NFL Daily with Gregg Rosenthal - Fake Trades We Want To See
Episode Date: February 29, 2024In a virtual room full of heroes - Dan Hanzus, Gregg Rosenthal, and Marc Sessler make their case for trades they want to see made this offseason. Before the trades, the heroes get caught up on news fr...om around the league including the Chiefs releasing Marques Valdes-Scantling (03:00), Tee Higgins' future with the Bengals(08:24), drama around Mecole Hardman (10:30) and Bill Hillgrove retiring (17:00). After the break, Rotoworld's Patrick Daugherty joins the show to help the heroes pitch trades they'd like to see made this offseason (27:04). Note: time codes approximate. NFL Daily YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/nflpodcastsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
The Around the NFL podcast.
Great additional crew work, Greg.
Welcome to another edition of Around the NFL.
He is.
He's working his way up the ranks, and people are noticing.
He's turning heads.
But is there a glass ceiling?
Yeah, it's been marginally impressive by Greg.
the second career of his
Dan Hans is here with
you heard Mark Sessler
and yes Greg Rosenthal
that's in reference of course
to the Flashpoint Focus series
which you know
here's the thing about the Flashpoint Focus series
you don't just pencil in an episode date
where it's like this is the next episode
it's when it kind of comes into focus
and I just have a feeling
there's something in the air
that there could be one coming up soon.
That's all I can say.
Does anybody else have that feeling?
So is this a flashpoint focus about a flashpoint focus?
Sounds about right.
How's everybody doing?
Great job holding it down with the great Patrick Claibon on Tuesday.
As the combine kicked off, I spent some good time with my parents who were visiting in town.
And now I am locked in as well, the underwear Olympics roll on.
or are getting going in Indianapolis
and we'll continue to comb the desert there
and find some news coming out of Indy
and the Lucas Oil Stadium,
but we're also going to dig into some free agency
and team transaction talk, Gregi.
In fact, we're going to try to put together
some realistic trades a little bit later
with the great roto Pat, Pat Dardy.
I'm looking forward to it.
It's my time of year.
we well as we finish taping this the on-field drills kind of start at the combine and we'll wrap all
those up on Monday and talk about them next week but it's almost like I enjoy this part it's good
good to learn about all the prospects it's like get it out of the way and then the real the fun
starts for a couple weeks and then we chill for like months your thoughts mark I was just
reflecting back on the flashpoint focus update that you provided and I am with you
that it feels inevitable, that there's some sort of tipping point coming.
But it is mysterious at this point.
I just can sense it like an air dirigible in the skies coming closer to our city, to our home.
And it is kind of a funky time of the NFL calendar I find because you do have this big event,
this tent pole event of the combine, and you have all the, or many or most of the GMs and coaches
there and they're talking.
So it makes you feel like this is a very, you know, big time of year news-wise.
But, you know, it's still, as you guys definitely handled on Tuesday, there's a lot of Fugasey
stuff out there right now.
The real meat and potatoes of the news is coming up as the free agency kicks off in earnest,
I believe next week.
A couple weeks.
Two weeks.
And, of course, then the draft starts getting closer.
So we're going to get you up to date on everything that's going on.
And do you want to start where we usually start?
which is the latest news?
Please.
Let's do it.
Let's do it.
Playing press on the outside.
The Holmes will throw it in the pocket.
He's launching one long.
Mark Westfield has scantley catches the ball at the Raven 30 on his back side.
Shades of the catch he had against Cincinnati in the end zone last year in the AFC championship game.
There's the call, of course, from Mitch Holtus in the AFC title game.
Marquez Valdez Scantling, one of the more frustrating wide receivers in the league,
a guy that has always gotten open, has always had premium quarterback talent around him,
but has never really broken through, but has made big plays, as you just heard.
There was one of them also scored in the Super Bowl.
The recent Chiefs win over the Niners, but now it looks like MVS will be once again
looking for a new team because the Kansas City Chiefs are releasing the wide receiver,
who was headed into the final season of his three-year deal.
It gives the chiefs much-needed cap help.
It provides $12 million in cap savings per over the cap.
So on the week where we learned that the chiefs were going to tag Legerius Sneed
and be open to a trade of him, and they are obviously all in, it seems,
on trying to get Chris Jones signed to a long-term deal.
This is some house cleaning that is much necessary.
And also, love him or hate him or who loved him, but MVS did serve.
a role in a paired down
offensive attack down the stretch
for the chiefs and now they have to find a
replacement for him. So the chiefs have
a lot of work to do. Well, I think they're going
to spend money and or draft
picks at receiver. We're talking
trades later and to me they're a candidate
for a wide receiver trade
if any team out there is. So they're
clearing money to do it. And yet
I'm not sure if they win back-to-back
Super Bowls without MBS
or without some MBS-like character
and there is something fun
and I, you know, identify it with a little bit as a Patriots fan.
If a bad move that you made results in a couple big time postseason plays that leads to your
championship, it all feels worth it.
MBS had a monster AFC championship game a year ago, 116 yards.
And then in the playoffs, in the AFC playoffs, he had like the biggest catches in each of the
divisional round in the conference championship.
So if you're a chief fan, it's like, okay, that kind of was a waste of money, but we wouldn't
to win a Super Bowl without it. It reminds me of when the Patriots drafted Sony
Michelle over Lamar Jackson. It's still a little salty about that. But, you know, they did
get a title out of it, I guess, in 2018. I mean, Dan, you're right to call him a, he was a
frustrating overall experience. But it's like he was until he wasn't. And like, the whole
offense was a tough watch. And then suddenly MVS made absolutely monster plays down the
short. I think you're right, Greg. They don't reach the Super Bowl or win it without a couple
of those plays, but they are a strong candidate to reimagine the entire wideout room. And I'm
with you that I think when you think about a team that would be prepared to make a trade for a veteran
wideout who you can plug in right away, you know what you're getting, because they're sitting
down number 32 in the draft. I mean, there's a lot of good wide receivers, but you're not going to get
one of the premier guys necessarily there. It's like they just feel like a trade candidate
big time to me. They're just so interesting because I said this last week that for a team that's
coming off a Super Bowl, they have big decisions to make, and they could go in two very different
directions. They could build around Mahomes and try to become a 500-point team again and get back
to the glory days there, or they could dig in around Jones and Sneed and keep that defense with
spags intact and find a way on offense. And maybe what this is, is they're trying to thread the
needle here, because if they do look to trade Sneed and obviously develop a new quarterback through
the draft or a cheaper signing or someone already on the roster,
then you can keep Chris Jones, he's the heart and soul of that defense,
you have the coordinator, you find a way, and then you go and attack that offense.
And it's a scary thought for the rest of the league because the chiefs,
I still think won the Super Bowl this year as a compromised team that still found a way.
And they could be the rare Super Bowl team where they get a lot better in the offseason,
and it's actually real, not like fake better, real better.
I think that's how they'll spend their.
money. You mentioned Sneed getting tagged, which we had breaking news right at the end of our show,
Dan, but we didn't have the information that they'd give him permission to seek a trade right
away, which the fact that that came with the news indicates to me, he's very likely on the move
if they get a good offer. And I don't see why they wouldn't get a good offer for a second team
all pro like entering his prime. He'll have a great market. He is a decorated cover corner,
a versatile guy, just came off a Super Bowl.
So the chiefs, I think the chiefs are set up potentially for a monster offseason.
We'll see what happens.
In other news, the Bengals, they're looking to get back to the realm of the AFC elite.
And it's looking increasingly apparent that they think T. Higgins being on the team is necessary toward that goal.
The Inquirer, Cincinnati Inquirer, Charlie Goldsmith reported, the Bengals have, quote, no plans to trade T. Higgins.
That kind of echoes what Duke Tobin, their director of player personnel, said.
that they plan to keep Higgins on the roster.
So T. Higgins, who is a perfect compliment, obviously to Jamar Chase,
and it looks like Tyler Boyd is going to reach free agency.
