Club Shay Shay - Nightcap - Hour 1: Lamont Roach Jr. joins + Sammy Sosa goes VIRAL
Episode Date: March 9, 2025Shannon Sharpe and Chad “Ochocinco” Johnson react to Sammy Sosa's viral picture, an anonymous NFL coach calling Shedeur Sanders "brash and arrogant," and Lamont Roach Jr. joins the show.03...:50 - Lamont Roach Jr. joins the show35:14 - NFL team calls Shedeur Sanders brash51:30 - Quinn Ewers profile53:45 - Sammy Sosa viral picture56:10 - Bringing back Grandma’s Tupperware(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements.)#Volume #ClubSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Make some noise for the greatest shooter of all time, Steph Curry.
We went live from All-Star Weekend for a new podcast called GOAT Greatest of Their Era.
And we ranked our top five shooters from the 2000s.
Major Five, Dirt Four.
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You won't believe who Steph left off his list.
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Yes, absolutely.
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Joining us now, fought to a majority draw Saturday night. It doesn't look like he's too pleased with that.
There are a lot of people on social media that actually thought he won that fight.
Joining us, Lamont Rose Jr. Lamont, how you doing, bro?
What's up, man? I'm good, man. Thanks for having me.
I feel real good.
No, thanks for joining us.
Take us through Saturday night.
You go into that fight, you move up five pounds,
you're 130 fighter, you move up.
And you're feeling, I mean, everybody's that man,
they know he got no chance.
Tank told you a couple of days earlier,
he going, hey, you not going to distance.
Y'all shake, pretty little, 250, whatever the case may be.
You go into that fight, you know, Tank's a slow starter, builds up as the fight progresses,
know he's trying to land, hook to the body, come up top with it.
What was your process? What were you going into that fight?
How did you want to fight and did the fight turn out the way you thought it would?
How did you want to fight and did the fight turn out the way you thought it would?
Well, honestly, yeah, the fight, the fight went exactly how we planned it to go.
Honestly, you know, uh, we familiar with him. We've been familiar with him.
Uh, we just knew it was a matter of time for everything to fall into play.
Um, and back to the whole, everybody not giving me a shot saying I'm gonna get
knocked out and all this and all that.
I know what I'm capable of.
I know what I could do.
In a nutshell, they had me totally messed up.
Especially when he bet me saying he was gonna stop me.
What do I do?
I told him himself, I said, you trippin'.
I said, I don't know what got into your head these last couple minutes, few days,, I said, you trippin'. I said, I don't know what got into your head
these last couple minutes, few days, whatever the case,
you trippin'.
You know you're not gonna do that, dude.
I don't even know why.
I told him, I said, I know you know you not gonna do that.
Cut it out.
Yeah. Hey, listen, when you talk about,
you're very familiar with them,
and I understand you and your team,
you went into the fight with a game plan.
Is it familiarity?
The fact that you guys probably trained together in the past or you've been in camp together
in the past, you sparred together.
Is that why you were so familiar in whatever game plan your team did have and were able
to execute?
Is that why it went so well?
I mean, yeah, it's one of the many reasons why it went so well.
Even though we were kids, some of them traits,
characteristics, and just ways of a man grew with him.
Yeah.
So some of the dirty tactics, I knew
that he revert to that when that pressure built up.
When somebody that was there wasn't scared of him.
When somebody was there that was there to return fire.
And you know what I'm saying?
He ain't been in the ring.
In his professional career,
he hasn't been in the ring with something like that
or something like the kind of what I got.
Right.
So what I thought, obviously, watching the fight,
and when I look at all his take fights,
most of the time, obviously, he starts slow.
And then round five, six,
he starts to pick it up a little bit.
And by the time as he's picking it up,
normally his opponent is deteriorating.
The condition ain't where it's supposed to be,
but I'm looking at you.
They get to round six and seven and he coming forward
and you ain't even, you not even moving.
So at that point, y'all mid range,
you sitting in the pocket.
And most of the time when he hits somebody, they retreat.
But you took one to give one.
I'm like, what he boy going at it?
I'm like, so did the power not affect you in any way
where you didn't really care?
Where you just sat in the pocket with him in exchange?
Because most of the time, I mean, you gotta be cautious.
You gotta be cautious because when throwing punches, you know, you got a chance to
get hit. You know, when you let him go, did you not care at all?
Or did you feel his power early and really one word about it?
So it wasn't that I wasn't I wasn't caring is I was cautious.
Like you said, I was cautious. But the but the defense the
defense is there and the confidence was was through the
roof. And I got a chin.
You can keep a spade to spade.
You know what I'm saying?
I see why he knocked people out.
I'm not going to say the power was overrated, but I've been in there with guys who can punch.
I mean, with guys who can punch, so it was nothing new to me.
I've been in there with middleweight champions.
I've been in there with junior middleweight champions.
I mean, as they were champion in their prime
and stuff like that.
So it's like, you know what I'm saying?
Like, I was confident in what I could do defensively.
And if I get hit, I know I was gonna give it right back.
Right.
So listen, in the ninth round, I'm sorry,
you know, I get excited about it.
No way.
I don't mean to take over. Listen, hey, young boy, in the ninth round, you'm sorry, you know, I get excited about boxing. I don't mean to take over.
Listen, hey, young boy, in the ninth round,
you know, Javante took a knee.
Obviously there's some controversy behind that.
It wasn't ruled a knockdown by the referee.
I've never seen that ever.
And in my years of watching boxing,
and enjoying the sport of combat sports in general,
did that moment impact your strategy
for the remainder of the fight?
I'm gonna say no, and let me tell you why.
The simple fact that he took the knee is,
it was really a boost because it's like,
all right, what we doing is working.
We know that he looking for something.
It should have been a knockdown one.
So that's why I'm yelling at the referee,
like keep counting, like you tripping, keep counting.
That's a knockdown.
Because if y'all didn't notice, he started to count.
He started to count.
He did.
Cut it.
And then he stopped.
He stopped.
Okay.
So when we resume the action,
I'm like, what you doing? doing keep counting like you can't do that
So and then it wasn't even registering or processing through my mind the other rules
to the simple fact that he could have got disqualified for having his corner come up to the ring and assist him during the round or
right
Or he can't turn his back on it like doing the fight
That's cause for that's that's the wave at all
He took a knee and then turned around and went to the corner a breath or usually turn it turn turn a stop the fight
Oh
Hey, I know that
What I'm watching you a lot of times when people hit Tank,
like Ocho was saying, they retreat,
but it seemed like you had a strategy.
Like if he hit me, I'm gonna hit his ass back just as hard
as many times as he hit me.
And I don't think he expected you to return
the kind of fire that you returned
because you wobbled him a couple of times.
