The Bill Simmons Podcast - KP’s Hurt, Dallas Is Alive, Lakers Misconceptions, the Caitlin Content Machine, and Big Fight Bill With Chris Mannix
Episode Date: June 12, 2024The Ringer's Bill Simmons runs through six sports topics, including Warner's NBA rights fiasco, the Caitlin Clark media frenzy, the Lakers' coaching search, and more (1:43). Then, Bill is joined by SI...'s Chris Mannix to discuss Kristaps Porzingis's injury and whether it opens the door for the Mavericks (28:38), key adjustments for Jayson Tatum, Game 3 predictions (46:04), and some boxing talk (1:15:17). Host: Bill Simmons Guest: Chris Mannix Producer: Kyle Crichton Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up, the Celtics were looking so great, and then poor Zingas got hurt.
Oh, no.
Next.
This episode is brought to you by my old friend, Miller Lite.
I've been a big fan of Miller Lite, man, since college days when I was allowed to have beer.
I think nephew Kyle is a fan too.
Miller Lite keeps it simple for us.
Undebatable quality, great taste.
Picture this.
It's game day.
All the gang's here. You're tailgating outside the stadium. It's a great time for us. Undebatable quality, great taste. Picture this, it's game day, all the gang's here,
you're tailgating outside the stadium. It's a great time for beer. Or how about when you're
standing at the grill and the smell of sizzling burgers is in the air? Moments like that. Or when
you want a light beer that tastes like beer, that's delicious. You don't want to load up
on those heavier beers and then you only have two of them. Then you feel tired. Your
stomach feels full. Miller Lite, it's your friend. It just accompanies whatever else you're doing.
You're super happy with it. Opening an ice cold Miller Lite can signal the beginning of Miller
Time. Miller Lite is the light beer with all the great beer tastes we like. 90 calories per 355
mil can. So why not grab some Miller Lights today? Your game time tastes like
Miller time. Must be legal drinking age. It's the Bill Simmons podcast presented by FanDuel.
Football is in full action. FanDuel's highest rated sports book is the best place to bet it
all. We've been doing pretty well on million dollar picks this year. I love the first month of the season
because you have to go into the season thinking,
I think Pittsburgh's going to be good.
I think the Chargers are going to be good.
I think Seattle's going to be good.
And then trying to back
what you think in those first few weeks
and then zag the other way if you were wrong.
You could bet on new and fun markets on FanDuel
like to catch a pass, same game parlays,
highest scoring game across the Sunday slate.
Offensive TDs in the next drive.
They have so much stuff, it's crazy.
The app is safe and secure and easy to use.
And when you win, you'll get paid instantly.
Plus, look out for FanDuel Squares this season.
Here's what you have to do.
Visit FanDuel.com slash BS to download America's number one sportsbook.
The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming.
Please visit rg-help.com
to learn more about the resources
and helplines available
and listen to the end of the episode
for additional details.
You must be 21 plus and present in select states.
Gambling problem, call 1-800-GAMBLER
or visit rg-help.com.
We're also brought to you by
The Ringer Podcast Network
where I put up a new rewatchables.
We're diving into sports movies this month.
We did Slapshot.
We did Breaking Away this week.
That's the new one.
You can find it on all platforms.
You can find it on the Ringer Movies YouTube channel.
Me, Sean Fennessey, Chris Ryan.
This is one of the great late 70s movies and almost a perfect sports movie.
If you haven't seen it, how dare you?
You should see it immediately. If you're from Indiana, you know it well. If you like cycling,
you know it well. If you love 70s movies, you know it well. But this is a classic and one of
the reasons we do the podcast because we want to keep spreading the word for movies like this. So
there you go. Sports movie coming up a week from now.
We did The Longest Yard. So that's going to be the next one on Monday. The real longest yard,
the one from 1974. Yeah. The first great sports movie ever. That's when we did for a week from
now. So you got six days to watch it. Coming up, I'm going to talk to Chris Mannix about how the
NBA finals was looking great for Boston. And then it flipped because Porzingis is hurt.
What does this mean?
We're going to throw all the storylines.
And then after that, I did a little six pack
because I had a bunch of stuff that I wanted to hit
in the sports and culture scene.
So there you go.
First, our friends from ProJet. All right, we're going to kick things off with a special part of today's episode.
It's brought to you by Michelob Ultra, which is the official beer sponsor of the NBA.
My favorite sport. Win or lose, you're
bound to enjoy the ride with a good beer in hand.
Michelob Ultra is good beer. It's crisp. It's light.
It's refreshing. Only 95 calories.
Order yourself an ultra six
pack while we unpack six
major things going on in the world of basketball
and in sports right now.
I'm going to start with the NBA finals. You think I'm going to start
with Porzingis, and I'm not. We're going to talk about Porzingis later with Chris Mannix.
I'm going to start with the concept of identity because the Celtics who were like minus 220
to win the finals, heading into the finals against Dallas, even though the matchups were
super favorable for them. And if you watch the first two games, they won both games,
even though they shot the ball terribly in game two.
And they just look like they're a better team.
Now with Porzingis, maybe that'll even it out.
But people had an issue picking them to win the finals.
And a lot of, especially national media people,
gravitated toward Luka
because the Luka framework made sense, right?
It's a star.
Stars win finals.
Best player in the series usually wins the finals.
But really, having the best player in a series is an identity thing.
And I was thinking about sometimes there's years where the identity of a team is the star, not the actual star, right?
So going backwards, I did everything before the merger when I was looking at this.
The 1979 Seattle
Sonics during the stretch when Bill Walton should have won
four straight titles and he didn't.
But they didn't really totally
have a best player. Like Dennis Johnson won finals
MVP, but really their guards were
the star. It was Gus Williams and Dennis Johnson
and they had size. So they
had things that made sense, but they didn't make
sense in the traditional, we have
a big star sense.
Then you go to the 1989 Pistons. Isaiah is clearly the best player on the team,
but that wasn't a star-driven title either because that's one of the best defensive teams of all time.
And that team was like a Swiss army. If they go big, they could go small. That was their identity.
That's why they won the title. 2004 Detroit, same thing. Defense, top five guys play perfectly together. And we weren't in 2004, like with Tatum and Brown, Jason Kidd tries to nudge that whole thing before game two.
