Bussin' With The Boys - Best of the Bus: JJ Redick Almost Quit Basketball While At Duke & The Legendary Best Pizzas Tier Talk
Episode Date: March 21, 2026Recorded: May 19, 2022 | JJ Redick came on the bus back in 2022 and delivered one of the most honest, insightful, and hilarious conversations the boys have ever had. From the jump, JJ gets into rankin...g players in today’s NBA, breaking down what actually separates the greats from the elites, and why those conversations get so heated. The boys dive into the anxiety of starting a podcast and how JJ transitioned from the league into media, including the mental side of knowing when it’s time to walk away from basketball. They also get into a fascinating comparison between NBA players vs. NFL players and how differently each league operates behind the scenes. JJ opens up about what it was like being one of the most hated college athletes in the country, sharing stories from his Duke days that shaped his mindset and career. He also gets real about his lowest moment, the routines that keep him grounded, and why therapy has played such a big role in his life both during and after basketball. Things take a turn with one of the most legendary Tier Talk's in Bussin' history where the boys debate the best pizzas. The show ends with the ultimate debate: MJ or LeBron?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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How'd you feel about that game of pig that just happened there?
I didn't feel great about it.
Yeah?
If we're sweaty right now, we just played an intense game of pig.
Intense game of pig.
And J.J. Reddick was the first man out.
Yeah.
I think what obsessed me is number one, the L, for sure.
Yeah.
But I texted Will yesterday and I said, Will, what do I need to know?
What am I walking into tomorrow?
And he laid out a show plan, some Duke stuff, some NBA stuff.
There was no mention of mini basketball pig.
Yeah.
And had I known that, I would have, I would have came more prepared.
Right.
I would have, my whole day would have been different.
I'll put it that way.
So you're blaming me?
A little bit.
Well, here's, and let me have Will's side for a second.
Yeah.
You guys probably got at least, I don't know, 10 to 15 warm-up shots.
Well, why were...
But usually when people play Pagan and someone comes in the middle of the game,
they usually have to take a letter.
And you didn't have to take a letter.
And why did you come in mid-game?
Well, that's because my driver took me to 12...
I'm not going to say the address.
You don't want to say the address.
But he took me to a different address
that started with a C, not a K.
And then on the way over here, we got stuck behind a train.
So, just shit happens, man.
A lot of adversity when you're coming to and during the podcast on the bus.
But just to argue with you a little bit more, when you and I were sitting in the corner
over there and we were like kind of first meeting each other, you did whisper to me, I play this
game with my kid, exact hoop, exact ball every single day.
Did you not say that?
Was that, does that a comment you made?
I said exact hoop.
Oh, the ball is bigger and harder to make it in.
You know, there's like a men's basketball, women's basketball, youth basketball, and then
there's like the mini-basketballs.
Right.
They're like three times the size that the ball you guys used.
That's what I'm used to.
Are you always aware when you walk into like a situation like that, like,
they all expect me to win this game.
And when you do lose in that kind of fashion, because it was pretty quick,
is it something where you're just like,
damn, these boys, like, really think they got me for real.
I mean, if you guys really think you got me in basketball, I actually feel bad for you.
What's that?
Whoa.
Let him finish.
Let him finish.
Nobody left.
No, but I'm just saying, if we, if we all of a sudden, like, did a Nerf football competition,
We'd probably win that too.
We're like throwing it at a target.
Like I would probably beat you guys.
I wouldn't say to myself like I got you in football.
I would just say like I won this specific random event.
Okay.
It'd be better and easier for us to say based on because there was no like real basketball there.
We're just better shooters than you are.
Again, like at this particular dress outside of this particular bus on that particular hoop,
you guys got me today.
And I, again, the competitive side of me is.
pissed off, and I wish we could move on past this.
Because now I'm getting angry.
It's going to be a few minutes.
It's going to be a few minutes before we leave this.
Trust me.
We do not want to see first take, J.J. Redick.
Really?
Yeah.
Have you not seen the way she's in making it recently?
I've seen a couple first takes.
I've seen you lose your temper, but I don't think it's anything we can't handle.
I don't know if I've lost my temper.
Well, I've been animated.
You can tell because your vein will start coming out of your neck a little bit.
You'll start leaning a little bit more on your seat.
And the seat lean is a big giveaway.
The producer said that to me the other day.
Really?
Because I know when you're about to get really engaged
because I lean forward.
Yeah.
I don't even realize I'm doing it.
Yeah.
I think I've got to be better at.
I've realized.
I was watching this exact video.
This is about Luca and Curry.
No,
this one was about
Stephen A.
calling Jimmy Butler a perimeter shooter.
Yeah,
and he's not a perimeter shooter at all.
Jimmy Butler's a fantastic player.
He's a superstar.
Who all are fantastic players?
Well, Pat Beverly pressed me on that the other day.
That's what you got.
Fantastic player. What does that mean?
And I'm like, I don't know.
You got pretty, you got going there.
There's like 40 or 50 fantastic players.
The hierarchy of the NBA is really hard to figure out at any given time.
But generally speaking, there's like five guys that are it.
They are him.
And you can win a championship with that player.
And beyond that, you know, there's probably five more guys that on certain nights
look like a top five player.
That's like the top 10 or 15.
Then it becomes very circumstantial for the next 20 to 40 guys.
You know, and like Draymond, he's a great example of that
Because where do you sort of place him in the hierarchy of the NBA?
If we're talking about someone who can go off the dribble and score on his own,
like that's not Draymond, but we're talking about impact on winning.
Well, shit, he's top 15, top 20.
So it's hard to rank players.
I hate doing it.
I hate, you know, they make me do it.
Have you seen Draymond Green try to play football?
I haven't.
Oh, there's a video of him.
If you can pull that up.
Is he a beast?
Pull it up.
Jermon Green,
spring football, Michigan State.
What's like a good, like, for an average quarterback in the NFL?
Actually, let's go, not NFL.
Average, uh, FBS,
college quarterback.
How far can they throw football on the fly?
50 yards, like what's good?
Oh, so that's a, um,
you'd think like, 50 to 60, right?
50 to 60 would probably be.
So I could basically,
I could be an average D1 quarterback.
Well, that's assuming that what you just said
means you can throw the ball 50 or 60 yards.
On the run, accurately.
On the run, I mean, I can just do it standstill.
You can throw a 50 or 60 yards standstill.
Yeah.
How long are you leaving us to this?
You have to go somewhere to go,
because we can go right to the field if you want.
I mean, I'm going to, you didn't give me warm up here.
We can go out to the field.
I'll tell you, after we finish,
I have nothing to do the rest of the day.
We'll play pig again, just you and me.
I'll get this list.
And you can warm up as long as you want.
My ongoing joke is basically that if I had not quit
baseball, I would have been a big league pitcher.
You think so? I had a heater, man. Were you a beast? I had a heater. I had a heater. I told
you. 6-4? Yeah. What were you going? Well, I quit in seventh grade. That's the thing. My dad made me choose.
But here's the thing. That is like the point where you have to choose. I was a beast then and
I hadn't hit my growth spurt yet. I was 5, 6. And then all the kids that I played against that
were on the same level as me, they all either played, you know, double A, AAA, AAA, baseball, D1, ACC,
baseball. I feel like I could have had
a chance. I mean, are you
hitting, like, low 70s as a 7th grader?
Yeah. Oh, easy. I mean, that's
I feel like that's a gangster.
Low 70s? Yeah, I feel like that's pretty tough.
In mid-60s, you're like, holy shit.
Right. You know what I'm saying?
Yeah. Like, even 62.
Yeah, if you go, if you go back to the dugout and you're
in like middle school and you're in like, hey, this kid can throw 72
miles an hour. You're like, fuck. I don't think I ever even
heard of that. Taylor, your listeners
know this. This is more us getting
to know each other. Where are you from again?
I'm from Arizona.
From Arizona.
I grew up in Arizona.
I grew up in Arizona.
Went to Michigan.
And I've been here since 2014.
Okay.
And then so Bon Terre, Missouri.
That's a real place.
Oh, I've been there.
That's a real place.
I've driven past there with Willie.
4,000 people.
It's a real place.
Yeah.
Tobacco, lead, cigarettes.
For a long time of my life, I'm not a conspiracy there.
But for a long time of my life, I was like, man, I'm not sure Missouri and Nebraska
actually exists.
Like, I didn't know if they were real places or if it was just like, we're going to put
them on a map because I didn't know anybody.
You know, I'd never, I'm like, Nebraska.
Because they don't leave. Nebraska people don't leave.
It's weird. I'm pretty sure Missouri people don't leave either.
You're talking about where I am right now.
No, but you like, you like a made it out kid.
Yeah, I mean.
You tell me all the time people from your town like don't really leave that town.
That's fair. Yeah, that's accurate.
And like Nebraska, it's a similar, it's a similar conversation we've had.
I feel like most people if you're in a small town, though, not a lot of people really leave.
I think that's a great point.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
No, no, no, I agree with that.
Like cities, I can see.
Yeah.
I don't know.
What makes you want to leave?
We were an hour away from St. Louis when I was growing up.
So there really wasn't no city.
There was like nothing around us.
So you get used to the community aspect, I guess, of a small town.
Like, when you're growing up and when you're younger, like in my area and say you're, like, good at sports, you, like, picture yourself being, like, a head coach of that high school team when you grow up.
Or like a gym teacher.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
I'm going to coach PE and I'm going to teach PE and I'm going to coach football.
What was a big city for you?
St. Louis? St. Louis, yeah.
When I went to Lincoln, Nebraska, I felt like it was big for me.
And everybody else from, like, Texas and Cali, and they, like, just shit on it.
When I went to Orlando, my rookie year, I thought Orlando was a city.
It's clearly not a city.
It's not a real city.
Orlando's a weird place.
Every time I go to Orlando, I'm like, I feel like everything's fake here.
Because it's like the Disney world.
And it's like, oh, there's a castle right there.
Or like, this extravagant billboard.
It's so insane.
But really, it's just like fake.
Nothing's real there, it seems like, to me.
I've only been there like three times in all three of those times.
I don't know.
I wouldn't call it like all of it fake, but it's a transient place.
So a lot of people in and out, a lot of tourists.
Google transient for me.
Well, he can, I mean, he can probably define it for you.
That'll be the easiest word to translate that I'll use today.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
What is short-lived?
Okay.
Always changes, moves around.
You know, people in and out.
Yeah.
Nobody's from, like, who's from Orlando?
Who's like, oh, yeah, I grew up in Orlando and I stayed in Orlando.
It's the same thing here in Nashville.
Like, the first six months, I lived in Nashville in 2014.
I didn't meet one person from Nashville.
I grew up in this area at all.
Everyone's transplants.
Yeah.
Come from New York, come from Florida, come from all over the place.
What?
You're, you know, you're touching the local boys back there.
Well, I mean, is that not true?
There's so many people from out of town?
Yeah.
I'm not trying to come out of the boys.
I'm just trying to say, like, it's a transient place.
Transient place, man.
You know, read a book, boys.
I mean, it's just a transient place.
You know, are you stoked to be on bus with the boys?
I am stoked.
I mean, shit, man.
Like, I got to be honest with y'all.
The last eight or nine months has been kind of crazy for me
because I always envisioned this year of bliss and quiet when I retired.
And I was very hesitant to do ESPN and agree to do like a short one-year deal.
and I was still obligated to do the podcast for another year.
So I was like, yeah, I'll, fuck it, I'll do, I'll do SPN.
But getting into the media space has been way busier than I expected.
And so I get asked to do podcasts probably three or four times a week.
That's not exaggeration, like literally three or four times a week.
So for me, when I got like the ask from your crew that was like, hey, could he come down to Nashville to do this?
I was like, absolutely, absolutely.
No hesitation.
I'm super excited to be here.
What about Bustin with the boys?
If there's three or four a week coming to you saying, hey, come on our podcast,
what about Buston was like, so was it the bus?
Was it Will?
It was mostly Will.
Yeah, it mostly was.
It usually is.
Great follow on Twitter.
He's a great follow on Twitter.
He's a great follow on Twitter.
Yes, he's hilarious.
He had one of the-
He's only to body back somebody for JJ.
Somebody was coming at him.
Really?
This guy named Chip.
And then JJ gave like a good response to him.
It was one of those things where you kind of like read through the bullshit.
Like, hey, JJ, do you need me to ask him for a favor?
Yeah.
I was so scared to clap back at people on Twitter
when I was a player
and then I was off of social media for like two years.
It was an awesome time.
Yeah.
But then when we started doing the podcast again,
I was like, I kind of got to be on.
But in retirement, I have zero problem clapping back.
And I used to think about Kevin Durant.
I'd be like, why is Kevin Durant?
Why is Kevin Durant like clapping back?
He's the top five player.
The guy's worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Like, why does he find the time?
But the reality is when you have the app on your phone,
and you check on it, it's human nature.
You're going to look at the mentions and, like, why not?
It's very satisfying.
Yeah, very satisfying.
Yeah, and it's a super.
You put that guy in a body bag the other day with the, you put him to,
put him in the crib, swaddle on them.
Yeah.
And the shit was so, like.
How's your swaddle game right now?
My swatel game?
Well, now we're kind of, you know, we kind of, we're kind of cheating now because
we got the Ollie swaddle because it's like Velcro.
That exists.
Yes, that exists.
And it is a very good swaddle.
But before we got the Ali, my swatel.
My swaddle was actually getting pretty good.
I was, like, in mid-season form before we got the Ollie.
That's good.
Yeah.
My wife only let me do the swaddle.
She couldn't do it.
Really?
For both our kids, yeah, I was, and I went tight.
I went super tight.
You got to.
You don't want those arms to build.
Well, that hands starts poking out.
When you first start, then that hand starts creeping.
Yeah.
They start scratching their face, the nails.
There's nothing.
It's a wild thing.
The swaddle was something I took very seriously.
As a young father.
You get competitive.
Yes.
Like, when they're kind of tugging, you're like, all right, I'll fucking show you.
You want to play.
games like that. You know what I'm saying? You've got to put them in there.
And they don't really fight back too much makes you feel kind of bad after.
But while you're in it, you definitely like think, oh, this baby's trying me.
You know what I'm saying? No, no doubt. I absolutely get it.
But yeah, I was telling Taylor, like, I was stoked that you were coming home because every
white kid in America when you're playing college basketball, they want to be able to shoot a ball
like JJ Reddick. And I was more fired up now that you're coming on the bus.
Because I'll tell him Taylor, that you're legitimately one of the first OGs, like in the
in the active athlete world
that was doing a podcast.
You did yours for like five years now.
You did it with like Yahoo and Ringer
before you had to do your own thing.
But just the fact that you're podcasting
in those five years,
like when we started busts with the boys,
like low key to give your flowers a little bit.
Like you helped give me like confidence
and like courage to like do busts with the boys,
kind of like a Pat McAfee.
And some of those guys who have kind of like pioneered the space.
And so that's like, that's actually like a huge reason
like why I was fired up.
Because I would look at old man in the three
and you're obviously in the basketball space,
so I never really, like, there's some out there you look
and you're like, oh, they're kind of like competition and stuff.
But you, like, you were, since you're in the basketball side of it,
I was like, oh, let me see, like, what JJ's doing,
like how he does this stuff.
You retired on your own platform.
Like you own your voice, you control your narrative,
you give a platform for athletes.
And so that's like why I'm so fired up that you're on the bus.
I appreciate that.
I never thought about that when I first started.
Woj was launching a platform,
called the vertical at Yahoo and he asked me to write articles for him.
And I got this like weird flashback to college being like stressed out and then having to
stay up all night till 6 a.m. to write a term paper.
I was like, fuck that, Wodge.
I don't want to do that.
And then he came back six months later and it's like, me and Chris Mannix are doing a pod.
Do you want your own pod?
And I legitimately had never listened to a podcast before.
My wife had listened to serial, the season one about the love triangle and the murder and stuff.
Oh, I never.
I was like, I listened to it and I was like, I don't know what to do.
like this is not what I'm going for.
And, you know, when I started it, it was, I thought at the time it was weird.
I thought at the time it was like, I'll just get some reps in case I want to do media.
But then I realized that it like satisfied this curiosity in me.
