1 00:00:01,320 --> 00:00:21,720 Speaker 1: The volume. What is going on? Everybody just finished watching? 2 00:00:22,600 --> 00:00:28,720 Speaker 1: As Chris Collinsworth called it a startling game because I'm 3 00:00:28,760 --> 00:00:32,360 Speaker 1: with them. Listen, you have that many injuries. We'll dive 4 00:00:32,400 --> 00:00:37,760 Speaker 1: into the coaching mismatch McCaffrey, but given how well Beijon 5 00:00:37,840 --> 00:00:40,240 Speaker 1: had played last week, you just thought this was gonna 6 00:00:40,240 --> 00:00:42,920 Speaker 1: be tough. And the forty nine Ers win by ten points, 7 00:00:42,920 --> 00:00:46,200 Speaker 1: twenty to ten. Sunday Night football, they go to five 8 00:00:46,240 --> 00:00:49,360 Speaker 1: and two to hold serve with the Rams, but because 9 00:00:49,400 --> 00:00:52,400 Speaker 1: they've beat them, they are technically in first place. Same 10 00:00:52,440 --> 00:00:54,800 Speaker 1: with even if Seattle wins on Monday Night, the Saverers 11 00:00:54,840 --> 00:00:57,800 Speaker 1: go forty nine Ers. Who's star midtal linebacker was up 12 00:00:57,800 --> 00:01:00,279 Speaker 1: in a box and a cast Bosa who he knows 13 00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:04,120 Speaker 1: where he is nursing an acl Kittles coming back from 14 00:01:04,120 --> 00:01:07,720 Speaker 1: injury with Mac Jones winning his fourth game as the 15 00:01:07,720 --> 00:01:10,600 Speaker 1: forty nine ers starting quarterback in the middle of October. 16 00:01:10,920 --> 00:01:13,040 Speaker 1: What a performance. So the forty nine ers get a 17 00:01:13,080 --> 00:01:18,000 Speaker 1: massive win. We'll dive into that game. Atlanta did Denny 18 00:01:18,040 --> 00:01:20,759 Speaker 1: Green once famously say they are who we thought they were. 19 00:01:20,880 --> 00:01:23,559 Speaker 1: That's very true. The Atlanta Falcons are who we thought 20 00:01:23,600 --> 00:01:26,959 Speaker 1: they were. Some other craziness today. Obviously I go on 21 00:01:27,000 --> 00:01:29,080 Speaker 1: with Colin after the Sunday game, so we talked a 22 00:01:29,160 --> 00:01:32,640 Speaker 1: little bit about the Denver I mean, it's one of 23 00:01:32,640 --> 00:01:35,240 Speaker 1: the most bananas game of all time. Had some times 24 00:01:35,240 --> 00:01:37,200 Speaker 1: to think about that. A couple other things that just 25 00:01:37,240 --> 00:01:41,959 Speaker 1: stood out today, from Shane steike In to Brian Schottenheimer 26 00:01:42,400 --> 00:01:44,959 Speaker 1: to I think we have a couple eras when it 27 00:01:44,959 --> 00:01:47,760 Speaker 1: comes to quarterbacks that we can just kind of just 28 00:01:47,920 --> 00:01:51,240 Speaker 1: unofficially that they ended today. And then a couple things 29 00:01:51,240 --> 00:01:55,400 Speaker 1: with college. Lane Kiffin is kind of the talk of 30 00:01:55,480 --> 00:01:57,760 Speaker 1: the town. Will he go to Florida who fired their 31 00:01:57,760 --> 00:02:01,880 Speaker 1: coach today? James Franklin did a hit on college game day. 32 00:02:02,320 --> 00:02:06,480 Speaker 1: He clearly plans on continue coaching, and I'm sure he 33 00:02:06,520 --> 00:02:09,040 Speaker 1: wants to be in the mix for a job like Florida. 34 00:02:09,120 --> 00:02:11,680 Speaker 1: So we'll talk a little college before we get out 35 00:02:11,680 --> 00:02:16,360 Speaker 1: of here. But obviously we got to start with an 36 00:02:16,440 --> 00:02:21,720 Speaker 1: incredible performance. And you know, in the pros, unlike college, 37 00:02:22,440 --> 00:02:24,640 Speaker 1: so much of it is about the x's and the 38 00:02:24,680 --> 00:02:31,000 Speaker 1: o's because in like just all around the league, most 39 00:02:31,000 --> 00:02:33,760 Speaker 1: teams are pretty beat up. I don't care where you look. 40 00:02:33,800 --> 00:02:37,600 Speaker 1: Everyone's dealing with injuries. Guys are dropping like flies, and 41 00:02:37,680 --> 00:02:41,960 Speaker 1: the overwhelming majority of matchups. The difference in talent is 42 00:02:42,080 --> 00:02:45,840 Speaker 1: not that great, but the coaching mismatch in the NFL, 43 00:02:46,080 --> 00:02:48,880 Speaker 1: and you see it on a weekly basis countless times 44 00:02:48,880 --> 00:02:52,800 Speaker 1: on Sunday, can be so wide and tonight, like, the 45 00:02:52,840 --> 00:02:57,520 Speaker 1: reason Kyle Shanahan and Robert Sala make a combined twenty 46 00:02:57,600 --> 00:03:01,000 Speaker 1: to twenty five million dollars was for that right there. 47 00:03:01,800 --> 00:03:05,440 Speaker 1: Kyle Shanahan now has won four games We're not even 48 00:03:05,480 --> 00:03:10,480 Speaker 1: too Halloween with Mac Jones. He won four games with 49 00:03:10,560 --> 00:03:14,480 Speaker 1: Mac Jones. I stand by this. If you win a 50 00:03:14,520 --> 00:03:18,280 Speaker 1: game as a backup quarterback, you've earned your contract. If 51 00:03:18,320 --> 00:03:21,040 Speaker 1: you've win too, if you win to you could argue 52 00:03:21,040 --> 00:03:24,240 Speaker 1: that you are an underpaid player. What Mac Jones is 53 00:03:24,280 --> 00:03:27,720 Speaker 1: doing is he's proving like I could be a functional starter. 54 00:03:27,760 --> 00:03:30,040 Speaker 1: I mean, he had an interception tonight, wasn't his fault 55 00:03:30,440 --> 00:03:34,840 Speaker 1: bounced off Juwan Jennings hands. But Kyle Shanahan and Robert 56 00:03:34,920 --> 00:03:40,000 Speaker 1: Sala doing this with randos all over the place. It 57 00:03:40,160 --> 00:03:44,360 Speaker 1: just was an incredible accomplishment tonight. Like, listen, I don't 58 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:48,000 Speaker 1: think that Raheem Morris and Zach Robinson by any means, 59 00:03:48,040 --> 00:03:50,720 Speaker 1: and Jeff Olbrick are their equals. But when I just 60 00:03:50,760 --> 00:03:53,760 Speaker 1: based it on the way they were playing, they were 61 00:03:53,840 --> 00:03:56,200 Speaker 1: much healthier, at least in theory they lost some guys 62 00:03:56,280 --> 00:03:58,160 Speaker 1: during the game that the forty nine Ers are going 63 00:03:58,200 --> 00:04:01,920 Speaker 1: to be at a disadvantage and somehow they're just not 64 00:04:02,520 --> 00:04:07,360 Speaker 1: because coaching really matters, leadership really matters, culture really matters. 65 00:04:08,040 --> 00:04:10,160 Speaker 1: And like at the end of the day, the Atlanta 66 00:04:10,200 --> 00:04:13,640 Speaker 1: Falcons have a lot of talented players, but they're not 67 00:04:13,720 --> 00:04:17,240 Speaker 1: winners and it's not necessarily their fault, right, I do 68 00:04:17,320 --> 00:04:21,559 Speaker 1: think under the right players like the Chiefs, the forty 69 00:04:21,640 --> 00:04:25,679 Speaker 1: nine Ers, the Rams, the Lions, all these good teams 70 00:04:25,680 --> 00:04:28,760 Speaker 1: around the NFL. Like a normal year with the Ravens, 71 00:04:28,800 --> 00:04:31,719 Speaker 1: the Bills would love a ton of guys on their roster, 72 00:04:32,320 --> 00:04:34,320 Speaker 1: and if you put them on their roster and that culture, 73 00:04:34,400 --> 00:04:37,239 Speaker 1: they would be winners. But there is just something about 74 00:04:37,279 --> 00:04:40,760 Speaker 1: that franchise and it was on full display tonight with 75 00:04:40,880 --> 00:04:44,840 Speaker 1: Kyle Shanahan coming in with his backup quarterback with backups 76 00:04:44,960 --> 00:04:48,719 Speaker 1: all over his defense and Robert Salah and just going, 77 00:04:48,760 --> 00:04:52,159 Speaker 1: you know what, physically, we are going to kick your ass, 78 00:04:53,040 --> 00:04:56,120 Speaker 1: and that's what they did. They just out toughed them, 79 00:04:56,320 --> 00:04:58,599 Speaker 1: They out physicaled them and they said, you know what, 80 00:04:58,839 --> 00:05:01,880 Speaker 1: our best player tonight, we are going to just completely 81 00:05:01,920 --> 00:05:04,440 Speaker 1: rely on him. And he was fantastic. That's the best 82 00:05:04,480 --> 00:05:07,359 Speaker 1: McCaffrey game in two years. Obviously, he didn't really have 83 00:05:07,440 --> 00:05:10,400 Speaker 1: a season last year and in this season though, he's 84 00:05:10,440 --> 00:05:12,840 Speaker 1: been productive and the forty nine ers have leaned on him, 85 00:05:13,080 --> 00:05:15,440 Speaker 1: you know, to get four wins, especially in the passing game. 86 00:05:15,880 --> 00:05:18,520 Speaker 1: He hadn't had that type night and tonight he was 87 00:05:18,560 --> 00:05:21,400 Speaker 1: simply spectacular. Twenty four carries for one hundred and thirty yards, 88 00:05:21,520 --> 00:05:24,440 Speaker 1: two touchdowns on the ground. He had another seven catches 89 00:05:25,040 --> 00:05:28,240 Speaker 1: in a huge spot on third and long down in 90 00:05:28,279 --> 00:05:31,240 Speaker 1: the red zone where a field goal makes a six 91 00:05:31,279 --> 00:05:35,000 Speaker 1: point game, a touchdown basically ends it. Mac Jones hits him. 92 00:05:35,200 --> 00:05:38,160 Speaker 1: And that's the thing with Christian McCaffrey, is he at 93 00:05:38,200 --> 00:05:41,120 Speaker 1: any moment could just turn into Wes Welker or Julian Edelman. 94 00:05:41,520 --> 00:05:45,239 Speaker 1: He's one of the greatest Swiss Army knifs you'll ever see. 95 00:05:45,240 --> 00:05:48,039 Speaker 1: And does he quite look as fast as he wants 96 00:05:48,120 --> 00:05:50,880 Speaker 1: it in his prime? I don't know. But he was 97 00:05:50,920 --> 00:05:54,920 Speaker 1: excellent and Kyle Shanahan wrote him like secretary tonight and 98 00:05:55,040 --> 00:05:57,560 Speaker 1: they needed to They needed every one of those yards. 99 00:05:57,760 --> 00:06:00,359 Speaker 1: They needed every one of those touches, and he was 100 00:06:00,400 --> 00:06:04,000 Speaker 1: simply spectacular. And the difference tonight is the forty nine 101 00:06:04,080 --> 00:06:08,480 Speaker 1: ers were gonna go. We had twenty four carries, seven catches, 102 00:06:08,560 --> 00:06:10,680 Speaker 1: eight targets, so I mean they tried to get him 103 00:06:10,720 --> 00:06:13,520 Speaker 1: the ball well over thirty times. Yet you look at 104 00:06:13,600 --> 00:06:17,640 Speaker 1: Bijon Robinson, who was also an elite player, I mean, 105 00:06:17,680 --> 00:06:20,960 Speaker 1: pound for pound, one of the most talented players in 106 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:26,919 Speaker 1: the sport. Fourteen carries and six catches, so twenty total touches. 