Pablo Torre Finds Out - Share & Tell-ichick (Super Bowl Edition) with Mina Kimes and Dan Le Batard
Episode Date: January 30, 2026Who gets to take pride in football, even (and especially) if Sam Darnold is your quarterback? Who gets to lock the gates on excellence, even if you're snubbing Bill Belichick? Did Tom Brady only get b...etter in the booth... because he couldn't get much worse? And do people only care when you're wrong? Plus: brrrtue-signaling, the pageantry of nonsense, The Polian Dimension and the Kraft family syndicate on Jason Whitlock's bulletin board.Further content:• "In the 'no' camp is a known liar...'" (Ollie Connolly)• "Sources: Bill Belichick will not be a first-ballot Hall of Famer" (Don Van Natta Jr. and Seth Wickersham)• "Tom Brady knew he needed to improve on TV. So he channeled his 'quarterback' days" (Andrew Marchand)• Subscribe to "The Mina Kimes Show featuring Lenny"• Take a PTFO audience survey for your chance to win a $100 Amazon gift card Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
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Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out. I am Pablo Torre. And today we're going to find out what this sound is.
No, don't do this. Transparency. This is unfair. Sunlight is the only disinfectant right after this ad.
Take that I'm going to stand ten toes down on that people who pretend like football in terrible conditions is enjoyable are completely full of it.
Liars. Liars. In fact, I came up with a word for.
It's the same people who love bragging about how they live in the Northeast and they wear shorts in the winter and you're so soft on the West Coast.
It's not about the toughness of the fans. It's about the enjoyability of the game. The games in shi-weather mostly suck. You can have some great moments, no doubt. But there's no, no chance people actually enjoyed watching that second half. Lies.
This is all just, I mean, clearly still trying to justify moving to L.A.
She's also right, though.
The idea that that is football weather, and all you're doing is getting in the way totally.
I'm sorry, Miami and L.A. agree on how warm weather is better.
Oh, what a shocking turn of events.
Papa, tell us one thing that happened in the second half of the game.
One thing.
That was like a play.
It was super, it was super memorable.
The time that Drake May, like, ran in the snow and bootleg.
That was awesome.
I'm going to remember that forever.
Forever.
You're going to remember that forever.
Yep.
What a play.
The white.
What a moment.
It would be very memorable.
The point of the whole thing is to find out who's best with a metric of some sort other than the scoreboard that measures merit.
And we're going to just make the second half something where people can't play successful football, where there's no one who can play successful football.
That's stupid.
I also keep hearing that, like, oh, the game was bad before the turned.
Jared stood him through a ball.
mom down,
feel, like, at least things were happening.
I understand that, you know,
it wasn't the best football.
It wasn't comparable to what we saw at night.
But the second half that game was unwatchable.
So anyways.
The whole thing was unwatchable.
The whole thing.
Compared to the late game where you have 17 storylines,
an inch on 17 different decisions,
would have made the Rams,
the team that's representing the best conference in the best game.
Is one of those storylines how Mina Kimes is not being allowed
by the internet to celebrate the Seattle Seahawks?
Is that one of the takes?
that Dan was referring to.
We want to start with this one?
I mean, we're here.
We're already arguing about who gets to, yeah, take pride in football.
Set the table.
You're the host.
This was last year.
This was the offseason.
Gino Smith...
Right after he was traded.
They throw Gino Smith out a window, Mina Seattle Seahawks.
And Mina tweet something along the lines of,
this is a decision that we, the Seattle Seahawks and their fans will regret.
And that has been resurfaced all over my feed, at least, because...
That's not what I actually posted.
Okay, well, what did you say?
Flat out, I think this is a mistake.
Chances of upgrading are low.
That is basically what I said.
No, well, she used fewer words, did it more efficiently and more accurately.
I was sharing my opinion, not as a fan, but like, as my football opinion on it.
Point being that Sam Fri-Darnold took you guys to the Super Bowl, so eat it.
That is what people are telling you.
That's just not true.
I gave a take right when the Seahawks traded Gino-Smith, where I was critical of it.
Very critical of it.
