Pardon My Take - Drew Rosenhaus, Washington Football Team President Jason Wright And Thom Brennaman Does A Call
Episode Date: August 21, 2020Thom Brennaman had unintentionally one of the funniest baseball calls of all time (3:09 - 11:03). Caps lose, NBA Lottery and the playoffs are cooking (11:03 - 22:42). NFL Super agent Drew Rosenhaus jo...ins the show to talk about his career, his clients, negotiating with GM's and more (22:42 - 66:11). Washington Football Team President Jason Wright joins the show to talk about his new job, changing the culture in DC, his playing days at Northwestern and whether or not hes a nerd (66:11 - 97:14). Segments include Billy's sheet and Fyre Fest of the weekYou can find every episode of this show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Prime Members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. For more, visit barstool.link/PardonMyTake
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Hey, pardon my take listeners, you can find every episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or YouTube.
Prime members can listen, ad-free, on Amazon Music.
On today's pardon my take, we have Drew Rosenhouse, huge interview with the shark, Drew Rosenhouse.
We get to the bottom of what it's like to be an NFL agent.
And then we also have...
Super agent.
Super agent.
Jason Wright, president of the Washington football team.
Great interview with him as well.
Probably Jake Marsh pointed out, probably the two smartest guys we've ever had on the
same show.
We had Marlon's man and foul ball guy.
I was gonna say Lenny Dykstra and Mr. Portnoy.
That also true.
But that, so maybe the second, the second pick.
We had Akon and Joe Montana last week.
Just Akon.
Martin Screlly.
Martin Screlly.
That's true.
Awesome, awesome two interviews though.
I highly, highly recommend it.
We have NBA playoffs.
The Caps have been eliminated.
We have Firefest the week.
Wait, what?
Well, the Caps have been eliminated.
I guess the Blackhawks have been eliminated too, although I said that at the end of last
show.
So, Sargi Soros?
Sure.
Okay, great.
I didn't say sure.
I'll address that.
Sure.
All right, awesome.
Billy will get wet.
Wow.
Yeah, tomorrow Billy.
We'll see you here.
I also like Big Ed how you just recommended, you highly recommended listening to part of
my take on part of my take.
Well, the two interviews, sometimes people are like, oh, I don't know who Jason Wright
is.
Well, I highly recommend it.
Drew Rosenhouse.
Oh, maybe you're a huge Antonio Brown fan.
No, I highly recommend it.
Both.
We might, there's definitely one super fan Antonio Brown fan listening to this right
now.
Being like, Drew Rosenhouse, skip.
It's probably Antonio Brown listening to it.
Yes.
AB, what's up?
You're going to want to stick around.
I know you want to hear Drew, but stick around and hear Jason Wright because maybe you'll
sign with the R-Words one day.
He actually followed me today.
Oh, AB did?
Yeah, because of my Chippewa's.
So, fire up Chips before we do all of that.
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Today is Friday, August 21st.
From the bottom of my heart, I'm so very, very sorry.
I pride myself in thinking myself as a man of faith as there's a drive into deep left
field by Castellanos and it'll be a home run.
So that will make it a 4-0 ball game.
Thaum.
Tom.
Damn it.
In all-time apology, it was definitely shades of the Chris Berman, Punn is Block, back
in 2013, right with Ray Rice, that whole thing.
Hats off to him for being a real pro as pro and continuing to do his job in the middle
of his apology.
Why did he have to say that?
Yeah, so if you're living under a rock, Thaum, I like to call him Thaum, I have hated him
for a very long time, but he had a hot mic situation where he used a homophobic slur
and probably he's going to lose his job for the game.
The craziest thing, it was a doubleheader, so the craziest thing that happened was he's
calling the game, not realizing he's trending on Twitter and his career's probably over
and then around the fifth inning, they said, hey Thaum, we're going to need you to do a
quick apology here, got into his heartfelt apology and then Castellanos hit a home run
in the middle of the apology and he did not break his tone whatsoever, just called, you
know what, play the clip, play the clip.
I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith as there's a drive in a deep left
field by Castellanos that will be a home run and so that'll make it a four-nothing
ballgame.
I don't know if I'm going to be putting on this headset again, I don't know if it's going
to be for the Reds, I don't know if it's going to be for my bosses at Fox, I want to apologize
for the people.
That is Thaum Breneman, I actually was watching it live because I hate him, he is one of
those guys, you know, announcers, it's usually only in baseball that really despise your
team, so whenever the Cubs are kicking the shit out of the Reds, I will watch the Reds
broadcast just to listen to Thaum bitch and moan, to hear, to listen in on his misery,
just salt, salt in his tone.
Anytime like a big heartbreaking play happens, like the end of that Oklahoma State game a
couple of years ago, I like more than anything listening to when they put the opposing team's
call on Twitter, like they do the highlight reel and you have to listen to just like kind
of stunned silence for a while.
It's the ultimate petty sports fan thing to do, it's like I also do it with press conferences
like when the Badgers beat the Gophers this year at the end of the season, I fucking logged
on to Facebook to watch PJ Fleck give a press conference and name the Gophers Co Big Ten
West champions, but Thaum, so yeah, all time, all time moments, unintentionally hilarious
to call a home run while you're trying to give your deepest, you know, apology to the
nation.
Well, it wasn't really an apology, it was more an apology to his bosses and being like
I hope that this isn't, this is just see you later, it's not goodbye forever.
Maybe if I, maybe if I nail this call and I continue my professionalism throughout my
apology, they'll bring me back now, talking about the actual clip at the start when he
dropped the hard F, he wound up, that was one of the hardest Fs, that's a guy that uses
the hard F multiple times a day, he took like a deep breath, it came, it was like a Johnny
Quaidal like wind up before the F came from his, his soul or the bottom of his ballsack.
Yeah, it was, it was just hardcore F that he hit.
I think that in the aftermath, you hear a lot of people talking about how he uttered
a slur, this wasn't an utterance.
No, no, no, no, no.
And I always think that that's funny when people say like he uttered a slur, apparently
can only utter a slur, no one ever says a slur or lets a slur slip, you utter, he did not
utter this, he screamed it with his chest.
He said it.
I was thinking it was such a hard F, like maybe, maybe he's in the closet, maybe this
is like a projection thing, maybe he was doing research for an upcoming trip, he wanted
to find his next vacation spot.
So he's asking Siri, what is the capital of the United States?
I mean, he's got, hey, his name's Tom Brennan.
Thom, Thom.
Fellas, is it gay to have the word man in your last name?
His name is Thom.
Jake, make sure you pronounce that age.
Jake, do they teach you how to do apologies if you ever utter a slur on the air?
Hot mic though.
In broadcasting school.
Hot mic at all times.
Always a hot mic, but I think in this situation.
What are you doing?
Why are you laughing?
What?
It was.
I'm not laughing at the laughing if you didn't do it.
Okay.
I mean, hot mic or not, that's not something that should be said.
Yes, correct.
But you are taught, always.
No, it wasn't the hot mic's fault.
Right.
Right.
It just happened that a hot mic was happening.
No, that was happening.
He should not have said that hot mic.
We're not going to mic-shame this one.
You have to, Stephen A. Smith, you have to ask what the, what the mic, the provocation
of the mic.
What was the mic wearing?
Did it have a windshield on it?
Did it have protection?
Did it have a P-pop filter?
I got to think the mic shouldn't have been there.
Yeah.
In front of his mouth.
The game wasn't even happening at the time.
Yeah.
What was the mic doing in the booth?
He didn't know the mic was hot, but regardless, if he's sitting in the living room, he shouldn't
be saying that.
Right.
And we don't want to say that he should say it, but the mic shouldn't have been there.
Right.
The mic, if the mic's not there, it's not a problem for Tom.
It seemed like the mic was just kind of looking for clout, amplifying the slur, like, oh, maybe
the mic can be the white night.
The mic's part of cancel culture.
It's the white mic.
Clearly.
Yes.
All right.
So that was Red's thumb, Brennan.
So to conclude, they don't teach you how to apologize in journalism.
No.
No.
Let's hope I never have to.
But if they did, would they tell you to maybe not call the homerun?
I don't know.
Well, radio broadcast.
I feel like if anyone's going to employ him again, it's like, well, this guy is a pro's
pro.
He might put that on his tape.
Like, yo, check it out.
I'm cool under pressure.
I'm on my way out.
I did have to apologize once on a broadcast.
Oh, for what?
For what?
I was, it was like, it was actually Syracuse vs. Central Michigan my senior year.
Okay.
I'm a big Florida Gator fan.
Oh, no.
I was watching on my phone on, on, uh, in the booth and they threw a Hail Mary and
they got it against Tennessee a few years ago.
Yeah.
So I just screamed.
It was arguing.
You cheered in the press box?
Oh my God.
I was in our booth.
So the press, the other press didn't see me.
I screamed, let's go.
So you hop, we'll hop mic on, let's go.
Because we usually do, it's called around the nation.
We go scores around the nation and I'm like, Jake, I needed around the nation check before
we get back to more of the studios.
What was the score that Florida Gators, Tennessee volunteers again?
Funny you asked, Devin.
So Florida was up by 10 with five minutes to go.
Tennessee tied it back up.
It was 2020 and the Gators rattle off a 66 yard, 63 yard touchdown for the win at the
buzzer.
Unbelievable.
Gators beat volunteers.
Let's go.
That's great that you're like big fuck up was just rooting for a team.
They try to beat that out of you at Medill and it was not an incredible into that game
too, but you had, did you learn anything from that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I remember it in Florida for that game.
Yeah.
There you go.
So Jake, can we, can we workshop this?
Like if you were Tom Breneman, how would you have handled that apology?
Can you call his apology?
I mean, I don't know that's an unprecedented thing to say.
Cassianus hit a home run though.
So he got called that.
Yes.
That's a moon shot.
Cassianus.
I'm going to give you a clip of the actual home run and be like, not enough energy in
this home run call.
Yeah.
What's going on there Tom?
All right.
So that was that was.
I'll try to find that clip by the way from senior year.
In unreal.
Yeah.
We would like that clip and unreal night on Wednesday night when that happens.
So we have NBA playoffs.
Oh, actually we should talk.
You want to talk caps first?
You want to.
Yeah.
I'm fine talking about the caps because I think I gained a little perspective throughout
the whole COVID crisis and what the, what the caps have done by putting on a show for
my enjoyment, for America's enjoyment, for Canada's enjoyment, really for the world's
enjoyment, I think is better than winning a Stanley Cup.
I think that that being in the bubble staying safe, practicing good hygiene, not spreading
the virus around zero positive COVID tests for the capitals are their opponents this
postseason, which I think is a testimony just what a great team this is.
Same number of goals today.
Same number of goals.
Yeah.
Well, yeah.
Hey, they have families they want to get back to.
Okay.
And I think that what they showed today was.
So they gave up.
No, no.
Tom Wilson doesn't have a thing.
No.
Well, what the caps did was they let them score four goals on them so that Tom Wilson
wouldn't injure any more of their players.
Yeah.
Trying to keep everybody safe.
All around.
Trying to limit the amount of ice minutes that the Islanders have to go through.
Plus, I'm just very, very happy for Barry Trots.
Like, this is a great win for Barry Trots.
Very good.
Really?
He's a cap for life.
Should have kept him.
Cap for life.
Our Stanley Cup winning coach.
I'm glad that we were able to share him with a less fortunate franchise like the New
York Islanders.
Who have all in all like four X the amount of Stanley Cups is the capitals.
Listen, we can we can talk about banners that hang from the ceiling all day long.
I think the most important banner this year is everyone's safe.
Everyone goes home to their families.