And it's like, I think Jalen Brown's the best part of the team. Everybody gets all fired up
about, oh my God, look at the head games. Well, wait, is Jalen Brown the best player on the team? And the point is it doesn't effing matter because the 2004 Pistons, we didn't know their best
player was. I still don't really know. Probably if I had to pick Ben Wallace that year was probably
their best player, but ultimately it didn't matter. And you know what we weren't doing in 2004,
having arguments about who is the best player in the Pistons over, wow, look at the
Pistons. They're killing the Lakers right now, which is what they did. So this is a relatively
modern thing where we have to argue about this stuff. 2006, Miami, that was a more fun argument
because Shaq was still the best center in the league, but it was becoming Wade's team.
And then in the finals, Wade just grabbed the car keys and he grabbed the steering wheel and he's
like, I'm going to take us home guys and he was clearly
their best player
by the end of the finals
but we didn't know that
heading into the finals
2008 Celtics
always had a Pierce
or Garnett thing
where Garnett was
the best player in the team
Pierce
beat LeBron
in a game 7
younger LeBron
but still
and
went toe to toe with Kobe in the finals
and was a better player and won the finals MVP.
I think KG was the best player on that team.
The point is, and you, by the way,
could have made a case Ray Allen could have won finals MVP,
but nobody really cared.
The point was they were awesome regular season,
awesome team, and they won the whole thing.
It was the identity of the big three.
The fact that they could play big,
they could play small.
They were deep.
And that was what it was.
2009 Lakers.
We argued that whole year about power Kobe,
who's their best player.
And I honestly, I still don't know.
I'm kidding.
I just want to make sure the Laker fans are still listening.
Kobe is the best player.
They don't qualify for this.
2014 Spurs is a great one because that's old Duncan. Duncan was their best player. And in 2013, I still feel like he was, even though Parker kind of was. 2014, Kawhi won finals MVP, but Kawhi, Parker, older Tim Duncan, really could have made a case for anybody. The real reason they won was their offense was just beautiful, the movement. And they had the perfect guy to guard LeBron
in a season where that team, that Miami team was kind of fading and becoming a different thing.
And then you look at 2024, if it is the Celtics that win the title, what's the identity of the
team? Who's the best player? The identity is the Jays.
It's Jason Tatum and Jalen Brown together. If you're going to compare them to some of these
other teams, that's their identity. It's having those two guys. And then on top of it, having
this incredible high-end depth with Holiday, with Porzingis, with Derek White, even with Horford
as a sixth man. And they probably have
five of the top 50 guys in the league, plus Horford, plus some shooting. And that's why if
they win, that's why they're going to win. And the point is, it doesn't really matter who the
best player was. This is stuff for people like me to talk about and get talk segments out of,
oh, who's the best player? Is it coming up on first take? Doesn't matter. Winning the title
is what matters, and if they win, it's because of the Jays.
So that's their identity, and that's all we should
be talking about. That's my first
thing for the six-pack.
Second one is a little
NBA-related,
and it's a quickie,
but Warner
feels like they've blown
the basketball package, which I've been telling you about for five weeks.
And then people start reporting it after the fact.
It's not done yet.
We'll see.
They might create a fourth package for them.
Do you realize how dumb it is that they don't even have the deal signed for the three packages with the people that are giving them over $75 billion for the next 11 years.
And because Warner screwed up and had an exclusivity thing, didn't exercise it in time.
And from what I heard, and as you know, I have good sources on this stuff, it came down to a
couple of conference finals games, a few, let's call it a few conference finals games, not per year,
just a couple, a few over the course of 11 years. And that became a deal breaker as they headed to
the end of the exclusivity period. And David Zasloff, who runs Warner, was basically like,
all right, we'll take it in the open market then. I don't know if he said
that specifically, but if you let the exclusivity window close, you don't get basketball, you don't
have a deal, then other people are allowed to bid and they didn't see NBC coming. And guess what?
They screwed it up unless they didn't want basketball along, which is possible, but I don't
think it's possible because for the next few weeks they kept floating out. No, no, we might match. We're looking at the Amazon. The lawyers are
going to be involved. And now it's either two options that seem to be sitting out there. One
is that they're going to try to match a lesser offer, the Amazon thing. No way. The second one
is, oh, well, they actually might create a fourth package for us. That's not happening either. Because guess who's not going to want that? The other three partners who are
paying all this money for exactly what is laid out in their deals. So now it's like, what happens?
Are you going to sue? That's really what you're going to do. They're like the spurn lover who
won't move their stuff out of the apartment, Warner. And guess what, guys? Get some boxes. It's time. You don't
want to have the spurn lover syndrome. And if they don't figure this out soon, I think it becomes
damaging potentially for the person who is running the entire company. Because at some point, you
have to have some confidence in who's running it. And if that person not only blew a deal with basketball, but then is trying to
hang on on the ledge, don't let me off, please. Not great. I would let this one go, move on.
They did the French open thing, do a lot of smaller deals and just admit that this basketball
thing didn't work out. Next one, third thing. Just a random soccer idea. With apologies to Kevin
Wilds. It's a half-baked idea. I don't know if you saw Team USA get their butts kicked by Columbia
the other day. Well, I was thinking about how my entire life people have been saying that soccer
was going to take off and that America was going to be good and sport of the future here and we're
going to have all these people. and it just hasn't happened.
And now I'm heading toward my mid fifties here and it feels like we're
further away than we were 10,
12 years ago,
even though we have guys like Pooley such,
um,
it's probably not happening.
I think it's time instead of thinking about,
do we invest in stuff,
the younger academies,
all that stuff,
maybe we need a change in PR.
And I was throwing this by Saruti and he thought it was funny.
So I'm just going to introduce this theory here.
Maybe they need to start going after five-star running backs,
basically from like eighth grade on in football,
and just lay out the actual financial situation of running backs in the 2020s.
Because let's say you become Saquon Barkley.
You're one of the best talents
at running back in a long time.
What does that mean financially?
Like Saquon Barkley, the Giants wouldn't even pay him.
He ended up going to the Eagles
for like 11, 12 million a year.
If Saquon Barkley was an awesome, awesome soccer player,
could he make what he's going to make in his entire NFL career in like three Premier League seasons?
