The Bill Simmons Podcast - Harden’s Moment, an NFL Schedule Glut, Owning the Jazz, and a Boston Sports Check-In—With Bryan Curtis, Bill’s Dad, and Ryan Smith
Episode Date: May 15, 2026The Ringer’s Bill Simmons talks about five guys he’s observing for the two major Game 6 NBA playoff games on Friday night (3:54). Then, Bryan Curtis joins to discuss the current state of sports pr...ogramming before Bill’s dad hops on to reflect on the Celtics’ playoff collapse and to check in on Boston sports (22:38). Finally, Jazz owner Ryan Smith joins the pod to talk about the second pick in the 2026 NBA draft, rebuilding the team, the growth of Utah, and much more (01:43:22). Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Bryan Curtis, Bill’s dad, and Ryan Smith Producers: Chia Hao Tat and Eduardo Ocampo Book a new kind of stay at HolidayInn.com The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit https://fanduel.com/playwithaplan to learn more about the resources and helplines Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I put up a new rewatchables on Monday night.
We did Tropic Thunder.
We're doing comedies all month on Netflix.
You go to Netflix, they have a million comedies.
We've done a bunch of them on the rewatchables already,
including Fletch, along came Polly, Ghostbusters,
48 hours.
The list goes on and on.
And we've also done this month.
We did Tropic Thunder.
we did Ghostbusters.
We did that last month.
We did, there's something about Mary.
And this Monday we're doing Borat,
which is an absolutely hilarious movie.
I've watched it once.
I have to watch it again before we record the episode.
But just laughing my ass off.
This movie, it's 20 years old.
It's still really funny.
And it's going to be Monday's rewatchable.
So stay tuned for that.
Scheduling stuff this Sunday.
So I'm recording this on Thursday.
We don't know what's going to happen.
And the game six is.
on Friday, Detroit and Cleveland,
and then San Antonio, Minnesota.
Who knows?
So on Sunday, we might be doing two podcasts with Zach Lowe.
We might be doing a part one, part two after each game seven.
We might just be doing one after the game sevens,
or if there's no game sevens and just the game one,
we'll be doing one episode.
But we're going to be live on Netflix,
and we'll let you know on social media what the time is
if you want to join us.
I'm looking forward to that.
We have an action pack.
podcast on this one. Coming up after the break, I want to talk about five guys that I'm looking at
heading into these game sixes that we have, a doublehead on Friday night. Really, really
interesting night of basketball. Brian Curtis is going to join us to talk about the NFL schedule
released was today, but just in general, what the leagues are doing here with all of the games
and is there just too much sports? Are we heading there? Or is too much sports a good thing? We're going to
talk it out.
my dad finally decided to come on after boycotting for a week and a half after the Celtics
loss. But Boston sports is in shambles. So had him come on to talk about it for 20 minutes.
And then last but not least, Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith, who's never been on the podcast.
They finally got some luck with the lottery. His story is fascinating how we ended up owning not just
the Utah Jazz, but also the hockey team as well. And he hired the Angels from Boston.
and just a lot of stuff about what it's like to own an NBA team.
So this is a long, fat content-filled podcast.
It's all coming up next.
We're going to take a break, bring in Pearl Jam,
and then I'm going to talk about the NBA.
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All right, we have a game six doubleheader on Friday night.
Really intriguing.
Game six is always intriguing, but I think these two for different reasons.
Can't wait to watch.
I've already broke the news to my wife that that's what's going to be happening for us on a Friday night.
Cavs minus three and a half at home to finish off Detroit.
Minnesota getting four and a half points trying to stay alive against San Antonio.
And look, Minnesota looks like.
they're in trouble for different reasons than Cleveland looks like they have the upper hand
against Detroit. Minnesota, it just looks like a talent issue, especially with Edwards, not 100%.
Cleveland, Detroit, this series has become more of a math problem where it just feels like Detroit's
max is around 105 points. And Cleveland could just get over that. They're going to win. Detroit
in the playoffs, 14th and threes. They've only made 10 threes a game. 49% on 2s, 13th. They have the
fourth highest amount of turnovers. They're almost at 60 in a game. And they're just running out of
guys that they can put out there in crunch time that they can trust. So I think they're in the
most trouble of these four teams. But I have five guys I'm watching on Friday night for different
reasons in the two series. First one is Julius Randall, who was a huge reason I thought that the
Timberwolves won game one and then has been a lightning ride ever since 13 and 13 for 39 and
the three losses and has just looked really, really, really.
awful at times trying to challenge
Wembe, trying to challenge what the Spurs are
doing to him. And it's like,
Randall has these moments where you, like,
I thought after game one, I was like, he's the key to
the series. I'm not sure if the Spurs have guys to guard
him. And then by the time you finish
game five, you're like, can they play Randall?
I mean, this is the story of his career.
He's made multiple NBA
teams. We're always questioning how good he
is, and I guess this is just who he is
from a basketball standpoint.
He's made, next year he makes $33 million
in the year after he makes $36 million.
He's the most obvious trade candidate.
And he's a guy that when things start going against them,
you can kind of see it.
He wears his emotions.
He wears the nobody believes in me,
kind of mask on his face and can get really frustrated.
And on top of all of this,
Towns has been great in the playoffs for the Knicks.
So you have this trade that was,
I thought,
one of the more fun trades we had this decade.
And the Knicks are clearly now winning the trade.
And Randall,
DeFincenzo, sadly, is hurt out for the year.
but Randall, the swing guy from Minnesota,
and it might not even matter.
He might be awesome in game six,
and it might not matter with San Antonio.
But I'm watching him.
If he's bad,
I don't see a world where Minnesota can win
when Edwards isn't 100%.
On the flip side,
I'm going to lump these two together
as my second guy,
Visell and Champany on San Antonio.
They made five threes a game during the season
and shot 38% combined,
and I thought it were pretty reliable.
I always felt like there's,
threes are going in. In the series, they're 21 for 63. 33%. I mentioned this because
Wembe and Fox and Harper have been a disaster from three in this series. They're all 27% or worse.
Wendy, I think, is a better three-point shooter than that. Harper, what came in the league,
wasn't supposed to be a three-point shooter. And Fox has kind of bounced around where you watch
certain games and you think maybe he could make them other times. You never think they're going
in. I mentioned all this because they lost game four. They were.
six for 26 from three.
And if you're looking at like,
how does San Antonio blow game six
and how does this go back to San Antonio, game seven?
To me, forget the Minnesota piece,
forget how if Edwards is 90% healthy,
95% healthy,
forget how great Wembe is,
forget how awesome Dylan Harper has been
as these playoffs on a long.
You can beat San Antonio
simply if they miss threes.
And I don't 100% trust their three-point shooting.
So I'm specifically,
watching Bissell and Champany because if they're making threes in the first half and
Wembe's doing Wemby stuff and the Hartford, like San Antonio, that'll be it. It'll probably be like
an 18 point win. But if the threes are starting to bounce around and they can't get into a rhythm,
that's what I want if I'm a Minnesota fan. So you could say this about almost any NBA team.
Like, ah, if the threes don't go in, it's tough to beat them. San Antonio specifically,
I don't totally trust their three-point shooting. And I think this is the occasion.
Killeysheel of the team, the more I watch them.
And if it goes south in a game six, and you go to a game seven, and I'm still nervous about your
three-point shooting, and Minnesota comes in as the fuck you alpha dog, just trying to bully them
and, you know, really test them. And all of a sudden, each guy's looking little nervous,
taking those threes. That's the recipe for San Antonio Blow in the series. I do not think that
will happen. I would not bet on it. But it's a team that sometimes they'll be up.
14 and all of a sudden they start looking a little creaky because the three start bouncing around.
So we will see.
All right.
Cleveland, Detroit.
I assume San Antonio is going to be Minnesota and I would probably not bet on game six.
I think Detroit's done.
I think they have slowly broken as this series has gone along.
And even game five, which they play Paul Reed.
the entire fourth quarter and the entire overtime, I think,
because my next guy on my list, Jayland Duren,
has gone south to the point that they just decided he couldn't be out there.
He's a 2011 guy that earned the season, 65%.
He's a 10-and-8 guy in the playoffs, 50%.
There's some stuff teams are doing him in the playoffs.
Like, we've talked about it.
They're just not guarding Thompson anymore.
They're preventing Dern from rolling.
But his confidence really seems gone around the basket,
like these little flip shots that he's,
to make.
Again, I'll say for the 19th time.
I voted for him second team Omba.
And I don't know what happened.
I have a theory that I'll mention in a second.
He also doesn't seem as explosive.
There's a chance he might be hiding an injury,
even watching the way he's running and stuff, who knows.
But compounded with Stewart
has just been basically unplayable in this series.
Jenkins, 21% from three.
Now he's playing crunch time.
and hasn't been making threes at all.
Holland can't shoot.
Levert is a classic trick-or-treat guy.
They can't find five guys to close games with.
Robinson missed the game because he had back issues.
I assume he's going to play game six.
So they have to go Cade Thompson, Robinson, Tobias, and Duren,
or B-Ball-Paul as long as they can possibly go.
That Duren lineup is plus 10 in the playoffs.
Every non-Kade lineups is a disaster.
And it's like the old Doc Rivers theory of as a playoff series goes along,
the number of guys you can trust in this series starts dwindling.
And you started at eight and suddenly you're at seven,
then you're at six.
And Detroit just might be at four.
The Duren, here's my theory.
He's a restricted for age of this summer.
And I think,
especially after the season he had,
you assumed he would be getting a max or close to it,
like maybe something 40 million here,
maybe something close to that Jaron Jackson contract.
But he doesn't have it yet.
And now he's not playing well on teams have schemed him,
differently. And to me, this almost feels like he's unraveling a little bit. This happened for
different reasons to Antoine Walker and the Celtics played the Nets two years in a row in 02 and
03. And Kenny Martin, just for whatever reason, had Antoine solved. He just had, Anton couldn't
do anything against him. And I really think it changed Antoine's career. That and his free throw
shooting went sideways. But he just was never the same. And with Duren, I would assume that's not
going to happen. He's 22 years old. But I always get really nervous when somebody goes full Section
A private pile on a playoff series, which is what's happening. Like him, him not playing in the fourth
quarter in OT is just, I just couldn't believe it. And the guy that we're watching does not
resemble the guy from the regular season. So is he going to bounce back in game six in Cleveland?
is this just going to get worse?
I think you have to watch.
We'll know in the first like six, seven minutes with him.
The next guy, Max Struce,
who single-handly swung Game 5,
a notorious trick-or-treat guy.
He'll do this twice a series where he'll look awesome.
I did like the way he was defending Kate.
If he's not the trick-or-treat guy for them,
then it has to be Merrill, I think,
but I think it needs to be one of those, too.
They need like that little influx.
Schroeder's another one.
Shruder, every year, nobody wants
Schrooter. And then in a playoff series, you completely
trust him. At some point, we'll figure it out with him.
Struce, when he's going, I really
like how Cleveland looks. And
he fell in a play. I've never
liked him because he was on Miami and the Celtics
would always play him. And he always felt like
he was killing the Celtics, even though
you go back and look at the game logs, he would have like
two good games in series, which is what he does.
A reader named Ovi
Jacob mentioned
that
Struis is slowly
morphing into the macho man Randy Savage.
And ever since I got that email,
every time I watched Drew,
it feels like he's reinvigorated to me.
He really does kind of look like the macho man.
I think he started talking to him,
be like, oh, yeah.
But when you watch him in game six,
just think of the macho man.
It makes the Max Drews experience so much more fun.
We'll see if he swings game six.
Last guy has to be James Hardin.
Has to be.
Looked washed in game one and game two.
Looked washed for the first.
I would say 43 to 44 minutes of game three
to the point that I didn't think he should be playing.
And then huge game three ending.
He was really good in game four, 11 assists, 24 points.
And then he was their best guy in game five.
Him and Moby.
Moby was really, really good, I thought, too.
I thought Mowgli was really good the last two games, actually.
But Harden had 30.
And, you know, it's weird.
On the one hand, he is 58 turnovers in the playoffs,
22 in this series.
and there's moments when he just looks old
and Detroit's made him look old.
And Asar Thompson looks like he's athletically
at, you know, a different planet
than 36-year-old James Harder at this point.
By the way, I did not think that was a foul
on Asar Thompson.
That's a no-call.
You can't decide a game on that.
Sorry.
But Harden, he's played 185 playoff games,
which has to be, I didn't look this up,
but it has to be like top five or top six ever.
He hasn't made the conference finals in eight years.
He made it in 11 and 12 with OKC.
He made it in 15 with Houston in that crazy series
where the Quipper should have beat them in game six
and Hardin was on the bench as the Rockets came back.
So he barely gets credit for that one for me.
11 and 12, he was a six-man in OKC in 2018
was the one where he carried a team to the conference finals
and then ended up losing to Golden State
in the famous three-point rock fight
that Houston just couldn't make any.
thing after Chris Paul got hurt.
It hasn't made it since.
So we've been talking about his playoff legacy or lack thereof.
Zach Lowe famously called him Guard Carl Malone, which I don't even know who that was
more insulting for.
But we've already litigated this.
We've already, the jury came out, came back in with a verdict.
His 2020s have been kind of secretly terrible and we'll get lost in the shuffle when we
go through his career and, you know, how great it was in a lot of ways.
but the playoff stuff was bad.
But last year died against Denver game seven,
like just really, really, really awful
and you can see it right away.
24 died in the last two Dallas games.
23 really died when he was on Philly
in the last two Boston games.
22, Miami series did not end well for him.
21, the last two Brooklyn series against Milwaukee
when he was hurt.
Hold that thought.
That's probably my favorite James,
started to play our performance until what we've been seeing with Cleveland.
But in the 2020s, 22, 6, and 8, stats are fine, but we were there.
We know what happens.
And you just can't trust them.
The irony of this, how amazing would it be if 36-year-old James Hardin went on like a heater
right now, if it basically starts with the end of game three and it runs through and he's
just awesome for the rest of this Detroit series and then goes into a Nick series and
becomes this. By the way, he's been in the Western Conference his entire career, except
that brief Brooklyn stint and that brief Philly stand, somehow never avoided, never ended up playing
the Knicks. So, at least I don't think he did. I don't remember James Hardin playing next. So James
Harden in MSG revamping his whole playoff legacy thing, pretty fun. Or it could be pretty painful.
I don't know. I was thinking about his greatest playoff moments, though.
You can think of the worst playoff moments, and we could do that for an hour.
And I was trying to think, what were the best ones?
And honestly, nothing jumped to mind.
And my mind drifted to 2021 when he was hurt on that Nets team.
And his greatest playoff moment was probably the,
what Zach Loke called the greatest theoretical playoff team ever,
when him and Kyrie and Durant were all healthy.
But then I really liked how he played in that Milwaukee series after he was hurt.
I thought he was, like, heroic in Game 7.
basically playing on one leg
doing everything he could
to just try to set stuff up for them
because he kind of had to play.
And as crazy as that sounds,
I think that was my favorite James Harder moment.
All the other ones were kind of negative.
He's in a situation right now with Mitchell
where he can kind of drift back and forth
and be impactful but not impactful
and do a little seesaw thing with Mitchell,
which they figured out for the most part.
It's okay.
but I like how this is lined up for them
because they need Thompson to defend Mitchell.
They can't play one of their other defensive swings
because then they just don't,
Detroit has no scoring at that point.
I mean, you could argue maybe they just go all defense
and throw away the scoring because they can't shoot anyway.
But if Thompson's shadowing Mitchell and he's around them,
then you're going to have to let Harden do what he's going to do
against pick a swing man on Detroit.
So it's set up for him here.
And then against the Knicks next round,
they might be able to just try to hunt Brunson
as much as they possibly again or pull towns out.
Harder won't be doing all his fopping stuff.
This is kind of set up for James Hardin to be like,
you thought I was dead.
I'm not.
You thought I was guard Carl Malone.
Watch this.
Do I think this will happen?
I don't.
I do not.
But it's in play.
It's better than he was on the,
Clippers where he had no chance to do anything.
I have hard and career-wise, I have been the mid-40s of my pyramid.
I have them actually one spot higher than George Gervyn.
And I have them two spots behind Sam Jones and Walt Frazier,
who were two of the best clutch players in the history of the league and especially his guards.
And the irony of those two being on a list and then it dropping and then go into Gervin,
who, you know, I wrote about this at my book.
book but had a chance he was up three one i mean it's crazy gervyn didn't make the finals but um
the bullet series for gervin was is kind of his version of a james harden didn't do quite enough when it
mattered um and then hardin has a million of those but um who knows maybe maybe it's a better late
that ever a clutch situation for james harding would i bet on this i would not um we have no idea what to
expect from james hard on my prediction i think cleveland finishes that i think
I feel the same way that I felt about the Toronto Atlanta series.
I think Detroit's going one direction and Cleveland has solved them in a lot of different ways.
