Games with Names - The Catch with Chris Berman | Cowboys vs. 49ers
Episode Date: February 4, 2026Chris Berman is in studio! We are coming to you from The Nuthouse San Francisco presented by Liquid I.V. Boomer is with us to relive an all-time classic, that he was in on the sidelines for: The Catch... aka the 1981 NFC Championship Game between the Dallas Cowboys and the San Francisco 49ers. (00:00) We kick things off. (0:32) Chris joins us in studio. (1:12) We talk about the game this weekend. (45:06) We go back to January 1982. (54:02 We get into the teams. (1:11:08) We dive into the game. (1:20:23) We score it. (1:22:09) We wrap up by hearing about Kyler and Jackie's trip to media day. Support the show: http://www.gameswithnames.com/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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January 10th, 1982, Candlestick Park, San Francisco, California.
Joe Montana, drive begins on the 11th.
They're all the way down of the five.
It's third down against the Dallas Cowboys.
Joe, rolling right, in trouble.
Looking for Freddie Solomon.
He slipped.
Pump fake.
What?
He throws it over two tall Jones.
He's dropping back, back, back.
Is that Dwight Clark in the back of the end zone?
This is the catch.
That was a...
I mean, it was...
That's why when I write, I got to write a thing,
you know, which I always do for SPN2,
which I don't usually anymore, but I...
And I got stuck with the score with those guys.
Because it was Friday, I hadn't even thought about it.
Like, oh, fuck, I can't pick a score.
And now I can't change it.
So I went, whatever I expect.
Somewhere in there, Seattle has to get a one-yard mark.
Not to win the game.
That would be too much.
They have to have a one-nard run off right tackle, or left tackle.
You know why they didn't run it?
I asked Pete.
Not to run this yet.
Like in April, Pete.
I said when Hightower stood up Marshon,
when they were about to go up by the play before,
no, no, no, the play before we found out, no, third quarter,
they were rolling.
They had not all their D.Bs hurt yet, offensively, they were rolling.
And they were at about the 15.
It could be wrong.
Third and one on Hightower stood up,
Marshall off tackle, and the kids.
The field goal, they went up by 10, but not 14.
I said, was that in the back of your mind?
Just a little bit.
Well, that, and there you go.
You remember that play?
The play right before the play,
High Tower got him on the ground on the hole.
On that, there was like, it parted like the day.
He gained four, but not.
But Hightower got him down.
Hightower was unreal.
He was like an old-time linebacker,
because the linebackers have changed through my career from,
my first guy in the league, they were 245, 250.
Then now they're hybrid guys that are 230 that can run faster than me.
So he was a hybrid guy where he was 250, 255,
and he could still cover ground.
And he could plug those holes.
He did.
But there's one in the third quarter.
I said, if you do remember that, he goes, a little bit.
I don't think anybody had asked him that either.
No, the personnel group that he put in,
they put in like ultra, ultra, ultra run heavy,
all run guys except two defensive backs
that were going to be man guys
that were Browner and Butler.
We never heard of.
We never heard of them.
We never heard of it.
I mean, we barely heard.
heard of him. You know, I'm just saying, right, right, no. But you, the very first day at training
camp, Malcolm Butler, you could tell that he was going to be a ball player. He was, he was fearless
at the line of scrimmage, and he had long, he was a smaller guy, but he had really long arms,
and he was really great at contacting you. And then he had a great, he had a great ability
to be able to run while the ball was in the air and not lose speed. A lot of guys,
when you're a defensive back, when you put your head back,
you lose your speed because they've got to put their arm up.
You know what I mean?
So you naturally drop your speed and then,
but he could always gain his makeup speed and still do it.
Like the play against Curse was an unbelievable play
that he had the crazy catch on.
But that was an unbelievable play by...
I was right there.
I'll tell you that story on camera.
I was right at the fight because we do prime time right after the game.
We're not on the field.
to like five minutes, but they're down there.
Two cheeks in. That's why they rushed
and they didn't, there was no...
No, I said,
I can say it now. I'm like, Tommy Jackson
and I was standing there. He fucking
caught that, Tom. And then I thought, oh my God,
every lip reader just saw.
But I was knees down. They never
saw... I mean, I'm right, he caught
it right there, both butts in.
Oh, you need him? Like, I could see it. One cheek ear
in? Well, but they were all in. And I went,
he fucking caught that, Tom? Like,
oh, Jesus.
All right.
We can go on.
This is too good.
Well, good to be with it.
My buddy.
Nice to see you.
I'm proud of you.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We ready?
I'll start it up and we'll get into it.
Welcome to Games with Names.
Today we are looking at the 1981
NFC championship game with the catch featured in it,
with the man who was at the game that called the game,
called the, no, he was at the game.
And he was recapt.
He was on the field at the game, and we're not talking about Tom Brady.
We're talking about the one and only Chris Berman.
Boom, welcome to the show.
In one question or in one sentence, why did you pick this game?
It was almost the start of my career.
Joel, good to see you as a buddy.
You know, we've known each other a long time.
Very long time.
I was a young man, and I can remember things like it were yesterday.
Don't ask me what I had for breakfast today.
I'm 70.
I was 26 then.
26.
And right there.
And there's a lot of the reasons why we picked that game,
but it was those guys became and are still my friends
because that was their age of the players.
You guys were kids.
I mean, this was before the Niners were the Niners.
This was the jump to what the Niners became.
You just started with ESPN and what, 79?
Yeah, so I've been there two years.
Two years?
I'm covering the NFC.
championship game.
It's been my dream, you know?
Is this the greatest game of all time, though?
That's a big ask.
Well, that's one of them.
I mean, historically, it lit the match,
if you want to put it that way.
So as I look back historically,
I mean, there are other games of that,
or you might pick another one,
and there's a few. There's obviously quite a few.
Yeah.
But I don't mean, quite a few, but there's Super Bowls,
many you were in.
Not even talking about the one everyone thinks I would be talking about, like, how about the upset of the Rams, which started the Patriots?
So now as a history major, not that that makes me so smart, but that's what I studied, Jules, at Brown.
You know, when I was in the library, I did study the history.
But I'm a football historian.
As I look back at, that was the start of the Niners, and we could look back at when the Cowboys started, you know, the Rose Bowl, they beat the bills.
although that was a shorter run, but great.
Immaculate reception.
Pittsburgh didn't win the Super Bowl that year,
but that started them.
But this is all in retrospect now.
And obviously you beating the Rams,
the St. Louis Rams' greatest show on turf,
the Patriots, that started something.
But this started not, I'm going to get bigger than that,
bigger than that.
Football, when I'm in college,
in the 70s, and I'm certainly old enough in the 60s.
I grew up at Shea Stadium, Joe Namath.
We had season tickets to the Jets.
I was eighth grade.
They won the Super Bowl.
Okay?
So I'm an NFL guy.
Yeah, yeah.
They threw the ball.
The NFL ran.
We threw.
We. I still say we.
Okay.
70s.
It was pretty much the Steelers, who won four with the, you know,
the Steel Curtain defense.
Dallas won a couple of Super Bowls
with the Greenwood.
defense. The Rams were very good.
They didn't win any Super Bowl, but this is how it was
played. Miami, of course, was undefeated. 72.
Them had had a better team in 73,
even though they lost two games, and they
won two Super Bowls in a row. And the Raiders.
That was kind of it.
Like, think of that type of football.
Somebody got 19 in one of those games.
I don't mean like they were boring, but they were
the rules were different. I don't know to tell you.
I mean, you wanted to
go one-on-one with Mel Blunt.
It was a different game.
Good luck. It was a different game.
Yeah.
So, point is, here's the Niners, 81.
Unknown.
Six and ten the year before.
Playing a six and ten team, the Bengals.
Bill Walsh.
Yeah, why wouldn't he head coach before this?
What was the matter?
Well, nothing was the matter.
Joe Montana.
Notre Dame quarterbacks.
None of them were ever any good in the pros.
I mean, there were a couple, and I'm short-trifting,
but at the time it wasn't.
There wasn't Joe Montana yet.
Well, yeah, and there weren't a lot of the Notre-Dame
guys that went in the pros were good.
I mean, Paul Horning would, but he really
wouldn't have any. He can go on and on.
Yeah, Joe Montana, okay.
Yeah, he won the Cotton Bowl. Nice.
These miners are terrible.
They've been terrible.
And there's a new kind of offense.
So football at that time
was not
medieval. This isn't medieval football.
I would never call that.
I mean, that was like you better buckle
your chin strap.
Ground and pound. Right.
But as that changed, not that everybody ran the West Coast offense, but it was, oh, there's another way to do it.
Not football's changing.
You know, Barack Dickerson wants to run for 2,000 yards.
We can still run the ball in the 80s.
You see what I'm saying?
But nobody had 1,000 yards that year for the Niners.
I think Earl Cooper had like 800 yards, but I think he caught 90 passes, is my point.
That would be a four-yard run, a four- or five-yard.
which is that the way to do it?
So it kind of changed things.
That's what I mean.
So not only the Niners,
I think it evolved football offensively.
1,000%.
That's why.
That's why is it one of the most important games ever?
Absolutely.
Yeah, what's the most important game?
It's the Super Bowl 3 with Namath?
That's important.
Was it a great game?
No, this was a great game.
And this was, you know, beating the Cowboys
in 81, coming off of one of the great teams in the 70s,
this was the stage for the San Francisco 49ers who were in their 36th year in existence,
having sniffed a championship.
Like everything associated with San Francisco was just, it was a weird city.