Like, because I go to dinners or I meet people and I'm like, I'm genuinely curious about people.
I'm very interested in the human psyche.
And it's given me this like amazing ability to, to like interact with people.
And then on top of that, as you mentioned,
there's nothing better as an athlete than like having your own platform and being able to control
the narrative.
And I've used it in in some ways, probably positively and probably negatively to do that.
But like I just, I enjoy having it.
If there's anything that happens in my life, you know, it's as a player and even as a retired player,
I can just go on the pod and talk about it.
When you were first starting your podcast, was there like that, that insecurity that like,
oh man, once I start putting this out there while I'm playing, am I going to be like,
my coach is going to think this.
player, my teammates going to think a certain way.
Like, how does you deal with that situation?
Yeah, I was fortunate because the Clippers at the time,
I get asked that question a lot.
The truthful answer is anyone who was around me as a professional
knew that my number one priority was basketball,
even more so than my family.
And I hate admitting that, but that's the truth.
My entire day was structured around trying to be great at basketball.
So no one that I worked with would ever question whether or not
I was making the podcast a bigger priority than basketball.
I think for me, and it's still this way,
I still get a little bit of performance anxiety when I record a pod
because I just want anything I do, I want it to be good.
This is why I'm so mad that I lost you guys in mini basketball.
No, I'm serious.
Like, I just want it to be good.
And so it took 20 to 30 episodes where I, like,
legit wouldn't have to chug a beer before.
before I started just to call myself down.
Really?
I would chug, I was living in LA,
so it was the North Coast Pilsner.
I would chug a North Coast, Coast Pilsner
and just to calm myself down, like, okay, all right,
you're gonna be all right.
And I used to fucking keep, I mean, age,
like 15 to 20 pages of notes on each person.
And I would like have every question,
I have a flow chart.
I mean, I overdid it.
And now it's like I record,
and I do my notes and I research
and I work hard on it.
But generally speaking now,
it's just like it's natural, it's flows.
I'm sure you guys have experienced the same thing,
100 some episodes in.
It gets easier.
It's way easier.
Because you can't understand, like the more you do episodes,
like it took us about 20 episodes.
Every once in a while too,
we'll do an episode with somebody and we'll call each other in the car.
But that was like our go-to in the beginning was do an episode,
driving away, call each other like, hey, what do you think?
And then we'd go back and forth on what we thought we both could have done better
or like, hey, if I do this, maybe you say that or like go off it this way.
And it was a difficult trying time because you're just kind of in this world that you know nothing about.
And then you don't know if people are really going to enjoy it.
And then as you do it more, it kind of just becomes like you know what your audience likes and wants.
You know, like, it's probably easier for me and Will because we're best friends.
So it's easy for us to come up here.
Because what we do in the podcast, we literally do outside.
Right.
So if it's just us too, it's never a difficult thing.
Having a guest on is not a difficult.
thing for us because at the end of the day, we can bounce back off each other.
You know, but it took us time in reps to learn that.
Yeah, I think with Tommy, I think that was part of the reason that I wanted Tommy as a co-host,
which our last season of the Ringer, he was trying to get me to do it.
And I was like, I could, I'll be honestly, I don't really want to do it anymore.
So we did it for a few months together.
And then COVID hit, pandemic hit, world shut down.
We have both simultaneously discovered Zoom.
And we're like, oh, we don't have to do these in person.
And we can do them, you know, over, over the internet and put some content out during COVID.
And then we, you know, Bill wouldn't let us own the podcast.
So we were like, all right, we're going to leave.
But I think having, like, that was my motivation for involving Tommy.
And just having somebody like as a backup, bounce ideas off to give me a pause during it.
It's helpful.
It's helpful.
By the way, even this year working for ESPN and kind of having a real,
sense of the landscape of sports media, like being in it and getting to understand it a little bit
better. Like, we are in the first wave of athlete-driven content, the first wave. And like you mentioned,
you're like, I was a pioneer. Like, I think all of us are. I think all of us in this first inning,
first couple innings are pioneers in it. I don't, I don't think this is like a novelty,
something that's going to be a short-lived thing. I think the future of sports media is going to be
athlete driven. Not to say that traditional journalists won't have their place in it, but
honestly, people are starved for this. Like, we have been fed. I agree 100%.
Andy and soda for the last 15 or 20 years and being able to peel back the curtain a little
bit and offer someone a three-course meal with a leafy green salad. I think people eat it up,
man. I really do. Yeah, I agree. I think not just that, but like the suit and tie like got to be
super proper all the time, I think for us,
is we're kind of learning, like, people want
to feel like, oh, these guys are just like
me, type of vibe. Like, we might play sports,
but, I mean, we're sitting here in shorts
and T-shirts. Barstle does it better.
It's one of the best parts about hanging out Barstool.
One of the best parts. With,
you mentioned Bill not letting
you own the podcast.
During that time, you said that was during the COVID.
That was during the pandemic.
So, our contract was running up.
I think it ended like July 31st or August
first. So it was basically two weeks into the bubble. And I told Bill in June, I was like,
hey, you know, just so you know, like, we are like going to other companies and being like,
do you want to help us sell ads on our podcast? I'm, you know, want to be transparent with you
that this is happening. So please make an offer. And, you know, they made an offer. But they were the
only company that was like, you can't own it. And this was right around the time of the ringer
sale to Spotify. And so...
And not to mention Barstall-Ther with Color Daddy.
Like, there was a lot of IP conversations.
Yeah, exactly. And so that was just...
It wasn't even...
It wasn't even a money issue because honestly,
honestly, the ringer
offered us more guaranteed money than anyone
else, but it was just like I just wanted
to own the IP.
Even like simple stuff that you want to do
down the line with, you know,
conversations or
episodes, it's like, well, if I don't have
control of that, like, what good is it?
you know, and so it really just became bottom line, like, are you going to let me own it?
And he said, no.
And I said, okay, no hard feelings.
That's fine.
We're moving on.
Now, what was it called before?
The JJ Ready podcast.
Original.
And he wouldn't let you keep that.
Yeah, yeah.
And they, so we lost, I mean.
It's the same thing at Barstool with McAfee.
Yeah.
It's a Pat McAfee show now.
Pat McAfee 2.0.
Correct.
For sure.
But you just almost think, like, man, it's.
We lost, yeah, so we lost.
Kind of crazy, right?
We lost our subscriber base.
obviously our R S.
That's gotta be the biggest thing, right?
And I had done it twice already because I lost it when I left the ringer or Yahoo,
I lost mine then.
So I've had to restart three times basically.
Well, what's huge, what I think speaks so good to your audience.
It was very like intriguing when like learning about you when we were doing Bustin with the Boys
was that, yeah, you guys amassed 100,000 subscribers on YouTube within six weeks.
On our old man.
Old man in the three.
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing that we realized early on.
It was like an epiphany moment.
We had my last year with the ringer, we did Zion in person in L.A.
And it was his first long form interview.
And we did Jimmy right before, literally two weeks before COVID and March 11th and the world shut down, basically.
We put that on YouTube.
And those are still the two most watched videos on the ringer.
YouTube channel. So is this epiphany moment we're like, oh, not only is it audio, like podcast
should be audio, they should be video. And then we should probably put stuff on social. And so like
all of those things help just grow the brand and grow the audience. And I talk with people all
the time that either want to do business with a podcast or, you know, our contract is up. And so,
you know, we're talking about potentially, you know, doing deals with other people. But it's like,
I don't care about anything else. I just.
just want to grow the audience. I just want people to appreciate the content. When I have a guest
on, I want people to walk away and be like, hey, I'm a fan of that guy now. Like, Pat Beverly's a great
example of that. He is a divisive player because of whatever, however you view his antics on the
court. But the greatest compliment I can get is like, I had Pat Beverly on the show and people
like, I used to hate Pat Beverly. I like him now. That to me is like, that's it. That's the juice for me.
Yeah.
Pretty impressive.
You said, yeah, and I was like, oh, Taylor's about that.
Oh, no.
What's the shoes for you?
On this?
Yeah.
The juice for me is basically coming on YouTube mostly.
And like seeing like subscribers, seeing people commenting and like just loving what we're doing.
It's still a crazy thought process to me that we're sitting here on mics on cameras.
And you when you play a sport your whole life and you think, oh, this is all I really ever be good at.
This is my one crack at the big whatever I'm supposed to do in this world.
And then you go branch off and do something like this.
And it's like, you don't know if it's going to work.
And all of a sudden, like, it's kind of blowing up in a way that you're like,
I can't believe people like this because it's so natural and easy for us to do.
So it's just fun.
I do love it when people come on.
They say, hey, I thought I didn't like this guy, but I do like this guy.
But for me, it's just like, it's given me, I feel safer in my own.
like own life after doing a podcast as far as like.
I feel like we're doing a therapy session right now.
It's really, it is a, it's actually something I think about all the time.
There used to be a point in my life where I was like football.
That's like the only main income I have.
Like yeah, I've made a lot of money in football, but like what if this and what if that?
Like am I going to ever be able to, you know, am I going to have to go work a nine to five job or something like that?
And then once we started doing this and I started really making money, I was like, oh, like,
I'm going to be okay no matter what.
Like no matter what I do in my life, I'm going to be fine.
Like this was like that step, that little piece for me to be like, okay, I'm going to be all right.
Everything's going to work out.
I knew going into my last year of my contract with the Pelicans that it was going to be my last year.
And the other side of that was so terrifying.
It was so scary.
And I had had a podcast.
But I, again, it was like, is it was podcasting my future?
I didn't know.
And it almost feels weird to say podcasting is my future.
You're like, is that even a thing?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, it's a thing, though.
I know, I know, but like, when you were like, you first had a start, you're like,
is this really a deal?
Like, the last three, four years.
I called my parents.
Actually, my parents called me because they were worried about me.
It was a New Year's morning.
We had played a road game in Oklahoma City, I think, the night before, got in late.
I went to bed at like 3 a.m. woke up at 8.
I had a miss call for my mom, so I called my mom back.
And she was like, you know, we're really worried about you.
My family was in Brooklyn, and I was living on my own in New Orleans.
And I was like super emotional because on Christmas morning, we were in Miami and my wife had sent me a video of my now, yeah, five-year-old running down the stairs to the Christmas tree.
And I basically checked out at that moment.
Like I was like, I just want to be home.
I don't want to do this.
And my mom, I told my mom, was like, I would just want to get in my car and drive from New Orleans back to New York City.
I just want to be home.
And she's like, why don't you?
And I said, because I'm fucking terrified, mom.
Like I'm so scared of what the rest of my life is.
Like, think about you guys play youth sports.
I'm guessing, I started at seven years old.
I'm 37 now.
I retired at 37.
30 years of my life.
I'm not great at math,
but I would guarantee that's probably high 80% of my life.
89% of my life has been wrapped up in sports.
My identity, my ego structure,
everything is so ingrained in being a bad.
basketball player.
Yeah.
And like,
letting go of that,
letting go of that thing.
Fuck,
dude,
it was terrifying.
But I can say to your point
about, like,
feeling safe about it.
Like,
no,
I can,
I can do other things.
And maybe it's,
maybe it's this for a while.
Maybe it's something else,
but I'm,
it's a weird place to be,
you know,
basically a year out of retirement,
to be like,
okay,
I'm gonna be fine.
My life's gonna be okay.
Everything's gonna be all right.
It's gonna be all right.
It's like getting to that other side of it.
Because you're right.
Like,
it's that.
example.
We spend however many years of our life just doing one thing.
And I feel like, like, you're probably the same way.
Like, even when you're in it, you have interest.
And every kind of player and athletes feels like they have something they're kind of
lining themselves up for.
They have a curiosity or, I'm going to do this afterwards.
Everybody feels confident.
But when those, like, for me, it was like three years ago.
I thought that could potentially have been my last year.
And you're just like, I was getting into real estate.
I was, I was journaling the podcast, what it could look like.
But I was just terrified.
I'm like, man, I'm not playing a whole lot this year.
like this could be it. Like I truly have to, I've always been the guy that felt comfortable and
be like, oh, I'll figure something out. Like I already have a few things going, blah, blah, blah.
But man, I really have to figure out, like, what I enjoy because this could be coming faster than what
I realize. And for me with the podcast stuff, like it's, it's like, you were saying it, like,
you're saying it like, that you're saying that, I love, like, talking to people. I feel like if I get
to learn something about somebody, like we've had on like Darren Wall or Max Crot. We've had on a lot
of incredible people, but a couple of those stories stand out where Max is talking about,
his sobriety.
Darren Waller's talking about his sobriety and just going in depth and like giving athletes
kind of a platform to talk about stuff.
And like you said, like I'll have people call and be like, yo, I didn't fuck with that guy,
but that's really cool.
Or it's just like, yo, I like this person, but man, I did not know he fucking went through
that.
And it's like really cool that you guys are able to like peel back layers because they feel
comfortable sitting in front of you because we're all athletes.
Right.
Because a lot of stuff that you'll give a microphone or the reporters or something,
And you're either in the locker room,
your backup or somebody that you're competing with sitting next to you.
Like, guys are around there.
You're not going to...
Walls are up.
Yeah, everything's up.
You're not going to actually give reporters and talk about stuff.
Not because you won't give it to the reporter.
One, you won't give it to the reporter,
but also, like, the environment you're in, you're just not...
Your guards up.
Like you said, egos are going.
And, like, when you're on something like this,
I just feel like everybody feels more comfortable
when they're talking with, like, athletes.
Or there's more of, like, an unfiltered approach.
Like, being for the boys, we tell everybody.
If there's something that you don't like,
let us know we'll take it off.
Like we've talked about jerk off stories
that somebody's wanted theirs off.
We kept ours on.
But somewhere's like, yo, just be yourself.
We'll talk about that soon.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, yo, just let it fly and be yourself.
And if you're driving that part.
If you're driving very much,
you want to take it off, we'll take it off.
People ask me all the time what this podcast is about.
I literally go, I think it's just like a bunch of guys
in the locker room talking.
Yeah.
It's like the conversations you would have.
But another thing to what you were saying is like,
we talk about all the time, like,
how you have like these blinders on how you're so zoomed into the world.
that you live in.
And like not only, let's say, besides the podcast, like football, like, I go and play football
and then I spend time in the offseason watching Free Agency.
And then I send time watching the Combine.
Then I watch the draft and see who the guys I'm going to go again soon, what they're going to be like.
And then shortly after that, the schedule comes out.
And then you're in OTAs.
Then you have that six weeks break where you're just so focused in like your fight camp going
into camp.
It's a year-round thing.
And what this has allowed us to do, or especially myself, because I had super,
caught up in like thinking like everyone is so focused and dialed in on Tennessee Titan
football when really if I just like zoom out for a second, it's like there's a there's a bunch
of people that are but for the most part like ain't nobody gives a shit what I'm doing.
It's like I'll be in camp and it'll be the middle of August and it's right in the middle.
The start is too far to see and the end's not close enough and you're just kind of like fucking
in it.
And you have a day off and you go drive home and you say,
you know what, I'm going to go cruise down Broadway real quick and see what's going on.
And you go down Broadway and you see every type of person walking up and down,
drinking, having a good time, going, they don't give two shits of the Tennessee Times
had practice today.
Or we were watching film or who we're going to play.
And it allows you to be like, oh, like, I'm going to be, it's going to be all right.
It kind of comes down to as like, oh, this isn't, is overwhelming consuming to everybody
as you think it is.
I experienced that at Duke because I felt like I feel like they all wanted it there
I feel like I was in a fishbowl at Duke and when I got on the other side of it I was like
oh no like Duke basketball like it's well known but it's not actually like that important
but at the time it felt like every single thing I did was live or die it felt very intense to me
the actual guy's a question because I was my
best friend, he works in television, LA, and I had lunch with him yesterday. And I was talking about
the other side of sports, you know, being retired and whatever. And he's like, you know, you used to,
you used to say this shit all the time when, when you were a player, like, used to say you wanted to quit,
you used to say you wanted to retire. And I'm like, I'm curious if you guys in your career, even if
it was a great season, that moment you're talking about when you're driving down Broadway and you're like,
people are just having a normal good time. Like, there's so many things that I felt like I missed out on,
like Christmas being an example.