But if you have those two guys as your dogs with Joe Burrough,
as long as you can protect the quarterback, they're going to score a lot of points.
This felt like a completely necessary move.
And we touched on it a little on our last episode,
but the news did firm up about what might happen,
what might happen with a tag T. Higgins.
like would they tag and trade them like with a sneak like and that's just not going to happen.
I just cannot imagine a world where you take take weapons away from Joe Burrow and you're
already going to lose potentially Tyler Boyd as well.
It's like this is your window.
Like just don't don't make false mistakes here and strip them away of a totally promising.
They have two number one wide receivers.
That's how you get back to the AFC title game.
It's, it's, I don't know if it's bold and I like it.
It's not surprising because it's just a Bengalsy thing to do.
They let Jesse Bates play out the last.
year. They're like, we're going to get one more good year out of Bates. You know, they almost
won the Super Bowl. We're going to get one more year out of T. Higgins. We're not worried about
what we get. Because I, unlike, I've seen some analysts out there say, like, the wide receiver
market, I don't know if it's going to be as strong. You have to give them the huge contract.
It's like, no, I think T. Higgins, they could get like a late first round pick for T. Higgins.
And I don't hate that they're not going to do it. You only have so many years where you're
going to have two great wide receivers like that. And I would not expect them to be back on the team.
And they've done this before.
They did it with Bates.
They actually did it with A.J. Green during the COVID year, which was a bad decision.
They just had him stay one more year, and he suddenly turned really old in that season.
They've done it in the past, and it's fine.
Go do it right now while everyone's around.
In other news.
You know, and I get it.
I've said it in this podcast.
I get it.
My favorite team is kind of a source of fail-sun entertainment for everyone else.
and I get it.
And they're delivering, I feel like,
a lot of good content lately
and this year should be interesting.
New York Jets had a wide receiver
named Mikol Hardman,
who was formerly of the Chiefs
that they brought in in the offseason
who was supposed to be a good compliment
and add an element of big play,
a big play element to their offense.
It never happened.
He barely was seeing the field.
And eventually he was traded back to the chief.
where yes he had the walk-off touchdown in the Super Bowl isn't that funny isn't that so cool
anyway also almost lost them you know ended their season before that with his terrible
place he he's he's a dummy but let's let's let's focus on the news that came out this week that
Nicole Hardman and this is according some reporting from Connor Hughes um that hardman frustrated by
his lack of usage with the Jets leaked game plans to the opposition it was implied by several
players on social media amongst them,
Sauce Gardner.
He leaked game plan details to the Eagles and also the Chiefs.
Ironically, games in which the Jets have their high point of their season,
a victory over the Eagles when we were in London,
as you may recall, gentlemen.
And then a Sunday night game with the Chiefs that went down to the final minutes
that they lost.
And also a commentary that Mikul Hardman made at some point before his trade
saying that he had been in contact with.
with both Patrick Mahomes and Brett Veesh, the GM,
come get me.
So the Jets are potentially a report out there investigating tampering.
So I mean, at the end of the day,
just a really good move to bring McCull Hardman into the organization.
It worked, it worked almost perfectly.
I mean, it is kind of a reminder, though,
that some of these off-season bolstering of rosters and moves
that get treated with a lot of, you know, grandeur.
Because it was like Robert Sala that, you know,
last off season was gushing about Mikola Hardman and his speed and called him like gas,
I think, and just like, it seemed like it all was going to work.
And it couldn't have gone worse.
But my thing is like, if this can be proven that he, that he's sharing game plans,
I'm not saying that like unleashing the Jets game plan to the opponent was a lot of top secret stuff to begin with
when you have Nate Hackett running the offense.
But I just want to fly around like a butterfly.
That's suspension territory.
How do you, how does that different to your point?
Like, how is that, you know, we're very, we come down very hard.
on gambling as our league makes millions upon millions of dollars off it.
And the idea, it's all about the integrity of the game.
If they, they're digging through players' phones and emails and things to find out
evidence of that, if they have evidence on his phone or wherever else that he was leaking
the game plan of his own team, first of all, he should be out of the league forever.
Why would anyone want that guy on their team?
And secondly, why wouldn't the league come down hard?
I agree 100% with you.
I was the first thought I had.
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
Just based on the reporting, I don't know if there is like a smoking gun.
It might be one of those things that got kind of talked, talked around by the other players.
He is certainly not a popular man in the Jets locker room.
I'm sure the way it all ended.
And he didn't like this partly came about because he went on a podcast.
I think it was Ryan Clark's podcast.
And yeah, he said how he was completely checked out of the Jets.
Admitted that he refused to return punts for them one game because he felt like he had been lied to
about having the punt return job or whatever
and then was just like not giving any effort whatsoever
he admitted like in the middle of his career,
which is not something you probably want to put out there
because I don't know if the chiefs are that interested
in keeping him either.
I mean, it was a nice, he'll always have his moment.
I mean, he's not quite Malcolm Butler,
but he'll always be part of like history,
but that might be about it for his career.
And this is going to sound like, you know, Sauer Dan with the Jets,
but I just think he, and if you watch Hardin,
and I talked about it with Colleen at the time,
if you feel you must, go check the tape,
that he was one of the only people
that didn't come off well on Hard Knocks.
He walked around with aviators indoors
and kind of carried himself in a different way
than everyone else and all the player bonding activities.
And it was just like, what's Hardman all about?
So it seems to be a premium knucklehead,
but congratulations on that Super Bowl
and all the glory that came with it.
All right.
Oh, also, Zach Wilson has been given permission
to seek a trade, good luck.
I saw a report out there connecting him
to Sean McVeigh and the Rams.
Okay, we'll see.
Put a pin in that.
I actually have seven different
Zach Wilson trade proposals
coming up as part two of the show.
I actually do have a Zach Wilson one.
It's one of about 60 that I concocted.
And I know it drives you guys
and some listeners crazy
that I believe that Sam Darnold is an NFL player
that could be successful in this league.
You will not hear me saying about that.
Zach Wilson.
That always had a funky smell to it,
and I don't believe he has a future in the league.
Finally, let's spin through a couple of things real quick.
Genu Smith, the well-traveled tight end.
He has been released by the Falcons, so he was cut.
Gino is locked in after a con,
Gino Smith locked in after a contract restructure.
Those two items are out there.
I thought, you know, Smith was actually pretty,
good last year.
Jonu, yeah.
I mean, he was like the guy that was on top of...
Did you do the thing where it's like you're saying the first name long?
So you're going to correct it before you go into your point?
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
I guess so.
I don't know what's the best.
John, yeah, he had a pretty good year.
You know, former Patriot great, Jono Smith.
Look, he was the guy who was always at the top of your free agent waiver wire.
If you play fantasy and you're like, hmm, he does have like 500.
yards this season and 50 catches, should I pick up China Smith? But you don't want to get the
ultimate, like the week where he goes one for eight, which is probably what's going to
happen next. You just put him in Pittsburgh. He can follow with Arthur Smith. But it was interesting
at the combine that the Seahawks essentially said, I think they were a little misleading the way
they said. They were like, oh yeah, Gino was always coming back. Like it was just a question of timing.
I think they went through the process. They decided he is coming back. But the way they
moved the money around in his contract, he is locked in now as a Seahawks. So he's not going
anywhere. I think it'll be Gino and some
rookie to be named later.
And finally in the news.
Warner goes under. He's going to
go back in the shotgun first and goal at the
two. Side car to his left.
