Pablo Torre Finds Out - Revealed: What Jordan Poole Told Draymond Green Before the Punch Seen Around the World
Episode Date: September 29, 2023One year ago, Draymond Green detonated the Golden State Warriors dynasty with a single punch at practice that left a million takes in its wake. Now, Oscar-winning filmmaker Ezra Edelman has an explosi...ve "tip" — the insult you can't hear in TMZ's viral video — to test the bounds of Pablo's journalistic ethics... and set off the sports-media screaming machine all over again. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out.
I am Pablo Torre, and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
So that means Draymond, in this case, is Yoda.
Do or do not, there is no try.
Mm, mm.
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Draf King's Network.
Why do you have this show? What's the point?
Because I want to find stuff out.
You want to find stuff out?
Yes.
By any means necessary.
Well, okay.
We should talk about why I've dragged you here.
Because the any means necessary thing is a subject that I think we should hash out.
So there are a couple things you should know about my good friend, Ezra Edelman,
the man that I consider my journalistic conscience in a very real way.
He is one of the most talented documentaries alive today.
This is not an exaggeration.
You might remember him from the five-part eight-hour movie he made about O.J. Simpson.
And the Oscar goes to O.J.
J made in America.
Also, Ezra very rarely does media,
unless he is absolutely forced to.
He's kind of a little J.D. Salinger in that way.
And so when I begged him to come on my show
to talk about a certain text message he received,
a text message that could truly shatter the NBA internet,
he felt a very real and very unsurprising,
ethical dilemma.
So explain just for the record here why you are uncomfortable with me wanting to do an episode about this text.
Because it was a text that I received from someone I knew.
And next thing I know, I'm sitting here across from you in a public forum talking about it.
I am betraying the trust of said person who sent it to me.
It was a theory about an incident that we all have seen.
and no one knows the truth of.
And the idea of validating this rumor and using it as a way of actually getting more listeners for your podcast versus actually, you know, getting to the truth.
If in fact that's possible, that is my issue.
I feel like this calls into question in this day and age with podcasts and social media, how one actually.
and who actually does the real work.
And as someone who takes that seriously,
I question whether I'm contributing
to this sort of insane sports industrial complex circus
by talking about it.
You've agreed to sit down,
and I just want to just be honest.
Yeah. Be honest.
Okay.
I feel uneasy.
I feel trepidious.
Big word.
I mean, again, when I think to about, you know, my own small history,
like I worked for, you know, many years working for real sports with Brian Gumble.
Yeah.
But to me is the certainly the...
It's a gold standard.
The gold standard, the apex of certainly television sports journalism.
It ran for 29 years.
It just last week was announced.
that or two weeks ago that this would be its last season, which really saddens me
because I think that is further proof of the sort of eroding of a certain sort of journalistic
standard that exists certainly in sports media and in nor media overall.
And if I can be someone who talks about something in a way that like promotes the idea
of figuring out a way to do things the right way.
Look around, Ezra.
And I don't know about sitting in a fancy podcast.
Are you not impressed?
I'm incredibly impressed.
I'm impressed that you actually agreed to do this.
Honestly, we've like had a running bed about whether you'd show up.
You can't do that shit.
You can't sort of say like, oh, my God, please do this.
Please do this.
Please do this.
Please do this.
And be like, oh, my God, I can't believe you did this.
That's not, that's like, great.
I've been hoodwinked.
No, you've just been, you've been guilted.
you've been guilted.
I should be stronger than this.
I love that you are weaker than this.
I should have been stronger.
That's all I have to say.
The backstory on why you're here,
Ezra Edelman, Academy Award-winning
documentarian for my money,
the greatest documentarian in America,
former producer, Real Sports,
guy who has done real journalism,
is because we went to dinner recently.
I had dragged you there
because I was telling you all about this Brian Davis episode
that I was working on, reporting.
That was episode three.
Go listen to that if you have not listened to that.
I was explaining to you at dinner
how I was reporting this complicated investigation.
And it centered around a text that I received.
What the point is, while we were doing that whole unpacking
of my journalism, you yourself got a text.
You showed me the text,
and I have been obsessed with that text ever since I saw it.
Why have you been genuinely obsessed with this text ever since?
Because it was a portal into a story that has not yet been reported,
but is at the forefront of the NBA discourse.
So that was a very long answer.
It was a text about a rumor.
Well, I should say, you, Ezra, are a Warriors fan.
I love the Warriors.
Unironically, you are a super fan of this team and how they play.
I'm obsessed. I'm wearing my Warrior socks right now.
You got this text from a well-placed source who knows things.