This was the start of San Francisco becoming a football town.
Correct.
Except for one little bit in the 70s,
70, 71, 72.
No, I didn't know all this.
I didn't realize what it meant to the Niners fans
when I came out there, but quickly realized it.
The Cowboys eliminated him the only three times they made it to...
They were in a playoff once for the West in the 50s.
I mean, that's a long time ago.
Cowboys at 70, Cowboys at 71 title games, and then 72.
John Brody was quarterback. He just passed away.
They were really good teams.
So that was, ooh, then 49ers.
That's right.
They're in the league.
But Staubeck had a, they were down by 15 at Candlestick in 72.
So three years in a row, we finally got good.
And Dallas knocked us out.
And here they are again, 10 years later.
So for the Niners fan, it was not only just, hey, we might go to the Super Bowl with this new offense.
It's them.
That's a big deal.
And that's a big them.
The Cowboys being America's team, that all grew, like the 10 years prior to that.
Like that's when they became the Cowboys
because before that you had the Purple People Eat or you had
There's a whole lot of it.
And the Cowboys became the Cowboys in the 70s
when they made that stadium, that got to watch.
You know what I mean?
Now, we'll jump into the game,
but how many Super Bowls, Boom, have you been to?
Well, the first one was that year
when the Niners won
and then they played the Bengals in Pontiac, the Silver Dome.
And negative 32.
Arctic.
Well, it reminded me we played against in Minnesota, and it was freezing there.
Yes.
Arctic.
Arctic.
One time you were happy to play in like a geodome.
I mean, the Silver Dome was all right, okay?
I mean, it was all right.
But for me, oh, my God, it's my first.
So 81, my first Super Bowl was going to make 44, 45, whatever the number is.
I mean, I've been blessed to do it.
I mean, you always think as a young kid, boy, I want to be Brent Musperger.
I'd like to go.
And then I remember that Super Bowl game.
two weeks later, and walked in, you know, four hours early.
Oh, my God, I'm at the super long.
So you asked me, I remember that, my first one,
but it's 44 or 45 was with the math.
And, you know, when I was young,
most of the games ended up being blowouts.
I don't mean young, really.
Even 80s, 90s, a lot of them were blowouts.
A lot of them.
But it kind of changed in the last 25 years.
I mean, for as many as the Patriots,
all of their run almost,
almost all of them have been unbelievable.
It's not like, well, the 89-9ers won 55 to 10.
But there were a lot of those.
If not by 45 points, there were a lot of 30 points.
San Diego was beating the crap,
getting the crap beat out of them in a couple Super Bowl.
Remember when the Niners beat them in, what, 94, 95?
Yeah.
blew them out.
By 49ers at 49, which I always,
and Steve ran for 49.
I thought that was interesting, by the way.
But the point, oh, I got one.
Do you know that when Pittsburgh won one of their Super Bowls against Minnesota in the 70s,
I was in college, you know what the half-time score was?
Two-to-nothing.
Two-to-nothing.
Steelers up.
Two-run-home or Willie Stardiel, okay?
Two-nothing.
Two-nothing.
Two-nothing.
The Purple People Leaders against the Steel Curtain.
Oh, my God.
A safety.
I don't know if it was a hold or a step.
I don't remember what it was, but two to nothing.
Two to nothing.
We did that game with Ed O'Neill.
It was one of the coldest Super Bowls ever.
It was in Tulane, but it was very cold.
It was like 10 degrees.
For New Orleans.
10?
Yeah.
It was really cold, yeah.
I would watch them, you know, but at any rate, so that's what, to get back to the Niners,
not that they scored 40 every game, but it changed football.
Just like when Johnny and I just showed up, I'm really dating even myself.
Two yards in the club of the days.
Like, ooh, so that's what a pocket looks like.
And here's Raymond Barry with another beautiful 12-yard yet at the completion.
Like, oh, we're also going to throw it.
the backs a little bit.
I don't, you know,
not him yet, but
he revolutionized it, and then
25 years later, he's Joe Montana,
and then, you know,
offenses since, but not every five years.
It kind of changed things.
It definitely changed things.
And, you know,
it's a different, like we were talking,
it's a different game.
And it's because of the Niners.
And then those Niners teams,
when Belichick was, you know,
with the Giants, he was the defensive coordinator there,
He invented the nickel coverage, which was taking a linebacker out of the game,
bring another defensive back in the game because you got running backs running routes.
It became a different chess match than what it was, you know, prior to that,
because it used to be about the box, the 46 defense, the bear defense,
got all these big ass bodies in the middle, we'll just plug it up.
And then, you know, Bill Walsh comes out of here.
He's throwing a Tom Rathman.
We never seen a fullback catch the football.
Right.
What is going on?
What is this guy?
guy's 44. He's not supposed to be catching a football.
He's been heading in the middle of the pocket,
blowing up a hole.
You know, and it was a huge change in the game.
It was. And nobody really knew it at the time,
which was part of the thing.
I mean, we look back
at who was on those Niners teams,
and we'll jump into that game.
We'll jump into that game.
What are your thoughts on,
what are your thoughts on this Super Bowl?
Seahawks Patriots.
How unbelievable are these turnarounds for both these organizations?
How fast, first off.
It's fresh.
It doesn't mean that we don't want to see Patrick Mahomes in any more Super Bowl because we do.
Yeah.
Okay.
I mean, the AFC, other than the bills, the whole thing was upside down.
The Patriots are 75 to 1, I think, to get to win the Super Bowl.
Seattle, by the way, was 60 to 1.
Yeah.
I heard of somebody who just, for.
fun. I've heard of this. I don't know
the person, but I've heard of it.
Five bucks on the
like in August that they would meet
it, meet in the Super Bowl. We got paid
$17,000. I'm told
that. I mean, why would you put on
New England won four games?
Seattle won 10, but
here are the Rams, here are the Niders,
you know. I think I can...
It's cool. I can... I have the justification of why.
Because this
person was probably born
in New England, a Patriot.
fans. So Abrable was coming back, so he's like, Patriots and also an Irish Catholic person
knowing that there's a Pope in office and every time there's a new Pope, the Seattle Seahawks are
in the Super Bowl. Is that true? I don't know, but I just made it up. Even though the Pope is from
Chicago, so Chicago, the Bears would have been a long shot too.
Bears? But anytime that is true.
Anytime Seahawks Steelers, 2006 with Pope Benedict and then again with the 2014
with Pope Francis and then now with the new Pope.
I had not heard that one.
So that's where I think that's why I come do this show.
Because I learned, how would I know that?
Popes? Football history, I got a lot of it.
But popes?
I mean, I know who, I know they're all popes.
Is it Benedict?
Yeah, not eggs, Benedict, Pope Benedict.
I got it.
This is a podcast of, you know, learning people.
This is, wow.
I just learned, well, hell, so that, that we can explain it.
Now it makes sense why the guy made the bet.
He's from New England, Irish Catholic, saw the Pope thing.
Friend of theirs like Seattle.
Five bucks.
Colors.
Green.
$17,000.
Talk about a Hail Mary.
One in one all time.
One in one all time in poker games for all you keeping score.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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They're one-in-one all-time in those Pope games, if you will.
This is the Pope rubber.
Yeah.
The Seahawks.
The Seahawks for one-on-one in a Pope change.
I don't know if he could.
call us a rubber matcher. It's got to be something more religious than that. This could be the,
the, I don't know what it would be. You and I are out of our league in this one,
I don't know. But when you see that smoke coming out of the chimney, buy your Super Bowl tickets.
Well, if it's white or black smoke, right? I mean, now we're getting deep.
We are. I'm going to have to do some research over that. I thought that was just for the
home or away jerseys for the Seahawks. I don't even know who is, who is, who is
wearing what? I don't even know that yet.
Pats are all way.
That's what I thought and the Seahawks are all blue.
First time that's ever happened.
That'll look good. These are good,
good looking, you know.
This is exciting game.
Well, here's the thing. It's fresh.
So, well, we can refer back,
no, we can refer back to nothing except Josh McDaniels calling players.
That is the only we can refer.
Mike Bramble didn't play in that game.
Craft, too. He didn't play, but he cared.
He was there?
I mean, yeah, not many.
Seattle.
Those are the only two probably that are in Jim Whalen.
Hey, Trader.
No, there's not.
There's probably a couple Seahawk guys like that, but there you go.
There's nothing.
But here's a thing.
That game's only 11 years.
It's not like, oh, 30 years ago, it was 10 or the Niners, Dallas.
Oh, 30 years ago, they broke our hearts.
We're getting back at them.
No, no.
But this is 11 years.
The Marshawn Lynch isn't playing.
Seattle should have a run for a yard for a touchdown at some point in the game off tackle.
I'm just saying they should.
I don't know the system.
I'm not saying win the game on it.
If this is a pope thing, then if we believe in these sort of things,
then that has to happen if you've gone to confession and said,
you know what we should have run off tackle.
So I'm just saying, I'm going on a tangent that I never thought I would get in.
But then again, we're in San Francisco.
We are in San Francisco.
And we go on tangents in this city, my favorite city in America.
We go on tangents in this city that we didn't anticipate.
We didn't anticipate.
We did it.
We did Matt Patricia on the show explained for 30 minutes why a pass was the right call in that situation.
And that the Seahawks were correct.
For 30 minutes.
Who did?
Matt Patricia.
Well, you know what?
It was second down.
I get it.
Not that past.
And that's where we landed.
to that maybe not that past.
What did Matt say with that?
