Freakonomics Radio - Extra: Jason Kelce Hates to Lose
Episode Date: November 19, 2023Pro footballer and star podcaster Jason Kelce is ubiquitous right now (almost as ubiquitous as his brother and co-host Travis, who's been in the limelight for his relationship with Taylor Swift). Afte...r you hear this wide-ranging interview, you might want even more Kelce in your life. RESOURCES:“N.F.L. Player Team Report Cards,” by the National Football League Players Association (2023).Kelce, documentary (2023).New Heights with Jason and Travis Kelce, (produced by Wave Sports + Entertainment).EXTRAS:"When Is a Superstar Just Another Employee?" by Freakonomics Radio (2023).SOURCES:Jason Kelce, center for the Philadelphia Eagles.
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Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner.
We are slipping into your Freakonomics Radio feed today with a bonus episode.
It is a conversation with Jason Kelsey, the longtime center for the Philadelphia Eagles.
In case you don't follow American football, Kelsey is one of the
Eagles' best and most popular players, and the Eagles are one of the best and most popular teams
in the NFL. They won the Super Bowl in 2018, and last season they made it back to the Super Bowl,
but they lost to the Kansas City Chiefs. One of the Chiefs' best players happens to be
Jason Kelsey's little brother,
Travis. This was the first time that brothers had ever played against each other in the Super Bowl.
The Eagles and Chiefs are two of the best teams in the NFL this year, too,
and they happen to be playing each other again this week on November 20th.
At the start of this season, we put out an episode called When Is a Superstar
Just Another Employee?
It was about a survey conducted by the NFL Players Association, the union, which they turned into a report card that graded all 32 teams on their workplace conditions.
Jason Kelsey was one of the voices we heard from in that episode, but only for a few minutes.
The full interview with him was well over an hour.
So I thought
you might like to hear the whole thing now. The Kelsey brothers have become a phenomenon over the
past year or so. They make one of the most popular podcasts around called New Heights.
They are in TV commercials together along with their mom. Jason was the subject of a documentary
on Amazon Prime. Travis, if you haven't heard, but I'm guessing you have, Travis has been dating Taylor Swift.
But it was Jason who was just named one of People Magazine's Sexiest Men of the Year.
The interview you're about to hear was done in late spring before the current NFL season began.
So there will not be any Taylor Swift gossip. Sorry about that. But I think
you will agree that Jason Kelsey is an unusually interesting and open-minded person, a curious
and positive person. And if you enjoy this conversation even half as much as I did,
that will be a lot. If you'd like to hear more of these full interviews from the episodes we
produce, you should become a member of our new Freakonomics Radio Plus program.
You will get a bonus episode like this one every week.
And you can also listen ad-free.
To sign up, visit the Freakonomics Radio show page on Apple Podcasts or go to Freakonomics.com slash plus.
Okay, here now is Jason Kelsey.
This is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything with your host, Stephen Dubner. Thank you so much for being here. Thank you so much for having me on.
I'm excited. Do you like being a podcast god in addition to being a football god?
I do enjoy my nine to five and this side job I have going on right now.
I guess it was on your show where you talked about your relationship with
your brother and how the podcast has changed it. That's true. You weren't just saying that.
Yeah. I don't know that if I did say change, maybe that's not the right word.
Amplify maybe or something.
Yeah. I think it's definitely amplified. And we just have talked more than we've talked.
We've both been playing football in the NFL for over a decade now. And our first 10 years,
we didn't communicate
as much. You also realize, especially being an older brother, how much your younger brother has
changed. It's not the same big brother, little brother relationship that it used to be when we
were in college and in high school together. I think now it's much more of a brotherly friendship
and love for each other. And you kind of see the differences in one another and the way you think about things. I do think Trav always viewed our relationship a little bit
more competitive. Being the younger brother, right? He was always trying to win. And, you know,
he compared himself a lot to me growing up, according to my dad. So to me, the relationship
was never that. But I think it'd be interesting how my brother would answer that. And I think he's far exceeded me in career achievements in the NFL.
He just plays an easier position. Come on.
I wish that was the case. I would go play that. But I think he's far exceeded me in a lot of
those regards and just beat me in a Super Bowl, which not the greatest highlight for me. So maybe
he doesn't feel as competitive, I guess, as he used to. I think he's finally cemented himself as
surpassing the big brother. It looked like he was sad for you after the Super Bowl, yeah?
Yeah. So I thought about it a lot the night before. Like, what am I going to do if we win? And how am I going to greet Travis, right?
He was sad.
And that's one of the reasons for me, I didn't really want that interaction to be that long.
You know, I gave him a hug and I'm like, go celebrate with your teammates.
Because I didn't want him to be in that state of mind.
I wanted him to be happy and celebrating with his teammates and enjoying the fact that he's a world champion.
What were you going to say to him? Did you figure it out if you won?
Man, I did have something, and I'm trying to remember what it was. It has since
gone out of my mind. I've tried to block as much of that day and everything out as much as possible.
Coming in second when the stakes are high is no fun, is it?
It's not. You put so much work in, and the team is so tight at that point because of the success
and longevity of the season.
You really get to a point where you think you're the best in the world.
And I still think on another day we might have been.
But knowing what it's like to share that moment with a group of guys and coaches and staff
and organization and knowing that that team with how good it was and how
tight it was, isn't going to have that final achievement as rough.
All right. So just so I have it, if you would just introduce yourself, say your name and what you do.
Sure. I am Jason Kelsey. I play center for the Philadelphia Eagles.
I also host a podcast with my brother, Draps.