It's the easy.
When's do you get some part of that?
Oh, absolutely.
I think Barry Trots.
He's using the information that he learned whilst coaching the capitals and how to win.
Plus, I mean, does it really count this year?
Like, no, I said it is the easiest year to lose.
You have your team lose.
There's no parade I could go to.
There's no Stanley Cup celebration.
I'm not going to drink out of the cup again this year.
So honestly, I'm glad I hope because they lost.
I hope that a new team.
I hope a new team wins.
And for all the people that are hard at work making a veteran golfing photoshop.
It's been a dry spell for them recently.
They haven't gotten to make those back.
So yeah, well, they made it last year, too.
Yeah, they made it last year.
But that was only that was a year.
That was an aberration.
All right.
So we had that.
The Blackhawks were eliminated as well.
You know, Hank, you're left hockey, whatever.
Yeah, what's left of your team is I think that you've got some really smart
players who have accurately realized that, you know, being around your family
in a time like this is more important.
Golfing. Yeah, putting on a game.
The Blackhawks getting eliminated first is actually also great
because when you get eliminated first, people just don't even remember.
That's true. It's like, what? Oh, yeah.
That. Oh, yeah.
OK, yeah, they got eliminated.
And you were playing with House Money this year.
House Money, youngest team, whatever.
You didn't need that draft pick.
We had the NBA lottery tonight.
The Chicago Bulls are going to get Obie Toppin.
Very excited. Who won? Oh, the Wolves.
Why are you so sure of that?
I actually don't think we are going to get Obie Toppin.
I think we're going to get the kid from Israel.
But I just know from a blogger podcasting perspective,
when you can say ain't no stopping Obie Toppin, it pays for itself.
Yeah, I mean, those shirts pay for themselves.
Being able to say that after a big play pays for itself.
Like he could suck, but just being able to say that for a couple of years,
that's worth it.
So stop and Obie Toppin, put it in the draft.
What about like a Mike Meyers T-shirt like an Austin Powers one?
It says, Obie Have. There we go.
We could go anywhere with Obie Toppin.
We also had an all time moment during the lottery.
So the Bulls went to four and I went live on Periscope
and we're sitting in the gambling cave
and the Barstool intern was sitting there as well.
Shout out, McDougs and he just casually.
I was like, hey, I think we're going to get Obie Toppin.
And he's like, oh, I had his class with him at Dayton.
We were dance partners in a class, like really?
And he's like, yeah, we were dance partners partners.
And I said, oh, so do you have his phone number?
He's like, no, but my ex-girlfriend does.
OK, McDougs, way to just do that to yourself.
And he's no stop and Obie Toppin, no stop and Obie Toppin.
Get some sloppy Obie Toppin.
I think that if you're picturing like what is
what does McDougs look like?
He's exactly what you picture him.
He is like Kevin McDougal.
If a Barstool intern was grown in a Petri dish.
Yes, that's McDougs. Call me, Dougs.
So other bonus lottery news. Yeah.
We are on a crash course for the ball family
to move to Oakland.
We are looking at the trade potentially
LaVar Ball dealing with the Golden State Warriors dynasty,
which I I mean, if you're a fan of chaos,
you should be rooting for that scenario.
The Warriors are going to figure out a way to trade
the number two pick and like Andrew Wiggins for, I don't know.
Anthony Davis, like something ridiculous.
Or I'll be like, what the fuck? How'd this happen?
Keonis. Yeah.
That would be actually great if Wiggins then went back to LeBron.
Like after the he bases like, no, I don't want this.
Wait, was that how it went? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
No, you'll have to specify so many times when he went back to Cleveland
and he made them trade Wiggins for Kevin Love. Yes.
All right. Before we get to NBA playoffs,
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NBA playoffs, the Lakers are back.
Yep. Laker Dan is back.
They just curbs stomped the fucking Blazers.
I can't believe that everyone decided the Blazers
were going to win this series after one Blazers and five.
I decided the Blazers were going to win the series after zero games.
So I was a little bit ahead of the curve on that one.
But it was it was a classic LeBron James game one to game two switch up
where for some reason I have zero stats to back this up, by the way.
I feel like LeBron James likes to have people doubt him in the playoffs.
Oh, he's liable to go out there and lay an egg just to get more fuel.
Just just to give Skip Bayless like a little bit of water in his dish.
But be like, here you go.
Come up with some takes for me so I can come out game two and smash everybody.
It was a no brainer.
It was a no doubt or that the Lakers were going to come out tonight
and win by at least 10. It wasn't even LeBron, though.
LeBron only had 10 points.
It was Anthony Davis being like, oh, yeah, I'm seven feet
and way better than everyone on the court and then just dunking on people
and grabbing rebounds over everyone.
So it's nice to see A.D. doing that, although he did it with the pelicans.
But so that I think what we're going to actually have
with these NBA bubble playoffs, because it's been very confusing
watching these teams like the Lakers lose game one, the Bucks lose game one.
I think we're going to have some fucking great series
because you saw the Mavs beat the Clippers and all this adds up to.
I've had a thought bubble in my head that I just think the Rockets
are going to win the title just so that we can all discount
Darryl Maury and James Harden and be like, that's not real.
It would be the perfect asterisk.
It really would.
The Houston asterisks.
Absolutely.
Like I think that there's a pretty good chance that it's a good shooting gym.
Like like we talked about earlier, there's no like fans behind.
Yeah, it's a close backdrop.
So yeah, I could see no strip clubs inside the bubble.
That's a bonus for hard fans.
They test them for weird fake illnesses all the time.
Harden again skates by on that one.
So yeah, I mean, I think that the Rockets have as good a chance
as anybody out of the West and then out of the East.
I still like Hank Celtics and the heat look good, man.
My heat look good.
The bucks look good.
The bucks look pretty good, but I still I'm not in.
I think that, you know what?
I think I think the bucks are frauds.
How stupid our brains are.
I think they're counterfeits.
We we we like discount the bucks just because Hank said the bucks stink.
And then they lost game one and we're like, oof, it adds up.
I think the bucks, the bucks might still stink.
Just because I don't know about that.
Dante had a good game.
Aaron Dorn wasn't playing.
You're our first day basis.
Yeah, Dante, the the say his last name.
D. Vincenzo. There we go.
The deli sub. He's the Italian sub.
Let it go. Let it go.
But yeah, they've been great.
I just the fact that we get wall to wall basketball every day is
like this is going to be a harsh come down when we get to the next round.
And they start doing just night games.
You're like, wait, where's my where's my basketball game at one o'clock?
Yeah, it's it's a big fuck you to the West Coast and a big giant wet sloppy
kiss to the East Coast media elites like us.
It's fucking awesome to watch these games.
I like it a lot.
One note that I had was did you see what Russell Westbrook was wearing?
Yes. So he's Russell Westbrook is copying my band shirts idea.
Just just a year later, again, I'm ahead on that.
Like I was ahead on the Levi's tag and on the the NASA tags.
But I was wondering how many bags of clothes
do you think that Russ had to bring with him to the bubble?
A lot. He probably gets he probably gets them shipped.
Did you hear the the anecdote that C.
J. McCall met eighty five bottles of wine in his hotel room.
Yeah. Eighty five bottles of wine because he's selling them.
Yeah. But he also him and J.
But are turning this into like a lucrative little side hustle.
But they were just talking about moving hotels.
They're like, yeah, they had to move all these bottles of wine.
We also had a great moment on the broadcast tonight where
Jeff Van Gundy is kindly as he could just essentially called Mark Jackson a fucking idiot.
What happened? He Jeff Mark Jackson.
There was one clip of Carmelo guarding LeBron, full court.
And Mark Jackson was like, see, people say Mello can't play defense.
Look at this defense.
And Jeff Van Gundy was like, I got to say, I agree with the people.
Mello can't play defense in Mark Jackson.
Just like, what? You know what?
Mello did have that one block at the end of the game, much like he hits his one
three. He Mello knows when people are tuning in.
I'm pretty sure that he has like a little Nielsen guidebook on the sidelines.
And he knows when the eyeballs are on him, when he can make his one play.
Mark Jackson also said about I think it was Westbrook tonight
because Westbrook wasn't playing.
He was talking to the officials.
He was like arguing for a foul call.
And then Mark Jackson was like, see, this is what a teammate does.
Is he communicates with the referees even when he's not playing?
And Jeff Van Gundy again, was just like, OK, Mark. Yeah.
Yeah, like it's pretty normal for a player who's sitting on the bench
to be talking to an official.
I'd say them spending all day and night together.
Jeff Van Gundy's had many moments where he's like, wow,
you say some dumb shit.
Jeff Van Gundy is probably the one that's trying to get him a job
with the bulls or the pelicans.
He's going to leak a lot of stuff.
Mark Jackson to the to the Pells.
Oh, God, if the bulls hire a mom, no, no, they won't.
They won't. They won't.
Bulls get Mello.
What? What if the bulls get Lamello? Oh, Lamello.
I mean, I feel like that'd be great for big cat to have
LeVar Ball in his in his universe.
But ain't no stopping.
Obi Toppin, dude.
Just say it ain't no stopping Obi Toppin.
Like when he goes off, when you I loved watching him at Dayton.
Dayton was a wagon this year.
Every time he had a good game, ain't no stopping Obi Toppin.
And he had a lot of good games.
All right, is I think that's it for everything that's going on right now.
Anything we missed will do Billy's List and Firefest after the interviews.
But we got two awesome interviews coming up.
So let's do it.
Let's get to Drew Rosenhaus.
And then we will have Jason Wright right after him.
PFT, you got a quick ad.
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Arrange for them to get a sober ride home.
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OK, we now welcome on a very special guest.
It is super agent, Drew Rosenhaus.
Drew, thank you for joining us.
Actually, I want to start there.
Are you OK with us calling you a super agent?
Is that OK?
Uh, you know, that's I've heard that term before.
It's pretty funny, but I prefer you guys can call me whatever you want.
It's no big deal.
All right, I feel like you're a super agent.
I saw that your nickname was a shark.
But I also think that you gave yourself the nickname, the shark.
Can you confirm that?
Oh, I don't know how that nickname came about.
I did have a book that was entitled A Shark Never Sleeps
or Shark Never Sleeps.
So maybe that's how I got the nickname.
But it's not like I refer to myself as a shark or a super agent out there.
I'm a pretty humble guy, believe it or not.
You actually, I was going to save this for later.
But I did.
I do have a bone to pick with you because you once claimed that you wrestled
a six foot shark and I actually can't pull up the old tweets
but are the old pictures.
But I had a problem with it at the time.
I called bullshit on at the time.
Do you remember this?
No, it's true.
I mean, you can go on YouTube and you can see the video.
It's if you just type in drew Rosenhouse wrestles a shark.
I don't know if you caught wrestling.
I grabbed it.
I grabbed the shark.
I grabbed his tail.
Try to bite me.
I was in the keys.
We were fishing.
I did something silly.
I jumped in the water.
I grew up in Miami Beach.
So I've been around sharks and fishing my whole life and it was kind of silly.
But no, there's no bullshit on that one guy.
I saw the video I wrote it at the time.
I blogged at the time.
I think it was probably like 2014.
I said the the title actually should have read drew Rosenhouse
touched the tail of a dying shark that was probably hooked on a fishing line
for the past three hours until it had no strength left.
But keeps tweeting out that he wrestled a six foot shark.
Well, I can tell you it wasn't dying in the video.
You can see it swim away.
OK, it was it was on the line for maybe five minutes.
And I can also tell you that it it definitely was it was a powerful, vibrant shark.
OK, there's there's no no exaggeration needed on that one.