And I'm not so sure that I've seen Tank wobble
like when you caught him a couple of times
and you was getting through the guard.
I mean, hey, normally a southpaw fighter, that lead right is a home run right down at
his right down Broad Street.
And you kept touching him with it.
For sure.
It was one of the many things that we trained for.
Obviously, he happy go lucky with his left.
And he'd been working for his whole career.
He'd been knocking these dudes out.
So we've been training,
we've been sitting on the left,
being able to, working on countering,
working on, you know, being able to block and come back.
And we had some pretty fast guys
and then we had some pretty strong guys
that I had to, you know, switch rounds with every,
like, you know, every spawn test.
So, you know, we was ready, we was prepared.
And like you said, them dudes wasn't really,
really cracking him back.
And I was really throwing that fire at him.
And the accuracy is was really probably pissed them all too.
And the fact that I was busy is like,
all right, this ain't stopping.
Yeah, I thought you did an unbelievable job
of keeping the pace up.
Like Ocho said, he's a guy that likes to start slow, so he has some energy reserve.
So when he comes out from five through 12, he's like, I got a lot left.
I know I ain't really spent no gas.
I just been coasting.
I've been on electric mode.
Now I got this fire, I got this gas in the tank.
I'm finna unleash.
But it meant you met fire with fire. And I've heard Floyd say that like when he went into a fight, he never watched
tape on the guy that he was fighting.
He left that up to his corner to watch the fight and then tell him instructions.
He would take all that information.
And then once he got into the rain, blah, blah, blah.
Do you watch fight?
Do you when you going against a fighter, do you watch them or you leave that up to your corner
to watch and then give you an instruction
to what you should do?
I don't watch them a lot.
I just so happen to be a boxing fan
that the fact that I do watch him fight,
you know what I'm saying?
I really like boxing and he's just somebody to watch.
He's a spectacular, knockout artist, skill guy,
like one of the better pound for pound fighters.
I like watching good fights.
So I do know some of his tendencies,
but to study him, not really.
I left it up to my dad, but one time, one day,
like one day in camp, we did sit down
and watch a few of his fights back to back.
Okay.
Hey listen, Tank, Tank has publicly interest, obviously in a rematch.
You want to rematch as well.
Are you open to immediate rematch or do you have a you don't need a tune up?
Do you have a tune up fight just to just to keep yourself going or do y'all
y'all run it right back immediate immediate.
And just to let y'all know, like in in my contract, immediate rematch was signed.
I signed for the immediate rematch when I signed for the first fight,
just in case he lost or just in case it was a draw. So,
they put that clause in there. They put the rematch clause in there.
So I already signed the rematch clause.
Okay. So when you got a rematch clause, how long we taking?
How long is the break before you start training again? Is it,
is it six months from now?
It's up to the A side.
It's up to the A side.
And when they want to fight.
So I'm thinking it's going to be
soon. I'm hoping it's going to be
soon. Let's say that.
I mean, I'm saying from a boxing
standpoint as a boxer, what is
soon to you? I mean, when you say
soon to me, I'm thinking a month.
I know that's not going to happen.
I'll think of July.
I'm thinking July. I'm thinking a month. I know that's not going to happen. I'm thinking July. I'm thinking July. I'm thinking July. I'm thinking July for sure. Okay. But if I'm not if I'm not
mistaken Lamont, I think I read something that he reached out to
Lomachenko side and see if they were interested. Did you see?
Did you read that also? Did you see that? But you can't you
gotta you can't believe everything you see. Uh if it is true, then that'd be funny.
But I'm pretty sure the rematch happens,
and I'm pretty sure that's the next fight for both of us.
Well, let me ask you this.
Would you be interested?
Go ahead.
Would you be interested in fighting Lomo or Tiofimo Lopez?
Or me.
Uh-oh.
Hold up, Chad.
Hold up, Chad. How about? Hey, put, hold up Chad, hold up Chad.
How about? Hey, put pause on it, LeBron.
Put pause on it.
Hey Chad, I really, hey, if I don't know if you see me,
fine, say it, I really do this.
Yeah.
Hey, I would dare, I would dare.
I listen, I've been studying you for years, you hear me?
Okay.
I can listen, listen, I don't have the time,
but I can tell you your tendencies right now,
round one through seven.
Okay. So if we was to get in there and spar right, but I could tell you your tendencies right now, round one through seven. Okay.
So if we was to get in there and spar right now, I could tell you what you're going to do by looking at your feet.
When you got your hand down by your hip, and you step forward, you're going to faint.
No, I ain't going to do that.
I ain't going to do no more keys.
But listen, I've been studying you.
I know you.
So if you want to spar at any point, if you get ready for the next fight-
Good sound, Paul, right?
I think I've seen you work. Good sound, back. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah
Yeah, I got hands. I'm like they got no power though. You got no power. He got pillars. He got pillars at the end of his arm
Nah, he ain't got no power Lamont. Hey Lamont listen they
Throwin' up my cake blows. Nah nah nah, ain't no, hey Lamont, where I'm from they call me hella hands
Yeah, they call me hella hands, but listen, I reflected on your performance, right?
In that fight, bro, I don't,
your game plan was phenomenal.
Everything you did, you executed from round one
all the way to 12.
After you have a fight like that
and you put on a show like that, what aspects,
I mean, like, how do you improve off of that?
Because if you would have grade your performance that night, you get an A+.
So what do you go back and work on after putting on a goddamn show like that?
Man, just going on.
See my thing is I always want to get better all the time, no matter if I do have a good
performance or not.
I just go back and I watch the tape and see what he do. Obviously, whatever he come with
the next one that we just got to still capitalize. We're going to add to what works. If it ain't
broke, don't fix it. But we're going to add to it. We're going to build, we're going to
build, we're going to build. Might try to pick it up so we can see if we can get that
star vigil now. You know what I'm saying? You never know. We're going to build. We might try to pick it up so we can see if we can get that star vigil now.
You know what I'm saying?
You never know.
That's how you capitalize.
That's how you capitalize.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Boy, your condition was on point, boy.
Old school fighter, man.
15 round fighter over here, man.
For real?
For sure.
I was at camp spot 13, 14 rounds.
Wait, with time or no time?
No, with time for sure, with time.
Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.
Cause you know I did 22 rounds, no clock.
Chad, we gonna get you a camp.
Maybe you can get me ready for the rematch.
Bring me, hey matter of fact, bring me the camp.
I ain't gonna charge you.
I ain't gonna charge you.
I give you four rounds, I let somebody else go for it
and I come back for another four.
Fair exchange, no robbery.
I like that.
All right, back.
Man, Lamont, will you put a pause on this man?
Don't beat him up too bad
because I need him for the night count.
I said I don't want him to come back
and talk about slurring.