This is before they signed Sam Darnel, but I was like, this is,
a mistake, very unlikely they're going to upgrade. And that take, which was proven wrong very quickly,
darn it was really good in the first half of the season, but it was more that Gino was so bad with the
Raiders, right? And it happened very quickly. So I took the L on this, I think in week five is when I posted,
yeah, that was wrong. And I went on Bill's show and talked about it was wrong. And the take
kind of simmered down, and it's come back to Haomi because the old takes guy reposted it
because he knows it's great business for him. The night that Sam was great,
against Washington, which is a horrible defense,
and then this last game in which he was legitimately excellence,
which is, you know, I was clearly wrong.
Like, they did upgrade.
Now, for the second half of the entire season,
Sam Darnel was not good,
and I think people, like, didn't watch those games, apparently,
the way people are talking now.
But it doesn't matter.
In the biggest game, when it mattered the most,
he was the engine of their victory.
I don't understand why Mina,
and this makes me so naive, I know in today's America,
where we have so many people fighting over race,
race and gender and DEI and everything else.
I don't understand how Mina's football opinions or her personality can be taken as any kind of polarizing
given how solid and obvious her information is, how prepared she obviously is.
I'm at a true law.
I'm at a true law.
Dan's doing the thing where he makes it worse for Mina by defending her.
Oh, no.
It's a classic Dan move.
I don't want to like single myself out here.
I think generally right now, like, everybody loves dunking on the internet.
So, like, old takes is a thing, right?
Me having a bad opinion and getting roasted for it over and over and over
is just kind of how social media works right now.
Maybe because it's me, there's, like, certain level of response.
There definitely is a different reaction from others.
People want to see Meenakimes take an L.
The thing that you have to realize, though, is, like,
and this is something I struggle with,
taking the L is never going to be enough for most people, right?
So the actual take was about Gino, not about Sam Tarno.
Yes, the take was, we're going to miss Gino Smith.
Gino Smith, yeah.
And Gino really regressed his season,
part because of his declining abilities, I believe,
and also a large part because the Raiders were an absolute train wreck,
and I don't think anybody would have had success there.
Not to make an excuse for my take.
Obviously, it was the right decision for Seattle.
I was wrong.
But I was talking to Bill Simmons,
He was like, I went on his show in like week six, and it was like, damn, that was wrong.
It was after a Gino game.
But when confronted with the dunking again, you know, people were like, you haven't acknowledged it.
And it's like, oh, right, you can never actually make people happy or satisfy it.
Here's the real question, which speaks to exactly the dynamic in Mina Kimes' brain, which is, of course, fully supportive of the Seattle Seahawks making the Super Bowl.
is there a part of your brain
where if Sam Darnold
has the worst game of his life
there's going to be a part of your
neurological heat map that's going to light up
and be like
eh
not the worst thing for your old mean of Kimes
for Sam Darnold to suck ass
here's what I've learned about
the internet
you get nothing out of being proven right
and only get people who take joy
when you're proven wrong
all of which
explains, of course, that Mina knows the reality of Twitter, and that is why she has tweeted
37,700 times.
How many times have you tweeted?
I'm afraid to look.
Yeah, you can't just throw mine out without, show me yours.
I don't want to do that now that I see that.
Nope, nope, tell us, tell us, tell us.
This cannot be right.
Tell us. Tell us. Tell us.
68,000.
68,000. That's twice.
That's twice.
That's twice what you accused.
A lot of,
68,000 tweets.
That's more than, yes.
In my defense, that was like a lot in that first decade.
And it was ironic.
Can I say that?
It was all ironic.
You can't defend this.
You can't have twice as many.
I was parroting people who tweeted a lot by tweeting.
I think that was.
You know, what a great gotcha, Mina.
Good job by you.
Twice as many tweets as you while trying to shame you for how much you've tweeted.
Unbelievable.
This does not feel good if that's what you're asking.
Does it feel good to discover that I've tweeted 68,000 times?
The answer?
Friends?
God damn it.
God damn it.
Jeez.
Can we talk about Bill Belichick now?
Can we talk about the thing that was the thing that also got people very mad?
Can we do that?
Yeah.
Yeah, I thought all of that was super interesting as somebody who has lost his Hall of Fame vote in baseball.
Moss is a very generous verb for what happened with your vote, Dan.
What is your take?