That video itself maybe doesn't do it justice.
There's there's there's more recent video.
I went fishing with the one of my clients, Juwan Taylor,
and he caught a Goliath grouper probably around 400 pounds.
And I got in the water with that bad boy and grabbed him.
And he wanted to smack me with this thing.
That's something you can find as well.
That ESPN had that on sports center.
So if you doubt my prowess of wrestling sharks and fish,
I have that for my resume as well.
I'm going to do something I rarely do.
I'm going to actually retroactively call myself a hater.
OK, that probably was a blog that came from spiked hate wherever it may have been.
I don't know if I had a bad day, hadn't had my coffee,
but I will retroactively rule that I was a hater in that case.
No problem, guys.
I've got fixed skin and I'm I'm very forgiving.
I would hope so.
If you're putting your like limbs near a shark's mouth, then yeah,
that's probably a good thing to have.
I want to say I want to start off off the top talking about something
that's in the news today.
There were some reports that the NFL was talking about maybe doing a playoff bubble
or multiple playoff bubbles.
And I didn't know if you had been a part of those conversations or what you had heard.
But what would your reaction that be?
My reaction is I think it's a great idea because the bubbles work so well
in both the NBA and the NHL and Major League Soccer.
It's kind of a proven component here to to beat covid.
So I'm all for that.
You know, you've got you've got a limited window and a limited number of teams.
So I think it's doable.
And there's so much at stake.
I I love it.
I think it would I think it would be effective.
Let's see where we're at in a couple months.
But I'm all for that, guys.
I gotta say, I think the NFL has done an outstanding job up to this point in dealing with this.
I mean, you're talking about less than 1% of the guys.
You know, have tested positive since training camp.
They've done like 100,000 tests.
And it's just been a huge success.
I think there might be 12 guys on the covid list right now.
That's unbelievable.
Yeah.
Out of 2000 some odd players that are presently on NFL rosters.
I'm I'm excited with the way this is going.
And when I talk to teams and my clients, everyone's confident that a season is going to take place.
Now, the season is is I think going to take place as well.
But there probably won't be a lot of fans.
Is that something that you're projecting out that the salary cap might be adjusted and
you're telling your guys like, hey, get ready for this because it might be a little different
in a year or two.
We might be feeling some repercussions from a year without fans.
Yeah, definitely concerned about that and how that's going to affect the salary cap.
You know, I think the NFL is going to pull a rabbit out of its hat and hopefully get a TV deal done here.
Possibly before we have a new salary cap next off season.
And that would offset any losses from the fans.
So it might be premature to be gloom and doom about, you know, the future of the salary cap
because the NFL is in negotiations with the networks as we speak.
And this would be great timing for both sides to get something done.
I mean, I think the NFL ratings are going to be through the roof and unprecedented
based on all the fans that should be watching NFL football coming up here in less than a month.
Yeah, I can't wait.
I want to jump back to kind of the beginning of your career a little bit if we could.
Like right now I'm sure that you can, you kind of sell yourself, right?
If there's somebody that's coming out of college that's going to be a projected top 10 pick,
you're probably on that shortlist.
You show up and you're like, Hey, it's me, the shark, the super agent.
You know, you want to sign with me already.
What was it like at the start of your career when you were first starting to get players to Miami?
How did you convince them that you could make them more money in the pros than they were already making out to you?
It wasn't easy. I was 22 years old when I broke in the business in 1988.
And I was a young guy with limited experience.
And, you know, I just told the truth, man.
You know, when in doubt, tell the truth.
I share with the recruits that I wanted to be an agent very badly because I wanted to help
my clients and I felt like I could do a great job.
And I really was confident that I had the, you know, the talent to do it based on my legal background.
And I was a law student at Duke and I had interned with an agency.
And I just felt like I had what it took to get the job done.
And I was just, you know, kind of spoke from the heart.
And I didn't have a lot of success early on, but fortunately I hung in there.
And at the end of the day, was able to build my resume and build my career.
Who, who is the client that like the, I've made it client, the client that you,
you were able to get that you're like, this guy is going to be great.
And he's going to set me up for future clients.
And it's going to be almost a snowball effect from here.
Well, you know, very early in my career, I represented Marvin Jones, who was the fourth
overall pick of the draft in the night, in the mid nineties.
And I also had Warren Sapp as a client in the mid nineties who went on to be one of the great
players in the NFL. But probably all the way back in 1991, I signed a first round pick,
believe it or not. Back in 1991, his name was Randall Hill and he came out of the university
of Miami and was drafted by the dolphins in the first round.
And as a guy that was based in Miami, that was a double win for me because I started
to build my client base for the hurricanes and the dolphins.
And that was pretty huge being a South Florida guy wound up to really, you know, dominating
in terms of signing over the years, a lot of the great hurricane players and,
and then going on and signing a lot of the dolphin veterans as well.
So I'd have to give Randall Hill a lot of credit.
It's kind of a breakthrough guy for me in 1991.
So after you kind of build out your stable clients a little bit, how,
how quickly did you figure out that you are a guy that was going to enjoy being on television?
You know, a guy that would not shy away from the spotlight if you had to be there.
Because I know a lot of agents stay more behind the scenes than you.
You're not afraid to do interviews and you're not afraid to, you know,
do these press conferences and things like that.
Did you make a conscious decision that you were going to be, you know, more public facing?
I do think that early in my career, I realized that in order to compete, I would have to be
different and I'd have to take more chances.
I'd have to be more aggressive.
So I kind of stepped outside the box.
And while most agents at the time were kind of behind the scenes guys and,
you know, shied away from publicity, I sort of used it to my advantage.
And I was on the cover of Sports Illustrated early in my career and,
and, and used that to sort of as a platform to get clients and was affiliated with things like
Jerry McGuire and Get a Burger King commercial and ESPN commercial.
And, and these were years ago, you know, so no question.
The media has been good to me in that I've become, you know, fairly well known publicly.
And that's been good for business, I guess.
Has there ever been a downside to that though?
Has there ever been a guy that you're going after who's like, look,
I want, I would love to use you as an agent, but you're, you know, out in the public eye
and maybe they have a stereotype of you as an agent that's too flashy.
Has that ever worked against you?
I think earlier in my career,
that, that may have been a factor with the few players, but probably not over the past decade,
because I've really, you know, I don't think I've done as much media over the past decade.
And certainly a lot less controversial.
Some of the media stuff earlier in my career was fairly controversial.
The next question, press conference and some of the, you know, interviews that I had,
had to do with, with tough topics like Plexico Burris and getting, going to jail and things of
that nature were tough. But I was on Money Night Football talking about that at halftime.
But I think over the past decade guys, a lot of that, I've turned more towards commenting
about league issues or, you know, negotiations. It hasn't been as controversial.
So I haven't heard any players really use that as a reason not to hire us.
Yeah. Yeah. And you've seen obviously a lot change over the course of your career in terms of the
types of contracts that players are getting, whether it's, you know, more guaranteed money here,
there are some giveaway takeaway on like, you know, some of the injury, injury side of things.
Where do you see NFL contracts like 10, 15 years from now? If you were to look at them,
like how much pro, how much more progress do you think the players will have made in terms of,
like maybe getting some, you know, full, fully guaranteed contracts?
Well, I started when I was 22 years old and now I'm 53. I'll be 54 in October.
So 32 years in the business and I've seen the, the contracts grow incredibly.
And there's no reason why that won't continue to happen. I think right now we're
even in the middle of a pandemic, you see blockbuster deals
for guys around the league. Over the last couple of weeks, there's been some huge extensions.
And, you know, even in the midst of the pandemic, we did an extension
for a guy like Darius Slay that made him the highest paid cornerback in the NFL,
for a guy like Javon Hargrave who went from the Steelers to the Eagles, became the highest paid
nose tackle in the NFL. I mean, I'm amazed every year with the growth,
Kittle just became the highest paid tight end. He's not our client, but that will grow the market.
And we have two great young tight ends in John U. Smith and David and Joku who will benefit from
that. Not to mention oldie, oldie, you know, oldie, but goodies who will benefit from that.
And guys like Rob Gronkowski and possibly even Greg Olson, if they decide to play after the
season. Yeah. So, um, I'm always curious this because as fans, you always hear rumors about
negotiations and when they start and if a team's getting close, walk us through this from behind
the scenes. You don't have to do a specific player, but at what point do you start talking about a
contract extension? Like a guy gets drafted, he plays his first two years, three years,
what point do you at least reach out to the team? Like the guy's playing well, the team likes him.
When does the conversation start about a contract extension? Well, um, if, if your client is not
drafting, uh, and becomes a great player, um, you're able to work on a new contract after
the second year. So you can actually, if you've got an outstanding player who was an undrafted
free agent, some of our best clients are undrafted free agents like Shaq Barrett who led the league
in sacks. Um, but let's just use the JC Jackson, for example, who was undrafted coming out of
college and has become one of the top corners in the league for the Patriots. Um, yeah, I've,
I mean, I've touched base with the Patriots about JC and he's only played two years. So, um,
for guys that are drafted, you can start talking really and do a deal after the third year. It
really depends on your client and their prominence. We've done 103 contract extensions and every one of
them has different timing involved. Um, but often I get started as soon as a player is eligible
after their third year for a draft choice or after their second year if a player was undrafted.
So, so for JC Jackson, for that one, are you talking to Bill Belichick directly or are you
talking to someone else in the Patriots organization? Well, um, without getting too specific about
JC, one thing that I enjoy about the Patriots is I have worked with Coach Belichick on negotiations.
Um, I've also worked with Nick Casario and talked about contract negotiations. He's
basically their, their general manager, but, um, I've, I've been able to work with Bill Belichick
for 30 years now. And, uh, in many instances, he's the one that I'm working on the contract with,
other times it's, it's Nick Casario, but they're both, um, guys that I have a lot of respect for
and, uh, they're very good at their job and, uh, I've been able to negotiate quite a few deals
with both of those gentlemen from my clients on the Patriots over the years.
And in a scenario where you have a player out of college who, you know, you're very confident
that you know that this person's going to be drafted highly, how do you decide
which player that you're going to go hang out in their living room or go, you know, to, to the
actual draft and sit next to, how do you make that call? Uh, well, last year, for example,
on the first night of the draft, I was with Derek Brown, who we were pretty confident he was going
to be the 10th overall pick. Um, uh, you know, or the top 10, I should say, and he was the seventh
overall pick by the Panthers. I'm talking to teams. So I have a feeling guys of where our players
are going to be drafted on day two. I was with Josh Uche, who was the second round pick of the
Patriots. And I was pretty confident that, uh, that Josh would be drafted in the second round
based on my discussions with the teams and the interests that they had in those players. So
where I am on draft day really depends on what the teams are telling me. Uh, I've got partners,
my brother Jason, Robert Bailey, Ryan Matha, they'll go and stay with players as well. So we're
with all of our clients during the draft. Yeah. But if you show up, the player knows like something's
going to happen, you know, and now have you ever been in a situation where let's say, uh, a player
might start to fall and you know that you're on television, you know that those cameras are hitting
you, whether you're in that player's living room or whatever it is. Have you been in a situation
like that? And you're like, you know what, I got to start taking fake phone calls. So it looks like
there's a lot of interest in your client. You just like pick up the phone and talk to nobody.
It's funny you mentioned that. If you guys do your research,
Google Willis McGehee and Drew Rosenhouse and what happened with Willis McGehee is exactly
what you just said. Wow. Um, he wasn't drafted. Yes, me yet. Uh, right. And ESPM was at my house
and they kept showing me and Willis and we were waiting for a call. So I call Willis McGehee
and I'm on the phone with Willis and Willis is on the phone and all these teams start calling me
and saying, wait a minute, Drew, who's Willis talking to? Is he about to get drafted?