He just got in that, you know, the group that they put in,
they had a beat on it, that they would check into that play.
If they put that specific other group in, I mean, it was a chess match.
They knew that they were going to check into that play if they gave him the certain
personnel group that they gave.
It was frenetic at that time, though.
Nobody was calling timeout, this.
I mean, it was like, okay, do we call a timeout?
Do we not?
I think both coaches, do I call it?
I mean, for five seconds, do I call one defense?
Do I, sorry, do I call one offense?
They probably both for five seconds, not keep getting.
I'm sure both Bill and Pete were, there was a five second thing like,
do I call one?
Do I wait for, do I, yep, 12 seconds, we better go, you know, right?
I mean, I'm, where are you?
You're watching this like, oh, God, I'm on, this can't be good, right?
No, I'm sitting there going over my two-minute drill,
call sheet like man
how many seconds are we going to have here
we're going to have what probably maybe
28
it's going to be
it's going to be tough I was thinking that
I was thinking all right we're going to have to get maybe
a shot we can maybe get a Hail Mary
how's Grong feeling he'll be our
you know that's what I was thinking then
whoop
pick that's my line you could say
whoop
exactly I mean it was
it was crazy
just and as I told you off camera
curse we're on the field
last four or five minutes curse caught the ball right here like right here the moon ball to rustle through
right here i said oh my god both Tommy jackson's standing with both cheeks are in both feet are in
that's why people who are not going to look at that there's not to look at i see it that's in like
oh my god they it might go from 2824 new england a winner to this and then this here's my memory
that you will like here's the story i've told very few so in the eight to five minutes we have to get
to the field. At some point, I'm the only one in America not watching the game because the eight-minute margin game.
We're going to get down to the field. It's an elevator and you don't just run out there and go, hey, here we are.
And we're going around and this. So all I could hear was the PA announcement.
Brady's pass complete to Edelman, first down. Brady's pass complete to Gruncowski, first down.
Brady's pass complete to Shane Vreen
burst down.
I didn't know where it was,
but that's all I had for three minutes.
So I'm the only one in America
not seeing you guys going down the field
for your, you know, setting.
I just got there for the touchdown, right?
It's weird.
To give everyone, you know, an update,
at the time, this was the largest fourth quarter deficit
in a Super Bowl that was becoming over came.
Right, right.
It was an exciting game.
Oh, it was unbelievable.
You don't even get to watch you.
It was unbelievable.
And it was bigger than that.
Again, historical, which was not at the time yet, but as we look back.
But Joe Torrey grew up in Brooklyn.
No, really, but there's a reason.
He was as a teenager at the greatest game ever played,
the Colts and the Giants overtime, Johnny United,
Yankee Stadium, Amici off tackle, they win.
That was called the greatest game because that brought football kind of even up a little.
It was an overtime game on TV and black and white TV at Yankee Stadium in 1958.
I said, Joe, what do you remember?
I did an interview with him because he'd like talking about other things,
obviously rather than who you're batting eighth, right?
So, and why?
Deflection.
So I said, what do you remember from that game with Boomer?
I was 11 or 12 or whatever.
We had, you know, bleacher tickets or whatever.
He goes, I remember the Yankee Stadium announcer,
Yankees and Giants was an guy named Bob Shepard,
the greatest voice of all times.
I mean, there are others that might say his there for, but all I can hear,
Unitas is pass, complete to Raymond Berry, first down Baltimore.
And I thought, oh my God, this is Tom Brady being John Unitas,
because I've seen nothing.
Give me credit for this.
And this is kind of, explain that to many people.
They don't even get it.
It's almost refreshing.
It almost brought like a nostalgia to you.
Well, I didn't know where you, you know, you could have.
been at the one you could have been at the mid. I mean, here is, I see nothing. All I hear,
oh my God, he is actually going to lead another one of these drives. I don't know what the clock is.
I don't know what the ballers. I don't know. Hey, we finally got, they were just before your touchdown.
So I missed all that. I mean, Jesus, bad five minutes to miss. But they didn't air lift me
into the field. So that was, that's my story of, you've never heard that stuff. That's pretty good.
Didn't it?
Shout to the Baltimore Colts.
They won 23 to 17 in overtime.
With a one-yard touchdown.
Yes.
Alan Amici.
But it was the greatest game ever played
because at the time,
Pro football was a secret.
They played it.
People went.
Don't get me wrong.
College was bigger.
It wasn't in the college things done,
but still not TV.
Not quite.
Baseball was still the biggest.
That's the first game, TV-wise,
it. Oh, because the Giants had Frank Yifford and Kyle wrote and the cult of Johnny and Nitis
and I assume Mackey was the tight end. But in the end, a lot of the whole of the, it was Yankee Stadium,
not just some other place, Yankee Stadium and the Unitedis won the next year. And that kind of put,
and by the way, I mean, this is educated, not that you need me to tell you this.
The coach of the Colts will Weeb Eubank.
He also coached Joe Namath and the Jets,
arguably won the two biggest games in the history of pro football.
Who is that?
UB. Ubank.
Weeb UB.B.A.N.K.
won the two biggest games, certainly of that time.
I know we had the ice bowl.
I'm going way back, you know, and Macular, you know,
I mean, Chuck, but he won.
He coached Unitas, and then he beat the team,
although Johnny didn't start in Super Bowl 3.
He beat the team.
The United States was the backup.
and then he was the 40-year-old guy.
And he won the two biggest games.
So we're digressing, but look that up.
Those two.
Wow.
So that's why we say, was this the greatest,
historic, it did things, but so did those two.
Pat, someone, the quarterback,
and Vince Lombardi and Tom Langey were the offensive
and the quarterback for the Giants.
Yes.
One was offense, one was defense.
Yes. And for the Colts,
yeah, they were the two offensive,
and the Tittle wasn't there yet.
Boom, who was your team as a kid?
Jets.
But I've had to...
I still smile if they win.
My dad would be excited.
My brother and I went.
It's painful.
Did it change, though, as you became, you know...
No, the Jets will always be here because I grew up...
You know what, Jules?
Not that I'm a football savant, but didn't know at the time we had season tickets,
but in the upper deck, eight bucks a game, okay?
60s.
The whole NFL through.
John Hedle, Lance Allworth, Chargers.
The Chiefs, not as much, but Dawson, threw.
Babe Pruly, through, Capoletti.
George Blanda, Houston, we threw.
We threw.
The AFO rebels.
But in the upper deck, and I've told your coach, Bill this,
I said, I didn't look.
I'm not young Bill Belichick watching with his father,
game film Navy.
But I didn't know I was watching pass patterns.
because a lot of 20-yard pass patterns.
NFL were running off tackle
and primarily.
And I'm watching 11 on 11 as a kid.
It doesn't make me so smart,
but it got me an understanding
that if I only was watching football on TV,
I went to 70 games.
Yeah.
And that's vantage point.
Wouldn't field level.
It was up high.
It was probably like game film you watch.
Anyway, that's right.
You're basically Ernie Adams up there.
I'm not as mysterious, okay?
But we built a box at the highest point of the stadium for earned out.
We were up, not all the way up, but at Chase Stadium,
the planes were right here, okay?
Like, hey, how's it going?
There's Delta.
So, but I have a saw spot for all the old AFL,
meaning San Diego Chargers, meaning Buffalo.
That's part of how I went that direction.
No one circles away.
Well, even Patriots, there were only eight.
We only had 18s.
Yeah.
I liked them all because they were our league.
Even the Raiders, who, that was a rivalry with Joe,
I mean, they broke his chin, Ben Davidson did.
I mean, they, you know.
But we liked all of those teams,
just because they were the AFL.
We were 60s guys, you know?
Man.
Now, you know, the game.
We talked about religion.
There it is.
There it is.
There it is.
Now, we're getting way off path, but I can do that.
Way off path.
Where were we? Back to Joe Montana.
No, whatever.
No, but back to.
Wherever you want to go.
Your show.
This game, this Super Bowl, being in San Francisco or Santa Clara now,
it doesn't have the same, but who do you got in this game?
Let's just go.
Let's just get this out of the way.
Seahawks, Pats, who do you got?
I won't be shocked if it goes either way.
I will give you the answer, but I mean, because how could we?
We'd be one 17 to 3, 1 16 and 3.
Well, they had an easy schedule.
Well, they, no, none of that matters.
None.
They know how to win.
And Seattle's won like nine in a row,
and New England has lost one game since the end of September.
So I don't care how you win.
You win.
You know better than me.
You win.
You're expecting to win.
You don't know how.
Oh, we're going to force a fumble recovery and a punt.
That's how we win.
Oh, we're going to kick you a stick to me.
Oh, my quarterback's going to throw a bomb.
I don't know.
New England's defense is better than we think
because they've out-defense three good defensive teams
in the playoffs, as you know.
You know, the charter is a good defense.
Obviously, Denver, the last thing they beat.
I mean, you could say, well, they had a backup court.
So what?
New England didn't fumble the ball at all.
After two games of,
not the cleanest football.
Not clean.
You know, and the game before it was huge.
where May got sacked a million times because those guys are really good.
They happen to be really good.
And so New England defense, there's got to be a chip on their shoulder, don't you think?
We're still talking about Seattle.
Well, it's the best defense in football.
I will say that.
Now, there you go, New England.
I'm not saying, well, therefore, New England's, no.
Seattle's branded defense, I've been watching it all year,
except against the Rams and very early Tampa Bay.
Tampa was going to the Super Bowl,
and Seattle, they weren't this yet.
Like in mid-October, you're not this yet, right?