107 00:06:27,320 --> 00:06:31,800 Speaker 1: Meanwhile McCaffrey had over thirty. Like, if I'm Raheem Morris 108 00:06:31,920 --> 00:06:34,719 Speaker 1: and I'm looking at Zach Robinson, how do we not 109 00:06:34,920 --> 00:06:38,240 Speaker 1: match the amount of touches for our best player as 110 00:06:38,279 --> 00:06:41,480 Speaker 1: they do their best player. And there was one time 111 00:06:41,520 --> 00:06:44,240 Speaker 1: the night on a short yardage play where they went 112 00:06:44,279 --> 00:06:47,080 Speaker 1: to Kyle Hugheschek and he got stuffed, and I would 113 00:06:47,120 --> 00:06:50,279 Speaker 1: imagine Kyle Shanahan immediately regretted it because he got too cute. 114 00:06:50,839 --> 00:06:53,280 Speaker 1: And this is the type game like in the NFL, 115 00:06:53,360 --> 00:06:55,880 Speaker 1: that differs a lot from Saturday, Like you play in 116 00:06:55,920 --> 00:06:58,440 Speaker 1: these games, it's like thirteen to ten going into the 117 00:06:58,440 --> 00:07:01,680 Speaker 1: fourth quarter. I mean you're gonna determined by a first 118 00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:04,240 Speaker 1: down here, a field goal there, that this is not 119 00:07:04,440 --> 00:07:07,799 Speaker 1: going back and forth scoring touchdowns on every possession, every 120 00:07:08,800 --> 00:07:13,720 Speaker 1: every decision matters, Every second and five matters, every third 121 00:07:13,760 --> 00:07:15,960 Speaker 1: and one matters. And there was a spot in this 122 00:07:16,040 --> 00:07:19,360 Speaker 1: game fourth and one. There was like little under nine 123 00:07:19,440 --> 00:07:23,440 Speaker 1: minutes to go and b John Robinson wasn't on the field. 124 00:07:24,160 --> 00:07:27,120 Speaker 1: It was like and the forty nine ers like back 125 00:07:27,200 --> 00:07:30,800 Speaker 1: up slot corner Lucas made a great play on Drake London, 126 00:07:30,840 --> 00:07:34,680 Speaker 1: who's also a really good player, but like, how could you, like, 127 00:07:34,760 --> 00:07:38,000 Speaker 1: what what are you doing? And this is what we 128 00:07:38,040 --> 00:07:40,520 Speaker 1: talked about with coaching. The forty nine ers didn't overthink tonight. 129 00:07:41,080 --> 00:07:44,080 Speaker 1: They said, get the ball to McCaffrey and let's play defense. 130 00:07:44,440 --> 00:07:46,720 Speaker 1: We're gonna tackle. Well, that was gonna be a huge 131 00:07:46,720 --> 00:07:49,360 Speaker 1: part of clearly their game plan. We're gonna tackle and 132 00:07:49,400 --> 00:07:52,800 Speaker 1: play really physical and their defensive line was flying around 133 00:07:52,840 --> 00:07:56,480 Speaker 1: Bryce Huff. You know who they got from the Jets? Who? 134 00:07:56,520 --> 00:07:59,000 Speaker 1: I guess, Well, the Eagles got from the Jets, who 135 00:07:59,040 --> 00:08:01,560 Speaker 1: obviously Robert Solid really liked. They had eleven sacks two 136 00:08:01,640 --> 00:08:03,880 Speaker 1: years ago. You know, the forty nine ers didn't have 137 00:08:03,960 --> 00:08:06,520 Speaker 1: to give up much to get them, and I don't 138 00:08:06,560 --> 00:08:09,160 Speaker 1: know where they would be without that acquisition. Because Bosa 139 00:08:09,200 --> 00:08:12,520 Speaker 1: is hurt, they don't have much edge pressure. And obviously 140 00:08:12,680 --> 00:08:16,080 Speaker 1: Tatum Bethom, the Florida State linebacker who filled in for 141 00:08:16,120 --> 00:08:19,800 Speaker 1: Fred Warner to night. When you talk about culture and 142 00:08:19,880 --> 00:08:22,560 Speaker 1: when you talk about a standard, you know, Tomlin loves 143 00:08:22,560 --> 00:08:25,800 Speaker 1: saying this standard is the standard. And listen, I think 144 00:08:25,840 --> 00:08:28,440 Speaker 1: people make fun of them because their standard has diminished. 145 00:08:28,880 --> 00:08:30,880 Speaker 1: But I think part of that doesn't even just mean 146 00:08:31,640 --> 00:08:34,480 Speaker 1: like winning is the only thing around here. It's like, 147 00:08:34,559 --> 00:08:37,600 Speaker 1: this is the way we play right, win or loose. 148 00:08:37,840 --> 00:08:40,480 Speaker 1: Because it's the NFL. You could have a great season 149 00:08:40,520 --> 00:08:43,240 Speaker 1: and lose six times, right and win eleven games. The 150 00:08:43,320 --> 00:08:44,960 Speaker 1: Chiefs two years ago went to the Super Bowl. They 151 00:08:45,000 --> 00:08:47,880 Speaker 1: went eleven and six. But this is the standard for 152 00:08:48,040 --> 00:08:50,000 Speaker 1: if you're going to be a starter on this team. 153 00:08:50,440 --> 00:08:53,480 Speaker 1: This is the bare minimum is to play your ass 154 00:08:53,480 --> 00:08:56,200 Speaker 1: off and hit fucking people hard. And you saw the 155 00:08:56,200 --> 00:09:00,440 Speaker 1: forty nine ers throw in random guys, young players. They 156 00:09:00,520 --> 00:09:02,640 Speaker 1: are a team and their culture has started. And this 157 00:09:02,679 --> 00:09:05,120 Speaker 1: is where I give Kyle a lot of credit. We 158 00:09:05,160 --> 00:09:09,160 Speaker 1: can disagree with his mindset when it comes to offensive 159 00:09:09,160 --> 00:09:13,280 Speaker 1: lineman not big undrafting them, right, which, listen, who am 160 00:09:13,320 --> 00:09:15,400 Speaker 1: I to tell him how to build a football team. 161 00:09:16,120 --> 00:09:17,680 Speaker 1: I would like him to pivot a little bit on 162 00:09:17,720 --> 00:09:20,560 Speaker 1: that stance. But one thing I've always appreciated for an 163 00:09:20,600 --> 00:09:25,200 Speaker 1: offensive guy, his value of defensive players is extremely high. 164 00:09:25,600 --> 00:09:28,640 Speaker 1: He not only values them highly, the type guys they 165 00:09:28,760 --> 00:09:33,800 Speaker 1: like and listen, obviously his general manager is a legendary badass. 166 00:09:34,160 --> 00:09:36,840 Speaker 1: I mean, one of the hardest hitters in the history 167 00:09:36,840 --> 00:09:39,080 Speaker 1: of the league, John Lynch. They got a pretty good 168 00:09:39,160 --> 00:09:41,960 Speaker 1: and you go back to Mike Shanahan. Like Mike Shanahan 169 00:09:42,000 --> 00:09:45,040 Speaker 1: and his heyday in Denver had some very physical defenses. 170 00:09:45,600 --> 00:09:48,880 Speaker 1: They were an old school, hard hitting team. They value 171 00:09:48,920 --> 00:09:52,120 Speaker 1: those type guys and when you build teams full of 172 00:09:52,640 --> 00:09:56,760 Speaker 1: people with high competitive character, physicality is something that they 173 00:09:57,600 --> 00:10:00,880 Speaker 1: enjoy doing. You know, they got rid of Who last year, 174 00:10:01,720 --> 00:10:05,640 Speaker 1: which I understood, right, awesome player. You watch him on Denver. 175 00:10:05,800 --> 00:10:08,160 Speaker 1: He is a he looks like an All Pro. But 176 00:10:08,240 --> 00:10:11,480 Speaker 1: they had replacements and you saw Tonight Mustafa, who is 177 00:10:11,559 --> 00:10:16,280 Speaker 1: battling back from a knee injury. They hit people so hard, 178 00:10:16,600 --> 00:10:19,440 Speaker 1: their linebackers, their safeties, the two d linemen that they 179 00:10:19,520 --> 00:10:24,240 Speaker 1: drafted really high Mikel Williams and Alfred Collins. Their corners 180 00:10:24,280 --> 00:10:27,200 Speaker 1: all hit and there is a standard on defense. And 181 00:10:27,240 --> 00:10:30,000 Speaker 1: this you know, you bring Robert Sala, who they liked 182 00:10:30,000 --> 00:10:33,000 Speaker 1: the most out of all the guys since Demiko Ryans, Right, 183 00:10:33,280 --> 00:10:35,760 Speaker 1: we saw with Steve Wilkes didn't fit in. We saw 184 00:10:35,800 --> 00:10:38,360 Speaker 1: with the dude last year didn't fit in. There's something 185 00:10:38,400 --> 00:10:41,120 Speaker 1: about the messaging with Sala, but the type of guys 186 00:10:41,160 --> 00:10:44,280 Speaker 1: haven't changed now. There is no replacing Fred Warner over 187 00:10:44,280 --> 00:10:45,760 Speaker 1: the course of the season. He's one of the best 188 00:10:45,760 --> 00:10:48,400 Speaker 1: players in the league. But in a situation like tonight, 189 00:10:48,520 --> 00:10:51,839 Speaker 1: you get him there, he's there on a scooter. They 190 00:10:51,840 --> 00:10:53,720 Speaker 1: were flying around with their hair on fire and they 191 00:10:53,720 --> 00:10:56,679 Speaker 1: were crushing people. How many times to night on outside 192 00:10:56,760 --> 00:10:59,920 Speaker 1: zone runs did their linebackers fill and they had guys 193 00:11:00,040 --> 00:11:02,520 Speaker 1: flying around from every angle, And that's what I thought 194 00:11:02,600 --> 00:11:04,280 Speaker 1: they were going to be able to replace. It's why 195 00:11:04,280 --> 00:11:06,439 Speaker 1: I was like, listen, I don't like picking against the 196 00:11:06,480 --> 00:11:09,560 Speaker 1: Niners in a primetime game. Kyle's proven this, But you 197 00:11:09,720 --> 00:11:11,920 Speaker 1: just miss enough bodies and you get Bejon Robinson. You 198 00:11:11,960 --> 00:11:13,679 Speaker 1: give them the ball thirty five times, gonna have two 199 00:11:13,720 --> 00:11:15,840 Speaker 1: hundred yards. Well, it turns out they didn't give the 200 00:11:15,840 --> 00:11:18,160 Speaker 1: ball thirty five times, and even when they did, their 201 00:11:18,160 --> 00:11:20,680 Speaker 1: linebackers were filling in the whole. Honestly, the only time 202 00:11:20,960 --> 00:11:22,839 Speaker 1: he kind of got in space were some of those 203 00:11:22,960 --> 00:11:26,120 Speaker 1: like you know plays where they kind of motioned him 204 00:11:26,120 --> 00:11:28,160 Speaker 1: out and threw him the ball like almost like a 205 00:11:28,160 --> 00:11:30,840 Speaker 1: wheel route, and he scored a touchdown on it. But 206 00:11:31,040 --> 00:11:33,760 Speaker 1: like as a runner, what was his long run of 207 00:11:33,800 --> 00:11:38,559 Speaker 1: the night? It was long run was eight yards. If 208 00:11:38,559 --> 00:11:42,480 Speaker 1: you would have told me that Bjon Robinson's long of 209 00:11:42,600 --> 00:11:45,160 Speaker 1: running the ball would be eight yards, I wouldn't have 210 00:11:45,200 --> 00:11:48,920 Speaker 1: believed you. And that's a testament to you know, listen, 211 00:11:49,000 --> 00:11:51,640 Speaker 1: Robert sala is gonna get a lot of credit, but 212 00:11:51,920 --> 00:11:55,080 Speaker 1: Fred Warner is a constant that has been around this team. 213 00:11:55,120 --> 00:11:57,480 Speaker 1: Obviously he's injured right now, but just in terms of 214 00:11:57,480 --> 00:12:00,520 Speaker 1: his messaging and what he means as a vocal leader, 215 00:12:00,960 --> 00:12:03,160 Speaker 1: like you talk about a guy that sets the standard, 216 00:12:03,160 --> 00:12:05,160 Speaker 1: and coaches have been saying this since the beginning of 217 00:12:05,200 --> 00:12:09,120 Speaker 1: the time. My message only goes so far. I need 218 00:12:09,160 --> 00:12:13,240 Speaker 1: the players. Like the reason coaches love players that act 219 00:12:13,280 --> 00:12:16,679 Speaker 1: like coaches on the field is because they regurgitate their 220 00:12:16,720 --> 00:12:21,880 Speaker 1: message and it goes like to you know, in any situation, right, 221 00:12:22,440 --> 00:12:24,360 Speaker 1: you work hard for the guy next to you in 222 00:12:24,400 --> 00:12:27,440 Speaker 1: the trenches, whether it's one of our you know, whatever 223 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:31,199 Speaker 1: industry you're in, whether you're in the military, whether you're 224 00:12:31,240 --> 00:12:35,200 Speaker 1: an athlete. Whoever is the boss, is the general, is 225 00:12:35,280 --> 00:12:38,600 Speaker 1: the coach. Even if you respect them to the nth 226 00:12:38,679 --> 00:12:43,760 Speaker 1: degree and you know you revere their messaging, there is 227 00:12:43,800 --> 00:12:46,720 Speaker 1: something special about being hand in hand with the guy 228 00:12:46,760 --> 00:12:49,240 Speaker 1: that you're actually doing it with. And I think you 229 00:12:49,280 --> 00:12:52,400 Speaker 1: saw that tonight with the forty nine ers. There guys 230 00:12:52,760 --> 00:12:56,640 Speaker 1: somehow bonded together obviously Sola's messaging, you know, kind of 231 00:12:56,960 --> 00:12:59,800 Speaker 1: getting together for Fred Warner. And what did Kyle Shanahan 232 00:13:00,760 --> 00:13:02,960 Speaker 1: They mentioned it tonight on the broadcast. I had read 233 00:13:03,000 --> 00:13:06,240 Speaker 1: about it this year or I mean this week, is 234 00:13:06,280 --> 00:13:11,320 Speaker 1: that they had taken Fred Warner's rookie snaps and showed 235 00:13:11,320 --> 00:13:12,959 Speaker 1: it to some of the young guys on the team. 236 00:13:13,480 --> 00:13:15,960 Speaker 1: Like this guy didn't just start out being an All Pro, 237 00:13:16,360 --> 00:13:18,400 Speaker 1: He didn't just start out being a Hall of Fame guy. 238 00:13:18,559 --> 00:13:21,800 Speaker 1: He was once an unproven rookie. Then no one really 239 00:13:21,880 --> 00:13:25,120 Speaker 1: knew who he was, that he was this hybrid positionless 240 00:13:25,160 --> 00:13:28,319 Speaker 1: player coming out of BYU. Was he gonna be a safety. 