They knew you'd be interested in this rumor.
The text began, quote,
the Jordan pool quote to Draymond before the punch was.
Dot, dot, dot.
Okay, so just to spell out this initial part of the text that Ezra received,
in June of 2022, let's remember this.
The Golden State Warriors won their fourth championship in eight years,
cementing themselves as one of the greatest dynasties in all of sports history.
They had Steph Curry and Clay Thompson, two of the best shooters of all time.
They had Draymond Green, their most vocal player, their defensive anchor.
But now they also had a would-be young phenom.
The team's offensively gifted and super cocky little brother,
23-year-old Jordan Hul.
But a few months after the championship parade,
this is now October 5th, 2020, the start of training camp,
for their title defense season.
The athletic reported, quite vaguely,
that a physical altercation, that was the phrase.
A physical altercation had just
taken place at Warriors practice.
And the very next day, TMZ
released video of the altercation in question.
And it was fucking wild.
Because we all saw Jordan Poole mouthing something
to Dremont Green, who then walked over to Poole.
And then what you see is basically the Subruder film
of the modern NBA.
Correct. You see Dremon Green
get chest to chest with Jordan Poole
and then Dremond almost
steps back as if to charge up
a punch in a video game
and it's a full body effort
it's remarkable
like he flies forward with the right hand
it's a straight right yeah a straight right
and and
Jordan Poole in this video
collapses to the floor
yeah and the warrior's season
collapsed along with it
the video of the punch
went viral instantaneously.
Obviously.
It blew up the internet, blew up the entire sports news cycle.
But because the video that TMZ acquired and released was security footage and did not contain any sound,
what Poole actually said to Dremond, the specific thing that triggered this multi-story collapse,
that was completely unknown to the public.
And it stayed that way.
unreported.
But that didn't stop any of us.
Myself included here,
from having takes.
Nobody knows truly
outside of the two of them,
like why this happened.
This is, I would like to hurt this fucking guy punch.
Yeah.
This is as clean as you can land on a guy, too.
Normally, you don't land this clean.
There was nothing that Poo said
warranted what Dremont did.
Like, how about we blame the guy
that fucking punch his teammate? Can we start there?
He has some personal stuff going on
that had nothing.
nothing to do with basketball or the team, and he brought it on a basketball court.
He was wrong.
So, Dremond is a full participant in this industrial complex, right?
And I want to point out that Dremont himself is also a podcaster.
Dremont has a show that's very entertaining, where he, like so many athletes, orchestrates
his own self-image.
Dramon Green did something that he never does.
He spiked the episode he recorded about.
the punch. He recorded it. He spiked it. He deleted it. And they never published it. And in fact,
they never re-recorded a podcast about it again. And when we recorded the episode, I hated the way I
sounded. And so we simply just didn't release it. I didn't like my tone. I didn't like the things I said.
I didn't like the way it came out. I didn't like it almost
If you're not careful, it almost comes off as unremorseful and distasteful, 100% distasteful.
The version of Dremont that was comfortable going on camera to talk about it directly came in this form.
I was wrong for my actions that took place on Wednesday.
And for that, you know, I have apologized to my team.
I have apologized to Jordan.
quite frankly, if my mother saw that video,
I know how my mother would feel.
I know what her next react.
I know what her reaction would be
and I know what her next step would be.
And so for that, I apologize to his mother and his father
and, you know, his family, his friends that care for him.
So notably, Draymond Green retreats from the world of podcasting
when things get real serious.
Meanwhile, all of the warriors, you may recall,
they take Jordan Poole's side.
which then led Draymond to go back on camera, on TNT, about 12 days later now,
to do like the, I might call it, a little Vaseline on the lens,
portrait mode introspection, talking straight to camera.
And then you kind of move to the why, you know, part of the process of why did this happen
and walking yourself through why, the different things that can get you to why,
what took place actually took place.
He's daring us.
He's daring us to ask what the why was.
It's not great.
It's not great because he apologized as he should have.
He, by the way, should have gone to a press conference.
I don't think he took questions.
But that is the correct forum versus going on his podcast.
Though, you know, obviously it would be interesting to hear what he said on his podcast.
I want to hear that deleted podcast.
But yeah, going and continuing to talk about it while not talking about it,
is not an answer. That's just ego-driven and it's unfortunate.
And so what I wanted to know was if anything else could even compare to this specific story,
because the most common reference point for this story is the original punch.
This was Kermit Washington of the L.A. Lakers, cold-cocking Rudy Tomjanovich of the Houston Rockets
in a game on camera in 1977.
But we all knew why that happened.