No, still learning each other.
They're all hitters, all levels.
Unlike the Legion of Boom, as you know, which were built from the back front,
although Bennett and Averill and the guys that front were really good.
Nobody's saying, they only have defensive back.
Bobby Wagner, how's that going?
Like, he was pretty good, right?
He was dead.
So this is built from the front.
If you look at stat sheet,
a lot of Seahawk games. This year. Last
year, he had a bigger standout year
stat-wise. But as you know, stats
sometimes... Excuse me.
Oh, Leonard Williams.
One tackle. He must not
have done anything. Yeah, but he threw two people
over his shoulder every place, so he
made the tackle, right? So, a lot of
times you're going, we had one, he didn't have a sack.
Didn't have a sack, he had three guys
on him. So
that front, and they use six or seven.
You know his father-in-law. He's father-in-law. I know.
I know.
It's just, I only found that out within the last month.
That brings the game to San Francisco.
There you go.
Ernest Jones and middle linebackers are a really good player.
Great ball player.
Some of the guys whose names, here's a thing, I'm giving a long answer to it,
but if you go even beginning of January, I'm not talking about beginning of October,
beginning of January, he has the average fan, give me six Patriots and give me six Seahawks,
name them.
Well, I can name the quarterback.
Okay.
The Walker, the J.S.N. I've kind of heard of them.
Well, I mean, he led the league in guards.
Defense, him and morey?
Guys are stud, by the way.
Witherspoon, I heard. Patriots.
Well, didn't they pay a lot of money for Milton Williams?
I kind of remember him at the Super Bowl.
He was good.
What was that booty guy?
I mean, who we certainly know Stefan Diggs, and we know Hunter Henry, I guess.
but who we don't know right that's that's the beauty of this game you name me six on
january 1st if you're a football fan not a fantasy where you know well you're not going to know
the strong safety if you're a fantasy football player not the cowboys so cowboys yeah so in the
end Seattle's there because of their defense not that new england is not you know you allow
points in the playoffs, three to the Chargers
and seven to the Broncos.
I mean, two of the three games, like,
L.O. Seattle allowed
some points of the Rams, which I'm sure that
New England that Josh is looking at.
Because whatever the Rams did,
we got to do that because nobody else did
anything, right? That's part of it.
I think Donald and May
will both play pretty good games.
But does
one not?
The chances are
they both might not.
be the best in games.
This is a big stage.
You know.
Huge stage.
I picked 26-17 Seattle
because I had to pick one like the end of the last week.
I hadn't really thought of the score yet.
So now I'm stuck with it.
I just think in all phases,
although New England as a punt returner,
dear to your heart, and Seattle certainly has a punt return.
And New England has roo-old.
New England has rookie kicker, young punter.
Is he a rookie, too?
I don't think so.
He's first year.
What's his name?
Well, Borough is the kicker, the punter.
Seattle has veteran kicker, Myers,
and maybe the best punter in football.
Don't even look at all the stats, the Australian guy, Dixon.
Why are we talking about part of it?
Because if it's close.
Field position and defense, that's what these teams are both so like.
So he's really good.
Just remember that when you watch.
Again, I'm not telling you, but.
Those stones like the Rams had special teams problems.
Well, in the end, you killed them, right?
So I just think all levels, all three set, all levels of their defense,
they're going to be hard to score on, barring turnovers.
Can New England get to 20?
I don't know.
Can Seattle get to 20?
I think so.
I don't know.
I'm not right.
I'm not wrong.
New England ones.
I will not be flattering.
Because here's the one thing I know is about New England in October.
Even when they made a tackle, I think I said this, I watched the games with Bougar, Jules.
They made the tackle, but the three guys standing right there, like their defense is never out of place.
Braves and the staff, or, you know, the whole staff.
Oh, yeah.
Seattle, they're rarely out of place.
Very, very.
I mean, both these teams, you don't see big plays on.
And they're so.
But J.S.
Noggs is really good.
J.S.N.
He hasn't been covered yet.
What do you see in him?
Because Sam Darnold told me, interview,
probably running this week,
that I did when I went up to Seattle two weeks ago.
He's got the best body language of a receiver I've ever seen.
I don't even know what that means.
Yeah.
From a quarter of them.
Tell me what it means.
Tom, I mean, Tom broke it down in one of those games that he had with them,
that, you know, JSN does a great job of keeping his pad level
the same by body language.
Anytime he cuts in a zone or something,
it's decisive, and the quarterback always knows.
Or, you know, when he gets on the toes of a defender
when he's running a man route,
he doesn't drop his weight.
Like, his shoulders don't drop.
That's how the defensive back breaks.
When they see body language,
they are the smartest people.
When they see, figure anything's fishy, they're breaking.
He does a great job.
staying smooth and staying on the same plane so he could cut and make everything look the same.
That's what the quarterback means when they say he's got great body language.
He's got good, you know, he's, he always shows like, that's what they're always showing.
Interesting.
It's the pad level because a lot of the receivers, you get your toes over, you know, your knees,
and that's when you break down and that's when the guys are breaking.
He can just go and stop and cut, and you can't tell that's what they mean by great
body language. Almost 1,200 yards.
Unreal.
Unreal year.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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It was a quiet little bit in the postseason, had a big game last week when Sam had his
big game. I mean, look, that's a good call. When did you make, like, you've been in this whole
picking game for as long as anyone. When did you make, like, do you feel uncomfortable that you
made that pick with so much time left till the game. But you have to do it because this is,
this is your, this is you. This is what you do. But like, what goes into making your pick,
the research and all that? And do you ever think that you change your pick from when you do it?
Because you're talking about it maybe a week and a half before the game. Do you ever feel like,
man, I wish I, I wish I would have put a little couple more points on that others.
Like, why didn't I see that Philadelphia was going to be that monstrous on defense last year?
But then again, I was only going to pick the chiefs anyway.
But I got all the others right before, like exact spread, exact team winning.
Well, that's the three before.
Well, nobody bets a thousand.
So I used to go to all the media days.
Now it's different, and I don't cover it that way.
Sometimes I'd get a feel on a team.
So I always had a blank slate, and I never made that pick till Friday of the Super Bowl.
Like sometimes you feel a team tight, even though they put on a good front.
Yeah, something I didn't like.
And I was already like wondering.
You couldn't be like, oh, they're going to win and then, oh, they're all nervous.
Occasionally I'd get a gut feeling on something.
Just so you know, no analytics for me, okay?
They can help you.
The boomer-molytics.
I'm going to a lot on the show, Popes, Boom-a-Linnis.
I just think Seattle has less question marks than the Patriots,
and I don't think, oh, I wish I knew that Diggs was going to catch 12 from Drake May,
whose deep ball is on intermediate deep ball.
Great.
How you lead the league in percentage and average yards an attempt does not happen.
You know that.
You know that.
So it's like, whoa.
I just think they have less question marks.
to me going into the game.
By the way, then they kick it off and
we'll see what happens. So you're going to
make a pick, but you've got to pick the Patriots, however
you do it. You don't have to? No, I
wouldn't have to.
I am picking the Patriots, though. I'll make my pick.
I think Patriots 2420,
Milton Williams
Barmore in the middle of that pocket.
When does Sam Darnold struggle
when he has pressure in the middle of the pocket.
I know, but that's like how you get to Sam.
That's fair.
Aaron Donald, well, who wasn't there, Rams, but that type of player.
That kind of, that type of player.
Mill Williams, they paid him a boatload of money.
He's been doing a boatload of things in these playoffs.
Christian Gonzalez, you know, you got a really good secondary guy.
I can see them putting Davis on, on JSN and having help over the top,
so you got a double there, and then you put Christian Gonzalez on.
Cooper Cup and say you're going wherever he goes, so then you're taking their two best players
out of the past game. If the Patriots can get the Seattle Seahawks to be in drop back past game,
not off their play action, not off their run game, if they can make it a one-dimensional game,
I think the Patriots have a shot. So I think, you know, Drake May has to have his best game of
his career. He has to. I mean, that's what this game is. That's what this team needs. And I have
confidence in Josh McDaniels having two weeks to prepare who's been in nine of these games.
This will be his ninth game of calling plays in this game, which none of those coaches over
there know how to do that.
This is a different game.
This is a rhythmless game.
There's spurts of rhythm in this game.
There's long timeouts.
There's long half times.
There's an energy abundance, like, storage system that you need to learn and know how to save.
And play callers can do that with how they,
play call, I believe there will be a few
trick plays. We haven't seen any trick plays
from the Patriots. You know,
bad weather. You don't want to call them in bad weather, right?
Can't? You can't? You can't.
So, you know, a big play and special team. The only reason I
go Patriots is because I think the Patriots,
Seattle can out tough you with their
complimentary of what their team is.
You know, you can't do that. You could do that against the Rams.
They've been struggling all year with special teams.
You knew something was going to, you knew that was going to be their way out.
You could do that with a 49ers team.
You can bully a team that probably shouldn't have been in the playoffs
because of the roster they have,
but because of the great coaching of Kyle Shanahan and Sala this year,
they overachieved.
You know what I mean?
So you could embarrass a team like that.
I don't think you could do that with a Patriot team that has people
that have been in this situation,
that have had play callers in this situation,
that have a team that everyone's been picking against,
I think it's just all shaping into that 0-1 Patriot feeling
where they were a 14-point spread.
It was a 14-point dog, I think.
Yep, or 12.
One of the biggest of all time.
And I just feel Drake's got to have that game
and the Milton Williams Barmore in the middle of the pocket.