We're thinking about taking him in the second round because everyone knows players don't get on
the phone during the draft. Well, I wasn't specific. I didn't say he was on the phone with me,
but the inference was that he was probably on the phone talking about, uh, getting drafted
and he wound up getting drafted in the first round to the surprise of a lot of teams. And I
think a lot of people felt that that particular technique of me calling Willis being on the
phone with him while he was on ESPN later turned out to be a pretty good strategy. And
the bills drafted in with the 23rd pick in the first round, I'd imagine that, uh, that that's
a great story. And I'd imagine that type of scenario happens often, maybe not exactly on the draft
day, but in your dealings with the league, because there's nothing like NFL teams secrecy and scared
of what the other teams are doing. I'd assume you're able to be like, Hey, listen, I'm talking to a
lot of people and then, and then everyone kind of drives up the price because they're all crazy.
Every, every NFL franchise is kind of crazy in that way. It's, it's a special league like that.
It's a very competitive league and, uh, I try and use that to our advantage. Um,
I have to operate with integrity guys because I've been doing this for a long time and I
represent a lot of players in the NFL and I have to work with all 32 teams and they're not one
off deals. It's not like I can burn a bridge. I'm going to be dealing with the team again. So I cannot
just fabricate stuff or make stuff up or I'll have no credibility, but there are times that you
obviously, um, you know, you can be aggressive, uh, in terms of stretching and I've done that from
time to time. Has there ever been, and you don't have to name names, but has there ever been a time
where, um, not to your fault, but just the fact that the player, uh, maybe didn't perform to the
level that they got paid. Uh, it may be momentarily burned a bridge where a team was like, we're not
going to deal with you for a year or two or something like that. Has that ever happened? No, I don't
think the teams blame the agent. If the player doesn't play well, it's not my fault. If, uh,
if I'm a hard negotiator, right? And I agree to a good deal
with the team and then the player doesn't, uh, play well, they're not going to fault me for that.
Right. So I haven't had that issue. Um, I really haven't burned a bridge with clubs. I, I, that's
why I've been able to do this for as long as I have guys and, and represent about a hundred
active clients in the NFL at this time. I go out of my way to be aggressive for my clients
and fight for my clients and get everything I can for them, but also maintain a relationship
with the teams that involves honesty and integrity and, and fair communication. I think it's
important. You can't just go out there and, and be a warrior and, and, and burn every bridge. You'll
be out of the business at no time because your clients, they need an agent that can communicate
with the teams. Negotiation is just one phase for a player. Often it's communicating about an
injury or about the draft or about a trade or how a player is performing, what he needs to work on.
My job isn't just to negotiate contracts. I'm involved in a litany of things that involve me
having to have a respectful relationship with clubs so I can operate on my clients behalf.
If I'm just this, you know, insane, let me just at all costs negotiate contracts.
That's not in my client's best interest either. I haven't had a hold out in, in a long time,
probably a decade. So I've been able to, you know, get things done and, and, and effectively
negotiate, you know, a thousand NFL contracts over the past 10, 15 years without having any
real acrimony with any given NFL team. That's not very shark-like of you though, Mark. That's
more, that's more like a, like a dolphin. Yeah. That's like the dolphin. Yeah. How do you like
that? You know what? I would say at times, at times I'm a shark, at times I'm a porpoise.
You know, you have to be, you got to be a flexible, you know? At times I'm a fish and a mammal and
I'm sure there's a lot of other descriptions that I've gotten from teams like who knows. Yeah. But
I, I, what I will say is I take my job very seriously guys and it's a big responsibility
to represent players. It's not, it's not a joke for me and as we kid around with, you know,
acronyms for me of shark, a porpoise. I've got guys whose lives depend on me to be a professional,
to recommend things that are in their best interest. The NFL is a short lifespan.
Guys are dependent on you to give them right advice to be a professional and I take it very
seriously and, and for whatever, you know, my public persona is, the, the one thing that I
can tell you guys is the most important thing to me is I always do what's in my client's best
interest and I work very hard to be professional at this. I study, I'm prepared and I try to be a
consummate pro every step of the way because my clients deserve that, so do their families.
How have you dealt with, you know, you've been doing it for so long now, like you said, started
in 1989. Social media has changed everything. Do you do social media courses with your clients?
How, like, how do you approach that when a guy gets drafted or when you officially sign someone
as, you know, being a client, Rosenhaus? How, how do you talk to them about social media and
how they deal with all that? I'm frequently discussing social media with my clients and the
easiest way to explain social media to my clients is whenever you post something just assume it's
a press conference. It's just like you getting up on a podium in front of the whole media and
making a statement because everyone follows you on social media. People follow everything that you
do and that is what I say to my clients, be aware that whatever you do on social media,
it is, it is equivalent to doing an interview and millions of people could potentially see it.
So from my standpoint, that's the type of conversation I have. Remember, when a lot of
our clients get to us, they've been through college. So they've talked about this with their
college coaches. Many of the guys get this conversation from the NFL teams as well.
So there is an awful lot of education that takes place before it even gets to me
and my interaction with an athlete. What about when you get a deal done for one of your clients?
And let's just say it's a big deal like a Rob Gronkowski level type thing. When you sign that
contract, do you have Ian Rappaport and Adam Schefter on the same text thread with each other?
Because they tweet, they tweet this news out within 30 seconds of each other. And I'm pretty
sure that the agents just copy both of them at the same time. Well guys, I'm not in a position to
reveal my sources or talk about my relationships with any reporters. But in general, as an agent,
I do think it's helpful to get along with the media. There are guys nationally that I have a lot of
respect for, including one of your good friends and Mike Florio. You know, I have a good relationship
with Mike and pro football talk. And really, I'm responsive to any reporter that reaches out to me.
I try to treat them all with great respect. I try to get back to everyone, even if I can't comment
or I can't help you with this. But certainly, I can't divulge the secrets of my practice.
I will say I did reach out to Mike before this interview. I was like, Hey, you got any juicy
stuff I can press him on. And Mike responded, no, he's a good guy. So I mean, that's, listen,
you guys, it sounds like maybe he's on, he's your first guy that you text.
Well, I tell you this, you guys have done a heck of a job. I mean, it's remarkable to see the growth
of your podcast and your broadcasting careers. And it's, it's fun to see, you know, I love this
element of our business that there's so much opportunity surrounding sports and commentating.
And there's great content for fans and you don't have to, you know, just turn to ESPN or NFL.com.
And you guys are an inspiration to a lot of people out there that, that you can go outside the box.
So I take my hat off. Way to butter us up. So, so in releasing the contract news,
you got to stay ahead of the curve because I think people are starting to catch up to this.
I talk about it all the time. When that initial news comes out, it's always like fake money.
They're like, oh, this guy signed for five years, $200 million. Then they look at it and they're like,
well, they could cut them after a year and a half. And it's only like 20 million guaranteed.
So how are we going to stay ahead of the curve? Because I think people are catching up to that
first tweet is always like, wait a second, let's get the real numbers. Yeah, I'm not a huge fan of
inflating anything because all that's going to happen is the media is going to come back a day
later and say, wait, this deal isn't what it was cracked up to be. So I'd rather just give,
you know, the facts. I think if you spin it, it's going to come back to bite you on the rear end.
So I'm not a huge fan of playing that game where you make it seem like it's better than it is
because that only goes so far. And I'm pretty straightforward when it comes to
breaking down deals and talking about them when I do, because I don't think it's beneficial
for my clients to put out an inflated or exaggerated contract, and then it's just
going to get assassinated or dissected the following day. I don't want to put my clients
in that position. You know, that's exciting. For them a sign of contract, there's no need
to, you know, to fabricate or, or, you know, kind of embellish on what these deals look like.
Yeah, go ahead. I was going to say one of your one of your most famous clients is Frank Gore.
And I was just going to let you know that I appreciate Frank Gore. He's been around for
what 15 years now. For you as an agent, that must be like an incredible guy to have on your
roster, where it's like every year you're like, is Frank going to retire? No, he's going to come
out and rush for 900 yards again. We're going to take another bite of that apple this off season.
So how many more years do you think that Frank's got left in him? Well, Frank is going into a 16th
season, which is amazing for a running back in particular. And Frank is the third all-time
leading running back in NFL history. And one thing that has established Frank is an all-time great
guys is he loves the game. And he's a very hard worker. And I think Frank loves the game so much
that he'll keep playing this game until he's told by all 32 teams that there's no job for him.
I really do. Frank loves professional football. He loves to compete. He loves to play. He's a rare
competitor. I don't think Frank will retire out of his own recognizance until the opportunities
have dried up. And really, at this stage of his career, you got to take it one year at a time.
I mean, he is a big year for the Jets. And I hope he does with Reunited with Adam Gase.
If he has a big year, I wouldn't be surprised if he played again in 2021. But it's got to be one
year at a time right now for him. I've always been curious to this. You have a ton of different
clients. How do you decide who like who you're rooting for? And after, let's say the Super Bowl,
you got clients going up against each other. Do you talk to the loser first or you try to
talk to the winner first? How does that? How do you always break that down? Do you have a protocol
or is it by feel? I think it is by feel, guys. I think it is by feel. Usually I will talk to the
winners first because they're in a good mood and they're happy and they're receptive and they're
glad to see you. A lot of times guys need to cool down after a loss. If I'm on the field after the
game or in a locker room though, whatever order I see my clients win, lose or draw, I'm going to
talk to them. But if I'm in a position where I have to go to one locker room or another,
typically I'll give the guys that have not won the chance to compose themselves and kind of get
over the bitterness of defeat. They probably don't want to hear from me right after a game when you
lose. When players win, they're ecstatic to see you and it's more welcome.
How do you decide who you root for? Are you just rooting for your clients? You're basically like,
I just hope all my clients do awesome and that's it. Or do you even have, like if Frank Gore's in
the Super Bowl and he's up against- He's on the Jets. Okay. Well, yeah. So we'll suspend all
belief. Frank Gore's in the Super Bowl this year and he's up against, let's say, Gronk. So it's
Jets first bucks. Are you somewhat like steeped down being like, I really want Frank Gore to win
this because Gronk has a few Super Bowls to his name and Frank doesn't have any.
You know guys, that's a brilliant question. Thank you. And although I'm an agent, I am a human
being and I care about my clients. I have to really tell you that I've grown to be very neutral
over the 32 years that I've been in the business. You learn to kind of put your emotions in a box
with the games and you're satisfied with your players coming out of a game healthy and hopefully
playing at the best of their abilities. I don't root for teams in the Super Bowl. If Gronk and
Frank won against each other, may the best man win. This is basically the next question answer.
You're just doing the next question answer. Yeah. I mean, no, I'm just, yeah. I really can't decide.
Just give us the next question. Give us the satisfaction of saying next question. Next question.
There we go. I think I know what you want to say and from your mindset, you have to, you look at the
NFL like it's your giant fantasy team. You've got all these different players and you just root for
their staff. Yeah. And so if it's Frank Gore against Gronk and the Super Bowl, you're hoping that
both guys get three touchdowns. That was the most diplomatic like diatribe you're about to go on.
I'm pretty good. I'm pretty good at the diplomacy at this stage of my career, but it's hard. I mean,
you're emotionally attached to all your clients and believe me, I've seen guys get injured game
after game. So after 32 years of gut wrenching pain as an agent watching these games, because I've
seen Gronk blow out his knee. I've seen Gronk have a concussion. I've seen Gronk break his forearm.