241 00:13:28,440 --> 00:13:31,439 Speaker 1: Was he gonna be a linebacker? Inside? Outside? Where was 242 00:13:31,480 --> 00:13:34,480 Speaker 1: he gonna play? And there was a culture in a 243 00:13:34,520 --> 00:13:36,840 Speaker 1: mindset of listen, we're gonna figure it out, or we're 244 00:13:36,880 --> 00:13:38,719 Speaker 1: gonna figure it out, going one hundred miles an hour 245 00:13:38,760 --> 00:13:41,400 Speaker 1: and fucking people up. And that's what the forty nine 246 00:13:41,520 --> 00:13:43,400 Speaker 1: ers have done for a long period of time on 247 00:13:43,480 --> 00:13:46,120 Speaker 1: defense and why they've won a lot of games because 248 00:13:46,960 --> 00:13:49,280 Speaker 1: when they're really humming, they have elite players doing that. 249 00:13:49,679 --> 00:13:51,560 Speaker 1: But they have had a lot of injuries over the 250 00:13:51,600 --> 00:13:54,439 Speaker 1: course of seven eight years under Kyle Shanahan. It's one 251 00:13:54,440 --> 00:13:57,040 Speaker 1: of the craziest eras I've ever seen because it's been 252 00:13:57,080 --> 00:13:59,920 Speaker 1: really successful. Yet the amount of people that go into 253 00:13:59,960 --> 00:14:04,400 Speaker 1: the Blue Tent and have their careers altered is borderline unprecedented. 254 00:14:04,520 --> 00:14:07,240 Speaker 1: It never stops even a night they lost the center, 255 00:14:07,360 --> 00:14:11,280 Speaker 1: middle of the game, hamstring out rights, Rinardo Green starting 256 00:14:11,280 --> 00:14:14,560 Speaker 1: corner out. Like they play a game, they will lose 257 00:14:14,679 --> 00:14:17,880 Speaker 1: multiple starters in that game. But the standard of their 258 00:14:17,880 --> 00:14:21,720 Speaker 1: physicality and when Kyle's on from a play calling standpoint, 259 00:14:21,800 --> 00:14:24,800 Speaker 1: let's face it, he is a much better play caller 260 00:14:25,280 --> 00:14:30,440 Speaker 1: and he became like, you know, one of the I 261 00:14:30,480 --> 00:14:33,040 Speaker 1: would say top guys in the league over the course 262 00:14:33,080 --> 00:14:36,920 Speaker 1: of his career as someone that called runs and his 263 00:14:37,000 --> 00:14:42,080 Speaker 1: offense hums. When the running game is working, they struggle 264 00:14:42,320 --> 00:14:44,880 Speaker 1: as an offense, whether it's Purty, whether it's Jimmy g 265 00:14:45,040 --> 00:14:48,520 Speaker 1: whether it's Mac Jones, whoever's playing quarterback for him, when 266 00:14:48,560 --> 00:14:51,440 Speaker 1: they become a pass heavy offense. What you saw to 267 00:14:51,480 --> 00:14:53,960 Speaker 1: the Atlanta Falcons to night, how many attempts do they have? 268 00:14:54,280 --> 00:14:57,800 Speaker 1: Thirty eight? Michael Pennix was twenty one of thirty eight, 269 00:14:58,200 --> 00:15:02,040 Speaker 1: So I mean, what's that fifty five per fifty four percent? 270 00:15:02,120 --> 00:15:04,280 Speaker 1: Not great? Kyle Shannan does not want to play like 271 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:08,080 Speaker 1: that tonight. Mac Jones seventeen of twenty six, so they 272 00:15:08,120 --> 00:15:12,200 Speaker 1: had they had seventeen or they had twenty six pass 273 00:15:12,240 --> 00:15:17,160 Speaker 1: attempts and thirty nine rushers. Now five of those you 274 00:15:17,200 --> 00:15:19,400 Speaker 1: know were Mac. I guess one of those was a 275 00:15:19,400 --> 00:15:22,400 Speaker 1: true run. Some of those were scrambles. So let's say 276 00:15:22,400 --> 00:15:27,840 Speaker 1: between McCaffrey and Brian Robinson they had thirty four carries 277 00:15:28,480 --> 00:15:34,080 Speaker 1: they had and used check almost ten more rushing attempts 278 00:15:34,080 --> 00:15:37,040 Speaker 1: than pass attempts. That's how he wants to play, and 279 00:15:37,120 --> 00:15:42,440 Speaker 1: when his guys historically have interviewed with other franchises about listen, 280 00:15:42,440 --> 00:15:44,400 Speaker 1: I'm gonna be the head coach. These are my philosophies. 281 00:15:44,600 --> 00:15:47,960 Speaker 1: This is my offensive philosophy. They want to have more 282 00:15:48,040 --> 00:15:52,640 Speaker 1: rush attempts than pass attempts. It makes it easier on 283 00:15:52,720 --> 00:15:55,280 Speaker 1: the quarterback. It's why when we talk about this being 284 00:15:55,280 --> 00:16:00,840 Speaker 1: a quarterback friendly offense, it's that because we're gonna lean 285 00:16:00,880 --> 00:16:03,240 Speaker 1: on a running back, we're not gonna lean on you. 286 00:16:03,360 --> 00:16:07,200 Speaker 1: And what happens when you are being successful rushing the football, 287 00:16:07,840 --> 00:16:10,600 Speaker 1: you're not in second and nine. You're not in third 288 00:16:10,600 --> 00:16:13,440 Speaker 1: and twelve. Because even if you have Tyreek Hill and 289 00:16:13,480 --> 00:16:16,400 Speaker 1: Travis Kelcey in their prime or Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, 290 00:16:17,360 --> 00:16:20,480 Speaker 1: third nine and third and twelve's are really really difficult. 291 00:16:20,920 --> 00:16:25,640 Speaker 1: They put you in a you know, in a you 292 00:16:25,760 --> 00:16:30,080 Speaker 1: just had a disadvantage. And tonight they were very, very successful, 293 00:16:30,280 --> 00:16:32,600 Speaker 1: you know, on early downs, and at one point in 294 00:16:32,600 --> 00:16:36,000 Speaker 1: time I looked they were excellent on third down. Tonight 295 00:16:36,040 --> 00:16:38,560 Speaker 1: they were nine to fifteen on third down, Like that's 296 00:16:38,680 --> 00:16:41,520 Speaker 1: really really good. At one point in time when Denver 297 00:16:41,560 --> 00:16:44,720 Speaker 1: didn't have a point, they were well under thirty percent 298 00:16:44,960 --> 00:16:47,680 Speaker 1: on third downs. And that's over the course I saw 299 00:16:47,880 --> 00:16:52,240 Speaker 1: three three weeks, they were the worst third down offense 300 00:16:52,600 --> 00:16:55,960 Speaker 1: in the NFL. And if you're doing that, your offense 301 00:16:56,000 --> 00:16:58,760 Speaker 1: is gonna suck. If you're successful on third down, your 302 00:16:58,800 --> 00:17:00,600 Speaker 1: offense is gonna be good because who who also does 303 00:17:00,600 --> 00:17:03,400 Speaker 1: that help? That helps your defense, keeps them off the field, 304 00:17:03,680 --> 00:17:05,879 Speaker 1: lets them rest, lets them be fresher when they do 305 00:17:06,000 --> 00:17:08,200 Speaker 1: come in harder for the other offense to get into 306 00:17:08,240 --> 00:17:11,879 Speaker 1: a rhythm. And that that was a coaching clinic tonight 307 00:17:12,320 --> 00:17:17,560 Speaker 1: by Shanahan, by Sala, by John Lynch. The type players 308 00:17:17,600 --> 00:17:20,000 Speaker 1: they bring in, because we talked a lot about this 309 00:17:20,040 --> 00:17:24,280 Speaker 1: with the Miami Dolphins. Everyone shitting on Tua over the 310 00:17:24,320 --> 00:17:25,960 Speaker 1: course of the last couple of weeks. Obviously he's not 311 00:17:26,000 --> 00:17:30,040 Speaker 1: playing well, but for his comments about the players only meeting, like, 312 00:17:30,320 --> 00:17:34,199 Speaker 1: you create a culture by the people, you know. We 313 00:17:34,320 --> 00:17:37,160 Speaker 1: hear this a lot about different cultures with different companies. 314 00:17:37,880 --> 00:17:40,760 Speaker 1: The culture is not the building, right It's like the 315 00:17:40,800 --> 00:17:45,640 Speaker 1: Apples building or Amazon's headquarters or you name it. It's 316 00:17:45,640 --> 00:17:49,040 Speaker 1: the people in those buildings, right, Like the culture with 317 00:17:49,080 --> 00:17:53,000 Speaker 1: San Francisco has been created by Kyle Shanahan and John Lynch. 318 00:17:53,680 --> 00:17:56,760 Speaker 1: It is not on Brock Purdy or Fred Warner to 319 00:17:56,880 --> 00:18:00,600 Speaker 1: discipline everybody. Obviously, if you're a great leader, you help 320 00:18:01,040 --> 00:18:05,159 Speaker 1: and you are additive to the room and to the 321 00:18:05,240 --> 00:18:09,560 Speaker 1: message and to like the plight of a given season, 322 00:18:09,760 --> 00:18:12,879 Speaker 1: of the success or failure. But it all starts with 323 00:18:12,960 --> 00:18:14,320 Speaker 1: the guy at the top of the food chain, and 324 00:18:14,320 --> 00:18:17,199 Speaker 1: in football, it's the coach and obviously the GM and 325 00:18:17,200 --> 00:18:19,679 Speaker 1: the personnel people of bringing in the right type guys. 326 00:18:20,160 --> 00:18:22,480 Speaker 1: And one thing the forty nine ers have done consistently 327 00:18:22,960 --> 00:18:25,560 Speaker 1: is get the right type guys. And I think at 328 00:18:25,560 --> 00:18:27,800 Speaker 1: the end of the day, they they've always leaned to 329 00:18:27,800 --> 00:18:32,560 Speaker 1: the side of being physical because it's hard to not 330 00:18:32,680 --> 00:18:36,560 Speaker 1: love football and be a physical player. You cannot love 331 00:18:36,600 --> 00:18:41,280 Speaker 1: football and be a talented player and be a guy 332 00:18:41,320 --> 00:18:43,480 Speaker 1: that's playing in the NFL and have a good career. 