I could see that.
See, now that you're bringing that up,
well, I can easily see that.
They're young guys in the middle.
There's a rookie, although the Patriots are rookies on the line.
The kid they drafted of North Dakota State is the first round pick,
Zabel, but he's a rookie against those guys.
I could see that happening.
And you've got two rookies on the line for the Patriots.
The thing is why I trust Josh on how he's going to call the game.
You're going to see a million screens to slow Lawrence and the boys down.
You're going to see a bunch of reverses.
get them to spread the field out, make them have to cover every square inch of the field.
And then once that happens, you're going to see Ramonjay Stevens, Remandre Stevens,
up those middles.
And then everyone's going to have to come in and you play action with Drake.
You have that thief or robber in the middle of the field who usually is trying to take over those zones and stuff to stop the passes.
Well, now they got to look at Drake May because if they don't, he's going to run 40.
So I don't know.
I think he hasn't played his best game,
and I understand why the spread's the spread.
But I just have a feeling two weeks to prepare with Josh McDaniels.
He's going to have his game of his life.
Do you ever play football?
Because you seem to know something about it.
A couple of games.
A couple games.
It was quarterback in 10th State.
You have to tell me.
Let's jump back in.
Yeah, we better get to this game.
That's the only reason we showed up.
When the game
took place, we go over some of the pop culture
and we talk about what was going on around life.
This game took place January 10th,
1989.
Number one movie, Sharky's Machine.
You ever see that, boom?
I have not. You would think I would.
I'm looking at this now.
This is interesting.
We all know this number one song.
Let's Get Visgo by a Ligia New John.
Let's get physical.
I loved her.
We all did.
It's my first crush, Greece.
We all did.
She was a babe.
Raiders of the Lost Ark was in there.
Reds were in the boss.
Were you a movie guy?
Yeah, that's, yeah.
Ozzy Osbourne bit off the bat.
Oh, yeah, that did happen.
In Des Moines, Iowa.
I wasn't at that one, all right?
I didn't have upper deck seats at that one in Des Moines, okay.
Oh, Ken Anderson was the MVP?
Hall of Fame.
We don't know yet.
Niners Superhold.
Marcus was Heisman.
Marcus Allen, Heisman.
And drafted by the radio.
What was your Marcus Allen nickname?
I don't know if I have one for him, but, you know,
still one of the great Super Bowl runs of all time against the Redskins.
And then he comes back.
Oh, God, put that game away.
I mean, this is good.
Hey, look, this was 81.
Who did the Niners?
They had a band.
Hold on.
It's coming.
He's coming.
They ran about
halftime.
This is before they had
halftime shows
at championship games
like a back of a flatbed.
I could get this wrong
because I didn't look this up
to make sure I'm right.
Hold on.
It's coming.
Roller decks.
I don't even know if you know
the Bay Area Band.
The tubes,
did they play halftime?
You don't even know who they were.
They had a couple.
I mean,
wasn't Huey.
No, Huey was at the game, of course.
Yeah, of course.
But,
what was life like for you
in 82. You're 20.
26. You're 26 years old.
I have no clue still. Not married yet, not parent yet, obviously.
And really, SPN, we've only been
in business. Well, let's see, fall of 79.
So, two and a half years.
I'm on a five-day trip
on the company's dine to San Francisco.
Really? Oh, my God. We don't do this. We're cable, man.
You know, we don't. So, and I'm at the NFC Championship.
It's the Dallas Cowboys?
The 49ers are my favorite city because I'm the San Francisco Giants,
which will take another hour to go into which we won't.
You grew up in Connecticut.
You liked the San Francisco Giants.
Have you heard of Willie Mays?
All right.
I've explained that.
I was seven years old.
He's my guy.
He's still my guy.
You know, he passed.
I kept my team because that's what you did when you were seven,
eight years old.
Your baseball team, you just keep them.
So, even though they were 3,000 miles away.
But what was life like?
was all right so let me tell you a story of that drive back in the day there weren't that many
mini cam they were actually heavier bigger this that cameras on the field so we could go and shoot the
second half and i went down with my producer tom riley my cameraman Greg wade we shot half from up
top and then half from down below so now you're the niners they're on the 11 for something to go
or shooting this.
And it's like a dream.
Like the Niners, they're down 27-21.
It's Rick and Randy White.
There's too tall Jones.
It's Harvey Martin or Tom Landry.
The Drew Pearson.
Oh, by the way, Tony Dorset.
You've heard him, right?
And they're driving.
This unknown team who had the best record in the NFC all year,
even though they were underdog, like even the December in games.
Like, they stink.
They stink.
Oh, they won.
They stink.
You know, it's one of those.
Now they're at the 25.
With two, Joe throws a pass to Freddie Solomon.
God rest of soul.
88.
You got a college quarterback like you.
Tampa.
You were like Tampa when they have football.
How about that?
He was a beast.
He was a good player.
Before his time.
He threw it to Freddie Solomon, but I'm field level, like right about even with it.
And I just see three white shirts, Dallas.
I turn to my producer and I go, well, I guess it's not going to work.
I see one get up.
Charlie Waters was one of them.
I think it was the last game Charlie ever played,
one of the great safeties of all time.
Another middle linebacker gets up,
and Freddy's at the bottom of the 12 with the ball.
I grabbed my producer, one of my best friends still to this day, Tom Riley.
He says, I've never seen you like this, almost exorcism.
I grabbed them by the shirt, and I go, they're going in.
I don't believe it.
They're going in.
And then, I think, an incomplete pass,
then the run to the five right at our feet,
and then the catch,
and the place exploded,
but it wasn't over.
It wasn't over because Danny White
completed a pass to Drew Pearson,
and had they had the college
tear-away jerseys of the day,
Eric Wright would have ended up with, like, some fabric,
but pulled them down,
and the next plate was a sack.
Sack fumble and then the place erupted.
And then you'd see my stand-up, which you've seen eight million times.
A million.
Well, I have one shot to do it.
It's like I have to make the catch now because the play would be over.
No, here they come.
Here they come.
We got 15 seconds.
Three, two, one.
Babababababab, bab, bab, bab, bab, bab, bab, blah.
And then, you know, then we had one shot.
One for one.
One for one.
You've seen it.
But so that was my, that was my, that was my, well, it had to be.
Well, had you catch, I mean, I know, you caught a million.
How do you make some of your catches?
Because I have to be.
Because it's coming right now, and I can't drop this.
We do drop it, but.
So that's my memory of the drive after the game.
Nine turnovers in this game.
Nine.
San Francisco made six.
San Francisco made six turnovers.
Dallas made three.
Joe was picked three times.
Like it was, but lead changes six times.
So here you go.
Tom.
now I'm a kid.
I went in the Niner locker room.
I was friendly with all of them.
So I got everybody.
I talked to everybody.
Dwight, Joe, Bill Wall,
Sadi de Bartolo, Fred Dean.
I mean, we can go on and on,
around, round, around.
Dallas.
I got every Tom Landry.
It's Tom Land.
First time every of them was the NFC
championship game the year before,
the first one I ever covered
and they lost at Philadelphia.
I get every Tom Rendering again.
Not podium.
I mean,
ooh.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Soundbite from Tom Landry,
because I've seen the piece a lot of time since.
Was this one of the best games you've ever been involved with?
I'm not saying, why didn't you punt?
You know, it's not one of those.
Tom Landry.
No.
But couldn't have a more exciting game.
I mean, all the lead changes in this, like,
this is Tom Landry after a devastating loss,
classy enough of the 26-year-old guy
that you might have.
we met once or twice, but he's not worried about Chris Berman after we lost on this.
Well, I couldn't have more exciting game for football, but best game, no.
And then, of course, not.
What a classy answer.
That's my Tom Landry's story.
I mean, that was, that was a different time.
What if you ask Coach Belichick?
Well, I can answer.
I can answer that.
Was this one of the best games you've ever seen?
No.
Might have waited three seconds more.
Hold on.
Is this one of the best games you ever seen?
Let me give you the look.
No.
And I'm not looking away, looking for the next question.
I'm looking at you like, why would you ask?
We love Bill.
I mean, we ought to say that you know that Bill and I.
I mean.
But you had to know what you were going into.
You know, like as a football player,
we're not able to run up the middle.
Well, then don't run up the middle.
Okay.
Now, what do you remember about this specific Cowboys team?
The aura still.
The aura.
But we talked about the history a little.
The next year they were in the championship game at Washington at RFK.
Yeah.
And that was the end of them of the Landry Cowboys.
Not end, he coached for the decade, but.
80, 81, 82, they lost championship games.
They were great.
They could have won them all.
But we look back as the Niners, this, and West Coast offenses.
Dallas, twice champions, twice lost Epic Super Bowl to Pittsburgh, you know, not that long ago.
It was the end of them coming.
And you didn't know it at the time either.
So it was something beginning, something at the end.
It just you didn't know.
But look back and it was,
that's why that game was epic on both sides.
1,000%.
I mean, can you just tell us how good Tony Dorset was?
Funny, Randy, Randy Moss,
asked me the one year we work together.
I mean, we're still good, bugs and all,
but he asked me and Tommy,
you know, I don't really remember him, tell me about him.
I've heard, but,
I never watched any, you know, going up, West Virginia.
I mean, he's not glued to TV, like even some...
He ran light.
Tony Dorset ran light.
A ballerina.
He wasn't even the pirouettes of Barry, but he, yes, he ran.
We all seen that 99-yard run, where at the 20, where he had 80 yards ago was over, right?