There was a brawl.
With Dremont's punch, the new punch, there was something else here.
And this got us thinking about fighting words, basically, like what other stories involved a genuine mystery about an unknown but violently triggering quote, some verbal act that pushed an athlete over the edge.
The couple of the things that immediately come to mind are, one, you know, I remember famously I'm a huge football fan, soccer fan, sorry.
That's how you know you're a real soccer fan, as you called it football.
Yeah, I had to, you know, come correct there.
The 2006 World Cup final between France and Italy.
Very tense game.
And the best player on France, Zenity and Sedan, you know, next thing you know, you see something sort of off-screen on the right.
And you see Zadon basically bow his head in hell.
headbut Marco Matarasi in the chest.
And he goes down and the next thing you know, Zadhan,
the best player historically,
the best player in the history of France,
one of the top five players in the history of the game,
just headbutted someone in the World Cup final.
And you're like, what the fuck just was said to him
to have this guy lose his shit?
What possibly could he have said to this guy to make him snap?
Right, to take his beautiful.
bald head and level it at his solar plexus, changing everything. And I remember watching this.
I remember watching that game live, to your point. And I remember also the aftermath, because in the
immediate aftermath, again, there were rumors that, okay, Marco Matarazzi said something about Zedan's
mother, right? The quote that had been circulating then was that Matarazzi called Zedan's mother,
quote, the son of a terrorist whore, end quote. Right? And Matarazzi,
He denied this.
He denied this to the point of actually suing
British newspapers for libel, and he won.
Honestly, what I heard was that he said something about,
you know, they played together at Juventus
and that he said something about Zadon's younger sister.
But then in April, we finally found out,
or at least according to him,
he did an interview where he actually validated that idea.
You live in America, right?
Yeah.
You know the NBA.
Yeah.
Trash talking.
Yeah, of course.
My trash talking was...
Nothing.
Very minimal.
Nothing.
Nothing.
Comporate to the trash talking.
They love that in the U.S. though.
Yes.
So what happened?
He didn't touch his mother.
I didn't touch nothing.
Okay.
He offered me his jersey.
Yeah.
I say, no, I prefer your sister.
The other incident that comes to mind is Roberto Alamar,
former Blue Jay.
former Oriole.
One of the greatest second baseman of all time.
Yes.
Comes from a storied baseball family,
Sandy Alamar,
Sanny Alamar Jr.
Remember the 3000 hip club?
Remember the Hall of Fame?
And so uncharacteristically,
there is this incident where
the next thing you know,
he's getting into a shouting match
with John Hirschbeck,
the umpire,
the umpire at home plate.
And then you see Alamar spitting at him.
spitting at the umpire.
By the way,
we've seen plenty of players
and managers go toe to toe.
All the time.
All the time.
Kick dirt on umpires.
Throw bases.
We've never seen a lugy
lobbed, arched,
propelled at an umpire's face,
especially from someone who at this point,
we have never seen anything
but the most genial behavior from.
So immediately you go,
what the fuck happened?
Right.
What could the umpire,
by the way, the impartial observer, ruler of this game,
what could he have said to Roberto Alamar
that would have incited such a reaction?
Because the reaction itself,
this is the unifying threat here in all these incidents,
the reaction is itself self-destructive.
To do the thing that crosses the line
is to visit upon yourself consequence
that surely no rational person
in retrospect would want to opt into.
Which speaks to our curiosity of why,
was said. It must have been something really, really bad.
We should say that we never officially learned what John Herschbeck said to Roberto Alamar back in 96.
Almar would claim that it was something derogatory, but it was something negative, something
touchy. That's as much as we know for sure. But all of these episodes, these episodes that are
really, really bad, they changed all of the people involved forever, which,
made me again think of Jordan Poole and Dremon Green.
And Cameron.
Yeah.
You know, Cameron, the rapper, Kill a Cam.
Cameron also had heard rumors, it turns out, about what Jordan Poole had said.
And Cameron actually said them.
He was saying his reasons Draymall punched him in his face.
They said the first day he told Draymour,
Green, you know, Michigan and Michigan State have beef.
Draymond Green is from Michigan State.
He's from Michigan.
That's already a lifetime robbery right there.
He told Draymore and I fuck more bitches in Michigan State than you than you went there.
And then they was running sprints or something.
He told Raymar, don't worry about it.
You'll be in Sacramento next year.
Then he told Raymar.
That's crazy.
Then he said Raymar, why is your Twitter handle Money Green when you broke and you're not going to get a new contract?
and that's the one that broke the camel's back
when you end up punching them in the face.