333 00:18:44,080 --> 00:18:46,679 Speaker 1: But it is hard to be a football junkie and 334 00:18:46,720 --> 00:18:49,240 Speaker 1: be the type guy that every GM talks about around 335 00:18:49,320 --> 00:18:52,359 Speaker 1: the combine of the type players they're looking for and 336 00:18:52,440 --> 00:18:54,239 Speaker 1: being a guy that has to buckle up his chin 337 00:18:54,320 --> 00:18:57,600 Speaker 1: strap because he's looking to crack skulls every single play, 338 00:18:57,680 --> 00:19:00,399 Speaker 1: because that's who wants to do that. You got to 339 00:19:00,520 --> 00:19:03,800 Speaker 1: really be into it, and the forty nine ers have 340 00:19:03,840 --> 00:19:07,840 Speaker 1: a lot of guys who are just physicality is really 341 00:19:07,840 --> 00:19:09,879 Speaker 1: what they hang their hat on. And tonight was an 342 00:19:09,920 --> 00:19:13,800 Speaker 1: absolute clinic. And listen, one thing I can't get around 343 00:19:13,920 --> 00:19:16,200 Speaker 1: is somehow the forty nine ers, with all their injuries, 344 00:19:17,240 --> 00:19:19,040 Speaker 1: are five and two right there with the Rams, and 345 00:19:19,080 --> 00:19:22,960 Speaker 1: if Seattle wins tomorrow, they're five and two. And this division, honestly, 346 00:19:23,560 --> 00:19:26,919 Speaker 1: the Arizona Cardinals are not gonna end up winning that 347 00:19:27,000 --> 00:19:30,440 Speaker 1: many games. They've actually been pretty competitive. They're gonna be 348 00:19:30,440 --> 00:19:32,720 Speaker 1: one of those teams as five wins and they could 349 00:19:32,720 --> 00:19:36,200 Speaker 1: have easily won like eleven games. But the NFC West 350 00:19:36,240 --> 00:19:38,439 Speaker 1: is shaping up to be really, really good. It's a 351 00:19:38,480 --> 00:19:42,960 Speaker 1: well coached league. It's a very physical division. You know, 352 00:19:43,040 --> 00:19:47,600 Speaker 1: the Rams their front bunch of badasses. McVeigh elite coach. 353 00:19:48,200 --> 00:19:51,240 Speaker 1: Mike McDonald I think one of the best defensive coaches 354 00:19:51,240 --> 00:19:53,560 Speaker 1: in the NFL. I've been saying this forever. If he 355 00:19:53,640 --> 00:19:56,439 Speaker 1: was an offensive play caller, he would be thought of 356 00:19:57,000 --> 00:20:01,399 Speaker 1: extremely highly. Think about Mike McDonald compared to Morris. Like, listen, 357 00:20:02,480 --> 00:20:05,480 Speaker 1: every one of the Shanahan guys doesn't like they love 358 00:20:05,560 --> 00:20:08,080 Speaker 1: Raheem Morris. I've never met him, but I've never heard 359 00:20:08,080 --> 00:20:10,919 Speaker 1: a bad word about him. People love the guy you 360 00:20:10,920 --> 00:20:12,639 Speaker 1: would love to have him on your staff as a 361 00:20:12,680 --> 00:20:15,239 Speaker 1: defensive coordinator. Does feel like he's a little over his 362 00:20:15,240 --> 00:20:17,480 Speaker 1: head as the head coach. Even at the end of 363 00:20:17,480 --> 00:20:19,880 Speaker 1: the game when it looked like Pennix his knees heard, 364 00:20:19,920 --> 00:20:23,840 Speaker 1: He's kind of limping around. He like Cousins is right 365 00:20:23,880 --> 00:20:25,680 Speaker 1: next to him. He doesn't quite know what to do, 366 00:20:26,440 --> 00:20:28,320 Speaker 1: and it was just kind of bizarre. And it just 367 00:20:28,359 --> 00:20:31,800 Speaker 1: feels like he never is that confident. And listen, when 368 00:20:31,840 --> 00:20:33,639 Speaker 1: you are in his shoes, you're gonna be a CEO 369 00:20:33,720 --> 00:20:37,879 Speaker 1: head coach. Whoever you hires your offensive coordinator, you're gonna 370 00:20:37,880 --> 00:20:41,399 Speaker 1: be pretty beholden to their skills, it working or not. 371 00:20:42,119 --> 00:20:45,080 Speaker 1: And Zach Robinson, like every time that I think, oh 372 00:20:45,280 --> 00:20:47,480 Speaker 1: he finally got it last week, I was like, really impressive, 373 00:20:47,720 --> 00:20:49,359 Speaker 1: and then you watch tonight You're like, what the fuck's 374 00:20:49,400 --> 00:20:53,119 Speaker 1: going on? What was happening here? Where is b Jon Robinson? 375 00:20:53,520 --> 00:20:55,200 Speaker 1: How are you not giving him the ball? Like every 376 00:20:55,280 --> 00:20:58,840 Speaker 1: single play I've even watching, I mean, the forty nine 377 00:20:58,920 --> 00:21:02,680 Speaker 1: ers have like DeMarcus Robinson dropping balls in the bread 378 00:21:02,720 --> 00:21:06,000 Speaker 1: basket that should be easy, like forty yard completions, but 379 00:21:06,040 --> 00:21:07,840 Speaker 1: they shouldn't even have to throw it. To him. But 380 00:21:07,880 --> 00:21:10,480 Speaker 1: the reason they do is Ricky Piersoll's knees messed up. 381 00:21:10,800 --> 00:21:14,080 Speaker 1: Juwan Jennings drops every other ball that gets thrown at him. 382 00:21:14,359 --> 00:21:17,480 Speaker 1: You got Brandon Aiyuk whose leg got ripped off last season. 383 00:21:17,520 --> 00:21:19,600 Speaker 1: I mean, their injuries left and right, so they're depending 384 00:21:19,600 --> 00:21:22,040 Speaker 1: on this guy. It can't even catch. Meanwhile, you look 385 00:21:22,040 --> 00:21:25,840 Speaker 1: at the Falcons, You're like, Drake London's a badass. Kyle Pitts, 386 00:21:26,119 --> 00:21:28,760 Speaker 1: we could argue that clearly shouldn't have been drafted as 387 00:21:28,800 --> 00:21:31,120 Speaker 1: high as he was, but he's definitely really talented. I'll 388 00:21:31,119 --> 00:21:33,320 Speaker 1: promise you this, when Kyle Pitts ends up on another 389 00:21:33,359 --> 00:21:36,639 Speaker 1: team next year or in some time in the future, 390 00:21:36,880 --> 00:21:39,400 Speaker 1: he will have a very productive season. But you're watching 391 00:21:39,440 --> 00:21:41,720 Speaker 1: him on Land and like this, this isn't working. You 392 00:21:41,840 --> 00:21:43,600 Speaker 1: got Bijeon, who, pound for pound, is one of the 393 00:21:43,640 --> 00:21:47,080 Speaker 1: most talented players in the NFL. Moody comes back, He's 394 00:21:47,119 --> 00:21:49,280 Speaker 1: flying around, he's getting open all over the place, and 395 00:21:49,320 --> 00:21:55,000 Speaker 1: they score ten points. Now, Mi guy, Pennis, I don't 396 00:21:55,040 --> 00:21:58,199 Speaker 1: know sums off. I can't quite put my finger on it. 397 00:21:59,320 --> 00:22:03,240 Speaker 1: Collinsworth was showing tonight that how he doesn't really step 398 00:22:03,280 --> 00:22:06,480 Speaker 1: into the ball. I've always wondered this because Pennix really 399 00:22:06,520 --> 00:22:08,560 Speaker 1: good athlete, right if him and he I think he 400 00:22:08,640 --> 00:22:10,240 Speaker 1: ran at the combine like a four or five two. 401 00:22:10,560 --> 00:22:12,879 Speaker 1: If he just race Mac Jones, he would beat him 402 00:22:12,960 --> 00:22:16,160 Speaker 1: running backwards. Yet when you watch Pennix play, he does 403 00:22:16,240 --> 00:22:18,640 Speaker 1: not play like a good athlete. And when you watch 404 00:22:18,720 --> 00:22:21,320 Speaker 1: him play in the pocket, he's just very erect. So 405 00:22:21,359 --> 00:22:23,200 Speaker 1: when you see these guys fall into him, you think, 406 00:22:23,200 --> 00:22:25,480 Speaker 1: at any moment he's gonna get his leg snapped, and 407 00:22:25,520 --> 00:22:27,680 Speaker 1: you start thinking, like, I wonder if over the course 408 00:22:27,680 --> 00:22:30,679 Speaker 1: of his career he's torn a bunch of acls because 409 00:22:30,720 --> 00:22:33,720 Speaker 1: of the way he does not step into throws. He 410 00:22:33,840 --> 00:22:37,639 Speaker 1: uses hips almost like a golf swing to generate power 411 00:22:38,160 --> 00:22:40,560 Speaker 1: with his arm, and he does throw a beautiful ball. 412 00:22:41,040 --> 00:22:46,679 Speaker 1: But I've also thought people have always like got almost 413 00:22:46,760 --> 00:22:50,359 Speaker 1: confused the power of an arm and the and the 414 00:22:50,400 --> 00:22:54,840 Speaker 1: beautiful spiral, Like he throws a nice deep ball, But 415 00:22:54,880 --> 00:22:57,840 Speaker 1: I don't think he has like a super powerful arm 416 00:22:58,160 --> 00:23:01,239 Speaker 1: like Matt Staffer or Josh Allen. To me, like his 417 00:23:01,359 --> 00:23:04,479 Speaker 1: arm strength relative to Mac Jones' arm strength isn't that different. 418 00:23:04,960 --> 00:23:07,520 Speaker 1: And if you watch some of his over the middle throws, 419 00:23:07,880 --> 00:23:11,160 Speaker 1: especially when people around his feet. He leaves a lot 420 00:23:11,200 --> 00:23:14,879 Speaker 1: really really short deep ball throwing. He's very natural with that, 421 00:23:15,040 --> 00:23:17,760 Speaker 1: like outside the numbers, like Jalen Hurts. That thing leaves 422 00:23:17,840 --> 00:23:20,320 Speaker 1: his hands just beautiful in the air. But some of 423 00:23:20,359 --> 00:23:24,920 Speaker 1: the drive throws, if there's any sort of I would 424 00:23:24,920 --> 00:23:29,040 Speaker 1: just say mess or just action around him, you're like 425 00:23:29,320 --> 00:23:31,360 Speaker 1: the end of result, You're like, what just happened there? 426 00:23:31,480 --> 00:23:34,119 Speaker 1: How did that? Something's just a little off and it 427 00:23:34,200 --> 00:23:35,760 Speaker 1: might not be all his fault. I've seen him with 428 00:23:35,800 --> 00:23:38,880 Speaker 1: good offensive coordinator, be good. I had a lot of friends, 429 00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:41,520 Speaker 1: like maybe I'm biased. I gambled on his team a 430 00:23:41,560 --> 00:23:44,200 Speaker 1: lot of Washington I loved a boor. I'm just a fan. 431 00:23:44,359 --> 00:23:46,720 Speaker 1: I'm rooting for the guy. But I watch him, I go, 432 00:23:46,880 --> 00:23:49,919 Speaker 1: I don't know, you know, like this guy might be 433 00:23:49,960 --> 00:23:52,000 Speaker 1: part of your problem. And let's face it, they drafted 434 00:23:52,040 --> 00:23:54,760 Speaker 1: him ete overall to be a franchise quarterback, and you 435 00:23:54,800 --> 00:23:58,280 Speaker 1: watch some of these other guys, you go the physical skills, 436 00:23:58,320 --> 00:23:59,560 Speaker 1: Like I know a lot of people, they did not 437 00:23:59,600 --> 00:24:02,160 Speaker 1: have first grades on them. They just thought the physical 438 00:24:02,200 --> 00:24:05,040 Speaker 1: skills were not there. And he just has a bunch 439 00:24:05,040 --> 00:24:08,480 Speaker 1: of injuries. He's hurt his shoulder multiple times, He's torn Acls. 440 00:24:08,960 --> 00:24:10,760 Speaker 1: You just watch him early on in his career, he's 441 00:24:10,760 --> 00:24:12,800 Speaker 1: getting the shit kicked out of him. You're like, he 442 00:24:12,920 --> 00:24:15,400 Speaker 1: feels more when you just watch the way he moves 443 00:24:15,680 --> 00:24:18,680 Speaker 1: like a thirty year old than someone who's in a 444 00:24:18,760 --> 00:24:21,040 Speaker 1: second year in the NFL and hasn't even made seventeen 445 00:24:21,080 --> 00:24:25,120 Speaker 1: career starts. So there's just something missing with the Atlanta Falcons. 446 00:24:25,280 --> 00:24:28,600 Speaker 1: It's a franchise issue as much as a Raheem Morris 447 00:24:28,720 --> 00:24:31,520 Speaker 1: or a Michael Pennix or a Bejon Robinson issue. I 448 00:24:31,560 --> 00:24:34,720 Speaker 1: mean this is this goes back to the Arthur Smith era. 449 00:24:35,480 --> 00:24:38,440 Speaker 1: There's just something in the building. There's a culture, there's 450 00:24:38,480 --> 00:24:41,240 Speaker 1: a standard that is just hasn't been there in a 451 00:24:41,240 --> 00:24:45,400 Speaker 1: long time that there's no really way to argue anything else. 452 00:24:45,840 --> 00:24:48,000 Speaker 1: Because you watch him, you go they should be better. 