Like, he could run, but he was not, you know, a track star, but he ran light,
like Emmett, a little Emmett?
for a guy that gained the most yards in history
and Tony is in the top
I don't remember them getting nailed a lot
you're running back you're going to get nailed some right
I don't remember them getting nailed a lot
Emmett for sure you remember but Tony
he was plugging Tony it wasn't
180 degree turns like Barry but
he just
ran light is that fair
and Randy watched some film with him
and boom you guys had it you and Tommy
went, well, look, I had to try to tackle him.
You know, Tommy played for Denver.
It was different than trying to tackle Earl Campbell.
Tommy was still a look like this.
But, but, Tony, Tony, I said,
and, of course, Harold did college player, Pitt.
He was, he was really good.
Was too tall, too tall?
He was 6'8.
Wasn't he 6'8?
6.9, 6.8?
Yeah, I mean, and legend goes, and I read it again,
preparing for this, because, you know, I don't remember everything.
Joe pump faked on the catch to Dwight Clark
and Too-Tal left his feet
by the way so that made him like Will Chamberlain
or Bill Redd or Shaq right
and as he was coming down then Joe through the pass
although he still really couldn't see
but Too-Tol had come down
the pump-fake it might have been blocked
and might not have this conversation
and you know the guy whose name we've omitted
in all this who became of all of those players
my best friend, Lloyd Clark, from that team.
We lost to, yeah, lost to ALS.
And he went up pretty high.
He did.
Jackie, give us a breakdown on, a quick breakdown on both these teams.
Just a quick run through the Cowboys here, 12 and 4.
Tom Landry, of course, coaching this team.
As we alluded to earlier, coming off a championship round loss
against Dick for Meals, Eagles the year before,
five out of six seasons they won the NFC East,
one eight of their last nine,
Topton scoring offense,
Topton scoring events.
Four Hall of Famers in that locker room.
Tony Dors said,
who we just talked about,
Steve Wright, Randy White,
Tom Landry,
Danny White under center.
You may remember him
from the Memphis Southman
of the World Football League.
If you guys are World Football League fans out there.
Good guy.
Arizona State.
Yep.
This was a heck of a Cowboys team.
And give us these Niners real quick.
Run through the Niners real quick.
13 and 3.
Coming off a year where they went 6 and 10.
The year before that,
2 and 14, third year of the Bill Walsh era,
first winning season in 5.
years. First playoff season in nine years. First year that Joe started all 16 games.
You may remember the year before that splitting with Steve DeBerg back there.
This was really the season, the birth of the dynasty, Ronnie Lott's rookie season.
Joe Montana, Fred Dean, Bill Walsh, Ronnie Lott all going to be Hall of Fingers.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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Notable.
Who are their first three draft picks?
Ronnie Lot one.
Right, two.
Was he two or three?
It was either two or three.
in the second round and then the third was Williamson.
All defensive backs that came...
Unheard of.
You wouldn't draft three defensive ones.
Well, not even that.
I mean, it literally changed the whole defense.
Yes, he did.
I read a story where Seifert and another coach,
he was like, it was Seifert,
these three rookies and another coach,
and he like walked them through,
like, this is how you are a pro.
Okay, we're going to get up,
we're going to run you through the streets,
of, you know, Redwood City or wherever they were working at that time.
Your hometown.
My hometown.
And then we're going to go do this.
I'm going to show you how to watch film.
But it just goes to show you that these San Francisco 49ers teams,
they always talked about with these unbelievable offenses.
But George Sefer and that defense with these three rookies may have propelled this team
to what it needed to be, to be the dynasty.
Un-talked about all of those teams that won, all those Niners.
seems even the one of 94, which was a little bit different, but four in the 80s.
And Bill McPherson was the defensive coordinator of George there.
Mike Holmgren, a couple of years in, not 81, wasn't there, but was a quarterback coach and became
offensive coordinator with Seaford.
Yes, but the defense, names that you wouldn't necessarily know, but I told you before we went on,
they were one of the first to do the six or seven men.
It wasn't a clean rotation, but they'd play six or seven up.
front.
Fresh guys.
Yes,
fresh.
Even if they would play one fourth of the play.
Well,
you're taking him off the field?
Yes,
because we need this guy
in the fourth quarter.
That was unheard of at the time.
Seal Curtin,
I will take Joe Greed out first year.
Yeah, I don't think so.
No.
And maybe you wouldn't take him out,
but you get my point, right?
So they had a guy that,
not on that.
That team was a lot of unknown.
A lot of unknowns.
Blaine Borton was a good player,
went into coaching.
I mean, that could go on and round,
but they were,
were not defensive. In retrospect, the 81 team. By 84, they had, they're 15 and 1. They had
established more, a lot of those guys who just mentioned, but they had a few different. But that
81 team, there is some similarity to New England. Like, they had a couple pieces in retrospect
who, Jack Reynolds in the middle, hacksaw from the old Ram, but he wasn't, the player that he was in the, in the
late 70s, but he was a really good player.
I don't know that New England has that,
but there is some similarity.
They said he
was like the X's and O's guys
that would explain it to everyone.
They said that guy, Hacksaw, Reynolds.
Yes, Jack Hacksaw Reynolds.
He was an absolute savant
when it came to, like, football.
So he was like one of their, almost like a
green dot guy on the defensive line,
meaning like he was helping all these guys,
hey, we're going to go here.
That's what middle linebackers did.
They really were quarter.
quarterback. Yeah. Not to say that
none of them are now.
I mean, Jones
calls the green dot guy for the
Seahawks, but I mean,
middle linebacker was you knew all of
them in the 60s, 70s, and so
he was a 70s middle linebacker, like
I mean, nobody was Dick Butkus
or Ray Nitsky or names that you know
and there are others that I could go back before,
but you knew the name.
Who's the middle linebacker of that team? Oh, the
Colts had Mike Kurt. He's a good player.
Oh, the Falcons said Tommy Nobles. No, he's a really
So they, that doesn't surprise me that he had to know because there wasn't,
if there were signals, they were rudimentary, right?
Rudimentary.
Now, how'd you get so close with like Dwight Clark and Joe Montana?
That team.
That age.
I was that age.
It's because this game dang near.
Well, the first time I met them all in person was that game.
So my first four years at ESPN, I primarily did the 230A.
show. Okay. Yeah, well, it's 1130 out here. But I'm in Connecticut, which in January is not the best
drive home, okay? So, but I was the Swami, and I picked them like every week because I
smelled it. I don't know why. They might have started one and two like New England. I don't, I'd have to
look that up. I don't know. But we get out the Friday before championship.
game.
It's different than.
Charlie Young
was a veteran tight end.
Randy Cross was
middle of his career, but a sharp
offensive guard, really good player.
And the two of them,
can I interview
a few guys after
practice Friday, which I didn't even know
that was not much, but still,
Charlie Young
and Randy say to me,
you're the Swami. You've been picking us every week.
will line up whoever you want.
These are the players.
Who'd you line up?
All of them, like 11 of them.
Dwight and Joe
and two of them. Not knowing that that
will, Joe is the quarterback. Dwight?
Freddie was probably the more name receiver then,
but you didn't know who they were.
They're like 11 of them lined up. I mean,
for four questions.
You've been picking it every week.
We have time for you.
I didn't do it so I could get interviews.
It worked.
Yeah.
And okay.
And by the way, the owner, Eddie De Bartolo?
Eddie D.
It's like five or six years older than me.
He owns a football team, 31, 32.
And like, we're still, I could call them right now.
I mean, we're still, but who's a 31-year-old owner?
I mean, I'm not, Mr. Rooney, Mr. Hunt, Mr. Ralph Wilson,
I mean, Mr. Mara, I mean, I knew all these guys at these owners meetings,
but this is my age, Eddie.
I mean, almost.
The players are my age.
and they're an unknown.
And I'm an unknown.
And it worked.
As I look back at it, I'm not smart enough to say,
hey, maybe if they win, I'll be their guy.
No, you don't do that.
It just worked.
So Dwight, as it turned out, his life went on.
And Joe is very close. Ronnie, all those guys.
I'm not doing this.
They're my age.
Or maybe I was two years older than them.
You know, I mean, and it wasn't, oh, he's meaty, be careful.
Careful of what?
Careful that I might spill my beard?
Like, no, I'm not going to do that.
What's your favorite Dwight Clark story?
One of the sweetest, you know, from South Carolina.
One of the sweetest people.
His smile was to guys or ladies.
I mean, I'm not going off the rails here.
I mean, it just, it was a sincere one.
It wasn't, I'm going somewhere.
None.
Now, he went some places.
He went a lot of places.
Well, but, and I became very friendly with him and Joe and Huey Lewis.
And so sometimes the four of us would hang out, and that didn't stink.
Rat Pack of the City?
But, well, where I wouldn't hear of that enough, you know, with a different life.
But Bay Area, I was an honorary Bay Area, and so Dwight and Mr. D.
I could go on and around about Dwight.
person and Mr. Du Barlow's Hall of Fame when he went into the canton of all the Niners
was the party and Huey sang and you know I mean it was pretty good like Camelot once again
Dwight said I need to talk you about something so Mr. DeBarla went in on I want to say
2016 I could be wrong but I don't think it was 2050 I'd be 2016 I think so I need to talk you
about something in a minute okay okay
not when of you coming out of you playing at pebble i'll see you then you know i'd see all those guys
at pebble not joe so much but dwight and and and and and and and you and you know and me we play at pebble
i mean i you know i shoot 88 i stink but whatever so um i whatever but
drag goes and he pulls me in the back room he goes we don't know yet
because i think it might have a less said what we don't know
other tests, and this is some things, and he was fine.