And the only way they don't win ironically is if James Hardin completely sucks.
I think they're going to finish off Detroit game six.
I don't really know what's going to happen in Spurs, Minnesota.
I would almost go with Spurs win by double figures or Minnesota obsessed them and wins.
Watch the three-point shooting.
These games are going to be great.
And I can't wait to know both watch about that, watch both of them.
And then on Sunday, talk to Zach Lowe about what happened and where we're going in round three.
We're going to take a break.
We are going to come back with my friend, Brian Curtis.
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All right,
the ombud's been up.
my life is here, Brian Curtis,
taping this before the NFL schedule release.
I'm sorry to pull you away from the anticipation of just
staring in front of your computer,
just waiting to see who the Cowboys were playing in week 10.
I never understood this day.
I never,
kudos to them for blowing it out.
There's stuff I want to talk about that.
I've not through a schedule day,
but do you get scheduled day?
What is this?
It's terrible.
It really is terrible.
The one they had this week where we're leaking week two
Thursday night football.
Yeah.
Why?
Not week one, not Thanksgiving, not Christmas, week two.
Like, am I supposed to just schedule my life right now around week two Thursday night?
Well, you already know who your favorite team is playing Road and Home before or whatever.
So I guess it's just for travel purposes, but leaking out all the international games and what their plan was for Thursday, Thanksgiving, and Christmas Eve, all that stuff.
Kind of defeats the purpose of schedule day.
That's not why we're here, though.
I feel like there's a moment happening right now with professional sports and money and scheduling and trying to figure out how to justify all these giant media deals.
And you can feel it happening in real time with college football, with the NBA, and with the NFL specifically.
And the NFL now, they're going to have nine international games this year.
They're pretty transparently discussing how the 18 week schedule is coming.
You're seeing the owners just kind of leak that out.
The season this year, we're starting week one.
It starts late this year.
We're starting September 9th on a Wednesday.
First week we go Wednesday, Thursday, Sunday, Monday.
The playoffs don't start until January 16th, and the Super Bowl was on Valentine's Day.
So they've just declared war on everybody's lives.
And we love the NFL and we're addicted to it like it's a drug.
And we can't fight back.
But is there a tipping point where there's just going to be too much?
You know, remember that quote from the executive who said,
we've reached peak TV 10 years ago.
Right.
And it wasn't just about the quality of TV.
It was about how much.
This feels like peak sports TV.
Except I don't know that we're quite there yet.
Right.
Because as you mentioned, what's still out there?
18th NFL game.
Expansion maybe in every league, certainly the NBA,
but maybe also hockey, baseball.
Bigger TV deals, more, you know, more sports scheduled on days we never used to have
sports, I just feel like there's more out there somehow, even though it feels like almost too much
right now. You can feel it, and I've talked about this before with the UFC and WW have been
really smart about strategically picking these weekends that were kind of dead weekends last weekend,
which seemed like it was going to be a little bit of a slower weekend because basketball
had finally slowed down, hockey had finally slowed down. It was a little more manageable.
It was the week after the Kentucky Derby, and that's always a crazy first Saturday,
Sunday. And yet last weekend had a pretty good UFC card. My son thought it was the best
UFC card of the year. There was a WW event that was being promoted all the time. This
week has PGA tournament. It just feels like everybody's gotten better at both stretching out their
schedules, but then also targeting dead weekends and then just kind of flooding us. And it's the first
time I ever really remember feeling like I have trouble staying with everything. Like there's
There's just too much.
Like, I haven't really watched a lot of the NHL playoffs this year.
And I usually love the NHL playoffs.
I just haven't been able to watch that much.
I wanted to ask you about that.
Because ever since I've known you, you'll text me on like a Tuesday night and it's like,
you watching this Pelicans game?
The announcer did something crazy tonight.
Right.
Wait, what?
That's on?
Yeah.
So I always feel like you're the highest consumption person I know.
Yes.
But you feel like you've reached your limit?
Well, especially because all of the TV and movie stuff that's out there, too.
And then, like, Survivor 50 is really good this year.
That's another 90 minutes that has now been thrown into my week.
But the combo of like the basketball with how the college football seem to just get longer and longer
and how January is now just absolutely loaded.
And we kind of finally get a breath in February.
I'm complaining about free sports, although I guess they're not free because we're paying for the streamers.
But it feels like there's less breaths in the schedule.
Whereas like even like when we started Grantland in 2011.
and there was the NBA lockout.
And we were panicked.
We were like, what the fuck are we going to talk about every week?
What are we going to do?
I remember when I was a kid when they had the baseball lockout in 81
and then the other one in 94.
And it just was like traumatic.
It was such a monkey wrench in the day-to-day life
and there wasn't stuff to replace it.
Now there's a million things to replace anything with.
And I wonder if that's part of this
is all the leagues and the sports field pressure
to constantly be in front of us.
Does it make sense?
It does.
I mean, Thanksgiving Eve is the funny one for me
that when you and I were growing up,
what was Thanksgiving Eve?
The Survivor Series?
It's a Thanksgiving Eve tradition.
And that's not a sports night
had really spent much time thinking about it all.
Yeah.
The NFL schedule league that just came out,
Packers Rams, Thanksgiving Eve.
And that's a funny one, right?
Because we know when the NFL came for Christmas Day,
they wanted to stomp on the NBA.
When they started programming those Saturdays in December with really good games,
they wanted to stomp on the college football playoff.
Who are they stomping on on Thanksgiving Eve?
It's just attention, the attention economy.
Goes to your point, though.
They just want to be in front of us on another night
and get the money they can get because you open up a new window
and somebody's going to pay for it.
So everything crests with the NFL with this Thanksgiving thing,
which you just brought up,
this Wednesday night game that they'd never had three Thursday,
Black Friday, Sunday and Monday.
There's going to be five days out of six where we have NFL including three on Thursday.
So part of me wonders is the NFL just trying to break up families and trying to get everybody
divorced.
I think that has to be asked, right?
Is it more single, more single male sports fans, maybe better for the NFL?
I don't know what they're thinking there.
But the Wednesday night thing blew my mind because that's a pretty, you know, that's like when
you're in college, you come back and you go out with your high school friends, right? When that's a day,
usually people travel. Like even we've struggled with even trying to program that from a podcast
standpoint because you can see the audience goes down for those five days because everybody's traveling,
everyone's with family, people might watch football. That's it. And the NFL's like,
we're doubling down. We feel like we can actually own this entire stretch, family and us.
Those are your two options.
And Wednesday night is just aggressive.
And part of it's Netflix.
Netflix is great for them, right?
They're like, they want these signature one-off events
versus like having the week-to-week stuff.
So they have the Wednesday night opening game in Australia.
They have the Wednesday night before Thanksgiving.
That makes sense from a Netflix standpoint.
I don't get it from an NFL standpoint except for money and attention.
Money and attention, which you can see because all these games,
games on Thanksgiving are bangers.
Right.
Packers, Rams, Bears, lions, Eagles, Cowboys, Chiefs, Bills, and then the Black Friday game
is Bronco Steelers.
So you're not just trying to dominate a holiday when you have a captive audience, you're
trying to post a huge number.
Yeah.
Which really started last year.
Remember, they put Cowboys Chiefs on Thanksgiving?
And what people forget is that game had more viewers than either of the conference championship
games last year.
Unbelievable.
It was a highest rated non-super Bowl game of the season.
Right.
57 million people watch that game.
So with the end, it's almost just like you're, you know,
shock and awe trying to get fireworks.
You know, you could put a crappy game on there.
And it would do very well because it's Thanksgiving.
People are at home.
They want to watch football.
The NFL's not trying to do that anymore.
They're just trying to completely dominate.
Also really hard to figure out what's an awesome game.
I talked to Gabe Spitzer or Netflix about this because he knew,
you know, they obviously have at least some saying requests for what they could put in.
for the Christmas game, right? And when you, basically the only thing you can have some sort of
sense of is who's playing who. So it's like, if we really like the Patriots and we really like the Chargers,
could we make that a request and be like Patriots in LA against the Chargers? Can that be our Christmas
game? But how do you know? Like, would the Giants be a team you'd actually want to request for Christmas
because they have a fourth-place schedule? They have a new code start. They might be really good. Maybe they're
this year's Patriots?
Or would you say, well, the Patriots
were in the Super Bowl last year.
Let's get them.
And then they have the year from hell
and they're 6 and 11 by the time the game happens.
So yeah, I look at these things
and it's like these games all look great.
But the only one that's actually probably
really reliable is Eagles Cowboys
because I know those two teams hate each other.
Is Mahomes even going to be in that Chief Spills game?
How's his ACL stuff going to go?
Are the bills going to be good?
What are they going to look like next year?
I just, you don't know.
So on paper it looks great.
But I understand the philosophy of the Packers, Rams, Bears, Lions,
these are all like the signature teams in the league, right?
We have 12 out of 32.
They're not putting the Panthers.
No.
They're not rolling the dice with like the Raiders.
Yeah.
And you're also putting something that's a rivalry no matter what.
Yeah.
So you guys have to Cowboys Falcons.
Right.
Cowboys Jaguars.
because that's like, you know, at the very least,
it's going to be a division grudge match.
All right, so let's say we're in the room.
We're two of the owners and we're worth a lot of money.
The league has all these media deals in place.
They've figured out this roundabout way of using the Paramount thing
and the chance to be able to renew,
to basically redo a bunch of their stuff at the end of the decade,
combined with the NFL network selling to ESP,
So now they've just kind of moved some games around and made them worth more.
It's like, yeah, we have these three double-hederers Monday Night Football ESPN games.
We're just going to grab those three and we're going to sell them the highest bidder.
Netflix or YouTube, you guys tell us.
We're going to sell the opening night game.
NBC, sorry, you don't have that anymore.
Do you have a problem with that?
Do you have a problem with that?
What is NBC going to say?
Hey, that's not fair.
What they're really doing is weakening the Sunday Fox and CBS games.
they're getting destroyed from the 1 o'clock and the 4 o'clock or in our case in the West Coast
to 10 o'clock and the 1.15, whatever they are.
I think those games are going to probably suck this year, right?
I agree.
And this is what happens with Peak Sports TV is you do hit the wall.
There just aren't that many good games.
Now, fantasy and gambling can make a bad game into a watchable game for some people,
but there just aren't that many at the end of the day,
which is where you get to 18th game,
where you get to expansion, right?
Then they start to,
the wheels start to go in motion.
But you're right, man,
if you're an NFL owner right now,
just think about this,
how far we've come from 1993
when Rupert Murdoch came in with crazy money,
$400 million a year,
$400 million a year.
I remember talking to Jerry Jones one time,
and he was like,
when they brought that offer in,
he was sitting next to Pat Bolan,
the owner of the Broncos.
And he goes, Brian,
we were just kicking the shit
out of ourselves under the table,
just kicking each other
with 400 million.
dollars is amazing. Can you imagine now how many broken femurs there would be for all the money going
around? Because there's like, there's like three Ruperts right now. You know, you have so much
crazy money because the streamers won in. They want more NFL. And the networks know that if
they lose the NFL, they're toast. They're gone. And then you have, you have streamers versus networks
with two different agendas that are perfect for the NFL, right? If you're a network, you want the
continuity, every Sunday I have a game, every Sunday night I have a game, Mondays I have a game
versus Netflix, YouTube, Amazon. They're like, we just want like impact. Amazon's a little better
at the continuity stuff. Netflix didn't want to have a weekly game. They wanted to, you know,
their schedule the way it works is they want to populate their main screen with like, here's the
biggest thing this week. So they only needed like three or four YouTube. YouTube's the one I can't
really figure out what they want.
Because they already have the Sunday ticket.
And just having these
one-off games, like, does you,
I don't even, does YouTube even, this almost
seems like a vanity thing for YouTube.
Like, we're YouTube, watch this, we have NFL,
but it's not like they need it. I think
Netflix needs it a little bit.
The streaming strategy is fascinating. And also
because they can always change your minds. Yeah.
The networks are like, as you say,
we need Sunday football. We need these
two time slots. Or if you're NBC, we need the night
game. We need that every week. That's like part of that's that's what we have to have to keep this
network alive. But if you're a streamer, you can be like, you know what? We're not interested in
full seasons. Oh, wait. Renegotiations coming up. A couple years from now, we are interested in
full seasons, it turns out. Because football's so popular. Yeah, I would argue for prime, having the
Thursday night football has been really good for them. Yes. And they figured out their strategy with
all their sports stuff is, I think, a little different than anyone because a lot of it's ad-driven.
I think eventually they're going to have a lot of product stuff down there that you're
going to see over the next five, six years.
They're going to figure out a way to integrate when you're on prime.
Oh, I like that ad.
You click a button and all of a sudden I'm buying a pan or I'm buying Dave Chang's cooking
something with some MoMAFuku sauce.
I'm like, oh, that sauce looks good.
And all of a sudden, I'm ordering it.
So they have like their own side of agendas.
Netflix has the, we're in front.
We're the leaders.
we just need to keep populating our stuff with one-off stuff,
whether it's the Kevin Hart roast one week or Stranger Things or NFL.
Elderly Mike Tyson.
Right.
Or the press box with Brian Curtis, like whatever it needs to be.
We're still waiting on the call-up on that one.
It might be.
I think they're waiting to see how many football games they were getting.
YouTube, I don't understand their strategy.
I can't really elaborate because I think sometimes,
and you saw this with the Amazon with the Masters,
to me, that's a pure vanity move.
They don't really need the first round or first two rounds of the Masters, right?
But you get it.
And now, like, all the higher up level suits are like,
go to Augusta.
We have the Masters.
And now you're basically you're in this, like, secret society for you just get to go in,
play the course, you get to warm around.
I don't really understand YouTube.
So what is YouTube?
What do you think is motivating them?
Well, I'm kind of with you.
I don't know if they know what their strategy with sports is yet.
There's this great luxury at this point in history to not know.
If you're Fox, you can't lose the NFL because then it's the mass singer and season 800 of the Simpsons.
And that's it, right?
You're, you're toast.
Yeah.
But if you're a streamer, you can play around with stuff.
You know, what if we have old Mike Tyson come out and fight?
What if we have Mayweather Pacquiao?
Right.
What if we have a guy climb a building?
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, you can play around and just sort of see what works.
you know, you still have to hit numbers and all that kind of stuff.
But like, I don't know.
And to me, it's like building a sports division is a big step up, right?
Dabbling in sports saying, hey, let's go get Iron Eagle and let's go get Greg Olson
and let's, you know, put together a little fantasy announcer booth and, you know, get one of the networks to produce a game for us.
That's dabbling, right?
That's a level.
If you say, we want a sports division where we have people hired working for us all the time,
week after week of NFL program.
That's a lot.
It's a lot of money,
and it also takes a lot of talent and know-how.
And you and I've seen this,
you know,
week after week watching the NFL,
not every network is as good at that as others.
So then you bring yourself under this microscope.
Are we doing this right?
Do our games suck?
Do our replay suck?
Do our announcer suck?
It's easier to dabble.
Yeah, and they're listening to all the media critics
and podcasts like this,
and that's where they're getting feedback from,
basically,
because they know not to trust
social media and things like that.
So it's, first of all, you could not listen to anything or you can be like, did we do that?
Like when Amazon, when they had the outage during the, what was it the last minute of,
what was it, the playing game or was the playing game, right?
It was Charlotte.
And Amazon just disappeared for 20 seconds and everyone nuts.
Like that's a catastrophic moment for people running sports in Amazon.
That's your worst case scenario.
100%.
But for the most part, I don't know.
it's pretty hard for an announcer to ruin a game.
It's pretty hard for a production to ruin a game
if you care about who's playing.
They can only do so much.
NBC has thrown away the pregame and halftime shows
for every sport they've covered for the last 20 years.
Nobody really cares, right?
Like the basketball show.
I don't know what they're doing.
But nobody cares.
It doesn't matter.
With the football piece,
so if they add another week,
and it's clear they want to go now.
I thought it was really notable that they pushed the Super Bowl all the way to February 14th.
The Super Bowl always, without fail, has been the first Sunday in February.
And it's either February 1st through February 7th without fail.
Single digits.
No longer.
Now we're at 14.
And I almost feel like it's a feeler to see this is how it's going to work for us when we go to 18 weeks.
what kind of number do we get
if we push it back?
And I don't know where this part ends either
because think about this
from the beginning.
And they're also insisting
on doing the preseason.
So you're talking August
all the way through February now.
One, two, three, four, five.
That's seven months.
It's not a seven month season.
That seems crazy to me.
Right?
It does.
It does.
But if you were going to grow,
wouldn't you grow into February?
Right.
like staggered through the way.
I don't know.
There's something about the way
the schedule was set up
where college started.
People were kind of back
from summer break
and all that stuff.
Kids went off.
School started for little kids.
Kids are in college
and then the NFL would start.