Cameron hosts this podcast
with Mace, by the way,
because of course they do. They're also
alleged journalists.
More money, more problems.
So all of that,
that voice in specific,
led Dremont to have to
deny Cameron
and Mace's reporting to
Patrick Beverly on Patrick
Beverly's podcast.
You know, like I said, Cam's stuff
wasn't accurate, but, you know, we know stuff that you don't say amongst men.
You know what I'm saying?
You know, we know, we know, things that you have to stand on.
Pam, stuff wasn't accurate, but we know stuff that you don't say amongst men.
We know things that you have to stand on.
What does that mean?
Exactly right.
This is what I want to find out today.
And so you should know that in our attempt to find this specific,
out, we made calls, right? The question has been, how do you take the unsayable gossip and bring it
on to the record to make it sayable, to make it news, to make it journalism? We made, here at Pablitore
finds out, more than two dozen calls. We reached out to more than two dozen people in and around
this story to attempt to investigate the text message that you got at our dinner. And I'm going to
unilaterally force you to reveal that text.
after the break. The question that has been raised repeatedly now of what is the line?
What is the line beyond which you get f***ing decked by your own teammate and a championship season
is ostensibly ruined? That's a story. And so here at Pablo Tori finds out, Ezra,
we are trying to do what you think is impossible. That's a story or that's rumor mongering.
Well, this is the thing. How do we take the rumor?
which is to you unsayable gossip
and bring it on to the record
to make it sayable and reportable
and news.
And so we tried.
We really did try here.
We requested interviews with Jordan Poole
and Dremont Green.
How'd that go?
They declined through the representatives.
A spokesperson from the Washington Wizards
also told us, quote,
Jordan has moved on from that topic,
end quote, they also told us that Jordan Poole,
quote, would rather not dwell on it
in long form interviews, end quote, which I think at least you can personally relate to.
But this is how much, Ezra, I fear your journalistic withering gaze.
Because on top of Jordan Poole, on top of Draymond Green, on top of those reps,
we also reached out to more than two dozen other people close to the situation, as they say.
We reached out to the following.
Andre Iguodala, Kavana, Kavanaughan Luni, Jonathan Kaminga, James Wiseman, Jamichael Green,
Anthony Lamb, Dante freaking DeVenchenzo.
Okay?
We were recreating the whole Warriors roster here.
Then Warriors GM Bob Myers.
Okay?
We talked to him.
Another person close to Jordan Poole.
Two other people close to Draymond.
Two other people close to Steph Curry.
Two assistant coaches.
A player development coach.
A player personnel official.
A team development official.
A team attendant, a physical therapist, a security guard,
and equipment manager and intern,
TMZ founder Harvey Levin,
and Zaza fucking Pechulia,
a former player who now worked with the Warriors,
Zaza Pechulia,
who reached out to him.
This is a We Didn't Start the Fire level list of people
who would not go on the record with us
because this story is,
I guess, too dangerous to talk about on the record
for these people, because it's too explosive,
I don't know.
No, but really?
What does that say? You reached out to 25 people, they all said no. What do you believe is the reason
why no one would talk to you? Do you believe there's a clear organizational mandate, which would
make sense that says you never talk about it? Like, do you think even people weren't talking to you
off the record? So, like, what does this mean? I think it means that on the one hand, yes,
the warriors and the wizards both organizationally wanted this story to go away. They have no
incentive to dredge this up for our for our yucks but secondly i think it speaks to the gravity of what
actually happened and so here we are right the moment the moment of truth because
Ezra edelman academy award winning documentary filmmaker you stop saying that please
what did the source in your phone tell you that jordan pool told draymond green that
got him punched in the face.
I don't know that I even feel comfortable saying that.
You saw the phone.
You saw the text.
So why don't you tell me?
Fine.
Okay.
Here it is.
You're an expensive backpack for 30 is what was said.
Say that again?
You're an expensive backpack for 30 is what Jordan Poole told Raymond Green that got him punched in the fucking face.
So when you saw that text, what went through your mind?
I was electrified.
Why?
Because it felt like looking at the arc of the covenant.
Oh, please.
I'm not kidding.
I'm an NBA fan.
I'm somebody who makes a living based off of like following things down rabbit holes.
And when I saw that, I realized two things.
Number one, I cannot believe this has not been reported yet.
And number two, holy shit, now I know.
It's a mystery.
It's an active mystery that has never been articulated despite everybody gossiping about it,
despite it changing Ezra.
literally the fortunes of a multi-billion dollar business.
This text, that line, those words,
your inexpensive backpack for 30 is what we now believe
is explosive enough to be the thing that's set off Draymond Green.