Is that you in a flagrant but very funny stunt dared the Hall of Fame to take your vote away, and they did.
That's not exactly how that happened.
I don't tell the story about it.
Tell the story.
Tell the story.
I vaguely remember.
Okay, so I am bothered by the fact that the morality gatekeepers of the Hall of Fame aren't letting Barry Bond
and the best baseball players I've ever seen
get into the Hall of Fame
because they're treating it as a moral epicenter
instead of a museum.
And so I quote unquote sell my vote to Deadspin
and allow their readers to pick my Hall of Fame ballot
and they pick a really good one
and I would have had a decision to make
if they'd picked a really bad one,
but they picked a good one.
And so I let the whole stunt go on
and then, of course, the Hall of Fame took my vote.
But the entire reasoning behind doing it,
beyond the look at me narcissism of enjoying the circus and the pageantry of nonsense was very much
to object to the idea that I didn't like baseball writers, my brethren, using that kind of
sanctimony to lock the gates on excellence. And it's the same sort of thing that has happened
here to Bill Belichick, where they are embarrassing him. He's getting a phone call that is
stunning him. I would love to see his reaction to that in real time as he's learning like the
rest of us, the shocking news that the most obvious of first ballot Hall of Famers doesn't get to
be a first ballot Hall of Famer because the morality police have arrested him.
So the BBWAA in 2014 said about Dan, quote, the BBWAA regards Hall of Fame voting as the
ultimate privilege and any abuse of that privilege is unacceptable and they have removed you.
That was 2014.
This story, by the way, Mina, like me, Jordan Hudson,
Donald Trump, who has truth socialed about this,
Mike Lombardi, who have also investigated on the show,
we all share the same opinion,
which is that Bill Belichick should be in the Hall of Fame,
and it's insane that he isn't.
And the thing that made me laugh, though,
was that, okay, that is obviously the correct take.
But in a sense, this is also the best thing
that could have happened to Bill Belichick.
Great spin zone.
Yeah, everybody's now just talking about,
how good he is again. God, we're all, like, it's now a brave take to say Bill Belichick's the
greatest football coach of all time, arguably, that he's won all these Super Bowls.
Well, it's not, I mean, literally everybody agrees with that. But the whole point is,
I was yesterday, I was like, is anybody going to take the apposite? Like, I was, I saw one person,
Greg Doyle, the columnist. Greg with three Gs. No, but I agree with you. I do think it's been
really valuable for him because, yeah, everybody's rising to his defense. Everybody agrees.
This is crazy. I think the actual, on the.
mechanics of how it went down, which are still up in the air, are really interesting, though, right?
So for those who don't know, Mike Sando posted about this, and I thought this was really illuminating.
He's one of the voters. He voted for Belichick. By the whole thing, too. Now everybody's trying to sniff out.
We can talk about that in a second. The Belichick 11? Yeah.
Ali Goddally, who's a guy who comes in my podcast sometimes who's Gray has been posting like a spreadsheet of all the votes.
Oh, we've been making calls here as well, like to add to Ollie's tabulation. I will say as a sneak
preview, Dan Fouts confirmed that he voted for Belichick by giving us a thumbs up on the text
message we sent him. So our investigation is also continued. Have you found a no yet?
No. We've had abstentions because it's against the rules, the rules that Dan Levitari doesn't
respect. That's what I think the noes are all going to say, though. This is like traitors.
It's just like traitors, which is a show that I'm recapping. Okay, but Sandoz says something interesting.
So this is like the senior vote, right, for Belichick to get in, which is limited.
to you get, I think, three people get in.
So Sando hypothesized that since they don't talk about their votes,
and you have to pick three,
that it's possible some of the Belichick no votes
were people who thought he was such a lock
that they could spend their votes
on getting some of those guys in who they wanted.
So 11 voters did that, though?
You think it's possible that 11 did?
that? No, I'm sure some of them just hate his ass. Yeah. So what's it supposed to be, though? Is it
supposed to be merit or morals? Like, I know, so we're all in agreement. There were a couple of
takes this week that were pretty universal and that I didn't hear something on the other side.