I think I played on Christmas Day 12 times and 15 years.
And I carried,
I carried like a little bit of resentment about that.
Like, I don't know what it was.
And there were moments where I was like,
you know, I could do something.
Why don't I do something else?
Like I started thinking about that.
Actually, it was right after I had my first kid.
It was like,
change my perspective about my time, basically.
And I,
I don't know.
It's like I was definitely still into it.
I was definitely still committed, even more so at the end of my career.
I was a fucking psycho.
But, like, I still carried, like, a little bit of resentment about all the things that went into it
that prevented me from doing other things.
Did you guys, do you guys feel that at all?
If I, like, me feeling it, it was probably, if anything, the last couple years.
Like, when I know I'm kind of like, I have a foot out the door, like, I kind of know
what I want to lean into and do when I'm done now with bustling with the boys and everything else.
And so you think about it a lot more like when I'm in the season.
But I'd say, like, the first,
large, the first like seven years, I more so think like, I can't wait to do this when football's
over with. Like, because it would be the same thing like with Thanksgiving, you don't get to do any
of the holidays like during the season. Like Thanksgiving, Halloween, Christmas, all these things,
New Year's. It'd be more so like, I can't wait to do this like when I get done playing.
Not complaining. Not complaining. No, but it's because it's a great life. And I'm, I was,
I never felt any sense of like ingratitude. I was always grateful. I was always,
You know, I would still, like, even my 50th year, super frustrated.
Like, dude, I'm fucking 36 and I'm in the NBA.
Like, how fucking cool is this?
Yeah, you know what I mean?
Like, I loved it every day.
But still, there were moments.
There were moments.
Everyone goes through the grass is greener.
And the thing is, there's so many different lives you can live on this world.
Yeah.
And so everyone always daydreams to think about what if.
Like, I always, I remember being in college and, like, having to get my weight up because I came into college super underweight.
And I remember thinking to myself, like, man, when I'm done playing football, I'm going to be so, like, jacked and skinny.
me. And like, I steal it to this day. I'm like, man, I can't, I can't wait to
fucking lose 60 pounds, you know, and I can't wait to do this and this. And there was,
I mean, we talked about it. We talked about all the time, like, during the season last year,
the season I was having. I had him over the house. I was like, I'm going to retire. I'm done.
And you kind of, but that's when you're like so in it. And then you start to realize,
like, hey, you're in the NFL. How cool is this regardless?
Yeah. Like, it's just dope. You're living every kid's dream is to be a professional athlete at
one at some position. We did it. We did it. We made it. Yeah, we've
Congratulations.
We fucking made it.
We made it.
And it's just cool.
It's a cool vibe.
But yeah,
there are,
there's always something you want to do
other than what you're doing at that moment.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think I've retired,
what,
the last three years.
Yeah,
every year for,
this is it.
This is it.
This is it.
This is it.
This is it.
I've known Will.
every single year,
he's been like,
this is the last one.
And now we're talking about year 10.
You know?
Yeah.
It's just crazy.
Do you think,
like,
I'm curious,
too,
do you think there's a difference in basketball and football,
like doing the media stuff and having personalities.
But I think because I think it's like,
it's wild that Draymond has a podcast.
I think it's awesome.
But I'm like,
damn, like he's got some stones when he's going to go do a podcast
like right after a game and talking about the game.
Like, do you feel like there's a difference there?
Because you obviously did the pod for like five years.
Like what's the sense like when you're around all the guys?
Because when I went to Vegas last year,
like everybody kind of knew about the podcast.
I know everybody liked it.
So it was all good.
But when I was in the building and seeing like guys work
and appreciating.
kind of like, damn, like, these dudes like fucking, they love, like, I love ball, but I'm like,
they love ball way more than the spot that I'm at in my career right now to where you almost,
you almost feel bad bringing up any of the stuff because you don't want to seem like you're like
not in it as much as they are. Yeah, again, I go back to that point, I don't, I go back to like,
any teammate I've ever been around, like, saw the dedication and work I put in. So I never
sort of worried about that. On the basketball football side, I mean,
That's probably part of the larger conversation just about the empowerment that NBA players have right now,
the player empowerment era that we're in the middle of right now relative to the NFL.
And I don't think the NFL has gotten to the level that the NBA has.
And probably some of that are guaranteed contracts.
Yeah, the players run the league more.
You know, again, it's...
You get the right guys.
You can not predict.
Like, it's a lot more competitive now.
It's a lot easier to predict.
Like all LeBron and these boys on this team, like these teams are going to see each other in the finals.
There's also just inherently, because of the way your cap works, there's, there's like more parody in the NFL.
And because it's a two-way sport, like in the NBA, it's like if you're one of the five best players or 10 best players, like you fucking run it.
You run it.
Now, some guys don't take advantage of that.
Some guys do.
But there's just more.
I just believe inherently.
there's more power if you are LeBron James or you're a Kauai Leonard or a Kevin Durant.
You just carry more than even a great all-pro NFL player does.
It's just the way the sport works.
Less guys probably.
When you say run it, you mean like they run practiced meetings and they say we're fucking,
this is what we're doing?
There's input on everything.
You have input on everything.
I don't know if you guys.
It's like Aaron Rogers or like Payton Manning.
There's very few guys.
But I think every team in the end, all 30 teams probably, you could probably
name five guys in the NFL, 10 guys maybe.
They could name the best wide receiver in the NFL.
And he's not having input on like who they should draft,
where they should trade.
Yes.
Where in the NBA, the top two guys on pretty much every team.
I mean, I had that with the Clippers.
I was like the fourth or fifth guy.
You know, I had, I would talk to Doc.
I would talk to L. Frank.
I would talk to Steve Balmer.
Like, I had that.
You know, I had that with Philly when I went there.
Like, I wasn't even one of the best players.
and I just think that because of,
I don't know if it's less guys or it's just like, you know,
we're on the court the whole time, you know.
In the NFL, you're playing offense or you're playing defense.
And to a degree too, it's like the NBA,
a great player can impact the game more than a great NFL player.
Because I don't want to make broad generalities,
but in general, like in the NFL, like on a play,
you have a specific task.
in the NBA, it's a little more organic
where a player's talent can sort of shine
in a bunch of different ways.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, it does make sense.
The Manning's there in Rogers, the Tom Brady's like,
if you play good offense, like running the ball
and you can keep them off the field,
like you can keep those guys off the field.
Like those quarterbacks need the defense.
The special teams and literally everybody
just as much as they feel like they can affect the game.
Basketball, it seems like not knowing basketball,
but it seems like you have two or three dudes,
can take over and do whatever the fuck you want almost.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Pretty much.
Like when LeBron...
As long as those dudes were like good in 2022 and not the last time they were good was like
2016 like the Lakers this year.
Right.
They built a team around guys that were good six years ago.
Is that why it didn't, is that why that didn't...
Is that why...
The Bron, still that man though?
Yeah.
Yeah.
He still is.
I mean...
Where would you rank him in the top 10 today?
I mean, he's in the top 10.
I don't know.
Is he top five, though?
It's hard to judge based on this year.
just because of how bad that team was and how badly that roster was constructed.
You know, to a degree,
the Brooklyn Nets not as bad of a roster,
but also equally bad because it's,
the NBA has changed and it's very recent.
The NBA has changed.
Like,
I really believe you need homegrown talent.
Like,
you have to draft well.
That's the inefficiency in the marketplace.
You have to draft well.
You have to have homegrown talent.
You can't buy championships anymore.
because you need all the ancillary pieces.
You can go get two or three great players that are super max or max players.
You need really good players three through seven, three through eight.
And if you're going to have two or three max guys,
those guys have to be on rookie contracts.
Or you have to be really good with finding bargain players and free agency.
But if you're, okay,
so if you're the L.A. Rams,
they went and they didn't do anything in the draft.
And there's 53 guys on a roster in the NFL.
How come you can't do that in the NBA anymore?
Like,
It seems like it'd be way easier to go pay seven or eight guys
and then have them be a super team.
You see that can't happen anymore.
But the Rams just did that with way more guys.
You know what I'm trying to say?
Yeah.
I don't understand what I'm saying.
I'm not, again, I haven't put my GM hat on to be an NFL GM.
Yeah.
I have put it on to be an NBA GM a few times.
And it's just the general way our cap works.
So there's a there's a cap and then there's a luxury tax and there's a hard cap.
an apron. There's a, you know, the difference between the luxury tax and the hard cap is like an apron.
So once you get into like two max players, then it's like, all right, we have 13 roster spots.
We need to fill out with essentially the supermaxes are so high now, essentially like $40 million.
So on average, you're going to pay guys $3 million a year, which is what the Lakers did this year.
They signed, you know, Avery Bradley, Trevor Risa, DeAndre Jordan, like all these guys on minimum contracts.
well, if you're a free agent and you're trying to get paid
and another team has,
let's say the mid-level,
which is $10 million a year,
you're probably going to go take that versus $2.5.
You know what I mean?
So it's just the nature of the salary cap.
So unless you have those guys that you drafted
and they're still on their rookie contract,
and you're able to pay those players
once they become free agents
because you have their bird rights.
But that's the challenge.
Does it what rights?
Bird rights.
Bird rights.
Bird rights.
What's bird rights?
Bird rights, basically,
If you're drafted by a team and then you're a free agent and that team is over the, the, what is it?
The salary cap.
The salary cap.
If you're over the salary cap, you can resign them.
Okay.
They came in with Larry Bird.
So like when I signed with Philly on the one year deal, they didn't have my bird rights the
following summer.
So when LeBron didn't sign there, they signed me on another one year deal.
Had I resigned there, they could have gone over the luxury tax because after two years,
you have early bird rights.
After three, you have full bird rights.
And this is all because of Larry Bird.
It's all because of Larry Bird.
Do you care to explain that situation to me at all?
Again, I'm not a complete basketball historian,
but my general knowledge of the situation is that the salary cap came into place sometime in the 1980s,
and Larry Bird's rookie contract was over,
and the Celtics wanted to resign him,
but they couldn't go over the salary cap to resign him.
So there was a rule put in place in the collective bargaining agreement
that you could resign your own free agents to go over the salary cap,
as long as you had bird rights.
All right.
Yeah.
That's a good explanation.
That's a great explanation.
Thank you.
And for the Rams.
Well, I'm not a historian, but here's exactly what you need to know.
In for the,
for the Rams question,
I feel like they've been kind of cooking that team up for a couple years.
Yeah.
Like each year they've kind of added a different place.
And mind you, they drafted Aaron Donald.
They drafted Aaron Donald.
Yeah.
They've had it.
They had Aaron Donald.
They realized like, okay, they're missing a QBPs.
They were able to trade Matt Stafford.
And they probably felt like,
they got, they got OBJ.
They were close enough if they just needed,
if they got like the OBJ,
and the Vaughn Mill and they probably sat there and they're like, hey, fuck these draft picks.
Like, let's try to win the Super Bowl this year.
I was funny.
It's fascinating with the NFL, like how you guys can sign a contract.
And then, like, two years later, like, a new contract happens.
We're like, you know, we sign a contract.
Like, we can't renegotiate our contract.
If we're going to make, let's say a guy's going to make $20 million and a team wants to go sign another player,
they're not going to go to that player and be like, hey, will you take 10 next year?
You know, it's like, you know, it's just like guaranteed.
Like, that's what you get.
Yeah.
And then also like, it's a real issue.
to Harry Beard is like, it's like, this guy's
he's gonna make $37 million, but his cap hits 13.
And it all, it really depends on,
that shit to me.
It depends on teams and how much like money they have.
Yeah.
Like if your,
if your owner has lots of money,
and really the cap doesn't really matter.
Right.
Because Will could be making $10 million and his cap,
it's going to be seven.
Yeah.
And we're going to say,
all right,
hey, well,
we're going to give you $9 million in a signing bonus right now.
So now your cap hits one.
And you're making a minimum this year.
It's just a crazy concept.
Yeah.
It really doesn't matter.
And we have a lot of tenders.
a lot of like, there's a lot of hurdles.
The fifth year, there's a fifth year option
where if you're a first round draft pick,
you get a four year contract with an option for the team
to pick up a fifth year option.
Mind you, you can get franchise tag twice too
because you can literally play seven years
on one deal basically.
And if you're out playing your contract,
your rookie year where you're about to get paid,
they can put a fifth year option on you.
And the fifth year option is like,
you make an average of what the top 10 guys
are making or something like that,
which is usually top three or four guys,
make a lot of money.
I know there's a big,
there's a big difference in the bottom.
So you kind of average out at your position.
At your position.
And then you can get actually,
get another,
I think you can put another option on the guy again.
No,
that's franchise ice tag.
That's fresh ice tag.
It's the average of the top three, right?
Yeah,
the top three players.
But yeah,
you could essentially be on these one year,
one year deals and they have your rights for like,
Taylor said,
like up to seven years if they actually wanted to.
But rookies nowadays,
like if you start out performing your deal,
like going into that fifth year,
if like they try a fifth year option,
you guys are getting a lot,
Guys are holding out or saying that they won't play stuff like that.
Guys will hold out.
And usually what teams do is they'll pick up your fifth year
and then they'll negotiate as you're going into your fourth year
where your fifth year doesn't really matter anymore.
But it just gives them more time just in case.
I signed my second contract going into my fourth year.
But they already picked up my fifth year option.
They have to pick it up by what, your third year?
By like May or something.
May your third year.
It's a wild deal.
It's a wild deal.
It's crazy.
When you're an NFL player
and you guys are,
we're all sitting here talking about money
and stuff like that
and then we look at the NBA
like, yeah, it's fucking wild
how these guys
kind of just run the show.
It really just...
I know.
We sit back as you.
It's like,
Mother fuck.
Like, these years are just making...
Like, I think Derek Carr literally...
You got to even play that money.
Right, right.
$10 million.
Dude, uh,
Derek Carr signed his contract,
not this most recent one,
but the one before that.
And somebody tweeted him,
it was like $120 million dollar contract
or something like that.
And he's like, hey,
congratulations.
You make as much as a contract.
a six man in the NBA now.
That's not true.
Well, that someone says this shit like that.
And I was like, that's just fucking wild.
That's not true.
But the money's crazy.
Have you been a non-starter and made a nice little baggie?
My two-year deal with the Pelicans was nice.
Yeah.
I mean, I made like 13 and a half or something.
A year and you weren't in the top five?
And I wasn't a starter, yeah.
That's crazy.
That's fucking wild.
That's good for you.
I'm thinking that's crazy.
Like, I didn't play either.
Give me that.
That's crazy.
If you're on a starter, you made $13 and a half million dollars.
It's different.
It's different.
I don't know how.
How is it?
What do you?
My first year
with the Pelicans,
I averaged 28 minutes a game
and scored over 15 points
and was second
the league and three point
percentage.
Go off King.
All right.
Okay.
Listen, a guy in the NFL
who's not a starter
might play 10 snaps a game.
Like, there's a dip.
That's my point.
There's a difference.
So you're still getting production.
You can add me.
I'm right here on the bus.
You can look at me.
He might not play a snap in the NFL.
He's just like, hey, just look at me, man.
Man, I didn't, I didn't say it.
He's like 10 mil.
What I'm saying.
You're paid in the NBA based on
production. And so you don't have to be a starter to produce. That's where the difference is.
That's true. And you guys have like way like less guys. We have less guys. Yeah. And again,
it goes back. If you're generally speaking, you have like a max guy or a couple max guys.
You have a couple guys that get salary cap, which is what every time I was a free agent, I signed with
cap space. I signed with to a team with cap space. Then you have like the exceptions.
You have the mid level exception. And if you're over the tax, you have the taxpayer mid level exception,
which is about half of the mid-level exception.
And then everything else is like minimum.
What's minimum?
It just depends on years of service.
So like if you're a 10-year guy, I think minimums is 2.7.
Something like that.
That's a nice little baggie.
Ours is like one.
900.
As a 10-year guy, I think it's one.
One for an NFL player is, that's the minimum?
So now you're on our side.
You see them?
Change the tune a little bit.
I'm saying.
Yeah.
Minimum after you've played like eight or nine, ten years.