But that he would pull me aside.
I don't see, I don't live here.
I need you to know that.
I'm almost tearing when I say it, because, you know, ALS, say no more.
I can see no more.
So, and it was.
They didn't know yet.
That was August.
I had some serious tests in September,
and we don't even know what that means, what I can do,
or what this, that.
And in 2018, he was dead.
right now I want to say 2018 so um no two years from when I might at a celebratory thing of those
Niners so this isn't you asked me the question it's a good way to almost step out is we shouldn't
take anything for granted right I hear a celebratory oh my God we're reunion to this and this and
that and it's all great maybe not so I can't not think of that without him pulling me into
side room like I need to talk to you.
Oh. So, I mean,
I don't mean to get a bummer, but we miss
him. We miss him. We loved him.
His wife Kelly's a good friend, and we can go on and
he, uh, he was
a, he was always a very
gratitude type guy for the play that is
talked about a million times that we're
about to jump into, which you already
broke down, but
um, you weren't watching this game.
Can you break down San Francisco
Candle?
stick in January.
Can you just put that out
there for the listener how cool this
place was? Because I never got to play there.
I went to a million games there.
I got to play in Santa Clara.
Going to the stick,
just paint that
picture for me. Well, it was an
old stadium, so there were warts, if you
would. By any, you know, like,
if you really want to say, so was the Orange Bowl,
although, oh, the Orange Bowl
with the history. So it was the old Mile
High Stadium. Like,
oh but
I mean if you really looked
RFK Stadium
I was there when the stands moved
when the Redskins were like
whoa you know
but oh the game
the atmosphere
so candlestick
you know the weather was
like worse for giant games in July
than it were off in November
for the 49th
people wouldn't know that
yeah it was windy
but then again it's football
it was windy
it was
the locker rooms were
you know because it was baseball first
they weren't worried about football
wasn't built for both jewels
it was at the time
I mean they figured out how to move
and the screech on those stands
must have been awful
when they finally moved them
but it was built
and it opened in 1960
yeah okay stadium
and it's on the ocean
so there was some rust involved
oh yeah okay but
and so the luxury boxes
if you will
which nobody cares
about his end of fans,
the owner's box was behind one of the goalposts
because there just wasn't.
So it wasn't, it was built with baseball.
It was kind of, but there was the Niners home park,
same like it was Willie Mesa's home park.
But I was at the last game there too, by the way,
in 2013.
It was great.
And it was not raw like northeast,
but for West Coast, this was football.
And so I think that's why the Niners were never
Yeah, West Coast offensive
No, no, no, no.
We talked about their defense
And how tough a lot of these players were
You know, and how tough-minded they were
And it wasn't just some, hey, we're scoring a lot of points.
It was San Francisco.
It wasn't, I'm not knocking L.A. or San Diego,
I love the places, but especially San Diego,
who should, but whatever.
But it was football.
And they tow to toad with the New York
Giants.
They'd come out and play, you know, in December.
It seemed like it wasn't the West Coast, but it was the West Coast.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
It's kind of both.
Well, I always, it's the only big city feel you really feel on the West Coast is in San Francisco.
You don't feel it really in L.A. because it's so spread out.
And, you know, I just, I always have vivid memories of just seeing all the crazy people in the
stands because San Francisco fans were always nuts.
You see the guys with the long, wavy hair,
overalls, all the gold jackets that everyone used to wear.
And everyone was like partying.
It was just, it was just a cool feel.
You got to actually live it in probably the biggest game
it ever had at that point.
It was.
I mean, I don't know that all of Hayden Ashbury was there,
but a lot of it was.
But there was a lot of,
I don't know if there was a wine drinking crowd at that point.
It was, there was northeast or Midwest toughness with West Coast sensibility.
And I've always felt that about going a candle-thick.
There's something about it.
As an aside, because good luck editing this freaking podcast.
Dwight memory that I should say, and I hope you can find it.
I have it on my phone somewhere, but the last game of candlestick,
which was Monday night, which ESPN did,
so I could go Sunday I couldn't.
Dwight came out and he and I, I started to Joe, you know,
two hours before the game, hour and a half, we redid the catch.
Like, you know, a million times, but okay, okay, so Dwight.
I think I remember this.
Take me through it.
And I rolled right, you know, like, I mean, I didn't pump fake too tall Jones,
but he goes, typical Dwight, he goes, and he played right along.
I said, wow, we're going to relive it.
Oh, I'd love to do it for you guys.
PSPN audience, boomer, you, the Swam, you were with us,
but-p-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa-pa.
He goes, there's one question.
Who's going to be the quarterback for this?
I said, and me, he goes, all right, we'll go with it.
You know, like, I have it.
I can't, you should,
just need to see the light of day again.
But we rolled right, and it didn't.
I actually threw it, okay.
He didn't ever jump his, but it wasn't like at his belt.
You know what I mean?
It was up there.
Swami got it out.
And he did it, and he spiked.
it.
A cool,
effortless spike,
too.
It was,
it was,
it was the same thing.
And he was having a good time
doing it with a smile on his face.
He'd probably,
not that necessarily,
but a million times.
Yeah.
That was before the last game
of Candlethick.
They beat the Falcons.
On a defensive touchdown,
Navarobo.
Navar Bowman.
What a baller.
Sweet guy.
I mean,
we laughed.
I can hear his laugh.
Yeah.
You know?
He and Joe were tight off on, you know, it's the same experiences you've had with some of your, you know, Tom and your teammates and you've been through the wars and not all of them did you win, but you.
Went them together.
You went through them together.
Yep.
And that's what it is.
A lot to be said for that.
And it's really cool that we're here at Super Bowl 60, you know, getting to celebrate a guy like Dwight Clark who meant so much to this league.
and, you know, the San Francisco 49ers to this point
weren't the San Francisco 49ers being a pillar organization
that they are for this league's growth.
And, you know, that's another reminder of why this game is so amazing.
Because you get to learn about cool, genuine people like Dwight Clark,
goofy guys like Joe Montana who gives me grong vibes.
Like, there's just so many.
That's, ooh, he kind of does.
Think about that.
I'm going to see Joe tonight.
But he, if you, I'm saying out of like, I get it.
I feel like whenever I see.
Wow, I never would have put those two in the same set.
I wouldn't either, but like, I just did.
Because you can.
I feel like it's a genuineness of joy.
Like when you, when you see Rob or whenever I see, I've met Joe a few times,
but he just has like a coolness about him.
We're like he just.
Joe cool.
Joe cool.
I mean, he.
Yeah, we're doing a thing with the 89-9ers tonight, six of them.
I told you, I mean, Ronnie and Joe and Tom Ratman and Harris and John Taylor and Eric
Right, and we're doing that in theater tonight, so I'm going to see all those.
That's going to be amazing.
Again, it was, this was, you doing this with me today and us doing this on stage with 2,000 people tonight,
you've taken me back to my 20s and my early 30s.
Heck yeah.
Thank you.
No problem.
I mean, I'm 70.
so I appreciate those days.
We appreciate you.
I mean,
you're another reason where this whole industry even is in place.
You know,
the landscape of what media,
sports media has become was,
you know,
a lot of the podcast space came off of your shows
of that you produced and you wrote
and that you were a part of a lot of the mock-ops,
you know, the knock-offs with like PMT
and all these ways to digest football.
everyone wanted to be around a guy like you and that's what people are drawn to to watch sport you know
so jack put a button on this let's grade the game boom's got to get out and talk about the 89
super bowl amen 28 27 the niners win this thing they would go on to super bowl 16 take down the
cincinnati bangles 26 to 21 and just to give it a little bit of shine before we move on
this game boom was there of course legendary broadcaster game
You had Vern Lundquist there calling it for Dallas Radio.
You had Pat Summerall, Vin Scully, Jack Buck, Hank Stram.
I mean, this was what a game.
Chris Burma, of course, this was awesome.
And this would spark a dynasty, of course, with the Niners.
And it would also spawn two sequels.
We love sequels around here.
The catch two and the catch three.
But like all sequels, the first one's the best.
Terrell Orleans, to beat the Packers.
first time in the divisional round
in years. I remember being a kid
like we play them, we lose it all every time.
He dropped a bunch of balls that game.
It's how Steve even got to throw off.
I mean, the whole thing was a man.
The catch three was Alex Smith and Vernon Davis
against the Saints who were Super Bowl champs
and the Packers who Steve
with the defending NFC champs that year.
So it was
yeah, three catches.
But so many.
He's made a call.
couple too. But we didn't even get to that. And one thing we didn't even get to, which we won't.
I know. Let's name the game. It's supposed to meet a guy for lunch at one. He'll wait.
Score the game. Is this the greatest game of all time? Let's score it. Desmos encouraged.
The name of this game is the catch game.
Stakes, Schwamp, zero to ten stakes of this game.
Okay, meaning stakes for what? Okay. For all.
championship game, you know.
Oh, no, no.
Especially in retrospect, stakes were as high.
Do I give it a one to, what do we do?
One to ten, ten being the highest.
Descals encouraged if it's a nine-term.
Well, stakes as life as we've just experienced ten, as it turned out.
You didn't know then that it was ten
because the Niners could have won or lost and we might never have heard of them again.
So at the time, but what we know now, 10.
10? Amazing. For me, it's a nine-five.
That's fair.
Yeah.
We've done, I've done 200 of these shows.