And now it seems like
they're kind of conceding
that territory to college football.
And college football is the other one on that.
Like Indiana's first game last year
was August 19th.
Their last game was January 19th.
It's a five-months.
schedule, not counting all the practices. So you're showing up in Indiana in mid-June and you're going
all the way through the middle of January. That's insane. Week zero is like one of the concepts that
makes me laugh about peak sports TV, which we got to in college football. We have week one,
but before week one, we have week zero. Right. There are games. It's like, but zero is not a week.
They're not good games, so it doesn't count as a week, but it's something to watch.
Yeah. But February to me, that's always been the dead zone of sports. I think there's a famous quote
where somebody asked a sports writer, why did you, why did you quit and said February?
Because there was anything to write about. So if you're the NFL, what if we stretch that another
week? And we just keep going and bet that you're not going to want to watch regular season NBA
as much as going to want to watch us. Right. February was always for the sports community,
it was vacations. There was always conferences in February and early March. It was always
kind of the time everybody reset and then March Madness would hit. Now March Madness is going to get
longer. Like, what are they, what are they, didn't they add like another 14 teams or something
and they were about to? They did. They did because, you know, like, literally, 60 odd teams
wasn't enough to pick a champion. This is one of the things I wanted to talk about.
These different leagues are doing stuff that everybody is like, please don't do this.
Like, not only the fans, but the people that play and coach the sports are like, yeah,
don't do this. And whoever is in charge is.
always like, no, actually we're going to do it.
Thanks for the input.
Like the NBA, I think pretty consistently across the board,
everybody is saying this season is too long.
Kurt Goldsberger had a great piece for us today
about all the leg injuries.
And it's something him and I had been talking about
behind the scenes for months about,
is there a way to actually capture,
did something change?
Because you could see in the basketball reference minutes
from 12, 13 years ago,
like the league leaders in minutes
versus the league leaders now.
People are 500 minutes less.
It doesn't make sense,
but it does make sense
when you watch how it's played
all the leg injuries.
And I,
where are we going with all this stuff?
The bet that's being made
is that they will take the money
and they will watch us roll our eyes
and they'll say,
you're going to watch anyway.
I know you're going to watch.
And you and I could do a self-audit about this, right?
Did we need a seventh team
from every conference for the NFL playoffs?
Absolutely we didn't.
Those teams have sucked by and large year after year.
Did you not watch those games involving the 17?
That was one where I was like, you got me.
I kind of like this.
Yeah, I wasn't against that idea.
If they added two more teams, I think that's now a mistake.
NBA playing game.
I think you're pro, if I remember correctly.
Yeah, I'm pro.
You're pro.
I've enjoyed it.
They bet that they could have teams that would often have a losing record or be right
around 500 and they put them in the postseason
that Bill Simmons will watch and you watched.
NBA Cup I watched.
Am I a bad barometer though?
Because I'm going to watch anything.
Yeah, but I'm just, what I think is like,
what would the backlash look like?
What if, you know, what would the NFL have to do
to actually put a number on the scoreboard
where they, woo, people really hated that?
This is a good question because somebody asked me this.
What's the number for each sport
that would make people go,
what the fuck are you guys doing, right?
So the NFL said,
we're going to have a 20 game schedule next year.
People would be like, what?
No, no, no, no.
We're tapping out.
You can't do that.
And I think for the NBA,
just staying even is about as far as they can push it.
Like, if they would have to 90 games,
I think, honestly, people would revolt.
Sure.
I think that would be awful.
College football, I don't know what the number is.
Indiana played 16 games last year.
Yeah.
Like, think about that.
That's more than the 1972, as many as the 1972 dolphins played.
Oh, my God.
And somebody was at the University of Texas, you know, in an 11 game college football world.
Yeah.
It feels like a ton, but I've watched every week of it.
Right.
It's amazing.
And it's, it's fun.
Everybody's like, oh, this sucks.
It's a new world.
It's like, eh, I haven't reached that point yet.
So you're good from late August all the way through January for college football.
I mean, I tell you what, you know me.
Like, I'll watch any football game.
Starting Thursday, I'll watch all day Saturday and I'll watch all day Sunday, Sunday ticket.
By Monday now, I'm dragging a lot.
Yeah.
I'm just like, Joe and Troy come on.
I'm like, I'm not watching this, but I feel like I'm dragging.
You're worn out.
That's what that first weekend of the NBA playoffs is like by like the eighth game.
You're like, whoof, need that.
I love this.
I'm in, but I'm drag.
This is, I'm tired.
Yeah.
And I'll tell you what it is, is you know, you've heard all these people talk about how confusing
the world is now with the streaming services and how hard.
hard it is to watch things. They're not wrong, but they also lack the historical perspective of
you and I where it's like, it is also in certain ways, easier to watch everything now. Yeah.
They're more college football games at the click of a button than there ever were when I was a kid.
Right. Even when I was in college. Texas used to have a pay-per-view game when I was in college.
Like, here's one of our crappy games. Let's just put it on pay-per-view if you didn't come to the
stadium. Like, it is now there's so much, it's easy to watch stuff. Now, is it a pain in the ass to go from
streamer to streamer and back and forth to television. Yeah, it is. It totally is. I understand that.
But there's tons of stuff on. There's tons of stuff on without really trying to watch anything.
Yeah, my life has spanned this entire kind of run we've had because I'm old enough to remember
game six of the 1981 finals tape delayed in Boston. This is the Celtics winning the title.
It was not on live. And I was in fifth or sixth grade and it had to,
to go to bed, then wake up for the game.
My dad woke me up at 1130 so we could watch the game to see what happened.
The other choice would have been to just listen to it on the radio.
But when you think about like all the NBA games that were lost over the years,
they were NFL.
I've talked about this before, but it sucks so much to be an NFL fan if you were in a city.
If you were like a Jets fan and you're living in New York City and they would do the thing where they were...
Which sucks to begin with.
Well, that sucks to begin with.
But they would show Jets, giants, you would only have two games.
So it would be one and one and nothing can compete with the home team.
And that was it.
You didn't get to watch any other teams.
So you're really tied to the little game breaks, the halftime stuff, the highlights,
the ticker on the bottom.
That was kind of all we had.
So I look at the stuff now where we're arguing about it's really hard to find where
every single game is on.
Like that's a decent problem to have.
I think what's weird to me is like the Lakers playoff game the other night in L.A.
was not on normal TV.
And that's where this goes back to the question of how much money is enough to actually
make it less likely people are going to like your sport.
Because there's just, L.A. is a huge city.
It's got people of all kinds of backgrounds.
And there's people that just aren't going to pay for Peacock in L.A.
right that probably loved the Lakers that either had to go to somebody's house
who had peacock or just had to find out what happened afterwards
and that's where I think you lose the narrative a little bit.
At the very least, like the games in the local cities,
I feel like should be on normal TV.
That reminds me of old school NFL when there'd be a Cowboys game
when I was a kid that wasn't sold out by Friday.
Oh, that's right.
And you start to hear the sports radio thing.
It's like, oh, should we get tickets?
I forgot about that.
We got the home blackout.
the home blackout, which is now nobody even understands that concept. Back in the day,
there'd be this thing. Remember that? End of the week. Well, you have to explain this because
there's probably people listening who don't even know you're talking about. You had to sell out the game
or it wasn't on local television. So if you lived in Cincinnati and the Bengals were 10,000 tickets shy,
the team would then have to decide whether they wanted to buy the 10,000 tickets themselves so their
fans could see the game. They would give them to charity sometimes. I remember that being a thing,
But you'd start to hear this murmur late in the week.
It's time to go buy tickets.
Right.
Because otherwise we're now going to be able to see the game.
Again, it's just like a totally different era of sports.
But was that the, was that the Laker game that was a $90 get in price?
There was the cheapest Laker ticket of the season.
Was that game four versus O KC?
Do you see that?
Yeah, no, the one they got knocked out.
Right.
Well, that's happening now with World Cup.
The tickets are starting to drop big time.
Remember, they priced it at a,
all these crazy heights.
And now it feels like the get-in prices is going to keep going down.
World Cup is another thing.
I mean, you could argue this is the craziest sports content year we've had.
With football getting longer, adding World Cup.
When does Winter Olympics start?
We did it.
We did it.
That's right.
Bill, I got bad news.
That shows you how much I watched.
February 6th or 20th.
You might remember some hockey.
Yeah, I did watch the women's hockey and the men's hockey.
But honestly, that's how much sports I've watched.
All this stuff is starting to blend together.
Dude, I'm with you.
I just feel like, I mean, I'm like Mike Tarillo.
We're just like rushing off to call another huge event.
The Hughes brothers.
It feels like it happened 10 years ago.
It does.
And it's so much stuff.
It was three months ago.
It's so much stuff.
And again, like, I think if you went to young Bill and young Brian,
it'd be like, this is a dream.
Because do you remember those nights when you'd be like,
there's nothing on?
I'd kill to watch a sport.
I'm starting to really have trouble, like, as I just proved with the Winter Olympics,
the stuff is just going in one ear and at the other when you're watching it.
And unless that's something I really have to focus on,
which is basically for this podcast, NFL and basketball,
I'm just finding, like, the baseball playoffs last year,
which I watched a ton of.
And now if you quiz me on what happened in the 25 playoffs,
I'd be like, well, Dodgers played the Blue Jays.
I remember that.
Game 7.
Who did the Blue Jays beat in the previous round?
Starts to get iffy.
I'm like, I don't know.
I watched it.
I never used to be like that.
Mariners?
Mariner's?
Blue Jays Mariners, I think?
Mariners.
That's what it was.
It was the Mariners.
Between the two of us,
we can reconstruct the last six months of sports.
We'd have to help each other.
Well, it's like I had Letterman on last week.
And one of the things I asked them was about like with the 6,000 shows, do you, you know,
he did 6,000 shows across the board.
Do they all start to blend in together after a while?
I was like, yeah, I don't, you know, remember little pieces.
But you don't remember it like the, like when Jimmy Kimmel goes on his show for the first
time in Letterman's show, he remembers every moment of it.
And I wonder with sports, the influx of it, if that's just going to be what happens with
our memories, where there's so much content, there's so much glut that three months.
after the Winter Olympics, I couldn't remember if we had the Winter Olympics yet.
And part of it's the media.
It just, everything goes fast.
I was looking at, for some reason, I went to ESPN.com's homepage.
I'm not totally sure why the other day, but I went to the homepage.
Wow.
What was that experience?
Like?
It was different.
Kind of like going to the old apartment building you, you know, lived in when you were a young,
young adult.
They didn't have archives for their writers anymore.
You don't have a writer like, you just have to hope they wrote something.
It was like going to the old apartment, the apartment had been turned down.
Yeah.
That's what it was like.
But I can't remember this.
It was one of these sports stories that leaked out of your brain and mind,
but some huge sports story the night before.
And it just wasn't,
it was barely on the homepage.
And I don't even blame ESPN.
It's just the world moves very fast now.
You know,
there's not the SI cover that comes out on Thursday.
And you're like, okay.
Yeah.
That was what happened this week.
Right.
Our brains are just ugly.
It's like, oh, there's something.
There's this WWE thing tonight.
What's going on?
Ronda Rousey and it's fighting tonight.
Okay.
And you just sort of pinged.
tong to the next thing.
It couldn't have been this much slower 45 years ago.
I think it was.
I honestly, you know what?
I don't think though, I think if you and I were like a living agate page, it wasn't
that slow because there's just a lot, there was a lot going on, but we just couldn't watch
it.
We didn't have access to it.
Not on a, not on a Tuesday night.
Well, I wonder if part of this.
So social media basically starts for what it looks like now, probably like, 80s.
18 years ago, 2008-2009 range.
Sure.
Before we were in the bookmark economy.
If I wanted to find out about anything, I had my whole slew of bookmarks.
I had websites I went to.
I had writers I liked.
I had a couple message boards for my favorite team,
like the old school message boards.
That was really it.
And I would start my morning and I would just go through all the bookmarks.
now I just probably go to Twitter or I go to a couple of the Boston Sports Reddit pages
and that's kind of what I do.
But I'm like I wish I wish I could actually go back to the old bookmark thing.
But you'd be bookmarking things that wouldn't even be able to know how to serve you the content
correctly.
And the ringer's kind of anomaly in that respect.
You can go to our website still and see all the stuff we have.
There's not a lot of places that are easy to do that now.
Apple News is one that I always go to now every day
and I always look to see
because I subscribe to that
I get all the different websites
and they do a pretty good job of curating what's going on
and that's like the closest side
to a bookmark experience now.
I agree because if you're anywhere else,
people, and again, we've benefited from this
being in the sports business,
but like everybody jumps on small things now.
Yeah.
So it feels like nothing is,
it feels like everything is big.
You know, people are like, you know,
I mean, just imagine like when we were,
when we were young, Mel Kuyper seemed like a lunatic because he cared that much about the NFL
draft. And now he's a normie because every Twitter account you follow cares about the draft
and is already caring about next year's draft even though it just ended. And so just everything
seems big. You know, it just everything seems important. And then I think at the end of the day,
nothing seems important or as important. Or everything seems big, but it's not like the
like for the Boston fans right now, the Jalen Brown, Jason Tatum, trying to
all of these little weird videos.
I'd almost, like, if we had this in 1982, this is all I would have done as a little kid
is trying to figure out, Wade, Mikhail doesn't maybe like Bird and just gone driven
myself crazy.
Now you can, you know, Jalen's done multiple Twitch streams.
He just did some other interview.
Tatum now just did an interview.
Then the people around them, then you have T-Mack being able to dine on a weekend of pretending
he had to talk to Jalen Brown when he obviously did.
and all of it's kind of meaningless.
Like we're going to go through it now with Yannis
over the next couple weeks
as people decide if he's going to get traded.
And that's another thing
is like people trying to sit through
the bullshit of the quote unquote
information reporters.
Is this actual information
or is there an agenda behind this information?
How do I, you know, in real time
you're trying to decipher it like a police detective?
What are the next few weeks of LeBron
going to look like, speaking of which?
We already started this week with the weird McMedaman story about he was upset that JJ Redick got a game ball and he didn't.
So he walked out of the locker.
I was like, what is this?
You're 41.
They already told you, you're the third best guy in the team.
It's like one last time, right?
Like when they have the movies, you know, the action movie with all the elderly action stars.
This just feels like we got one more in us.
Well, this is what I've been pushing for with the Warriors for weeks.
And I actually think has a real chance to happen is LeBron going on.
the Warriors with Curry, with Draymond, they trade Butler's contract and a pick for Anthony Davis,
and they just do the old guy team and just go and sell out in every NBA city. And if you're
LeBron, you have two choices. You either see, now we're doing a LeBron segment. You can't
fucking resist. It's like heroin. But if you're LeBron, you either take the minimum and try to win a
title or you do the expendables in Golden State and you just have this two-year, you know,
you're everywhere, you're a sellout everywhere, you're the biggest story wherever you go.
And in a weird way, you've stolen some spotlight from OKC and San Antonio, who are the teams
that are going to win the titles the next couple years.
But you have something different.
You're basically like in the Hulk Hogan after he gave up the title to the Ultimate Warrior,
but he was still the biggest sellout that they had, but he didn't need the title or like
what Andre the Giant was like.
I think that's what's sitting there for LeBron.
I think that's his only move left.
But this goes back to the attention.
economy. If they do that, there would just be stories that come out of that all the time,
which is one of the reasons you would do it. You think LeBron's interested in the attention economy?
I do. I do. I do think he is. Do you think Draymond Green's jokes would go over better with
LeBron than they did with Charles Barkley? What do you think of that? I know you talked about it,
but told my audience. I just watched that moment. I'm like, is Draymond Green? Is he, are we sure
that? First of all, we're sure that he's good. Maybe we're past that as an announcer?
But second of all, like to be a good announcer,
I think you just have to have that ability
to let people make fun of you a little bit.
Do you have the ability to eat it?
Charles Barkley has a great ability to eat it.
Stephen A.
I was saying this,
when the Knicks lose to the Thunder in the finals here in a couple of weeks,
Stephen A is going to come on there,
hang his head on the show.
Yeah.
4-0.
I can't believe it.
I was so excited.
And he's going to let himself be vulnerable.
Can Draymond do that until?
television? There's that. And then there's also, as we've talked about many times, when you do those
shows, it's professional wrestling and you have to sell the other person's moves.
100%. And I don't know if he's a move seller. You have to let the other guy get their stuff in.
Yeah. Like there's a, there's a respectfulness that you have to have in that situation if you're him.