This one, and does Shador Sanders belong in the Pro Bowl? Like, it's just an easy opinion to have
that Shador Sanders doesn't belong in the Pro Bowl, and it's an easy opinion to have that obviously
Bill Belichick is a Hall of Famer. But you guys believe that.
believe that, because cheating's pretty egregious, and I don't know football the way Mina does,
but Mina also doesn't know football the way Bill Pollian does. And so when Bill Pollian maybe has
more information about how much success Billiichick had because he was cheating, would there
be any merit to the idea that Bill Belichick somehow cheated his way to more glory than he
deserved or it's just petty nonsense?
I want to introduce Napoleon.
The polion thing is fascinating.
You should, yeah, please.
The polion dimension.
He's 83 years old.
He has given quotes about what he did
or did not do as a voter.
Don Van Nata and Sethrakecham broke this story, by the way,
credit to them. Don Van Nata called
up Polion in the reporting and
asked him to do up for Belichick and he said he
couldn't remember. And I'm just like,
and elsewhere he had said that he had voted for Belichick,
I think. So anyway,
on that level alone, like,
concerning, if not dispositive of what he may or not have actually done.
But he remembered that he voted for Robert Kraft.
Like he remembered 100% certainty that he voted for Robert Kraft and didn't remember with
100% certainty whether he voted for Belichick.
And I always find it funny when someone doesn't remember something, especially something
that just happened, let alone stuff that is like pretty memorable.
Instead of saying yes or no, I just think I don't remember is a very legal go-to when you
don't want to say what you really did.
Yeah.
In this case, though, the craft thing that Dan mentions me is.
also pretty instructive because Robert Kraft and Van Ed had also reported this previously,
had been campaigning to get into the Hall of Fame and is in the same class.
Is one of the candidates who get voted on alongside Belichick in a way that has seemingly
made a conflict of interest, especially for Bill Pollan who definitely supports Robert
Kraft unambiguously.
Which also just like spare me the idea that Robert Kraft deserves even an iota of the credit
that Bill Belichick and Tom, right, we could parse out.
You know, I think history has shown Brady probably deserves more,
but undeniably Belichick deserves a lot of it.
But give me a break.
Well, the idea that Kraft is getting in before Belichick is obviously, it's idiotic.
But if I were to go back like six or seven years with you guys and say, look,
let's stand next to Bill Belichick where he is in the world right now.
And let's tell him that all of the following is going to happen.
Tom Brady's going to immediately win a Super Bowl without him going through Rogers
and Mahomes and Drew Brees to do so.
There's going to be a 10-part docu-series
that Robert Kraft is going to manipulate
in order to shame you into the national perception
we didn't have before.
You're not actually as responsible
for everything that happened there
as people think you are.
You're going to start dating a 20-year-old
and bonus, one of your linebackers
is going to do the same thing with your organization
and take them to the Super Bowl that you did,
rendering what you did less meaningful
because one of your linebackers can do it.
I mean, it is exactly why this is the greatest thing to happen to Bill Belichick.
The narrative on Belichick, for all those reasons,
no one has lost the polychule divorce of Kraft, Brady, and Belichick, more than Belichick.
And now there is this movement to find the Belichick 11.
Doesn't this connect to what I was saying earlier about, like, the desire of the internet to just find people to dunk on, right?
I'm not saying that...
Here are some people that you can't dunk on
because they said yes, they voted for ballot check.
Dan Fouts, Ira Kaufman, Buck's Beatwriter,
Jeff Leggwald Broncos beatwriter,
Paul Domewitch, Eagles, beatwriter,
Matt Mayoko, Niners, Beat Rider,
give us a thumbs up.
Mark Craig, Vikings beatwriter,
also another thumbs up.
A bunch of people have not responded
as we are recording this now.
I just love...
I think it's a lot more than that, right?
I saw a spreadsheet with...
They're 50. 50, 50 voters.
Those are the new additions to what Ollie Connolly has tabulated.
We're trying to, like, fill in the-
This is a lot.
Yeah, we're filling in the spreadsheet.
So between yours and Ollie's, how many people are left?
We got, here you go.
Like how many names are uncounted for between the names that Ollie put out and the one you just said?
13, 14, 15, 16.
We have 15, and we have an eye on the 16th, Tony Dunjee.
Oh, wow.
Okay, so you and Ollie together have 35.
Ollie had 17, exactly.