Mine in this past year is based on like 980 maybe.
I think that's what it is.
How many guys are minimum guys, though, that are like bawling,
that are starting and producing.
And I'm not saying they're like necessarily all pro players,
but they're good.
They're really good.
They grade out well in analytics.
I see, I think analytics is a, it's not the move.
I know you have a bad taste about well.
I know you have a bad taste about like analytics and the PFS.
I just don't think it makes a whole, it doesn't make a whole lot of sense.
Stowers, like you can do it for quarterbacks, maybe white receivers.
You can do it to an extent, I feel like at every position.
To an extent, but it doesn't talk the entire story.
When people say numbers, I agree with you.
People say numbers of the entire story, I disagree with that whole, a wholeheartedly.
And I love analytics in basketball.
There's my, the most beautiful, uh,
Synergy that I've, you know, can witness in Synergy, by the way, is a name of an advanced stats company.
The most beautiful synergy that I can see, like, when I analyze this stuff, is my eye is telling me something,
and I'll hit up a couple people I use for advanced stats.
Some of the stuff I check myself, but I'm not great on second spectrum.
I don't really know how to operate it.
So I be like, hey, it feels like this team is running way more ISOs this series, and they don't
run a lot of ISOs in the regular season.
Can you look that up?
And then it'll be like, oh, yeah, they're running 40% more ISOs during this series.
than they do during the regular season.
I'm like, oh, it matches up.
Sometimes the eye test and the analytics,
they match up.
Sometimes the analytics tell us stuff we can't see with our eyes,
and sometimes the analytics lie to us with what we see with our eyes.
Yeah.
Like, Devin books are an example of this.
He is, I think, third on,
he was like third on the sons this year and win shares, right?
He's going to be first team all NBA.
He was top five in MVP voting.
Like, he was their best player this year.
but because of how analytics grade players out,
he didn't fare particularly well.
Like, you're always going to, in the NBA,
you're always going to need volume shot creators.
And he's great at that,
and he does it at a fairly efficient level.
And my eye can tell me that.
But the analytics, they lie to me.
They lie to me.
They don't tell me he's as great as he is.
Very well-spoken man.
He is.
Kevin Booker?
You are.
Sharp, you're sharp.
No, yeah, I don't know,
Devin Booker.
Answer your question about the minimum things.
I feel like it probably happens more
for like defensive guys than offensive.
Yeah.
Because if you're, if you're like on offense,
I feel like when you're like,
when you're having a year,
like it's,
it's easier to see.
Yeah.
Like defense could be harder
because there's a lot of variables
that you sometimes need to go to your way
like as far as opportunity and everything else.
So if you might see a minimum guy bawling
on a minimum contract,
I feel like it's probably like a vet
that's on like a one year deal,
probably defensively.
So here's another question I have for you.
I'm glad I have you guys in my podcast right now,
but I have another question.
for you. I'm curious about this. Seriously, I think about the NBA and like a guy who's a free agent
who needs to put up numbers. Like in the NBA, it's a lot of it is like your points, your rebounds,
your sis, field goal, percentage, all this stuff. Like, you need to put up numbers. And so there's a way
for a guy to basically have good counting stats, earn a nice contract, but have literally no impact on winning,
either because he's playing on a bad team or because of his role and he just, you know, he's able to just shoot the ball whenever he wants.
And I wonder if the NFL, if you're able to do that.
Like if a guy's a free agent, like can you hide behind statistics?
Or is in the NFL, are you just exposed at all time if what you do doesn't impact winning?
I think it's another one that goes for defense because you can hide behind statistics in a lot of ways if, because a guy, let's say a defense event, he can have a lot of sacks.
You can look at him and be like, oh, that you had 12 sacks here.
holy shit.
And then he go watch his film and he's,
he might not be beating guys one-on-one.
The quarterback might be holding the ball really long
or he gets flushed out of the pocket the wrong way.
It's an effort sack a lot of way,
a lot of ways,
which is one of the arguments I would have had with,
what's his name, who loves T.J. Watt.
Oh, Jersey J. Jerry.
Jersey Jerry.
Hey, it's an unbelievable defensive end.
He deserves everything he's getting,
but a lot of his sacks are effort sacks as well.
Like he beats dudes.
Don't get me wrong.
He fucking murders cats out there.
Are there statistics for that?
Like how many times?
times you beat the edge. I'm sure there are. Yeah, yeah, that's where PFF comes in a play.
Pro Football Focus. The thing Willow was kind of alluding to with me was with PFF,
they grade everybody every single day and they have like these numbers come out. And it's
very difficult thing to do for my position because you don't, there's a thousand different
ways to run one play. And based on how we run ours, it's different than Washington does or
San Francisco does or, you know. And so when you go to grade it, you can't grade us all the same.
And so you need to have somebody in the building to know what to do.
And that's where I kind of get off, like a little upset with numbers.
Right.
Because there's times.
There's one.
I go back to this, the task part of it.
You could do your task, but someone through their bias because of how they think the task should be run.
Right.
Grades you a different way.
Internally, the Titans could be like, oh, you did that perfectly.
Right.
And there was a point in 2016 where I was the grade of the number one tackle for the first nine weeks of the season.
And I said the same thing then, too.
It's just like they don't really know what they're talking about when it comes to offense linemen.
Now with quarterbacks, I think running backs would be another difficult one to do.
I think defenses would be pretty hard.
It depends.
Like with O. Lyman, you could see it like if you're moving the guy out of the gap.
Like you could be doing the task, but are you moving them to the sideline?
Like for me as a backer, like I could take an offensive lineman on in the hole.
But if we're stagnant or I'm barely getting moved, even though I'm doing the right thing,
like I know my I'm leveraging the right side to our baby.
All these guys don't know what the fuck they're talking about.
the A gap so you make sure you keep a egg out.
But if Dante Hightower takes on more of a thudder,
Dante Hightar takes on somebody and puts the offensive lineman in the gap,
you'd see why he'd get like a better grade because he's physically moving the guy
more, which could play into it.
What a lot of times are to do is spill.
Yeah.
It's so crazy because defense like...
Sometimes I feel the same way when you're talking about some of the basketball stuff.
I'm like, I kind of don't know what that means, but he makes that shit sound crazy.
It's crazy, right?
But yeah.
Basketball's a crazy world.
It would be more so defense where you could hide behind stats.
Like DBs who get a lot of picks, you have.
Like, you got a lot of picks.
You made a lot of plays on the ball.
You get a lot of sacks.
He could be a bad run defender.
Like, maybe he's rushing to get a sack every damn play.
Right.
That's a great point.
With D.Bs, too, it's like, if you get a lot of picks,
that means they're throwing the ball on your side.
Correct.
Yeah, you get more opportunity.
Or if you're a safety, too, safety is due.
Like Kevin Byard, he's on the Titans.
He had a lot of interceptions this past year,
and he's just in the right place at the right time.
Right.
He can fool quarterbacks, that type of thing.
But if you're a corner one-on-one, I draw Revis at one point when he was on Revis Island.
It was like you don't even throw to that area.
Like he just locks dudes down.
The gray ones like they probably won't have a lot of stats because the ball's not thrown to him.
Right.
You know how it is though.
It all comes down.
Who's the cornerback for the Dallas Cowboys?
Go ahead.
Well, keep going on.
Stefan Diggs.
No.
The corner.
It is Diggs.
Trevon Diggs.
Trevon Diggs.
He's a guy.
I saw a stat.
I don't know if this is true or not.
He had the most interceptions in the NFL last year.
But he also had the most yards given up by any cornerback too.
But he was all pro.
He would play aggressively.
You could beat him on a.
double move because he's like looking to get a pick.
He's trying to get them picking. He is a stud.
But yeah, like the great ones, but you know how it is.
Like all those numbers, all that stuff comes down to like trying to gain leverage like in a
negotiation. So some guys that does work out.
You know, others, you know, might not, but it all comes down to probably the negotiation.
Another thing is too, it's like supply and demand.
Like a lot of guys are going to free agency and you'll be like, he's not that good,
but he gets broke off because this team needs.
There's, let's say there's, um, the markets down.
The markets down.
There's not many tackles.
I missed out on 2016 free agency by a year.
I was a free agent in 2017.
I tried to get a player option for 16 after the 16 year.
I didn't get it with my Clippers contract.
And I missed out.
Like that summer was bonkers.
That was the summer where, you know,
Timothy Moscov got $64 million from the Lakers.
Holy shit.
Yeah, we're going to take a break from Old Man and three.
We're going to get to bust with the boys right now.
Yeah, let's go with that.
Dude, I want to talk about, like, I know you've talked about it openly,
but like your Duke days.
Like you were one of the most hated players in college basketball like history.
Like obviously Duke as well, but like it just in college basketball in general.
There were times where you talked about quitting.
And I've seen that you did, is it true that you've changed your number at times like your cell phone number?
Oh my God.
So yeah.
I mean my my sophomore year, I've probably changed it 10 or 15 times.
There were so many nights that year where I don't know who was the culprit.
who from, it was somebody from Duke that had a friend at another school that would pass along my number.
And, you know, it was UNC fans mostly and Maryland fans mostly.
And back then, I had the Nokia, you know.
And so, like, I don't know if you could do this maybe in like the upgraded model, my junior and senior year.
But early on, like, you couldn't like the snake alarm and simultaneously have it on silent.
So I would just get calls all night long, like 30, 40 calls.
you know, as soon as like the number shows up at a Maryland party or at a Maryland bar,
like my shit's blowing up over and over and over again.
So I, yeah, I had to deal with that.
There were, you know, there were times that Maryland fans would call me.
They would call me the Antichrist.
Which is like, what?
Again, this is it true?
No, it's not.
Okay, I was wondering for that.
No, but the-
Watch out, JP, you know what I'm saying?
It goes back to why sort of I felt like, in a way we're all the main character in our
story, right? We're all a little bit narcissistic, I think inherently. A lot of ways.
Yeah. But, you know, Duke felt like this, this, this fishbowl and I was like the main character.
And everybody, everybody really hated me. And it was, it was tough to deal with. So yeah, my
sophomore year, and I may have told this story with, with Dan and Eric on their pod, but my
sophomore year, I called my sisters to campus. It was during the Christmas break. I told them to come over from
Raleigh and they came over. There was this chicken place and we grabbed a chicken sandwich and I was
like, I'm done. Like, I want to quit. And they were like, what do you mean? I was like, I just,
I was like, I want to be a normal student. I want to go to class. I want to be a frat kid.
I think I probably said I wanted to write poetry. I think that probably came out. Pre-am poetry.
When you're depressed, that is the move. It is the move. That is the move for sure. And then I didn't
quit. Second semester, I went into what I would describe as a spiral.
I mean, I was out every night.
Nights before games, I would drink 25, 30 beers.
Nights before games?
Yeah, show up the next day.
How many beers?
I counted.
Really?
Yeah.
You can crush them like that?
The marker on the wrist that I move?
After the season, do you guys remember the OC?
Please tell me you watch the OC.
Yeah, I remembered it, but I did not watch it.
That was the show when I was in college.
That was like, we would record it on VHS.
We record it and like watch it later.
That's why.
So it was a Thursday, and I was like, the OC's on tonight.
And I was like, I'm going to see how many beers I can drink tonight.
And I started at 8 o'clock when the OC came on.
And I got to like 39 by the next morning.
And it was just like that was my second semester at Duke.
I was just, I was out of control.
And a little bit of it was immaturity and selfishness.
A little bit of it was rebellion because I had my whole sporting life since I was
seven years old and watched Christian Leitner hit the shot to be Kentucky.
I was like, I want to go to Duke.
And it was like a dream come true.
And then I get to Duke and I'm like, oh, everyone fucking hates my guts.
Like this is not what I signed up for.
Why did everyone hate you so much?
Because I was a Duke.
I mean, if I had gone to Florida or UVA, like it would have been fine.
I would just would have been a normal kid.
You guys had that hate vibe, huh?
They do.
They do.
And it's like the white villain at Duke.
Like that was definitely part of it.
I was next in line for that.
Because we, I mean, we had, we had like 11 or 12 games my freshman year that we played at the beginning of the season.
It was like home games.
And then we played like UCLA and Indianapolis.
We played Ohio State and Greensboro for the Big Ten ACC challenge.
We'd have a road game until after the new year.
And we go to Clemson.
We come out for warmups in the entire student section is Channing shit.
Two weeks later, we go to UVA, my home state.
There's all these students.
I had really bad back me in college.
And I had, there was all these kids wearing like makeshift,
white Duke 4, Duke number 4 jerseys.
And they had painted like red dots on their shoulders.
That's hilarious.
By the way, I thought it was a hilarious.
Hey, it's us to Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, new?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called, Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
But this one's extra special.
So how did we?
How do we actually come up with a name Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
We were thinking I'm originally calling it one of the early names of our band.
Before Jonas Brothers was...
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast,
for people could call in and say, hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas,
and offered it up as a potential title.
For the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL, late-night comedy guy,
not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending.
Opinions are flying.
And nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise.
Breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down, give you context and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
Sports Slice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Follow Timbo Slica Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis.
And I know firsthand because I competed there myself.
I'm Renee Stubbs, and on the Renee Stubbs Tennis podcast,
I'm breaking down everything happening at Roland Garris.
Every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on clay.
Jen should win?
I mean, she went down in three to Rovachina, but I'm delighted.
Yeah, she's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lennar Rabakina is arguably the best player in the world right now.
And I actually can win on any surface.
Because if she's serving, well, good luck.
Consider this your court side seat to the French Open.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
There is too.
I was very sensitive.
At the time, did you think it was funny?
I did.
Even though I was really sensitive about, you know, my shoulder acting.
I was like, man, that's, that's fucking creative.
Why didn't you go t-shirt under the jersey then if you were so, if you're insecure about it?
It was a rule we couldn't do it.
I convinced him my sophomore year.
I went into his office.
I may have cried and I was just like, you got to let me wear a fucking shirt under my jersey.
Damn, you say you may have cried.
When you say it may have cried, you 100% cried.
I cried, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You brought it.
That's a real deal.
Yeah.
So the end of my sophomore year, we lost in the final four.
It was a, it was a low point for me.
We lost to Yukon.
We were up eight with like three and a half minutes to go.
And they came back and I had a chance twice, actually,
once to take the lead with like 10 seconds left.
I got stripped.
And then I had a chance with like five seconds left to hit a three to tie us.
And I missed them both.
And I just like that spiral that I was on went even deeper.
And coach would like make me come in on Saturday mornings to his office and he would meet with me.
And he told me during one of those meetings, he said,
we didn't win a national championship because you weren't worthy to be a champion.
It was like the meanest thing everyone's ever said to me.
And it was true.
It was true.
But it was like so soul cutting, right?
That sent me further down.
So I then, my parents, because they knew I was having a tough time for Christmas had given me a toy airplane.
I'm like, what the fuck?
It was a ticket, basically.
They were like, wherever you want to go after the school year's out, you can go.
So I'm like, all right.
I was like, I want to go see my buddy.
Duke soccer player. I want to go see my buddy in California. So I planned this trip. We went to
Davis, California. We went to the Bay. We went to Santa Barbara. We went to L.A., drove back up.
Well, by the time I got to the trip, my parents knew that I was in a really bad place. I had
$7 in my checking account. They're like, we're not going to give you any money for this trip.
We'll let you still go on the trip. We're not going to give any money. I basically like
bummed off people for those like 10 days I was out there. And I got back from the trip. And
I was supposed to finish an incomplete
because I'd not gone to class all semester either
so I was supposed to finish an incomplete
so I'm hanging out in my buddy's apartment
for like two weeks
and I would wake up at like 2 p.m.
in the afternoon I'd start chugging beers
I'd have a burrito, party through the night,
wake up at 2 p.m. I'd do that for two straight weeks.
No one knew where I was. I told my parents
I was in summer school. I told Duke I was back home
finishing my incomplete. One day I get a fucking rap,
wrap, rap at noon on the door
of the apartment and it's Coach Collins and Coach Wojo.
So I walked downstairs.
I've literally got, by the way, I have one outfit.
I've got, it's a blue Abercrombie shirt and Abercrombie cargo.
Oh, it was the time.