We've done, you know, World Cups where, you know, women's taking their shirt off,
Cold War game with a miracle on ice.
I mean, those, there's.
Wow.
9-7.
9-7.
We're all in, we're all in the same.
Oh, I thought I had to give a full number.
Star power.
The Russian judge in figures games.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
All right, I'll give it a 9-8.
Is that what you want?
You're in.
You're already in for 10.
All right.
And for a 10.
We can't undo it.
Star power.
You've got 9-8.
No, no, no, star power.
Star power.
The Niners, we didn't, we didn't know them, really.
You really didn't know them.
It's hard to say if we're judging in 81 or even 82,
or we're judging now, right?
Now?
It was the beginning of the legend of Joe Montana.
I mean, Dallas had a lot of those guys.
A lot of Hall of Famers.
Tom Landry.
Bill Walsh, Star Power,
you had Bill Walsh, Tom Landry.
9-2.
9-2.
I'm going to go with, for me, it's got to be a nine flat, nine six.
No, look, Bill Walsh versus Tom Landry.
Okay, that's a good start.
Gameplay of the game.
Well, that's a...
Nine turnovers.
Oh, gameplay, not the one, not the catch of me.
No, gameplay of the whole game.
Oh, Tom Landry, well, one of the most exciting games ever, but...
So gameplay, although there were great plays made, so...
Some sloppy football.
Oh, God, nine turnovers.
It's hard.
And it wasn't a downpour.
It was dank, but it wasn't wet.
It was candlestick.
Candlestick.
Dank is a good word for candles.
Very good word.
So game play, because of the turnovers,
although clutch is clutch.
I mean, so 7.5?
I don't know.
Is that low?
I think it's like an,
8-4. Yeah, 7-5's low.
Nine turnover shouldn't
out overshadow. Let's go an 8-1.
It's going 8-1. Is that fair?
And I'll give you my- Because I don't do this.
You guys live this. I'll give you
my take on it, though. I think it's an
8-4. Yeah, there was a lot of turnovers, but there was
a lot of lead changes.
And what people don't realize.
People don't realize.
We didn't get to go into it, but
Cowboys almost came back
and won after the fact.
They needed the sack fumble, which
That's an exciting.
Yeah, I don't do this.
Yeah, I mean, 8-1 is as low as I can go.
Yeah, only nine turnover shouldn't shake.
Because I have to remind myself that was sloppy.
I don't remember it.
I don't remember it is because a lot of them,
they fumbled, but then they got it right back.
So it wasn't, they fumbled on that was a touchdown.
So a lot of them were no harm, no foul,
although there were fumbles or picks.
1,000%.
Last, we grade the name of the game.
The catch.
You're done. I mean, that's 10.
10. I'm going to give it a 9-1 again.
I mean, we're, this, how long, how long ago is this?
45, what is it?
45 years.
This is the most expensive NFL films clip to catch.
The most expensive NFL films clip.
And the most requested.
To rent?
Yeah, to use it, to license it.
But we shot it.
It was a different angle.
We were from the five the other way.
We run ours.
You went 10, Jack?
Jack is 10.
I have a 9.9.
This is a high.
This is a 9.2.6.
Where is it on the score of games we've done?
So this is going to be our new fourth overall.
Wow.
Wow.
It's just behind the Malcolm Butler game.
These are all the games.
Not any game, period.
No, these are all the.
I didn't know you're non-football.
Just behind the Malcolm Butler game and just ahead of the 2001 Stanley Cup game 7 with Ray Borg.
This one's for Ray.
Wow.
283 Super Bowl.
I kind of remember that.
You, Jules.
Yeah.
I just want to let you know that I had the low.
Patriots Chiefs.
I mean...
No, no, I believe me.
I know them all.
Who's Josh McDaniel last night?
That was his favorite game.
Okay, so how about...
I want to see if you've done it
because this is just fun.
I don't want to take too much time.
And we've got low ones too here.
You got ones that were a long time ago
that...
Like for football games in the last...
We did the immaculate reception with Terry.
The fact that that's 25 is a little bit of a fun game.
That's not.
That was a fun game.
They didn't win the Super Bowl that year.
No.
People think they did.
They did not.
But it was the kickoff like you said.
It was the kickoff like you said earlier in this episode.
That's what sparked them.
That was a rookie class too for the Steelers on that defense.
Insane.
Well,
Jack Lamber.
They,
they're like 10 Hall of Famers on Pittsburgh side in that game.
And by the way,
we could go on around about Raiders.
There would probably 15 or 16 Hall of Famers in that game.
Yeah.
It's pretty.
They wouldn't have trouble getting in.
No.
So, and that's our list, you know, of the last, of the last Josh Allen division game.
13 seconds?
We did that, did it?
Yeah, but there were four scores in the last two minutes.
Yeah, we're waiting to do that game.
We want Josh for that.
Ooh.
The only other non-shoot, another one you have to go way back,
and it would be look it up, though, the Kellyn Winslow,
overtime San Diego, Miami was a joke.
Like, that goes,
way back. A joke.
24 to nothing. And then all of a sudden we're in
overtime. Hook and ladder to
look that game.
Who would be the perfect guest
to... Kellan Winslow.
Caught 13, blocked the winning
field goal. I mean, they had to
carry him off the field exhaustion,
came back six minutes later. I mean,
Orange Bowl,
almost
the end of the first overtime. So heat,
the next game, they had to play in
fucking minus 69 at Cincinnati.
No wonder they lost.
How could they not?
Dan Fouts.
Don't your eyes like...
They're up 24.
Look up that game.
The division...
You don't have to look it up.
For you.
I mean, that's a long time.
Or Dan Fouts,
who, you know, a broadcaster.
My dad loves Fouts.
He would be...
Do you know him at all?
We've met for...
He's a broadcaster.
Yeah.
He got it.
Yeah.
Dan.
He kills it.
Dan Fouts.
That he...
He...
I mean, I'm just thinking...
great game football I mean you know
now okay the Giants game
the 18 and 9 tenths and oh
we did that
wait 18 and 1 yeah I go to 18 and 9 tenths
and oh and one yeah we did that with
we had bruskey and eli at the same time to do that
how was that that was fun
I mean it was the first time brusky ever came on
to talk about it with the law about the loss
so it was cool that that's what we originally wanted
the show to be
have a guy on both sides.
We then found out it's so hard.
It's hard.
Even though it's a lot, well, it's recent enough.
Yeah.
And we killed Zoom, too.
Those were a Zoom interviews.
That was, oh, my God.
That was a great game.
Yeah, well, I mean, but, you know, it was great, Tom.
It was great.
In Media Day, someone says, well, what was the final in that?
1714, 14, 10?
What the hell was the final of that?
How do I not know that?
But do you, we try to.
No, no. What was it?
1714, I thought.
Is that what it was? Plexiglass.
Yeah, 1714.
Blade zero.
So Tom, Tom.
Let a smile.
It was one of those meaty-day question.
Back then was, you know, remember what it was.
Now they made it a fucking collagellular.
I hate it now.
You guys used to be in the stadium on Tuesday in your uniform.
I got all my ears of them.
You guys look good.
The stadium is nice.
Now it's a thing.
It's a fucking colligular.
Um,
when yesterday it was hell out earth.
Tom.
Yeah, terrible.
Tom went,
you're gonna hold us,
you know,
he's gonna hold us,
he didn't,
he wasn't intact?
He's like,
no.
Ah,
they're gonna hold us
the 14 points, huh?
Okay.
Well,
if I were Tom,
I'd say the same thing.
Unfortunately,
every now,
you know,
I mean,
whatever.
All right,
we,
hell,
this lunch,
I can't even call the guy
to like me out of here.
Boom.
Huh?
But he doesn't know.
I got waiting for me at 1 o'clock.
Boom.
Thanks so much for coming on.
Hey, Jules, we could go on for hours.
We didn't even get to Boston Strong.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
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Let them work and rework.
Let them animate.
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No, a toaster.
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Fun!
Let them put golden wings on a dog.
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Let them color correct.
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Didn't get to ask them half the things I wanted to ask them.
I know.
We need part two and three.
You need 15 hours for that.
Boom.
When my hero's growing, like you said,
everybody that's talking sports now is just paying an homage to Chris Berman.
A lot of it.
Adding fun into it and talking like you talk at the,
and your personality and fun sound binds.
Whoop, man.
That was so cool, guys.
I came like,
can't be like,
do you imagine hanging out with Joe Montany,
Huey Lewis,
and frigging Dwight Clark.
Bro.
Because he's their age.
He just casually dropped that.
He was like probably a young, cool kid from ESPN.
Like Jackson's Rick May.
That's right, brother.
Just running the town.
Like you said, the San Francisco Rat Pack.
Yeah, San Francisco Rat Pack.
They really are, bro.
Screw the news, bro.
We don't even need the news.
Man.
Just Huey and the boys.
What a game.
And,
Thanks again.
That was awesome.
To Chris Berman for giving us some time.
That was a fun episode.
That was a bucket list episode.
And that's been another episode of Games with Names.
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That number is 424-291-2290.
And we'll see you guys next week.
Every Lenovo is built to let them go.
Let them work and rework.
Let them animate.
A dinosaur.
No, a toaster.
No, a hamster and a jetpack.
Fun!
Let them put golden wings on a dog.
Good boy.
Let them color correct.
Anywhere and everywhere.
Let them make.
Powered by Intel Core Ultra processors, Lenovo gives creatives everything they need.
Lenovo.com. Let creatives create.