I mean, you know, I just want to see these guys come out healthy and play well, honestly. Whether
they win or lose, you know, I'm kind of calcified at this point on that. Yeah. What about what about
fantasy football though? Do you play fantasy? Definitely not because I think it'd be, you know,
a little bit of a conflict of interest. Yeah. Right. I could just play a team with my clients,
but that wouldn't be fair. So I don't play fantasy football. One of the tough parts guys is when I
grew up here in Miami, I was a huge dolphin fan, huge hurricane fan, like you would not believe.
And I can tell you very frankly that I miss being a fan. I miss being a dolphin fan, a
hurricane fan, because now I just root for my clients and I'm not able to be a fan anymore.
I can't play fantasy football. I can't just sit back and watch a game and cheer when the team
scores a touchdown. Now I'm analyzing every play, wondering if my clients are playing,
why this guy didn't play, why he missed the tackle. Yeah. Being an agent is a lot of fun,
but I will tell you when you become an agent, you, football is now a business and not fun
like it used to be. So that's the only downside. I see so many people say to me, I love football.
I'd like to be an agent. Sometimes I just want to tell them it's a great profession. I love what I
do, but you lose the innocence of being a fan, which is a lot of fun. So you've had it happen
a couple of times that I know of, but maybe more times than, you know, throughout your career,
but you've had to cut ties with clients. So basically the reverse of a client firing an agent,
you know, Antonio Brown, Johnny Manziel, how does that, how do you, how do you get to that
conclusion? Is it like, you know, you tried, you tried, you tried and nothing changed or,
you know, what exactly happens when a Johnny Manziel or Antonio Brown situation, you have to
cut ties with clients. You know, rather than shedding light on those two cases in particular,
at a respect for them, and I want to rehash tough times for either one of them. I think that the
answer is this. In general, my philosophy, man, is to stick with my clients as long as I can,
as long as I'm effective, as long as my advice is being appreciated, as long as the client respects
me and I'm effective at what I'm doing. At the point in time where the client no longer cares
for my advice or my recommendations or we're, we're in conflict in terms of what a player
should be doing, there's just no point in continuing that relationship. So for me, if I, if I ever get
to the point past, present or future, where I have a client that repeatedly disregards my counsel,
um, we don't share the same philosophy on how they're approaching their life and their career.
What's the point in having me as the representative? And if they're not going to cut the cord, then I
will, because there's other agents out there that they might have a better connection with at that
time. So, I mean, representing players is a very important job. And if I can't contribute
and be important in a player's life, then I shouldn't be that player's representative anymore.
That makes sense. And one of the great magic tricks that, that you pulled, and I think it's been done
a little bit recently, not just with Antonio Brown, but also this offseason we saw with,
with Jamal Adams, where a player is not happy for whatever reason on the team that they're on,
and they want to be traded, they're not a free agent. But in my head, last summer, I, I reached
the point where I thought that Antonio Brown was a free agent. It seemed like it was a free agency
period for him. And how do you exercise the little leverage that you have with a player that's under
contract to try to steer them to a team that they kind of put on their pre-approved checklist?
It's a slippery slope in that, you know, the teams really don't want a player to be on their club
that doesn't want to be there. You know, that's not productive. If you've got a guy that
doesn't believe in that organization, doesn't believe in that coaching staff,
doesn't want to be in that locker room, that's, that is counterproductive.
So if you get to that point with the player, and that player doesn't want to be there to that
extent, you really should trade that player. And that's not as much of a magic trick as it is
unfortunate because the downside is that when a player is that unhappy with the team
and motivates the team to trade, that's not the best for a player's reputation moving forward
either. And it's not the most conducive thing to the relationship with that new team or any other
team. So I'm not, you know, I'm not, I don't think that that's anything brilliant or a magic
trip trick. It's, it's, it's unfortunate for everybody involved when you get to that point
because it does have a negative effect on everybody in some capacity. Yeah. Remember,
these guys have relationships with players. And when they get traded, I mean, those relationships
in many respects, they, they suffer, you know, with coaches, with players, and, and that's not
fun. We had a client and Darius Slay that got traded and he didn't leave on the best of terms,
but that was hard on him because Darius really cared about a lot of people in that Lions
organization, but it was time for a change in, and that was a, that was a win-win for everybody
at that point in time. Yeah. Magic trick is probably not a great choice of words. It's more,
that's on me inside my own head where my dumb brain was like, oh, he's a free agent now. Like
at times I thought that he was because there were so many teams that were interested.
But if it's a, if it's a player that is, that says, you know, publicly or privately to the
organization, here are like the four teams that I would like to go to. Do you have any leverage at
all to make that happen? Or is it just you counting on the GM to like, do your player a solid and,
and try to put him in a place where he's happy? I think when you've got a client who's under
contract, you don't have a ton of leverages in agent because it's really up to the team, to the
side, how they want to trade the player for what terms, to what team. The leverage that I have is
just to be professional and communicating with that team and share with them what we believe
is in our client's best interest and in the team's best interest, to try and find a scenario where
everybody wins. The trade is beneficial for the player and beneficial for the team that acquires
the player and beneficial for the team that trades the player. That's what I'm trying to
accomplish. And I guess the term leverage really applies to using my experience. I've been an
agent longer than any other general manager by, by a wide margin at this time. So I try to share
with these general managers my experience over my three decades in the NFL and try and encourage
them to do what I think objectively will be in everyone's best interest. And hopefully that carries
some weight. Drew, this has been awesome. I have one last question. By the way, you're now a recurring
guest. So whenever one of your clients is in the news, you have to come on our show to tell us about
it. Just so you know, just no problem. My last question is the me on the soft question of the
day. Go to me on these.com slash PMT get 15% off your first purchase. How the hell did you get
the Instagram handle at agent? Oh, I, uh, I don't deserve any credit for that. One of the guys who
works for me, his name is Kyle Lincoln. He talked to the people at Instagram. We got a lot of clients
that we get verified and get handles and they were nice enough to give me the handle. I mean,
I wish I could, that's boss at agent is the greatest handle to have. If you were an eight,
like that makes you the best agent right there. You should just say that you should actually
just have that on your business cards. Just be like at agent. That's it. That's the only thing on the
business card. I wish that was the case and it was that easy, but it is a cool handle and I
don't intend to change it anytime soon. What about it has been a lot of fun with that handle?
What about when you retire? When you walk off into that sunset, are you going to find another
agent and sell it to them one last score? I'm sure I'll keep that handle. Why not? You know,
even when I'm retired, I'm sure people will still think of me as the agent.
Hopefully I've left that legacy over all these years. I've been doing it 32 years. My goal is
to get it up to 50 at least and then we'll go from there. We'll see what's next.
Well, you better hope that nobody grabs super agent because then that would actually make
you look worse if you're just agent or shark wrestling agent, shark wrestling agent. Drew,
though, this has been awesome. We really appreciate it. And like we said,
you now legally are obligated to come on anytime we ask.
Be my pleasure, guys. You take care. Thanks so much. Appreciate it. Bye-bye, guys.
Okay. That Drew Rosenhaus interview was brought to you by our friends at Bud Light Seltzer. Bud
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once if you want us to apply on your behalf. Billy didn't. Billy winked, which is half of a blank.
That was creepy, Billy. Jake, I will apply on your behalf. Billy, you don't, you would like,
I would actually love to see Billy negotiate the memes job with Bud Light Seltzer like so.
So how many Bud Light Seltzers do I get? What do you mean when you say I have to do memes?
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All right. So go to Bud Light Seltzer needs memes right now to apply. Bud Light Seltzer needs memes.com
to apply. Here is the president of the Washington football team, Jason Wright.
Okay. We now welcome on a very special guest. It is Jason Wright. He is the president of the
Washington football team. Awesome to have you. You just announced a week ago, huge hiring.
You're the first black president in NFL history. Also, I would assume going to change some culture
in Washington football team. Can we start with the culture change and talk about the team name?
Can we, can we decide that right now? Cause I know PFT really wants the red wolves. So let's,
let's do that right now. PFT, I heard you have a dynamic presentation for us.
I do. Well, I mean, it's what I heard. Well, I, I, some, some, some about Colin Powell and
yeah, I, that something, something round about like that, that, you know, caught my attention,
but I didn't quite fully understand. I may have said that I would give a Colin Powell like UN
presentation to you, but then I ditched that. I scrapped that because of everything that happened
after that presentation. So this is just going to be me talking to you one on one from a fan
perspective. It's the Washington football team now, but well, first of all, I'll say if they
make the Super Bowl this year, you know, you can't change that, right? Like it's just going to be
watching football. I mean, that sounds logical to me. I think if we, if we, if we go to the
Super Bowl this year, I think we will probably just all be kicking it a little bit instead of
worrying about things like this. Absolutely. But if you do change the name, I really, I feel
strongly that it should be red wolves. First of all, you got Fred Smoot, who really created
the movement behind red wolves. He's a fan favorite. He brings up some good points. The
defense could be called the wolf pack. I think that, that dogs in general are criminally under
represented at the professional level. When it comes to sports mascots, we do own the, the water
dogs lacrosse club. It's a professional lacrosse team. But besides that, there are like no dogs
at the, at the major league level. I think that you could do something like release wolves on the
sideline before every game. I'm talking about like before the teams take the field. Yeah,
that sounds highly litigious, but I hear you though. Okay. Here's the way. Don't worry about
that. Here's the way I would do it because we want to tie in conservation as well, right? We want to
be doing good things on and off the field. So if you just maybe eight o'clock on Sundays before an
any home game, you put maybe three red wolves down on the field, let them walk up and down,
just paste the opponent sideline, let them, you know, pee and poop down there, mark their territory,
get the wolves back, take them back to their conservation. And then it's game time. Guess
what? Now the Detroit Lions are walking around, you know, ankle deep in Wolf scat. I think that's
a good home field advantage right there. I like the way your brain operates, my friend. Okay.
It's exactly the tie. It's exactly the type of, you know, disruptive thinking we need to get to
a good answer. I can make no commitments to you right now, brother, but consider your application
effectively submitted. Okay, there we go. We're good. Hats. Yeah. No, no, don't keep going. He's
got. Yeah, exactly. You're a good guidance from your boy. Good guidance from your boy. He said
we were submitted. Okay. Submitted. Don't give away the free stuff now. I've got a million more
ideas. We're submitting, save them because then they're going to bring you on as chief marketing
officer. One more idea. No, don't. The urinals are fire hydrants and the rest first. That's perfect.
Jason, you are also the youngest NFL president in history. Is that also true? Not in history.
Just currently, just currently. All right. So how is, how does that
work when you're meeting with people and you're their boss and you're a lot younger than them
and trying to, you know, we talked to, we talked to Sean McVeigh. We've had him on a few times. He
talks about how dealing with guys in the locker room and he's their age. How do you get over that?
I don't think it's something that needs to be an obstacle and it's also not something I'm
going to custom to, frankly. You know, I've been counseling CEOs for the better part of the last
decade. It's not a whole lot of, you know, 30-some CEOs running around. I think you build trust in
a few ways. You build trust by being credible so you know what the hell you're talking about.
You build trust by being reliable. You're consistent. You follow up. You do what you say.
And you build trust by being personable and making personal connections. And I think if I can do
those three things, it can bridge any age divide. It can bridge any demographic divide. It can,
you can connect with folks and I'll plan to bring those to bear. I'm not too concerned about it.
No, on the flip side of that, do you think that maybe there's some underestimation that goes on
that maybe might play into your hand a little bit? Have you experienced that in the past?
Certainly. That can absolutely, I guess, help you or hurt you. But I tend to be pretty genderless.
You know, I'm not super Machiavellian dude. I don't have some grand twisted scheme to grab power.