It was the times.
And I've got these flip-flops that I had bought at the Gap in San Francisco with my last
$5.
They were on sale.
And they're like, they're like, come outside.
So I'm like, all right.
So I'm two, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, $1.95.
I'm 2.
I'm fucking fat.
I'm fat as fuck.
I hadn't shaved in like three weeks.
My hair's like,
S-A-E frat-boy hair.
You know what I mean?
A little wavy, a little curly,
right over the ears.
They're like, you know,
come outside.
We get in the car.
We drive all the way back to campus.
Just give me a pause real quick.
Where's your anxiety at when these dudes
knock on the door?
10 out of 10.
10 out of 10.
Which is debilitating.
There was bongs everywhere as well.
Like, it was a bad.
It was a bad scene.
Beer, beer cans everywhere.
in a way though
and I'll in a way
I was like finally
really yeah someone came to get me
I was like finally
and so they
we go to campus
we're getting ready to
this is a random part of the story
but we get we get ready to turn on campus
and Wojo
looks in the rear of your community
he's like nobody said a word
by the way since come outside
like I just followed them into the car
we get to campus and he's like
so what are you been doing
and I was like
like, I don't know why I said this, but I was like, watching movies.
I was like, all right.
So they took me up to Coach Kay's office.
They dragged me through the fifth floor.
He's on the sixth floor.
They dragged me to embarrass me and shame me,
which I love that they did that because Wojo and Collins are complete assholes,
and I love them to death.
So they dragged me through.
I'm like, looking like shit.
And then we go up to Coach's office.
We had a long hour and a half meeting.
And, you know, they basically,
It was basically an ultimatum.
It was like, dude, we're not going to kick you off the team.
We're not going to kick you off camp, you know, at a school.
But you need to get your shit together.
And like, we're going to get you, you know, the help you need.
So like I started seeing a therapist, saw a therapist the rest of my time at Duke.
That summer I saw a psychiatrist as well.
They put me on a fucking hourly schedule that summer.
And it was, dude, I swear to God, I still have the sheet.
It is 8 a.m. wake up, 9 a.m. check in, 10 a.m.m.
class.
1 p.m. study hall, 2 p.m. court, 3 p.m. waits, 4 p.m. run, 5 p.m. pickup. 6 p.m. dinner, you know, you're in your
apartment, 10 p.m. lights out. And I did that all summer. Would they check in your apartment to make
sure the lights were out? It was funny because it was two weeks into summer school. So I didn't have,
I had petitioned the dean to get back into summer school. They let me back in. I took a class on
the Civil War. And there's the start of my transformation as a student.
well that summer. I got basically straight days after that. But because it was so late in the
summer, they were like, we don't like all the, all your teammates, all the managers, everybody
you know, they already have roommates. So there was this random dude. I don't know his name.
There's this random dude on central campus. They were like, there's a person that has an extra
bedroom in the two bedroom apartment on central campus. You're going to live with this person.
and he'd no affiliation to anyone I knew, any affiliation of the team.
And I walked into the apartment.
I was like, hey, man, I'm going through some shit.
I would appreciate it.
I'm going to be friendly to you, but I appreciate it if you just like let me, let me be
for the next like six weeks.
And he's like, what did he say to you?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So what did he say to you?
He's like, okay.
All good.
No worries.
And I would like see him like later on, like my junior and senior year.
And it was like a passing, you know, sort of like.
Didn't know his name.
No.
He probably talks about you all the time.
Oh, there's no.
He probably talks about you all the time, dude.
He was talking about how he was instrumental in JJ Redick getting back on the horse.
Let me tell you something about JJ Reddick.
When I met him, he was going through it.
See what he's done?
Yeah.
See what he's done?
That schedule, that was life changing.
Yeah.
Because that became the rest of my life.
And I wouldn't have done what I did in the NBA or even done what I did at Duke.
Had the length of the career I had.
I was, I mean, from that point out, I was a psycho.
I was absolutely psycho.
It was like diligent routine, my schedule.
That takes precedence over everything.
I need to get my work done.
I need to get my sleep.
I need to eat right.
I'm going to go after it like that over and over again.
And I did that for the rest of my career.
Oh, shit, dude.
That's an incredible deal.
Yeah, what do you think?
Like discipline.
Discipline's the number one thing you need for success is what you're saying.
Well, I think obsession is.
I agree with that.
I think because even with like a creative,
you don't necessarily need discipline.
If you're super talented,
I know guys in the NBA that aren't as disciplined as I was.
I know guys that probably are more disciplined than I was.
Like I, it's obsession.
It's like the true love.
The stuff we were talking about earlier about like,
fuck, man, I want to go have a beer on Broadway or fuck,
I want to go, you know, have Thanksgiving dinner with my family.
All those things, like we have to be more obsessed with the other thing.
We have to be more obsessed with what we're doing.
And I always was.
I was always more obsessed with it.
And it's, you know, so it was like the obsession on one hand.
But then I was like learning how to be diligent, learning how to have a routine.
You know, I developed this routine as a pro player.
It was like it was sick because my routines had routines.
And it was like to the minute on a game day, to the minute, starting at 8 a.m.
Whenever I woke up, it was like to the minute.
All right, it's 12.13.
I've got 17 minutes till I need to eat lunch.
It's 115.
I've got 15 minutes till I need to take my nap.
I'm waking up at 4 p.m.
I'm calling the room service at 4.30.
Like it was just everything was to the minute.
When you do stuff like that, though, does it ever feel like if something messes with that schedule?
Like your kids are doing something, your wife does something, you can argue with somebody and it fucks up your schedule where you're now off the minute?
Yeah.
Does it, does it fuck up your game?
Did it fuck up your situation?
Because being that obsessive.
It would fuck me up in the moment.
I don't know.
There was one example I can think of where it really fucked me up in the game.
But it would fuck me in the moment.
I'll give you an example of that.
My first game with the Pelicans were in Toronto.
And again, they don't know that I'm like this.
Right.
And so Jamel McMill and Nate McMillan's son comes in the training room and I've started my routine.
90 minutes on the clock.
I'm in the training room.
65 minutes on the clock.
I'm in the wait room.
52 minutes on the clock.
I'm on the court.
38 minutes.
I'm finishing up my workout.
I'm back in the locker room at 36 minutes.
Like I'm starting that first game.
And he comes to the locker room and he's like, hey man, you're shooting it.
He said some time that was not my shooting time.
And I fucking lost it on him.
And I, Jamel and I are cool.
But it was our first interaction that we had had.
And I was like, what the fuck?
What kind of operation is this?
That's not my shooting time.
I agree to this shooting time this morning.
I told you motherfuckers.
Like, then I'm like, okay, I got to go apologize like seven people right now.
Yeah.
But that was something.
After the game you apologize.
Like all that stuff.
The one time was I was in Indianapolis when I was with the Bucks and it was a different hotel than we normally stayed at.
And I ordered my room service and it never came.
and I went you know I'm like I'm running out of time now I've got to go down I could take my bags
bags down to the bus so I went down I go to the restaurant I'm like hey room service never came
they're like whatever they go get it they gave it to me a minute before my bus time so I'm eating
like on the bus as I'm walking in the arena and I was like two for 13 that night and just couldn't
I couldn't focus on the game was because of the food because the food was bad like you're
yeah what you think about the routine there
It fucked me up.
It messed up your day.
So it was all about control for me.
Yeah, no, I get that.
Here's what I can control.
I'm going to control this.
And like, you're now, you're now fucking with my control.
The one thing I can control is my routine.
And now you're fucking with it.
And I'm pissed.
Yeah.
And it fucked up.
Fucked you up.
Two for 13.
Yeah.
See, I've tried to be like that before during games,
especially on game day.
But one thing I've realized for myself,
when I do best when I don't try to have control over anything.
As long as I'm in my head,
I'm like, oh, I just need to feel good before this game starts.
I could show up four hours before the game starts.
It show up two hours before the game starts.
It does not matter to me anymore.
But at one point, I was like that right after like, wake up at this specific time.
Go get in the cold tubs.
Go from there.
Go get a coffee at that Starbucks.
Then you go to get to the coffee.
You go right to the stadium.
I used to be like that.
But then one thing would happen, it would fuck me up.
And then I would tell myself after the game, like, oh, that's because you messed up your deal.
Yeah.
I got over that at Duke.
By the end of my Duke time, I was like,
my performance on the court is not because I made three out of four on the last spot of my routine
and didn't make four out of four.
Like I just got over that part of it.
I think it was more about just like, it was like, here's what I need to do to peak at 707 or 737 PM.
When that all goes up and it's tip, like here's what I need to do to peak at that time.
So that was what it was about too besides the control.
It was like there was a reason that I did everything.
It wasn't like, well, I did tie my shoes a certain way and put on my clothes, my jersey in a certain order.
But it wasn't about superstitious.
It was whatever.
But he was like, everybody's got a few.
Everybody's got a few.
Everybody's got a few.
You have a thing?
Do you have a suspicion?
Yeah.
Not that I'm like thinking of like, you know, I love a pregame latte.
Yeah.
But I wouldn't say it's like a superstition.
Like if I miss it, I wouldn't like think a certain way.
I mean.
What if somebody said that we don't have lattes?
We're just going to give you an espresso shot.
I'm good.
You're not going to...
I'm good.
Really?
So it's not about the caffeine.
No, no, no, it's not about the caffeine.
It's just like the vibes going into the stadium.
It's like about getting a latte.
It's putting into the cup holder.
It's turning up Zizi Top, Sharp Trust Man,
LaGrange, all the ZZE Top.
Cinderella Man by M&M.
A lot of like old school bangers.
And like feeling good walking out of the latte.
What?
No, Cinderella Man.
That's a bangor, right?
You said ZZT Top three times
and all of a sudden said Cinderella Man, M&M.
I was like, oh, fuck.
ZZ, Z Zee,
Yeah, Sharp Dreschman
LaGrange, yeah, like,
Cinderella man's another one.
Like, if I'm feeling like I gotta have, like,
a comeback game or a get back on track game in my head,
I'm going to Cinderella man when I'm walking inside
because to me it's like, I'm Cinderella man,
I'm the fucking underdog.
All that kind of say, you know what I mean?
No, we all telling ourselves our story.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're always telling yourself what you need to do.
Yeah, that's kind of like, I guess.
Is that because you listen to it one time before a game
and you played well?
And then you're like, okay, that's my song.
Yeah, some of that stuff is.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like visuals,
like running through a same reel in your head
about like old plays that you've made
just to like see yourself do it
and feel this and feel that.
Yeah, it's like a kind of like a routine like that.
And then if you have a baller game, you're like,
yeah, I gotta go back to that kind of routine.
Yeah.
But if it throws off, I'm not like thinking about.
It's like that's the...
I'm not talking about peak, getting to the peak,
like hitting the peak at 737.
Yeah.
What are the things I need to do to get into a flow state?
Because as an athlete, like if you're not in the flow state,
you're okay.
maybe you're shitty, but you're not like the best version of yourself.
Right. You're in your own head a lot.
Yes.
It's also one of the most difficult things to achieve is the flow state.
100%.
Just be like nothing else matters.
You're so present right now.
You're not thinking about anything else.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
One time in Tampa, it was like before the fourth preseason game.
It was the first time I made the team outright.
So I was in my second year.
Went through preseason.
My anxiety's at 10 because I'm like, this is it.
Like, I got to make the fucking team.
Yeah.
And I had, I had an ice cream before the game,
the night before the game.
Why?
I made myself up,
ice cream,
Eminem's,
had some caramel
and some fudge
on that thing.
Fuck.
And the boy ball.
Like,
the boy played well.
Like,
I let the team
and tackles that game.
The boy...
You had them, huh?
Yeah,
and so sometimes,
like,
that would be my reason
for having,
like,
is that flow state?
I literally think back
to myself,
I'm like,
it puts me in like,
I don't know,
puts me in a good mood.
Obviously,
some ice cream puts anybody
in a good mood,
but I'm thinking,
like,
if everybody's like,
why you eat that
the night before a game.
You just worry about yourself.
You just worry about yourself.
There are dudes.
Everyone, I don't know every team you've been on,
but the tie-ins have a Sunday station every night before a game.
You're like, why the fuck is it out there?
Everybody does.
It doesn't make sense to me.
It's like, what are we doing here with this thing?
100% I feel you guys and I agree, but I had that one moment.
We go back to the flow state thing.
When you're in a flow state, it's like the game goes by so fast and it's over.
But there's other games where you're not like you're the opposite of flow state.
Don't know what that is on flow state.
and you remember everything.
Like we played, Michigan was playing
Notre Dame. It was the night game when we came back.
It was like 100, a minute 42 left in the game.
There was like five scores or whatever.
That's the one where Dinar threw it in the back of the end zone.
Yeah.
And we won it.
Anti-Flow, thank you.
And me and my girlfriend who I was dating at the time,
meeting the girl was dating at the time, like,
I cheated on her or she cheated on.
Something happened.
Like two days before.
You know what happened.
I cheated on her.
There was like a description,
there was something that was going on.
But it was during that game.
And all I could think about was trying to get her back.
And I played the entire game.
And I played all right, but pretty good, decent.
But like the whole game, I was not ever invested in that game.
I was just thinking, like, how do I make it up to this girl?
Was she at the game?
Probably.
It's $115,000.
How can I tell?
Sometimes you know where your girl sits and you feel like...
No, see, I never knew anything like that.
Looking at where they're sitting.
No, see, I never had that.
Not until I got...
Not until like the NFL where I knew where people were...
sitting. Yeah. And my dad would always sit in a certain spot. I always kind of look up at him
every once in a while. But my girl. Every game my dad ever came to, even youth basketball.
Yeah. I'd always like find him. Find him. The flow state part is like when you're not in that
state, you're thinking about what just happened. So it's like that you're carrying something to the
next play. Yeah. And I always always be like, oh shit, I had a turnover. Okay. That's like a tally.
And then like I'd be like, I made a shot. Okay. Now we're even.
Oh, I missed a shot.
You are preaching right now.
Okay, I just had a good pass.
That's a, like, then all of a sudden, like, what are you playing?
You're not actually in the game.
You're like doing this tally in your head.
You're playing chess in your head.
Yeah, it was very detrimental to the overall product that I was trying to put out on the court.
There would be times where I'd be like so stressed out about games that I would do that on purpose.
Right, but okay, all you have to do is just play well in this series.
And you have played a good play.
I could have done better on that play, but like that won't be like a minus.
That'll be like, because you're real.
I made that good play on that earlier series.
Well, no, it's like you start playing the, like, a lot of times the way the grade is like minus zero plus.
Zero, you did your job, minus you did into your job, plus you did something extra.
Something extra there.
And so I like, go and I have like a couple of, I have like zeros across the board, one minus and a plus.
I'm up.
And even like, a plus to me would be double what a minus was, you know, in your head.
But you're like playing this game so you can tell yourself, I played good.
Any way to tell yourself, I did well.
What about the feeling of...
being in the arena, being on the field, on the court, whatever,
and just knowing that you're shit, like knowing that you are having
September, what was the end of your life?
Oh, yeah, we, unfortunately, we were all at.
And you're like, you can't escape it and you feel like everybody knows that you're
shit.
Everybody knows you're terrible.
What game was that?
That is the worst fucking feeling as an athlete.
September 12th, 2021.
I saw, I tore my ACL in October of 2020.
Insurance policy.
I'll have the four.
Right?
So, in my head, I'm like, comeback season.
I'm with the boys, all of these guys the whole year of town.
Like, hey, this would be a comeback here.
I feel great.
I feel amazing.
And I wasn't feeling the best.
I go into camp and I'm like, no matter what,
this better not be the film I want to see right now.
Roll the tape.
I'm like, I'm like, I have to start.
I have to start.
I go out to play.
They announce the offense.
I'm fucking waiting crowds going wild.
I gave up two sacks in that game
got dusted. Well, that's Chandler Jones
getting five sacks. This dude, Chandler Jones, 55
he got five sacks in this game. I gave
up two to him. This is me right here.
Getting beat.
It was like within the first three series,
there's a, there's some, there's some,
this is the next series. This is the next series.
No chance.
So, no, stop, stop, stop it, stop, stop it.