453 00:24:48,400 --> 00:24:50,640 Speaker 1: They have a bunch of guys. The Niners would take 454 00:24:51,080 --> 00:24:55,520 Speaker 1: half their starters yesterday without blinking. Get the forty nine 455 00:24:55,640 --> 00:24:58,480 Speaker 1: ers just beat him by ten points and honestly kind 456 00:24:58,480 --> 00:25:01,240 Speaker 1: of handled them, like physically shoved him around a little bit. 457 00:25:02,640 --> 00:25:07,040 Speaker 1: What a win. Incredible moment. I mean, Kyle Shanahan, every 458 00:25:07,040 --> 00:25:10,280 Speaker 1: time that people want to say something bad about him, 459 00:25:10,320 --> 00:25:12,000 Speaker 1: he just all of a sudden five and two with 460 00:25:12,880 --> 00:25:15,320 Speaker 1: a group full of randoms in mac Jones playing quarterback. 461 00:25:15,359 --> 00:25:18,439 Speaker 1: I mean, let's face it, they kind of have a 462 00:25:18,480 --> 00:25:21,240 Speaker 1: disaster on their hands with Brock Purdy in the sense 463 00:25:21,240 --> 00:25:24,760 Speaker 1: that they give Purty two hundred plus million dollars and 464 00:25:24,800 --> 00:25:28,000 Speaker 1: they were kind of describing the toe injury, and even 465 00:25:28,040 --> 00:25:30,840 Speaker 1: Brock says like, if you make the wrong move left 466 00:25:30,920 --> 00:25:33,439 Speaker 1: or right, not even straight on the pain, it can 467 00:25:33,480 --> 00:25:35,320 Speaker 1: set you back. He's like, I don't even know what 468 00:25:35,320 --> 00:25:37,320 Speaker 1: to do. It's like day to day that could just 469 00:25:37,400 --> 00:25:40,280 Speaker 1: last months that there's no guarantee that we see perty 470 00:25:40,320 --> 00:25:42,720 Speaker 1: next week in three weeks. Who knows that this is 471 00:25:42,760 --> 00:25:44,639 Speaker 1: one of those that is just kind of keep your 472 00:25:44,640 --> 00:25:46,639 Speaker 1: fingers crossed. Maybe it goes away. And even if it 473 00:25:46,680 --> 00:25:49,280 Speaker 1: does go away, it kind of did last time he 474 00:25:49,320 --> 00:25:51,120 Speaker 1: played and set him back, and now he's been out 475 00:25:51,160 --> 00:25:56,240 Speaker 1: several games since. So they've got like how many teams 476 00:25:56,280 --> 00:25:59,520 Speaker 1: throwing their backup quarterback and completely melt and the forty 477 00:25:59,600 --> 00:26:02,000 Speaker 1: nine ers bringing mac Jones and he can not only 478 00:26:02,040 --> 00:26:04,200 Speaker 1: function like he does a really really good job. He 479 00:26:04,480 --> 00:26:08,840 Speaker 1: has been you know, what Daniel Jones is doing with 480 00:26:09,119 --> 00:26:12,600 Speaker 1: Indianapolis has been amazing, But I give a lot of 481 00:26:12,600 --> 00:26:17,160 Speaker 1: credit to Shane Steiken. Obviously, their offensive weapons are just incredible, 482 00:26:18,119 --> 00:26:20,959 Speaker 1: and Daniel Jones is a more physically gifted player than 483 00:26:21,000 --> 00:26:24,119 Speaker 1: Mac Jones. But not if you would have told me 484 00:26:24,320 --> 00:26:28,160 Speaker 1: that through seven games Mack would have made all these starts, 485 00:26:28,920 --> 00:26:30,760 Speaker 1: what would happen to the forty nine ers, I'd be like, 486 00:26:30,800 --> 00:26:33,560 Speaker 1: they'd be three and four best case scenario, especially if 487 00:26:33,600 --> 00:26:35,760 Speaker 1: you factored in a bunch of injuries. He'd be like, no, John, 488 00:26:35,760 --> 00:26:38,840 Speaker 1: Actually they're five and two, and he's like single handedly 489 00:26:38,880 --> 00:26:42,800 Speaker 1: won them some games, made huge throws on third and 490 00:26:42,880 --> 00:26:46,280 Speaker 1: long tonight. I wouldn't have seen it coming. And it 491 00:26:46,359 --> 00:26:49,760 Speaker 1: also shows you why. And I think collins Worth talked 492 00:26:49,760 --> 00:26:52,280 Speaker 1: about tonight. They were talking to Mac and he's like, 493 00:26:52,480 --> 00:26:54,479 Speaker 1: I kind of it was healthy to kind of get 494 00:26:54,560 --> 00:26:57,280 Speaker 1: drug through the mud and go through a lot of 495 00:26:57,320 --> 00:26:59,600 Speaker 1: shit and hit a lot of adversity, learn a lot 496 00:26:59,600 --> 00:27:02,280 Speaker 1: about myself, because if you think about it, like Mack 497 00:27:02,800 --> 00:27:05,520 Speaker 1: led a pretty charm football life, surely was a good 498 00:27:05,600 --> 00:27:08,960 Speaker 1: high school player, goes to Alabama to it, gets hurt, 499 00:27:09,000 --> 00:27:12,240 Speaker 1: gets inserted a year later, wins the national championship, then 500 00:27:12,240 --> 00:27:16,040 Speaker 1: gets drafted fifteenth overall, then goes to the Patriots rookie 501 00:27:16,119 --> 00:27:18,720 Speaker 1: year makes the playoffs. It's like kind of riding high 502 00:27:19,520 --> 00:27:23,280 Speaker 1: and then everything changes and everyone's making fun of him, 503 00:27:23,280 --> 00:27:25,880 Speaker 1: and everyone just thinks he sucks and I'm probably guilty 504 00:27:25,880 --> 00:27:28,399 Speaker 1: of that too. Turns out he doesn't. Turned out he's 505 00:27:28,440 --> 00:27:32,960 Speaker 1: pretty good, not great, you know, not a top ten player, 506 00:27:33,280 --> 00:27:35,960 Speaker 1: shouldn't probably get drafted in the first round. But he's 507 00:27:36,000 --> 00:27:38,359 Speaker 1: a legitimate starter, and if he's with the right coach 508 00:27:39,000 --> 00:27:42,640 Speaker 1: and the right organization, can more than function, can win 509 00:27:42,720 --> 00:27:45,600 Speaker 1: you games on Sunday night football against a really good 510 00:27:45,600 --> 00:27:50,440 Speaker 1: defense against essentially two defensive coordinators Rahe Morris defensive coordinator, 511 00:27:50,600 --> 00:27:53,760 Speaker 1: Jeff Ulberg defensive coordinator. I mean, they're head coach, defensive guy, 512 00:27:54,040 --> 00:27:56,200 Speaker 1: and they have a legit defensive coordinator, like they are 513 00:27:56,359 --> 00:28:00,600 Speaker 1: a well run defensive operation. And he just triculating the 514 00:28:00,640 --> 00:28:02,800 Speaker 1: ball with Christian McCaffrey down the field in Kyle Shanahan, 515 00:28:03,200 --> 00:28:05,480 Speaker 1: and it looks like a more than functional player. So 516 00:28:06,600 --> 00:28:10,080 Speaker 1: congrats to him for just not tapping out and just 517 00:28:10,160 --> 00:28:12,200 Speaker 1: keep on swinging and turn it into a good player. 518 00:28:12,640 --> 00:28:16,359 Speaker 1: So wan to win five and two San Fransco forty 519 00:28:16,440 --> 00:28:25,120 Speaker 1: nine ers who would have thought today's show is brought 520 00:28:25,160 --> 00:28:28,000 Speaker 1: to you by our new presenting sponsor, hard Rock Bet. 521 00:28:28,200 --> 00:28:32,320 Speaker 1: Monday night, we got a little doubleheader Tampa Bay goes 522 00:28:32,359 --> 00:28:35,600 Speaker 1: to Detroit and Houston goes to Seattle. So here's what 523 00:28:35,640 --> 00:28:37,480 Speaker 1: I did. I went to my hard Rock Bet app 524 00:28:37,680 --> 00:28:40,160 Speaker 1: and I put together a little parlay. I like Tampa 525 00:28:40,160 --> 00:28:43,240 Speaker 1: plus six on the road, I like Seattle Big at 526 00:28:43,280 --> 00:28:47,800 Speaker 1: Home minus three. And I also included anytime touchdowns for 527 00:28:47,960 --> 00:28:50,600 Speaker 1: Mike Evans, who's back. You know, Baker Mayfield's gonna feed 528 00:28:50,640 --> 00:28:53,880 Speaker 1: him the rock and Sam Laporta star tied end for 529 00:28:53,920 --> 00:28:58,600 Speaker 1: the Lions that bad boy pays about plus nineteen fifty seven, 530 00:28:58,640 --> 00:29:02,440 Speaker 1: so almost twenty to one. There. You got the Bucks, 531 00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:05,360 Speaker 1: you got the Seahawks, you got Mike Evans and Sam 532 00:29:05,440 --> 00:29:09,239 Speaker 1: Laporta anytime touchdowns. So there's new promos daily. Get in 533 00:29:09,320 --> 00:29:11,200 Speaker 1: on it. 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Two play terms and 543 00:29:40,640 --> 00:29:44,000 Speaker 1: conditions apply. Concerned about gambling in Florida, call one a 544 00:29:44,160 --> 00:29:48,680 Speaker 1: eight ady mt it. In Indiana, if you or someone 545 00:29:48,760 --> 00:29:51,000 Speaker 1: you know has a gambling problem and wants to help, 546 00:29:51,040 --> 00:29:53,800 Speaker 1: call one eight hundred and nine with it. Gambling problem, 547 00:29:53,880 --> 00:30:03,040 Speaker 1: Call one one hundred gambler. Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, New Jersey, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia. 548 00:30:06,480 --> 00:30:11,080 Speaker 1: Thirty three points in the fourth quarter is not a record. 549 00:30:11,160 --> 00:30:14,320 Speaker 1: Turns out, it was thirty four, But the only way 550 00:30:14,560 --> 00:30:17,720 Speaker 1: you can come back when you are in a situation 551 00:30:18,000 --> 00:30:21,560 Speaker 1: like the Titans a couple weeks ago, with the Arizona Cardinals, 552 00:30:22,240 --> 00:30:25,680 Speaker 1: today with the Denver Broncos against the Giants, it's impossible 553 00:30:25,760 --> 00:30:28,560 Speaker 1: to just score on your own possessions. You're going to 554 00:30:28,640 --> 00:30:31,720 Speaker 1: need a free possession, which is a turnover. It's the 555 00:30:31,760 --> 00:30:34,959 Speaker 1: only way to make one of these comebacks, and in 556 00:30:35,000 --> 00:30:38,560 Speaker 1: the Titans case, it was the De Marcado fumble at 557 00:30:38,600 --> 00:30:40,400 Speaker 1: the goal line, they got a free possession out of 558 00:30:40,400 --> 00:30:44,360 Speaker 1: it instead of a touchdown. And on the Broncos case tonight, 559 00:30:44,520 --> 00:30:48,880 Speaker 1: it was Jackson Dart throwing them a ball, basically hitting 560 00:30:48,880 --> 00:30:52,000 Speaker 1: their defensive player right in the hands. But I thought 561 00:30:52,000 --> 00:30:53,840 Speaker 1: there were a couple of moments to night and I'm 562 00:30:53,840 --> 00:30:56,200 Speaker 1: on the side of like, at this point in time, 563 00:30:56,360 --> 00:30:59,400 Speaker 1: Brian day Ball, who's gonna be a polarizing guy. Like, 564 00:30:59,440 --> 00:31:02,040 Speaker 1: it's pretty clear Mike and Daniel's gonna get fired, right, 565 00:31:02,800 --> 00:31:06,560 Speaker 1: Jonathan Gannon's in major, major trouble. I don't think you 566 00:31:06,600 --> 00:31:10,240 Speaker 1: can just transition to Jackson Dart and have this success 567 00:31:11,320 --> 00:31:14,800 Speaker 1: scataboo the team, Like they have been a pretty capable 568 00:31:14,840 --> 00:31:18,080 Speaker 1: team since they've put Jackson Dart in there. Firing Brian 569 00:31:18,160 --> 00:31:21,200 Speaker 1: day Ball is pretty risky, right. I think we see 570 00:31:21,200 --> 00:31:23,280 Speaker 1: this over and over the Titans currently. I saw a 571 00:31:23,320 --> 00:31:26,520 Speaker 1: headline today they're already starting their coaching search. If you're 572 00:31:26,560 --> 00:31:30,719 Speaker 1: starting a coaching search in the NFL before Halloween, I 573 00:31:30,800 --> 00:31:33,880 Speaker 1: just can't take your organization seriously. You know, during the 574 00:31:33,920 --> 00:31:37,160 Speaker 1: work week, everyone else is game planning, you know, watching 575 00:31:37,240 --> 00:31:39,920 Speaker 1: draft picks, watching free like everyone in the NFL kind 576 00:31:39,920 --> 00:31:43,080 Speaker 1: of fallows the same schedule. Meanwhile, the Titans president in 577 00:31:43,200 --> 00:31:47,440 Speaker 1: GM are orchestrating a coaching search, like, I just can't 578 00:31:47,440 --> 00:31:49,920 Speaker 1: take your franchise seriously. So when I look up today 579 00:31:50,000 --> 00:31:55,240 Speaker 1: and Mike Vrabel is just ruining your organization, just completely 580 00:31:55,240 --> 00:31:57,640 Speaker 1: clowning them up and down the field, like you kind 581 00:31:57,640 --> 00:32:00,560 Speaker 1: of brought this upon yourself. I do think the Giants 582 00:32:01,320 --> 00:32:05,440 Speaker 1: have tried to do it the right way. Their ownership 583 00:32:05,560 --> 00:32:08,000 Speaker 1: was very clear, like it was so embarrassing, but we 584 00:32:08,080 --> 00:32:09,800 Speaker 1: just wanted to give these guys a little more time. 585 00:32:10,120 --> 00:32:13,320 Speaker 1: And then you let them handpick the quarterback and then 586 00:32:13,360 --> 00:32:16,560 Speaker 1: he shows life. Now we can argue the coaching. They 587 00:32:16,600 --> 00:32:18,600 Speaker 1: got way too pass happy at the end of the game. 588 00:32:18,720 --> 00:32:22,040 Speaker 1: Just run the ball, kill some clock. Listen, if you're 589 00:32:22,040 --> 00:32:24,760 Speaker 1: gonna fumble on a run, so be it. Shit happens, 590 00:32:25,200 --> 00:32:27,760 Speaker 1: but do not put it on this young quarterback who 591 00:32:27,760 --> 00:32:30,000 Speaker 1: obviously threw the bad pick. And then the next series 592 00:32:30,360 --> 00:32:33,360 Speaker 1: that they're throwing like Jalen Hurts to aj Brown trying 593 00:32:33,360 --> 00:32:35,280 Speaker 1: to hit these balls down the seam, It's like, what 594 00:32:35,280 --> 00:32:38,840 Speaker 1: are you doing? Just run the ball. You can nippick 595 00:32:38,840 --> 00:32:42,280 Speaker 1: the play calling. Totally agree, but I do think that like, 596 00:32:44,240 --> 00:32:47,920 Speaker 1: I keep them, They're not gonna win many games. But 597 00:32:48,000 --> 00:32:50,000 Speaker 1: I think I would just give him a little bit longer, 598 00:32:50,120 --> 00:32:52,280 Speaker 1: leash just one more year with the guy. I just 599 00:32:52,320 --> 00:32:54,440 Speaker 1: think it's pretty risky because all of a sudden, you 600 00:32:54,520 --> 00:32:56,720 Speaker 1: get in this cycle and you become the Titans fast, 601 00:32:57,320 --> 00:33:00,280 Speaker 1: and you almost take one step forward and you're like, 602 00:33:00,320 --> 00:33:03,000 Speaker 1: oh Jackson Dark, cam scataboo. Then all of a sudden, 603 00:33:03,000 --> 00:33:05,120 Speaker 1: you bring in this next coach, because what's the coach 604 00:33:05,160 --> 00:33:07,480 Speaker 1: gonna do? You'll see it with the Titans. I want 605 00:33:07,480 --> 00:33:10,280 Speaker 1: to like cam Ward. I've been watching his career since 606 00:33:10,280 --> 00:33:13,920 Speaker 1: he's been at Washington State. Last year was awesome to watch. 607 00:33:14,360 --> 00:33:18,080 Speaker 1: He looks fucking terrible right now, looks atrocious, looks like 608 00:33:18,160 --> 00:33:20,840 Speaker 1: one of the worst players in the NFL. Is his fault. 609 00:33:20,920 --> 00:33:23,960 Speaker 1: I don't know that organization. You got people getting fired, 610 00:33:23,960 --> 00:33:29,480 Speaker 1: you got new coordinators. It's not like he's absent a blame. 611 00:33:29,960 --> 00:33:33,520 Speaker 1: But it's hard to know how much falls on his shoulders. 612 00:33:33,760 --> 00:33:36,080 Speaker 1: But here's what I do know. It's gonna be a 613 00:33:36,200 --> 00:33:41,640 Speaker 1: chaotic this year and probably next year. Right and even 614 00:33:41,640 --> 00:33:44,280 Speaker 1: when you get the right coach, Look at Caleb Williams. 615 00:33:44,400 --> 00:33:46,440 Speaker 1: I watched Caleb today I think he looks pretty bad. 616 00:33:46,720 --> 00:33:48,320 Speaker 1: I don't think he looks I don't think he looks 617 00:33:48,360 --> 00:33:50,840 Speaker 1: good at all. Not comfortable in the pocket, always scrambling 618 00:33:50,880 --> 00:33:53,520 Speaker 1: and running around. But they run the ball well, they 619 00:33:53,520 --> 00:33:56,600 Speaker 1: play defense. Ben Johnson good coach right now? Is Brian 620 00:33:56,640 --> 00:34:00,440 Speaker 1: Dave all good coach? I don't know, but I do 621 00:34:00,480 --> 00:34:04,000 Speaker 1: think he's shown enough with this quarterback. He's an offensive guy. 622 00:34:04,440 --> 00:34:06,520 Speaker 1: I would just give them a little more growth together. 623 00:34:07,080 --> 00:34:11,600 Speaker 1: And I just think that Sean Payton's very lucky because 624 00:34:11,640 --> 00:34:15,720 Speaker 1: through three quarters it looked like their offense was completely broken, 625 00:34:16,280 --> 00:34:20,000 Speaker 1: like it was just this is not gonna work. You 626 00:34:20,040 --> 00:34:24,040 Speaker 1: guys went all in for this quarterback, this offense has 627 00:34:25,200 --> 00:34:27,359 Speaker 1: I think they had the worst third down percentage over 628 00:34:27,360 --> 00:34:29,839 Speaker 1: a three game period in the entire league. They were 629 00:34:29,880 --> 00:34:33,320 Speaker 1: trending the wrong way. They they could not complete passes, 630 00:34:33,480 --> 00:34:36,000 Speaker 1: they could not get first downs, and then all of 631 00:34:36,000 --> 00:34:38,480 Speaker 1: a sudden, it just flipped and now you look, they 632 00:34:38,560 --> 00:34:41,160 Speaker 1: score thirty three points, they're five and two. Their defense 633 00:34:41,239 --> 00:34:44,480 Speaker 1: is obviously really good, and they have life and today 634 00:34:45,840 --> 00:34:49,200 Speaker 1: felt a little t bow ish. If you remember years 635 00:34:49,200 --> 00:34:52,080 Speaker 1: ago when Tebow came in for Denver, they pulled games 636 00:34:52,239 --> 00:34:55,600 Speaker 1: out of nowhere. They had no business winning. There was 637 00:34:55,600 --> 00:34:58,960 Speaker 1: a famous one at Miami. That's what today felt like 638 00:34:59,040 --> 00:35:02,279 Speaker 1: a little bit and how sustainable is that? And this 639 00:35:02,320 --> 00:35:07,400 Speaker 1: is where I think winning sometimes can band aid your issues. 640 00:35:07,960 --> 00:35:11,000 Speaker 1: Because the Broncos like didn't fix everything in one quarter. 641 00:35:11,600 --> 00:35:14,760 Speaker 1: They had like the football gods through them a bone. 642 00:35:15,320 --> 00:35:18,359 Speaker 1: But those first three quarters have kind of been a 643 00:35:18,360 --> 00:35:21,040 Speaker 1: consistent theme. And listen, I would imagine John Payton has 644 00:35:21,080 --> 00:35:23,440 Speaker 1: to be pretty frustrated. You have to wonder like his 645 00:35:23,560 --> 00:35:26,160 Speaker 1: play calling and the rhythm with bon Nicks. It's completely off. 646 00:35:26,200 --> 00:35:29,359 Speaker 1: They keep calling these deeper breaking routes that are just 647 00:35:29,480 --> 00:35:33,560 Speaker 1: simply not working. Bo Nicks is not hitting them. It's like, 648 00:35:33,560 --> 00:35:36,800 Speaker 1: what is Kyle Shanahan call for Mac Jones? Like outbreaking 649 00:35:36,880 --> 00:35:40,360 Speaker 1: routes like deep outs thee've comebacks or breaking you know, 650 00:35:40,560 --> 00:35:43,520 Speaker 1: routes over the middle. Stuff he's comfortable with. Yet they 651 00:35:43,600 --> 00:35:47,200 Speaker 1: keep calling go routes for bo Nicks and he not 652 00:35:47,239 --> 00:35:49,960 Speaker 1: only doesn't hit them, they're not even close. It feels 653 00:35:50,000 --> 00:35:52,279 Speaker 1: like he's overthrowing him by five yards. You could have 654 00:35:52,400 --> 00:35:55,680 Speaker 1: Randy Moss meets Kevin Garnett. I don't even think you 655 00:35:55,719 --> 00:35:58,279 Speaker 1: get a fingertip on the ball. So I just think 656 00:35:58,320 --> 00:36:00,560 Speaker 1: the Broncos, and I'm someone that has a lot of 657 00:36:00,600 --> 00:36:03,359 Speaker 1: exposure on them to win the division. Clearly, the Chiefs 658 00:36:03,400 --> 00:36:06,760 Speaker 1: are playing better right now. They just got to figure 659 00:36:06,800 --> 00:36:11,680 Speaker 1: out some sort of consistent offense if they want any 660 00:36:11,760 --> 00:36:14,600 Speaker 1: shot to compete in the AFC. Because one offense that 661 00:36:14,640 --> 00:36:18,920 Speaker 1: has figured it out, I think by far start to finish, 662 00:36:18,920 --> 00:36:22,560 Speaker 1: he's been the best offensive coordinator in the NFL this year. Seinstichen, Well, 663 00:36:22,600 --> 00:36:25,840 Speaker 1: what he has done is just remarkable and he was 664 00:36:25,920 --> 00:36:28,880 Speaker 1: so fired up today watching him on the sideline. Jonathan 665 00:36:28,920 --> 00:36:30,719 Speaker 1: Taylor pound for pounds, one of the best players in 666 00:36:30,719 --> 00:36:33,799 Speaker 1: the league right now, just a dominant force. And it 667 00:36:33,880 --> 00:36:36,000 Speaker 1: kind of makes me sad. You know, Wisconsin guy, their 668 00:36:36,040 --> 00:36:39,799 Speaker 1: programs and shambles, kind of the last of a one 669 00:36:39,800 --> 00:36:42,520 Speaker 1: of that last generation of good Wisconsin players till they've 670 00:36:42,600 --> 00:36:46,520 Speaker 1: kind of gone through this downturn. But whatever's happened to him, 671 00:36:46,560 --> 00:36:49,319 Speaker 1: Remember we're not that far removed from him being mad 672 00:36:49,360 --> 00:36:51,640 Speaker 1: about money a couple of years ago that might have 673 00:36:51,680 --> 00:36:54,200 Speaker 1: even been last year, to what he's doing right now. 674 00:36:54,239 --> 00:36:59,120 Speaker 1: Like he is, he's a dominant force. He is two 675 00:36:59,200 --> 00:37:02,160 Speaker 1: years ago. Is mccaf last year goes Last year it 676 00:37:02,239 --> 00:37:04,239 Speaker 1: was Saquon and this year it feels like it's him, 677 00:37:04,680 --> 00:37:06,600 Speaker 1: Like I'm the best running back in the league right now. 678 00:37:07,280 --> 00:37:11,360 Speaker 1: And what Shane the rhythm and how good he is 679 00:37:11,400 --> 00:37:13,960 Speaker 1: at getting Daniel Jones on the move. Like one of 680 00:37:14,040 --> 00:37:18,400 Speaker 1: Daniel Jones' strengths is his athleticism. So and he's not 681 00:37:18,520 --> 00:37:21,399 Speaker 1: like some power thrower, like he actually has pretty good touch. 