They need to market, hey guys, there's way more money in soccer.
Way more.
Not to mention all the ancillary damage from football, but just show all the running back ages.
Show when running backs careers are over at 27, 28, 29.
In soccer, you keep playing.
Just come to the MOS when you're 39, you're washed up.
You'll make another 20 million a year.
This is now a PR campaign.
And I think soccer should look into it.
That's my half-baked idea to save you a soccer.
All right.
Fourth thing.
We got to talk about the Caitlin Clark content frenzy, which I've tried to stay away from, but I've been just amazingly amused by everything that's happened with it.
And why am I amused?
Right.
What's amusing about this? there's an old saying about when people wrote hit pieces in magazines or newspapers or blog posts
that when they really went after somebody, it often said more about the writer than it did
about the person that they were doing the hit piece on. Are they resentful? Are they jealous?
What's their purpose? They're trying to get attention for themselves. This Caitlin Clark story,
whatever prism you view sports through,
whatever prism you view your own career through,
what you want out of it,
what kind of content you want to get day to day, week to week out of it,
it's just perfect.
Do you want to make this a story about race?
Voila, here it is.
Do you want to make it a story about older ex-players resenting
the new class of star? Boom, sitting right there. Do you want to make it about favoritism? You could
do that too. Did she deserve to make the Olympic team? No, she's not one of the 12 best players,
so why is she on it? Do you want to make it about this is the fault of why we can't
grow women's basketball, especially at the Olympics, which was a case Christine Brennan made.
This is the most successful Olympic team that probably in any sport for it, they're going for
their eighth gold and nobody's cared because they just kill everybody. So we actually needed Caitlin to trumpet how good this team is.
You could do that thing.
You could do any sort of media beef you'd want to start.
We saw it today.
Stephen A got mad at Peter Rosenberg
about something he said on a radio show
and did an emergency YouTube clip on it.
We've seen infighting with the media.
It's like, oh, great. We all get to
roll up our sleeves and just go at each other over this Caitlin Clark thing. We've seen reverse
racism. I won't name the sites, but there's a couple of them that are trying to turn this into
sports health or skelter. We have the ratings. There's a ratings porn contingent out there
talking about how
great the ratings have been.
What does this mean?
Is this all Caitlyn?
Is she getting enough credit for what she does with the league?
And then you have the ex-players.
I always enjoy that.
The older current players lobbing shots.
You had some incidents on the court and everybody just lost their mind every time anything happened.
And it was weird because let's go back to the part where it was just kind of fun to watch
Kate McClark play basketball and see how she was going to do as a rookie in this league. And
instead it just had to become about all these big issues and just people, everybody's like,
oh, is it time for my 15 minutes? I thought it was ridiculous.
She's, you could argue, has started more beefs and more conflicts between people
without intending to do anything.
All she's doing is trying to play basketball,
but it's almost turning into like,
this is like a hip hop story.
But the part that got super weird,
I thought was the Olympics because on the surface
yeah she should be in the Olympic team because people like Caitlin Clark and it's fun to watch
her but there's a bigger picture thing with the Olympics that I think people missed they just
picked all the best players like you go look at look go look at the team they had, right?
They have all the ages of the players are between 26 and 33.
Griner's 33 and then Taurasi's 42.
So she's the outlier and she has to be on the team
because she's going for six gold medals and you have to have that.
But it's a team where they just said,
we don't want to F around.
We just want to keep winning the gold medal. We're not trying to accomplish. We're not trying
to grow the game. We're just trying to kick everybody's butts. And they have. Here are the
scores for the last four gold medal games. They won by 21. They won by 29. They won by 26. They
won by 27. Putting her on this team when she was like four or five years
younger than every other good player, first of all, who are you bumping? Second of all,
she's going to be the only young player you have. To me, this is a failure of vision.
And I would say this about the men's team too. The men's team, you know, Bam, Booker, Tatum, Edwards, Hal Burton,
even Anthony Davis and Bede's not 30 yet. And then the older guys are LeBron and Kawhi and Durant,
Curry and Drew. You don't need 12 players on a team like this. You need nine or 10,
and then you need two happy to be there people. And this is what we figured out all those years ago in the Dream Team when crazy
Leitner gets it over Shaq, which is, we're not going to litigate that here, but that was,
Leitner was one of the best college players of all time. Shaq was one of the best center
prospects of all time. He had to do it over again, maybe put both of them on.
But for a while there, they tried to have youth on the team and now they've just gravitated toward,
we never want to lose the gold medal.
We're just going to kick ass.
And I think I agree with it,
but I think if I was like,
if I was sports are,
I'm never going to get elected.
I'm going to give up the dream.
I would want a team
of maybe nine hardcore all-stars, best players in their primes, peaks, or heading toward their
peaks. So everyone from Edwards to Tatum to Booker and probably Curry's at the tail end of that.
Then you want the one older star going for one last gold medal. So maybe in this case,
that's LeBron. And then I would want the two young players.
I'd want two people,
like somebody like Chet,
put him on the team,
get him the experience.
It's going to make him amazing.
He's not going to care if he plays anyway.
Or even Paolo,
who was on the last USA team.
But if you told me we had Paolo and Chet
as the two young guys,
great.
That's amazing.
What an awesome experience for those guys because they're not going to play anyway because you need nine or 10 guys. Great. That's amazing. What an awesome experience for those guys,
because they're not going to play anyway, because you need nine or 10 guys to win.
And I think you could make the same case with the women's team. Maybe the mistake was you take nine,
Taurasi's the old lion as the 10th, and then you go super young with the other two. You have
Kaitlyn, and then you also have Juju Watkins. You have Cameron Brink. Whatever you want to do, but those last two spots, which are a little ceremonial for
the most part, and then that allows Caitlin on the team. The other piece of this, which I think
people are missing, and I would call this the Tim Tebow theory, which rarely happens, but when
somebody is such a big star, it almost becomes not worth it to have them involved on your team unless
they're just going to play all the time.
And I say Tim Tebow because there was a summer,
I think it was summer of 2013.
The Patriots signed Tim Tebow as a backup quarterback.
Super exciting.
I was all in.
It was like,
this sounds great.
It's perfect.
Belichick player.
We'll play him a tight end.
Third QB.