Even though I thought Barclay definitely seemed to be provoking him a little bit, which I didn't think
got enough, you know, he's basically just saying to his face, you guys are done, it's over,
you know, and probably odds are Draymond Green is going to handle that that well, but then
he handles it the wrong way and comes back in him with something that wasn't really factually
accurate. And it was just awkward. You know, it's like exactly what you don't want when you're
on those shows. Like you watch the Amazon show, which I think is the closest we have to a good
show right now. There's a mutual respect with all those guys. They're not going to hang each other out
to dry. But in general, the interesting.
said the NBA piece is interesting because it's the first time they've really had backlash,
and I don't know how much of it is fair and how much of it isn't fair,
but they've also been in everybody's life for such a long time that it's kind of,
this is an inevitable way that this could probably end.
But that whole thing has felt off the whole year.
I love that show, but the ESPN fit, some of the time that they have,
the fact that they don't have the same time they had after the games,
which is when I really thought that show was at the most important.
And to me, like, Shaq is the biggest issue with the show.
Like, it just doesn't see, it seems like he's there because it's fun to be on the show,
but it doesn't seem like he follows basketball at a high enough level anymore.
Like, he doesn't know who people like Baylor Shireman are.
Like, you're on a studio show covering a sport, you know, you have to,
there has to be some sort of a modicum of following the game.
So it just feels, it's like watching.
a little like watching the Warriors, ironically,
where it feels like they're having trouble
trying to reinvent themselves.
It's an interesting experiment
of can you take something that's so awesome
in one place that is a Turner network
and just transport it to the other place?
Would it be the same?
And the answer is no.
Kind of the same.
Same in a lot of ways.
Yeah.
You know, when they were doing their obit's
the other night, that had, you know,
that felt like inside the NBA.
Yeah.
They were talking about Ted Turner.
That felt like inside the NBA.
But then there are moments really
something just feels different.
They have a chance to flip the narrative again
these next couple rounds, I think.
I think the basketball is better.
There's more of a spotlight on them.
It'll be easier for somebody like Shaq
because there's only four teams left.
He can just watch the game and figure out what happened.
He knows the players.
Yeah, yeah.
He'll know who Shaky Giladal is how Xadr is.
But yeah, look at this is what happens.
One other thing I had for the schedule stuff before we go.
So the NBA season, 82 games, six playing games, four playoff rounds.
Conceivably a playing team could play 114 games in a year.
Cleveland and Detroit, we'll see what happens tomorrow night,
but are on pace for 28 playoff games.
So combined with the 82, that's put you at 110.
I can't remember what the record is, but I think the,
I want to say like the 0,000, maybe the 05.
spurs. Somebody in the mid-2000s played like
108
games, something crazy.
There's no world in where the basketball
they'll scale back to schedule, I don't think.
They're not giving money back.
It's actually more likely they're going to add teams.
Yes. And create more
inventory. Hockey's definitely adding more
teams. Yes. The WMBA
to everybody's horror is adding more teams.
More teams, which people are just stupefied by.
And then baseball might be adding more teams.
Which was dead five minutes ago, and then now it's back.
Yeah, I'm just, here's the thing is whenever there's a playoff expansion,
I always get a little nervous because you can never take it back.
Right.
You know, we're talking about this with college football now, right?
Are they going to 16, they're going to 24, you know, what's going to happen there?
And the thing is, I'm always like, I would be happy to experiment for a year and see how we feel about this,
but the thing is you can't do that.
It will never come back because you'll get money
and then you'll say, well, who wants to give money back?
I don't think have they ever unwound?
They really haven't.
The only thing they've ever unwound was the 232
with the NBA finals going back to the 2-2-1-1-1.
But that wasn't taking away games.
It wasn't taking away games.
And it just feels everything.
It's like, you know, it wasn't that long ago,
the college football was two teams.
That was it, right?
You had the bowls, but it was the BCS match one and two,
and that was it.
And then you bigger and bigger and you can never go back.
And that's the thing.
In a just world, you'd be like, okay, we did too much.
Let's just scale it back a little bit.
But we know that it would never happen.
It's weird when everybody in the league seems to think the NBA should cut 10 games.
And yet there's no way they will.
And the players are cutting 10 games.
It's just they still play them.
Right.
Well, the irony is when they get NBA Europe going,
I'm talking about that later in the podcast with Ryan Smith briefly.
because the Utah Jazz owner was on.
It's coming on later.
There's probably a world where if they can get,
so I'm talking 25 years from now,
if NBA Europe can get to the place it needs to get to
where we just have an actual world championship,
where they have the schedule as kind of aligning,
and then it's like a best of three
with the champion of the NBA and the champion of the,
or they play it in October of the next year,
however they do it.
I just feel like if you gave Adam Silver,
if you got him drunk and gave him some truth serum,
I would think he'd be like,
this is what I'm really thinking,
the actual world championship.
Because the league's in a crazy spot
where most of the best young players
are from not here,
which Perkins has been talking about on TV,
making it seem like we've lost our cars to Japan.
We're losing basketball.
It's like, people are fine.
Basketball's still good.
I don't really care where the guys are from.
but it is a little weird.
So we'll get a world championship and then guess what?
We'll have more games.
And then I'll be like, should the world championship be three or five games?
It should be seven.
What about nine?
I don't know.
What month can we put it in?
So it sounds like, to recap,
you're not delighted by the NFL ads,
but you'll also watch all the games every week,
which is where I've stand.
College football, you're okay with more football.
Yeah.
I mean, it did feel like a grind.
I remember when Joel and I went to the national championship a couple years ago for the ringer,
and it was on a Monday.
Remember, and it would have been like a huge, I think it was a divisional round of the NFL the day before.
And I was like Monday, we get to the stadium in Atlanta, we were looking at each other like, whoa, is a lot.
That was a national championship.
NBA, you'd go lower.
Lower.
And then baseball, which is headed for a strike, I wonder where they're going to end up.
it feels like the season can easily be shorter.
That's one where,
especially with the pitcher injuries
and how hard it is just to keep everyone healthy
and feels like 144 would be perfect.
But then you've thrown away all the records.
Yeah.
And we all lock in the playoffs.
Like, here we go.
Yeah, in baseball,
it feels like you could actually make the baseball playoffs
maybe even a little longer.
I'll see.
Yeah.
And again, I don't want to go there because once we do that, we'll never go back to the current stage, you know?
The only one that I kind of like is the PGA where- Move to the spring.
Yeah, just the PGA being like, you know what, we're doing some of this wrong.
We got to have more West Coast stuff.
We got to have more stuff in prime time.
Let's like rethink some of the, some of our ideas.
But the PGA is not going.
We have more majors now.
We're now having six.
like the PGA that having the four majors, I think has been really,
I think like they have four anchors in their schedule that the casual fans like
myself can just jump in and be like, oh, PGA's this weekend.
Here we go.
All right, Brian Curtis.
How's it going with Joel Anderson?
Love the guy.
How's it going with Shoemaker?
You know I love the guy.
I want both those guys.
It's all Texans on the press box.
Somebody I've been working with you and Shoemaker now for 15 years.
You believe that.
It's a long time.
We're sending like our work relationship to the ninth grade in high school.
That's how long we've all been together.
In a couple of weeks, it'll be 10 years at the ringer.
Yeah, I can't believe that.
Ten years together of this website.
Unbelievable.
All right, Brian Curtis.
Great to see you.
Thanks for popping on.
Thanks, Bill.
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All right.
People have been asking for them ever since the Celtics got eliminated.
people thought you were too mad to come on.
Then people thought maybe you're never coming on again.
They didn't know where your head was at.
The Patriots are falling apart.
The Celtics fell apart.
The Red Sox season is over.
And my dad is here.
How are you feeling?
Well, as you just described, I'd also include the Bruins.
Not only losing, but not getting the Toronto draft pick.
So I was trying to decide when you said I had to come on today.
which sports team had I was going to wear.
Yeah.
Bruins, Celtics, Patriots, or Red Sox.
And I decided, I don't like any of them right now.
So I'm wearing my Ruby's dad hat.
Your dog Ruby.
Ruby is our special needs puppy.
She's had some trouble in year one.
Who gave you that hat, just out of curiosity?
Michelle, who walks Ruby and Winnie.
Okay.
All right, so Bruins, you sit down for the lottery.
They have to go back from five to six to Maple Leafs.
It's just one.
Instead, they go up.
Every year, every year somebody jumps ahead.
So what happens?
They Maple Leafs jump up, get the first pick.
Oh, my gosh, yes.
Yeah.
And you and I were on a thread with our nephew, Ryan.
So that was just the coup de grace on top of everything that's been happening to our sports teams.
And now we have this, whatever's going.
on Jalen Brown, Jason Tatum.
Is Jalen Brown still on our team?
Jalen Brown's still on the team.
He was on the Jennifer Hudson show this week talking about stuff and sent some Twitch.
He's out there.
You know, I wish instead of going on the Jennifer Hudson show, he was back in the gym,
dribbling and shooting free throws.
He's resting his body.
So you went to game seven.
I went to
I went to the four home games
we won game one
looked really good
and then I saw three terrible losses
including game seven
yeah
so what do you want to happen
do you would you
you're just talking as my dad
the Boston fan Celtics fan
what do you want to happen
do you want them to keep Tatum and Brown together
or do you want to move Brown when his values high
yeah it's a hard hard question
but if the package was perfect for Jalen Brown,
I would move him in a heartbeat.
I don't know what that perfect package is.
I'm just kind of tired of watching them.
Okay.
You know.
Ten years?
Ten years of watching his offensive game?
You're good?
Well, something, I think,
I don't know if the Philadelphia got it into the referee's ears,
but I watch the tape of a couple of the games.
Almost every time he goes in to make a shot, he pushes off.
And they don't usually call it in the regular season,
but it's apparent that he can't get his space unless he pushes.
Whereas you see some of these other guys and other teams,
and they get to their space quickly and shoot quickly.
But I'm worried he's turning 30.
His athleticism is what has made him the star.
he is. He's been having difficulty now getting his jump shot off without pushing. He can't make
three throws. He's a black hole in terms of the ball going into him and not moving.
Yeah. And he can't dribble. I don't understand after 10 years where he can't dribble.
Well, I'm higher on him than you because... Yeah, I know you are. You've always been higher on him.
I always valued the durability. I always thought he played hard and gave a shit. And I think
the more we step back from the season,
I think it was pretty weird that Tatum just showed up with six weeks left
and they had to figure out how to incorporate that.
In real time, it was fun to watch,
but it doesn't seem like they ever,
they had these two styles and they talked about it.
Jaylen talked about it after Game 7 when he said,
I felt like we were playing more like us in Game 7.
Well, why do you think that?
Because Tatum wasn't playing because you guys were pushing the ball up
because you had the ball more.
But I do think fundamentally, you and I, you know, obviously the listeners aren't privy to our phone calls.
We always talk about stylistically, Tatum likes to bring the ball up, take his time, figure out what he's going to do, whereas I think Jalen likes to move faster with the guards.
And it's the first time I feel like maybe they just want two separate things on a basketball team.
Well, it's an interesting point because I'd say for the first two-thirds of Jailant of Tateum coming back, he deferred to.
Brown. And Brown was still the alpha dog in the offense. Tatum was a lot of time in the corner
the way he was as a rookie. And then when they got into the playoffs, it kind of switched and
Missoula shortened the bench. And to be honest, I know you and I have talked about it. I don't want
to see the Brown or Tatum bringing the ball up. I want to see a guard bringing the ball up.
I don't want to see Tatum dribbling until there's nine seconds left and he doesn't.
as I saw. And then I want to see Brown bringing it up and losing the ball over and over.
I want to see White or Pritchard bringing the ball up and, you know, play Brown and or Tatum at the
high post or, you know, move them around. We stop moving when those two guys bring the ball up.
I say that one Twitter clip, somebody did a great job of pointing out what Philly was trying to do
with, Jalen, where it was just basically like, fine, go one-on-one, knock yourself out, you'll make half of these.
not letting the three-point shooters do anything.
And they stayed home with everybody.
And it was a lot of Jalen going against good defenders
trying to like bang against them and get his spot.
And that would be the same thing with Tatum.
It wasn't just that though.
It really struck me after watching the Nick Philly series.
I think Philly was really, really happy to see Tatum or Brown bring the ball up.
Because when they went ISIL, M.B. just stood there.
He wasn't moving around.
He didn't have to move around.
He wasn't wasting energy.
Yeah.
We weren't tiring him out.
In the fourth quarter, he was wide awake.
And you watched the Knicks, and it was a completely different way of attacking Embed.
They moved him all around.
Yeah, they wanted him in pick and pops all the time where he had to let come out.
And Tatum and Brown bringing the ball up, how many times did we have seven or eight seconds left
and suddenly somebody had to take a shot?
And Embed, again, never moved.
Yeah.
Well, it was funny, they were doing that to us with Kada, the pick-a-pop stuff,
especially with Vucevich, just trying to get him where he'd have to jump out a second
two late out of three-pointer.
And then the Seltics were never doing that to Embed, which was just bizarre.
Which, you know.
Oh, boy, here we go.
Did you put Joe back in second row?
I'm not going there, but if Tatum and Brown consistently are bringing the ball up so that
Embed can just stand there and be lazy and rested.
That's a coaching decision.
That's a coaching strategy.
If I'm the coach of the Celtics, I have Missoula,
I have my guards bringing the ball up,
and I have the ball moving all around this.
And I have Embedd tired by the fourth quarter.
Well, this goes to what I said last week about,
it felt like they treated that Philly series as kind of a tester.
for what they were going to do in round two and round three.
Let's see, what do we have with Vucevich?
What do we have when Tatum brings the ball up?
What do we have if our bench shorter?
And they never took Philly seriously enough until it's too late.
You and I were both struck by Stevens' press conference, which was riveting.
And he seemed both pissed off that they lost to Philly.
I think he knew that Philly wasn't that good.
But also pointing out, like, he didn't even think we were that good.
He made a point of pointing out the 3 and 11.
against the best teams in the league.
He brought up Shireman and then Hugo,
which I thought was notable
and how important Hugo is going to be for them next year.
Meanwhile, Hugo got buried after the trade deadline.
So I don't know.
I felt like they weren't 100% aligned watching the press conference.
I agree.
I mean, you and I talked about it afterwards
that one of the great things about the regular season
and how they overachieved,
which was great because none of us expected 56 wins.
Yeah.
Was they used 10 or 11 people.
They didn't tire out Brown and Tatum.
They had wings coming off the bench over and over and running.
You know, one thing about, you know, I'm not a real fan of Walsh,
but boy, he runs his tail off.
Yeah.
Hugo runs his tail off.
Shireman runs his tail off.
What happens when they're sitting on the bench?
Isolation again.
We saw it, except for the championship here, every year for the past four years, isolation.
But you bring those guys off the bench, they're moving all over.
And they're getting offensive rebounds.
Right.
And they're pressuring, like you saw with the next day with Maxie for four games, just chasing them around, using bridges on them.
And we had all the guys to do that.
But it was a really bad coaching series.
And I thought, I've said this, I thought Missoula was great during the regular season.
I just wonder a big picture, what did they learn from it?
You know, the trade that they made to get under the luxury tax,
getting rid of assignments, really did change the team.
Because one of the things that made that team,
the thing you and I liked was they always had two guards out there.
Right.
And it was two of the three at all times.
And one of them was usually hot.
And if two of them were hot, they were beating anybody.
But usually you can get one of them going.
Pritchard's trick-or-treat, white,
the shooting was, you know, I just thought they put a lot of miles on them.
I wonder, like, thinking about things they would have done differently,
would they put less miles on white and brown and not really cared what seed they got?
I thought that was one of the lessons of the season is it doesn't really matter what seed you are.
It matters how healthy your guys are in April.
Right.
Two thoughts on that.
I can recall during the regular season, three or four games that we won because Simon's got hot.
Yeah. Nobody else was hot. He came in. He got hot and he would play the whole fourth quarter.
And, you know, that trade made a huge difference, obviously, in terms of our depth at not just shooting guard, but a guard who could make a shot.
You know, when our shots aren't falling and we don't have those subs in there grabbing offensive rebounds, we're just a static team. We're not moving.
Well, do you feel like the window is
these NBA teams have these four-year windows?
This is a team that just lost in round one.
You know?
Yeah.
And it's the team that made the 22 finals and 24 finals.
We thought they were going to make the finals last year
and they had the crazy Knicks clap.
Tatum gets hurt.
And now you look at teams like OKC in San Antonio
and they just seem so much better set up.
You know, unless there's an awesome trade.
Right.
You know, and they do have some, they have a trade exception.
They have the mid-level, da-da-da.
The other thing that struck me, though, and you've just brought it up about seating,
in retrospect, I would have preferred to have been the fourth seed.
I think we matched up really well with Detroit.
Yeah.
I think we matched up really well with Orlando and eight, you know,
and the fifth seat as well.
We put a lot of miles on ground to get to the second seed.
And he just looked little tired to me in the playoffs, playing all those minutes.
Can I throw a trade at you that I've been thinking about?
Does this involve anybody from Milwaukee?
No.
Oh, okay.
I'm starting to get nervous about the honest stuff.
Yeah.