Steelers show blitz. He throws
the pass up. He's going to pick
off James Harrison. He's running up the
sideline. 25, 30,
35, 40. Still on his feet at the
45 and down. No, he's still on
his feet. Here comes Harrison jumping
over people. To the 20, the 15,
the 10, the 5. And that's a
shut down for Pittsburgh. An amazing play. I still think the most amazing play in NFL Super Bowl
history, at least in a not end of game scenario. WDVE, that is Bill Hillgrove with the call
of James Harrison's pick six of Kurt Warner of the Cardinals and Super Bowl 53 took it back 100 yards
and they needed every one of those points because the Steelers were actually down in the final
minutes. Warner was playing out of his mind with Larry Fitzgerald and then Big Ben to Santonio
Holmes in the back of the end zone. Another classic Hillgrove call and the venerable play-by-play man
is stepping down. The team made the announcement on Thursday that the 84-year-old is out, retiring as the
play-by-play voice of the Pittsburgh Steelers after three decades on the job. He took over in 1994 from Jack Fleming
and now it is Hillgrove stepping aside
and people that listen to this podcast know
we have quite an affinity for local play-by-play men
and how they serve as the voice of the fans
and it is a passing of the torch moment for Steelers fans
because there's been a lot of big-time moments
in the last 30 years.
Yeah, I think like you, the special thing about radio
is that most of your memories, obviously,
or you're creating these images in your mind while you're like driving around.
It's like I don't even, I'm not a big baseball fan, but I kind of love driving around listening
to like a Dodgers game once in a while.
It just creates this texture.
His name, his voice has been in our lives as long as we've been fans for the most part.
And I think the way you judge these guys is in the biggest moments, like do they nail that
call?
And like, that's a great example of how precise and entertaining and verbally talented he was.
He's a man.
It actually was making me think, like, they might be the most beloved positions in the media.
Like, columnists, everyone turns on columnists if they ever liked them to begin with.
Like, they get mixed reactions.
National broadcasters, they'll have their fans, but they get a ton of hate.
Yeah, even podcasts, you stick around long enough.
People start turning on you, too.
But the local legend radio host is, like, beloved, our friend J.B. Long's going to be that guy someday.
People are going to be listening to that call he made when they won the Super Bowl forever.
Greg, do you think that at this point, at this stage, and there is online evidence that this is possibly the case that the listeners are starting to turn on us to varying degrees?
Well, I mean, we've probably never, all of us haven't been equally beloved the whole time.
But yeah, I would think there's some, there's some haters out there.
But the good thing with podcasts is just like stop listening, you know, so that part I don't.
You do have that power.
Take a walk, loser.
Yeah, if I write a podcast memoir in a few years, it would be die a hero or live long enough
to see yourself become the villain.
I feel like that is forward by Sir Anthony Hopkins.
Got a nice ring to it.
You're absolutely right, Mark.
Me and a couple friends, actually we're, and this is like a sad Patriots fan thing to do
at this point, we're texting the Gil Santos call of Adam Venetary winning the first
Super Bowl with him, which he absolutely nailed just the way.
The octaves in his voice goes up, like sticks with me forever and gives me chills.
I only played it because Walker wanted to listen to it.
And he absolutely nailed that call.
And like Gil Santos, rest in peace,
he'll be a legend forever in New England for that.
Yes.
Walker was told, if you want my love and a new baseball bat for the season,
you will listen to this call.
No, he asked about it.
He asked about it.
He's like, Daddy, tell me when they weren't embarrassing,
when they weren't getting F-minuses on the NFLPA report.
or whatever.
That's right.
Let's talk about that in a second.
But I know you guys mentioned Peter King,
but Peter King retiring after, you know,
decades and decades is the,
you know, kind of the voice of the league
as a columnist,
Hillgrove moving on.
It's, you know,
we've been doing this long enough now
where, you know,
we've been covering the football
for what feels like a mini generation
of the league's history
and now everything changes.
You know what?
Somebody's going to come for us one day, too.
So let's just enjoy it while we have it, you know?
Yeah, they did put out the grades.
That's one more item.
the NFL, PA, kind of like this move.
And by the way, what I was saying at the top of the show,
this is a perfect example.
The machine wants you to think this is a massive week or two
on the calendar right now.
But like in reality, it's a lot of flotsam and jetsam.
So that's when the union says,
this is where we'll drop in our grades of coaches,
facilities, and the survey of their players.
And three head coaches got A plus grades when their players were surveyed.
Andy Reed, well, you knew it would be Reed.
Can you guess who the other two were if you didn't see this?
I didn't.
A plus.
I think, well, I saw him.
I knew Shannon's up there.
I don't know if he got an A plus.
Kevin O'Connell and Dan Campbell, the only three coaches that get an A plus.
Now, Reed might have gotten an A plus.
However, the Chiefs, and this was the case, I believe last year as well,
Didn't fare so well in other voting.
Their facilities were, I think, at the bottom of the list.
And GM Brett Veach did not get graded well at all either, which, you know, they're back-to-back
champions.
So take that with a grain of salt or see it as a la Ravio Magnifico of the entire experience.
Anything else that kind of jumped out from the union list here?
I think the timing of the vote mattered because they pointed out that Nick Siriani received an A.
but these holes were done in November
before they went off at the side of a cliff.
So I wonder what even a six-week difference
would have made for some of these marks.
I think it was mostly about like communication
and following through on your word.
So the Veach thing,
maybe he doesn't have a great, like interpersonal skills.
But the ownership stuff,
Clark Hunt going 31st out of 32 owners
because they feel like he's been selling them
a bill of goods about their cheap facility,
which kind of is fairly well-known.
as one of the most run-down old facilities
and that basically he's repeatedly promised
to fix it. And then they were like,
ah, you guys keep going on these long playoff runs.
We didn't have time to fix it.
It is a little interesting.
It has worked.
Like, they banged on the car.
I mean, is that what he actually says, Greg?
Or you just project what you might say.
What?
In terms of the facility.
Your playoff run was too long.
We didn't have time this year.
No, that was.
That was like one of the things that apparently he said,
he said to them after last season or something.
It did work, though.
Like, remember last year, like the floors were on even
in Arizona or Cincinnati and a bunch of stuff
were too, like those teams were so embarrassed
and Tampa was another one that they did
kind of like fix this relatively small scale
stuff like the Cardinals no longer
charge money for people to eat there.
So I would like this.
If we had this at our work, we could have little,
you know, try to improve what you can improve.
I bet they're going to fix those facilities
in Kansas City.
I bet he doesn't like it on ESPN.
This is like a lead story that Clark Hunt's
one of the worst owners in sports.
Well, it caused a total firestorm for the Cardinals
a year ago, you're right.
And like the one that I kept seeing people going nuts about was that the charges.
And we, and I think it's, you get the feeling that the chargers cut some corners here and there in general.
But they charge their players for game day daycare for their children.
It's $75 for the first child and 50 for each additional child.
Now look at, I don't, I don't know what the other teams are doing on that front.
But this like became a fiery talking point on Twitter yesterday.
Yeah.
The Bucks, like is another example and why this is a really smart.
idea by the union, even if it probably ruffles some feathers in terms of a relationship between
the two sides. The Bucks felt compelled to release an organizational statement after they got
slammed for having an unclean and smelly locker.
Anyway, yeah, that's good. Good stuff. What if we were just like, can we get those,
you get some red apples in the in the little jar outside me some rohose it's like those green
they're flavorless the green ones I like the tang of green I'm just kidding I'm kidding and by the way
for people younger people out there when they have those town halls for your job and like you know
one of the people on the show needs to kind of fall in line on this too don't fall into the trap
of thinking you can speak your mind because certain members of management will use it against you
if you try to embarrass them, you know.
We've seen multiple, and I know you're talking about me,
and I take that note, I accept it.
It's a classic shadowy league figure trap move.
Never stand up.
We've seen multiple former NFL employees contribute to their status
as former NFL media employees by stepping up in those big spots.
Yes, yes, yes.
Mark?
I learned to say nothing except in, then I do say,
something and then I wish I didn't. That's how it typically works.
And that's what's happening in the news. Let's take a break. And when we get back, we will welcome
in the great rotopat. Welcome back. Our next guest. Our next guest,
is a favorite, a personal favorite.
Mark loves him. Greg, hot and cold.
He is one of the great NFL writers.
Give you a break for NBC sports.
He is a Jeff Fisher scholar.