We'll run some goal line stuff for him. It'll be awesome. Well, what happened? The first couple of practices,
all anyone cared about was Tim Tebow. It was like, you're going to play Tebow? Where's Tebow?
You're going to play Tebow? And guess what Belichick did? After, I don't know, I don't
remember how long it was. He was like, F this and just wave Tebow.
It's like, I want no part of this. The ensuing hullabaloo day-to-day over Tebow just made it
not worth it to have Tebow. When that hullabaloo becomes too big, you better really feel good
about the player. And I think with the Olympic team, to have Caitlin on the team, which I was
like, how is she not on the team? She's going to grow the game. Well, guess what happens? You go to
the Olympics and it all becomes, is Caitlin going to play? Why isn't she playing? Caitlin only
played four minutes. Should Caitlin play more? Is Caitlin better than this person? And it turns
into a fucking nightmare. They don't want that. So I totally get it. And by the way, she would
have been four years younger than everyone else on the team. So I get why she didn't make it,
but I think it's a failure of construction, um, more than anything else.
All right. Two more things for the six pack. I'm in the honeymoon period with Drake May
and it's marvelous. It's really great. What I didn't know, I haven't had,
you know, I guess this will happen when the Red Sox bring up Marcelo Mair.
Although I don't know if I'm ever watching a Red Sox game again.
Um,
but really with football,
I've never had it before.
Cause I had the same quarterback for the entire time.
The internet existed.
Basically we drew Bledsoe and Tom Brady for,
you know,
into the 2020s,
the little pieces every day.
I've really enjoyed it.
Like there was stuff yesterday about
Drake May playing dodgeball. I watched multiple clips of Drake May playing dodgeball.
I've watched him in mini camps. I've watched his little 40-yard throws or short throws.
I've watched videos about people that think he doesn't have as fast of a release as Jaden
Daniels doing side-by-side
minicamp videos. It's really great, but for the most part, it's fun as hell. And all it is is
ceiling and upside and happiness, and there's no downside yet at all. It's basically like having
a rookie quarterback with social media in 2024 is the Instagram filter effect, where if you have kids or you have kids that you know they're friends and
they'll take this picture. And then by the time it's done on Instagram, they look like Cindy
Crawford crossed with name a model from now. This is what the Drake May honeymoon period is.
Everything just looks great. He looks magnificent. I wish we could just kind
of freeze it right here because I know there's going to be a game, especially if he starts
in the first year where he'll be terrible and be like, oh my God, is Drake May good?
Right now, I feel like he's going to be the best quarterback of all time
because I am in the honeymoon period with Drake May. All right. Last but not least, the Lakers.
So we talked conspiracy bill.
I know you,
you saw conspiracy bill on Sunday's podcast,
who's very suspicious of the JJ Redick and,
uh, just the Lakers audibling from JJ Redick out of nowhere to the UConn coach,
Dan Hurley.
And the reports were being broken by Adrian Roderowski,
who once wrote a book about
the Hurleys. And it never smelled right to me. And it seemed like everybody was benefiting from
the story being a story, but not the results of the story, which the results of the story
technically were, oh my God, they actually hired Dan Hurley. And yet I wasn't talking to anybody who ever believed they were going to hire him. So it's like, all
right, who gains from this? Hmm. Well, the Lakers gained from this because they're obviously trying
to cut the price down on JJ or they absolutely don't like any of the candidates. And you know,
maybe they half sincerely were trying to go for this. Hurley gains for this because now UConn's
like, oh my God, we might lose him. And even though he just signed an extension, he can make more money. And then Woj gains from it because he's in this
blood feud with Shams. And Shams had reported the Lakers were about to hire JJ. So now it's like,
well, actually, no, they tried to hire Danny Hurley. Here's where it really fell apart for
me. They offered him six years, 70 million, which would have made him like the sixth highest paid
coach. If you're going to actually try to hire somebody who just won two straight
championships in a climate where the five best coaches in the league are all
making eight figures a year.
Let's just say this.
It wasn't a Godfather offer.
It was like a,
it was,
what was,
what was Tom Hayden?
It was a conciliary offer.
It wasn't Godfather offer.
They basically offered Tom Hayden, Tom H a conciliary offer. It wasn't a Godfather offer. They basically offered Tom Hayden money for Dan Hurley. And then something weird happened after. There was a whole,
there was some discourse about,
well, the Lakers are a family business.
They don't really splurge like that.
Family business was used a bunch of times.
That was a big offer for them.
They're a family business.
I just got to cry bullshit on this one.
First of all,
they paid the luxury tax more than any other team in the league. So we'll start there. Second of all, the Buss family owns 66% of the team.
And then the other half, the other whatever third is somebody owns a majority minority stake of that. And then there's some other partners.
So if they were really hurting for money with the way the franchise values of these teams are now,
the Lakers, I would say,
if they're going to get 5 billion for the expansion teams,
four and a half billion, 5 billion each,
it's going right.
Phoenix is going to be worth over
four billion. The Lakers are the most important franchise in the league from a value standpoint.
So they're a seven billion team, let's say. I think that's reasonable.
And you can't run the day-to-day because you're a family business.
You could probably sell 5% of your business at a $6 billion valuation and make so much money that
you could then kind of nudge that toward the team would be my guess. I don't believe the family
business thing. I don't think they ever really wanted to hire Dan Hurley. I just don't believe
the story. I think it was a strategic play to try to drop the price on somebody they liked would be my guess. But please don't call the Lakers a family business. There's nobody a family business. And by the way, the other thing with the expansion stuff, because now the media deal is going to be done. And I think what happens is the league probably just names the price,
which they did with WNBA. They had the expansion teams and basically the price,
this was last year, was 50 million for the San Francisco team and the Portland team,
which backed out. And then the Toronto team just ended up, the Toronto ownership team just ended up getting it.
I think they're just going to say,
here's the price.
It's four and a half billion each.
It's five billion each.
And it's going to be Seattle and Vegas.
And can you hit the price?
So when you think about the numbers in those contexts,
I'm pretty sure the Lakers could have afforded Dan Hurley.
I'm almost positive.
Which makes me think
they didn't 100% want to hire Dan Hurley.
Yeah, we really like him.
Oh, we flew out to see him once.
Here's an offer.