I keep thinking of that segment I did on my podcast a month or so ago about older big men
and what the track record is for year 14 and on.
Right.
You know, with Tatum and Brown,
you always feel like with those two guys,
you can build around them,
figure out some sort of strategy,
and Jalen turns 30 next year,
Tatum's younger than he is.
And that's like a five-year window.
Yannis, it might be two.
That's a good point.
And so now we're condensing this window
where you're also going against OKC and San Antonio
who have all these young players
and they have all the contract staggered
and the ability to add all of these pieces.
It's like, you know,
you have these lightning-in-a-bottle seasons,
and I think we had one in 24
when we were able to get Porzengis and Drew.
And everything kind of aligned.
They spent a lot of money for that season.
They, you know, the opponents fell in the right way.
I think that's happened to the Knicks this season.
Well, what you just said,
the opponents fell the right way.
Yeah.
Which didn't happen.
You know, we faced a Philly team
that if we played them three weeks ago,
we would have swept them.
We faced the Philly team that had one good week in them,
and we just happened to hit them that one week,
and then they died immediately.
So I just, I wonder, like,
is this the time to take a swing?
And I keep thinking about New Orleans
and whether there's a way to get back Zion
and Trey Murphy
with Jalen and some,
picks and whatever else needs to go in there and basically end up with
Trey Murphy making half as much as Jalen and then taking this enormous flyer on
Zion and trying to figure out can you put Zion in a winning
organization with a different fan situation and what's there and if
nothing's there you bail on it and now you're paying Trey Murphy half as much as
Jalen like I wonder I wonder if Stevens is thinking about stuff like that
Well, we both like Murphy.
All the smart teams like them.
Yeah.
Williamson is so injury prone.
It's hard to know what you're really getting.
He's almost like the contract to make it work because Jayland's going to make like $58 million.
But I wonder, because Brad is so outside the box with how he thinks about stuff.
Right.
That I wonder if he's thinking, Yonah's two-year window where I'm probably not winning the title anyway.
Or can I try to reconfigure this so I can have, you know,
know, I got to pay Pritchard.
That's the other thing is to have to pay Pritchard 7 million this upcoming year and
7 million after a free agent.
He's a guy that's worth 20 plus.
And do I need a center?
It would be the other thing I'd be thinking of.
Like, if I'm trading Jalen, do I need a bigger guy?
Like, do I have to, should I think about Sabonis?
Do I think about Sabonis and trying to get more Sacramento King's first round picks that are always worse
guy, though, that he hasn't finished the season in a couple of years.
Yeah, well, they shut him down this year.
I'm just trying to think how many centers are out there that could make an impact.
Do they feel like they need a center?
The Vucevich thing obviously failed.
My guess is, well, again, going back to the press conference, he's Stephen certainly intimated
that there be changes.
Yeah, he wanted more stuff at the rim.
He wanted a more conventional team.
It felt like he was clearly tired of the style that they played.
After that press conference, I did look at different teams and different big men.
It doesn't necessarily have to be a center, but a big man.
I mean, Utah has a couple of people, as an example.
There are teams that if Jalen was in the trade,
I think you could get a big man and a wing back.
And I'm just not sure if Stevens is ready to trade.
Brown. He flattered him in the press conference and a couple days later in the newspaper and
maybe that's the kiss of death. I know, but that's, I've always wanted to keep these guys together.
This is, everything that's happened in the last few months is starting to make me wonder,
like, does Jalen just want his own team? Yeah. And does, well, I talked about this a week ago.
It just feels like the body language seems to be heading that way, in my opinion.
Yeah, you wonder. I mean, we sit so close to the bench. I always watch Tatum and Brown together.
And it was weird with Tatum coming back with so little time left in the season.
But it was even weirder, you know, we went to that game seven.
Molly was able to go. We went to a bar first and we were sitting there and having a drink.
And there's two Philadelphia fans sitting next to us. They have Philly Gear on.
and the guy says to the other guy,
it's so great that Tatum's not playing.
And I said, what did you say?
He said, Tatum's not playing today.
I was flabbergasted.
Game seven, I just never expected
he wouldn't give it a shot, I guess.
I didn't know he wasn't playing.
But it's understandable,
considering he had a calf injury to the other calf,
but they pretended was a knee injury,
but it was a calf injury.
But did I have any confidence?
when I heard that.
No.
Not too much confidence, no.
No.
I mean, the reality is,
I was there for game five.
We're up three games to one.
You win game five at home like you're supposed to,
like all,
like the other teams did.
We're up 13 in game five, right.
Yeah, Tatum doesn't get hurt in the game six.
There is no game six.
Would we have beaten the Knicks?
I don't know.
It would have been a fun series.
The thing I will never understand is why they put all those minutes on Tatum
that has never been explained properly.
I don't get it.
I don't understand it.
I don't understand the quotes he had after about,
but his right leg still isn't 100% the size of the left leg.
And just stuff where it's like, what?
You said you were recovered.
You weren't recovered?
And if that was the case, then why wasn't he on a minutes limit?
Why is Wemby on a minutes limit?
But he's not, why was, there's been a bunch of guys in the league who,
like Lamello Ball, the whole year was under 30 minutes because they were trying to keep him
healthy. Why were we putting minutes on him like that?
I agree. If I was chisholm,
that would have like a meeting and be like,
what the fuck? Why did we,
why did that guy play 43 minutes in game five?
What are we doing? Well, it seemed like there was such
an impetus to get the second seed
instead of the third seed.
When in retrospect, we lost three games at home anyway.
So did it matter? No.
We were a better road team at times during the year.
Whatever. There will be some major trade.
I don't think you'll love watching Janus, just for the record, if that's the trade.
Not really your type of guy.
No, I'm not saying that's the greatest trade that's out there.
But I certainly think they're going to explore what can they get back for Jalen Brown.
I don't see Tatum being the trade object.
Red Sox, we don't need to talk about it's disgusting what's happened.
It's not just that.
It's frustrating, disgusting, unreal.
that the Fenway group that has billions of dollars
has become the cheapest franchise in the league
with the highest prices to go to a game.
Yeah.
It makes no sense.
And, you know, I'm not going to a game this year.
I'm revolting.
And your son's rich and you're still not going.
I mean, think about that.
Well, look at third base.
We have a guy hitting 162.
Who's five feet tall?
I mean, it's just an abomination what the Fenway Group has done to the image of the Red Sox.
They got their four championships, and then they said, that's enough.
Yeah, they were like, well, you suckers are now just going to pay for tickets for the rest of your life.
Yeah, and you can come in the eighth inning and sing Sweet Caroline and buy your pink hats and blue hats.
and we're going to make more money.
It's a shame.
It gets risky when you start playing that game of chicken with your fan base.
I think it does.
Especially in this era, you know, people who are just like,
well, if they don't care about the team, I'm not going to care either.
We've seen, we've seen the, that happened in the early 80s a little bit,
and it happened a little bit in the 90s too, where you could feel people are like,
all right, is this how you're treating us?
Then we'll go over here.
You know, and there's three other teams and a bunch of other stuff to do.
Well, you can go online now and get great seats anytime you want.
Right.
That's a really shameful position that they've put the fan base in.
And they also don't have the signature guy, which there's been years where they haven't,
but they were, I think, putting all the eggs in the Roman Anthony basket, and that has not gone well.
Which is a, you know, is he fragile and injury prone?
I don't know, but once again, he's hurt.
All right, we've talked enough about the Red Sox.
The Patriots are the other one.
I know that's been the big topic.
Well, the head coach has been the big dinner topic in New England now for five weeks.
It's not just that.
We've talked about this for 20 years.
Every time things seem pretty good with the Patriot franchise, something happens.
Whether it's deflategate or spy gate or, you know,
some scandal or the owner of the team in a spa twice getting caught.
It's just one thing after another.
And this is just the latest.
This is a really bad story up here.
It's not going to go away.
It seems to have legs, you know, as a week goes by and then there's a new photo or a new story.
And I feel badly, I really like, love the job.
job the coach did last year.
I thought he had the locker room really all going in the same direction.
The camaraderie was great.
We overachieved.
We didn't have a bet.
We had a somewhat easy schedule, but we overachieved.
And now here we are again.
And nobody's talking about the players.
Right.
The articles are about the coach.
Yeah.
Yeah, we would almost be better off losing in Denver.
It turns out Drake's hurt.
The Vrabel thing doesn't happen.
And then all the dialogue is about, can they, can they get back?
Can they get there to the Super Bowl instead?
I mean, they're going to trade for AJ Brown on June 1st.
It seems like almost a formality at this point, which would be the thing everyone talked about.
I, so I've tried not to talk about the Brable thing that much because it's such a bummer of a story.
And they, you know, every side has kids.
And it's just, I don't know, it makes me, it's a little unseemly.
but I wonder how you become the way he coached the team
where he's like the patriarch of this Patriots family
and everything is about family and team
and being there for people and hugging each guy
as they come off the field.
And now will that seem disingenuous
as he's doing it this year?
That's, I think that's a really good way of phrasing
the most important question
that people up here are asking,
what's it going to be like?
Is he going to be in the hallway hugging everybody again?
Are the players going to look at them a little bit differently?
Or maybe they'll like them more.
The coach is getting after it.
It's a sad story.
You're talking to families and I don't know the details.
I just know what I read.
I just wish I wasn't reading any of it.
I'm just looking forward to the season.
Waiting for the schedule to come out today.
But that's not the top, yeah, that's not what's in the paper.
So you care about the schedule?
Brian Curtis and I just did a whole segment about this,
that we think the schedule release day is ridiculous.
But you like it?
I haven't seen the schedule yet.
No, but do you like it though?
You like looking at it and being like, oh, we're playing?
Yeah, like.
You just love it.
That looks winnable.
That's going to be a tough game.
Where's the buy?
Yeah, I like all that stuff.
We talked about, the reason that I had Brian Curtis on was we talked about this
content what we have now and how the football is adding these extra games and there's going to be
a Wednesday night game before Thanksgiving and all this stuff. You've been watching sports the
entire time I've known you, which is my whole life, whenever it's on. Do you feel like there's
a difference now with the amount of sports that's on or is it just harder to find? It's a little
bit of an overload. So you feel the overload a little bit. Have you watched as much hockey playoffs as
you usually watch?
No.
Well, that's not unusual.
Once the Bruins got knocked out, I don't watch as much.
Yeah, but you would watch, like, you would watch to root against Montreal and you'd pick
random players.
I've watched a couple of Montreal games.
I watched the Colorado game yesterday.
But my heart's not in it.
I like the Bruins team.
I thought they overachieved.
I liked the new coach.
We're a couple players short.
We don't have a first line center.
but I like that we did as well as we did
and I have optimism for that team.
They seem to have their act together.
Wow.
Bruins, number one in your rankings.
Well, it's kind of weird, isn't it?
I'm going to be back with the Pats.
We still have Drake May.
He's going to be healthy this season.
Their team's going to be good.
Some good drafts.
I'm going to be fired up by July.
I am too.
I'm going to be fired up for the,
I just wish the focus was on
the draft picks, the movement of first year to second year players, progress, stuff like that.
It's just not there right yet.
Yet, maybe it will be.
You don't think he's going to step down, do you?
I don't know.
Would I be 100% shocked?
No.
See, I wouldn't either.
But to me, like a leave of absence seems more realistic.
Like he comes back when real training camp starts or something.
But, you know, in the NFL, that's pretty massive for your coach to just not be around for two months.
I don't know how they're going to handle it.
And the owner is 88 years old, 86 years old, whatever he is.
Right.
So.
Yeah.
I hope he doesn't step down.
I wouldn't be surprised if he does step down.
I don't, none of us know the whole story.
I hope it isn't the story that the paper keeps printing.
but I don't know.
I love how you're so forgiving of Brable
and you demoted Joe to the second row again.
No, I didn't demote Joe.
You did.
You demoted Joe and I never mentioned.
I have texts where you said he's back in the second row.
I've had it.
Well, that's private text between you and me.
You were done.
You were so mad after the series.
You wouldn't come on.
I was mad, but I couldn't even get you to come on today.
You were still mad.
And I'm not defending Raywell, by the way.
I know.
I don't know the details, but it doesn't look good.
And I'm not putting Joe in the second row,
but I think he has a testing year coming up
that will determine whether he's here next summer.
Wow.
Yeah.
What TV shows are you watching?
The three Chicago TV show.
I watched the movie you recommended.
Oh, Crime 101.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I still don't understand how,
He got, he got, he got, he got the diamonds at the end.
Spoiler.
Oh, I'm sorry.
Yeah, though you can't spoil the movie.
Okay.
Okay. So you like Crime 101 more than Rip or did you like Rip more than Crime One?
No, I like Rip.
I like Rip more.
All right.
I didn't quite understand either one of them at the end, but I'll have to watch it
a second time.
You know, I agree with you on the lead actor in Crime 101.
He was a little too, um, past.
Chris Thamesworth.
Yeah, I just didn't think he was good enough.
That was my biggest issue with the movie.
And I'd like to.
and other stuff.
I thought he was great in rush.
I don't know what he was going for.
Yeah, I don't know what his plan was in 101.
I didn't get it.
He like intentionally was hard to figure out and I didn't think it worked.
I thought he just came across a little weak,
weak in personality, weak in demeanor.
It would have been a great, like early 2000s Russell Crow
during his proof of life error role.
That was like what I needed from that.
I needed like just somebody at peak of their powers,
a little enigmatic, trying to figure out what they're thinking.
That's a good.
It would have been good before he gained 200 pounds, but he would have been good.
Did you see Project Tell Mary?
No.
What channel is that on?
It was a movie.
It was with Brian Gosling.
Yeah.
Was the biggest movie the year?
No.
No.
I'll wait for it to come on cable.
It's on Amazon right now.
Oh, it is?
Or it's on all those.
You have to pay for it.
Well, I just put it to me.
Just charge it to my bill.
What other TV shows are you watching?
You love the Madison.
I like FBI.
I like the Madison.
What about the Yellowstone spinoffs?
You're on that one.
Well, yeah.
I mean, I like the U.S. Marshals.
You like that one?
The other ones, I think, starts tomorrow night.
You love the Madison, though.
I like the Madison.
Yeah.
I like the acting in the Madison.
You and I talked about it.
Last time I couldn't stand the two daughters or the two great kids.
Two of your favorite actors, though, Kurt Russell, I'm a show five.
Yeah.
And I understand there's a season two already coming.
Right.
And it's season three, I think, already.
You're not watching Euphoria?
No.
It's not my...
Yeah, please don't watch that one.
As you say, when I want to do something...
you're not the demographic.
That one, I definitely don't think you'd like that.
There was no new CBS shows this year.
Boston Blue, you're okay.
No, I think you jumped out.
I watch it, but it's poorly written.
And I like, Donnie.
I liked him in Blue Bloods because he had an edge to him.
He's too nice a guy in the new one.
But you never did The Pit.
That was the shocking one to me.
100% you would have liked the Pit.
I don't get how you missed that one.
I did two episodes and then got caught up in life and haven't been able to get back to it.
So maybe this summer.
All right.
Well, keep us posted.
All right.
I thought you did okay.
You weren't as angry about the Celtics as I thought.
Well, it's a good thing we didn't do this two weeks ago, a week and a half ago.
All right.
All right, Dad.
Enjoy all the sports this weekend.
Do you have a PGA pick?
Sheffley.
Sheffler?
Sheffler?
No.
No.
Oh, Shafley.
Zander Shafley?
Yeah.
We call him Zander.
Zander.
I like Xander.
Zander.
Okay.
There you go.
It looks like, for me, Schuffler's been in a slump.
Okay.
His irons aren't doing so well, but.
All right, we'll enjoy it.
I'll text you over the weekend.
We're going to come back, take a break, come back with Utah Jazz owner, Ryan Smith.
All right, we're taping this late Wednesday afternoon.
So if anything happens, over the next 24 hours, don't blame us.
Ryan Smith is here.
He is the owner of the Utah Jazz who finally had some,
luck in the lottery. What'd you do? What kind of tricks were you doing the week leading up?
Were you like wearing the same shirt every day? What superstitions do you have? So I'm incredibly
superstitious. And so what I decided to do was not go to Chicago. I mean, I've been there.
I've been in that lottery room twice in the back room or once in the back room, once kind of on the
side. And then obviously last year with my wife on stage, actually with all the kids sitting there and
man, that walk of shame.
That walk of shame hurts.
It stings for a really long time.
And I was like, look, I'm 0 for three going to Chicago.
I'm going to stay home.
And, like, I sat at home, watched it with my family.
Did our usual Sunday church stuff, went and sat there.
And like, I'm one for one doing that.
So that's a lot better.
Church, that might have been the key.
Maybe that's what you have to do now.
If you ever back.
Yeah, for sure.
I had, it was amazing.
I said on the podcast.
Oh, go ahead.
No, you go.
We had a record attendance at church in Utah on Sunday.