Why the name of the podcast, New Heights? Where'd that come from? So we're from Cleveland Heights. So we were looking for a way to draw on that.
When we were going through the different names, that one sounded like the one that
is what we're trying to do constantly, right? You're always trying to take your game to New
Heights. And now we're in a different game. We're in the podcast game, but still try to be great at
whatever you do. And I think that
that's one of the things that we want to continue to run with. And we look forward to doing more
things of celebrating individuals that are the best at what they do. Expertise and watching
people who are really great at things is one of the most enjoyable things to witness and celebrate.
Just tell me a little bit about your family, growing up, what your folks did and what the house, what the family was like,
what you were into and so on. Yeah. So grew up in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. We were,
for a short stint where I have few memories, we were in North Ridgeville, Ohio. My brother probably
doesn't remember that portion at all. My mom worked in banking her whole life,
started off as a teller and worked her way up to a vp and primarily in low-income housing loans
She worked at key bank the largest building in the city
My brother and I could see it from our high school cleveland heights high school. So we always knew where mom was
My dad was a steel worker in cleveland
He ended up becoming a sales rep where he was in and out of steel wheels quite a bit
And did you have siblings beyond your brother?
No, just Travis and I.
And tell me about you as an athlete as a kid. How good were you at what sports when you were
younger, let's say from zero to 12 or 13?
My father believed in us trying as many things as possible. So I did everything from
my first sports were soccer and baseball, then to hockey, karate, golf, wrestling, lacrosse. I eventually settled into my high school sports of
being football, hockey, and lacrosse. I guess I don't want to be cocky, but I was good at pretty
much all of those sports. I was one of the better players on the field, no matter what sport it was.
Would you say the same is true for
most NFL athletes? I don't know. You know, football is tricky because if you're big,
fast, and strong, there's a good chance you're going to be good at football.
There are other sports that I think require more skill or repetition that I've seen high, high caliber NFL players struggle with. Obviously, golf is one
that anybody who plays knows that that's a difficult game. What's your handicap now,
if you don't mind me asking? Oh, man. I don't know that I play enough to have a handicap.
I'm happy if I break 90. Let me say that. I hit some shots that are spectacular pretty much every round I'm out there. And then
also three putt and chunk wedges around the green. I know that game. I'm familiar with that game.
So I guess another thing from growing up, we grew up in a very,
what's the word? A liberal town. So we played music. We did a lot of artistic things as well.
Right. You played sax in a jazz.
I did. I played sax in jazz band in high school. So we got exposed to a lot. And I think that that
ultimately has helped us be better football players.
Why do you say that?
Well, I think that you draw on all of the experiences and you take things that you learn
in one craft or one sport, whether it's hand-eye coordination in baseball or, in my view, one of the best ways to learn the value of practice is to try and learn an instrument.
There's few things that you'll get immediate feedback as to why practice is important. The skills and knowledge and proprioception and different things you learn trying different sports or activities, the different parts of your brain and the way you think, whether it's, you know, analytically or much more on a kind of in the moment free spirit kind of level.
All of these things can be used in the game of football.
What about handling pressure?
Let me ask you a question about the Super Bowl.
Did the Super Bowl feel like a fundamentally different game, at least for a little while?
You know, the intensity and emotions of it are very, very high. But, you know,
obviously this being my second one, I had some familiarity with it. The game is the exact same.
The emotion and intensity and all of that is going to enhance what's happening in your head.
For better or worse, or it could be either?
Well, it can be both. I think it's worse when you try to do things outside of either your job or
the things that you've done to get there. And I've been fortunate, both of the
Super Bowls that I've been in, to have players that have won it. And Chris Long, who had won a Super Bowl in New England
right before we played in Super Bowl 52 with the Eagles,
that was his biggest advice was,
don't let the moment dictate things to you.
Do everything that got us here.
And when the play's there, you'll be ready to make the play.
Did you feel you were able to do that
in this past year's Super Bowl?
Yeah, I mean, for the most part,
I mean, you always have plays you want back. You know,
you're never going to go out there and play a perfect game. And unfortunately, I've found when
you lose, you definitely remember the plays that you could have had back. But for the most part,
you know, I thought as a team, especially offensively, we were pretty composed.
You know, we moved the ball efficiently. Jalen Hurts played out of his mind.
What's the relationship between a center and a quarterback? I mean, is it
preternaturally close or are you just another alignment essentially?
No, it's much different. The center and quarterback have to be in sync and have to be
on the same page. You know, I think that each quarterback is different just as each center
is different. And the way that that manifests is never going to be the same. You know, Nick Foles is different than Carson Wentz was,
and Carson Wentz is different than Jalen Hurts is, and all of those guys are different than
Michael Vick was. You're trying to get to a place where you guys are on the same page.
You understand the way he's thinking. He understands the way you're thinking.
Do you spend a lot of time with him trying to just kind of establish communication at least and so on?
Absolutely. You have your own meetings with the guy. You talk a lot outside of meetings, whether it's on the field or off the field about, you know, I think we should maybe do this
on this play if this is the situation or we should point the guy into the boundary on this play
because we have a good answer to the field and I'm okay if we're hot over there. I think all of these things are getting ironed out if you have a good relationship.
When it's a new relationship, obviously you need to talk more and you need to get on the same page
and understand how each other think. Let me go back to something you mentioned earlier. When
you're talking about the neighborhood you grew up is kind of a liberal neighborhood. So tell me for
a minute about you now. I know that within NFL circles, at least, you're considered a pretty politically,
I don't know if politically active is the right word, politically astute, culturally aware,
whatever you want to call it. But just walk me through how you see your platform, I guess,
as a football player who has a platform addressing things that are
within the culture, whether it's politics, society, et cetera. Hold on. My dog is, let me get my dog
out of here before I answer that question. Sorry, Steven. No worries. Take your time.