Anyway, that's my superior take.
The Lakers, you're not a family business.
You have more money to spend
than just about anybody
and you have the best franchise and you're probably in the best market for where
athletes want to live and where you can get the highest tickets. And I'm just not buying it.
I'm not buying any of it. That was today's six major things. Remember, get yourself a six-pack
of Michelob Ultra, a Superior Light Beer, an official beer sponsor of the National Basketball
Association. It's refreshing, crisp,
only 95 calories. Plus right now, McLoBelcher is helping fans get closer to the game than ever with exclusive prizes and experiences. Wow. Like courtside seats to see your favorite team play in
person. Learn more and enter for your chance to win at McLoBelcher.com slash courtside. Enjoy
responsibly 2024 Anheuser-Busch
McLob Ultra Light Beer,
St. Louis, Missouri.
McLob Ultra registered.
Courtside sweepstakes,
no purchase necessary.
Open to U.S. residents 21 up.
Begins October 19, 2023.
Ends June 12, 2024.
Multiple entry periods.
See official rules
at McLobUltra.com
slash rules for free entry,
entry deadlines,
prizes, details,
message, and data rates may apply void where prevident.
This episode is brought to you by Prime Video. You know me, I can't go a day without sports.
I really can't. And now Monday nights are all about hockey. That's right. There's a new
exclusive home for streaming Monday night NHL hockey,
and it's on prime all season long. Watch prime Monday night hockey deliver unreal plays.
The biggest goals can't miss moments. Matthews, McDavid, Crosby, the NHL's best.
They're all on prime prime Monday night hockey. It's on Monday. It's on prime.
This episode is brought to you by Movember.
The mustache is back with a vengeance. Look at Travis Kelsey. Before he rocked that Super Bowl ring, he rocked that super soup strainer. Grow a mustache for Movember. You'll do great things too.
You won't win the Super Bowl, but your fundraising will support mental health, suicide prevention,
and prostate and testicular cancer research. And if you don't want to grow a mustache,
you could still walk or run 60 kilometers, host an event, or set your own goal and mow your own way.
Do great things this November. Sign up now. Just search Movember.
Y'all afraid of ghosts? How about ghost peppers? It's the moment you've been waiting for. The ghost
pepper sandwich is back at Popeye's.
A buttermilk-battered chicken breast served on a brioche bun with barrel-cured pickles.
And here's the best part.
It's topped with a sauce made from ghost peppers and oncho chilies.
If that doesn't send a chill of anticipation down your spine, nothing will.
Get your ghost pepper sandwich today at Popeye's before it ghosts you for another year.
All right, taping this.
It is mid-afternoon Pacific time.
This is a guy that I should have on a lot more than I do, but I'm, as always, awful
at booking my own podcast.
You've seen him in Abu Dhabi.
You've seen him in Saudi Arabia.
You've seen him in basically every continent in the world.
And now he's in the U.S. covering the NBA Finals.
Chris Mannix, it's good to have you on domestic soil.
You're one of my favorite guys, Bill, who comes out of the woodwork for every big fight.
It's like you, it's Damian Lillard.
It's a handful of NBA coaches that when there's a big fight that they don't quite know enough about,
my phone starts blowing up.
That's me. I'm big fight Bill.
I'm also a medium-sized Bill.
I'm medium-sized Bill, too, for fights.
Yes, but I helped you make
a little bit of money. I don't know if you doubled down
on Usyk after you texted me, but you texted
me a little bit before the fight.
I said, you're going to make a good amount of money
on Usyk. I told you I
bet on Usyk because that's my guy.
I love him.
But in general, there's been a lot
of good pay-per-view fights that are
just interesting enough to
justify paying for them.
But you wouldn't be telling your grandkids about any of
them. That's where we've landed
with boxing, at least until Tank gets
the right challenger.
But we're not here to talk about boxing. We're here to talk about a Boston Celtics team
that came out of 2-0 in Boston on Sunday night, and it felt like they had solved Dallas.
I was trying to restrain myself from the pod with Rosillo, but everything I had seen,
we've seen so many times in the finals or in really major series, there hits a point
with a series where you feel like one team has figured out the other team.
And I felt that way in game two.
It's like they just figured out Dallas.
You remember this happened with Golden State in 2002 in game four.
Some point in game four, Golden State just figured out Boston and it was a wrap after
that.
I felt that way with Mavs Clippers round one. I went to game
five. I was like, shit, really
seems like Dallas has just figured the Clippers
out. And it felt like Boston had figured
them out. Now we're pulling Porzingis possibly
out
of this. So now what happens?
Man, when it comes to Porzingis
and his availability,
my
panic level is an 11.
If I was, as a Celtics supporter,
I would make my panic level an 11
because, look,
his value is incalculable to me.
I know they're 30-5 during this season
without Porzingis,
9-1 in the playoffs without Porzingis. But all you have to do is watch
the first two games of the series
to see just how
valuable he is. I mean, he won game one
for them, right? Like it was 37 to 20
at the end of the first quarter. Porzingis
had 11 points in that game. Yeah,
the Mavs made it close in the third, but that game
for all intents and purposes was
one in the first half, and that was all
Porzingis. A little bit less effective.
A little bit less effective in game two,
but he still got his points, still had some rebounds,
still was a menace defending shots
at the rim. Without him,
I think this becomes a
losable series for the Celtics.
I do believe that. I have
faith in Al Horford
to step up, and I don't
have the numbers in front of me, but Al Horford to step up, but I don't have the numbers in front of me,
but Al Horford,
when he plays 30 minutes or less, he's a lot better than Al Horford who plays 30 minutes or more.
He's just not a 30 plus per minute game per game player.
And that means we might see some Luke Cornett in this game three,
if Porzingis doesn't play.
And how about some Sam Hauser who was just ripping off bricks in game two
and looked like he lost his confidence.
I think Houser's going to play
either way, though, right?
Like, I thought he was really good
in game one.
He was two for three from the floor,
two for two from three.
And he defended.
I mean, there were some
Sam Houser defensive moments
in game one.
He was awful in game two.
But he's going to play
no matter what.
If Porzingis is healthy,
Luke Cornett's not seeing the floor.
Not until garbage time, anyway. Andzingis is healthy, Luke Cornett's not seeing the floor, not until garbage time anyway.