I don't want him to come back and talk about like,
he's gonna be all right.
He gonna be, I think he gonna be all right.
Don't just get him body blows.
Don't hit him on his head here. Just get him body blows. I'm good, I'm good, I'm good, be all right. Don't just get him body blows. Don't hit him on his head here.
Just get him body blows.
I'm good, I'm good, I'm good.
My defense is my offense.
I ain't gonna get hit.
A lot of times when guys win and they get a rematch,
they're like, well, I don't have anything to improve upon
and they run into a problem.
Because you had a draw, can you go back and say,
you know what, in this situation here,
I should have did this instead of that,
and I might have been able to land something.
Is that how you go back and approach the fight?
Because you didn't get the win,
and so you're like, well, I didn't get the win.
I didn't lose, technically, but I didn't win either.
And I think as a fighter, you know, draws and ties,
that ain't what we do it for.
We wanna be win, we wanna be on the top spot.
And because you didn't land on the top spot,
you feel that, you know what,
go back and watch this fight through 12 rounds.
Maybe if I pick it up through the first three or four rounds,
maybe that's a round or two that I win
and we don't even have this discussion at the end
because it looked like they gave you round 12.
Had you not won round 12, he would have won this fight.
We should say it, honestly.
So to me, I thought I wanted to fight clearly.
I thought I won a close fight.
I thought I won a very competitive fight.
I'm not saying I steamrolled him or whatever.
But to me, I think I won the fight.
Now granted, ninth round should have been called a knockdown.
Two judges on the official scorecards
gave him the round 10-9.
If that was a knockdown, I win the round 10-8.
That's a three point swing.
I would win a unanimous decision.
So you got to take all of that into account.
Make some noise for the greatest shooter of all time, Steph Curry.
We went live from All-Star Weekend for a new podcast called Goat, Greatest of Their Hair.
And we ranked our top five shooters from the 2000s.
Paja 5, Dirk 4.
Paja is elite.
I'm mad I left him off my list, but I still like my list.
You won't believe who Steph left off his list.
That's so tough.
That's why we have these conversations.
Yes, absolutely.
I love it.
Step talked about what separates the truly elite NBA shooters.
When you have a scouting report and you're on the list as not just a shooter, but we
have specific rules for how we guard you.
There's a fear factor that's associated with it.
Anytime you're wide open, you might as well just count that and get on back on defense.
Listen to GOAT. G-O-T-E, greatest of their era on the iHeartRadio app, Apple
Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Julie Stewart-Banks.
I'm doing a new podcast from iHeart Podcasts and the National Hockey League.
And I'm paired up with one of my favorite players, the
always quotable Nate Thompson.
I wore nine NHL sweaters and I have story after story to share.
And believe it or not, I have plenty to say
and not just about hockey.
Believe me, he does.
Energy Line with Nate and JSB is the name of the podcast
and it's gonna be, well, it's gonna be quite the ride.
We're officially line mates, Nate.
We're the Energy Line.
We'll have plenty of folks join us,
current players, some of my former teammates, Hall of Famers,
and wait to see some of the connections that Julie has.
She has quite the Rolodex.
Okay, we'll lean into Nate's playing experience
and tap into our interests away from hockey
and try to do what Energy Lines are supposed to do,
provide an emotional boost.
How do you feel about all that, Nate?
I'm vibing, Julie.
I'm ready to roll.
Listen to Energy Line with Nate and JSB on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hey, this is Mel Reed, LPGA Tour winner and six-time Lady Geo-Bean Tour winner.
And Kira K. Dixon, NBC Sports reporter and host.
You forgot to say All My Miss America, by the and we've got a new podcast Quiet Please with Mel and Kira. We are bringing you spicy
takes on sports and pop culture, some golf haves and interviews with
incredible people who have figured out how to make golf their superpower. Or just
people we like. Plus tales from the road and everything in between. By the way,
golf isn't just for the dads, brads and chads. Yeah it's actually life's cheat
code and we're not gonna be quiet about it on or off the course. We're bringing By the way, golf isn't just for the dads, brads, and chads. Yeah, it's actually life's cheat code,
and we're not going to be quiet about it on or off the course.
We're bringing on some of our friends like Michelle Wee,
Heather McMahon, Amanda Baleotis.
So, if you want to keep up with us and here's the app,
tune into our new podcast.
Listen to Quiet Please with Mel and Kira,
an iHeart women's sports production in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment.
You can find us on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
It was a moment that should have broken me, but just because of how I was raised and
my bullishness and arrogance to want to be great hardened me. It gave me a platform to
be so singularly focused on greatness.
We all have moments like this. Something happens that's supposed to break us. But it's in these moments that we discover what we're really made of. I promise you, if anyone knows this, it's me.
I'm Ashlyn Harris.
It's three things that could have happened in that ninth round alone with that knee. It could have been a 10-8 round score to knockdown.
It could have been a disqualification or I could have won by TKO.
So honestly, when you look at that and you say, I got to draw against the number one spectacle in America,
a pound for pound talent,
and a guy with a 90% knockout ratio,
you look at it and like, okay, if you got to draw,
more than likely you was supposed to win that night.
So even though I didn't get to win,
I'm not a moral victory guy.
I'm pissed that I didn't win, honestly.
Right, exactly.
I'm pissed that I didn't win.
But I really think that I should have,
a lot of people think that I should have.
And in the rematch,
it's just gonna make it worse for him
because I gotta rev it up.
Like you said, I gotta do something. I gotta do something. I gotta rev it up. Like you said, I gotta do something.
I gotta do something.
I gotta pick it up somewhere to turn this around
and make it a victory for me.
Lamont, you're moving up from super featherweight
to lightweight.
Were you afraid that moving up might rob you
of some of the power?
Cause that's, you know, normally guys guys that move up they lose some of the
sting
Were you concerned about that? Are you gonna stay are you gonna stay in super feather?
Are you looking to move up the baby go 135 140 even higher now?
One thing that 135 gave me is a lot more thing
Less pounds I had to lose so
You know, I felt so what do you normally walk around at Lamont?
Normally, I wanna say if I,
50, 55?
Especially if I'm in the gym,
nah, no, no, I walk around like 150.
Somewhere around 150, 149 on a good day.
If I'm on vacation, I don't get no higher than 55.
So, okay.
Okay.
So you, so I think that works.
I think that's one of the things that helped Floyd Mayweather
because Floyd is not a naturally big man.
So it was easy for him to stay at 147
because Floyd only walking around
at like 155 to begin with.
So he go for six, eight weeks, he lose five pounds.
That's his sweet spot.
For sure.
For sure.
And that's another thing with you.
It's not like you walking around 165, 161, 65,
and you got to strip down 35, 30 pounds,
you only having to come down 10,
maybe even 15 pounds at a max.