And so we're getting-.
But, but, but, Mina, here's the thing about this.
this, me now, while you say wow, and I understand why you say, wow, let's examine for a moment
what's just happened here.
35 people have run forward with the totally obvious opinion proudly.
Tadda! Yes, I voted for Belichick.
And the others are in complete hiding, and Pablo's not going to be able to find them, because
of course, it's the easiest thing in the world to vote for Bill Belichick and to find the
people who voted for Bill Belichick because they want to now be seen because they never
thought their vote for Bill Belichick could possibly be wanted by anybody because it's the most
obvious thing in the world. They're all defending themselves, right? Because what you've got here,
there's got to be some name for this kind of like, it's not a prisoner's dilemma, but like,
essentially. The Belichick dilemma is what it's going to be named. Nobody's supposed to reveal
their votes. Correct. But the people here are so afraid of being the odd men out that they're
willing to buck tradition to come forward, thus throwing the no-lawful.
voters under the bus.
And I mean, I don't mean to malign them.
God knows I would do the same thing.
So I just want to be clear.
But let's be clear about what's happening here.
People are coming forward because they don't want to be bullied.
It's so good.
And then the remainders are shrinking and shrinking.
This is so fascinating to me.
So you may even then, using the powers of reality, television, logic, deduce that there
might be some liars, potentially.
But the people who won't tell us their vote might be the most suspicious of all, ironically.
Right?
And so I'm looking at you, Jeff Duncan,
who wouldn't tell us his vote,
New Orleans Saints beatwriter,
or Scott Garsoe of the Ravens,
Jerry Doolock, Steelers, Bearder, Darren Gaines.
Don't do this.
Darren Gaines.
Covering the Panthers for NBC Sports.
No, don't do this.
Transparency.
Sunlight is the only disinfectant.
I would lie to you.
Who's going to expose this?
I know.
That's a thing.
Somewhere there's a...
Also, it's not like state secrets.
It's not like something we're like lying about it.
It is now.
By the way, I love that, like, Armando Salgaro,
fellow South Floridian, Dan,
a guy you've known for a very long time,
is like, he's like,
I was the one who suggested Belichick,
and here's the wedding toast I gave him,
and here's...
He did his... Yeah, somebody has to present the case.
And by the way, like,
apparently confidentiality around none of this matters anymore
if you're in favor of Belichick,
because he was like, here's the speech I gave,
here's the thing that Brady sent me
to read to everybody that didn't convince the Belichek 11.
There is a strong connected fiber between these two stories, though, right?
Avoiding the dunk tank.
People are terrified of being like, oh, no.
And by the way, in fairness, I mean, you alluded to this before, like, you know,
what Darren Gant was saying to us while he was avoiding disclosing his vote was that, like,
this is a process thing too.
I'll quote him, this is far more of a process story than a personality story in terms of like
how rigorous or rather how restrictive the voting structure is now.
where people were like,
ah, I shouldn't vote for Belichick
because I want to get this other guy in there
this year,
and they might disappear
if we don't get them in now.
Here are some other things,
though, some other just red crumbs
to throw in to the recipe here.
Because what someone else pointed out to us
is that here's the list of stuff
that was thrown into the discussion
against Belichick.
There was SpyGate, of course.
That was the thing that was most famously reported
that we got to get accountability for SpyGate.
The other thing,
I guess we should also acknowledge
that, yeah,
There's the whole, like, he didn't win without Brady argument, which seems just farcical in totality for all the football reasons that we've acknowledged.
But the third thing that I didn't realize was in the discussion that apparently, according to people, one of the voters who were in the room, on this Zoom call, said was, it's possible that Belichick could come back as a coach.
And they didn't want to vote him in if it's possible that he might still be in the NFL.
And that to me is funny.
Just as a matter of Belichick is absolutely desperate to get back in the league and no one will let him back in.
And that might also be the reason, according to at least one voter, that they would like to not vote on him right now.
So that's also apparently in the discussion.
When presented with something this kind of absurd, right, one of the fun things with conspiracy theories is going and finding whatever the reason might be for something that doesn't seem to have very much reason.
you can find any number of them.