So at this point, I've given up two sacks.
It's the first fucking quarter still.
And I'm like, I've never done that in my life.
That's never happened to me
ever in my entire life.
or in the first quarter of four,
I'm having a horrible game.
Like, there's no way to come back from it.
It's got,
and the rest of the game just got worse and worse and worse.
I'd be sitting on the sideline,
and, like, you just feel like everyone's looking at you.
I went and got an IV because I was cramping.
Thank God.
That's what this sack is.
You can go back.
This tag is just Kendall getting beat for a sack.
I go back into the game.
I play the Tennessee Times my whole entire career.
I go back into the game,
and what do they say?
The announcer,
Love the guy.
His name is Matt.
He did a real fucked up movie.
I was Tara Luana's back in the game.
The whole stadium, not the whole stadium,
but the stadium starts booing.
And I'm just like,
Will, yeah, Will, I saw Will up there.
Me and his wife are in the suite
just fucking booing him.
Yeah, it was tough.
Dude, it was the worst.
The worst feeling in the entire world.
As an offensive lineman,
when you get a penalty,
what's going through your brain?
Don't care.
Same thing?
No, no.
Hey, old man in the three.
We're in the old man in the three podcast right now.
He's pod and you up.
up.
Yeah, okay, go ahead.
You know what?
You guys have the four.
You guys have it four.
I was going to say, what's the worst moment?
What's that situation for you?
Game one, 2019 playoffs against the Nets.
I was some shit.
And they kept targeting me and ISOing me.
And I fouled out with like four minutes to go.
What a blessing.
Did you foul out?
You're like, yeah, I'm going to try and foul.
out.
No, no, no, no.
And I was able to foul out of the Cardinals game, I would have fucking done it.
Yeah.
It is a little bit of blessing, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
This is the great thing about basketball.
You have other players that can produce.
So, like, if you're having a shit game, sometimes they'll just be like, all right,
we're going to relieve him of his duties and we're going to go with the other guy.
You're saying getting benched?
Yeah, getting benched.
Yeah.
It's like sometimes like, thank God.
Thank God.
But, yeah, and then DeAngelo Russell waved me off the floor.
He drew the sixth file.
He waved me off the floor.
I was playing in Philly.
the whole Philly, you know, crowd is booing me.
Yeah, which they're insane fans.
Yeah.
And like that was a low point for me.
That was a low point.
You know, the other part was like playing with Chris and I love Chris, but like he demands
so much of his teammates.
And there were games where like I would not play well and I would feel like this overwhelming
sense that I let him down.
You know, that I didn't, I didn't reach his level that night.
And that probably hurts more than like getting booed by a crowd, right?
Because to me it was always about like, am I accountable to my teammates?
If I'm accountable to my teammates, like fuck everybody else.
You know what I mean?
So that probably those moments probably were worse.
Yeah.
They're the worst.
It's the whole 2000, I'd say 2016 Thanksgiving game versus the Dallas Cowboys.
Like I've talked about before on here, but when I missed two tackles in a row on
Ezekiel Elliott.
Not only that,
Stod.
But Dack would check at the line of scrimmage,
and I knew, like, what the run plays were.
He'd be, like, he'd, like, step back and be, like, whether it be, like,
Pope or Giant, like, I would know what plays were coming and what they were checking.
The TV copy?
Because of the TV copies, yeah.
And I would know what the play is and tell people and fucking, he broke a tackle from me.
I, like, leave my feet diving off the diving board.
Yep.
And the second miss tackle, the first one was in my head.
And I'm thinking, don't miss his tackle.
And, you know, that usually never works out for you.
The universe doesn't hear negatives.
Yeah, and then they come.
There it is right there.
Right fucking there, dude.
And it was a big one.
Go back.
Go back.
They drive all the way down.
Play it again.
I want him to hurt like I did earlier.
They drive all the way down and score.
And we get to the sideline, and I'm sitting on the bench.
And that's a time for me when I...
Oh, you really missed it.
Yeah, I really missed it.
Yeah, I mean, he had a hand on me, too.
And then he does the...
Eating.
Which, by the way,
Ezekiel Elliott stole that from Donald Robinson.
And then they score.
And I go to the sideline.
Your effort did not look great right there.
That's a minus. That's a minus.
Yeah, it looked like a minus right there.
Yeah, yeah, we can go ahead and say that.
And I'm sitting on the sideline and I'm wondering, I'm like,
man, everybody, like, it's a Thanksgiving game.
Everybody's watching the Cowboys play on Thanksgiving.
Yep.
And I saw an article that was like the most televised, like, football game that year and shit.
And it's just, I'm sitting there thinking, like,
I wonder what people are saying about me on Twitter.
That's, to me, that was a moment when I knew.
social media and other stuff was consuming my mind more than, you know,
forget the last play, move to the next one.
It was more like, I can't miss this tackle because I'm on the big stage
and everybody's going to fucking think I'm trash or know that I'm trash.
And that game is one of those games you're like, man, just get me fucking home and off
the field.
It's a weird thing as an athlete, I don't know if you've ever felt this way, of feeling
like you've made it, like you're a starter in the NFL or you're a star in the NBA.
And you think to yourself, man, I hope I don't get exposed to everyone.
knows I don't belong here.
There's a feeling.
Imposter syndrome.
Yeah.
That's normal.
That is?
Do you felt that?
Oh, yeah.
That's normal.
Okay.
Most, I think, most, most, most, well, it's years of therapy.
Yeah, I love that.
No, but it's, I think most high achievers in anything, if you asked, I don't know what
the percentage is, but it'd be a large percentage of actors, actresses, musicians,
uh, professors, like, like, unless you're a narcissist, like, it has, like, delusions
of grander, like, you
really do think at times, like, oh, I'm going to be exposed.
I'm going to be exposed as a fraud.
That sucks.
It almost be better to be a narcissist, honestly.
It sounds like a nice deal.
Like, you just don't know.
I agree.
You ever feel that way?
Yeah.
Like, ignorance.
I wish I was like, super ignorant.
I'm that dude.
Everyone's like, no, you're not.
You're like, you guys are haters.
But it's just fucking you're a narcissist.
I got to become a narcissist, 22.
I mean, my shit.
Narcissusus Taylor.
Yeah, let's go.
do want to ask about your therapy, do you feel like the therapy stuff is where that started to
help you make your shift mentally in basketball? Like, what did you learn from therapy about yourself
that was holding you back? It's a great question. I think I learned who I was. I think I became
more comfortable with who I was. And do you guys ever take personality?
quality tests.
Yeah.
With the aneogram or something like that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, you know, I've done, I did a bunch of college.
I did them in the NBA.
I took one recently.
My wife would me take one recently.
And like 15, 20 years ago, if I'd taken one, like on the introverted, extraverted scale,
I would be like 95% introverted.
And if I took one now, like I'd be like 55, 60% introverted.
So I'm still introverted, but I like have gotten.
comfortable enough with who I am and myself and enough confidence in like the person,
not the player, but the person, because I was confident as a person, I could navigate
NBA locker rooms. I could be a great teammate. I could be liaison between the coach and the
player. It helped me on the court. You know, I'm just, like I, I think it gave me a sense of
perspective about who I was and my value as a human being. Again, it's like I'm 19 and
And everybody's like, fuck you.
You know, you drink your own pee.
The best t-shirt I ever saw, I was at Maryland my sophomore year.
And these guys had these white t-shirts done.
And my picture was on the front.
So I went a little closer to see what it said.
And on the front it said, when I grow up, I want to name my kid, J.J. Reddick.
And so when I got close enough, they turned around so that I could see what was written on the back.
And it said, and beat him every day.
Which is just, you know, that's savage.
savage, right? So, like, again, I'm
19, I'm like, fuck, dude.
You know, so I think it was... You drink your own piss?
No, I never have. I never have.
But it was a very clever thing.
You gotta try it.
So I think it was, I think it was, like,
becoming, like, just,
just confident. Like, it's not...
I don't think it's egotistical to be, like,
sure of yourself. You know what I mean?
You can still be sure of yourself
and be self-aware enough to know when you're wrong,
know when you fucked up,
to know that it's not all about you.
Like my dad, that was the greatest piece of advice I've ever got in my life.
You'd tell me that every day as a kid.
I'd complain about something like, JJ, it's not always about you.
Not always about you.
That helped me, you know, as a basketball player in a team sport, it helped me.
Let me navigate everything.
I think that's what it came down.
That's the real benefit.
Later on in life, you know, as I became confident in who I was, I mean, I still see,
I've seen a therapist that lives on the West Coast and comes into New York.
like once a month and I talked to him on the phone.
But, you know, that more is like almost performance coaching.
You know what I mean by that?
Like, and he was the guy along with my wife, really, you know,
but he kind of helped me get that last 1% to retire.
It was like 99% of the way there for like a year.
It was such a hard thing to let go of.
And so him and I like met a couple times.
We did a bunch of these like time value proposition exercises and we work through some
things, why I want to play, why I don't want to play.
And by the...
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news,
huge news?
We created our own podcast called,
Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts.
We're starting a trend.
But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with a name, Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
And, well, we were thinking,
I'm originally calling it
one of the early names
of our band before Jonas Brothers
was...
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing,
a bit for the podcast,
where people could call in and say,
Hey Jonas.
And then I wrote down
on my little notepad,
Hey Jonas,
and offered it up as a potential title
for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas
on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen.
and we don't care where you hear it.
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At the end of the second meeting, it was like, oh, dude, it's crystal clear.
Like, it's not even a question about whether or not I should retire.
I should retire.
Like, it's time.
And I was very comfortable with doing it.
So, damn.
Yeah.
Have you guys,
you guys aren't in therapy,
see therapists?
Oh yeah,
I see therapists every week.
Yeah,
absolutely.
I first started doing couples therapy
before we got married.
And then we like fell in love
with the whole therapy aspect.
Yeah.
Like emotional intelligence,
all that stuff.
Like I'm like,
yeah.
I like love like looking into that stuff
because I feel like your psyche.
It's like everything,
right?
Like losing control of yourself in a moment,
like figuring out like why am I reacting to this
or why am I getting upset or losing control or what am I scared of?
Like being in therapy and,
actually talking about, like, it's like, it's like you get the dead ends,
like when you're in conversations with friends or buddies or something else,
and you don't nearly, you don't nearly go as far as what you would in therapy.
Like, there's nowhere to go, and you're in a safe place.
And then they ask those extra questions that actually get you talking about,
like, the underlying thing that, like, breaks you.
And then you're in tears for whatever reason.
And then you come out of it, and you're like, you know, you start learning about yourself a lot more.
So I'm glad that, I'm glad that this is a safe space for us.
Yeah, this is a safe space.
There's definitely a safe space.
You work with, what's the dude's name you work with?
Armando.
Armando.
He's part of cheat code.
And he's like supposed to do a bunch of things.
He does like sound waves and different songs and stuff like that.
And you put those on.
He talks you through stuff and it's pretty cool because you talk about what's, what's
bothering you in this moment?
It's like a present feeling.
Like what's the thing that's bothering me the most?
And he'll be like, all right, look forward.
Like how do you feel when you look forward and think about it?
You're like, well, I feel this way.
And then you look right and look left and if you're really present, you can notice like
When you look, whether it's right or left or middle,
like some areas feel worse or better than others.
So whatever's worse, he'll be like, all right, let's start there.
Or sometimes we'll start what's better.
And then you just work through it.
He's like, all right, now fix it out on a spot.
And then every 60 seconds, we're like, what are you thinking about right now?
And then you start talking to him.
And then at one point while you're talking, it'll be rambling.
I'd be like, stop right there and go with that.
And then you just kind of keep working through it.
And I'd say majority of the times ends in tears.
Because you're just trying to figure out
you're trying to figure out
you know, why do I,
you do certain things
so that other people approve of you
when you can't just approve of yourself
like what is that from?
From being a child or whatever
and like how do you get to a point
where you're the only one
trying to prove it under yourself?
And it's just, it's like you said,
like the whole growth thing is
it's super, it's the most important thing.
It's the most important thing as a human to do
and we talk about reading
like we're both like trying to read more.
And when I go to read,
I'm like to look at a fiction book, like a book that's not real or it's not a self-help book.
Like it's so hard for me to go and read that because I could go find something that's going to help me like be a better person.
You know?
And so that's something definitely.
And it's like you say it all the time.
It's the most important thing.
Like with whether it's sports, being a father, being a husband, all that stuff.
On the emotional intelligence.
He's doing it again.
No, it was not a question.
It was a comment to Will's comment.
Is that okay?
That's all right.
Okay.
All right.
Carry on.
Immediately we start talking.
He's doing it again.
No, I would say this is a little bit of a callback to what we were talking about earlier
about will I ever be good at anything else?
And I think what I realized at the end of my career and what I've realized over the last
nine months is like when you develop that side of your personality and develop that
side of your brain, you can fit anywhere.
Being able to like what we do, what you guys have done for a long time, what I did for 15
years and prior to that at Duke and high school, AAU, all that stuff.
Like what you do in a locker room and being able to navigate that year in, year out,
like that is building a skill set.
And by building your emotional intelligence, like you can fit anywhere.
You can do anything.
I really believe that.
Yeah.
I'm not going to develop a rocket.
It's going to take us to Mars.
Yeah.
I'm not saying we have Elon for that.
But there's other, like that that's like almost like a like a skill set that is overlooked,
I think.
Yeah, I'd agree with you.
Have you read Emotional Intelligence 2.0?
No, I haven't.
Where do you get the emotional intelligence thing from?
The first time I heard it was actually
is now become a good friend of mine,
David Solomon, who now runs Goldman Sachs.
I met him when he was not running Golden Sachs.
He was not the CEO.
Okay, flex.
Yeah, it's a little flex.
No, but it was like the first time,
it was the first time I'd ever heard the phrase.
I spoke at this, this was like in 2016,
I spoke on this panel at this retreat
that Goldman Sachs was having for like,
tech and media CEOs. I have no idea why I was invited. I really truly don't know.
But I spoke on this panel with Maverick Carter and Casey Wasserman. And David and I spent some
time together at the dinner that night. And it was the first time that he like brought up.
I was like, hey, you have, you've got emotional intelligence. You could, you know, you can work on
Wall Street if you want it. Like, oh, so then I like started reading about it. And then I started thinking
about like how it relates to my own life. And like it's, it goes back to like anything we do as an
athlete, like our routine, visualization, all that stuff. It's like, it's like that constant flow
state. And so like being able to check in with yourself, what am I projecting on other people?
What is that person projecting onto someone else? Like, I'm constantly thinking about that.
You know what I mean? It's why it's been so enjoyable for me to have you guys in my chair and
and ask you these questions. It's been very special. It's been a very special time. Are we doing
tear talk? Oh, we got some tier talk. You want to have some tier talk? We can hear some tear talk.
Let's do some tier talk. Now, my question,
So Tier Talk, you guys are getting familiar with Tier Talk, everybody out there in the audience.
It's something newer that we've done.
But we have a tier system.
We have our audience.
There's Tier 1s out there, Tier 2s and Tier 3s.
Now we bring it into a segment where we rate things.
Most notably recently has been the burger thing.
That's one out there a couple times where we rate it in and out.
Which, by the way, what's your favorite fast food burger?
I saw all that.
My favorite fast food burger.
Man, it's definitely not in and out.
Okay.
That's all we needed.
Then the question's over.
Then the question is now over.
Like, it's fine.
It's not like.
But you watch my thing and you're like,
Yeah, you see.
No, I totally co-signed with you.
I'm like, yeah, it's like, it's fine.
It's fine.
Fuck yeah, dude.
This is great.
I'm having a blast.
Okay, go ahead.
Well, talk about your talk.
Hang on.
Let's see what his favorite fast food burger is.
I'm actually, I would probably say, what a burger?
Because I lived in Austin, and that's probably, like, I think it's, I think it's good.
I don't, what a bird is, are we like, are we doing, like, is five guys fast food?
Is that not fast food?
That's a big question to people are saying.
right now.
Because there's no drive-through.
There's no drive-through.
Which I do, like, I understand this.
Five guys is more on the fast casual side, like Chipotle, basically.