What you see is what you get with me. And the thing that excites me about this job
and work in general is solving hairy complex problems. Really complex, challenging problems
and galvanizing a group of people to go and achieve it. And so for me, I'm actually just really
about solving what needs to be solved and seeing the impact of it. That's what actually excites me
more so than, you know, scheming and gaming. So you're right, man. It could play into my favor,
but I'm just going to let it be what it is. By the way, that was a very thoughtful answer. But
the correct answer is you just need to grow a mustache and put on reading glasses and everyone
would be like, wow, this guy's really thinking about this. That's like the little rascals sitting
on each other's shoulders with like the overcoat. Yeah, it's really, you know, rock the mustache
of people like, wow, this guy's pretty serious about stuff. Maybe a bow tie. Yeah, that usually
helps. I mean, I got some grace from my last few years, you know, working in high intensity jobs.
So you know, just let those come out. Yes, you do have a pretty big challenge ahead of you. Like
the Washington football team is a team that has, you know, not had the best track record for the
last 20, 25 years or so. Bill Parcell is famously said, I think when he was hired by the Dolphins,
first thing you do if you want to change the culture, you change the carpets. So he just like
change everything about like the layout of the place. Have you thought about like something
small like that that could lead to a greater overall shift? That's actually really insightful.
No, no, I hadn't. But I actually liked that. I think the principle there is psychologically,
we get used to our environment. And when you're in that environment, what you see, what you smell,
whatever it is, gets your mind in a place where you do things the same old way. So I actually
really liked that. I hadn't thought about that something like that to sort of tangibly or
physically change the game. I've been more focused on some of the things that are related to what
people experience, you know, person to person, you know, we have an independent investigation
going on into sexual harassment. And, you know, I'm familiar with those challenge that helped
other companies move through those. And, you know, depending on where we're at, and I don't know if
it's better or worse than I think it is outside in, because I've raised it basically the same
information as y'all until I start on Monday. I know the path to get us to a culture where
people are empowered and there's good leaders and the right voices are in on the right decisions
and there's transparency and all that. That's what I've been thinking about more. So, but I
actually really liked this idea of surrounding that with some more, you know, overt changes that
start to shift, you know, what you think it should look and feel like when you come to work. I
actually really liked that a lot. So you played college ball at Northwestern running back at
Northwestern played in the NFL as well. Why in your estimation is Evanston the greatest home field
advantage at 11 a.m. on a Saturday afternoon? Because it is, it is. I'm here for it, man. I'm
here for it. Let's see. Let's see. Where do I start? No one's in the stands.
The intense focus that you are able to achieve. No, it's the beauty of being able to walk on
the lake and center yourself before you get out there to play an important game. It's
the reminder that, you know, maybe the students aren't there as early, but it's because they're
about to be world leaders and CEOs and they had a little bit of study in the day. Oh, our journalists.
So yeah, or yes, or yeah, or, or running journalism, you know, we are, we are, we are
absolutely the journalism cartel, right? So, you know, so, you know, it's okay if you didn't show up
to the, you know, the first kickoff, you weren't there tailgating three hours ahead if you're gonna,
you know, run the show. Yeah. Okay, well, I'm good with that. Good trade-offs. Yeah, I have a
longstanding belief that it is truly the greatest home advantage in all football. I went to University
of Wisconsin. I'm also a gambler, big, you know, I love to gamble and I always bet Northwestern 11
a.m. Because there's teams that have high school football, you know, kids who play to Texas high
school football in bigger crowds than the 11 a.m. Northwestern. Come on, man. Come on, man. You can
catch teams on, you know, sleepwalking. I mean, Northwestern, it's always when Wisconsin's schedule
comes out, you know, Ohio State's gonna be tough, but if they're playing 11 a.m. in Evanston, that's
when Northwestern catches teams. Hold on, hold on, real quick. I'm gonna get you up off of us real
quick. You know, in my time at Northwestern, and you'll probably be able to verify this.
Yeah, she did get Wisconsin. I either, I either, no, let's be, let's be even, let's take it one step
further. I either never lost to Wisconsin or most certainly have a winning record against Wisconsin.
I know you won one, man. And I credit my performances against Wisconsin
of helping me get to the NFL. So I thank you. There you go. And it was an, and it was a game at
Evanston probably at 11 a.m. So it proves my point. Boom, we're done. Although I'll say this,
though, you know, the one of the most fun moments in college football is jump around in the fourth
quarter. Yes. Badger statement. Yes. The, all right. So I had one more Northwestern question
because I do love college football. 2003 Motor City Bowl MVP, probably the biggest award out there.
I love that. I love that bowl game because it's always like the ninth team in the big 10
versus like the third team in the Mac. What was it like? Was that, was that, was that one of the
greatest achievements? This, this should actually tell you how well I played in that game. I was
the MVP, but we lost. There you go. That's huge. We lost, we lost, but I bawled. It was a fun,
I mean, you know, college football is such a special thing. And we're all in our, our split
mind of both, you know, understanding, prioritizing student athlete health and safety along with
grieving and missing the experience this year. I mean, it's just a blast. You know, what I remember
most about the Motor City Bowl and my career in football in general are like the folks that I hung
out with, the staff that I spent time with, you know, sitting with my dad in a Detroit
casino gambling, you know, like those, those are the types of things that I remember from that
trip, you know, much less the game that I don't know my family watched. Yeah. Second, second
longest, second longest Motor City Bowl history touchdown. So that's actually almost better than
having the record in the Motor City Bowl to be like, you know, this bowl, I'll take, I'll take
all of it. I'll take all of it. It was a life, it was a lifetime ago. And let's be clear that if I
tried to do any of it, I would pull a hand. So when you got this job, I think it was CBS Sports,
they interviewed somebody from your old Northwestern teammates. And one of them said, I think this
was off the record, not by name, that he thought that by now you'd be president. So do you feel
like a disappointment because you're not under a cheat? Yeah. No, I do not because, you know,
that's not as I might say, in a more casual moment, I'm not about that life. I want,
I want no part of that life. I actually have a bunch of really close friends in Northwestern
grads actually that are pretty high ranking in politics. And they've got a composure and patience
and thoughtfulness that I could never achieve. So, you know, they can have at it.
Are you worried at all being a notable Northwestern grad? And there's many of them. I'll give you
guys credit for that, that Darren Revelle in his basement has like your social security card or
like a piece of pizza you ate as like a senior. I do know that I do know that Darren has some
paraphernalia of mine. Of course, he's a college athlete in his basement. Yes, you're unaware.
Unless he sold it. Unless he sold it since then, but he did have something years ago.
Who gives a better pregame warm up speech? Darren Revelle or Mike Greenberg?
Oh, wow. Gosh, it's tough to decide. Yeah, can I can I can I put them together and make it,
you know, this like this, you know, this greeny highly analytic and then energetic,
Darren, yeah, yeah, slightly erratic delivery because I kind of want them both. I mean,
I feel like yeah, if you combine them like a like a Voltron, that would deliver the best
ad read of all time. You get not only the ad read greeny, but also the analytics of how it breaks
down and how many like different trinkets you can buy using that that contract from Darren.
I had a question for you about the team name and how things are like being implemented moving
forward. Do you have like an R words jar that you're going to put in the office? So when anybody
says the R word by mistake, you put like 20 bucks in there and then that goes to like paying,
I don't know tamper. That's actually that's actually, you know, that's actually a probably a
pretty good reinforcing mechanism. But no, the name piece, and I've said this before, so I'm
going to pare it back what I said before, forgive me, but it's it's more than a name, right? It's
actually reestablishing an identity. And it's actually a really hard thing to do. And I think
if there's anything that I've learned over the past few days, engaging with fans substantively
for the first time, this is not an easy task. And that's because it's so important and because it
means so doggone much to people. Because the identity will inform the way that everything
that comes out of the building is structured, it's going to inform the way we engage with fans.
It's going to inform the way that when we do have people back in the stadium next year,
that the fan experience is crafted. And then most certainly we're building a new stadium,
it's going to really influence the design and the feel of that new place. It's going to inform
the way what we do charitably in the community. And I think actually, if you know, if we get it
right, it's also going to inform the way that we treat each other within the organization and in
our culture. And and it has to, you know, hit a few things all in concert. And I don't know how
it's going to come together. But I trust that the process will get us there. It's got to bring
some sense of the historic nature of this club since 1932 forward into it. It can't really
just be a break break as though nothing ever happened, right? It needs to have all of that
historicity in it. It needs to have the hogs. It needs to have, you know, the the memory of,
you know, a groundbreaking winning quarterback. Like all of that stuff needs to be part of
the go forward identity. But it also needs to have the values in the culture that, you know,
Dan and Tonya Snyder are pivoting us towards, that Coach Rivera is driving, that they brought me
into drive. It's also got to it's got to capture the energy of the fans today, the diverse set
of fans that we have today. It's also got to represent the DMV in a way that's unique. I mean,
if there's so many things that have to be threaded together in this, it's really challenging. But
I think the secret is going to be real engagement of the fan base. That's frequent. That's meaningful.
It's going to require us to engage the place, our staff. It's going to mean talking to leaders
around the DMV area as well. We're going to need a lot of input to get this done. And it probably
won't land where everybody wants, right? There's only one thing you can string together for a name,
right? But hopefully everybody at the end of it, because of how we approach it, will be able to
see their fingerprints on the process. They'll understand the depth of meaning that comes out
in the new identity. And eventually, because you know, not everyone's going to be on board at the
beginning, eventually everybody understands and embraces this new identity and it brings us back
together. And that's a bit of what we need as a fan base. So how big of a priority is it for you to
get the team to move back to Washington DC, maybe on the site that RFK Stadium was on? Is that
something that you discussed in your interview process? Or is that something that you personally
know is going to be a priority? No, that has not been part of the discussions coming up. And I like
the way you tried to intercept me there. I am completely inoculated against inception, my friend.
It is, I've heard this for the last few days, it's actually really important to a large portion
of the fan base to feel like it is a DC-based team. But I don't know where the location
discussions are. And I need to catch up on that when I'm in office. But the things that I am excited
about and why the stadium actually is something that I got very fired up about. And in talking with
Dan and Tony, I did a lot of brainstorming and wild, throwing out wild ideas about, is not just
that a stadium is a location where you bring families, it's where the team plays, it becomes a
sense of pride and identity for the fan base. But also it's an economic driver for the region.
And if you look back on like sort of my track record before this, I talk a ton at McKinsey
about economic development, what it does for communities, how it's able to uplift various
types of people and various types of businesses. And the idea of being able to help craft how that
capital that goes into the stadium flows to businesses and communities. And then the wealth
that's generated from the stadium flows into businesses and communities, for me is a bit of
the challenge of a lifetime to do it in a way that's aligned with my values and espouse's equity
in a really beautiful way. So that's what I'm excited about. And I know irrespective of location,
that's the lens I'm going to bring to it. But I'm hearing people loud and clear now,
my friend. There are strong opinions in many directions, but not much stronger than people's
desire to see the identity rooted to the district in some way.
So you mentioned that you're starting on Monday. Have you given your press conference yet? Have
you done a press conference yet? No, I haven't. I haven't. I don't know if I'm a press conference.
You guys can advise me. You guys can advise me on what will resonate with folks.
You need to start with a joke. So you got to have that ready. I would assume you're going to do a
press conference at some point. So we need it. I'm sure, I'm sure it will. I'm sure it will.
But here, I'll tell you what I care about when it comes to media engagement.