And if you have any questions about Joe Flacco talking Roger Federer's poise,
you know where to go.
Rodo Pat, Patrick Daugherty.
Welcome back to Around the NFL.
Pointing out all my truly terrible.
Twitter memes that I keep on my account for like seven years at a time should probably
change my Joe Flacco Broncos header, especially since he's good again. He's the comeback player
of the year. There you go. It's relevant. So good that everyone pointed out it was better than
literally coming back to life. Does anyone remember Joe Flacco on the Broncos at this point? I certainly
don't. Roger Federer does. Greg, do you want to hash out the beef there with Rotopat?
Well, there was no beef. Although I'm not even actually sure if I did hire Rotopat, but I remember I was
a big supporter of him back at Rhoda World while we were laying brick by brick. I shouldn't take
credit for you if Evan hired you. He probably did. So you can't claim credit. It was Evan. He actually
Evan stole me in the night from the baseball side of the site too. They were, I was going to do like
a baseball test shift. And he immediately got me installed on a football test shift. This is not a joke.
I did both sports for about 18 months. And the one day one of our other bosses, Greg, Brett Randermark,
has called me. It's like, Evan said you're not doing baseball.
anymore. I've thought about that often, and I know we'll get to the trades. The first six
months at Rotoa, I loved baseball. Baseball was, you know, my favorite sport at the time. And I wrote
the baseball magazine. I worked in both baseball and football. And I often think, like, if I had just
not been assigned to cover football, how much worse my life would be. Wouldn't we hear it? One of those
great sliding doors moments. We were like Oakey's in the 30s and 40s. Not as many opportunities, I'm
just saying the NFL has been very, very good to me. Yeah, we were like Okies in the 30s and 40s.
Just get all the way to California. Don't stop on the way there. Skip over baseball and just
skip to football. That's for the almighty American dollar. I have always wondered, Pat,
like if you suddenly switched gears, developed a new interest, became like a tax account or
something, you'd have to rebrand your entire handle. The roto part of it would make no sense at
that point. But the wardrobe would be ready to go, I think, right now.
What are you going to think of my tasteful wardrobe?
You guys have the really tasteful backdrops.
I have the tasteful wardrobe.
I need to work on my backdrops, Bill.
But they used to, before Musk came along,
they used to hold it above your head like an anvil.
Do not change your handle or you lose your verified checkmark.
And now we all lost our verified checkmark.
So I think he could change the handle.
Now, some people will be confused.
Followers of Pat will be confused if all of a sudden he's talking about advanced accounting
around tax season after 15 years of talking baseball and football, but, you know, they'll figure
it out. He'll keep some. He'll lose some. It's good. I have so much podcasting experience too.
I'm sure I could BS being an accountant. Like, I just don't cheat on your taxes. You should be pretty
good. Even if you cheat a little bit, you're probably all right. But, uh, wow. All right.
I can imagine a tax podcast would very much wait. But you know what? It's once you define what your
audience is and then you just go for it. And I think Pat would have a chance. Here we are. We're
going to talk about, yes, while the combine is kicking off, we're going to really be digging
into the draft side of things once those activities have ceased in Indianapolis.
But for now, we're going to keep our eyes on what's current, the players currently on
rosters with free agency a couple weeks away and players under contract and teams trying to
figure out how financially they want to attack. So trades could happen. In fact, I believe
It was around this time last year, or maybe the year before,
the Russell Wilson trade went down as an example two years ago now.
And so we could get a big one as teams set up for free agency.
So why not?
Let's throw out some trades.
Let's try to keep them in the realm of reality, things that could make sense.
Now, I know we said before we started that rotopat has a hammer drop to end all hammer drops
as we build it up to a level of expectations.
cannot possibly meet, but that's how we'll end.
But we're also going to start with our guest.
Patrick, get us going with the trade.
First of you're right.
You're actually kind of late on a big trade where, you know, the new league year,
when it begins March 13th, that has never stopped people from announcing trades in like January
18th, like Matthew Stafford to the Rams, like kind of wondering why the rules even in place
at all when that kind of stuff can happen.
I'll start, you're promising a hammer drop.
I'll start as normy as possible.
Okay.
And I just, I want the normie trade I want to happen.
is Justin Fields to the Atlanta Falcons
for a pair of second round picks.
Some people will say he won't fetch that much.
I call two second rounders kind of like
the gentleman's first rounder
where you can't be seen like valuing him
at a first round level.
And I feel like like toxic fan purposes.
He's not worth the first rounder.
But he could be worth two second rounders.
It's not an all-in move.
It won't like cripple the franchise.
You don't have to make an all-in move
in the NFC South.
It's a similar roster to the Bears
where it's made to have a high-octane rushing attack.
He's got a solid defense.
He's proven despite his passing limitations.
He can at least strike up one of those amazing,
like, alpha wide receiver connections as he did last year at DJ Moore.
And I just think it's a good, it's more than a hold serve move,
but it's like the Falcons finally trying to like actually get serious
about quarterback without having to make like some totally fran.
Maybe it turns into a franchise altering move,
but it's not like Deshawn Watson where like totally alters the franchise.
with three first rounders gone.
And I just think,
I think of all the Justin Fields
potential destinations,
I want it to be the phone.
I think that's a good way
to get going here
because I'm sure you're not the only one
that has a Fields trade.
So why don't we,
we'll talk about that one.
And if anyone wants to add a Fields,
Mark, go ahead.
Well, I was going to say,
I did a couple Justin Fields scenarios.
But Falcons, it's like, cool,
it's the missing piece.
It's what they were so frustrating.
If they were, for years in a row,
it's just like, put a quarterback here
and we got a lot going on.
And I had the same thing as you.
I had Fields, though, for a second.
And on this show, we have our guys, dudes that we, you know, really just sort of have a bit of a fetish with earlier in their careers.
They can't be stars.
And, like, Tyler Algier was my dude two years ago.
And I kind of think it would help if they sent Tyler Alger in a second back to the Bears.
It frees him up for a big career in Chicago.
And it gets, it kind of unclogs the whole Bijon Robinson thing, too.
So I think the Falcons just seem to be using the wrong players at different times a season ago.
So he's a weird trade evaluation because you're saying two seconds.
So that would have to be, I think it's the 43rd pick of the draft and then I guess next year's second.
We're trying to be specific here.
I mean, you could even get NBA like and trade a 26 second once I think we get to the draft.
I make the second second can maybe be a conditional third like it can turn into a third or something like that.
They do have an extra third round pick this year that if they wanted to do that.
his contract makes him more tradable, more valuable.
He's getting paid nothing this year.
And then he's on a fifth year option next year,
which for a starting quarterback is essentially nothing.
I mean, it's going to be like $20 million,
but that's a bargain if you actually are a team
that's going to want to pay it.
Whereas this year, I think you're literally paying him like $5 million,
something crazy.
A base salary, $1.6 million, $1.6 million dollar roster bonus.
You're paying them what, like, Sam Darnal,
made in San Francisco last year, what a, like, a backup is going to make, or less than a decent
backup. That's why I think he might have a better market than people think. I'm not sending
him to Atlanta, though. I think they're on a weird timeline because Terry Fontenow is like,
he's been around for a while. They're GM, but the coach is new. I think they might rather
just go with like a young play, a franchise, you know, draft pick, which Arthur Blank seems to be
all over. So that's why I'm sending him to the Raiders for the 44th pick. And the Bears did
like getting a veteran back. So they're going to get back Tyree Wilson, who had one of the worst
seasons out of a top 10 pick that we've seen in a long time last year. But he was a top 10
pick. So it's like, okay, give us someone we can play with a little bit that has some talent.
What was a year ago? Forty fourth pick overall in Tyree Wilson to the Raiders. I think they're
the most likely team that would actually do this. I think that that's a good one. Go ahead, Pat.
I was to say, I love the idea of it. If it's the Falcons, I love the idea of including Alger, because
he's like a loaded gun laying around.
Like he's going to go off if he's on the roster.