But Mina, would you buy the idea that Jerry Jones is reportedly, according to Don Van Nata,
keeping Bob Kraft or has tried to keep Bob Kraft out of the Hall of Fame?
Would you believe the idea that Bob Kraft would not want Bill Belichick to be part of his big weekend
and would keep him or try to influence folks to make sure that he could remain that small?
You wouldn't buy that kind of pettiness?
If that's true, and I don't know Kraft and the state of that, I know I've read all Don and Sess
excellent reporting about the disillustive relationship, the stricand effect is pretty serious,
my guy, because if you get in and Bill does it, it's all anyone's going to be talking about, right?
So I don't think, I would imagine he recognizes that on some level.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I don't think it would be very smart on his part if he wants this to go over.
Well, if I may, Pablo, can I suggest to the Hall of Fame voters who and the people who run the
Hall of Fame, if you've got this many voters who have come forth and broken the rule of not
making their vote known as public, you might want to take away their vote for breaking the
rules, the way that my vote was taken away for breaking the rules because you're supposed to
follow the rules.
Well, no, but these are the gatekeepers who are telling Bill Belichick that he's also got a
follow the rules or he's not allowed in the Hall of Fame.
So if the rule makers want to follow their own rules,
they might want to ban some people for getting in front of everybody and be like,
I voted for him when it's supposed to be secret.
So I just got to jump in here with a quick update because the Pro Football Hall of Fame
did in fact threaten in a rare statement that it could remove voters who violated their
bylaws.
But not only that, the Hall of Fame also decided, perhaps paradoxically,
to correct Bill Pollian's elusive memory forum, declaring that the 83
year old former Colts general manager didn't even speak during the discussion about Belichick and his
candidacy. And that, according to the Hall of Fame's independent auditing firm, Pollyan did actually
vote for Belichick. Meanwhile, a columnist for the Kansas City star, Vahey Gregorian, finally
texted us back in our ongoing quest to hunt down the Belichick 11, and he wrote, quote,
sorry for a delayed response, wanted to write about it so I could explain vote as best as possible.
And what Gregorian wrote about in a column
was why he voted no.
Explaining that he did not vote against Valichek-or-Craft,
he voted for three other candidates who had been, quote,
snubbed for decades.
But this story, apparently, does not stop there.
Guys, I have a late-breaking update.
Jason Whitlock has just added a photograph of me
to a cork board he's created on the internet
in a conspiracy to destroy Bill Belichick.
I mean, you belong up there.
That's good work out of with...
I'm part of the Kraft Family Syndicate now.
This is hard for me to discover.
God damn.
Who else is on there?
Robert Kraft, Bill Polly and Tony Dungey,
me, Mike Florio.
And then a rain...
You got to get off the internet, Pablo.
You're tweeting too much, and you got to get off the internet.
I regret. I regret all of this.
You're sitting there on the internet while we're doing the show.
I mean, you're just perusing the internet.
Where are people talking about me?
Have you been refreshing Twitter as we've been talking this whole time?
At least he used a good photo.
He did use a pretty good photo of me.
Should we talk about the other take that we wanted to throw in the faces of various people,
which is Tom Brady as we continue, the theme, the through line of this episode?
Yes, yes.
By the way, this, yes, the through line of nobody cares when you're correct.
Only people care when you're wrong.
Dan came in over the top last year texting us.
Tom Brady's bad about this.
was right, you guys were wrong.
Nary a peep from all Lepetard
this season as Tom Brady
has built some
support and received accolades
for his performance. Would you care to?
Apologize to us, Dan.
His
one personality trait
that we know of is competitive
freak. Yes.
That dude is hearing all of this.
And, by the way, like,
you know, when he took a second,
right? He didn't jump right into
the booth, again, knowing what we know about him, he's probably been doing an insane amount of
preparation. Like, he is not, like, the criticism of Romo now is that he's maybe not as prepared as he was
initially. These are all the, you know, leaked stories we're seeing. That's not going to be the
case with Tom Brady based on everything we know about him. But, Mina, I would say to you as someone
who has done that, I would say to you as someone who has a lot of information at her disposal,
you know how fast all that moves.
You can prepare for that.
Tom Brady, I'm sure,
will have a lot of things to say
and not enough time to say them
because you are not prepared
for how quickly all of that moves
when you've got 700 sheets of paper in front of you
and you need to know
who the backup nickel package is
on the left side,
you know, who's in too deep coverage this time.