And look, I think Luke Cornett is fine
during the regular season,
but the minutes I've seen him play
in the playoffs have been very shaky.
And if you're needing him
to play 10 to 15 real minutes
with Porzingis out of the lineup,
that would worry me if I was the Celtics.
This is the Brissette spot that I've been crying for for two months because I actually think
this is somebody that you can at least switch on defense with him.
The KP thing, you mentioned the panic level being at 11. You meant 11 for the entire season,
day after day after day. You didn't just mean this week. This is a constant thing of every
game you get through where Porzingis is healthy, you feel great if you're a Celtic fan. And the
irony of that game on Sunday night was the game probably should have been over five different
times. And each time Boston just couldn't land the knockout ball. That was why I was such,
it was weird doing the podcast that night with Rossell because I was trying to not be negative. The Celts
are up 2-0. They're 78-20.
And we're nitpicking on
Tatum. I didn't love his shot selection.
But there was a lack of
just finish him off in that game where they
just, Dallas was dying to roll over and be done
with it. And the Celtics just couldn't do it.
Now, it's close
in the last 6-7 minutes and
that's when Porzingis gets hurt.
So it was almost like them not being able to finish them off in the third quarter
when Dallas looked like they were ready to go home.
And Kidd put out Luka and Kyrie together when he normally wrestled them.
Because he knew, if I don't save these two minutes here, we're done anyway.
And then the Celtics can't finish them off.
So I'm with you.
They bring him in.
He changes the game. can't finish him off. So I'm with you. They bring him in. He changes the game.
He just makes it weird.
He changes what Dallas wants to do offensively.
He takes away their lobs.
He creates these mismatches
on the other end, and even in the six plays
when he was hurt before they took him out,
Kyrie had that layup.
Russell and I talked about it Sunday, that
KP was coming behind
and just blocking against the backboard
in game one.
And in game two,
he didn't want to jump
and Kyrie got the layup.
And it's those little moments like that
that if I'm Dallas,
I'm like,
all right, that guy's now gone.
Either way,
if he plays or if he doesn't play,
that guy's gone
for the rest of the series.
I guess my question is,
have you seen enough from Dallas
to think that it's even going to matter?
Because this looks like a bad matchup
for Dallas anyway.
So what do they,
let's pull Porzingis out.
What does Dallas need to do now?
What needs to happen?
Well, I think for starters,
and it's kind of cliche,
I think some of their role players
will make shots at home, right?
Like I think PJ Washington will be better. I think Derrick Jones Jr players will make shots at home, right? Like, I think P.J. Washington will be better.
I think Derrick Jones Jr. will be better.
Josh Green will be better.
These guys couldn't buy a bucket in that last game.
But how much is that after the corner threes, though?
Yeah, I think that's a big part of it.
Because they took them away.
They took them away, but they did miss some open looks.
Like, they missed some open threes in that game.
And I think if you're Dallas, you can count on them being a little bit
better at home. I just
got to believe there's at least one
Kyrie game out there. And look,
I'm with the people that say it's a
bad matchup for Kyrie. Not only does
he have three elite
defenders coming at him
in waves all game, and
Brown, Holiday, and Derek White,
they're also making him defend
on the other end of the floor.
They're putting him in action.
Sometimes he's on a switch against Porzingis.
Sometimes he's faced with Jalen Brown.
They're forcing him to expend energy
on that end of the floor.
But he's too good a player
to be 0 for 8 in the next two games from three.
Like, he's got to have
at least one breakout game.
And that game two
was just close enough to make me believe if Kyrie has a breakout game and if some of these role
players start making some shots, that they can take one of them, probably game three.
And then all of a sudden you're looking at game four and you're saying, is Porzingis going to
play in that one? What's he going to look like? Then all of a sudden the pressure kind of shifts
back to Bostonoston for for
that one and you know that's why i think that this this is still very much a series maybe more so
if porzingis is out i don't agree with you on the kairi thing but i see the point okay
no no i i see the point you're right because he missed how many open threes in the first two games
and maybe five of them were wide open. Yeah.
On the other hand,
I thought what they were making Dallas do,
and this is whether Porzingis was in the game or not,
was just a lot of one-on-one stuff
and a lot of,
hey, Luka and Kyrie,
why don't you pretend you're in a sports movie
and dribble through your legs a few times
and try to beat whoever's guarding you,
which I don't really think is how Dallas advanced
through the first three rounds.
I don't see that changing as much.
I'm with you on the role players.
The role players that, to me,
are going to be helped the most without Porzingis
are the two centers.
Because now maybe the lob threat comes back
in a little more.
Great point on Horford.
The other thing is it's Wednesday, Friday.
This was the worst possible time
for this injury to happen, right?
Because first game Sunday after nine days off,
and then Thursday, and then Sunday was second game,
had some time off, then Wednesday, this game three.
But then playing Friday, all of a sudden,
this series could be 2-2 in 50 hours.
So if you're putting huge miles on Horford in game three,
you also have to know we're playing in two days.
Which Dallas has to know the same with Luca,
to be fair.
I mean, Luca, that one picture of him
was wearing the full body wrap on the chest ribs
and the full like,
I mean, he looked like,
he looked like he was preparing to film
like a Saturday Night Live sketch or something.
So I'm not sure that's going to help him that much either,
but it obviously hurts Horford the most because he's old.
Now, do you walk away from Game 2 thinking Luka figured some things out?
Because you had the one assist in Game 1,
you had 10 more in Game 2.
I thought the Celtics were sending more doubles in Game 2
than they did in Game 1.
Is that kind of forecast game three?
Look ahead to game three.
Like if Porzingis is limited or not able to play,
it becomes even more important not to send doubles because we know if you
send doubles at Luca,
he's going to carve you up.
He's going to find lobs.
He's going to find corner threes.
And without that rim protector in Porzingis,
like the last thing you want for the Celtics is
for Derek Lively to get any confidence like
you don't want Daniel Gafford to start
feeling himself you know during these
games you want these guys you want these guys
shooting like two time like how many shots
is Derek Lively taken and made in this
series like three like it's
you know same thing with Gafford he's been kind of
out of control I mean he's had all
kinds of dumb fouls,
and he just is kind of running around like a chicken with his head cut out.