Like they like coaches cannot quit him.
And like they let him being good be the enemy of Bejan being great.
And he's just he's just got to get off the roster.
They're going to be too tempted to use him if he's on the roster.
It's not fair to Alger to call him a progress stopper to use a Parcellism
because he's actually a young talented player.
But he is in terms of letting Bejan be the guy what he wants to be.
And that's a 2,000 yard rusher.
You got to give him the ball.
Got to give him the rocks.
So I like all, these are all places that make sense for fields.
I also have a fields trade, but I have to tell you, in terms of BS detectors,
there has been very few storylines that have popped up post Super Bowl in the last few years
that smelled as funky as the Steelers saying they were good with their quarterback room.
It actually brings to mind my first year and Mark,
first year at NFL media when we were doing write-ups with Mike Shanahan, not Kyle,
Mike Shanahan stating that he would stake his reputation on Rex Grossman and John Beck,
that quarterback room. That's how it feels in Pittsburgh right now. So I think about Mike Tomlin,
like, what have they been missing since Ben got old? I mean, just a true two-way threat quarterback
who can make plays, who could avoid the rush. And I think Fields,
to the Steelers makes a lot of sense.
And I'm going to send the 2024 second round pick 51 overall,
a 2024 fourth round pick and a 2025 conditional third.
Whoa.
That becomes a second if fields hits certain performance and durability escalators.
Get it done.
Do not.
I smell the BS, so stop trying to serve it, Steelers.
Not trying to dominate the talking.
but amazing stylistic bit in Pittsburgh.
And you make it a great point with the Steelers
and like the BS detector and the quarterbacks.
I loved how Rahim Morris in Atlanta was just like,
yeah, he didn't do that at all.
He literally wouldn't even be here.
The quarterback was in any way.
I would still be in L.A.
Like, let's just be real.
And so there was some admirable honesty.
With these guys that are actually still in a roster.
The Steelers would have to go against what they've been for a long time.
And there's some indication that they are.
I mean, it's time, Greg.
It's time to maybe mix things up in Pittsburgh.
And there's some indication that they are and that they will.
It is a different general manager, Omar Khan,
than Kevin Colbert, who was there for a couple of decades.
But I don't know.
Three picks might get it done.
I think there's going to be a bigger market.
I think it might be something close to that sort of trade than people realize.
The trick is like I almost know the Raiders would be in on this,
but maybe the Falcons, there's actually not that many teams.
that are logical, like, destinations for a Justin Fields.
Because most of the most logical ones have picks in the top three,
the Patriots, commanders, and bears.
Yeah, but we just named three teams that make sense.
The Giants are out there.
They've been connected to Fields, at least in times of chatter.
I mean, that's four right there.
I mean, that's, I think he's going to have a market.
And like you said, like the difference between him and, say, Sam Darnold,
when the Panthers gave up a pretty good bounty,
like Fields has actually shown something like he's shown he has a potential high level play in him
and the contract is a real great sweet spot that's almost perfect it's not too long in the future
it's two years at a very low rate like that that helps all right let's move we'll stick with
the Raiders I'll throw an out here that I another thing that I don't quite buy now I do buy that
with with all the bravado and excitement around the Raiders with Antonio
Pierce that they want to win now and maybe you're right. Maybe they go and they hunt and get a
quarterback that they could believe they could be a playoff team with. But I still, the DeVante
Adams thing, I'm still, I'm not there. I'm not there believing that he is definitely on that
team, given his age and where they are as a team. And I, and I've always thought that the Jets
were going to make a big play for him. You know Rogers wants to make big play. You know, Rogers is
calling the shots for the Jets at this point. So if the Jets pick,
up the phone and called up the Raiders, what would it take? So I'm saying, tell me if this is
crazy or this kind of makes sense. The Raiders would give up their first round pick, the 13th
overall pick. The Jets give them back their first round pick, which is a 10th overall pick. So
the Raiders move into the top 10. The Jets also give them a second round pick in 2025,
which given the state of the Jets roster and the boomer bust nature, could be a pick in the
low 30s potentially, or in the 30s, would that be enough to get Adams and his big contract
out of Vegas?
No.
I think so.
I don't, I, I, I, I, I'm with you.
I think the Raiders, especially under Josh McDaniels, Devante Adams, would have been history
very quick, but new coaching staff, he likes the coach.
I could see Pierce not wanting to move a player like that this off season, but I just feel like
if they get, if someone calls, I think.
think they'd be listening to this. I cooked up one, and maybe this is too high of a price for
the cults to give up, but I thought that the cults who are also in, like, let's surround our young
quarterback with weapons now, would be willing to give for a Devante Adams and his prime
the 15th overall pick. And what I love about it for the Raiders, that may be a little rich,
but in this world, the Raiders, who need a lot of pieces, could turn around and redo their
wide-out room and have more as well, because they had to have the 13.
pick and the 15th pick. But maybe that's a little expensive for Devante Adams. I don't think it would
have been a year or two ago. I've got a non-official Devante Adams one, by the way. He was like,
it really was as good as gone as any players ever been when it was Josh Medan. Where he would basically
go up to the Monday night football camera, like right and Sharpie. Like, I want to be traded. And then
that didn't happen. I think Pierce like loves him a little too much. My Antonio, when I was in
Vegas, Antonio Pierce walked by me in the lobby. Like his dog love.
Levels, just like walking in a lobby, we're so off the charts.
I feel like he's not going to trade a dog levels guy, like Devante Adams.
But this isn't one of my official three.
I want Devante Adams to the bills.
I think a first rounder is too rich for DeMonte at this point.
I think I'm going back to my gentleman's first rounder.
Two twos from the all-in bills for Devante.
I don't know if he's too redundant to Stefan Diggs.
Their salary cap situation is probably too messed up too.
Stefan and Devante can both do everything on the football field.
They're so all-in.
that I really want Devante Adams
on the bills instead of the Jets.
Plus two for the storyline
if I'm playing Rogers twice.
Put a pin in that.
I could see, you know,
you bring in Adams
and then you get rid of Diggs or whatever.
But I don't think that's too much.
They sent a first in a second round pick for him
just two years ago.
I don't understand.
I don't think there's much of a chance
Devante Adams goes traded.
Why would they trade one of their best players?
They're also not going to get
any real like cap relief out of it
in the short term.
They get like a very much.
And they don't need cap relief.
They need to be fill in that stadium and win some games.
I guess I don't get why they would.
I guess the answer to that too, Greg,
is that at least in how the league typically works,
big ticket guy for a team that's kind of rebuilding,
reloading that was a different regime brought him in.
There's always that chance.
Now, have we heard Adams on record say he definitely wants to stay with Las Vegas?
Because if I'm Adams, I'm like, how many big time years do I have left,
one or two?
And I don't know who my quarterback here is.
Like, I just think there's as much as the Raiders want to put it out there.
And I think the GM said he's a Raider a couple days ago.
Like they're really pushing that hard, but that is also, that's leverage.
And I think given there would be a market for him and some teams like the bills are a great example too.
The bills and Jets are both very desperate teams in different ways that maybe you can get that first rounder.
Now, mine was moving up in the first round and then a second.
But, you know, the trade famously that got Stefan Diggs to Buffalo was just Diggs for a first.
And that worked out for everyone.
The Vikings then got Justin Jefferson.
So could Adams command that?
It's 32 years old, which is kind of snuck up on me.
That's part of it too.
A little bit.
I just think they can get even more cap relief.
If they were going to trade them, they're going to trade them like during the season or see how everything goes in weight.
I do have a Diggs trade though.
While he's up there.
I'm sending Diggs.
And I think Diggs is eminently traded.
I think this wide receiver market has not finished expanding.
Teams are going to be ready to pay wide receivers as quarterbacks, whether it's contracts
or in trade terms.
And so even though Diggs is coming off a down year, he's young enough.
I think he could get a first round pick back.
I thought about the Browns.