How long after reading that text,
it matters of seconds, minutes, hours,
did it occur to you that,
I think I'm going to do a podcast about this?
0.0001 seconds.
But it was because I needed to track it down and I needed to translate this.
We still need to translate this, right?
Like, you're an expensive backpack for 30.
Let's diagram the sentence.
30 is who in this case?
Steph Curry.
Yes, that's right.
Number 30, number one in your heart, Steph Curry, is the 30 in question.
You're an expensive backpack for 30.
Expensive.
Like, this is not like, oh, this is like Louis Vuitton.
This is Draymond Green making 25.
$28 million a year expensive.
And contextually, knowing that there's a lot of money issues surrounding the Warriors
and that Draymond Green was going to be up for a contract extension after last season.
Yes.
And Jordan Poole was also going to be up for a contract extension.
Yes.
The idea of money was swirling in the air.
It was the thing that Draymond Green, I am told, was actively worried about,
insecure, about, anxious about.
But Draymond had told people, I am told, that he believed last season would be his final season in Golden State.
This was going to be his last dance.
And here was Jordan Poole, the guy about to take his money in the zero-sum game of Joe Lacob, owner of the Warriors' pockets.
The thing that he had earned as the best defensive player and anchor a future Hall of Famer on this team.
So, expensive.
Backpack.
Well, I guess that means that
It's a good line.
Steph's been carrying him.
It's a good line.
It is a good line.
Like I'm now imagining
just Draymond is an actual backpack here.
Like being carried by Steph Curry,
like almost like, you know,
like he's on his back, like Yoda actually,
or like a baby in a baby Bjorn.
How's your art department?
Can you come up with that image?
Oh yeah, we're on this now.
Okay.
I like them almost like in a video game sequence together
where Draymond,
hops onto Steph's back, and they together, like, combine to punch Jordan Pool.
So that means Draymond, in this case, is Yoda.
Well, I mean, look, like Yoda, Draymond clearly believes,
do or do not, there is no try.
I do, by the way, I do think the analogy of Steph Curry being Luke Skywalker is not a terrible one.
I agree.
He definitely does, is a practitioner of the law.
the force. He definitely is a force for good in our league and in our world. And I believe that in the
end, he is going to conquer and extinguish the dark side. You're such a Warriors fan. You're like an
actual, you're an actual Warriors fan who I want to also remind that the reason now,
journalistically, why we do transparently feel comfortable saying any of this stuff is because
we got another source to verify, at least that this is a thing, that that's a thing, that
the Warriors are all talking about internally. One warrior's official, close to this situation,
and this is real, the person who did call us back, incidentally, that official independently confirmed
to us here at Pablo Tori finds out, that this phrase, your inexpensive backpack for 30 has in fact
been floating around the organization as the tipping point, the thing that set off Dremont.
But he does not, in fact, know that that is the thing that was said.
This is also true.
Do you believe that this confirmation, corroboration, information that you learned
justifies us sitting here and having this conversation right now?
I do.
I do because I think newsworthiness is, look, it's like pornography.
Really?
What?
You don't like the Supreme Court?
You don't like the quote.
You know what I'm going at, right?
I'm aware of the quote.
You know it when you see it.
I know it when I see it.
And this story, to me, clearly is newsworthy.
The idea that there is a line, well-crafted as it is, that the employers of these two men have all heard and identify as plausibly the trigger that set off the demolition of a dynasty you might worry and argue.
Yeah, that's, that's, I would want to know that.
I think that is in the public interest.
So Helen O'Troy was the face that launched a thousand chips.
Is that right?
I believe.
Something like that.
What do you actually believe is the real fallout of this punch?
What do you believe, as we sit here, a year after this happened, do you actually believe was caused by this one incident?
I believe that this punch is a crossroads.
I think this crossroads landed upon the body of Jordan Poole.
and this was where a lot of decisions were actually made.
That affected a multi-billion dollar organization, nine-figure decisions,
it affected the championship defense that never was of your favorite team.
I mean, you tell me, you're the Warriors fan, you're the guy wearing the socks.
You're telling me that this punch wasn't the most important thing that happened to this team in the last year?
It was the most important thing that happened to.
the team in the last year. But I'm just not sure that trying to figure out what was said
that incited this incident matters at all at this point. Because like the Warriors and the
Wizards and Jordan Poole and Draymond Green, I would like to move on to this season, even though
I'm fucking sitting here and talking about this with you. And the only reason I'm doing it is because
I'm aware, one, you guys did your homework and you actually got somewhere with this. And you
corroborated the text message, and that's why I'm comfortable sitting here and talking about it now.