All right. What kind of dog? Yeah. Irish Wolfhound. I have two of them back there.
They're fun dogs.
They're enormous.
They're a good time.
My wife grew up Irish dancing, so she always wanted one.
I had never heard of them until I met my wife, Kylie.
And she, the moment we got married, actually before we got married, I think we got Winnie.
And then we needed one to kind of have a companion.
All right.
So getting back to you as a, whatever we want to call you, like, you know, open mic on that for a minute.
I kind of do my best to not be too political.
I don't even mean politics per se.
I mean, from what I've seen is that you seem to present a kind of pro-human position, if you know what I mean.
I would agree with that. Not a, you know, us and them, not a fight or flight, but something where, I don't know what
it is. I guess that's what I'm asking you is, are you driven a little bit by a desire to bring
people together, maybe using sport to bring people together? I don't mean to give you too much credit,
but that's the impression that I've got. I'm just curious about it.
No, I think that that's very fair.
I don't, you know, some of these things I think happen just kind of unconsciously and
maybe who I am, but I think there's definitely a desire to be positive, to bring people together.
I'm not a fan of, a lot of what I draw on is from things that I like of coaches and
players and teammates. And I think that, you know, coaches that are more unifying,
are more celebratory, are more embracing.
If the culture of the team is, you know,
you need to buy into what we're doing,
that is a frustrating culture and team to be a part of.
If the culture is, it's our job to get the players to buy in,
or it's our job to make the culture embracing of the players, that's a culture I can get behind.
And, you know, I think in the world right now, it is very animosity driven and people want to pit sides. And I think that I certainly, I try to see the good in people. I try
to see the good in humanity and shed light on that. And I think embrace my teammates and in my
city and the values and things that were instilled in me from my father and mother and area that I grew up in.
So let me ask you this. You've been with one team for your whole career. How many seasons now?
This is year 13 coming up.
Okay. So even though football is an unusual job or a pretty uncommon job, at least,
it's a job. And the Eagles are essentially your employer. I mean, they are your employer. It's a job and the Eagles are essentially your employer. I mean, they are your employer.
It's a little bit different than most employers, perhaps.
I assume you like the culture overall because you've had certainly opportunities to leave.
Can you talk about your relationship with the organization in a way that a non-professional
athlete could relate?
Because the world has changed a lot in that regard
too. As you well know, your folks were with a company for a long, long, long time, and that
just doesn't happen that much anymore. So in a way, in the modern world for a relatively young
person, you're sort of an outlier. To talk about your relationship with the organization, you know,
pros and cons, then we can get into this NFL PA report card that I want to talk about too.
You know, it's extremely hard to stay with the same organization for an entire career.
There's so many factors that go into that between, you know, what you're worth, whether the team
agrees with that assessment, you know, what the dynamics are from a health standpoint and
from an age standpoint. And I've been very, very lucky to meet a lot of parameters. And it was close a few times to probably not being that way.
Meaning you almost left a couple of times.
Well, I think I almost was forced out at least one time. I think I had a rough year in 2016,
the year before we played in the Super Bowl, ironically enough.
What was rough about it?
Oh, I just didn't play well at the start of the year.
Were you hurt? No, I just had a few bad games early on. I was
out of rhythm. We were able to turn it around. I had a good second half of that season, but
a lot of the narrative was that the Eagles wanted to move on from me, and I think they did. But
I was in this realm from a contract standpoint that it was probably too much
that anybody else wanted to pay. You were in a three or four or five-year deal at that point?
I signed a five-year extension and this would have been year four of that extension, I think.
And the reason I say the contract saved me was that I wasn't such a high salary that the Eagles weren't
willing to pay it, but it was too high that another team probably wasn't interested in trading for me.
What was your number that year? Do you remember?
I think it was right around six. It might've been a little bit less.
Six million a year. So what was that like coming back to the team for your last year
of that contract, knowing that the team hadn't been your biggest supporter necessarily?
I did not view it personally. I'll be honest with you. I knew that I struggled the beginning
half of the season. I had an offensive line coach that believed in me and Jeff Stoutland
very strongly felt that if I just used the right technique, I'm going to mitigate the
vast majority of these issues. And he ended up proving to be right. We ended up going to the
Super Bowl the next year. I had the best season of my career. I made my first all-pro team,
won a world championship. So it was a pretty damn good feeling.
So they're not going to not bring you back now.
Correct.
And now they're getting me on a bargain really.
Cause now everybody's, Hey, you're still interested in that trade.
You guys were talking about last year, but these are the things that happen throughout
a career.
You're going to have ups and downs and bad years.
And I think sometimes I think, you know, not to pat myself on the back.
I think I handled it in a really healthy way.
I had a great leader in Jeff Stoutland as an offensive line coach who believed in me still. So my self-confidence was
still high. And what's your relationship like with the upper tier of the organization, with ownership,
with GM, EVP, and so on? As I've gotten older and garnered more trust within the organization
and more of a voice, I get asked my opinion more. Not that I was ever shy of voicing my opinion
before, but now it's more proactive, I guess, asking of the opinion rather than me just blurting
it out. Can you give an example of where ownership or management may come to you and say, hey,
we don't know about this, we don't feel good about this? I mean, this is a bad example. It
seems like something really small, but we do a bowling trip or some type of team activity every off season.