There's some whispers they want to bring in a wide receiver, Tony Pauline at that the Cowboys
maybe with the brother thing.
But who's got an extra first round pick this year?
It's the Arizona Cardinals with the 27th pick over.
all, just send him over to Stefan to Buffalo.
For some reason, I think Stefan Diggs would be happy to be in Arizona where it's just
chill and he could just put up big numbers.
And who knows, maybe you draft, you get a wide receiver in the draft, you got him,
you got Wilson, you got Kyler Murray, let's fly.
I think the bills would do that too.
Greg, I had a duplicate exactly the same trade situation right there for Arizona.
I hate the idea of a declining physically, but his ego higher.
and more powerful than ever, Stefan Diggs going to the Arizona Cardinals, that zoo and seeing
how that turns out while, you know, Kyler, you know, either freezes him out of the game plan
or is forcing targets. I mean, that smells like a disaster. I think he would either embrace the
retirement home aspect or he would just be, yeah, I'm going to retire. Like, he does immediately retire
after they traded him. He's only 30. Like, he wasn't that, you know, he wasn't thrilled last year. He played old
last year. He did. He did finish with 1180 yards and 107
catches. I know it fell off a lot, but, you know, during the season, but it's not like he was
a disaster. I just feel like both those teams would do that trade. And the Cardinals, you know,
they can't, they have a surplus of picks. They're one of the teams that could actually give
it up, although that's the Texans pick, which we thought at the time was like going to be
a top five pick. There was like a week in the season when we were like, ooh, the Texans,
the Cardinals could have the top two picks of the draft. And it ended up being the 27th because
the Texans got into the divisional round.
Yeah. If you, if you like do the math on it, to get to 1100 yards, if you play every week
is like 65 yards a game, that's kind of what his ceiling was this year. And I just wonder
like if he is, because people know, I'm not going to say he's a diva or anything like that,
but people know, you know, he's, he's a lot. Like, and you got to make sure Stefan's at a good
place. If a guy that's coming off a red flag season and you know he's a little bit of a
handful potentially in a locker room. What kind of is his market as strong as maybe you might think
it should be strong because he's been like a top 10 receiver for the last five years or at least
before last year. I think he's an interesting one in terms of trying to figure out how much he
command. I'm sure Brandon Bean and McDermann are thinking the same thing. The amount of screaming
between Kyler and Stefan Diggs would maybe set like a single season. It would be great though.
Receivers are like, I don't know what the comparison is, but I think a T.O. And I think this has happened
with a lot of receivers.
Like, their expiration date with some of them, like, happens in after about three years.
But that first year is great.
The second year is pretty good.
And then it starts getting sour.
So it's time.
You're going to get one nice year where he looks great.
All right.
Before we go around the horn again, let's pause, take a break.
And we'll be right back with rotopat and fake trades.
All right, Pat, give us another one.
This isn't the hammer drop.
No hammer drop.
This one is like for pure function.
This is like buying a couch.
You got to get the couch in the house.
It's not flashy, but it is quite comfortable.
The Kansas City Chiefs, I originally said conditional fourth rounder.
I think it could probably be a conditional fifth rounder to the New York Giants for Darius Slayton,
who just for some reason every year the Giants hate Darius Slayton, even though all he ever does is get like 700 yards on limited targets.
He's cleared 700 yards in four or five seasons.
Something MBS has never done for the chiefs.
just cut, get a legitimate field stretcher who actually has like half a decade of proven
production. He could be a great role player in this offense for the Chiefs. I think he's
better than he's ever been allowed to be in New York, which maybe is not really a thing
after five years. But Pat, Pat, everything you're saying right now is exactly how we would
have explained the Cadarius Tony trade two years ago. Except for only Cadarious Tony, he's actually
produced. He's playing solid, but this is a perfunctory trade. It feels.
very like a couple that's no longer really feeling the magic, but like let's just knock it out
every other week. He's done 700 yards. I want more. This is like, this is like when, when, when Mark or
actually, I don't even remember it was Mark or Wes or who was like where we have to drop like a big
ticket like hammer drop of an item. And they talked about Geo Bernard's impact on the 2021
box. By the way, this isn't the hammer drop of course. And this is a part of a larger, this is part of
a larger Chiefs receiver core overhaul
because this is also part of the Chiefs trading for Justin
Jefferson of course, which we're not even going to get into
on the show. But they got to
remake the receiver. The fact that they
won back-to-back Super Bowls, it's
like the definition of like league replacement
receivers, they're not going to do it a third
time, famous last words.
He's had a league worst quarterback play for
half a decade, man, Darius Slayton.
Get him at the real quarterback, get the Chiefs the real
field stretcher and watch magic happen.
I also think the Chiefs, with that
32nd pick, it's in that closer to
gentleman's terms where it's, if it's not a slate and you want to go try and swing for the
fences on someone else, you can essentially offer a first round pick that to the chiefs looks
like a second round pick and maybe get out of there. Because I'm with you, I think it's going to
be multiple. It's got to be, it has to be multiple pieces, but it can't just be a bunch of
B minus Hammond Eggers like last season. This is, this is a great wide receiver class. There's
going to be, look, you know, the top six could be all quarterbacks and receivers, which is crazy.
but then the first round could be six or seven receivers.
So there might be a spicy guy available there too.
You know, I said that the Steelers offense to me feels like the girl in the closet
in all summer in a day.
I tip my cap to what the Chiefs were able to do.
All apologies to the union and their incredibly comprehensive survey.
But I can't watch another season of Patrick Wilhom's checking down for four quarters.
It's the worst thing that's ever happened in the history of it.
I want my bomber back.
I want the God of all gods airing it out to a talented group of wide receivers.
So, yeah, that's why I push back against Slayton because I agree.
I think everyone agrees that Slayton seems there's something there to unlock and maybe that's it.
If he's a piece of that pie, he's a piece.
But I need a big time draft pick.
I need a big time number one wide receiver to pair with Mo Holmes and let him fly again.
Because, you know, Kelsey is also going to keep on getting more and more lumbering.
as he's getting older, they can't wait another year.
And we shouldn't be burning Patrick Mahomes' 20s prime
with him as a game general.
We just can't do that.
We shouldn't.
It's a shame.
He like needed to prove something to himself or whatever.
You proved it, man.
Like, we get it.
You can win with literally anyone.
This is coming from like the fantasy guy
and then the guy who drafted Mahomes in fantasy.
That's true.
And it's just like everyone's so mad at that they won the Super Bowl
with him having like Alex Smith,
sub-Alex Smith stats.
This checks both boxes, though, as a fantasy guy, fan, sure, that draft him, but also just, I like watching Mahomes be Mahomes.
It's almost like when Jordan at the end of his run, when the NBA was in a much different place, when he was like winning game, you're watching that Jordan documentary and they're showing the highlights and they have the big music and they have the single cam on Jordan talking like, oh, and he disrespected me.
So I had to put him under the ground.
And then he makes the big shot at the end in slow motion.
And they put up the final score and it was like 72 to 65, Bulls win.
Like it doesn't take away from Jordan's greatness.
But, you know, I want, you know, I want Mahomes to be in 1989, 90 Jordan when he's putting up
35 a game and soaring through the air.
It's embarrassing for the league.
You watched the Super Bowl and your mom is like, I was told Patrick Mahomes through the ball deep.
I literally did get a text for my mom during the game that the game was kind of boring.
It was like mid third quarter.
I was like, yeah, you're not wrong, mom.
I mean, Deb Rosenthal is the conscience of the national football league,
and people have to understand that.
Greg, throw out another one.
Okay.
I'm going to stick with the Chiefs, but on the defensive side,
we mentioned Legerius Sneed.
I think he's getting traded.
You wouldn't put that out there unless you were expecting to.
Bit of a risk, but they did let Charverius Ward go for nothing, basically,
and that worked out fine for them.
So who needs a cornerback?
There's a lot of teams, but who's going to be willing to give up something?