682 00:37:22,040 --> 00:37:24,319 Speaker 1: And there are plays today, some play action plays getting 683 00:37:24,400 --> 00:37:26,760 Speaker 1: him on the move, some dump offs they get Tyler 684 00:37:26,800 --> 00:37:29,000 Speaker 1: Warren in space all the time. They had a great 685 00:37:29,080 --> 00:37:32,120 Speaker 1: play in the red zone like a play action a 686 00:37:32,120 --> 00:37:35,160 Speaker 1: little dump off to Pittman for a touchdown. His play 687 00:37:35,200 --> 00:37:38,360 Speaker 1: calling is just spectacular. Now. They picked Herbert off a 688 00:37:38,360 --> 00:37:41,880 Speaker 1: couple of times, but they were scoring at will today. 689 00:37:42,600 --> 00:37:46,480 Speaker 1: And the Colts, I don't know how good their defense 690 00:37:46,600 --> 00:37:49,400 Speaker 1: is relative to like can they be a true AFC, 691 00:37:49,560 --> 00:37:52,680 Speaker 1: like win the AFC. Their offense right now though, is 692 00:37:53,440 --> 00:37:56,080 Speaker 1: and you win enough games like you control like you 693 00:37:56,160 --> 00:37:59,320 Speaker 1: get that thing in the dome. They have multiple receivers, 694 00:37:59,320 --> 00:38:01,759 Speaker 1: they got a study tight end, they got an elite back, 695 00:38:01,800 --> 00:38:04,600 Speaker 1: and they got a quarterback who's very very confident. The 696 00:38:04,640 --> 00:38:07,960 Speaker 1: other offensive coordinator that listen, everyone shit on this guy, 697 00:38:08,080 --> 00:38:10,799 Speaker 1: every single person, Brian Schottenheimer is gonna be one and done. 698 00:38:10,920 --> 00:38:14,600 Speaker 1: Brian Schottenheimer doesn't deserve the job. Jerry Jones has lost it. 699 00:38:14,760 --> 00:38:17,759 Speaker 1: I probably said half those things. Brian Schottenheimer this year 700 00:38:17,760 --> 00:38:21,200 Speaker 1: as an offensive coordinator has been dominant. What he has 701 00:38:21,239 --> 00:38:25,120 Speaker 1: done to lose And I told this to Coward. To 702 00:38:25,200 --> 00:38:30,319 Speaker 1: have Micah Parsons traded a couple days before Week one 703 00:38:30,640 --> 00:38:33,600 Speaker 1: is not easy if you are Andy Reid or Pete 704 00:38:33,680 --> 00:38:37,800 Speaker 1: Carroll or Sean McVay, let alone a first time head coach. 705 00:38:38,280 --> 00:38:40,640 Speaker 1: And not only did he handle that well, he's also 706 00:38:40,760 --> 00:38:44,400 Speaker 1: taking in George Pickens, who is at least it felt 707 00:38:44,400 --> 00:38:46,480 Speaker 1: like one of the great wild card person out. Mike 708 00:38:46,520 --> 00:38:49,239 Speaker 1: Toms like, I'm out, I can't do this. I'll go 709 00:38:49,640 --> 00:38:52,279 Speaker 1: I'd rather give DK metcalp one hundred and fifty million dollars, 710 00:38:52,280 --> 00:38:54,560 Speaker 1: which is kind of crazy, and just get rid of 711 00:38:54,560 --> 00:38:58,480 Speaker 1: George Pickens, who's basically free right now. And Jerry's like, here, here, 712 00:38:58,719 --> 00:39:02,920 Speaker 1: here you go, Brian, no problem. He's gonna have eighty 713 00:39:02,960 --> 00:39:06,160 Speaker 1: catches this year in ten touchdowns and just dominant play 714 00:39:06,200 --> 00:39:09,280 Speaker 1: after dominant play after dominant play, and then CD comes 715 00:39:09,320 --> 00:39:14,080 Speaker 1: back ferguson how well Dak's playing. They look, they look 716 00:39:14,120 --> 00:39:16,399 Speaker 1: like the Rams. He just like, watch the Rams play. 717 00:39:16,440 --> 00:39:19,520 Speaker 1: It's like touchdown, first down, first down, chunk play. That's 718 00:39:19,520 --> 00:39:23,160 Speaker 1: how the Cowboys look. Now their defense stinks and that 719 00:39:23,320 --> 00:39:25,759 Speaker 1: limits their ceiling of probably being a wild card team. 720 00:39:26,400 --> 00:39:30,360 Speaker 1: But they have been a revelation this year because on 721 00:39:30,400 --> 00:39:35,400 Speaker 1: the flip side, like Washington looks terrible. Obviously Jaden's injured again. Defensively, 722 00:39:35,680 --> 00:39:39,399 Speaker 1: they can't stop a soul. Offensively, they got a bunch 723 00:39:39,440 --> 00:39:43,280 Speaker 1: of injuries. They look like the Magic from twenty twenty 724 00:39:43,280 --> 00:39:47,000 Speaker 1: four is. You know, I almost ran out of gas 725 00:39:47,040 --> 00:39:49,000 Speaker 1: the other day. It was one of those like I 726 00:39:49,040 --> 00:39:51,960 Speaker 1: was on empty. It was like a Tuesday, and I 727 00:39:52,000 --> 00:39:54,000 Speaker 1: didn't drive that much on a Wednesday, and then I 728 00:39:54,040 --> 00:39:55,840 Speaker 1: realized I had to do some stuff on a Thursday. 729 00:39:55,920 --> 00:39:58,000 Speaker 1: And then all of a sudden, like I'm blow empty. 730 00:39:58,719 --> 00:40:01,080 Speaker 1: And that's what it feels like now with the Commanders, 731 00:40:01,440 --> 00:40:04,160 Speaker 1: like they're below empty. They got nothing. You know, they're 732 00:40:04,239 --> 00:40:06,279 Speaker 1: like a pitcher in the eighth inning, who you know, 733 00:40:06,360 --> 00:40:08,799 Speaker 1: starts off throwing about ninety three and by the sixth 734 00:40:08,920 --> 00:40:11,440 Speaker 1: or seventh is thrown about eighty five. Tim Linscomb used 735 00:40:11,440 --> 00:40:12,960 Speaker 1: to be like this toward the end of his career. 736 00:40:13,160 --> 00:40:14,719 Speaker 1: It's like, all of a sudden, his fastball is going 737 00:40:14,760 --> 00:40:16,959 Speaker 1: like eighty two years old. It's like skip, we gotta 738 00:40:16,960 --> 00:40:19,040 Speaker 1: go the pen here. And I don't know what the 739 00:40:19,040 --> 00:40:21,839 Speaker 1: commanders supposed to do. Players are their players. They look 740 00:40:22,000 --> 00:40:26,120 Speaker 1: they look really bad. Something's just really really off. Two 741 00:40:26,160 --> 00:40:29,960 Speaker 1: things I think we can unofficially say the Tua and 742 00:40:30,040 --> 00:40:34,719 Speaker 1: the Kyler Murray eras are over. Tua got benched. I 743 00:40:34,760 --> 00:40:36,919 Speaker 1: wasn't super locked into that game, but that whole thing 744 00:40:37,000 --> 00:40:40,600 Speaker 1: is just obviously he's had an awful season. The franchise 745 00:40:40,680 --> 00:40:44,960 Speaker 1: is falling apart. I don't really know what you do 746 00:40:45,040 --> 00:40:47,400 Speaker 1: because his contract is still pretty big. It's not like 747 00:40:47,400 --> 00:40:49,479 Speaker 1: you could trade him. You wouldn't think maybe you could 748 00:40:49,480 --> 00:40:51,560 Speaker 1: eat some of the money. Maybe a team could use 749 00:40:51,600 --> 00:40:54,279 Speaker 1: him as a bridge. I'd say the same thing for 750 00:40:54,360 --> 00:40:58,200 Speaker 1: Kyler Murray. You know, the difference for Tua and Kyler 751 00:40:58,320 --> 00:41:02,920 Speaker 1: is the backup comes in who everyone likes. Jacoby Weresett, 752 00:41:03,760 --> 00:41:08,920 Speaker 1: from Bill Parcells to the cafeteria guy at every organization 753 00:41:09,000 --> 00:41:11,480 Speaker 1: he's ever played for. Jacoby Weresett is probably one of 754 00:41:11,480 --> 00:41:15,160 Speaker 1: the more consistently respected guys in the NFL. Never thought 755 00:41:15,200 --> 00:41:17,280 Speaker 1: he was that good of a player. And I'm watching 756 00:41:17,320 --> 00:41:20,000 Speaker 1: him come in for the Cardinals and not only look good, 757 00:41:20,040 --> 00:41:23,880 Speaker 1: like they're a well run operation when he's playing quarterback 758 00:41:23,920 --> 00:41:26,640 Speaker 1: for them, and they have looked way better these last 759 00:41:26,640 --> 00:41:29,240 Speaker 1: two weeks with him playing offense, same with Marvin Harrison 760 00:41:29,680 --> 00:41:33,000 Speaker 1: than when Kyler's played, And I just think, like they're 761 00:41:33,040 --> 00:41:36,520 Speaker 1: two and five. Cardinals are headed nowhere. Obviously, the Dolphins 762 00:41:36,640 --> 00:41:41,959 Speaker 1: just got ransacked by the Cleveland Browns. It's just over. 763 00:41:42,120 --> 00:41:45,640 Speaker 1: And this is a good example of I understand, like, 764 00:41:45,680 --> 00:41:48,839 Speaker 1: when you have a quarterback, you need to invest in them, 765 00:41:49,120 --> 00:41:52,319 Speaker 1: But if you're not super confident in your quarterback, why 766 00:41:52,360 --> 00:41:55,080 Speaker 1: would you pay them? Like just play it out. I 767 00:41:55,120 --> 00:41:57,280 Speaker 1: don't think we do that enough. Just play it out 768 00:41:57,719 --> 00:42:00,400 Speaker 1: for every Dak Prescott's Like, well, we played Dak Prescott 769 00:42:00,400 --> 00:42:01,880 Speaker 1: out and we had to pay him a lot of money, Okay, 770 00:42:02,680 --> 00:42:05,640 Speaker 1: But like, would you have given Kyler this huge contract? 771 00:42:06,160 --> 00:42:07,840 Speaker 1: Did you need to do it after year three? And 772 00:42:07,880 --> 00:42:10,160 Speaker 1: the answer, of course is no same thing with Tua, 773 00:42:10,200 --> 00:42:12,560 Speaker 1: Like who are you bidding against at the time. I 774 00:42:12,600 --> 00:42:15,400 Speaker 1: never quite understand this, And I think two teams that 775 00:42:15,480 --> 00:42:18,680 Speaker 1: were burned so bad were the Cardinals and the Dolphins. 776 00:42:18,680 --> 00:42:21,799 Speaker 1: And they find themselves in this situation where they have 777 00:42:21,960 --> 00:42:25,400 Speaker 1: this quarterback albatross. You know, I wouldn't be shocked at 778 00:42:25,400 --> 00:42:27,760 Speaker 1: all if like they just kind of ride with Jacoby, 779 00:42:28,120 --> 00:42:30,040 Speaker 1: because that's what I would do watching them play that 780 00:42:30,080 --> 00:42:33,680 Speaker 1: they feel like a much more efficient operation when Brissett 781 00:42:33,800 --> 00:42:37,400 Speaker 1: is in there than when Kyler, who can make spectacular plays, 782 00:42:38,000 --> 00:42:41,560 Speaker 1: but there's no cohesion snap to snap, one play could 783 00:42:41,600 --> 00:42:44,160 Speaker 1: be fifty yards, the next three plays could be you know, 784 00:42:44,440 --> 00:42:47,640 Speaker 1: negative ten, and to us just who just wants to 785 00:42:47,640 --> 00:43:03,439 Speaker 1: watch him play at this point in time. We will 786 00:43:03,520 --> 00:43:06,160 Speaker 1: end with this one thing I think we're about to learn, 787 00:43:06,480 --> 00:43:09,520 Speaker 1: Like in the NFL, not all jobs are equal. Right? 