So that's a lot, that's not that drastic
where you see these guys have to go through
this massive dehydration in order to make weight
because it, man, you keep doing that
flux weight in your body, man.
It takes something out of you, man.
It definitely takes a toll on you for sure.
Hey, listen, after a fight like this,
how much time do y'all take off?
Like, I mean, before you get back in
and gradually just start building yourself back,
not only in the shape, but just making sure
you don't lose that rhythm and consistency. Oh, It's tough, man, especially how boxing is today. That's more so like a personal, so me personally,
I don't like being out of the gym too long. I get, I get cussed out by my, by my doctor,
because he tell me to take a break, you know what I'm saying? Like, so, and I understand because
your body do need to heal, rest. I've been through an eight week training camp and then went through a hard 12 round fight.
So you know, you gotta get your body together, take some time off because when you peak,
when you peak and you peak at the right time, and I think I peaked at the perfect time,
Saturday night, it depletes you.
So I get a little rest.
I get a little rest probably like two weeks.
I want to be back in the gym.
One, because I probably get too heavy and I'm like, I don't feel right.
Right.
You don't feel like, yeah.
And I be bored.
I normally be in the gym.
So that's how I go.
Where you live at?
What's the-
I live in D.C.
Okay.
Okay. I'm going to make a little trip down there, man.
Whenever you get back in the gym and you want to start sparring,
I'm going to come down there.
And I got to know.
I'm a bad man, Chad.
I don't know.
I know. I know. I'm a bad man, too.
That's what my teacher called me when I was in high school.
I got a little bet for you, right?
We're going to do eight rounds, right?
We're going to do eight rounds?
If you can, yeah, we're going to do eight rounds, right? We gonna do eight rounds? If you can, yeah, we gonna do eight, yeah.
If you can beat me, at least four rounds.
Now, you know LeBron James,
he just scored 50,000 points, right?
He sent me the ball.
If you can beat me, if you can win more rounds than me,
I send you this ball he gave me to put up.
I'm gonna call my dad right now.
We can set that up.
Milestone.
We gonna set that up. Milestone.
We're going to set that up for sure.
You're going to take that ball up off him?
Man, that's going to be...
You're going to get that ball up off him?
Okay.
It's going to be in the trophy case.
Right on top of the bell.
Okay.
Matter of fact, I'm going to make it easy for you.
I'm only using my jab handle.
Oh man.
You giving it away.
Nah, I mean, listen, I can take what I'm doing and still win.
That's what I do.
I told you they called me hell a hand. Hold on, I'm telling you, you giving the what I'm doing. I still win. That's what I do. I told you they call me Hella hand.
You giving the prize away.
Braun ain't gonna like that.
Oh, nah, you ain't gonna get that.
You think I'm gonna lose to you and lose that ball?
For sure.
The devil is alive.
Hey, let me ask you this Lamont.
After the tank fight,
who would you like to fight after the tank?
Are you gonna stay? Are you gonna stay at, are you gonna go,
are you gonna stay, if you go back, if you rematch,
you beat tank at 135, are you gonna stay at 135
or slide back down to 130 or go up even to 140?
It depends on what's available.
If the champions at 35 are available,
I wanna fight them, I wanna unify, obviously.
That's good for my career, that's like legacy fights,
and on top of that, they big money fights.
Money.
If they're not available,
I would go definitely defend my title at 30
and probably try to unify there
because I can make 30 comfortably.
And I feel like I run that division.
Like I probably can't even go undisputed if they let me.
That's a lie.
Cause I'm like Lamar being a student of the game,
I know you heard your dad, you weren't around there,
but I know your dad has told you or whomever in your corner
about the Four Kings, Hearns, Hagler, Duran, Leonard,
and how they fought each other,
and all the top contenders in that, they fought them.
You go back to the 70s, you look at the heavyweights,
they fought, Norton fought Ali, he fought Frazier,
he fought Shavers, he fought Ali.
Nobody dug, why is it now it now Lamont that we have guys
and they want to cherry pick and don't want to take,
it seemed like, and I love Floyd,
but Floyd that 50 and 0,
cause nobody wants to take an ass with him now.
Because now they feel like my legacy is ruined.
I lost the fight.
Some of the great fighters,
we don't look at Ali because he lost three or four times, even when he looked bad fighting Trevor Burbank or Larry Holmes. We don't hold that
against them. We don't hold it against Leonard. We don't hold against Hagler. We don't hold
against Hearns. We don't hold against nobody. I don't know. And I hate that. I love Floyd
and I'm glad he's undefeated, but everybody thinks now if I be undefeated, I'm going to
be revered like Floyd and it's not gonna happen. It ain't Floyd is one of a kind fighter man in the caliber even if a lot of
people do go undefeated and retire undefeated it's not gonna be the same
and it's not gonna be the same because Floyd put in his work Floyd Floyd fought
them guys when when he was able to he fought them guys when he was able to.
He fought everybody.
He fought them guys.
He earned the right to fight who he wanted to,
when he wanted to, whatever the case may be.
That's just a once in a lifetime fighter.
I don't know why the guys are not,
maybe I do. I'm going gonna give you a little scoop.
These guys are worried about the money that they can make if they-
If they still have a O on their record.
They think that a blemish would knock down the value
of whatever they have in their contract
or whatever they have presented to them,
which is crazy to me.
I think if you put on a good enough fight,
no matter if you win or lose,
the performance is what matters.
It's really what matters.
So people wanna pay to see you fight.
If you fight the good fights,
that's what-
They gonna pay to see it.
That's what they gonna pay to see it.
That's why pay-per-view numbers used to be so high
because people are gonna pay,
they wanna see certain fights,
they wanna see them fights.
Look at Mickey, look at Mickey Ward and Arturo Gatti.
Ooh.
That was jam packed.
Laws didn't matter.
People still pay big money to see that
because they know they was gonna get action.
Yeah.
But now Lamont guys like, you know what?
Yeah, if I fought Lamont, I can make 15 mil,
but if I fight this guy that I know I can whip,
I can make 10.
So why take the chance for an extra five
when I can get this can over here
and I can whip him for 10?
So I just get me a couple, I get me five or 10,
I get me five or 10, I need 10 million dollar fight.
Why would I need to take a risk for two of those big fights?
Nah, I ain't gonna do that.
But then you gotta think about that.
Lamar, I told Uncle Art of Night,
we talked about this too, right?
Not only do certain people not wanna take risks,
but you wanna build it up
until you get to the really, really good fight.
So if you got, like you talk about the Four Kings
back then, back in the day, right?
And today if you got the best boxes, right?