And literally today,
we just got back from the bowling alley
because they consulted with me
and other leaders on the team about,
you know, do you think this is important?
And, you know, I do think it's important.
I think it's fun to kind of step away from practice
and do something outside the confines of a game.
How'd you bowl today, by the way?
Terrible.
It was one of my worst outings. The lanes were slick. They put too much oil on.
Come on, come on, come on.
Wasn't ideal.
A poor carpenter blames his tools.
That's fair.
Okay. So anyway, but you did it and that's something that you talk about with management, for instance.
Another example, probably more of a impact. I'm getting older and they're looking at having
the next center for the next decade.
So they've drafted a guy with the idea of him maybe replacing me multiple times at this
point in my career.
And I've ended up having great careers with those guys.
But Cam Juergens was a guy we drafted last year and they had me actually watch tape and
give my assessment
on which players I liked out of that draft class.
There are a number of really good centers in that draft class.
It's a little bit weird though, in that you are being asked to help your employer recruit
your eventual replacement, correct?
Well, either they're going to do this on their own and I'm going to have no involvement,
or I can be a part of this and try and, you know, have a say. And, you know, I have seen players fight the process
of them drafting guys or bringing free agents in. When you say fight it, meaning the new guy comes
in and you give him a cold shoulder, you don't help him out. Cold shoulder. You don't really
help him. You don't develop a relationship. You don't try and help the player improve. And listen, I don't know that that's a job of any player. I just think for
your own psyche, it's not good for you. Like if this guy's better than you, it's going to happen.
And would you rather it be, hey, this guy fought it with every tooth and nail,
or would you rather be like, hey man, like I had some small part in making that guy get as good as he could be as fast as he did. And I've seen guys
fight that. And I think it actually does make those players play worse. I think it starts to
mess with their head. And I don't think it's a healthy room. Like you want a room in the NFL
that everybody feels like they're in it and valued. You don't want to be a healthy room. Like you want a room in the NFL that everybody feels like they're
in it and valued. You don't want to be in a room where like, you're not, you're holding back from
a guy. Cause that guy's going to feel that he's going to be like, man, that guy doesn't really
care about me or he doesn't like me or whatever you, you want all of these individuals in your
room to be adding to the conversation. That's a big part, in my opinion, about getting better
as a unit and a player is all of these conversations that happen throughout the week
happen in the preparation, in the off season, at the bar. All of this makes a difference.
I firmly believe in the outcome. So if you've got someone on your team that you feel hasn't
quite got to that level yet of being that kind of teammate. Are you now the sort of guy,
veteran who will go, maybe it's your QB and you say to him, listen, you're doing an amazing job,
but if you could also reach out a little bit more as a human, as a teammate, it'll be better.
Do you do that? I do that now for sure. If I see it, I have not always been that position. And being older now, I view more strongly on that
now. I wish I would have had this viewpoint in other parts of my career and voiced them to other
guys that I've played with. You would have done some things differently?
Well, I think I would have just voiced things and maybe in a more direct way. Sometimes I voice
things in an indirect way, right? Because you don't want to step out of your lane, right?
Especially if it's a player that's either older or in a different dynamic, right? So you just kind
of say things hoping that they'll get what you're saying and it's in a respectful way. Whereas now,
me being the oldest guy, I kind of have the credence to have that conversation with just
about anybody if I want to. I read that you thought about maybe retiring this year. Is that true?
I've thought about it seriously for a number of years.
Tell me that process.
Shocker, playing in the NFL is really hard. And as you get older, it gets harder and harder for
a number of reasons. Obviously, the number of injuries and where your body's at is in a much
different place the older you get.
Overall energy level, it's a lot to do a really hard lift, stay focused in meetings,
go out there and practice.
And what about family too?
You have three young daughters, correct?
How does that factor in?
Well, it definitely factors in.
And I think, you know, back to the thing about energy, you beat me to it asking about the
families, but, you know, you only get so much energy throughout the day. And when you apply so much into the game and into your teammates,
you know, when you come home in the middle of a season, even if you get an off day here or there,
your kids are going to see a fractured level of, you know, what dad really is at a hundred percent,
right? I am not ignorant of that fact. And I think, you know, what dad really is at a hundred percent, right? I am not ignorant of that fact.
And I think, you know, one of the greatest things anybody in this world can do is be a father.
And it's a job that I take extremely seriously and want to make sure that I'm doing a good job
of, and that does weigh in on these decisions. Are you a different dad during the season then?
Yeah. Well, I have less time. I
have less energy. Do you think it affects you, uh, you know, whatever emotional? Yeah. There's
times where I'll be on a season and my wife's extremely good about with the FaceTime and
everything, but it's not the same. And, you know, you see videos or pictures and things, and you
definitely on a road trip or, you know, in the middle of a season are wondering to yourself, you know, am I doing the right thing right now? Am I'm doing other things now too, because I've
thought I was going to retire.
So I've taken on more activities in anticipation of retiring.
Like podcasting?
Like a podcast, like other business ventures.
What other business ventures are you working on?
I've been involved with real estate in Cleveland for a number of years.
I want to get involved with that in Philadelphia now.
I made a Christmas album this past year with our offensive lineman and a bunch of musical artists.
It's all awesome, but all of this is time. My wife jokingly said when I was thinking about
retiring, she's like, I think you should probably just play another year because at least I know
what the NFL schedule is. Did losing a Super Bowl add to your
wanting to come back or subtract to wanting to come back? Unequivocally added to it. And I don't
think it should have. It's so hard to get there. And there's so many things that need to happen
right for that to happen. I mean, right after the game, I wanted to play another season and I had to
really step away and figure out, you know, is this the right thing? Is this the right thing for your body?