Cause I'm, I'm, I'm agnostic to, you know, the format. You want to put me in front of podium,
put me in front of podium, you know, let me be here with you all, which is quite casual and
comfortable. Like that's good too. Like I'm good with whatever. But I think what's in there are
a few things. People to understand clearly how the culture that we're creating, you know,
comes across in the day to day. And in order to do that, I need to be a bit authentic.
I need to pull back the curtain a bit on like what's going on in the building, you know,
everything's going on in the building, but you need to know something about it for us to be
authentic, incredible, and really signal a new direction. You know, I want to be,
um, I want to, I want to listen a lot. I want to be in forums where I'm not just talking at people,
but I'm also taking in input, you know, I got an application here today. I got a few other ideas
today. I got an attempted, attempted inception here today. Like I want to take those inputs,
you know what I mean? I want to take those inputs and I want to listen. And so whatever
format it's in, I want that to be part of it as well. And then, you know, I want them all to be,
you know, focused on moving us forward in some way, not just to look at myself,
because I can do that in a mirror. And it's not just to hear my own voice because, you know,
I can do that singing in the shower. It's actually about something that moves us
towards our goals in some way, communicate something meaningful to the fan base.
So I just want to be a little bit action oriented about it. Does that, does that make sense?
Yes, absolutely. Right off the bat, it's helpful in your introductory press conference if you
know what the colors of the team are. So for example, if somebody asked you what color the
Redskins are, excuse me, Washington football team $20 and the R word star, sorry. You should not
say maroon and black like Jim Zorn did in his first press conference. So it's burgundy.
Is that really what happened? Yep, burgundy and gold. I'm just going to hammer that home.
Burgundy gold, that's good. I am, yes, understood. And understood. Another help,
do you mind if I give you a piece of advice? I don't know. Oh, no, bruh, bruh, please, please
fire away. I'm taking notes. Okay, so this is a very important thing. You need to figure out,
and this is going to be very tough for you because obviously you've got an athletic background.
You need to find a sport that Dan can beat you in because I don't know if he'll be able to just
like take you on to the racquetball court like he did with Vinnie Serato and like beat, beat him,
you know, like 21 to nothing, feel good about himself, then go back home. You need to find a
sport he can consistently beat you at that you always go out. That's a good way for you to maintain
that job. That's actually really good advice and something, you know, something might know about
me. There's literally only one sport that I'm good at and that is American football. I am actually
quite bad at everything else. Maybe track. I could probably beat him in a foot race, but that's
everything else I might get wiped the floor with. So, you know, that's a safe bet. That's good to
know. It's kind of a cool thing to be like, I'm only good at one sport and I also played pro.
All right. I had one. I had one last question. Very good. Yes. Very, very good. Elite. I had
one last question. So, Jason Wright, you went to Northwestern. You were a football star there.
You went to the NFL. You played in the NFL. You went and you were a star at, or no, sorry,
you went to the University of Chicago grad school. You then went were a star at McKinsey.
You're now the youngest current active NFL president. Has anyone just been like, dude,
you're kind of a nerd and a big time overachiever? I'm very much a nerd and I absolutely embrace that.
Because you make us all look bad. Yeah, you can't really hide it. I mean, actually,
like, I mean, I have, I mean, I have, I have Star Wars socks on right now. You're making us look
bad though. That's really what it is. Yeah, I'm, I'm, I am sorry. You're, I feel like you all are
doing quite well on your own. So you should just, you know, maybe it's, maybe it's a more of a, you
know, self reflection thing to realize how much you have actually achieved. That's it. You know,
that's it. That's it. I am, I am my own worst critic. So, you know, overachiever is not a label
I would apply to myself. I think there's a lot of room for growth. And this job is going to stretch
and grow me. And that's what I'm excited. I just see a resume like this. I did the same thing.
There was a kid who's Scott Harris, who used to work for the Cubs, who was like, I think he became
the Theo's like right hand man when he was 26. And I wrote a blog being like, what the fuck,
fuck this guy. He's such an overachiever. I just read a resume like yours. And I'm like,
how did he have enough time? Like, yeah, it's impressive, man. It's impressive. You know what
it is? Like, well, actually, so people say this about sports often, you know, yes, there's like
work and preparation and all of that. But most things, it's about timing and opportunity. And
frankly, that's, that's what it's been for me. You know, I chose to, you know, when I first break,
you know, in the NFL, it happened because a bunch of people got injured. Do you know what I mean?
Right. And that allowed me to get on the field, show what I could do and establish myself. It's
not, I was working hard all the time. I was, you know, being my best self all the time,
but it took, you know, a serendipitous moment for me to jump in. You know, it was the same thing
when I chose to retire and go to business school, the timing worked out in a way where
I got into a career and got experience that led to this, I had enough experience at this moment
for this to happen. And this whole thing came together, you know, out of the blue, our networks,
my network and the Snyder's network just crossed at the right time. So yeah, there's like, you
know, you prepared, you went to school, you got decent grades and all of that. And I don't want
to downplay that. However, a lot of it has to do with just things coming together at the right time.
And for that, I'm just grateful. Well, you even through this interview, you've given like three
or four answers where I'm like, damn, how can a person be so thoughtful? Like, I just don't have
the words that you have in your, in your vocabulary. You have a lot of words. How many words? How many
words do you know? You got so many words, dude. I have the best words. All the best words. And
go ahead. I was just, no, no, no, you finish up. Well, I was gonna say, and the greatest
accomplishment, the second longest touchdown in Motor City Bowl history. Yeah, that's clear.
That's clearly at the top. I don't know why that's not my resume, actually. Well, I'm rooting for
you. I want to, I want the Washington football team to succeed. I'm sure you've heard this
so many times. But that district, DC, Maryland, Virginia, the DMV is a, it's a football community
that has longed for a successful football team for the last 20 years. We've had glimpses here
and there. But if the team can come together, like you are in a prime position, actually,
you're kind of buying low in a way. You're buying low. There's a real opportunity here.
And you could be a God. You could be a God to people in Virginia, DC, and Maryland,
if this succeeds. And I'm pulling for it, man. Well, I'll quote Captain America, my nerd side.
There's only one God, man. And doesn't, doesn't wear this. So I'll pass on that. But I will,
I will align myself with your aspiration and your, and your goal. And that is, you know,
Coach Rivera has already started a movement that I think is going to get great performance on the
field. And I will both get us out of his way on the business side and do some things that really
make the fans excited about it again. That's what I, that's what I owe you guys. Well, that's
interesting. I appreciate that. But where, where is the exact line between what your job is and
with what coach Rivera does? Because coach Rivera, he's taking on more than just a traditional head
coaching role. He's very intimately involved with the operations of the team. So like,
where is that line where you stop and he starts? Yeah, it's super clear to me this. And then,
and that's a good thing, I think, you know, rural clarity really helps performance.
Coach Rivera oversees the football side 100%. That's everything from the players that are selected
in the draft to the players that are on the field, the scouts that are on the squad,
the trainers that are in the training room, everything that goes on to that goes into what
happens between the lines is, is coach Rivera all day. And if you think about it in a really
simplified way, his metric is wins and losses, right? Me, on the other hand, I run all the
business operations that surrounded the marketing, the sales, the stadium operations, everything
that happens just off the grass, anything that happens off the fan experience, anything that
happens off the grass, that's in my area. And if you think about, if his is wins and losses,
mine is a franchise value and dollars and cents, you know? And that's the way to think about our
disparate rules. Awesome. Well, Jason, thank you so much. We really appreciate it, man. Best of luck
and good job being, being you and being an overachiever. And it's okay that you put all of
our resumes to shame. The world needs people who are just kicking ass like you, you know? I feel
comfortable saying that you got a position of power. It's like, that's good. Received. Yes.
Thank you, sir. Oh, wait, I forgot one last question. Ah, you tried again. This is attempted
in substance. I heard the whisper, bro. You're not going to get me. Your middle name is Go Million?
Yes, it is. Oh, yeah. That's fucking awesome. That's not a bad name either. Washington Go
Millions. Damn it. Dude, you're way cooler than everyone. Well, I mean, I'm not the one, you know,
at work in jeans with my sneaks and feet up. That's pretty good. That's true. I do. I am having a
good time. I don't have it like that. I don't have it like that. I feel like that was an inception
to be like, stop slacking, dude. Sit up straight. No, I think that he's accepting you to make
this classic trick. He's making us feel good so that we'll be like, yeah, you are. We'll keep
compliments. Yes. I know you can't insult me into future compliments. You're doing a great job.
Yes. Thanks. Maybe get some collar stays, dude. The collar is looking a little wrinkly.
The collars are perfectly normal. There we go. Let's go. Let's go. Get some collar stays. Come on.
Get some wireless earbuds. Yeah, wireless earbuds. Yeah, you're the president of a team. How do you
have wires still? What the hell are you doing? Maybe wear a tie. We're trying to look professional.
I'm here for it. Serving that realness. Serving that realness. I like it. Jason, thank you so much,
man. Appreciate it. Yeah. That interview that Jason Wright was brought to you by Zip Recruiter.
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the smartest way to hire. Okay, let's get to some of Billy's sheet that will do Firefest and wrap
up the show. What are you gonna say, Hank? George Carl, this league. Yes. But did you see what Mark
Jackson actually said? Yeah, he didn't actually go at George Carl, really. He didn't say anything.
He was just like, you know, coaches should be held responsible for like not having played defense
during his career, which is like a lot of coaches. Which is also very weird because Mellow actually
did kind of play defense in Denver. And George Carl just said, I heard Mark Jackson's taking
shots at my defensive coaching during tonight's broadcast. Remind me how many all star teams
did you coach, Mark? How many DPOIs? How many finals appearances? How many of my teams became
dynasty right after I left? Oh, well, I mean, Mark. He took like a sub, he took like a sub shot and
just went in. Mark can hit him with the dynasty that took over when he left. Like that is the
ultimate Mark Jackson stat. He was, he happened to be. No, that's what he used that as a disc.
Yeah, which is a disc. Okay. How many of my teams became dynasty? Yeah, right. Like I was the piece,
I was the missing piece. I thought he stumbled into the only thing that Mark Jackson could reply
with. But that's a major case of like, if you throw a rock at a pack of dogs, the one that you hit
is the one that's going to bark at you. Whoa. You know that one? How many, how many rocks?
It's an old saying, a hit dog will holler. So like hitting dogs, they could, I'm not personally,
but somebody who made up the statement has said that, but it's a classic case of like,
he's talking about everybody. George Carl took it personally because he knows that there's a
kernel of truth. He just goes down to the East River after we record and just grabs a bunch
of rocks looking for dogs. Sorry, you don't know common saying. No, I know that. But I just,
I don't like to do sayings that talk about hitting dogs. Root. Apologize. I will not do a phone and
then do a homerun call. I will not. I will not apologize to a homerun call in the middle of
your apology. Listen, I said some things about dogs that I wish I could take back and Dwight
Howard with inbounds pass. And I think that when you look at it, I wasn't actually saying that
about the dogs. And there's a deep three in the Lakers are now up by infinity points with 424 left
in the fourth quarter. But again, it's not about me and the dogs. It's about George Carl
interpreting that as a slam on him. All right. So quickly before we get to Firefest, Billy Sheet,
he did it. Were you saving the trees now, Billy? Yeah, double-sided it. Damn. Wow. Where'd you learn
how to do that? Settings. Yeah. Oh, the IG model who sucked off the suns is getting money. Yeah.
Oh, and the only thing is maybe 46,000 in a day. Hell, yes. Get your cash. Wait, it says that,
yeah. Holy fuck. Good for her. Good for her. You got it. Listen, there's opportunity knocks
just but once or twice in life. And you got to open the door. She also maybe to her five or six
of opportunities, friends. Her another benefit that she got was her family disowned her. And so
she got fired. But her job was in her dad's accounting office. That's awesome that you got
fired from that. That sounds miserable. And then you made $46,000 in a day on only. Good for you.