Oh, I didn't even think I'm the...
Fast casual.
It's the second time I've heard that.
Charles said it about Shake-Shack.
She's like, oh, shake-shack, I think is awesome.
She's like, but it's a little more fast-casual because there's no drive.
Yeah, it's not fast.
Yeah, it's not.
You're fancy.
Yeah, yeah, you fancy.
You fancy.
You think the number one burger is because I'm sure you've talked about it.
But that's not fast food.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay, so just drive-thrus.
I bet you Minenow Burger makes it up there, doesn't it?
I was going to say shake-shack, but shake-shed.
I mean, Hardys.
Wow.
Okay, yeah, Carl's Jr.
Carl's Jr., that's easy too.
Hardys is fire.
What a burger is good?
In-and-out is good.
I've said in-and-out burger is good.
But you think In-N-Out burger is better than What-A-Burger?
No.
Now you just say that.
I'm lying.
I'm lying.
In-N-Out burger is better than what-W?
In-N-Out would be your number two best fast burger.
You go Carl Jr.
one, in and out two?
I don't know, man.
Once five guys is taken out for you, you kind of fall apart.
In Shake Shack, because I think Shake Shack's good.
Yeah, you kind of fall apart.
You just a classy bitch, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh, that's funny as fuck.
All right.
So, Tiers, go ahead.
You rattled me.
You rattled me.
I'm not even thinking about that anymore.
I'm trying to think of other fast food.
We just found out that everything will has built himself on the last two weeks is not real anymore.
I think the spicy ketchup is overrated at What a Burger.
Hmm. Okay.
Because Texas are big on that.
The whole thing for me was coming from Missouri, like you'd be in the locker rooms, and when you travel like a Texas game or we go on the West Coast to play Arizona.
Yeah.
And the guys who are on your team where West Coast like, oh, we got to go to N&A.
And dudes from Texas, immediate argument in the locker about what a burger in and out.
So I always look forward to going to these spots to try these, both all these different burgers.
Yeah.
And now that I've had them a few different times each, I do think I won't.
wanted to like What a Burger more, because again, I more so, like,
love to just argue against the West Coast people because they're so prideful about
In-N-Out Burger.
But I would say In-N-Out Burger is probably a better burger than What-A-Burger.
You got to try Fat Burger, too.
Well, that's not really a drive-through either.
Yeah.
It's casual, man.
We learn something.
Yeah.
But on this tier talk, we're going to be doing, should we do pizza toppings or pizzas?
To where you can combine certain toppings.
Well, then that's just a pizza.
But some people like just a pepperoni pizza or a cheese pizza or, like, whatever.
We're not ranking toppings themselves.
Yeah, that'd be difficult to do.
I don't know where I'd stand on that.
I don't know where you stand.
If I had to rank the number one topping.
That's what I'm saying.
Are we going to say if Taylor says...
I don't know how the tier talk works.
We're still funny.
We're still putting in water here.
I think it's best pizza.
Yeah, whatever is your best pizza.
Your number one favorite pizza tier.
You know what?
We'll do our three favorite pizzas and then you guys will tear it for us.
No, what do you mean tier for us?
Because if we're doing tier talk, there's tier one, two, and three.
Yeah.
So if JJ says, my favorite pizza is X, and you say my favorite pizza is Y, and I say,
my favorite pizza is Z, how are we going to tier that?
We can't because we'd all would say that our pizza is number one.
Right, but that's what we did with Bert, with the fast food burger.
We go one, two, three.
Like, we quietly let JJ have the floor, and he does this tier one through three.
Yeah, but if you're just making a pizza, there's no, he's going to make three pizzas for us right now?
I can make three.
Off the top of my head, I can go.
Let's go.
I feel like everyone can.
Yeah, I can say three pizzas.
Okay.
I'll figure out the way to say three pizzas.
You can go last, Taylor.
Yeah, you can go last.
I'm always going last from now on.
JJ, you have the floor.
All right.
I'm actually going to go.
I'm going to go in order of how I want to eat these pizzas.
Does that make sense?
Well, I don't know.
I'll explain it a little bit more.
So, like if you go to a great pizza place, like Lucali and Brooklyn,
I would want to eat.
them in this order. Not the entire pizza. I'm not that gluttonous, but maybe a slice or two of each.
What I'm saying? Gluteness is one of the seven did they since. I've been glitness.
So, I would start with two toppings that you guys don't actually have on this graphic here, which is your
number one. This is your number one pizza. I would say this is my number one pizza. Okay. Number one.
Like, I just want like shallots and hot peppers. Shalettes and hot peppers. Hey, let it, let's just let them
at the floor because I'm eating. Second pizza would be a, what I call a twin special.
special, my wife's favorite pizza, along with her twin.
I'll go pepperoni, white onion, green pepper.
And then for kind of like a dessert, I would go with ricotta, sausage, and maybe some sage.
I fucked you guys up, didn't I?
Yeah, I'll tell you why.
You did your chef special on us just now.
So, my man knows is pizzas.
Will you have the floor.
My tier one, why you already left?
Because I just feel like he just said some like artistic shit.
You're going to go sausage.
I mean, this is hard.
My tier one is very hard because there's a couple of pizzas I'm thinking about.
So start tier three.
Well, either way, I got to decide out of this tier one, that's what the hard part is.
But I think if I had to order a pizza, I think I'm going to go.
He texted me this last night.
So he's had 24 hours.
I thought about the entire.
I've only thought about my one.
I know exactly what.
I'm going to go to like a sweet heat.
Oh.
Where you got pepperoni, jalapanos.
I love onions, so you can just throw onions on them.
That's not really part of it, but I do love onions.
But you throw like a, you get the red pepper flakes, but you also drizzle honey over top.
You drizzle honey over top.
Mike's hot honey?
Yeah.
Some Mike's hot honey.
Yeah.
I like that.
My number two is Hawaiian.
That's a battle for my number one.
I'm a big Hawaiian pizza guy.
I believe in pineapples on pizza.
I am pro pineapple on pizza.
And my number three,
um,
big CPK guy.
I love Supremes.
I love meat lovers,
but I think if I had to order,
I would go pepperoni and bacon for my tier three.
Hmm.
Taylor,
take it from here, brother.
My tier three is going to be very basic,
extremely basic.
It's going to be your,
uh,
Neapolitan cheese,
pizza. I think you can't beat it. You got a little bit of garnish on there. You got your cheese,
your sauce. I think it's fantastic with the fluffy crust. It's outstanding. That's my tier three.
My tier two is also the Hawaiian pizza, but with a spice. You got to throw banana peppers on there
or jalapinos. I like a little spice. I have the four. And number one is going to be,
I almost said yes when you said CPK
because I'm a barbecue chicken pizza guy.
That's my number one.
Barbecue sauce, chicken.
Really?
A little onion on there.
I think it's my favorite possible pizza
I can make for myself.
Barbecue chicken?
Barbecue chicken.
Now that we're done,
what the fuck was that, dude?
Yeah, what did you say?
What was your number one?
Shallots and what?
Shallots and pepperonies?
Shallots.
Shallots on pizza.
It's a cheat coat.
What's a shallot?
A shallot is like...
Like a little onion, right?
In between like a red onion and garlic.
Okay.
I like garlic.
Yeah.
I like onions.
I mean, I like both those things.
They cook a little bit.
Shallot and what?
Hot peppers.
Hot peppers.
Those aren't like terrible ingredients.
I'm just thinking you're tier one.
You're like, hey, JJ, what do you want to eat?
They got something with the shallots and hot peppers on it?
Here's the fuck, man.
I am not.
I am not a C.
Hater. I think I think restaurants like CPK, Chili's, TGI Fridays, like they have their place in America.
And I respect them. And I've ate a lot of meals at places like that. But you're better than them now.
Question where you guys are eating pizza based on you, you guys saying Hawaiian pizza for both of you was number two.
And a barbecue chicken pizza number one. I think by the question that.
I think you can't touch barbecue chicken pizza if you're the right barbecue sauce on it.
Brother, that's the one thing.
I mean, cheese to me,
but some people like like their cheese pizza.
I don't want to sound like a coastal elite here.
Yeah.
But I'm going to sound like a coastal elite.
Yeah, no, I get it.
Like, I live in New York.
I live in Brooklyn.
Brooklyn is the best pizza in the world.
Like, the shit y'all are talking about is disgust.
What do you mean the shit that we're talking about?
So you would need a sweet heat.
I think you reacted like, oh, that sounds pretty good.
Yeah, you said that you actually did.
I think you said, that sounds nice.
Sweet heat sounded nice.
That was my tier one.
Hawaiian pizza was fire, bro.
Yeah.
Coastal elite, you guys should just sit on the traditional ingredients and you guys just make the best pizza and that's it.
That's how I think a coastal elite works.
So I think by you doing some special shit like shallots and hot peppers, does that make you a coastal leader?
Or does make you use your, you're just a little fluff.
You're a T.J. Fryers and some fluff is what it sounds like to me.
It's just what it sounds like.
But I will agree on the barbecue chicken part.
The barbecue chicken throws me off, bro.
I'm not here to argue that part.
I've gone downhill within an out burger.
I've seen what the people have done.
I've seen what Will's tried to do to me.
I think it's fucking ridiculous.
Honestly, shameful of you guys to handle yourself the way you have.
I think it's fucking ridiculous.
I think barbecue chicken pizza is the best pizza.
Barbecue chicken pizza.
No, they wouldn't eat barbecue chicken pizza.
We wouldn't feed that today.
Y'all fucking up.
We wouldn't feed that to them.
You like barbecue?
My daughter, I told my daughter to mellow mushroom last Sunday.
Melammer mushroom's fire.
She wants to go back tonight.
I probably go get one tonight.
You know what I'm going to order?
The barbecue chicken pizza.
Nope.
Hang on that way.
I might go half and half now.
Hawaiian is fucking good.
A little heat on it, right?
Yeah, I'll put a little sweet heat on it.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
I did like the sweet heat vibe.
You want to know where you get that pizza at?
Good.
Midnight oil.
It's off of 51st.
No free shout, it's to midnight oil.
But you go to midnight oil and you order a sweet heat pizza for midnight oil.
Like that?
Let them know the boy sent you.
Okay.
It might have a little something in there.
Yeah, I want you know I sent me and I wanted this sweet heat pizza, please.
It's phenomenal.
Really?
Are you here until tomorrow?
I leave tonight.
What time?
Ship a little bit
Yeah something like that
Yeah
Okay
Is this one of those show up at 730 things
Are we getting there a couple hours early?
To my flight?
Yeah
No, I don't get
I don't go to the airport early
Who does that?
I'm not a...
But here's what we're trying to ask
Are you driving there to fly out at 730
Are you getting there at an hour, hour and a half before?
Are we going through TSA or we're not going through TSA?
Oh, I see what you're asking.
I see what you're asking.
You guys flew me down.
Like I'm like this trip was not on me.
We didn't fly down.
Oh, he's right.
No, you know what he is right.
Barstle.
You're our first guest that we've flown down to be on the bus.
We've just started kind of doing that.
No shit.
You should ask for some money.
We probably would have gave it to you.
Nah.
It's just my pleasure to be on the show, man.
I love that.
Your show.
No, I don't, I don't, I'm not a, I'm not, I'm not that level, dude.
You guys really don't like barbecue chicken pizza?
I don't, like, we were talking about PJs.
Are we not talking about, we're not talking about PJs?
We're talking about private jets, yes.
I would.
Gas prices are too, too extreme right now to be doing that.
Like, I don't think barbecue pizza is trash.
I just don't order it or I don't eat.
Like, to me, it's like, what are we doing?
See, I felt that way about Supreme.
It's such a staple, but for me, I'm like, all the extra shit on it.
I had a bite of yours.
I said it was solid.
You like barbecue chicken?
What are you barbecue chicken chicken chicken chicken and ranch they had?
It's number one by far.
Like, it's not even fucking close.
That hopinero cream pie.
Holy fuck, dude.
Yes.
See, that's where it kind of throws me off when he starts talking about pizzas,
because there's like, that's like a gourmet pizza, like,
five points is like Jack Browns
in a lot of ways of the burgers.
Like you can't like just go like if I were to say to you guys
I like jalapinos but the seeds carved out
with cream cheese on it also
it just doesn't make any sense
to be able to explain that pizza. You know what I'm saying?
I thought JJ was going to explain something like that
the way he did. I think he did.
Still we need an interpreter to figure out what the fuck he said.
Yeah, what was this? Yeah, you said a little bit of sage
and that's where I was like...
You guys have had like a fried sage leaf before.
Like a little fried sage leaf on the sausage and ricotta
pizza? That doesn't sound like a white
sauce. Do I look like a guy that had
fried sage on my pizza?
In your life.
You've never had fried sage.
Like to me that's a gourmet-
How much money did you have when you grew up?
Fried sage?
It's seven bucks and chicken. It sounds so expensive.
It sounds expensive to me.
Well, he lives in New York now. Like he's...
It's a very expensive place.
It is. It sucks. It must be nice.
But what was that piece? Why don't you move down in Nashville?
What's up?
Sorry, go out, do what's question first?
Well, again, what was the driest?
The same thing that you explained.
What was it? What was, what were the toppings?
What else was it was ricotta, cheese, sausage, and fried sage.
See, I think it's incredible combo.
It sounds like it's like a tasty pizza for sure, but if we're just like ranking our pizzas, dude,
and you're saying sage and ricotta and sausage.
I mean, I actually, you say, you should, you could.
The best thing I heard from both of you was just a classic Neapolitan cheese pizza, honestly.
I think that's.
Well, that's flyer.
I said garnish, too.
Did you hear?
I started some fancy.
like you. I said garnish.
He reacted to sweet. So basically what you just
fucking said with all those fancy words is a sausage
pizza. With a little bit of sage.
K is a sausage pizza. Throw some of that green
shit on there as much as much as it said to the person in the counter.
But no. You like melon mushroom
though? I do. I love pizza.
You want an underrated pizza? I went with my
daughter to a birthday party last week.
Chucky cheese. Don't fucking at me, dude.
That Chucky cheese is low-key fire.
Peter Piper pizza for those of you in the West?
I haven't had a chucky cheese on a long.
time, so I'll take it.
When and I went there?
It was delicious.
We didn't have any money growing up, so we couldn't go to Chuck
and Cheese. That's crazy. That's crazy.
We got the fried
sage, though, huh? I got the fried sage now.
That's wild.
Sausage and fried sage. He just said
sausage and cheese pizza.
I know he did. But he's also, he's also
like, the only thing you guys said good was the cheese
pizza. And I'm thinking, like, bro, stop.
Anything like you didn't react when I said
sweet heat. Yeah. You did say,
oh, I like that. Because I almost, because when you
said that to Will, I almost said, hey, we don't react here. We don't react in the tear talk.
Do you know? I know. I was trying to keep it. That's why I was holding it in while he was going.
When he said the sweet heat, I'm pictured, there's a, there's a place called Emily in Brooklyn.
It makes a great burger as well as. This guy. No, it's, I'm just kidding. The water's better up there, man.
Like, what do you want me to say? The water's better for pizza. Sure, sure, sure, sure. Why the bagels are so good.
And bagels. Emily has like a sweet heat pizza that basically is the description of what you described. And they do little Mike's hot honey on the top. And you've had it?
Yeah, and I've had it.
It's fire. It's a good pizza.
You just don't, I think you don't agree with pineapple on pizza.
No, it's not.
I don't wake up, you know, any morning and be like, oh, I'm going to.
I want pizza tonight.
I want to put pineapple on it.
Like, that's just a weird thing to me.
It's that mushrooms.
Like, I eat everything, but mushrooms, I can't, I can't touch.
I can't touch mushrooms.
Not for me.
Now, Italian truffles, I could.
You see my face?
You know, my whiplash.
I'm turning and looking at.
you so fast. Dude, what was the second pizza you said? Because you were kind of did a run on sentence
the last two. Twin special. Huh? The twin special. It's just simple. Pepperoni, white onion, uh, green pepper.
Oh, we just got to start naming our shit cool. So it sounds better. Yeah, he said white onion.
Like, when he said the way, when you, I'm talking like here you know there. When he was talking like that,
I legit thought to myself like, we picked the wrong category. Like, because we're about to say sausage and shit.