Is it the right thing for the family?
And can you do it?
My biggest thing is I want to do it the way it needs to be done.
Being who you are in the meeting room, on the field, around your teammates, investing
in that, as well as practicing hard, as well as lifting weights.
Whether it's Jeff Stoutland saying, I remember he's said this to me for three
years now, but just stop playing when you don't want to play football. Stout, I don't think that's
ever going to happen. I think I'm always going to want to play football. And he said, no, Jason,
there's going to be one day that you're going to wake up and you're going to realize you do not
want to do this anymore. And it's going to happen. Trust me. And my wife has pretty much said the same thing.
So you're 35 now, is that right?
35, yeah.
So 35 years in a pro football player's body is the equivalent of what?
A lot of car wrecks. At this point, I get MRIs on all of my major joints after every year
to see where they're at and how much worse they've gotten. And, you
know, the guys reading the reports are like, yeah, man, your shoulders look great. Your knees are in
really good shape. And I'm like, are they in good shape for a 13-year football player? Are they in
shape for like a normal 35-year-old? I'm like, oh yeah, for a normal 35-year-old, you would look
terrible. But the fact that you play football, these are really good looking knees. So.
Have you had major surgeries or no? I've had a few, I've had two on my right knee, ACL, MCL,
which was actually the same injury. They used to do two separate surgeries on that. Now they just
do it with one. I've had an ankle clean out on my left ankle. I've had bilateral spore ternia
on my gut. I've had this tendon removed in this finger.
When you're getting your screening at the end of the season, that's to, I mean, check in,
I assume, but also to establish a baseline so you can see for later? Or is it really just to
see what kind of shape you're in right now? Part of it is to see what kind of shape I'm
in right now. Part of it is to, I don't know, I'm just curious to see what's happening on an annual basis,
how things are deteriorating, staying the same in some situations.
Nothing's getting better, unfortunately.
It's all either the same or worse.
Now, what about your head?
Do you get scanned?
Are you concerned about brain injury, CTE, and so on?
Well, I mean, it's obviously something that I think every player is aware of now.
I don't know that concerned is the right word.
I think it's something that I think will eat you alive if you're concerned about it.
I'm aware of it, and I try to think of it in terms of what can I do to mitigate potentially
the ramifications of that.
I have not been scanned yet because there's a few scans out there that I'm optimistic
about that I think I will get
either this year or next year. But as of right now, none of them have that many studies around
them. So they're pretty, unfortunately, there's no clear way to tell whether somebody has CTE
while they're alive. Right now, the major way that they know how to do it is to cut the head open.
And I don't plan on doing that for hopefully a long time. Do you know anybody who died of CTE? Did you know any of
those older players? Not personally. I know a fullback that played with the Eagles and the
Patriots that ended up getting Lou Gehrig's disease. And it came out after that he had CTE.
Out of all the brains they've cut open of former NFL players, almost every player,
maybe every player has had CTE. So one, that's frightening, obviously, on some degree. But two,
there's also a number of NFL players that live long, healthy lives without symptoms later in life. And I would love for the NFL and NFLPA to get
behind an initiative that pushed for those players to donate their brains. Because unfortunately,
I think most of the players that donate their brains end up being players with symptoms.
And I have a sneaky suspicion that there's a lot of people walking around with CTE that
have minimal symptoms and that there are lifestyle mitigations.
What do you mean by lifestyle mitigations?
Proper sleep, exercising, proper nutrition.
I think that all of those things are going to end up playing a role into the severity
at which this affects your life.
If you look at a lot of the symptoms associated with CTE,
there's similar symptoms as other age-related cognitive diseases, whether it's tau protein
buildups, web entanglements. I think as we're finding out, exercise, sleep, proper nutrition,
a lot of these things mitigate all of these other cognitive declines.
And you're pretty good at that stuff
or not so good?
I think I'm really good.
I think I'm really good with sleep.
I don't drink as much as I used to,
even though I still enjoy one
every once in a while.
My conversation with Jason Kelsey,
center for the Philadelphia Eagles,
continues after the break.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
This is Freakonomics Radio.
We'll be right back.
Let me take you back to the beginning of your career. On your show, you talked to Howie Roseman, your EVP GM of the Eagles, and he admitted
that there was some reluctance to draft you because of behavioral concerns.
He said, I do remember in the draft room, scouts were going, I'm just telling you, he might fight half the team and he really likes to party.
How right were those scouts?
Well, I think the anger portion has always been misunderstood.
The party was spot on.
That's something both my brother and I had an affinity of,
especially in my younger years. I enjoyed having a good time and celebrating life.
My anger, I've always been a kid that's been prone to outbursts or temper tantrums,
but almost all of them happen in the confines of being on the field, one. And then two, they're always with
people that I love and respect. I don't know that I've ever gotten that upset to want to fight a
random person. It almost always comes at a level of, I feel like I'm being disrespected by somebody
that I have respect for, and why is this not being reciprocated type of feeling? And what happens is I don't address that. I've gotten better at it because now I just
address it on the front end, as opposed to- How do you do that?
Well, you go talk to the person. You tell them how you felt and, you know, or you say it in
maybe a less direct way, but you get it out of your system, right? In a much more appropriate
manner. It still happens from time to time.
I'm a very emotional person, always have been, but I've definitely gotten much,
much better at controlling that. All the elements of being a professional
football player that you're talking about, I think listeners will really get a good window
into what the job is like, even though most of us are not physically capable of doing it.