Well, they moved it to Sunday, too, the lottery.
Usually it's Tuesday night.
I said on my podcast the other day,
I thought they need to go back with the law.
I don't like the representatives.
I want the people in the room who have the most stake.
Either give me all the owners or give me the GMs,
like the people, because the most famous moments ever were
Dave DeBusher winning the Patrick Ewing lottery
in, like, just like almost losing his mind or Jerry West when he didn't get LeBron James that
year in 2003. I want to see the weight of the lottery on the people who actually care the most.
We've gotten away from that. Or you're just twisted where you're looking at people for
their life, most of their life that's kind of been able to put their thumb on the scale for
things or be successful and they have no control over this? Yes, that's exactly what I want.
All right, so walk me through the emotions.
So you're supposed to be
what number?
You were four, right?
Yeah, we were, we won the,
we won the coin flip with Sacramento.
Not televised.
Yeah, non-televised, but we were four.
And so, you know, you kind of hope in this draft.
I mean, I think everyone was kind of had this,
could you stay top four?
I mean, that was the discussion leading up
or how would you do that?
And then, you know, you know,
that our kind of floor is eight and that's that's kind of where you're thinking and you know i was
i didn't mentally tell myself i'm perfectly fine at seven it's great players all the way through and
you know it was almost unbelievable for us like i mean first of all when the envelope here's what's
crazy like one of our camera guys came down and gave me the envelope i just got this today actually
wow and so when that when that was pulled out first of all when sacramento was pulled
out like my my 13 year old lost his mind and just went down because he saw purple right and then
the jazz you know and then we got in the top four and then you know obviously Chicago Memphis and
then it was you've never you've never moved up right this is the first time never never never so the
the faith in the lottery system I don't care who you are is kind of sitting there you're just like shaking
your head a lot. And it's a crazy feeling. And I think that, you know, I'm sure Sacramento has some
of that feeling right now. I'm sure, you know, Brooklyn for sure. There's no way not to.
There just really isn't. And it, if I'm a, if I'm a consumer of sports and entertainment or
television or drama, like, that's a pretty cool event, you know, because it, it's, you know,
the pain. I mean, I had people show me videos of restaurants here and you,
Utah, like erupting the restaurant, the entire restaurant.
And it's pretty cool.
So we had the opposite.
I remember the worst Celtics one.
Well, there were two bad ones.
We had the 97 and 2007.
So it was Duncan was the prize one year.
And then it was Durant or Odin.
It was either of them.
Let's get one of the top two.
And the Celtics got fifth that year.
And it was the opposite of those videos where the people in the bar is like, oh, it was like, you know, it was like a traumatic event.
And you're just looking at the rest of it.
what did I just waste the last year for?
Now you're out of the woods.
Like you actually have the kind of team you want.
You've had to,
you've been in some lotteries,
you traded for Jaron Jackson,
you have marketing still,
you never got rid of him.
Now you have a top two pick.
You base Bailey.
Like this is,
this was a three-year odyssey
to get to this point, basically.
Yeah, especially he's taking over
as a new owner,
a new ownership group where we come in.
It's probably not how you want to design,
you know,
your tenure when you start.
But this is a little bit where you just trust the team you brought in and you say,
hey, where are we at?
And what are your goals, honestly?
Like, our goals are winning a championship in Utah.
It's never happened as well.
And I just don't think we're going to tiptoe into that, right?
I think that it's going to require a running start a little bit of help.
It's going to require a different level of building than probably maybe what it takes to make the playoffs.
and even even those groups that, you know, have done that in the past,
just given our market, given our luck, given where things are.
It's like, you know, you've got to start.
And that starts with our front office and our coaching and like how we're going to go through this.
And we've been close.
I mean, I took over that Donovan and Rudy team, you know, where Trayman destroyed us in the corner there.
Yeah.
And it's staples at the time.
man, that was a helpless feeling because that was kind of ours to have.
And then, you know, kind of had to make some decisions after that.
And so, you know, here we are.
Like, I like where we're going.
I like the assets that we have going forward.
We have all of our picks plus plus and a lot of young talent.
And honestly, I think every team is going to have to do this.
You know, I think I think this is a lot of my point around the lottery reform and everything
else is like the way we're going to have a certain number of teams that are going through the
rebuild process and the rebuild experience and all have different sizes of markets and you know
I think as a league which I love we'll ask ourselves really hard questions around what do we want
that rebuild experience to be yeah how long should it take I've figured you use that word before
it's interesting because the other word is tanking but it's really a rebuild because you're
you're trying to get to a much higher place than you're in you you guys you guys you guys
became the lynch pins for this in February, which was really the first time all the tanking
slash rebeau dialogue happened. And I was part of it. I definitely did one of the first podcast
being like, we've got to fix this. Like this is the earliest. This is ever gone. But from your vantage
point, like if I own the jazz, I don't know how you would do another strategy, especially when you're
looking at San Antonio who gets two, one, and four in three straight years. Now you're watching
in the playoffs and all those guys are awesome.
And they're 20 and 21 and 22,
the foundation of this 10-year contender.
So if you see that,
like, how do you not try to emulate that in some way?
I don't know.
Well, I think, first of all,
I don't think there's an ownership group
that wants to go through this, right?
I think that's first of all.
No one in the league wants to do this,
especially like you look at our situation
when we're taking over, right?
I mean, you want to do the opposite.
Like, you want to go fast, you want to flex up,
you want to show, you know, your fan base that, like, you got some juice and, like,
naturally.
Yeah.
And so when you come in and you're like, okay, let me tell you what we're going to do.
I know we got the All-Star game coming here this year, and we've been waiting on that.
What we're going to do is trade our two All-Stars, probably not a popular spot to be, right?
But you've got to have conviction, you've got to have alignment.
And then, you know, you always start off with a retool.
Right.
We're just going to retool.
And then it gets a point in what you're seeing with a lot of teams.
They're like, no, no, no, no.
If we're going to lay up in a weird way, like, don't lay up in the water.
You know, if the water's 200 yards and we're going to get on in three, like,
like, we've got to, we've got to figure out how to, how to get out of this position and right or wrong.
And I think you saw this with San Antonio, the decisions become pretty easy in the top part of the draft.
Yeah.
Right.
You know, you're betting between some pretty amazing options there, you know, being in those
drafter rooms and kind of being on the other side, it gets a lot more challenging or, you know,
it's challenging all the way across. But, you know, drafting eight and nine every year is a little harder.
Well, I look at the situation you had when you took over. I don't know how much you want to say about
it, but you had Mitch and Gobert. You had the foundation of a team that was really consistently good,
but had not done as well maybe as people are hoping in the playoffs, right?
And I don't know if it had run its course,
but it felt like it was hitting a little bit of a wall.
And then you have a franchise guy who the rumors started immediately.
He wants to go back to New York.
He wants to go here.
He wants to go there.
And this is the conundrum of the league, right?
You go through this process.
You get a franchise guy.
But then you also have free agency.
You might not be able to keep the guy.
Do you think there should be more mechanisms in place that favor the team?
when you've had somebody for, you know, five years, seven years, nine years with the,
like, could there be luxury tax stuff, like benefits you could get for just having stability?
No, I mean, look, this was all pretty new to me, right?
I mean, my first day, we were kind of in the middle of the COVID,
and we had, like, two days to, like, signed on in Rudy or 30 days.
It was that short window, if you remember.
I remember having two days before Monday before we got to kind of go into it with Rudy.
And I remember going up to his hotel room and being like, hey, bro, like,
what do you care about?
Yeah.
And actually,
I was like my first meeting ever.
It was just him and I talking because we knew each other before.
And,
you know,
there was a process and going and sitting down with Don and going through all that.
And,
you know,
I think you almost,
from what I'm learning about these championship runs,
it's a little,
it's a little bit like you almost don't know what you need
until you get on the track.
and you know it's it's like this i got to have a little more than the other team so it's a little bit
of a moving target so you know running its course of a team you'll see that this year whatever
will happen the narrative will be around a couple teams and get bounced out they just don't have
enough and and they've got to bring more than the next group the hard part is when you're already
ass set down and you're you're over the cap you know like we were we were we were
were into the tax. We'd given up a lot of picks for Conley. And so it's like, how deep do you
want to cut into your future when you've been bouncing the first round like three times?
Right. You know? And I think when Danny, when Danny originally came in, he and I had a lot of
real honest conversations about that. And ultimately he's like, hey, look, I've done this before.
this is what we're doing.
And like, this is how we're going to think through this?
And, you know, he had been coming from a place where he'd been knocking on that door
with a really good team of Boston for some time that he had kind of put together.
And then obviously the year he leaves, like they end up going back,
adding one more piece.
Almost you don't know what you got.
And it's just one more piece.
Then that didn't work.
And then one more piece.
And, you know, having those assets to be able to do that is really important.
the year he left or the year you stole him.
I mean, let's be honest.
You kept stealing Celtics people.
You stole both ages.
You stole Will Hardy?
Just go back to the well with Boston.
Just keep taking our people.
Brad doesn't answer my call.
We tell Brad, your phone number is blocked on Brad's phone.
Yeah.
But I think the other thing is also, one of the things I do love,
I'll just be honest, and it's not to get on the OKC terrain,
but one of the things I do love is just,
I mean, with Joe Kitch and,
in SGA is just how they haven't let the narrative come.
Like they've been pretty forward thinking on both of those individuals about,
no, I like this market.
I want to be here.
You know, you, you know, there's a lot of drama.
There's a lot of narrative that comes out, well, you're in a smaller market.
You're in this or that.
Like, it's loud enough for these players.
You know, we see this in hockey, you know.
So a lot of these players play the worst when they're in the biggest markets, you know.
And I love the fact how they're embracing that.
market. There's nothing you can't do from OKC. There's nothing you can't do from Utah. There's
nothing you can't do from Denver. There's nothing you can't do from these places. And I think that,
you know, we've always had players who've had their best years in Utah, always growing up.
Like you look at Hornacek, you look at Boozer, you look at DeWill. They'll all tell you after the
fact, like, I had my best years in Utah. Right. Why is that? You know, because they could come
get locked in. They could, they could actually, you know, do it in, you know, it's interesting because
we're in such a global media market where instead of one or two voices, there's, everyone's got a
voice. Like, you know, and so it's, it's a little bit like we're playing in the United States or
we're playing in Europe. Yeah, there's a difference there. Right. Well, you're unique in two ways.
One, well, a lot of ways, but you came in, you didn't have new owner syndrome because I always feel like
when the new owner comes in, they feel like they have to do this crazy, splashy move and,
you know, shoot for the moon and try to improve the team. And that's usually when they get into
trouble. You did the opposite. You had to basically start a rebuild. But then the other thing,
you're, you are Utah. Like you're from there. You belong to that whole area. You're really
invested in building up, not sports, but just the culture, the mentality of how people see
Salt Lake, how people see the city and the state, which normally when people come in,
like Chisholm bought the Celtics was a huge Celtic fan, but also wasn't living there the last
20 years now. He's back. You, you were a Utah guy. You even had chances to maybe get some
other teams and you were fixated on, no, it has to be this team. Yeah, so when we went through
this process, like it was. I mean, there's no secret. I was looking at Minnesota. I, you know,
I sold my company to SAP.
You know, I've come from tech, you know, spent my whole career in tech, didn't do one thing else.
And everyone's like, well, what company are going to start next?
And I was like, you guys, I want to do hoops.
Play hoops every morning.
I love going out to Boston and just hanging with the Angels and, like, watching hoops with them.
And I'd go down to Summer League and play golf with DA.
And, like, you know, I just sit next to them in the suite watching players.
And I was like, this is so fascinating.
Like, I'm such a junkie.
and it was the only thing that intrigued me.
And so when the opportunity came, you know, everyone would say,
hey, what are you going to do?
What's next?
And it's like, no, I, you know, and I called Adam and said, hey, look, like,
I'm really interested in this.
And, you know, for whatever reason, opportunity came to me on Minnesota.
And, you know, the owner there, Glenn was, like, super nice.
But was he going to sell?
Was he not going to sell?
He's kind of a little bit of a, it seemed like the situation was a little runaway bride.
Like, how's this going to go?
And so we had worked down to it.
And we were getting really down almost to the dock level.
Like we were drawn up docks.
And my wife was just like, what about our season tickets for the jazz?
And I was like, well, no, no, no, no.
Like Minneapolis, it's only two hours away.
Like, we'll figure this out.
And I think she knew how I kind of go all in on stuff.
And she's not going to see me as much.
And she was just like, I just love with the boys.
he's like, we're jazz fans.
Like, this isn't going to work.
And then, like, you know, you know when your partner's, like, not feeling something, right?
Like, I'm in day two and she's kind of not speaking.
I'm like, all right, this isn't right.
So I called Adam.
And I remember I was on the golf course.
I pulled over in the trees in the cart.
And I was like, hey, look, man, I can't.
I can't do this.
And then I went back to the family who owned the jazz forever and just said, hey, there's ever a chance.
I turned down something else, even if I could buy a little bit.
like if not, I'll just be the best sponsor you've ever had.
Like, I'll do anything.
And, you know, they called back like six months later and we're like, hey, you still
interested in that?
And I was like, yeah, and a piece?
Yeah, awesome.
They're like, well, if I're going to do a piece, we're going to do the whole thing.
I was like, what?
And they're like, well, we need an offer.
And I was like, I don't know what that looks like.
And then ended up pulling up the Forbes valuation on my phone, ended up doing a deal.
And I was like, is this for real?
The Forbes valuation?
That's certainly even accurate.
Well, I don't know what you go off.
It wasn't like today.
Four years ago was very different, right?
Right.
And then, you know, we remember calling Adam.
And I said, well, we probably should talk to Adam and Adam call him.
We were all on the phone together.
He said, hey, we're transitioning the team in Utah and this and that.
I didn't call me back.
It was like, we were having another conversation.
It was a little bit like, hey, look, if you're lucky in life,
you're going to work in the NBA, work in sports.
If you're really, really, really lucky, you can be a governor.
Yeah.
He's like, no one gets the team.
They grew up sneaking into the arena and they grew up cheering for.
Like, this is unheard of.
And like, so it's not lost on me, but that's also a lot more weight.
Like, I know what it's like to be a jazz fan.
Like, like, I had a funny one today.
We were in the drive.
I just got back from Chicago.
We were in the Combine interview and, you know, interviewing all the players.
And I'm sitting there.
and, you know, at Austin and set all this up.
It was phenomenal.
Did a great job.
And, um, but Camboozers in there.
And I'm, you know, I asked one question because I didn't say much a little time.
I was kind of auditing the class.
But Carlos is also one of our scouts.
And a little bit like, you know, Carlos could only take us the Western Conference
finals.
Like, what do you think you can do?
Right.
And that's the fandom coming out.
Like, I know, I know the pain of not getting over the hump for Utah and so long.
And being like when I took over and, you know,
one of the second or third most winning his franchise in the last 30 years without getting over the hump, it's kind of crazy.
And so, you know, I think the lottery moment for every jazz fans, every jazz fan was like, boy, it's like whatever.
It's just nice to get a little luck.
It's nice to feel.
It's nice to have the light shine a little bit.
you know, and I think, I think there is a little bit, I mean, there's no way to not look at it the last couple years and say, hey, there's a lucky part of our game a little bit, right? And, you know, it's, but if I look back at my career, like, I was extremely lucky, you know, in, you know, in tech and when you were born and the, in the timing and when I graduated, you know, college and where I went to work and what I almost went to go do, but didn't.
Right. And so it luck's a part of all of it.
I didn't even think of the part that the lottery was in Chicago,
the biggest nemesis of the Utah Jazz, the two finals in a row.
And somehow Chicago finally gave it back a little bit.
Yeah.
It's good. There's a lot of healing.
Probably still a lot of healing left.
Still today.
And then the other weird thing about this lottery is there's a top four.
and I actually really like the next couple guys too,
but I think there's pretty clearly a top four.
And you guys have these indirect ties with two of the four, right?
Where you have Boozer who played for the jazz for years,
who had the best years of his career and is now involved with your team.
And then AJ who got pulled out, went to prep school there, went to BYU.
I know you guys are a little bit involved with the success of BYU.
So you've probably gotten to know him a little bit, right?
Yeah, I mean, I go to BYU is like a mile from my house. So like it's kind of, it's my alma mater. It's where I went to school. It's where I play hoops three or four times a week. That's like part of why I live where I live. It's a little bit of like, you know, if you're going to live in Raleigh or whatever, you're right next to campus. Like I like the college town, Phil. And, you know, I also grew up here. It's weird. Like my parents, I was born in Eugene Oregon. It's crazy. Danny and I were born in the same hospital. Right? In Eugene. Yeah.
And my dad was, you know, there was four or five kids.
And he said, I'm going to, I'm going to go from, you know, University of Oregon in the late 70s to BYU.