I told Hank this, but after we talked about the Phoenix Suns thing on the show on Tuesday night,
you sucked them off. I went home and I dreamed about the show. That's how fucked up my brain is.
I dreamed about the show and Billy was like, I said that Devin Booker went first and then Hank said,
that's weird because he's usually a last shot kind of guy. And good in the fourth dimension.
Credit to Hank for invading my brain with one of his good jokes. Good joke. That was a nice,
like subtle, like brag that you're dreaming in jokes. No, I dream about the show sometimes.
And I wish that I didn't. Yeah. Yeah. I probably have so many jokes in your head. You have to
dream them. Yeah, you have to dream them. Nice. Yeah. And then Joe Rogan was sitting next to Hank
and he was like, that's, that's fucking hilarious, dude. All right, so hunting for elk. We had Bryson
Dechambeau do something very like triple B of him. He asked spectators to be quiet because it really
bothered him. Because there's like no one there because sound travels big cat. You didn't finish
the sentence. Oh my God. He said, can you keep it quiet? And then he turned back and added,
helpfully I might add, because sound travels this guy. So should I? Yes. Yeah. Challenge
Bryson Dechambeau to a fight. Rough and rowdy, rough and rowdy. Done. Because he's a fucking pussy.
Ah, he might fuck you up, dude. Honestly, he might fuck you up. Big. Yeah. But you're you don't have
15 minutes worth of footage of you working out silently. Right. You also don't have man strength
yet. I have a lot more. No, you don't have man strength yet. Like you're strong, but you don't
have man strength. I'm I think it's show. Okay, you should make a video. All right. Let's also let's
not let's not use the P word pejoratively, Billy. I'd like to apologize. Thank you. Now I'm in
Cloudshare made. And that was actually a test, Billy. You are you are. There you go, Billy. There
you go. You are a soy boy for apology. There you go, Billy. You failed that test. All right,
let's do a fire fest and we'll get out of here. Hank, fire fest. PFT can actually test this one.
I was longboarding, you know, previous firefests. It broke. I got a new one. I was dipping home and
I hit like a pothole, pretty much full yard sale and flying, scraped up my arms and legs.
That's just living the rad life though. Yeah. That's the you take risks. It was that you got
wasted sound effect. Yeah, full full on. There was like a really old lady that like it was like
out of a movie she comes. Oh, there's a hospital right there. I was like, I'm good. I'm just going
to get on my skateboard and keep going. Hospital right there. She was like, you need to go to
hospital. I mean, I like I was like, come on. I bike over that exact same pothole every night
when I go home. And it's to the point where like I have to stop my bike and drive around this huge
thing in the intersection. So shout out to Blasio. That's probably where he buries all the fucking
groundhogs he murders. Oh, by the way, I totally forgot that Kevin White is back. I should have
mentioned that. He is. Shout out Kevin White. You got to work out with the Jets, right? The Jets
probably won a Super Bowl with him. Des Bryant got to work out with the Ravens. Yeah, Des Bryant,
they did Des Bryant. I love when old players should now Des Bryant was never the fastest guy,
but they showed he he one of his trainers put out a clip of him running against air and he
looked slow. And it was like, were we supposed to be impressed by that? He's a convert. He's
converting to a tight end. He'll be fine. Yeah. All right. PFT. What's your fire? My fire fest
of the week is that 750 genetically altered mosquitoes are being released into Florida.
So that shouldn't be a problem. That sounds great. It violates my one rule of if an idea
sounds like something that a movie villain would say as like his grand plot, then don't do don't
do that. Stay away from it. And when you say 750 million, really, you should never release 750
million of anything unless it's dollars in a Phoenix hotel room dollars dollars into the
bank bank account into my economy. Yep. And that's fine. But if it's mosquitoes, first of all,
fuck mosquitoes, why are they genetically altered? So they're genetically altered because they don't
want them to breed. I did a little bit of background on this. And so the female larva are going to
die. But the male larva will grow up and then they'll pass on the gene that kills all the female
larva. Because I think they want the males to mate with other mosquitoes, which in the
long term will kill all the mosquitoes. I don't want to be a douchebag, but you got that totally
wrong. Oh, no. Go on and like me. So they're releasing 75 genetically altered male mosquitoes.
Maybe if you hadn't killed your frog, then all these mosquitoes wouldn't be so terrifying.
Dude, don't do that to Bertha. Okay. She lived a hard life. Okay. Do you want to get
I'm just saying if there were a few more bullfrogs out there,
it's actually kind of interesting. Yes. So they're releasing 75 million. I don't know
million, the exact numbers on 750 million out into the Florida Everglades of male genetically
modified mosquitoes that will then mate with female mosquitoes, which then they're off transformers.
How do they know that they're all males because they have neared them? Because they engineered them
that they don't ask for male mosquitoes would die. So then all the baby mosquitoes have asterisks
because they're like, yeah, right. No. So basically there's only be it's going to be a totally bad
ratio dude fest. And guess what? Mosquito dudes are chill because they don't bite. Oh, that's why
they're doing it. Interesting. But they just buzz. They still buzz in your ear, which is just as
bad. They should release them all on a Saturday. Yeah. Just out of spirit. And guess what? Yeah.
Saturdays do it. Or four. The mosquitoes. The male mosquito boys. Total sausage fest down
the Everglades. Okay. Bill, you wanted your fire first? You want me to do mine? I mean,
you can go first. Oh, no, you go. Are you sure? Yeah. Okay. This is a trick. No. Okay.
All right. I'm really trying to think of a fire fest. Yeah. No, I have one. So I have a puppy
that's growing into a dog. What? Yes. He's quite large. And I feed this puppy a lot and I feed it.
So basically when I make meals, I sometimes make my puppy meals as well. And so like steak,
sometimes I give him like a lot of my steak. Anyway, he's taking just huge shits. Shits everywhere.
On the inside? So I take him outside. Do you haven't trained him? I've trained him. But I take
him outside for like two hours. Like we're out there chilling. And then I take him inside. And
immediately as soon as I bring him inside, he just shits everywhere. That means you have not trained
inside as outside. That's 100% not trained. Also, it's a barn. So like inside and outside is kind
of a nebulous concept for this dog. But that's not trained. I know, but I don't know what to do.
You got to train him. So I do train him. So I take all the poop and I throw it outside. No,
you need to go outside. And when he poops outside, you give him a treat for pooping outside.
And you don't give him a treat inside. You make it a big deal when he uses the bathroom outside.
I used to, when I first adopted Stella, she actually didn't poop inside. But
we had to do the pee training. I got a big thing of roast beef. And every time she peed outside,
she got some roast beef. Never got roast beef for any other reason. It's all about positive reinforcement
with your dogs. Like when you had a fire fest, great job, Billy. Good job, Billy. Who's a good
Billy? Right. Billy, do you want one stinky treat? Yeah, like a stinky treat that smells great. And
it's like, oh my God. Have a beer. Have a beer, Billy. Good boy. That's a good Billy. Thanks,
rule. Yeah. But the worst part is, is the flies. So now I have a huge fly problem,
because there was a window open, and he pooped inside. And now I have a shit ton of flies in my
house. Again, problems that having an aggressive frog as a pet would solve neatly. Anyway. Christ.
All right. And guess what? My frog's dead, so we can't eat the flies. Right. I feel like there's
other animals probably in the barn that are also pooping inside. Yes. They're showing the dog.
They're like, go ahead. We do it all the time. Anyway, are the chickens? Chickens are outside. Chickens
are outside. All right, Billy. All right. My fire fest is, I stumbled accidentally on the
perfect crime. And now I think I'm going to have to go through with it. So I had Dana and Marty
Mush. Dana's been on the show. Marty Mush came over my apartment the other day to take a piece of
furniture away because they're moving and they don't have furniture. So I gave him a piece of
my furniture and it's a new building. So I haven't met all of my neighbors. So I'm outside with them.
They're loading this big piece of furniture and escalate. I'm holding my son and a guy walks in
and he gives me a look like, are these guys robbing the place? Because it's Dana and Marty Mush.
And then he looks at me holding a baby and is like, no, they wouldn't rob a place holding a baby.
They wouldn't rob a baby. Maybe you're stealing the baby, too. Well, I'm thinking,
like, if we robbed the bank, but I went casually holding my baby, who would ever think like,
this guy's robbing a bank? Like, no, he's holding a baby. Yeah. If you, if you're wearing a Bjorn
and inside that Bjorn, you've got like an extended mag. Find the flaw. Yeah. I think I need to get
into a life of crime using my son as like pretty much everyone. Yeah. As a prop, as a fall guy.
I think my son will be a fall guy. If you're wearing scrubs too, that helps. No one ever
thinks that a nurse or a doctor is robbing a place. It was like, I can't charge someone that young.
Right. And he, the guy looked at me and he was like, this guy, because they do, Marty and Dana
do look like they would be robbing someone. And they were like struggling to put it in the back
of an Escalade. And it was like, what's going on here? And then he saw the baby. He's like, no,
they're, he's, he's, he's a dad. He can't steal. Yeah. That's great. I mean, you know, back in
the day, how people would have kids and they'd make them work for them on the farm. This is
what your kid just like, take them to a convenience store and work your way up.
Should we try it tomorrow? Family crime syndicate. Yeah. Well, no, you, one of you walks in and
just grab something and we're like, no, we're just sitting here with a baby. Like what, who's
going to, no one would ever suspect that. No one would. Also, I mean, you could have your son just
like hand the teller at the bank a note saying like we're robbing, then technically your son was
robbing. Right. Your only crime was being a bad father. Right. Well, or a good father, if you
want to spin zone it. Yeah, that's true. Adrenaline getting hooked on adrenaline at a young age.
It's important to have hobbies as well. All right. That's our show. I can't trace the kids
handwriting. That's also true. Yeah. We've tried it with Hank. Yeah. All right. That's our show.
We'll see everyone on Monday. Have a good weekend. More sports, more sports. What's the Chuck
Borden sports, sports, sports, sports, sports, sports, sports, sports, sports, sports, sports,
more sports than seven. That's a pig snag. $1,000 play barcel on Monday. Yeah. Yes.
Cornhole. And we got a big guest coming on Monday as well. Huge. Get excited.
Huge guest. Love you guys. Billy, your final thoughts on Monday. You're going to find out
that I was offered a job. Oh, very prestigious firm. You'll find out on Monday. It's going to be
very interesting. And I'm wondering if I should take it. Tune in Monday. Billy actually does
want this job. When the person left Billy was like, should I go up and ask him for a business card?
I said, definitely you should. I'm joking. Love you guys. I'll never leave you.
I am snacking. I am snacking. Cheetos, Pringles, ramen, French fries, chicken, nuggets, ice cream,
sandwich. What am I creating? What am I creating? I am snacking. I am snacking.
I am snacking. What am I creating? What am I creating? What am I creating?
I am snacking. What am I creating? What am I creating? I am snacking. Cheetos, Pringles,
pringles, ramen, ramen! French fries, French fries, French fries!
Shake it, shake it, shake it, shake it, shake it.
No.
Ice cream, ice cream, ice cream, sandwich.
What am I creating?
I am snacking.
I am snacking.
No.
I am snacking.
What am I creating?
What am I creating?
I am snacking.
What am I creating?
What am I creating?
I am snacking.
What am I creating?
What am I creating?
I am snacking.
What am I creating?
What am I creating?
What am I creating?
It's Pardon My Take presented by Barstool Sports.