But the last thing a young guy, you want to give a young guy like that
is any confidence.
Like, you want him to feel out of his element.
You don't want him involved in the game.
So, if I'm the Celtics, like, I'm looking at Jalen Brown,
I'm looking at Drew Holiday, I'm saying,
we're going to leave you guys alone on an island for the most part.
Like, if Luka gets 50 on you, okay,
that's the way it's got to be, but
we can't afford, now more than ever,
to send extra bodies because
we don't want to make
Al Horford defend the rim
all that often. I don't believe that Luke Cornett
can do it. So, I think
defending Luka one-on-one in this game three
is going to be huge.
I noticed two things just from going to both games.
One is that I thought he got noticeably tired in the second halves of both
games.
Like really just kind of peaked for the first hour of the game and then held
on after that.
Cause there was a moment in game two and it seemed like he was going to go
for 60 points.
And the Celtics were really concerned with not letting him just get that open 28 footer. And anytime, you know, cause you don't, you don't think he's in three point range, but he always is. And it's just this thing. It used to be the biggest flaw with Robert Williams. Remember how many times for Robert Williams, he was always two feet further back than where the guy was. And you knew it in real time. Like, oh, that guy's going to shoot a three over Rob. He's not going to see it in time. And noticing the Celtics benched a couple of times when
people would forget that Luke had the 28 foot range and the Porzingis fell asleep on one
and all the coaches get mad. It's a, you can tell they've just been like the whole,
you know, lead up to the series. Don't when that guy is in this territory, 28 feet away for
shooting. So I thought they took those away and I thought he got tired as the game went on.
The bigger thing that I noticed in person,
and then there was a great YouTube clip today
of all the times people blew by Luka in game two.
It's like 20 times and they're blowing by him
and he kept doing the matador.
Like he should change his name to Luka Luis Castillo Donchic
because he was doing the matador wave
by, but then trying to pick the guy from behind. And that just became his move.
But every Celtic was just going by him. There were times when he was lost and wandering around. I
don't know how much of that had to do with him being tired, hurt, whatever. But I think the
Celtics are going to look at that. Everyone's talking about what's going to happen on defensive
without Porzingis. I think there's so much meat on the bone with attacking Luka. And they really were
figuring that out in game two. What do you think of my theory? I just don't understand why Tatum
doesn't take 12 to 15 foot shots. Over and over again, he's just going by Luka and just not rising
up Durant style. He feels like he just has to keep going and get to the rim somehow and either kick out or shoot a layup.
What's happened to his 12-foot shot?
Why is it gone?
I mean, don't you feel like that's been
kind of drilled out of his game in recent years?
In the last two years, right?
This is the Rosillo theory about the hand linitis, basically,
where you practice step-back threes and drives,
but nothing in between i think the bigger
problem with tatum in these first two games is that he's not finishing with any kind of force
right like he looks more like the rookie and second year version of tatum who was trying to
kind of artfully finish around the rim yeah i want to see the Tatum we've seen the last couple of years.
Just put on
20, 25 pounds of muscle
and try to dunk over guys.
Go through guys.
Jalen Brown does that
exceptionally well.
Like, how many times
do you see Jalen Brown
kind of dip around
and look for layups?
He's going to the rim hard.
Like, he's trying to get fouled.
He's trying to get
to the free throw line.
I want to see more
of that from Tatum.
That's a bigger concern for me.
On the subject of Doncic, though,
and I was at all the Timberwolves-Mavericks games,
I thought one of their fatal mistakes
was that Minnesota didn't do enough
to put Doncic in action, right?
I mean, they were so isolation heavy,
and it was like Anthony Edwards going up against
Derrick Jones Jr. or P.J. Washington.
They just let Doncic hang out, defending the guy standing in the dunker spot.
And this is when Doncic, I don't know how severe his knee injury is, but he was complaining about it at the time.
Why are you not putting him in as many actions as you possibly can?
And just like with Kyrie, I think Boston's done a decent job of that in this series.
And Doncic, look, I don't know whether it's he doesn't care.
I don't know if it's because he's hurt, but he's not a good defender.
Like I've heard some things, you know, this year about how he's playing better.
He's gotten like the average level.
I don't see it.
When he's got a guy in front of you that tries to go around,
he's either getting beat or he's trying to do that thing like you talked about,
kind of the reach around and stuff you did in high school,
where you're trying to poke the ball away and get a steal on that end.
So I'd put him in as many actions as I can
if for no other reason that's going to wear him down.
Oh, Lucador?
I got to come up with a good name for the Matador D.
But the thing is, though,
the thing is in the last couple minutes of that game,
and they showed this in the other series too,
he can dial it up defensively for like two and a half minutes.
Because Dallas, I thought, played really, really good defense down the stretch.
Part of that was because the Celtics fell into that walk it up mode.
And once things slow down, they become a lot easier to stop.
But they do have it in them.
The crowd's going to help.
The crowd's going to give him some energy.
I don't know how many Luka games I've seen in person
this year, but I thought it was interesting. He wasn't talking
that much to the refs and to the crowd.
And I don't know whether that was
because he's not feeling good. I thought
he was talking to the refs as much as he always does.
Like he talks too much to the refs. I didn't feel
like it was as much as in the
Clippers. It was almost
like they had to have an intervention
with him in that Clippers series because he was, it was two and a half straight.
He was doing a one-man show.
I made that joke.
He's made a one-man show on the court with the three refs.
Just babble, babble, babble.
But every time he thinks he gets fouled, he gives up on the play.
Like completely gives up on it.
Like he spends the rest of that play on his side of the court
arguing with the referee.
If I was Jason Kidd, that would drive me crazy.
I was thinking if Porzingis
was healthy
going into this game three, because I really thought
the Celts had a chance to
go up, and we'll talk about the reasons
after the break, but I was wondering
would this be the game where Luka just tried
to bomb a bunch of
threes and really, really, really
take over and do that thing.
Now, without Porzingis, if I'm Dallas, I almost want to wait for that.
It's like the Rocky IV where you want to wait to have the trainer go,
No!
And do like the,
All right, now we got to do it.
I want to see who the Celtics play and what my matchups are and try to save him for the second half.
Let's take one break because I want to talk about the,
uh,
the big picture Celtics,
uh,
torture piece of this.