And we only watch the output, right?
We watch on Sunday.
We don't see what happens those many, many, many other hours.
But you're now talking about all those other hours and all the stuff that goes into it,
the meetings, the lifting, practice.
When it comes to all that stuff, the actual job, everything outside of the performance
on the field, how much does the workplace
environment matter? We're talking about the NFLPA report card here. And, you know, as an outsider,
I can look at it and say, oh, wow, I could imagine how being on a team with really low grades could
be terrible and it could result in bad play. On the other hand, there seems to be no correlation
between good marks here and good teams. In fact, quite the opposite. A lot of the teams that are really good are ranked pretty low.
So can you just get into that a little bit? How much do you care? How much does it matter? Maybe
not just you, but other people as well. Well, you know, in terms of a lot of the
things that were voted on for this survey, I think that players do care. I think that they
want to be in a workplace and in an environment that is, one, the best
available, but also, two, something that is enjoyable and is good for their family and
facilitates a healthy environment to get better in.
To me, the most important things are the staff questions.
You know, is the staff good?
Do they want to help players improve? But I mean,
some of the people that were rated poorly in that are some of the best and highly regarded
people in their fields. So how do you account for that then? Just personal differences?
Yeah. And sometimes it's personal difference. Some of it is, if a guy has been around for a
very long time, there's a chance that he is more old school and less inclined towards maybe new
modalities and things that college kids are coming in with. What the NFL deals with a little bit is,
you know, every major college has better facilities than the NFL does. The universities
use these as recruiting tools and they have very large pockets to build these enormous facilities.
And the NFL just is behind that for
the most part, outside of maybe a couple. I was at the Miami Dolphins training facilities last
year, and it's pretty state-of-the-art. Why were you there?
We were doing training camp there. So for me, another reason this is a little bit more difficult
for me is I haven't played anywhere else. But you do hear through the grapevine and guys that have
been other places, the vast majority of NFL players have played for multiple teams. So you get a frame of reference as to where the Eagles are and where the different staff members are in the eyes of the players.
So the Eagles came out kind of middle of the pack. I'm curious what you thought of that result. And I'm also curious to know, I assume you filled out the survey yourself. Maybe you didn't.
No, I did.
Would you say that the overall team results for the Eagles reflect your views closely or not so much? I thought it was spot on. I'd be curious to see what the standard deviation on each one
of these was, because when I saw the results, it was almost to the T.
You felt like you were looking at your answers.
Yeah, yeah.
But I know that a lot of guys filled it out.
All right, so I'm glad to hear you say that,
because I do want to ask you about something that you mentioned earlier,
which is the discrepancy between staff and facilities.
So for the Eagles, I'm looking at your report card,
strength coaches, A+, training staff, A+, but training room, C-, locker room, C+. So explain how that, why there's such a split there. Is it just that you want to be kind to people? I mean, it was an anonymous survey. So what is it that makes you grade the people well, but the facilities poorly? Well, I think that one, we were one of the least injured teams in the NFL last year.
And the two staffs and rooms that control that the most are the strength department
and the training department.
I've been around a lot of different staff members at this point.
I think that both of those rooms are led really well.
They do forward innovative things. They're
open to discussing things with the players. Give me an example, if you don't mind, of the
forward innovative things. So there's a whole discrepancy right now in the NFL of do you
practice on Wednesdays or how many hard days in a row? The strength staff is very involved with
the training staff at,
one, trying to help players improve and get better, but also to mitigate injuries.
And training camp used to be two-a-days, hard every single day, three-hour practices.
Pads and helmets.
That's right. And now it is much more of a tiered system where one day is a yellow day and that goes
into one, the intensity practice, but also the length at which you're out there.
Green is a, hey, we're getting geared up.
This is going to be a barn burner, but it's done in a calculated way that the coaches
understand, that the players understand, and that is done in scientifically what is the
optimal way for a player to one,
stay healthy, but also improve. And just so I'm clear, those changes were the result, I assume,
of NFLPA, the players' union requests and negotiations over the years, not from the
teams. But tell me if I'm wrong there. I would say you're wrong. The two days for sure was a
big negotiating factor by the PA before I got into the league, but there was a very large gray area
in terms of how long practices are. They can't be over a certain amount of time on the field,
but we are quite frankly, way underneath that threshold. But I think I would be very much
remiss if I didn't give credit to the Eagles organization, our
strength staff, and our training staff at going beyond what the collective NFL mindset
is on that.
Define what people mean when they say that a particular head coach is a player's coach.
And I want to know the upsides and potentially the downsides of that too.
One, it can mean that they're too soft on players, which is obviously not what you want in a head coach. But I actually think the more I think a head coach is that people refer to as a player's
coach, is a coach who leads by embracing individuals and by encouraging them to be
themselves, by encouraging them to take themselves, by encouraging them to take
ownership, by valuing them as individuals. I think that that's ultimately what most coaches
that I would call player coaches being. The onus is on the team to embrace the players,
not the other way around, which is what I would say maybe is the more old school
mentality or militaristic mentality of,
hey, you guys got to bind everything we're doing because this is the way it has to be done.
And I think there's strengths and negatives to both of those. And you don't want to probably be too far in either of those directions. But in general, that's what in my mind a player's coach
is. Your team got an A in food service and nutrition. Let me tell you, it's so good, Steven.
Why have you not invited me for lunch yet?
Come on over.
All right.
The Eagles, to their credit, have taken that feedback from players since I've been there.