And if all the best boxes fight each other right now and not have fight after fight after fight
and actually build it so people want to actually actually want to watch and you can maximize
your your pay. That's a little different. Think about how long before Earl and Bud actually
fought. Look how long it took. Look how many fights they had because they have the build
up to it. So from that standpoint, I kind of get it and
understand you want to maximize your your pay. You also, nobody wants to lose, but
at some point they ain't gonna have no choice but to fight each other. But Ocho, you
gotta understand. You gotta be right. But think about it, and Lamont you know this.
Sugar Ray went to 160 to fly high
They didn't come down he they went to him they did
131 35 they went up to click sugar ray was 147 went to 160
Hagler what her was 147 went to 160. He definitely right about that
that's middleweight and Ray Ray
and Durant started at 35. So
but that's one of the best
lightweights to ever do it.
Yeah, horse hands a lot of a lot
of those guys started. Yes, a
lot of those guys started there.
Oh, Joe 3035 for Floyd 3035 40 Force Hands on 135? A lot of those guys started, yes, a lot of those guys started there, Ocho. 30, 35, Floyd, 30, 35, 40, 47, and De La Hoya at 54.
Yeah, oh yeah, a lot of them guys, yeah.
And Pacquiao's an anomaly.
Pacquiao started at like 106, 112.
And blew through everything.
Eight division champion and still knocking him out.
You're not gonna see that.
Even when you look at Armstrong, you look at all those guys,
nobody's doing this again.
Nobody's gonna do that.
Yeah.
I mean, basically you'd have to start at,
say you'd have to start at like 140 and go to heavyweight
to try to clean out everything.
And that ain't happening.
I mean, Roy was an anomaly.
Cause Roy went from 60, 68, said it.
10 years straight, middleweight, heavyweight.
Roy was, if Roy hadn't had Roy just stayed there
and not screw up the muscle that he put on to go to heavy.
Cause I think that took a lot out of him.
That took too much out of him.
He probably should have stayed.
He probably should have never come back down
or just took his time.
But Roy won the title,
couldn't get nobody else to fight,
gave the title up and came back down.
And he wasn't the same after Tarver beat him that one time.
He was never the same.
Cause he got started getting beat by fighters that Roy,
Roy would have mopped the floor inside of five rounds with him.
So what's next tank?
I mean, excuse me.
What's next Lamont?
What's next after this tank, after this tank fight,
you say you want to fight whoever the big money fight is.
Who?
Lomo, Tiofimo, Haney, Garcia, whoever.
The champs at 135 right now are Shakur,
Keyshawn Davis, and Loma Chinca.
Ooh.
Okay.
That's who we gonna be looking at after,
you know what I'm saying, after I beat Tank,
after I beat Tank in the rematch.
You know, if them guys ain't available,
then we gonna go to 30 and defend my 130 pound championship.
So listen, out of those three you just named,
who would you prefer to fight first?
If you can't get all three, if you had a preference.
If I had a preference?
I don't really got a preference.
I would put a blindfold on and pick whichever one.
It don't matter.
Ooh, that's what I'm talking about.
You talking about this talk.
Whoever want this ass, hey, tell them,
whoever want this ass with me.
That's what I want.
Yeah, for sure.
Who want this ass with me? For sure. I want, who want this ass with me?
As a matter of fact, I tell you what, I tell you what,
Lomo, you gonna get it first.
So you gonna get it after I get tanked.
When I get tanked, I'm gonna get you at the first this year.
Hey Shakur, I'm gonna come see you in July.
Hey, Kishan and David, hey, at the end of the year, or 27,
I got you, I got you ass with me too.
Sound good to me, you hear me?
Sound real good.
Hey man, I appreciate it.
Congratulations, great fight.
It wasn't the outcome that you had hoped for
because you trained for eight weeks,
had a great camp and you put the time in to win.
It didn't go away, but who knows what's gonna happen
July, August when the next fight come around.
Wish you the best and guess what? Come back and join August, when the next fight come around. Wish you the best and guess what?
Come back and join us again when the fight happens and all.
We'll see what happens after that Lamar.
Appreciate you.
Appreciate you.
Thank you man, I appreciate both of y'all man.
All right, all right, I'ma see you in DC.
No doubt, yeah, get my contact.
We'll bring you out for sure.
All right man.
Just, hey, body, cause he need to talk.
I don't want, I don't want to, you know. Yeah, that's what I want you to do. Yeah't hit him in the jaw. You know?
Yeah, that's what I want you to do.
Yeah, yeah.
Big leg.
That's what I want you to do.
That's what I want you to do.
Hit one of my legs.
Yeah, I got it.
I'll make sure I record it too.
We'll have it on the night count.
That's what I need you to do.
Record it.
All right, all right, all right.
All right, man.
Appreciate that, Le'Bri.
Have a good one, bro.
All right, thank y'all, man.
A quarterback coach from a team drafted in the top seven
referred to Shadur Sanders as
brash and arrogant in his team interview.
Josina Anderson posted a very lengthy, interesting post.
I'm not going to read it all, but you guys can see it.
Here we go with this again, Ocho.
That's what you want from your quarterback.
Listen, don't change.
You know who else is brash?
Can I tell you one quarterback who is brash, especially come out of college with the way
he plays, the way he carried himself by the name of Baker Mayfield, who went number one
to number eight.
Baker Mayfield was trash.
You know, Kam, brash.
You know who else is brash?
Johnny Manziel was brash.
You know, now all of a sudden there's a
problem with having confidence in yourself. It's not brash, it's about having
confidence. It's believing in yourself and believing in the work that you've
already put in. The resume speaks for itself. Turn on the film. There's a reason
he's talking the way he's talking. I believe I can come in to change the
franchise. How is that brash for feeling that way?
If you're not serious about changing your franchise
and having a franchise change your quarterback,
I'm not the one for you.
What's wrong with saying that
when that's exactly what the teams are looking for?
Someone with that type of confidence.
Not soft spoken, you are a leader of men
coming in as a rookie to change the franchise.
You have to be.
What are we really talking about?
Okay, let's just say for the sake of argument, Ocho,
everything that he said,
everything that this coach said,
that he's brash and he's arrogant, can he play?
That's all that.
Can he play football?
He's a football player.
He's not into politics because in politics
you need to be likable.
That's why people vote for you.
In this situation, can he play football?
Okay, does he have any issues off the field?
Do you worry about having to have your phone
on ring the entire night? Do you worry about having to have your phone on ring the entire night?
Are you worried about, hey, if you see my player here,
give me a call, watch out for him.
Is there any such thing that you could need to worry about?
His dad was brash.
I'm confused.
At the end of the day, can the guy play football?
Can the guy, if I want a football player.
I want him to have good character.
I don't care about the brassiness. I don't care about all the stuff.
I don't want him to get in trouble off the field.