You probably couldn't get two more polar opposite spots and moved us here.
And, you know, he grew up in Washington State.
My mother's from Palo Alto, California.
And, you know, we kind of settled here.
And, you know, I started a business here.
I met my wife here.
Like, I have a lot that I have been given because of the.
state and everything else. And for me, it's not that, you know, I just went to school there.
Like, I grew up running those halls because my dad was a professor of BYU. And like, everyone thinks
it's like, oh, you're just in charge of, or you just like to be with hoops and sports.
And that, no, it's like, it would be really weird because I started Qualtricks, really,
you know, from an academic room with my father.
Like at B.W.
It'd be really weird if I wasn't all in on there and all in on Utah.
It's a little bit of like that every time I go there reminds me,
I feel like where I came from, you know?
Right.
So it's cool that, you know, a potential top pick or wherever it ends up is like,
is coming through here.
and I'm sure all the Dukies feel the same way about CAM.
And, you know, it's kind of how it's gone.
I mean, I get the amount of text I get from everyone from Duke.
And, you know, there's a lot of them.
Like, the decision's easy.
Like, whatever it is, they're coming.
And you got the BYU contingent.
It's like there's a lot of drama around this and a lot of insight and narrative.
And it's going to be an interesting 40 couple days here.
Well, the Utah thing, I think, has evolved.
really this century, but from where we used to think, like, I'm living in Boston, I know nothing.
I'm just like, Mormons, BYU, Utah, snow, Sundance. That's like all you know. And it really feels
like that shifted over the last, I would say, 15 years. Now you have a hockey team and there's just
feels more energy around Sundance. I think almost like peak. Now it's moving. Is it move? Where's
moving to Colorado? Eventually. But yeah, I'm sure you're replaced that with.
something, but in general, real energy around the city. And then you also have this weird stuff,
like you have the stupid secret lives of Mormon show. There's a real housewife show.
That's right out of central casting. Right. So there's all these different things going on with
Utah that just didn't exist 30 years ago. What's fair and unfair about the Utah thing?
So if you think about Utah, like most people aren't from here. Like I'll just say that.
Like, you know, my dad's from Washington.
You know, if I look at, you know, my mom's from California.
My wife's from Las Vegas.
There's not a better place for family life.
There's just that.
Like, I'm fortunate.
I've got siblings all over.
Like, there's just something about Utah.
I also think it's like, look, most states can only own one or two things,
authentically. Like, what do you actually own or are positioned as that no one else has?
Right. And, you know, as we went through our jersey designs, if we've gone through this,
I've been asking myself and looked over the last couple of years, like Silicon Slopes,
the tech community and the innovation in Utah, we're probably the number two innovative hub.
and everyone's going to be like, no, it's Austin or no, there was a time in 2018.
I think we had as many startups or, you know, IPOs is New York City, right?
Like, you start looking at that and it's like, why?
And, you know, people can say to Utah and sell out too early when they get businesses,
but if you look at what's come out of here from this next phase of influencers and how the world works
and, you know, everyone has a different tie to folks, the amount of people that come in
and, you know, ski here and visit here.
I just saw pictures of Connor McDavid down in southern Utah and the alma.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, like, like, I saw that.
Like, but it's crazy who comes through here.
Yeah.
And it's like most time people vacation here.
But, you know, I don't think we've done a very good job over the last 30 years, like
branding ourselves.
Yeah, because you feel like a small market, but you're not.
Yeah.
Oh, there's like I said this on day one with the NBA.
there's nothing that we have in common with a small market.
You go to our airport.
You can jump on a plane and go to Paris,
go direct to Hong Kong or Seoul Korea.
You can go to London.
Like, that's not a small market.
You're not having to do connections, right?
You've got a tech ecosystem that is insane.
So if you come out here and get a job in tech,
and it doesn't work out,
you can get five other jobs in tech.
Right.
Right.
What we get branded for is because,
you know,
we don't have the urban.
living that most people associate with a big market.
And that's because when you come to Utah, you actually kind of want to spread out.
But we're the fastest growing, youngest demographic in the country.
So what people also don't know is within Salt Lake City, within 90 miles, you've got
250,000 college kids that most come out here, want to stay here.
And so you always want to bet on youth. If you take Stanford and
Cal and Caltech out of Silicon Valley, you kind of don't have Silicon Valley, right?
What makes Boston special and kind of rejuvenating all the time is that education system.
Right. And so I'm super long on cities and growth where there's always youth coming in and then what they do.
The key is, and I feel like it's unique that my wife and I in our group, we're in a position to kind of
take a little bit of the the announcement or the the baton of city building and community building.
So right before I came here, I just announced a new help partnership for both of our teams.
We're building this.
We bought a mall, so 110 acre mall right in South Salt Lake.
And we just put our Utah Mammoth hockey team is two years old, the practice facility there.
we've got a corporate offices there
and then we just announced a new practice facility
that'll be done in September of next year
for hoops all together
but with our own separate worlds.
So we just announced within our mountain
a 60,000
square foot healthcare facility
that services both that's like super innovative
and this is part of like
our responsibility now with these teams
and we're actually doing the same thing downtown.
We're creating this arena district right in front.
We've got a live nation venue,
got a major hotel going in that's five-star.
We're looking at this to be like,
okay,
what's everyone's experience when they do want to go to urban living?
Because I know the experiences when they come out is awesome.
You know, it's absolutely awesome.
I mean, you got guys like Jordan Clarkson was here.
He loved living down south and kind of having a house,
and then you're 20 minutes from 25 minutes from 7.
in ski resorts. We've got the Olympics
coming back. I mean,
you know, so it's where I choose
to raise my kids. It's fun.
But, you know,
there's a couple of things we can
authentically own. And it's like, come have the
best years of your career and
come have the healthiest
mentally here. Because wellness
is real. And
go ahead. How many people own
an NBA and an NHL team in the same city?
Within the same ownership
group together.
Just Denver?
No.
Yeah, you've got Denver.
Oh, and then New York and New York.
And you've got Toronto,
which is kind of corporate owned
or however that is.
Yeah.
And then you've got Leonces
and what's going out of Washington.
Right.
And we're all set up different,
you know.
But you are a maniac competitor.
So now you have these two winter sports
so you have NHL and NBA happening simultaneously.
Like, what happens to you at night?
So I prefer to have it.
Like, if you're going to give me the heat, like, let's just do it all at once, right?
Yeah.
So I would just go every other night.
I've told my kids, like, you know, dad works the night shift.
Like, it's what we do a little.
And so, like, we, I don't think anyone in our organization was acclimated the first year of, like,
we all knew hockey was coming.
Yeah.
But I don't think we knew hockey was coming.
What's the crossover with the organization?
Because some people will have, you know, basically somebody who's in control of everything,
people will split it up both ways.
How did you decide to attack it?
So I think we looked around at all the different models and we're like, okay, none of this is for us.
I believe when it comes to organizational structure, you build around people and you, you know,
it's just got to feel right.
Yeah.
You know, I feel like a little bit, I kind of, you know, operating in tech, like no one's evaluated or I would say innovated around organizational structure as much as tech has.
Like, you know, some people have one direct report. Some people have 20, the span of control, no titles, titles, open floor, like, however you're, you're just controlling, you can't control how people think these days.
It's much more around the environment.
And so it took a step back and said,
okay, how do we want this environment to work?
And clearly, I didn't know a whole lot about hockey.
So we were fortunate that we have great GM and Bill Armstrong,
the cableber.
And then Chris Armstrong,
it was actually a great friend.
Tony Fienow's actually a golf agent working an agency,
but it was a hockey guy and represent a lot of hockey guys.
And, you know, he was a big part of the idea.
So those two kind of work together on the hockey side.
And Chris is a president, Bill is a GM.
And, you know, they run that and report up to me.
And then on the hoop side, which we can get into, you know,
I've got Austin now as our president of all basketball.
And then you stole him too.
That was another one.
Yeah.
It was another Boston theft.
That was your third one.
Can I at least tell that story?
You have three now.
Yeah, can I tell that story?
Yeah.
I think it's important.
So when Danny came over, you know, he didn't really want to be the president of basketball
because he'd already done that a long time.
And, you know, I was more like, hey, what do you want to do?
It's me, DA.
Like, he was actually super helpful in getting a team.
And then it just worked out.
Well, wait, wait, wait.
Going backwards, though, you're friends with them a long time.
You've been playing golf in them forever.
Yeah.
Even when he stepped down.
from the Celtics, my shit detector was blinking hard.
I was like, first of all, I don't think he's giving up.
Second of all, that's his buddy that just got the jazz.
I'm suspicious.
But there was like a six-month process and we're together,
we're actually at the hero.
We're a Tiger Woods golf tournament.
We're there with Tony, Fee now.
And he's not working for anybody at the time.
And he won't tell me he's going to come help me.
Because I don't think, I didn't think his wife and Michelle and their family,
he was going to move to Utah.
He had some health issues.
He had a heart attack.
Yeah.
For sure.
And he didn't want to go from being the president of basketball to being the president of basketball over here.
He wasn't doing that.
Yeah.
He wanted to kind of shift gears a little bit.
But in one week, I watched him in December, like watched like six different games a night.
I'm like, dude, you just watched like 30 basketball games from college to everything.
And you don't have a job?
Like, who's paying you to do that?
He's got the eye.
iPad, the laptop, and the TV up. And I'm like, who? You just do this for fun now? I was like,
you might as well get paid for it. Yeah. Like, come over and help. And then that started a process.
And, you know, he really wanted, it came down to what do you want to do. He wanted to help scout.
He wanted to help with coaching and help manage the players and didn't really want to deal with much more than that.
So he helped me.
We came over.
We started this process.
We got into it.
And, you know, I just love working with Danny.
But, you know, I was driving last year with my wife.
And me and Danny were going somewhere.
And she said, hey, what happens if something happens to you and Dan?
And I was like, well, that's kind of weird.
Like, well, what do I do?
what do I do with the team?
I was like, well, let me tell you what you do.
You call Austin H.
And you tell him to come out, you're going to run it.
Because Austin's an absolute star.
Yeah.
And I'd never had that conversation with him, ever.
He would never push anything.
He's like, he just didn't never happen.
And then she was like, well, does Austin know that?
Because I just saw he was interviewing for this president job or something online.
Like, are you, don't you think you should tell?
tell them. And I was like, it's actually a good idea. So I call Austin that day. It was right after
the transaction. I said, hey, Austin, I don't know if you know this, but let me just explain the
conversation I had with my wife. This is how I feel. You're my designated survivor. I need to tell you.
This is how I feel. We've never had this conversation or anything like this, but this is how I feel.
And so you need to know that.
And if you're interviewing, because I heard a couple other rumblings that someone was going to grab them.
And I knew that if they sat down with him, it was going to be very close to they were going to do it.
Yeah.
Because you love that he's got the age background, but he's also his own guy.
Like, and I said, you need to know that you come knock on my door.
Well, he called me back and he's like, hey, if I'm going to go,
I want to go now.
Hmm.
And I was like, what?
Okay.
And by five o'clock that day,
I had hired Austin as our president of basketball ops.
But you didn't tell Danny yet?
No, I didn't tell Danny.
It had to work this way.
Yeah.
I was like, there's no way I could talk to Danny.
No way.
Too weird.
And it's just,
it's just like he would he would like hammer me that are you doing this because of me or this
like he's just that way like he's he's he's the hard math teacher yeah that's just the way he's
competitive as he is himself he's he's that competitive with his kids to go out a little bit
and and do this i mean austin coached in the g league and yeah but austin i knew austin from b yu he
was a real i wouldn't say he was on athletic but he was a really smart point guard
Like I knew his basketball makeup.
I had watched his career go.
And I was like, there's something different.
But he's also, you know, he's also got that, you know, Boston organization, you know,
he's very disciplined, very open.
I don't know what to say.
It's almost, you know, East Coast educated type vibe, like with the Ainge background,
which is like a pretty cool combo.
And so then I was like, oh, no.
got to call Danny. And so I can't get a hold of Danny. So I'm like, someone told him.
Oh, like he was mad at you? You thought he was like? No, I can't get, you know, I thought he was.
Because I normally get a hold of him, but it was like a three hour period where I couldn't get a
hold of him. So I finally get a hold of him. I was like, D.A., like, we've known each other for like 15
years. Like, we built incredible trust together. And I think it's either going to be really good
after this call or you're going to be really mad at me.
I just hired Austin as a president of basketball ops and you got to go figure out how to work
for him.
And it was it was quiet for a second, but there was no one more happy than DA.
And it's just been awesome.
And so Austin's in charge.
He's running the whole thing.
But, you know, part of this is like for me watching him and others and Austin go to work and, you know,
knowing where to point DA, you know, I'm sitting in that, I'm sitting in that draft interview room and I'm looking over and there's, there's Will with championships and the pop pedigree today. Austin's got a ring. Avery Bradley's in there. He's got a ring. And I see DA with three rings and pretty much built the fourth. I'm like, all right, this is, this is a championship. I, like, I'm not going to know more than these people. And I, you know, and.
I just need to, you know, make a couple hard decisions a year
or be a tiebreaker here.
Well, the other thing with Danny is he's basically,
he's such an anomaly with the draft.
First of all, you never know.
I just know from all the Celtic stuff.
Nobody knows what he thinks until like the last week.
That's why if there's any stories that come about,
Utah likes this guy, Utah likes that guy.
It's like, I promise they're not true.
No, Danny's not even going to tell people it works.
And I'll just tell you that.
I just wrote back with him on the entire plane trying to debrief.
just trying to figure out what he thinks he won't tell you yeah i've been through this three times he does
not want to influence danny's a truth seeker he really is he doesn't lie i'm sure he loves you like
you call him you're like danny what do you think he tells the truth like in a weird way you know
or he won't say anything like he'll look he's not going to lead something weird but like danny's
point of view is going to be something that and i i believe him on this i believe that he's
He did not know, you know, he was drafting one in that, you know, in that famous Jason Tatum
where he goes back to three and then Jalen going back to three.
I honestly believe he did not know who he was going to go take until right up to it.
And the reason why is because I kind of got to read the day before the draft with Kianti
and then got a different read 10 minutes before the draft.
And so what I'm really excited for is that Austin can turn to his left and have that,
that as well. And Austin's, Austin's an incredible, incredible talent evaluator.
Like, you know, sitting next to that guy your entire life, like you learn, you learn that side of it,
plus, you know, but he thinks for himself. And so that's what you want. And then, you know,
with Will being able to have these guys talk to Will and
will's a unique coach, just awesome and, you know,
young and I'm excited to see what he can do.
The whole lottery reform thing were you,
are you involved in any committees yet?
Have you jumped on anything?
Were you involved in the reform?
I'm on the mini committee.
I'm on the planning committee and I'm on the social justice committee as well.
And, you know,
I think they've actually done a really good job of regardless of the
committee here of just like they had a bunch of GM calls. They basically set up the hotline.
You call us with your ideas. And, you know, our group has talked to the league and other people
in the league, you know, four or five times just to say, hey. And the answer is always like,
yeah, happy to schedule a call. I'd love to listen. Well, if you thought about this, you thought
about that. So, you know, in some ways, it's a little bit like us naming the mammoth, like we're
putting it out to the fan boat, which brings a lot of input in, but it's within a tighter
group. And that's hard to decipher. But I think the league is looking at it all and saying,
hey, we're all partners in this. We want to get it right. Let's make sure we understand every
view. I'm empathetic to the rebuilding. But I think everyone's going to have to almost take a step
back and say, hey, what's best for the product? It's not going to be perfect. And by the way,
right or wrong, like, luck's going to play a piece of this. And then what happens when you get the
teams, the humans, and the agents and all of that involved? Like, it's all great until you get the
people involved. Right. And like, you see that with every CBA. Like, there's unintended consequences
and this happens. And, you know, certain things trigger. But, um,
I don't know.
The only thing I really care about is that I don't think team should, like what happened
with the Spurs, I think they have to figure out three top four picks in a row, like little wrinkles like that.
So you can't just basically, I know the odds are going to be stacked a little differently anyway,
but it just feels like having that much luck three years in a row, they can kind of litigate a little bit.
Yeah.
And so I think we'll come way more.
I mean, there's stuff that's being reported on the side.
there's stuff that's being reported on the other side of how to do this.
But no, I think there's something like, I'll just speak for myself.
Like, I'd be okay now that we're the second pick.
Like, okay, great, you can't come in the top five next year.
Right.
It solves a lot of problems.
Yeah.
All right?
The next thing is like, hey, if you just unrestrict the picks that are restricted one through
eight or one through seven, that also solves a lot of problems.
I agree.
Okay.
And so I think, I think that that's fair.
And it's like, okay, then draft well.
But when you're a team,
I'm also super empathetic to the teams that can't get out
because we are such a star-driven league.
And hockey, it's a little different.
You're grabbing guys, you're developing them,
you're putting them down in the minors.