You know, we're about to say basic shit. I believed in what I was about to say. I stay in tento
down. Yeah, but he said twins pizza. He said, recotta.
He used the word ricotta.
Oh, he did.
Just say cheese.
And what's crazy is he's been thinking about that since last night.
Yeah.
He's a homework guy.
He's got 15 pages on both of us.
I actually forgot.
He knew exactly where I was from when I was doing it.
The only reason I thought of all those pizzas, because when I saw the toppings, I was like, oh, shallot's done on there.
Can I ask you a hard hit?
I just went back to the catalog in my brain.
Can I ask you a hard hitting basketball question?
Please.
Who's the greatest fall time?
Man.
Who's the goat?
I like that question.
And a second part question.
Was Michael Jordan a narcissist?
I think it's like, it's one A, one B to me.
I don't, I don't like that answer.
I want you to take a strong stance.
Who's one A?
Who's A?
It's weird because Jordan is who I, like, grew up watching.
But then LeBron is who I played against.
And it's hard for me to, like, pick either one.
Kyle Corver once said to me, he's like, you know, like, MJ, I know, I know the compliment,
accomplishments are great, but like, MJ had to take two years off.
So, like, the discredit LeBron gets for making eight straight finals, I think is kind of insane.
So I'm, I'd just say it, I'm just going to say Jordan.
One A.
That was your safe answer, because if you would have said LeBron, you'd have got torched.
No, Jordan.
It's Jordan.
Okay.
LeBron's your two?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
What about Kobe?
Great player.
Great player.
Oh.
You know, here's the other thing I've learned, especially the,
last year is the you guys know where to stand is right yes yes okay um an m&m callback that was an
emm thing um by the song's incredible too incredible song um what i've realized is that certain players
stands are fucking insane on social media and i said a bunch of nice things about step kerry
the other day and but the question was who do you want in the clutch more luka or step i saw that video
And I said in 2022, I said, Luca, and the amount of hate that I got from the Steph stands.
Do you think he deserved it a little bit?
Greatest shooter of all time.
Again, that wasn't the question, no.
Game in the line.
Who do you want the ball in their hands?
The question, yeah, exactly.
And I said, Luca.
Who do you want with the ball?
Who do you?
But why?
Size.
But if he, if my man can just pull up at the logo and splash that thing in no problem,
then we don't need size.
Oh, I sound like a basketball guy right now.
Cool him up.
Luca is big.
He's a dominant player.
He can't shoot like Steph.
Everyone knows that.
No one can shoot like stuff.
So why wouldn't you put,
do you need a basket, right?
The whole concept of basketball is to put the ball in the hoop.
The issue more is like how you go get the basket.
You know what I mean?
Like,
so when I think about like much,
I think I look at statistics
because they track those.
What about Janus?
The best player in the world right now.
So you'd rather have Luca over him too?
No, the question.
was the question that I got asked was Luke or Steph.
Well, I'm bust one of the boys who like to throw in wrenches.
You know what?
There's like 10 guys I'd like to have in the clutch with the ball in their hands.
All right, but go ahead.
Talk to me about Luca.
Sorry, I didn't mean to throw you on this from there.
When I think about, like, who do I want to have the ball in their hands in the clutch?
It's guys like Luca.
It's guys like LeBron who have size because they're going to create a shot, whether that's
against the double team, whether that's one-on-one.
they're going to create a shot.
There's nothing wrong with saying Steph in that answer, by the way.
And he's made a ton of clutch shots.
I was basing some of it on just this past season.
Steph was 10 for 51 from three in the clutch this season.
So like some of that is recency bias,
which is another thing I've learned in the media.
We all have,
the prisoners of the moment.
I like to describe Stephen A as that.
It's another phrase that I seems that way.
It is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It sucks.
It sucks.
I can't imagine,
I can't imagine getting the point where, like,
you have a show every day.
And you're like,
man, I got to fill two fucking hours
with the same take
but in a different way. That's tough.
I like to pop in and pop out, you know?
Yeah.
I loved what you loved the
clapping back you were doing on a Mad Dog.
I think every young generation
athlete and young generation person
was fairly hype about that.
I...
The one thing I'll say,
and this is not in
in sort of any direction
towards Mad Dog, the one thing I say is like
I, and I'm sure you guys
I've seen this too. I have witnessed and lived both in my own personal experience and my peers
experience a lot of tired narratives around athletes. And, you know, I remember going through the
lockout and seeing articles written about athletes. And I'm like, why is everybody
siding with the billionaire owners and not the athletes? It's, there's something about athletes that
people think we're entitled, that people think our only value is to entertain you on a
basketball court or a football field that we're not allowed to be intelligent and speak our mind
or speak an opinion or to protest or whatever it is. And it's so dehumanizing and so demeaning.
And a lot of some, a lot of the stuff that has gone viral on first take has been in a direct
response to some of those narratives. And that's one example of it.
But, you know, the other part of it I don't really want to talk about.
Sure.
The undertone I don't want to talk about.
But, you know, so much of that is like, hold on a second, like the narrative is wrong.
The narrative is tired.
Let's start a new narrative.
That makes sense.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Man, I do want to ask before you.
I know we've been, we've had a long pod.
Yeah, we've got to play another game of pig.
Is coach, be ready.
Is Coach K a psycho?
From the outside, when you watch a lot of situations unfold,
it seems like a lot of things that he does seems very calculated.
And, yeah, so I'm wondering it's like, is Coach K?
Well, I guess, I guess when, because my version of a psych,
my definition of a psycho, I also use the word sicko interchangeably about when I talk about people.
Gotcha.
And, like, what's your sort of definition?
I guess psycho is pretty hardcore.
over the top.
Yeah, very over the top.
Really demonstrative on players.
Hardcore makes you feel less than a lot of the time.
Narcissistic.
Narcissistic.
He's better than.
Manipulative game that he can do with players.
I mean, you played for him.
There's been a lot of...
I wouldn't, I don't...
I think manipulative is the wrong word.
I think the word you use about calculus.
I think that's probably more appropriate.
I don't, he's definitely not a, definitely not a narcissist, he's definitely not a psycho in sort of the traditional sense.
He is very intense and he's very demanding, but he's a truth teller.
He is always a truth teller. And, you know, my four years with him, I say this sincerely,
my four years with him, I never saw him have a bad day.
Like not at what he's on, he's on every day.
We get back from Virginia Tech on the bus at 3 a.m. He, you know, we lose.
meeting, you know, we're in there for an hour.
We got practice the next day.
He's on the bike at 6 a.m.
He comes to practice, energized, ready to go, ready to coach.
He's like that with every team he's ever been on.
He's so invested and takes such ownership, you know,
or did take such ownership of being a coach, being a Duke basketball coach.
That program, he's phenomenal.
And I get to a degree when someone sees him motherfucking a ref or motherfucking a 19 year old.
Like I get why people are like, oh, he's, he's a psycho.
He's a psycho.
But like, I actually would say all the good shit that said about him is true and then some.
Like he's, my dad is the greatest man that I've ever known.
I didn't have to look far for a role model.
Coach is the second.
Like, coach is phenomenal.
And I became friends with him my junior year.
And we've been friends now for whatever that is, 17 years.
He's like such an important part of my life.
And it has been for, you know, since 2000 when I committed.
Like he's just, he's the man.
I love that, dude.
After your little stint, your sophomore year when you were brought back and put on a big schedule,
did you and him ever talk about it?
Like reminisce maybe a couple of years ago about it.
Like, hey, you were, I was worried about you there for a second.
He ever gave you the, hey, didn't know if you were going to make it?
We talked a little bit about it when he came on the podcast in the fall of 2020.
but actually the moment we became friends and the moment that I felt like he wasn't just my coach
was that following spring we lost in the Sweet 16 to Michigan State in Austin.
War school.
Yeah, terrible.
And, you know, I had gone through all that my sophomore year.
And then I got ACC player of the year, ACC tournament MVP, first female American.
I got one of the National Player of the Year awards.
I got the Rupp Award.
And we, yeah, let's give it, give it up.
My man's just going off right now.
Context, context. Context matters.
Yeah, no doubt.
Yeah.
High point.
No, no doubt.
I'm with it.
So he called me into, or we lose at the arena.
We're all emotional.
I'm crying.
And we're getting on the bus.
He's like, hey, come to my hotel room.
We get back to the hotel.
And we went in there and we basically talked about that.
We talked about that day in May of 2004 when he dragged me,
when they dragged me into the office,
talked about that summer, everything I'd done.
We talked about the season.
He talked about how proud he was of me.
Like, I was a lifer at that point.
Like, I was a coach K lifer.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, new?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called,
Hey, Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with a name
Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
Well, we were thinking I'm originally calling it
one of the early names of our band
before Jonas Brothers.
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast,
where people could call in and say, hey Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad,
Hey Jonas, Jonas, and offered it up as a potential.
title for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL, late-night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel, help an
a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Just your group perform.
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending.
Opinions are flying.
And nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise.
Breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down, give you context and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
Sports Slice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Follow Timbo Slica Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis.
And I know firsthand because I competed there myself.
I'm Renee Stubbs, and on the Renee Stubbs Tennis podcast,
I'm breaking down everything happening at Roland Garris.
Every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on clay.
Jen should win?
I mean, she went down in three to Rovachina, but I'm delighted.
Yeah, she's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lena Rubakina is arguably the best player in the world right now.
And I actually can win on any surface.
Because if she's serving, well, good luck.
Consider this your court side seat to the French Open.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
He was a friend from that point on.
Yeah.
That is awesome.
And then one last thing.
Another one last thing.
The gambling story of you almost coming to blows with one of your teammates.
You said it was one of the closest times you ever came to fighting a teammate.
Yeah, I mean, I've gotten hit by teammates before.
You've gotten punched by a teammate?
Yeah, he did Turquilu used to hit me.
He hit me a couple times.
A couple times.
When I was like a rookie and then once again, my third year.
He just liked to fuck with me.
But I like, like, I got into a little scrap with Carlos Arroyo, me and me and Brian
Cook got into it one time.
Like, I never, like, came to blows with a guy in practice, but, like, I was trying to
find a place in the league, like, in the league.
So I was just scrappy in practice.
And if you're a vet, like, in his shoot around, like, that's one of the times Turkaloo
elbowed me in the eye and gave me a black eye.
He's just like, I was playing too hard to post-defense when we were, we weren't
walking through players.
We were running through plays.
And he just turns and he, like, noticed it was me.
And he caught me in the elbow.
Got me with the elbow.
So the Justin Anderson story, basically, everybody in the NBA plays Bure.
Do you guys play Buree?
Yeah.
Okay.
Everybody plays Buree.
So there's a, there's a, in the players cabin, we used Delta Charter Flight.
So on the players cabin, there's always a table.
And then there's a bunch of other seats.
So the table is four card games.
And so playing Buree, and there had been some tension building between Justin Anderson
and another teammate of mine.
They were going back and forth.
They sat next to each other.
So their actions directly affected the other player's actions, right?
Whether or not the guy stayed in the game, whether or not a guy went for a boo or didn't go for a boo, like it all affected each other.
So they were kind of mouthing off and Justin wanted a pretty big hand to not count because he felt like there was a discrepancy and how that particular hand had been played.
And we had been drinking as well.
there had been some wine on the flight.
And so there was Amir Johnson, me, Jared Bayliss, Justin Anderson, diagonal to me.
And then there wasn't a fifth seat.
So Joelle would sit on the armrest in the aisle.
Joel M.V. would sit on the armrest in the aisle.
And it basically got to the point where their bullshit was sabotaging the general flow and enjoyment of the card.
It was ruining the night.
Yes.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So I got a little.
vocal and then he got vocal back with me and then I said uh you're a little bitch and he said what did
you say and I said you're a little bit you double down I double down and again I'm not proud of this like
I just said I said I said you're a bitch and he said what did you say I said you heard me I said you're a bitch
and then he like stood up on the table and like you know almost swung on me joel luckily like grabbed
them and then all these flight attendants they were on the plane like came I don't know why they broke up
this shuffle, but they broke it up.
Had he swung on me, like,
I'm sitting down, he's standing up on a table.
You think he would have won that fight?
6, 2.30.
What I won? No, I would...
Down by the ankles, dude, give him a toss.
I would have lost...
Dude, those... The tables
are like here. Like, there's no leverage.
I was stuck. I was stuck.
I would have lost that fight.
You're a little bitch, dude.
You gotta think, if you're really
going to fight somebody, while he's taking the time
to get up on that table, you've got to make a move.
You know, if you're going to win that fight.
The flight attendants, they obviously
fly with all the other teams that word got around that that had happened.
So I had a bunch of texts from buddies around the league that I heard you guys got into a fight,
you know, whatever.
I was like, no, it was nothing.
It was like, what happened after?
You guys cool?
Yeah, yeah.
He's fine.
Fudgett.
I have to ask him.
Jay is my guy.
I'm just kidding.
I just give you hard time.
We appreciate you for going on, man.
Thanks, dude.
It's been unreal.
Been unreal.
With your flight.
Hey, Jack, is he doing the green screen?
Oh, all right, cool.
Did I appreciate it, man?
Anything else?
Anybody got anything?
You try to hit that pig, one-on-one?
What?
Pig?
No.
I don't think so.
I don't think so.
He's scared.
Is anybody better than you at the collegial level of all-time shooter?
Steph.
Really?
Yeah, Steph would have, I mean,
there's other guys that have surpassed, like, the three-point thing,
but Steph would have shattered it had he played one more year.
He would have shattered it.
I think
I was, I don't know who I was having this conversation with,
but there was somebody the other day.
Like I think why,
I think why it's like, oh, oh, it's Omar.
Omar from, me in my house, highlights, Omar, Omar, Raja.
Yeah.
He's now a sports center.
We were talking about this two days ago.
And I was telling him, it's like,
part of the reason, like,
the Duke version of me is, you know,
there's a legacy to that, I think, a little bit.
though I didn't win a championship.
Oh, there definitely is.
Yeah.
There's a little bit of, like, if you were growing up in that area, you watch college basketball,
but I think the reason is, number one, because I played for Duke and, like, people hated Duke,
and there's divisiveness there.
The second reason, though, is, like, my draft class was the last draft class before the one-and-done era.
So I feel like my time in college basketball was, like the time in college basketball that
we all knew and we all grew up knowing now with the one-and-done, it's just different.
Like, you don't have that attachment to a player.
You don't make the legacy.
Yeah, you're in and out.
most people don't even pay attention
until March Madness anyways. So now it's
back then it was like you and Adam Morrison.
Yes. Yeah. And it, you know, and then
UNC was awesome when I was there. They won in 05.
You know, we had some great games with them. So I
and they were all upper classmen. Like all those guys left. They were all
my high school class and they all left after their junior year.
I decided to stay one more year. So I just think it was like
part of it was like just the era we were in.
It wasn't necessarily that like I did anything that was that much special
relative to other great college basketball players.
I mean, you were pretty fucking good.
I mean, I was, whatever.
You know, you weren't decent.
11th overall pick.
You were pretty solid.
I was good.
Lemth overall pick.
Hey, guys, it's us.
The Jonas Brothers.
I'm Joe.
I'm Kevin.
And I'm Nick.
And guess what?
We created our own podcast called,
Hey, Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We get to ask people to do podcasts.
We get to ask other people questions because we're sick and tired of being asked questions.
Well, sick and tired of.
strong way to put it, but, you know, tired and sick, tired and sick.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen. We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel.
Help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
And nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
And every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the biggest moments in sports and giving you the real story behind the headlines.
and we're going straight to the source, the athletes themselves.
Their locker room stories, their reactions in the moment,
and the stuff nobody gets to hear.
Listen to SportsSlice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Sliced Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
Winning on Clay is an art.
The rallies are relentless.
And at the French Open, only the toughest survive.
I'd know.
I competed there for decades.
Join me, Renee Stubbs, on the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast
for no nonsense breakdowns of the biggest matches, the toughest players,
and the moments that define Roland Garris.
She's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lennar Rabakina is arguably the best player in the world right now
and actually can win on any surface.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs Tennis Podcasts on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