It is remarkable how much the cafeteria has changed for the better in one, the quality
of food that's there, and two, the wide range of what
you can get. During the season, are there days where you eat three meals a day at the facility
or no? Yes. Most Wednesdays and Thursdays, I eat breakfast, lunch, and dinner there.
Okay. So walk me through those meals. I'm not asking you to name everything you eat,
but give me a typical breakfast, typical lunch, typical dinner.
My breakfast is usually, if not the exact
same, one item different. It used to be Chef Tim, shout out to Chef Tim, he's no longer with the
Eagles, but I usually go in, I get three eggs over easy with three sausage links and breakfast
potatoes. And then I go get a bagel with cream cheese on it and honey, and then a cup of blueberries.
Can I just say, I've never tried cream cheese with honey. It sounds good.
So one of our strength coaches did that on an English muffin. It's very good on an English
muffin as well. But yeah, highly recommend it.
Is the honey meant to be somewhat medicinal or just you like it?
I think it's one for taste, but also two, I think it's a better
sweetener than some of your other alternatives, but that's up for debate. Lunch,
so we have a few stations. We have a station right when you come in, which is really for your clean
eating, right? It's going to be some type of rice or grain, maybe a noodle and some veggies that
have been cooked. And then to the left of that, there's going to be a pretty clean,
low fat added type of meat. And then the more you go left, you'll get a little bit of fried stuff,
right? So if you're in the mood for some French fries or like a sausage sandwich, hoagie,
and then if you go even left of that, this is probably my favorite station. They've gone to a like regional dish.
And some, a lot of times in season, it's based on a player's like favorite food or where they're from. Yeah. Give me a, for instance. Well, for me, I went to Thailand one year, so I had them
do Penang curry with non-bread, just absolutely one of my favorite dishes. Another day it might be,
you know, I'm trying to think
of who in particular, I think it was either Fletcher Cox or Brandon Graham was smothered
pork chops. Now, wait, let me just be clear though. We're still on lunch, right? Were you
moving off of lunch or you're staying with lunch? So, and I guess I should say that might be dinner.
Okay. Cause I was going to say, if you're eating smothered pork chops for lunch,
I don't know what afternoon is like. I think that station is still like a theme of the day station for lunch. And I think the
dinner one is the player one. Okay. So I can see why that gets an A. Team travel for the Eagles
was ranked low, a D. You would agree with that assessment? That might've been lower than what
I ranked it, but I did not rank it high. If I was any higher, it was a C.
I'm reading here.
It says only half of the players feel they have enough room to spread out.
I guess that's on the plane.
You don't have roommates in a hotel at least, which some teams do, right?
Is that correct?
It's correct.
Yep.
But you're one of only seven teams that don't offer first-class seats to their players.
And I did not know that before this study.
When Chip Kelly was a head coach, obviously everybody can't sit in first class, but he did allow starters and players who
are extremely large to sit in the first class seats instead of the coaches. It's a nice perk.
Anybody who sat first class knows that those seats are pretty nice. And other teams also have,
I think, private planes that have more space for the guys that are in the back. Like, you know, we have a
player, Jordan Malata, who's north of 6'6 and 400 pounds almost. He's going to struggle to fit any
situation in the back of the plane. What's your plane? It's a charter from?
It's a charter, man. I'm trying to remember because I-
Is it American? Philly is a hub for American or not?
So Philly is definitely an American Airlines hub. And I'm trying to remember because I- Is it American? Philly is a hub for American or no? So Philly is definitely an American Airlines hub.
And I'm trying to remember,
there's always the little video at the start
with the lady who's walking and her heels are clicking.
And I know the exact thing.
I'm trying to remember.
It's not, is it Delta?
No, it's not Delta.
I think it's American Airlines.
I think it is.
It's good to know you watch the safety video though.
Well, you gotta be prepared.
Yeah, I've seen it a few times.
Okay.
So treatment of families, the Eagles did okay.
B minus.
Tell me about that one.
We have a family room for games that oftentimes is just a little small.
And then I think another part of that is there's not really a big congregating area for families
and players after the game
that's like away from fans. Do you think this report card will lead to any change?
I do. It's already led to change. So we talked about the training room facilities.
They installed a much larger cold pool in the actual training room. We used to have two above
ground pools out back, which I always,
you know, we're a billion dollar organization with above ground pools. I think we can maybe
do better than this. Above ground outdoors? Yeah. Like in the winter? Well, so they would have to
shut them down in the winter. And that was a big issue with it. And there was a big cold pool and
hot, and I guess it wasn't really that hot, but it was hot enough. So they've already made
corrections on that.
I believe they're addressing some of the family issues at games.
The weight room is adding another tier that's going to add more footprint for more bikes
and other workout equipment.
What about travel?
Do you know if that's going to change at all this year?
So I did talk to somebody about that.
Why don't the Eagles just invest in a plane already?
It's, you know, it's more than valuable in an organization.
And their claim was that there's no place to store it close to Philadelphia.
They can put it where they had the outdoor pools.
How about that?
So I don't know that that's going to change.
And I don't know that the coaches in front office are going to be willing to give up
their first-class seats.
So we might be stuck still with only an empty row,
which is, I mean, all things considered,
not the worst thing in the world.
I guess what I'm really asking is,
how much do you think this report card is going to matter?
Short-term, let's say this season, and then long-term, which would include teams
responding to it in a meaningful way?
I do think teams are going to respond to it. I think the Eagles are already responding to it.
Just like players are competitive, I think owners are competitive. And I think that owners are
certainly a good portion of owners are not going to like seeing their organization viewed in a
negative light. And I think that they're going to try and correct these things.