Yes.
And secondly, I do believe that when Media Day happens next week with the Golden State Warriors and the Washington Wizards, that I believe the topic will come up again.
Yes.
So in that, I don't think the thing is dead.
So I feel comfortable as the person that is, I'm not necessarily bringing this back to life or you're not bringing it back to life.
So I'm like, whatever, it's fine.
And by the way, no one listens to your show.
Not with that attitude.
But no, I get it.
Like, we're doing a bit of a pre-mortem.
A pre-mortem.
Yeah.
Do you know any other premortems?
Like, I've never heard this term.
It is a little, it's a little like hanging the Mission Accomplished banner on the aircraft carrier, admittedly.
Okay.
And we know how that turned out for America.
Oh, it worked out great.
It worked out great.
We did it.
The human question here is actually, like, a viable and fascinating one.
because it's the question of like, why did Draymond Green react like this?
This was his why.
This is the why he never wanted to disclose that he deleted a podcast over,
that he never published and has never podcasted about on the record.
This is the one thing that caused him to snap in this way.
And by the way, like what I am told, again, a little bit more reporting,
is that Draymond not only believed that last season was going to be his last season with the Warriors,
the team that drafted him, the thing that he clearly invested,
his own ego into and vice versa.
I was told that money's his biggest insecurity.
Like, you're an expensive backpack for 30 speaks to an anxiety that he has about not just
his financial status, but also his ambitions to be taken seriously as a justified businessman
who stands on his own two feet, who goes, I mean, the one time I met Dremont was at CES,
was in Las Vegas.
CES is the consumer electronics.
show. It's the biggest tech conference convention in America.
And he was there because, it turned out, he was hanging out with Maverick Carter and LeBron's
business people. I was doing a story actually about LeBron and his business empire for ESPN.
And Raymond was hanging around trying to glean the financial wisdoms that he could.
So money, being as explosive as sex or any other insult, like, I think that is, that's kind of
revealing about what it is that makes somebody tick.
Do you believe that if the media landscape,
sports media landscape had been different in the mid-90s
when Jordan punched Dave Kerr?
Yeah.
If it were a story at the time, if there had been video,
if they as a team and Phil Jackson and Michael Jordan
were forced to speak about this and answer questions about this,
do you actually believe that would have affected the success of that team?
Yes, I do.
I think, look, one through line through all of these stories, right, these dynasties, how do they go well or how do they go bad?
There's a presumption that they did it because of psychological fortitude.
You know, you're strong or you're weak.
And Michael Jordan is the strongest, and he's the most resilient, and he does not get bothered by any of this shit.
And Steve Kerr clearly was strong because he did not get derailed.
by this. He made the shot. But they did not get tested in this way. Why would I assume that they
wouldn't be affected by it? They did not live under the rigors of the test that now you and I are
part of. Is it harder to be a professional athlete now than ever? So this is, it's interesting,
right? Like, this was an argument made on behalf of LeBron by Rich Paul recently, on the record.
He said that Michael Jordan is not the goat because he never had to deal with what LeBron dealt with.
And I think on the level purely of pressures of the test, right?
Like, I know Michael Jordan was followed around by everybody globally, and that was real.
Michael Jacksonian in that way.
But the internet did not exist.
I buy that.
I was going to say, what do you think about all of this?
I blame TMZ.
Like, I actually believe that as awful as that incident was and as awful as the punch was,
I think the video of it is the thing that made...
I mean, this is a weird thing to say.
Like, I don't even know what as I'm saying.
No, but I...
The video of it, the publication of the video of it,
made the thing which already had happened so much worse.
Yes.
The idea of seeing someone exact that kind of violence
on another human being,
it does sort of irreparable sort of damage to,
in the minds of people who are watching that person do that.
It is a proof that like whatever we heard
that there was a scuffle in practice or a fight in practice and Draymond Hitt Jordan Poole,
nothing that could be written or spoken about could do justice to seeing that.
Yes, I believe that I have an increased empathy maybe when you think about,
as we're talking about Draymond and what would have incited him to do such a thing,
because yes, he's a human, he's going through these things, he feels vulnerable and insecure.
again, not justifying anything that he did, like far from it.
But it's interesting on the other hand about Jordan Poole.
You know, I'm talking about the idea of, well, what happens then ultimately when you get a contract?
Yes.
And how that affects a human being who's 23 years all the time and all of a sudden is a, you know, multi, multi, you know, $100 million.
Nine figures.
A nine figure player.
You've made it.
That has to fuck with your psychology.