The Detroit Lions, and I think the market for,
need in a trade. The terms might not be that high because you have to make him one of the highest
paid cornerbacks in the league, if not the highest, along with it. So that's going to temper the
market. But I'm going to say number 73 this season and a 2025 third gets it done. So that's just
next season's third. I think we need to get more into trading future picks like the NBA. Like
they'll spend three months of podcasts talking about,
ooh,
the Lakers,
2029 first round pick is now available.
Like,
they can trade that.
It's like the NFL team should get into that more.
I don't like that.
It's time for the Lions to push forward.
Football is completely different.
You know,
why?
Because those NBA trades,
they don't feel tangible at a certain point.
It's like a trade 10 years in advance.
I like that the NFL,
everything's a little more.
Everything's within the three-year window of reality.
Okay,
but at least,
okay,
just send a future pick.
So the Lions,
they give up 73.
They're already short of pick,
I believe.
And then,
yeah,
I'm going to either a second or a third next year.
I think it's a cunning move too because if you trade picks way down the road and things go awry, you get canned.
It's the next general manager that has to deal with that.
So that's savvy.
And the lines don't want to be the new bills, which is the lovable losers that become the big time team that then can't get over the hump.
So this is kind of a sneaky important year in terms of continuing the franchise progress.
That's why I'm with you.
They're going to aggressively look to get better this off season.
And when I was getting ready for this exercise, I would say,
all right, what are the playoff teams that lost?
Like, what do they need?
And the Lions jumped out to me and everyone knows Aidan Hutchinson is a big time player
for them, give him a little help.
So I'm going to go in the front seven.
And there's two options, both from the same team, the Chargers.
And there's two.
And what I like about it is that the Lions and really any team that is looking for help
in this realm, they can either go big ticket or they can get a,
slightly discount, uh, item. So, uh, you have obviously, uh, Joey Bosa. Um, I think he,
with his age, his track record, I know the injuries, but because of the position he plays, uh,
a premium proven pass rush. I think he's going to cost the first round pick. So the lions
give up their 29th pick for Joey Bosa and all of a sudden they have these dogs on the opposite
ends of each other. And if they don't want to go that hard, if they want to keep that first
round pick, Khalil Mack's there.
And I think Khalil Mack, I think
second round pick, 61st overall
seems fair for a guy, man, he's a little
older, but he's coming off like an 18-sack season.
Would you give up a late
second to get Max? So they have
two paths to go there depending on how
rich they want to be. I really like
this because the Chargers, I think
there, if there's a time to part with
Bosa, this came to my mind too,
that post-Brandon Staley,
different situation, new vibe,
and it, you know,
25 million in the red
right now. They've got a lot of changes they've got to
make. They have the most expensive defense
for a number of years under Staley and they were
disaster. So it's like you can move
Bosa and it is a player
that I think has missed so much time
that the lions are taking a risk
there but it's time for the Chargers to think about
a fresh new start I think.
So Bosa was at a
pistachio eating competition
in my hometown of
Santa Monica last week.
I learned this information. I
I don't know why, some sort of sponsorship.
Like how much money could it be possibly making off that, that it was worth going?
Right.
I don't think he was in the competition, but it was some, some sponsor event.
And he was eating, so they asked him about Jim Harbaugh, and he said he loves the sound of it.
It's like, I don't know if he's going to be on that team.
I'm with you, Dan.
I think he gets dealt.
I think that charges would throw a parade if they could get a first round pick for him.
They might cut them.
I'm with you.
They should explore a possible trade.
And I think they'd take what they can get, whether, whether it's a first, a second,
whatever it is. He just hasn't been able to stay on the field. When he's on the field,
he's freaking awesome. So he makes sense for a team like the lions that would like just take a big
swing. But he's a huge risk. And the pistachio thing's a bit of a red flag too. I do like
pistachios, by the way. Good. How much are you eating though? In a pistachio eating contest.
I'll find out more information. This came across my, my like Santa Monica account that I follow.
And I was like, what is happening here? Joey Boses at 3rd Street or something eating pistachios.
All right. Mark, do you have one more before we go to the hammer drop?
I do. And I'm going to use a rhodopat word, wishcasting.
This is probably more something I would like to see happen.
And it's very unlikely. But I do see two teams with quarterbacks that I think behind closed doors are like,
what are we doing with this guy? And like this guy is overpaid and not producing.
I see two quarterbacks like that.
So I think you flip the script here and just hear me out, like the Cleveland Browns take
to Sean Watson and they look back on this season and say, you know what, this is not
probably going to get a lot better.
And we can either be an organization, Andrew Barry is a forward thinking general manager
that like we can sit in our mistake if that's how we feel about it or we can move on.
And I think that the New York Giants feel the same way about Daniel Jones and his absurd
contract. And so the Browns and Giants flip quarterbacks. But I think in that world that
the Deshaun Watson returned to the NFL was about as toxic as it could be off the field,
obviously. But to him to go to another team after the Browns, I think it's more palatable probably
for the Giants to take that experience at this point. And I think if you're Brian Dayball,
you can look at Deshaun Watson and say there's a lot we can do there. And if you're the Cleveland
Browns, you're back in the world of reorganizing it quarterback. But Daniel Jones could get you
through a season or two.
Whoa.
Wait, can I just say that this is wild?
This is, I mean, this is impossible, although it's fun because any idea that gets the
Browns, a detached from that quarterback is great.
Nobody wants that guy.
Nobody wants the guaranteed money connected to him at this point.
And certainly a Tiffany franchise like the New York Giants with the Maras and the Roonies,
they would never, ever take on Watson.
So I think it stops because of the baggage.
Forget about any of the other stuff.
In my opinion, I don't think that the Giants even pick up the phone.
Right.
I get it that the Jones is a distressed asset, so he's like a negative asset, too.
But no one would give up, I don't think, you know, a conditional.
No one would take Deshawn Watson on their team.
I don't think right now, the other 31 team with that with that contract.
But do you think there's a speck of possibility that inside the Browns building,
they're like, it would be nice to move on from this player.
Of course.
They're done.
Yes, I think the Browns would do this in a second.
I'm with you, but I don't think any other team would do it.
Why don't you reach, this is a, there, and people forget about this,
because, and the Browns, they deserved it.
They got buried.
But there were a lot of the teams that wanted Watson, too.
And they were reported out there.
You can look it up.
Go check in on some of those teams.
And see if they want them.
I do have an important update before the hammer drop.
Joey Bosa finished seventh out of eight competitors in a pistachio,
wonderful pistachio, get crack and eat in competition.
The world champion, some guy named Webb, destroyed.
with 221.
Joey Chestnut was there,
tied for fifth.
Bosa finished
152 pistachios.
He did beat one other person
in the competition.
He came and said a lot of eight.
So it's got a red flag.
Yeah,
someone's an actual competitive eater
and they couldn't have beat
the athlete that was just
I think it's right.
You're,
you should be able to get off the bus
and eat too.
They build it as Joey
versus Joey,
Bosa versus Chestnut.
And there appears to be
about, you know,
17 people in,
you know,
hoodies watching this thing.
It does make me finish, finishing seventh out of eight makes me think that, yeah,
he doesn't have that dog in him.
And I'm dropping that too.
That's a third round pick now going from Detroit.
All right, it's time now to do what we must, which is clear the decks because Patrick
Dardy, Roto Pat, is about to share a hammer drop, a panty dropper.
And everything that could drop is dropping.
Here we go.
I think it ties together everything we've been talking about so far.
So listen, Deshawn Watson, he got three first round picks, right?
RG3 got three first round picks, sight unseen in 2012.
Washington traded three first round picks for the right to trade.
Yeah, but Rex Grossman and John Beck, Mike Shannon, was ready to stake his reputation upon them.
So three first round picks is kind of been the going rate for like the stunning quarterback trade and acquisition.
I think it needs to be up to four first round picks.
It's like someone's going to always break new ground in this territory.
It kind of ties into Greg, too.
Like, who cares about future first round?
Just keep trading them.