Although I understand that young kids will make mistakes
because I was young.
So I'm not here to condemn for a first-time mistake.
I just don't want to see a repeat offender.
That's what gets, that's what, that's what I get upset about
repeat offenders, but I don't get upset about, repeat offenders.
But I don't have no problem with Shador.
I don't have no problem with any guy.
If that's what we're talking about,
that's what we're about here.
Now, you have to understand,
a lot of times, Ocho, we brag,
because we had to, hey, a lot of times,
we were playing against people that were bigger than us,
older than us, and we did something good, we had to let them know.
That's how we grew up.
Every time.
Every time.
But listen, I understand obviously,
especially at the quarterback position,
they want you to be and conduct yourself a certain way.
They want you to be Palm Brady's a certain way. They want you to be
Tom Brady's, the paid man, the Drew Breezes. They want to lump everybody in the same category. You have to be a robot.
You have to be politically correct. You have to know how to talk and you have to know how to answer questions. You have to know how to keep things in house. You have to know how to fall on the sword. When things don't go well,
You have to know how to fall on the sword. When things don't go well, you put the blame on yourself.
No, it's me.
It all starts with me offensively.
I have to play better.
You know, when you win,
We won.
You gave very credit to everybody.
When you lose, you take the blame.
That's the part about being a quarterback.
That's the ownership that one has to have.
Ocho, this is what Jacina Anderson's second paragraph.
According to league sources, said quarterback coach seems to have an issue with the culture
of athletes who have broad fame and financial success before entering the NFL and their
opinions appears to have them a problem with certain athletes.
I'll leave it at that.
This is how the pre-draft evaluation can get jacked
because the evaluators don't seemingly possess
the discernment to detect intangible traits
that are connected to the will and drive to win
without being a stat or delineate it,
delineate it in an analytic report.
report. I don't I mean if you're not if you're not familiar with said culture see somebody from a different culture if somebody from the Asian culture or the Jewish culture I
couldn't but I know with I know my culture I know how we talk. That man, think about it. And
I've always said that you've heard me say this numerous
chimes chat. What I respect so much about guys that parents
that had money. His dad is tired. He said, No, I want your
money. I want to do it myself. Peyton Manning parents have
money and now I want to do this myself. Bronnie James' dad is LeBron James.
He said, nah, dad, let me put the time in.
That says something because a lot of times we see people,
kids of famous or well-to-do,
they don't have that kind of drive.
It takes a special type of
person to go up living in an ivory tower with mink slippers and silver pajamas. Say, hey,
I want to get out the mud like my dad or like my mom did. Everybody ain't wired like that.
I got to. Push your door. And his dad did everything everything he put him in the right situation, had great coaches,
had a cultivated relationship with Tom. Tom would talk to Shadour, probably check them out on film,
probably work with him. What's wrong with that? If every parent could be in a position to make sure their kid got the best,
the best teachers, the best coaches, the best physios.
Would we or would he or she not do that for their child?
Absolutely, that's the whole point.
That's the whole point in being a parent,
being a father, being a mother,
that's what you want to do.
I'm confused.
Oh, it goes without saying.
But just for the sake of argument,
you have the other side that creates stuff like this.
They don't care.
Oh, he's not conducting himself the way we feel.
Well, that's okay.
You didn't raise it.
Can you play?
Oh, I love it.
I love it. That's all that matters. I don't think there'll be a situation that he's gonna get in trouble. I'm not going to be able to
play. Can you play? Oh, I love
it. I love it. I don't think
I don't think there'll be a
situation that he's going to
get in trouble. Uh he's he's
seen very level headed to me. I
know he's going to be level
headed because I know his dad.
I know his dad extremely well
and his dad jokes around but
they know he know nonsense. They know he don't honestly. That's what it's time for business.
When it's time for business and perfecting your craft and getting better at your craft, putting in the work, the homework, the studying, the training.
How many times you heard time say I'm two things.
I'm coaching dad, but I'm dad first. Make no mistake about that.
His kids are very, very of the utmost importance to him.
He's always been this way.
Y'all think he's, this is time.
This is who he is.
He behaves a little different when he on the phone with me.
But he, I don't get it.
But you know what, Ocho? Hey, I guess I,
Bucky Brooks responded.
Thanks for sharing this, Ashina.
Every year we watch high profile quarterbacks
deal with the nonsense.
No one expects your Dura Sanders to be perfect fit for every coach and organization, but the unnecessary character attacks by NFL
personnel and some media members with NFL backgrounds is garbage. These unflattering
and unfounded remarks haunt prospects beyond the pre-draft process, including tainting the fan-based
opinion before the players take to the field for a squad.
It's stupid, it does.
Make some noise for the greatest shooter of all time,
Steph Curry.
We went live from All-Star Weekend
for a new podcast called GOAT, Greatest of Their Era.
And we ranked our top five shooters from the 2000s.
Paysia five dirt four.
Paysia is a lead.
Okay, okay.
I'm mad at him, I left him off my list, but I still like my list.
You won't believe who Steph left off his list.
That's so tough.
That's why we have these conversations.
Yes, absolutely.
I love it.
Steph talked about what separates the truly elite NBA shooters.
When you have a scouting report and you're on the list as not just a shooter, but we
have specific rules for how we
guard you. There's a fear factor that's associated with it. Anytime you're wide open, you might as
well just count that and get on back on defense. Listen to GOAT, G-O-T-E, greatest of their care
on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
It's Julie Stewart Banks. I'm doing a new podcast from iHeart Podcasts
and the National Hockey League.
And I'm paired up with one of my favorite players,
the always quotable Nate Thompson.
I wore nine NHL sweaters and I have story after story
to share and believe it or not, I have plenty to say
and not just about hockey.
Believe me, he does.
Energy Line with Nate and JSB is the name of the podcast and
it's gonna be well it's gonna be quite the ride. We're officially line mates
Nate, we're the Energy Line. We'll have plenty of folks join us, current players,
some of my former teammates, Hall of Famers and wait to see some of the
connections that Julie has. She has quite the Rolodex. Okay we'll lean into
Nate's playing experience and tap into our interests away from hockey
and try to do what Energy Lines are supposed to do, provide an emotional boost. How do
you feel about all that, Nate?
I'm vibing, Julie. I'm ready to roll.
Listen to Energy Line with Nate and JSB on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Hey, this is Mel Reed, LPGA Tour winner and six time Lady Geo-European Tour winner.
And Kira K. Dixon, NBC Sports reporter and host.
You forgot to say All My Miss America, by the way.
And we've got a new podcast, Quiet Please, with Mel.
And Kira, we are bringing you spicy takes on sports and pop culture, some golf haves
and interviews with incredible people who have figured out how to make golf their superpower. We're bringing on some of our friends like Michelle Wee, Heather McMahon, Amanda Baleotis.