The reward for one ball or one spot in this sport is so high.
Right.
Well, in hockey, there's so much, in hockey, there's so much volatility, even with the stars.
Like, you see like Taylor Hall right now in Carolina where all the, like the Bruins had him.
He was good.
Like, these guys can do this.
We're in basketball, you have these fixed guys that year after year.
You don't have the same volatility.
Or the young guys.
It's very rare for a young guy in hockey to come in and make such immediate impact.
Like, there's like a celebrating.
Yeah.
Once every eight years.
And then, you know.
You look this year and you got VJ playing in the playoffs.
You've got, I mean, it's pretty impressive.
Dylan Harper, all this stuff.
Yeah, Dylan Harper, like, it's pretty impressive.
Do you feel like you're part of a new, because I remember we've had these generations with
NBA owners.
And in the mid-2000s that all of a sudden you had Cuban comes in with Gross back in the Celtics.
And they're like these younger guys that came in and they were younger.
They were more from the tech side.
They were not trying to blow the league up a little bit, but maybe push the league.
a different direction. Now it feels like we're heading that way again with some of the guys from
your generation, like, you know, like the Charlotte owners and, um, yeah, for a chisholms coming in
with the Celtics. Like it feels like something generationally is shifting and I don't know what.
A hundred percent. It's really clear. I mean, you've, you've seen the, the asset class of sports
become something that's super desirable. Um, you're seeing also, you know, the groups of people coming in
shift from family owned to more like, you know, kind of towers that have been stacked together.
Like the landers, yeah. Yeah. Ownership groups that come in. And, you know, I also think the days of
no one's, like, let's just be honest, like, in no other world would you acquire a business for the
size of the price of what, you know, Portland did and turn it over to somebody. That would never
happen anywhere in business. Right. You'd never be like, okay, I'm,
I'm paying this for this luxury brand.
Okay, yeah, someone out.
I'll come see it next December.
That's unheard of.
And so now with, you know, I don't know what's cause or effect,
but as you look at the risk people are taking to get in here,
I think long gone are the days where the principle or the main principle
is not heavily involved.
We're not going to see a day where a board's running it, a family office is just running it on the side.
Those days are gone. They're gone in football. They're gone in everything else just because of what it is.
And actually, if someone's stretching this far to acquire one of these, they also really understand the community aspect of it as well.
Yeah. Because they care about that as well. And so I think that we're just in a new world.
And you've seen it. Like in our world, it's.
It's Patrick Tumon. It's Ishpia. It's obviously, you know, Gabe and everyone up in Charlotte with Rick.
And, you know, I think the wrestlers are someone new and coming in.
And like, you look at, you look at the involvement, not only just with there or what Dundan's done in Carolina and now in Port.
Like, like in a round and what they're building out. Like, it's a decision to say, hey, I'm actually, could probably do what I want.
This is what I want to go do. And like, I want to be involved.
Now, that's a tough balance as well because I know enough.
Look, I'm a hooper.
I play all the time.
Like, I watch basketball.
I'm a junkie.
I watch every game.
But, like, in this draft, for example, I'm going to say this.
Like, our family shouldn't want me drafting this person.
Like, when you've got the team with Austin and Danny and group, like, you should feel
a lot more comfortable than with me.
Now, I want to opine and have a thing, but like, how involved you get is like, you got to be a little careful because you need to be involved enough to give the team air cover, right? Because everything's not going to go well. And you need to understand the body of work that people are putting in. But at the same time, that's what gives them air cover to be able to have a long tenure. I often find that when people are too far out of it,
or they don't live in market,
they become really reactive with coaches and GMs and stuff like that.
When you're in it every day,
you know that,
all right,
I know you're doing all the right things.
We just need a break.
And I learned this,
Qualtrics just leading out.
When we opened up in Europe,
I was in every single detail in Europe.
And like going through,
and I remember my board coming to me going,
you know what,
let's pull the plug on Europe.
It's going to,
too slow. It's not working. I'm like, hold on, hold on, hold on. It's here. It's here.
And then four quarters later, the thing pops. Or when we started shifting our model and it's like,
hey, you know, this isn't working. It's super expensive. No, no, no, hold on. Everything's always
taken longer than I thought. And if you weren't as heavily involved, you might have been
overrun by the board. Yeah. And so it's, it's, you got to have polar opposite emotions
to be able to manage it. You got to be able to manage. I got to be over involved, but also let
the team work. But like when they come to you with the Jaron Jackson trade, ultimately you're
stamping that one way or not. Like if you didn't want to do that, the trade's not happening.
Yeah, for sure. If I don't want to do it, it's not happening. Yeah, because you're taking on a big
salary, you're giving up draft picks. Like, you're not going to be like, okay, I hate this,
but I trust you guys. At some point, you have to be a little on board. No, and they want to read me in,
but in our organization, the way we're lined up, they want to call me and talk about it. Yeah.
but they also know that if Will Danny and Austin or Will Austin and Danny are a line,
I'm going to have a hard time saying, honestly, I'm going to have a hard time really saying, like,
no, we shouldn't do that.
And because I know that they've wrestled this thing down and thought through everything.
Because they attack it differently.
No one's going to get fired for the way they're thinking about this.
And, you know, they know they can speak their mind.
They know they can speak their mind with each other.
And then when we do something,
I've got to be able to be like, all right, guys,
like put your hand in the middle.
We're riding and dying with this thing.
I'm cool.
Like, the one thing I hate is like, you know,
just this revisionist history.
And in sports, it's all the time.
Should have done this.
We should have done this.
No, you were in the decision room.
Like, if we're doing this, no one's going to say that.
No one's going to say we should have or I didn't say that.
If you want to say it, speak up right now.
Because the second we pulled the trigger,
it was your idea as much as it was anyone else's.
Is it daunting?
Is it daunting to be in the West and watch these playoffs
when you see San Antonio and OKC
in your conference loaded with these guys thinking like,
Jesus, we don't just have one mountain?
It's like two mountains next to each other
that we have to climb here.
No, I think, I don't think it's ever, you know,
I definitely don't think it's more daunting than going up against 23 and 19 or, you know, 1997.
Right.
Right.
I think, I think that, you know, they're both in a pretty good spot.
They are mountains to climb.
I would argue that, you know, there's people out there that say we're right behind it with where we sit and everything that's going on.
I think with the lottery, I think you're probably the third.
with assets right down in the West.
So I agree with that.
But I don't think any, like,
it just shows how competitive this is and like what you're shooting for.
Like, you know, it is, it is what it is.
And, you know, I know, you know,
D. Wade's in our ownership group and like,
and just talking to him and like knowing that history of what it's like
and what you had to do and really asking about the grind.
Like it's pretty crazy to be able to turn to,
to Danny and D. Wade and be like, walk me through like what you thought in, you know,
March of this year when you guys won. And it was like, this was stressful. We didn't think
this. This is who we were up against. We thought there was no way. They had smoked us that.
Then you get into the moment. Then what happened? It's like, this change or this change or
this how it is. And, you know, that's kind of where it's at. Those are two similar teams,
The 06 Heat that Wade won the title with and then the 08 Celtics that Danny won the title with,
where in two years there was the move and then there was the move after the move,
and then all of a sudden they're in the mix.
It's like, whoa, we're here.
Let's go.
Like that 08 Celtics changed in nine months.
Yeah, and then even, you know, the battle within the series.
Yeah.
There's that too.
I'll be interested to see how you handle that.
We haven't even seen that side of you yet.
But you're in like a conference final losing your mind on the sidelines.
Wait, I had another question for you about expansion.
Yeah.
Which it seems like it got floated out there.
Adam has the two cities.
He seems to want to have.
Be interested to see if they could get the money for those two teams.
But then everybody has to vote on it.
And you go from 30 to 32 teams, which is adding two teams to the league that you now have to beat.
you're losing media share.
Yeah.
Do we have the right amount of teams?
Like, where do you stand on this?
Are you even allowed to talk about it?
I mean, and there's nothing I would say that I probably wouldn't say publicly or privately
or whatever it is.
I kind of, I'm a guy.
I kind of have one story.
This is it.
Right?
And so, you know, I think you need to zoom out because, look, part of me is like Vegas is
extremely close.
Right. It's extremely close to us. Yeah, very close. I mean, you might have seen the jersey exchange we did with the Vegas Knights.
Everyone's like, oh, you were just trolling the Knights in the playoffs where you put out that you'll exchange a Vegas Knights jersey to a Mammoth jersey and people are lined up around the block.
It's like, no, no, no, no. The world doesn't understand that like, you know, Southern Utah is 90 minutes from Vegas.
Like when we opened up with a Mammoth, like the Knights were the hockey team.
Yeah.
And so on the selfish side, it's a little bit like, hey, that impacts our market a little more than probably most.
And as you look in the West, you've already got some hills to climb, you know, two great markets, which I think they are that are being floated.
Like, I want to have to get to our ultimate goal. We don't want to make it harder.
And so I think there's a lot of people that could easily see or take that view of it or take, hey, how much money are you going to get or that's the view?
But if you look at everything that Adam's doing holistically and if you look at where sports is, why I'm so bullish on the NBA, we're probably the only league that can have the reach and the impact globally.
that this sport provides.
So you look at that NBA logo.
My sister-in-law is from Africa.
She's from Zambia, who married my brother.
And right or wrong what people think about NBA Africa,
brands go over to Africa, and it's really hard.
It's really hard to translate over time.
They end up into something different.
But just being in draft interviews and seeing these kids have come over.
Like that NBA logo means something over there, and it is the logo of basketball.
And you go, you're looking at Europe.
We focus on the teams or this or that.
But if you fast forward 20 years and you say, okay, NBA, Europe, you know,
there's a league with a chance to actually have a view of all of sports with that NBA logo.
It's pretty amazing.
And if Seattle and Vegas are part of that bigger picture,
like, I'll do it.
Like, I'm a partner.
Like, I think that's a great, or we'll have that discussion.
But I look at it more holistically is not a seller of the NBA.
It's more of like, holy cow, like, we have a sport with a ball
that has a great mobile viewing experience.
Like, one of the best.
I can watch NBA games from my phone and I love it.
Like, our reach is insane.
And by the way, people can have a team.
People can pick it up.
Like, that's how I look at it globally and say,
hey, how many users are we going to have?
You always hear those stats that, oh, Manchester City or Manu, U.S., 1.2 million fans.
Like, if you look at the NBA in that way,
I'm grateful that we're making the investment now for Europe.
someone already made the investment in the W.
Someone already made the investment in Africa
because we truly have, you know,
a world who wants that product.
And I think that's how I look at it.
And that's a weird way that's not a,
and it just, so I think I don't look at it just those two teams.
I look at it as a global NBA brand, like where it can go.
And, you know, you can see being a part of Vegas.
and, you know, it works.
Yeah, because, like, financially,
you'd be getting, like, let's say
it's $15 billion for both teams,
you're getting a $500 million check
to give up a small percentage
of your media rights.
Yeah, I don't really...
But that's not how you're looking at.
You're looking at it as the holistic.
I get it.
Yeah, like, it's holistic.
And, you know, there's not many sports
that could be doing what the NBA is doing.
Yeah, well, you could see the NFL.
They just announced their schedule.
They have nine international.
games. They're clearly very wary of this.
They're super aggressive.
Yeah. Super aggressive. They're like, hey, I want
Christmas Day. I want this. I want that.
Like all these leagues, I mean, we're all
like, you look at what's going
on and I think that we
truly, I think Adam's vision's a lot
bigger and I think they're doing
a really good job with it. Last question.
Walk me into that room
of 30 really
rich, successful people.
It's the board of governors and you guys
have to talk about stuff and argue
about stuff and you're just at this big giant table in some room and you're all and you're all
successful people who are used to get in your own way the entire time and now you have to hash shit
out what is that room like what was it like the first time you went in there um i mean it's it's hard
it's a daunting task i mean you know if i if i take a step back and if i'm the league it's like
okay how do you have a room of 30 people who all have opinions who are all going through
something that are all trying to kill each other that have to come in together and like what do
do i do i just and there's a couple camps that differently i'm fortunately to be a part of a different
couple of different leagues and have like do you just say hey here's a memo here's what we're
discussing or do we actually care and open it up for debate and let everyone speak their peace
and then try to make the most humane decision knowing that it's almost impossible
Yeah. And you have people are different. You have the small market teams. You have the, I don't want to pay the luxury tax teams. You have the, I have a lot of money. I want to win the title. I don't care what that cost team. You have the people that generate a bunch of revenue. They don't want to share it with everybody. So there's agendas everywhere. Nothing's like one little quadrant. There's like vectors. Every issue is like seven watchbacks. Yeah. Right. There's never anything that's like one quadrant. And so it's really. It's
really, it's really hard. So on that front, like, I think going into these things, it's,
it's in anything, if that was your board or anything else. It's not, you know, probably the most
productive way to have a meeting. But how else are you going to do it? You kind of have to do it.
But yeah, there's no way else to do it. And I think what our current setup is,
I don't think there's anyone in that room that doesn't feel like they can go and give input. And
at least listen to. And that's, that's pretty hard to do. Right. And so I would argue that,
you know, whether it's Tom Dunden or whether it's, you know, even Jim Dolan or someone else,
like, I feel like, you know, whether it's Mickey or like, they're able to, to do it in the
capacity and the ability to, Adam, to hear and maybe even feel that I see you is, it's a gift.
And so I think that, you know, and look, I've been on someone that, I've been on the opposite side,
maybe even my point of view at the time, a couple different ways. I've been fine. I've been done that.
Like, in, like, I'm cool with how, I'm really cool with how we're going and I'm even more bullish than ever on the NBA.
And I'm excited to be doing this for a really, really long time.
What's your fine? What's your fine total right now? You're down 500?
I'm down more than that.
How many?
Are you in seven figures yet?
No.
No, I'm not, I'm not human or Draymond level.
All right.
Try to keep that number below seven figures.
No, it's part of it.
I mean, there's a process, and I get it.
And, you know, it's just the tax.
Congrats on everything.
I think it's not cool to watch from afar.
No, I mean, you're from there,
and all of a sudden you own these,
teams and they become even better assets and staples of the community than they used to be.
And you have this whole thing going now. Hopefully, you'll get some luck in the lottery.
But that's the thing. You never know. You have these four guys at the top. And it's like,
pick seven might be the best guy in this draft. I see him being drafted. It is, it is such a,
you know, and the funny thing is like, like, I remember Will the first day a couple years ago.
He's like, okay, great. Everyone come. I don't care where you were drafted.
I don't want school you went to. I don't care anything.
Like your life starts today.
Right. Like once the seasons start,
no one cares internally, like,
where you were drafted or how it was.
Like, maybe you got veterans that have come in
in the second round.
And, you know, you look at the Rudy Goberes.
You look at the Jokic.
It's like, it really has to do with, like,
who we're going to invest in
and taking a 10-year view on this.
And I just feel really fortunate
with the group that has chosen to do this with us,
you know, starting with Austin and then Will and, um, and D.A. obviously, like,
what a blessing to have that doing around. You know, you know, I remember being at the 22
finals and they invited Danny to sit courtside with the Celtics owners for one of the games.
And Will Hardy was really just involved. Maybe it was 23. It was 22 or 23. When did you hire
Will Hardy? Was it 23? Yeah, I think it was 23. Maybe it was the 23 playoffs. But,
I could see Danny looking at Will Hardy and watching how involved he was.
And I said to my dad, oh, no, Danny's studying Will Hardy.
This is bad because we knew Will Hardy.
Everybody loved Will Hardy.
But I was like so not surprised when you hired Will Hardy.
Well, people would ask and be like, he's like, I don't know.
I like what that, I like what boss.
But what was the youngest coach in the league at the time?
Yeah, he was great.
We hired him.
And he's been.
I'm glad she finally gets to go for wins now.
he's an awesome partner like and it's it's you know it's funny like Danny Austin and I all golf
with Will you know we're all golfers and you know it's it's fun like we can all just go play and then
the time the end of the round is we have nothing else to talk about like a long business
video all right yeah and like a lot of times they're managing me I think it's like hey look okay
who's whose job is it to go manage Ryan a little bit and you know
it's been good we're super fortunate all right i'm happy for you congratulations congratulations
congratulations and everything thank you for all the time look forward to seeing you i want to come to
salt lake for a game at some point so you should i'll change your life i'll let you know
hang out with the angus all right good to see you yeah let's go all right take care all right
that's it for the podcast thanks to brian curtis and ryan smith and my dad and gahow and
wardo um again we don't know the schedule for sunday yet so check out on social media we're
definitely going live on netflix at some point we'll be after a game seven we'll be
be after two game sevens.
Will it be after just one game one?
We don't know.
We'll find out tomorrow night.
And you have a whole weekend to watch BOR app because that's going to be the next
rewatchables on Monday.
Enjoy the weekend.
I will see you on Sunday or Sunday night.
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