No one cares with the Brooklyn Nets, 2028 first round pick.
Just get them out there.
It's four first round picks for an elite quarterback.
The commanders, I mean, the owner, the new guy,
he tried to lay low for a year.
He's like, it's a new day in Washington.
And like January 1st rolled around.
I was like, okay, never mind.
Like, he's sitting in on meetings at the combine.
You know, he's like starting feuds with other assistant coaches
and the league, like, he spent his whole off-season, like, leaking anti-Bin Johnson dirt.
He's ready to, like, ascend to the throne of, like, the crazy new owner.
I think it was Dan, said the Los Angeles Chargers.
They need a fresh new start.
Jim Harbaugh, all he wants.
He doesn't care about passing the ball.
He's not going to pass.
He doesn't need to pass.
Alex Smith, Colin Kaepernick.
Gets the NFC championship game every year.
Trade Justin Herbert to the Washington Commanders,
for four first-round picks,
blow up and restart two organizations anew,
remake a bold new NFL.
It's a new era.
The going rate is now four first-round picks.
Everyone's happy,
and we get something to write about
for months and months and months.
I love it.
Including the number two overall pick, I'm assuming.
It's one of those.
Yeah, sure.
Who cares?
I mean, yeah.
It's a steep price.
That is a steep price.
I think the charges would have to think about it.
They would have to think about it.
Give them something to think about Josh Harris.
That's his name.
right, Josh.
Yeah, that's it.
Give him something to think about.
You know, they,
George Bluth,
an Arrested Development,
once taught us
that you never promised Crazy a baby.
I would say
when it comes to the NFL,
you know,
always pick up the phone
with crazy
when it comes to trades.
And I think Jim Harbaugh,
he's just crazy enough to do it.
I think Jim,
he's,
you're already hearing some
stories behind the scenes. Jim is a wild man. Jim's going to build this organization in his
likeness. Justin's not his guy. Maybe he doesn't love him like the media loves him. Maybe he thinks
he's got a bit of a ceiling on him. I don't think that's his career. It's a hammer drop,
but I don't think it's insane that Harbaugh might want to build this thing. And take J.J. McCarthy.
You know, my guy. My, you know, I could see Harbaugh doing something, a mega splash. And that would be a
mega splash spicy and yeah i mean justin herbert yeah uh the stat guy we all love him we love the empty
stats except for they didn't even come with any touchdowns in 2023 so uh didn't love him that much
last year but he can take his empty volume somewhere else uh jim harbaugh gets his you know
character building rushing attack and yeah everyone be careful with that with that uh justin herbert
slander the wrong media member could hear you and i know cut you ear to ear i draft him literally
every year. I love them.
Take your empty stats elsewhere.
I love the empty stats.
He's not going to have him anymore in L.A.
He'll have him for days in Washington for days and days.
So that's why we need this to happen actually as a fantasy community.
Greg, your thoughts on that before we say goodbye to Patrick.
I don't like it.
I think Jim Harbaugh, I believe in love.
I believe Jim Harbaugh loves this man, Justin Herbert.
I do think if they offered the number two overall pick and multiple more first
run picks. I think they would take it, the charter. As crazy as that, as that seems,
Jim Harbaugh would believe that he could just turn that pick into gold and,
and rebuild the whole ship and it's cheaper. And it's not, it's not that crazy.
You know, the other thing is, it's not going to, it's not a fan base here in L.A.
where you're going to get a ton of negative reaction to it. There might be no reaction.
It's like, it's like, they're struggling to have any imprint in the city. And like,
if you, if you traded like Justin Herbert away from like the Dallas Cowboys, um, people are
going to go freaking nuts. I think charges, it's like off the radar. It could be done without too much
too much cantankerous nature to it. Patrick, you've said it all. You never promise crazy a baby,
but I would I would promise you a baby. I don't need any more babies. Let's be real.
How many you got? We have four folks. Wow. That's enough. But you're in St. Louis. It's a little
bit of a different vibe there. It costs the livings lower too. It's a strong Irish Catholic German
town, long lineage.
We actually have a small family by German Missouri standards.
Like, oh, wow, four.
When are you getting started for real?
Pat probably lives in a home that is bigger than our homes combined when you get that
Missouri bump rolling.
There's a Missouri bump.
I can confirm.
There's a Missouri bump.
Should we take our podcast and relocate to Missouri?
I feel like that would be an energy chef.
We'll give you a tax break.
We'll give you a tax break.
I'm sure.
And Lincoln are there.
You know, it really.
adds up.
What about your wife,
what would she do to you?
I mean, your wife, Greg,
has been vengeful about
certain elements of the move from New York to L.A.
If you took her to middle America,
then what happens?
Yeah, I think she just goes to Tokyo.
You're equidistant to both coasts
here in St. Louis, guys.
Actually, a little closer to East Coast.
Oh, man, honey,
ATN is moving to Missouri.
Honey, I'm moving to Japan.
he had a good run.
All right, good stuff. Pat, thank you so much.
And you can check out Roda Pat's work over at Rota World or NBC Sports.
And I know you have a comprehensive banger you put out a couple weeks ago going over each team season.
And I'm sure there's more to come in the near future.
So thank you, buddy.
There is.
Thank you very much.
I've committed, I believe, the ultimate industry football where I'm late for my own podcasts.
Right.
People should check out the Roto World football show because we've made him late.
for it today. So please check
them out. You could, you could bang us for that. Go ahead.
That's how much I love the show. I would not miss the show
even for my own show. So thank you.
Very much for having it. Or you could trash us in the
open of that one and then we could do a little Fugasey
podcast war and then everybody wins.
That's true. That's true. It's true. Go dark.
All right, Matt. Thanks, my pleasure.
Thank you. There he goes. Roto, Pat.
Yes. One of our
favorites.
I, man, that Herbert
thing really does get me thinking. I know it's absurd.
Blah, blah, blah.
But Harbaugh really is, I mean, people that don't know.
People don't realize that that's a different cat.
And the Chargers are not a team that's overly comfortable with paying massive bucks for anybody.
So if they had an opportunity where the coach got what he wanted,
which is complete control of building the roster and his own vision.
And all of a sudden there was plenty of money freed up.
Well, it could.
That would be fun.
I think Harvard is that.
I also, it's like, it's the closest, kind of closest thing you get to the shocking nature of the
Hershal Walker trade. But the smarter team completely rebuild from scratch there in one multiple
Super Bowl. It would be fun, but I think the way Jim Harbaugh talks about Justin Herbert, he's like
ready to build a statue of Justin Herbert. I think he's everything that, Justin Herbert's everything
Jim Harba has ever wanted out of a quarterback. He's been like searching for this quarterback
forever and just he is so confident that he's like we need nothing more than a stud
like this and me and we're going to freaking roll I kind of I think ultimately I'm with you on that
I think the hardest thing to do is to locate a high end quarterback and he's got one that's like
25 years old so maybe you don't want to overthink things ultimately I think we'll get some fun
trades though some that we haven't even thought of because you know if they were that big of a
surprise we wouldn't be able to think of them but it feels like there's
a lot of cap space out there.
And so we actually will get some fun trades, I think,
of the next two weeks.
All right.
So there you go.
That's it for another show.
We will be back on Monday.
I think we're going to go back to three a week starting next week.
So as free agency gets closer,
we're going to really be digging in.
And also, like we said, the combine will be wrapping up by the time you hear from us again.
So we'll be welcoming on some draft guests and looking at how teams will improve on that end.
So, yes, it is the beginning of a new journey, 2004.
And we're here.
Mark, do you have anything you want to add before we say goodbye?
I think I just felt an earthquake in my apartment.
Really?
Yeah.
I don't know.
Or like an aircraft flew into the side of the apartment.
But like it was a major jolt right there.
So I'm going to be checking that out.
Post haste.
Yeah.
That's it.
All right.
Until Monday.
Thanks for listening.
You know what you got to do.
He'd the car.
This is an I-Heart podcast.