So, if you want to keep up with us and hear us yap, tune into our new podcast.
Listen to Quiet Please with Melody.
And we'll see you next time. of our friends like Michelle Wee, Heather McMahon, Amanda Ballyonis. So if you want to keep up with us and here's the app, tune into our new podcast.
Listen to Quiet Please with Mel and Kira, an iHeart Women's Sports production in partnership
with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment.
You can find us on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
It was a moment that should have broken me, but just because of how I was raised and
my bullishness and arrogance to want to be great hardened me.
It gave me a platform to be so singularly focused on greatness.
We all have moments like this.
Something happens that's supposed to break us.
But it's in these moments that we discover what we're really made of.
I promise you, if anyone knows this, it's me. Wait, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
You ain't finna get away with that one.
Hold on now.
All right, somebody that's throw up.
Remember that, you know what I, you get.
You travel with that?
I travel with that now.
I got all this stuff for you.
Perception is a person's reality.
But perception is not always the truth.
Oh, you're in your bag, wait a minute.
Perception is not always the truth.
It's uh, look, he's been dealing with this his whole life, because guess what he's been? Dion Sanders' son.
He's been dealing with this his whole life.
He's gonna deal with it for the rest of his life.
No matter what occupation, that precedes him.
For the longest time, and I still get it,
I'm Sterling Sharpe's little brother.
They be in airport, hey, Sterling!! I said bro, you loud and wrong. Yeah, but you close
You with that boy now, yeah, I just ain't what they call me Sterling. Yeah. Yeah, you play for Green Bay. No, I play for Denver
Oh, yeah, that's right. You don't want to play with far. No, I play with Elway, but okay, but go ahead
Keep it going Oh yeah, that's right. You the one that played with Favre. No, I played with Elway. But okay, but go ahead.
Keep it going.
Hey, they use the mistake. They still do what you be used to.
They still do.
I like bro.
Ocho, and guess what they tell me.
Man, y'all don't look nothing alike.
I say he my brother, not my dad.
Hey, what the hell?
Hey, you know, people today steal,
and most of the time it's women.
Most of the time it's women, it's very funny.
Obviously they're fans of me,
and they confuse me and T.O. all the time.
And I mean, sometimes they miss.
I'm not sure how you mistake me for T.O.
T.O. is about two inches taller,
and he got about 40 pounds on me.
86.3", about 230.
Like, I'm confused now, you know.
I'm one good looking brother.
I'm one good looking brother.
Now I'm not saying my brother from another mother
is ugly or nothing, but he don't look like this.
So I'm not sure how you can do it too.
Now my sister and I, we look alike.
You look at my sister and you tell,
okay, they're brother and sister.
My brother looks just like my mom. Me and my sister look like my dad. But it's okay. But I
understood that growing up, won't you imagine? I got a brother that's three years older. So he's a,
I'm a freshman. He's a senior. He's good at everything. Naturally, bro, you ain't gonna
be like your brother. You can't run your brother.
Okay?
I don't like that.
That ain't number of motivation though.
You know, he ain't that.
Oh, I love that.
That ain't number of motivation.
Hey, hold on, let me tell you something.
What you think you should do or had to deal with?
Being at Jackson State.
Well.
I can't do that.
You can't do that.
Well, maybe you could do that at the HBCU level,
but you can't do it at the PWI.
So he goes to Colorado, you know, he get done there.
What do you say?
You still hearing all the chirps and the terms
and all the negativity.
Now, draft process.
You showing your confidence
based on the work that you've been putting in.
But who knows how long.
Now they're telling you to change
because they don't like the way you conduct yourself because you believe in yourself. You have confidence. We talked about
Travis Hunter and his comparison to playing both ways in NFL comparing it to Shea Holt, Shea Holt,
Ohtani. What are we talking about? What are we talking about? It's okay. That's the confidence.
That's what you need to be great at whatever it is you do.
It doesn't even have to be sports. It doesn't have to be football.
But the kind of confidence that Chateau has, the kind of confidence that
Travis Hunter has, it's okay to be like that because that type of confidence
is what had driven them to the point where they are in life.
Because guess what? So he went to HBCU, he lit it up.
Oh, he should. He had an HBCU. He go to Colorado,
he lights it up. Oh, weak conference. You see? I can't win. I can't win. How does he win? How
does he win, Ocho? He goes to an HBCU, does what he does. You say the level of competition. Now he goes to a D1 and now you say well the conference was weak.
Now when he gets at NFL I wonder what's going to be the excuse then when he comes in and actually
changes the franchise around. Same thing with Ken Ward. Ken Ward is a little different. Ken Ward's
approach to the game and the way he conducts himself is a little different. Everybody's
personality is different.
Everybody's personality is different.
They're not all gonna be the same.
Some of them are.
Yeah, I wouldn't cry.
So don't expect me to be a BTD.
But who you telling?
Because I sure was.
Listen, that wasn't.
That wasn't quite. I'm joking.
I'm gonna talk it and walk it.
But I'm talking and walking.
Yes.
Quinn Uris says he is the best quarterback in the draft
over Cam and Shadour.
I think I'm the best in the class
and the most ready for the NFL
because of what I've been through.
I think I'm the most ready for the situations
that occur in the NFL.
Injuries, playing through tough injuries,
having a big name behind you, continue to play through that amount of pressure
Continue to be confident at the being bench. It's hard to do
I matured a lot and then all the injuries I had to deal with and come back from I wouldn't trade it
It's the reality of the position stuff gonna go wrong and I have a plan of attack for pretty much any situation that can arise. I
Like it you got to be it see here we go have a plan of attack for pretty much any situation that can arise. I like it.
You got to be, see, there we go.
Once again, he's spewing it in a different light.
He's spewing the same type of confidence and brashness that they're talking about
that should do or did, but in a different way, he just spinning it in a different
way, using his history, his past experience on telling you why he's available as the best player ahead of the two that
might be in front of him. That's very brash. Why are you
telling us that? Same thing. The delivery is just different.
Every player in the draft believe they're the best player
in the draft. He did go through a lot. He went to Ohio State, couldn't get on the field.
He leaves and go to Texas.
He came with much fanfare, got booed, they wanted arch.
Yeah, he had to play through injuries.
Yeah, he's gone through a lot.
Yeah, you have to.
I mean, you have to be resilient.
You have to be able to compartmentalize.
They're gonna love you one week, hate you the next,
but you have to believe have a
strong belief in yourself, Ocho. That's the number one thing. Never let them take your confidence.
Even all the booze, even if you get benched, you made it this far. You made it this far to give up
to quit because now you have a little bit more adversity that you've ever gone through?
Nah.