You need to know every...
I don't think people understand
that Al Michaels every week
for 17 times a year, however long it is,
that the burden that is Al Michaels at his age,
just learning every player on the roster
because you need to know who recovered that fumble.
As opposed to the NFL when he had three seconds
to identify every player on the field
and get off like a perfect path?
What are we talking about here?
I would not care to, and I will not apologize to you.
He has indeed gotten better
because he's good at getting better,
and he couldn't have been much worse.
It was this season, earlier this season,
that I legitimately thought and said that he was distractingly bad.
Like he was getting in the way of my enjoyment of the telecast by not merely just being boring and bland,
but by being bad.
What I will give you, though, is that he was great on the call and far exceeded my expectations
on Ram Seahawks, and it made me realize something that I had not considered.
There are two ways to be great at that job.
You can be at the trough that everyone else is at
and then just be legitimately better than everyone
with your information and your stories
and your wisdom and your perspective
or you could just have great enthusiasm for football.
Gruden did it that way. Madden did it that way.
The best announcers that there have been,
Romo did it that way at the beginning.
They were enthusiastic about football.
So when I'm on my couch
and Matthew Stafford breaks a tackle
to make a fourth down gain on a run.
And I am more surprised than if my coffee table
had gotten up and run those three yards
because I can't believe Matthew Stafford
can do this with 17 years in his body of NFL football.
And Tom Brady merely does this.
Oh my God!
He's great at broadcasting,
because all he's got to do is match the enthusiasm of the customer.
And it's not that hard.
And he figured out how to do it.
He figured out how to be human
in one of the best games I've ever seen
that felt like the Super Bowl before the Super Bowl.
I think you hit on something that is definitely true there
and underappreciated by those of us
who are like grilling down into the details.
Did they, he get situational football right?
Was his analysis of this coverage?
Did he predict it, whatever?
Is that the vibe, the enthusiasm,
the joy is the most important thing?
You've got to know the game.
You've got to know the players.
You've got to get them right or whatnot.
But overwhelmingly, when I talk to fans,
about games and football coverage in general,
they respond well to passion.
And so I think that's absolutely right.
I think that is definitely one way
in which Brady has been good this year.
You can tell he enjoys watching the games.
And I know Collinsworth, it can be divisive,
but I think he shares this as well.
You know, you also get the sense
that he's like excited by watching these young quarterbacks
and he's excited when players play well.
That's fun to watch.
fun to be a part of. I think that people are responding to that.
So Brady's now given interviews, like a victory lap on this season to throw it in Dan's face
and into Boog Shambi's face. He's given an interview to the athletic. And he basically said
a couple of things that made sense to me that also speak to what you guys are discerning,
which is that number one, Tom Brady went into his rookie season trying to say way too much.
And I empathize with that. Anybody who's tried to do television knows, like, you start off
trying to say a lot of stuff to be, like, smart and persuasive and prepared.
And then you realize, oh my God, I didn't have any time to say the things that I had memorized.
And you look like an idiot.
One of the quotes here was that it's a lot easier to start something that it is to finish something in terms of just speaking in public.
And that is absolutely true.
The second thing that it was mentioned was that he loves Kevin Burkart in a way that is clearly real enough to be transmitted through the screen.
Speaking of Bob Kraft and Belichick, Brady said this about Kevin Burkart.
quote, I value Kevin as much as anybody I've ever worked with.
And it goes on and on.
Wow.
Julian Edelman, dagger.
Truly.
Oh, because he was vulnerable.
No, but when's the last time he was terrible at anything?
Like, you've got someone there holding your hand.
A professional broadcaster as you do the reps is sitting there putting his hand on your knee and helping you.
Burkhard is so good at setting him up.
And if you pay attention to like the mechanics of these things, and you really listen to the way.
he talks about plays and asks him questions.
It is masterful.
He's a great guy and I think really talented,
but the work he's done to help Brady get to this level is masterful.
Not surprising that Tom Brady, who's like the consummate teammate,
say what you will about the dude, beloved,
recognizes that he has a really good one.
But I also think that dynamic, too,
is something that's underappreciated that people respond to.