788 00:43:09,600 --> 00:43:12,520 Speaker 1: Who am I answering to? How much you're gonna pay me? 789 00:43:13,239 --> 00:43:15,920 Speaker 1: Do I have say over the roster? Right do I 790 00:43:15,960 --> 00:43:18,400 Speaker 1: have to if the Tennessee job, Well, it's like you 791 00:43:18,400 --> 00:43:20,960 Speaker 1: have a president who's a football guy, and you have 792 00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:23,719 Speaker 1: a GM who's a football guy, and you have an 793 00:43:23,760 --> 00:43:26,440 Speaker 1: impulsive owner. So like, who am I answering to and 794 00:43:26,480 --> 00:43:28,319 Speaker 1: how much you're paying me? Because you paid your last 795 00:43:28,320 --> 00:43:29,960 Speaker 1: coach three million dollars and he had to deal with 796 00:43:29,960 --> 00:43:32,319 Speaker 1: all this bullshit and he got fired. So if I'm 797 00:43:32,360 --> 00:43:34,640 Speaker 1: even interested in the Tennessee job, and I have any 798 00:43:34,680 --> 00:43:37,520 Speaker 1: sort of leverage, I'm gonna need a lot of money 799 00:43:37,520 --> 00:43:40,800 Speaker 1: to even entertain you. Right, And I think in football 800 00:43:40,800 --> 00:43:42,960 Speaker 1: it's very easy to see hierarchies like who am I 801 00:43:43,000 --> 00:43:45,719 Speaker 1: answering to? Who's in charge? In college? That's not the 802 00:43:45,760 --> 00:43:49,120 Speaker 1: case when you hire all these top college coaches, they're 803 00:43:49,120 --> 00:43:52,239 Speaker 1: the boss. Ryan Day, the GM at Ohio State works 804 00:43:52,280 --> 00:43:55,800 Speaker 1: for him, The GM at Oregon works for Dan Lanning, 805 00:43:56,040 --> 00:43:58,880 Speaker 1: the GM at Notre Dame works for Marcus Freeman, the 806 00:43:58,920 --> 00:44:02,640 Speaker 1: GM at Texas works for Sark. Now, you got to 807 00:44:02,640 --> 00:44:06,000 Speaker 1: deal with some boosters and provosts and some but like 808 00:44:06,080 --> 00:44:08,040 Speaker 1: you're the boss of your football team, there is not 809 00:44:08,120 --> 00:44:11,919 Speaker 1: a player on the team that you don't sign off on. Right, 810 00:44:12,120 --> 00:44:15,960 Speaker 1: And historically it was clear some jobs are better than 811 00:44:15,960 --> 00:44:19,400 Speaker 1: others that there's not a time in the history of 812 00:44:19,440 --> 00:44:23,280 Speaker 1: the sport when Penn State was viewed as an equal 813 00:44:23,320 --> 00:44:28,719 Speaker 1: to Indiana, let alone not a vastly superior job and 814 00:44:28,800 --> 00:44:32,040 Speaker 1: location to work as a head coach. Yet Kurt Signetti 815 00:44:32,120 --> 00:44:34,799 Speaker 1: basically just said, not only am I not interested, I'll 816 00:44:34,840 --> 00:44:37,040 Speaker 1: take eleven and a half million dollars to stay at 817 00:44:37,120 --> 00:44:42,560 Speaker 1: Indiana because the world's changed. Nil revenue it's it's different 818 00:44:42,600 --> 00:44:45,640 Speaker 1: than it was five six years ago, where obviously the 819 00:44:45,680 --> 00:44:47,560 Speaker 1: top programs, a lot of them are still going to 820 00:44:47,600 --> 00:44:50,319 Speaker 1: be the top programs. But like it wasn't difficult for 821 00:44:50,360 --> 00:44:53,759 Speaker 1: Alabama to give someone thirty thousand dollars, it's a big 822 00:44:53,760 --> 00:44:56,440 Speaker 1: difference to give five guys. What game was I watching 823 00:44:56,480 --> 00:44:59,799 Speaker 1: a couple weeks ago where the coach said that the 824 00:45:00,080 --> 00:45:02,080 Speaker 1: posing coach said that they had seven or eight players 825 00:45:02,080 --> 00:45:05,040 Speaker 1: making over a million dollars. So it's like before, yeah, 826 00:45:05,120 --> 00:45:08,879 Speaker 1: people got brown bags and some free car leases. Now 827 00:45:08,880 --> 00:45:10,799 Speaker 1: it's like they also need the car lease to go 828 00:45:10,880 --> 00:45:12,600 Speaker 1: on top of the million dollars that you have to 829 00:45:12,640 --> 00:45:15,879 Speaker 1: pay him. And that's just your linebacker, your quarterback, Carson Beck, 830 00:45:16,000 --> 00:45:20,200 Speaker 1: who just threw four interceptions, is making millions upon millions 831 00:45:20,200 --> 00:45:23,040 Speaker 1: of dollars. Hell the shitty quarterback for North Carolina, the 832 00:45:23,040 --> 00:45:25,400 Speaker 1: little left, he's making one point five. This is going right, 833 00:45:25,480 --> 00:45:29,399 Speaker 1: whether we agree or not. And Florida just fired billion 834 00:45:29,440 --> 00:45:32,759 Speaker 1: Napier and all signs. There was a CBS report that 835 00:45:32,800 --> 00:45:35,279 Speaker 1: the ad at Florida has already done a lot of 836 00:45:35,320 --> 00:45:39,520 Speaker 1: research on Lane Kiffin, who has clearly changed the narrative 837 00:45:40,360 --> 00:45:43,479 Speaker 1: and just the way we view him as a human being. 838 00:45:43,800 --> 00:45:46,720 Speaker 1: He is one of the most likable guys in college football. 839 00:45:47,640 --> 00:45:49,560 Speaker 1: You know, a lot of people say I've cleaned up 840 00:45:49,600 --> 00:45:52,680 Speaker 1: my act. He looks sober, right, Some people like claim 841 00:45:52,719 --> 00:45:55,680 Speaker 1: they're sober might be lying. Like Lane kiffn looks sober, 842 00:45:56,000 --> 00:45:59,200 Speaker 1: looks really healthy, lost a ton of weight, obviously does 843 00:45:59,239 --> 00:46:02,239 Speaker 1: hot yoga seven days a week. Is just got a 844 00:46:02,360 --> 00:46:05,000 Speaker 1: vibrant feel to him that when I scouted, when I 845 00:46:05,080 --> 00:46:07,359 Speaker 1: went I went through USC when he was there, he 846 00:46:07,440 --> 00:46:10,840 Speaker 1: was like angry and grouchy. He was not this big personality. 847 00:46:10,880 --> 00:46:13,840 Speaker 1: He actually talked to nobody. I would say he was 848 00:46:13,880 --> 00:46:17,200 Speaker 1: pretty miserable back then. The guy you see now that 849 00:46:17,600 --> 00:46:21,520 Speaker 1: honestly had Georgia on the ropes a couple days ago 850 00:46:21,960 --> 00:46:24,719 Speaker 1: is a completely different human being. And there have been 851 00:46:24,719 --> 00:46:26,480 Speaker 1: a lot of question marks over the last couple of 852 00:46:26,560 --> 00:46:29,600 Speaker 1: years with off the field stuff with Lane Kiffin. He 853 00:46:29,760 --> 00:46:32,719 Speaker 1: wanted to interview for Oregon and wanted that job. The 854 00:46:32,800 --> 00:46:35,120 Speaker 1: year Dan land and got it, they wouldn't even entertain him. 855 00:46:35,440 --> 00:46:39,200 Speaker 1: They would not entertain him. Alabama was open when Nick 856 00:46:39,239 --> 00:46:42,600 Speaker 1: Sabin retired, they didn't call Lane Kifvin. He had worked 857 00:46:42,640 --> 00:46:45,160 Speaker 1: there for three years. Nick Saban and him pretend to 858 00:46:45,200 --> 00:46:47,160 Speaker 1: be friends. They were never gonna hire Lane Kifn and 859 00:46:47,160 --> 00:46:50,560 Speaker 1: they went to Kaylin Duboor that was from the Dakotas 860 00:46:50,560 --> 00:46:53,919 Speaker 1: who was working at Washington in Fresno State. Lane Kivin 861 00:46:53,960 --> 00:46:57,400 Speaker 1: had been in the building, knew the Nick Saban blueprint 862 00:46:58,239 --> 00:47:00,600 Speaker 1: and look at Lane. He has taken all and turn 863 00:47:00,680 --> 00:47:03,760 Speaker 1: them into a power. He's fucking competing with the Division 864 00:47:03,760 --> 00:47:07,480 Speaker 1: two quarterback at ole Miss. But I don't know job, 865 00:47:07,680 --> 00:47:09,960 Speaker 1: Like I know Ohio State's better than every job. I know. 866 00:47:10,040 --> 00:47:13,040 Speaker 1: Texas is better than because the amount of money, the recruits, 867 00:47:13,080 --> 00:47:15,680 Speaker 1: the whole thing. But then we get into like is 868 00:47:15,680 --> 00:47:18,560 Speaker 1: Florida great job anymore? In theory, yeah, they're in this 869 00:47:18,680 --> 00:47:21,440 Speaker 1: state with a bunch of recruits, but like we've been 870 00:47:21,480 --> 00:47:24,200 Speaker 1: watching them for a long time now, not winning. They've 871 00:47:24,200 --> 00:47:26,960 Speaker 1: had a bunch of nil it's not really working. So 872 00:47:27,360 --> 00:47:31,239 Speaker 1: we're gonna find out that do you need to leave? Like, 873 00:47:31,560 --> 00:47:33,600 Speaker 1: is there a big difference between Ole Miss and Florida? 874 00:47:33,760 --> 00:47:36,759 Speaker 1: A lot of people would say yes, there is and historically, 875 00:47:38,800 --> 00:47:41,880 Speaker 1: but in twenty twenty five, I don't know, right, I 876 00:47:41,920 --> 00:47:44,560 Speaker 1: know this, there is a big difference. Working for the 877 00:47:44,560 --> 00:47:48,000 Speaker 1: Green Bay Packers and the Tennessee Titans. There is a 878 00:47:48,280 --> 00:47:53,040 Speaker 1: major difference working for the Kansasy Chiefs and the Arizona Cardinals. 879 00:47:53,320 --> 00:47:56,680 Speaker 1: There are well run organizations, there are well run ownerships. 880 00:47:56,880 --> 00:48:00,279 Speaker 1: There are well run uh just franchise. This is in 881 00:48:00,360 --> 00:48:02,560 Speaker 1: terms of their resources and the way they think about 882 00:48:02,560 --> 00:48:04,799 Speaker 1: the business. And then they're the shitty ones. And we 883 00:48:04,840 --> 00:48:06,720 Speaker 1: see it all the time. It's why the same teams 884 00:48:07,000 --> 00:48:10,719 Speaker 1: draft Hie every single year. One In college football, now 885 00:48:10,760 --> 00:48:14,319 Speaker 1: it's like Texas time. I'm watching the ASU Texas Tech game. 886 00:48:15,200 --> 00:48:18,280 Speaker 1: The announcers like, Texas Tech's paying twenty eight million dollars 887 00:48:18,280 --> 00:48:21,200 Speaker 1: for their roster. So it's like if you have big 888 00:48:21,320 --> 00:48:26,640 Speaker 1: nil and collectives in revenue, that's a good job. Historically, 889 00:48:26,680 --> 00:48:29,400 Speaker 1: Texas Tech would be one of the worst jobs in Texas. 890 00:48:29,760 --> 00:48:31,879 Speaker 1: Texas be better, TEXA, A and M would be better. 891 00:48:32,120 --> 00:48:35,200 Speaker 1: Could argue SMU and TCU were better. Well, they're gonna 892 00:48:35,239 --> 00:48:37,439 Speaker 1: give you twenty eight to thirty million dollars a year 893 00:48:37,440 --> 00:48:40,360 Speaker 1: to spend on players. You could argue that job is 894 00:48:40,400 --> 00:48:42,319 Speaker 1: every bit as good as the other jobs. You know, 895 00:48:43,040 --> 00:48:45,560 Speaker 1: and uh, I think we're about to find out. My 896 00:48:45,680 --> 00:48:48,279 Speaker 1: guess would be Lane Kiffin will be the next head 897 00:48:48,320 --> 00:48:51,160 Speaker 1: coach of Florida. But I wouldn't bet a lot on 898 00:48:51,200 --> 00:48:54,279 Speaker 1: it because he's winning and having more success at all 899 00:48:54,360 --> 00:48:57,240 Speaker 1: miss And one thing he's talked about is being around family. 900 00:48:57,360 --> 00:49:00,000 Speaker 1: His life is changed. Uh So, what we're gonna find out? 901 00:49:00,280 --> 00:49:04,560 Speaker 1: And if Penn State in Florida can't get guys to leave, 902 00:49:05,520 --> 00:49:08,640 Speaker 1: maybe we need to rethink and relook at the way 903 00:49:08,680 --> 00:49:11,800 Speaker 1: we've always kind of put the hierarchy of jobs these 904 00:49:12,080 --> 00:49:14,239 Speaker 1: You know, I'm not just talking Ohio State in text, 905 00:49:14,280 --> 00:49:17,759 Speaker 1: I'm talking the next fifteen jobs. Maybe. Actually it's much 906 00:49:17,760 --> 00:49:20,279 Speaker 1: more open ended and there's forty jobs that are all 907 00:49:20,360 --> 00:49:23,239 Speaker 1: kind of in the same ballpark. Have a great night, 908 00:49:23,360 --> 00:49:28,200 Speaker 1: See you later. The volume