I mean, listen, it take a toll on your mental too, huh? You know, you take a toll on your mental. Oh, yeah for sure
Especially at the quarterback position. Oh my goodness. Oh my goodness
Well, I wish uh, mr E Ewer the best of luck.
Oh Joe, a fan posted a picture of Sammi with Sammi Sosa this weekend and it's gone viral.
Where the hell it gone viral?
Yes Sammi?
Yeah.
Oh you're trying to say which one Sammi?
No, wait Sammi got all the puffs out?
Oh yeah, no, they say Sammy, he black again.
Yeah, I saw that earlier.
I thought somebody played around and Photoshopped the picture
because how do you go from bleaching your skin
to being black again?
Man, Sammy look like them look
like the Williams Brothers, the
white chick.
Yeah, Sammy. What happened?
I think you listen. Once you
stop bleaching yourself,
doesn't your doesn't your
normal pigmentation come back now that you bleach it too much? No. He was probably on that Ambi, that Archer, that Esoterica.
You remember them bleaching creams.
They used to be bleaching cream.
Hey, anybody my age or older know about them bleaching creams?
There was Archer, there was Ambi, there was Noxzema,
and there was Esoterica.
Anybody know about them?
I don't think you know. You know? know about them? Anybody know
my whole life, even when it wasn't popular.
Back in the 80s, because you know,
back then it wasn't popular at all.
It wasn't popular until like the 90s when Michael Jordan hit,
Wesley Snipes hit, because you know,
you had the DeBarge brothers,
you had L and Chico DeBarge,
you had Al B. Sure,
you had all them brothers with the good hair and
skin. He both. Yeah. So, nah, I've been blacked by popular man since 68. Same, same, same since 72.
Glad to have you back, Sammy. Ocho, Granny says don't come back over unless you're back. Oh,
Joe. Granny says don't come
back over unless you're
bringing back her containers.
My grandma said don't bother
coming over if you don't bring
back her containers. Oh,
Granny's gonna play by that
Tupperware now. You talk about
Tupperware? Yeah. Somebody
took my Tupperware and just
wanna take their time and
just. Oh, they didn't bring your Tupperware back?
They did after a couple of months.
Tell me, you know I got it.
Yeah, I know you got it, but I want it.
What, I'm gonna put my food in my hands?
So you want me to store my food like this
and put my hands in the freezer?
My grandma ain't play about her Tupperware, boy.
I ain't with that, y'all.
She ain't play about it.
And she gotta use it to take her lunch too, to work, man. And please. She ain't play about her Tupperware boy. I ain't with that y'all. She ain't play about it.
And she gotta use it to take her lunch too,
to work man, and please.
Man, we just put, we ain't have no Tupperware like that.
Man, we put lumen and foil on top of everything.
You ain't, we ain't have no lids.
Hey, y'all had all, maybe y'all did.
We ain't have no lids in the 70s and 80s.
Food just be all out or you put
lumen and foil over the top of it.
Yeah.
I bet you didn't keep your grease in the coffee.
Yeah, that Maxwell put it right on the stove.
Come on now, we done lived the same life.
Come on now.
Like I said, I ain't know nobody,
I ain't know nobody no Tupperware.
We ain't have no Tupperware.
I mean, we had, you know,
our drinking glass was old great,
was a great jelly jar, a mayonnaise jar,
you know, hot water.
It's great to drink this thing off the side of it.
You ain't buy no drinking glasses.
Same, same, same, yep.
And like I said, I ain't know nothing about this
until I got the, until I was in the NFL.
I ain't know nothing about no Tupperware.
I heard people mention it, but we didn't have that.
Like I said, my grandma put Luminum Four,
hey, cover that dish, boy.
Luminum Four, cover it up.
Hey, I'm just thinking about breakfast, man.
Back in the days, I don't know if you know
if you know Quake Oats, Quake Oats oatmeal.
Listen, I remember my granddaddy, man,
either I asked for two things for breakfast.
Either Quake Oats oatmeal or Cream of Wheat.
I don't know if you remember Cream of Wheat.
And he would use evaporated milk.
Yeah, I know that.
The one in the white can. I didn't know you weren remember Queen Marie and he would use evaporated milk. Yeah, I know. The white can.
I didn't know you weren't supposed to drink that milk.
I didn't know you weren't supposed to drink it.
I didn't know that you spoke it blends.
You make you make cakes and stuff with that.
I didn't know you weren't supposed to drink it.
But I wanted me and my brothers to wonder like man why we every time we drink this milk
our stomach be tore up.
It's too damn thick.
I don't know what the, I don't know what's in there.
That's all we had.
Hey, we get some water in that can of milk.
My grandma said, hey boy, drink some of that can of milk.
Okay.
Put a little water in.
Hey, now, and it had to be, the milk had to be really small.
I mean, it almost had to be clever.
You know what clever is? Like it's co's coagulated now if it was like that
Yeah, you were drinking but hey if it's just a little smell. Oh, you got to go into Syria
You can go on up in here
Hey my girl, hey you be okay boy
My grandma was like, you be okay, boy.
But dude, but yeah, my grandma wasn't, hey, you gonna be toting the dish out there
with lumen and foil over.
You won't get no Tupperware, so you were good.
The Volume.
Make some noise for the greatest shooter of all time,
Steph Curry.
We went live from All-Star Weekend for a new podcast called GOAT Greatest of Their Era and we ranked our top five shooters
from the 2000s.
Payser 5 dirt 4.
Payser is a lead.
Okay. You won't believe who Steph left off his list.
That's so tough. That's why we have these conversations.
Yes, absolutely.
I love it.
Listen to GOAT, G-O-T-E, Greatest of their era on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up everyone?
It's Greg Rosenthal and I'm teaming up with the king of spring, Daniel Jeremiah.
He requires me to say that.
We're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this
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From DJ's mock drafts to my top 101 free one free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday, keeping you up to
date as we head to the NFL draft. Listen to forties and free agents starting on March
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What's up everyone? Julie, stripping Sierra along with former NHL player Nate Thompson. We're doing a new podcast together here
We go the name energy line with Nate and JSB each week
We'll get together and talk about hockey life all topics are fair game, right?
Exactly, and you'll never know who will drop by to join us Julie is pretty well connected
She has text threads going that you wouldn't believe
Julia's pretty well connected. She has text threads going that you wouldn't believe.
Listen to Energy Line with Nate and JSB
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is Mel Reed, LPG Tour winner
and six time Lady GeoBean Tour winner.
And Kira K. Dixon, NBC Sports reporter and host.
And we've got new podcast, Quiet Please, with Mel.
And Kira, we are bringing you spicy takes on sports and pop culture,
some interviews with incredible people who have figured out how to make golf their superpower.
An iHeart Women's Sports production in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment.
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