE network. Visit 734 00:39:36,560 --> 00:39:39,760 Speaker 2: rapid radios dot com up to sixty percent off free shipping. 735 00:39:40,560 --> 00:39:45,200 Speaker 2: Oh what a day. Have a great day, everybody. Fritzy Seaton, 736 00:39:45,280 --> 00:39:47,520 Speaker 2: Mark Paula, yours truly. We'll talk to you tomorrow