But getting punched in the, you know.
face like that.
Like even by someone who like,
even if that person hated you and like it was just,
the whole thing was completely unjustified.
There's no way someone doesn't internalize
that action of how you got to that point and that someone
actually did that to you and your,
and so that is like beyond.
100%.
A psychologist.
It's like, I feel how it's like.
It's, it's, it's humiliating.
it's not just damaging, it's not just painful, it's emasculating, right?
Like, this is what Draymond was referring to when he ended up, like, apologizing in the press conference to Jordan Poole's parents.
Because he was sort of bowing at the altar of like, even if Drayman believes that Jordan Poole had this coming, which I believe that Drayman believes, by the way.
I also know that Drayman understands why this is uniquely,
shameful for both of them.
Do you believe that Draymond actually has been changed as a human being as a result of this?
So I don't know him personally.
I don't.
But I believe that what makes him great is what made him punch Jordan Poole in the face.
It's the hair trigger of at any moment, I am going to summon someone.
something inside of me that feels unreasonable, unreasonably amazing.
You know, I'm going to block this shot.
I'm going to make this pass.
I'm going to read a defense.
Set up the orchestra for Steph Curry.
And unreasonably awful.
I'm going to get thrown out of a game in the NBA finals.
I'm going to punch my teammate in the face.
I'm going to be, despite all of it, despite my resume,
may unimpeachable as the best defensive player on this team,
I'm going to be a thing that my employer wonders,
am I worth it?
Because I cannot be trusted.
And that lack of trust is also why he's special.
I believe it is the same coin.
The Warriors gave him $100 million before your contract,
$25 million a year.
I personally believe and have to believe
that they traded.
Jordan Poole for his arch nemesis,
Chris Paul, who's basically
called his arch nemesis. I have
to believe, and I genuinely think
that Dremont is a brilliant basketball player.
I don't listen to his podcast,
because I don't listen to podcasts.
Pretty good. But he's a smart dude.
I enjoy when I see him on TNT.
I absolutely believe that he's
evolved. I think, carmically, if you see that,
like, wait, now it's like,
oh, I got Chris Paul for
for Jordan Poole. Like, it's not like the
universe is telling him something.
he's going to have to like he's going to have to take it into him look inside himself and go okay if we're going to move forward
i created this mess it's time for me to clean it up and if you're saying what you're saying about
the fact that he genuinely believed that that was going to be his last year with the warriors i believe
he has a deep sense of his own of history in general of what they've accomplished as a group
I believe that it's the first time
that they've lost in the previous decade or so
with, you know, the whole team healthy,
with Clay and Steph and Draymond Healthy.
I believe that they
have that thing,
the mental fortitude,
the will, I mean, they're old as f***.
They're short as hell.
Yeah.
They have a arguably outsized belief in themselves.
They just signed Rodney Magruder.
Well, thankfully they did not sign
.
Oh, I shouldn't, don't say that
because I don't want him coming after me.
we'll believe it we'll believe with that name uh yeah i think that um i do believe that this might be ultimately
a thing that if a rose can come out of the concrete of this punch okay that's bad i believe if there's
going to be let me let me work up the metaphor for you what you're saying is that draymond green
it wasn't enough to be figuratively punched in the balls by the backlash publicly
Now he needs to plausibly be literally punched in the balls by Chris Paul.
No, no.
I think what I'm saying is he's got a fucking win a championship so all this shit goes away.
That's what I think.
And I think if he does, by the way, Zenazin Zadon, who was the aggressor,
is the greatest player in the history of French football.
Yeah.
Roberto Alamar is in the Hall of Fame.
Yep.
people are going to move past this incident despite what all these people are saying.
And Draymond Green, if he wins a fifth title, yeah, I think it goes away.
And a fifth title with another prominent player, a new cast.
Yeah.
Pre-Cevon-Dorant, during Kevin Durant, post-Cevon-Durant, with Chris Paul.
Yeah, that's going to be his legacy.
Your socks are glowing.
By the way, but we have not.
you did not, despite my agreeing to sit here and talk about this,
rise to the standard of journalistic practices to report this.
You have no source on the record.
Oh, you're telling me, wait, hold on.
You're telling me that Watergate was not journalistic, Ezra?
Oh, so, sorry, who's our deep throat?
Well, how dare you ask me to reveal my sources?
Well, by the way, if I can go back into the time machine to, like, think about a
story that took place before both of us were born.
Please.
Deep throat, I mean, maybe I've also seen all the president's been a bunch of times.
But they were merely directed to sources to say, first of all, follow the money.