Were you surprised though, that there is what looks like a negative light. And I think that they're going to try and correct these things. Were you surprised, though, that there is what looks like a negative correlation between
the report card and wins, Super Bowl wins, especially? Were you surprised at that?
I'll give you the top five are the Vikings, the Dolphins, the Raiders, the Texans, and the Cowboys.
Bottom five are, well, the Commanders are kind of an outlier, cardinals, chargers, chiefs,
jags, Bengals, Pats are 24. So, you know, it's not perfect by any stretch, but I guess seeing
the chiefs so low is maybe the big surprise. The chiefs is the biggest surprise.
And the Bengals, but I mean, the Bengals have only really been good for the last few years.
So the Bengals are notorious for being, and I love Cincinnati.
I went to school there.
They are notorious for being
one of the cheapest organizations.
They are still good at evaluating talent
and they have an incredible quarterback in Joe Burrow
that helps you win games now,
as well as an outstanding defense.
I think if you look at the correlation of that,
what you see is
the teams that are at the high end are teams that have all recently revamped their infrastructure.
The teams that are at the low end of that are teams that have not invested in new infrastructure.
And I think that the new infrastructure probably is not going to make as big of a difference
in wins and losses as having good players,
but it can make somewhat of a difference for players. It can also make a difference for
sponsors and bottom line of business making money. I'm sure somebody's been crunching numbers on
that portion of it. And it also makes a difference for other workers that are in those buildings.
And like we just said,
owners are competitive, man. They want to have the best.
And, you know, again, from the outside, just as a fan, you think of these multi-billion dollar firms paying their employees in some cases, many, many millions of dollars,
but even the lowest paid are making a lot more than the average employee.
But then cheaping out on those infrastructure or facility
things. Can you explain that? It's just surprising to me. I think that one, a lot of the owners that
have, I guess, new age of owners or the real estate moguls or people that have made money
outside of, I guess, inheriting a team might not be the right choice of word there. But I think that
all of them understand the value of investment
and they've built businesses around doing all of that.
I think the family-run businesses are used to more of the old school way of the way the NFL was.
You know, the Browns are a legacy of Paul Brown,
one of the most heralded coaches of all time in the NFL.
And, you know, they adhere to a particular
style of football, a way of doing things from the football end, not necessarily, I think,
on the business side of things. I will say there was one point where we talked about my anger
earlier and we were coming back on a short flight and they didn't turn the TVs on on the back of the seats.
And I remember just flipping over, we're a billion dollar organization and we can't even get free movies on these flights.
Like what's going on here, guys?
Who'd you say that to?
I said that to one of the stewardesses and then one of the guys that kind of runs everything for logistics with the team. Came back and he's like,
we're going to turn the TVs on, Jason.
So we got him going.
Now, what about being charged for food in Arizona, let's say?
Did that surprise you?
It didn't.
That's the way it was in Philly my first few years,
in the off season at least.
We went to Arizona and we used the Arizona Cardinals facilities.
And I can say firsthand, they are not investing in this
place. The weight room had, I'm not kidding you. The mats of the weight room were like, I don't
know if they had water moisture that was getting in there, but the rubber mat that was on top of
the concrete floor was peeling up on the corners of it. So like, you're like walking on an uneven
surface the whole time. I was like, how are people not just getting hurt in here? Outside of their cold tub and hot tub in their training room, which was pretty spacious,
it was eye-openingly bad, in my opinion.
For, I would say, probably 99.8% of people listening to this, they never have and never
will play in the NFL.
They probably have a little bit better sense now of what the job
is like on a day-to-day basis, thanks to you. But assuming they're going to continue to not play in
the NFL, but they are thinking about, you know, I have a job, I have a boss, I have a place where I
go, I have perks and intangibles, or maybe there are things that I want. What do you think is the biggest takeaway that the rest of us can learn from this report card and survey?
I think unequivocally that more unions should be doing this.
One, I think that Jeffrey Lurie is a very open owner and a guy who really wants player feedback.
It's different when one person or somebody comes to you with an anecdote or a one-off as opposed to a literal survey of your entire workforce saying,
this is what we think of the place that you have us operate in.
For CEOs and owners, I think that seeing it this way, an unbiased view of it, gives you a much more realistic idea of what your workplace environment is.
So I would want this information.
And as a worker, I would want my boss to know this, but to also not be punished if I tell him it to his face.
So I'm a big fan of this survey.
I think that it will lead to a lot of change in some of these NFL organizations,
especially if it's done on an annual basis.
I see no reason why other fields or places of business would not follow suit
and try to make changes as well.
Nobody wants to be known as the cheapskate.
Before, when it was rumored you were the cheapskate,
it was harder to prove.
Now there's data.
So...
I love it. I love it.
Listen, I'm glad for my sake you didn't retire
because it'll be really fun to watch you play this season
now that we've had this conversation.
But I just want to wish you all the best
with your health and your family and, of course, your job performance and all that.
So it was really a pleasure.
Awesome. Stephen, it's been a blast.
That, again, was Jason Kelsey, a future Hall of Fame center with the Philadelphia Eagles.
On November 20th, his team plays the Kansas City Chiefs
with their future Hall of Famer, Travis Kelsey.
The podcast they make together is called New Heights.
It's fun.
You should check it out, even if you don't like football.
Maybe especially if you don't like football.
We will be back soon with a regular episode
of Freakonomics Radio.
Until then, take care of yourself.
And if you can, someone else too.
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What about the rats in Jacksonville? Did that surprise you?
Not one bit. I mean, come on, man. I've gotten in trouble for talking trash on
Jacksonville one time, so I got to calm it down.
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