It's like people like it when the play-by-play guy
and the color guy seem to genuinely like you.
each other. Yeah, like a buddy cop thing. Yeah, it's one of the things I love most about Buck and Aikman,
who I think are just the gold standard company woman, whatever. But like there's a lot of times
during the game where you can feel them like chuckling to each other and there's like references
to things they've seen in the past or remarking with like amazement of something the other person
has said, it's a hang. Like a game is a hang and you want to feel like you're in the company
of actual friends.
And I think Brady and Burkhart are starting to create that vibe.
It's an underrated thing, though,
that I don't think people know very much about sports television,
Tony and Mike, or wherever it is that you find chemistry pairings.
Yeah, the people need to love each other
in order for there to be people dissolving,
laughing in front of cameras in pressurized moments
just because they enjoy each other's company
and their friends hanging out.
Like the shared joy elements of chemistry
have been humanizing for the robot of Tom
because you see the enthusiasm for sport,
you see the love story of him having a connection
with a partner who is helping him,
and it has to be a long time since Tom Brady doubted
the way that he had to doubt,
am I good at this when the gas bags of the world like me
are saying, man, he's terrible, it's distracting, how terrible he is.
Yeah, I mean, he was in the dunk tank
in a real way, in a way that resonated with his vulnerability,
and I think all of us have felt a version,
of that. I will say, though, Mina, that Dan didn't eat the L. He just sort of like,
said a bunch of stuff and then refused to do it. Or is the accountability. No, I'd like to see a
little more of a sample size from him to see if he's going to continue to get better, because
while he has gotten better, almost all of the people who do this with reps do end up getting
better. I've realized that despite talking about three seemingly very disparate topics, they're all
the same topic. Everything we've talked about is the story of people who have been successful,
being brought down and figuring out how could we then establish that all along we're as good as we
think we are. That is Mina. That is Bill Belichick. That is Tom Brady. And by the way, and by the way,
because Dan is calling for sample size
in terms of like how much better can you get at this
it's also probably worth us seeing this.
The Miami Herald High School Sports Show.
Today's show is brought to you by Health South.
Office Depot.
Love the special effects here.
The mirroring.
I love Ratanchex.
Powerade and sound advice.
Good morning and welcome to another edition
of the Harold High School Sports Show.
I'm Dan Levittart.
Killian and Southridge have two of the top baseball teams in Dade,
but when we featured them a few weeks ago,
it was no contest as Killian pinned the 7-0 defeat on the Spartans.
However, this week, Southridge was looking for some revenge
as the two teams met again in a district 16 rematch.
Now, in softball, the Douglas Eagles have one of Broward's top teams.
This is fine.
Oh, the little smile.
I didn't think that was that bad.
For those who are not watching on YouTube,
you've missed the smile of a little.
Dan Lebitard.
How old?
How old was that?
Smile?
Yeah, how are you there?
I'm in my very early 20s.
It's legitimately my first television appearance was that show.
And till my brother's dying day, he will make fun of me because we taped on Wednesdays,
but the games were on Friday.
So I'm taping before the games are played.
And so this is what my brother would do when impersonating me.
Wow, what a play!
I personally always enjoy clips of young Dan,
which we rarely get to see,
because whenever I watched them,
I just imagined it's what would have been like
if A.J. Soprano had done sports.
Hold on, hold on.
Dan going, wow, what a play.
What I found out today is that Dan resents Tom Brady
because Tom Brady is literally doing
what young Dan Lebitard used to do
and being praised for it.
Yes.
Yes.
It's just secretly jealousy.
Wow, why are you so jealous of Tom Brady?
What a play!
Wow, what a play!
Amazing!
Two days from now.
Yes, you're welcome.
Pablo Torre finds out is produced by Walter Avaroma,
Maxwell Carney, Ryan Cortez,
Juan Galindo, Patrick Kim, Neely Loman,
Rob McRae, Matt Sullivan, Claire Taylor, and Chris Tumenello.
Our studio engineering is by RG Systems.
Our sound designed by Andrew Bursick
and NGW Post, Digital Strategy by Bailey Carlin and Andrew Northern,
and our theme song, as always, by John Bravo.
We'll talk to you next time.