So they did in reporting the story, Woodward and Bernstein, over the course of two to three
years, end up going to these sources that they were figured out a way to triangulate to actually
get people on the record to talk about these things.
So do not, do not, do not compare yourself to Woodward and Bernstein.
I feel like I'm the Woodward.
Do you, do you want to be the Bernstein?
No.
You want to be the Woodward?
We're not, we're not a team here.
What are you talking about?
Have we, have you gotten someone on the record to say this?
Um, to confirm this.
Well, certainly, um, anonymously.
Anonymously.
Yeah.
And you feel good about that.
I, by the way, I feel good.
I feel good enough.
I feel good about between the two of us, the validation that came, that go, okay, you actually
have corroborated a thing that makes it more than merely a text that I got on my phone.
I do feel good about that.
Well, this is where I'd like to take the opportunity to invite both Draymond Green and Jordan
pull onto this podcast.
Together.
Together.
Okay.
Yeah.
And in fact, if they agree, they can both punch me in the face.
Oh, please, guys, please.
I don't know how much more of a sales pitch I can give.
So at the very end here, Ezra Edelman, again, for my money, the greatest documentary in America.
Please don't say that.
I love that you don't want me to say it.
Why would you say it?
I feel like you watch one documentary every three years.
So I don't think that your opinion really matters in this regard.
What I found out today, we end every show by declaring what we found out, what I found out today is that Ezra Edelman understands what I'm trying to do here.
And that's very meaningful to me.
Even if I only watch one documentary every three years, according to his estimation.
Is that accurate?
No.
How many documentaries do you watch?
Are we really going to do this?
Yeah, sure.
Why not?
You brought it up.
Like one every two months?
One every two months.
Yeah.
And generally, what are the content of these documentaries?
Are I, I being interviewed?
Yeah.
For like, what is this?
What I do for a living?
What did you find out, Ezra?
I found out that you do have a conscience.
You are trying hard.
You do want to do your best.
I do think that you have a lot of talent.
Oh, God.
This is a...
Where is this landing?
What I appreciate is that you have enough of a conscience and ambition to an awareness,
which is the same as conscience, in this case,
to have this platform, to have a podcast that in some ways is just another thing thrown
on the trash heap of the sport in the sports podcast.
and universe and try to do something that is unique and elevated.
But again, I like the idea, as I said, I think I do appreciate the fact that, you know, there is a...
Say it?
No, just the string was pulled that you guys actually did the work.
Now, I don't think...
No.
Jarn.
Come on, say it.
The journey that you guys went on to get to...
Some corroborating truth.
Journal.
Clearly, if you can't call yourself a journalist, then you're not a journalist.
But you come from, you are a journalist.
Thank you.
You are a journalist, Pablo.
But clearly, do you feel guilty?
I mean.
Do you feel like what you do on this show is journalism?
I do.
You do?
I do, genuinely.
Every time you do a podcast?
Yes.
I believe that the standard of journalism that I am practicing is horrifying on some level
to the Columbia School of Journalism.
I don't know who the other arbiters of conscience are.
And prior to you walking in today, you as well.
But yeah, I stand by everything.
We have a, again, not to just toot my own horn here,
but yeah, I believe that journalism is the art of withholding
as much as it is disclosing.
There are so many things that we have not reported
that I have found out because it doesn't meet our standards.
And yet, what's going to happen, I am 99% sure,
is that someone is just going to aggregate the quote,
pull it out. It'll be fed to like NBA Central and it'll be like ball sacks sports and all of that stuff.
And I don't even know how much traffic we're going to get to our profound journalistic meditation.
Do you consider yourself the Walter Cronkite of sports journalism?
Can you cut Ezra saying, do you consider and just say you are the Walter Cronkite of sports journalism?
Yeah, that's really journalistic.
Ezra Edelman, thank you for being my journalistic conscience.
You're welcome, and again, I stress, please find a better and more respected journalistic conscience.
Fair.
All right, that's another week here at Pablo Torre finds out a show that continues to spite David Samson by continuously finding stuff out.
Because we are produced by Michael Antonucci, Ryan Cortez, Sam Daywig, Patrick Kim, Neely Loman, Rachel Miller Howard, Carl Scott, Ethan Schreier, Matt Sullivan, Chris Tuminello, with studio engineering by Viridian Tech, post production by NGW Post, a theme song by John Bravo. And also you can watch us now on DK Network.com as a TV show on Samsung TV Plus, Channel 1168, on Roku Channel 254 now, and Zumo Play.
And hold on, let me monetize my child here real quick.
And I'll talk to you next time.
I'll talk to you next time.