RBC has helped millions of young Canadians turn their most likelies into
most definitely making their ideas happen with scholarships,
internships,
and skill development,
plus resources for artists and athletes.
Learn more at rbc.com slash support youth.
As the world's population grows, so does the need for resources like potash to support sustainable food production.
This is why BHP is building one of the world's most sustainable potash mines in Canada.
Essential resources responsibly produced. This is what BHP has
committed to Canada. The future is clear. It's happening now at BHP, a future resources company.
To discover how, visit bhp.com slash better future. Metrolinx and Crosslinks are reminding
everyone to be careful as Eglinton Crosstown LRT train testing is in progress.
Please be alert as trains can pass at any time on the tracks.
Remember to follow all traffic signals.
Be careful along our tracks and only make left turns where it's safe to do so.
Be alert, be aware and stay safe.
All right, so here you have the Celtics.
This has been an eight-year odyssey, six conference finals, and a really fascinating run.
They're the second most successful team of the last eight years, but of course, they didn't win a finals. And coming out of the garden on Sunday,
it's like, that was the game.
Played like crap, 25% from three.
We played all the hits from the typical game
that they would blow,
even dating back to the last couple of years.
You know, shades of like game five, 2002 Milwaukee.
Shades of some of those Miami losses.
Shades of game four, golden state.
Like we're playing the hits game two,
golden state in 2022.
And they got through it.
They got over this invisible hump.
And now they're going to go to Dallas in game three,
where for whatever reason,
they're more comfortable on the road.
I don't really fully understand it,
but they play more freely,
especially Tatum.
And I have some theories on that.
And they're just going to bomb threes
and they're actually going to blow them out in game three
because they've solved Dallas.
Now removing Porzingis.
Are we sure we're not now underrating
the fact that they still might do that?
That we haven't had a good Tatum yet?
That Tatum, for whatever reason, is better on the road?
And I don't get it, but it's true.
And that he seems to be a mismatch for Dallas.
Cause he's going by everybody and they're throwing three guys at him and
he's still creating all these shots,
but his shot's not going in yet.
But if his shot starts going in,
I don't know what their answers are.
Anyway,
talk it out with me.
Is there a chance they come in and shoot the lights out?
You've watched them all year.
They've done this on the road over and over and over again.
I think there's a chance because every six weeks or so,
they have a game like they had in game two
where they shoot sub 30%.
It looks like they're taking too many threes.
More often than not, they lose those games.
And it leads to these classic Gary Washburn versus Joe Mazzulla moments at the press conference.
It's a great local theater.
Gary wonders why the Celtics don't drive more.
And Joe kind of fires back at him and says that they're all good shots.
But oftentimes, they lose those games.
And generally speaking, they respond with more great ones, right?
Because they are a great three-point shooting team.
Like, what, a.1 percentage point for being the number one percentage team
in the NBA last year.
So I have confidence they're going to bounce back
and have a good shooting night in Game 3.
The Tatum question, though, is interesting because everything Dallas has done, regardless
of what Jason Kidd says, everything Dallas has done in this series is geared towards
making Tatum inefficient.
You know, game one, they're throwing multiple bodies at him.
They're tilting the floor towards him.
They're trying to get the ball out of his hands.
Then you have the whole Tatum-Brown comment, which is
designed to get into Tatum's
head. Look, there are people in Dallas
that will tell you they think it
worked. Tatum did take 22 shots
in game two.
He did have the 12 assists, and that's what everybody's
talking about, but he was 6 for 22
from the floor. People in Dallas might
tell you that maybe he was
overaggressive like they
wanted him to be. But have you ever seen, Bill, more times where Jason Tatum was hunted defensively
than game two? I've never seen it before. He was put in every action and they were trying to go
one-on-one with him, with Luka and Kyrie every single time. I'd never seen that before.
And Gaffrey.
Yeah, I don't think that's a reflection on Tatum as a defensive player.
I think that's Dallas trying to wear down the best player on Boston
and make him more inefficient on the offensive end.
So, given that, I don't know.
It's all about how Tatum adjusts in this Game 3 to what they throw up.
Because they're going to have something new.
It will be something that he hasn't seen before or something they haven't done yet
that's going to try to throw him off the mark.
If he adjusts well and shoots like six for ten from three, which is very possible,
there's your Jason Tatum breakout game.
There's your game six against Milwaukee from 2022.
Game seven against Philadelphia.
But everything Dallas is doing in this series is geared towards making Tatum inefficient.
So far, at least shooting-wise,
they have been successful.
Well, I agree with everything you just said.
I also think Boston can learn from some of the stuff
that didn't work too.
Because even just sitting there in game two,
one of the things my dad and I noticed was
when Tatum was on the left side,
about 30 feet back, facing the dude, a lot of times the Celts make the mistake of they
have them facing the guy either straight ahead, so the rim's straight ahead of him, or he's on
the right. And if he's on the right, he's not as good going to his left. He wants to go to his
right. He wants to finish. He has that great Dr. J little swoop layup. And when he's on the left with some speed, he was just going by Luca getting
into the paint on his dominant hand. And then it's either a jump hook or it's like that scoop layup.
And I'm wondering if they're going to shift where he has the ball in the spots for game three.
And I would encourage people in the first half, like look where he's getting the ball at these spots because it was the same kind of looks.
Are they going to shift people around
so that he's attacking kind of 45 degree diagonal
with his right hand?
Maybe that'll help him.
Because I thought strategically
some of the ways they were using Tatum,
it didn't make sense to me.
You know, if he doesn't have his three point shot
and he's attacking straight ahead,
then everybody can come over and help, right? That's why Drew is open on those little passes sometimes. But it wasn't helping him get unlocked. They got to unlock him. that's eventually going to just open up more space for him in the middle, right? Whereas Porzingis, he was at the top.
So if he's at the top, now Tatum has to be at a little bit of a weird angle.
I don't know. I'm babbling, but I just feel like they're going to put him in better spots
than he was in the last game.
Well, two things.
One, I mean, I thought Holiday bailed Tatum out big time in game two.
What was like six of his 12 assists went to Holiday?
And that's because Holiday is so smart. Like just
doing stuff you learn in high school, like follow the basketball, like get in the paint,
step into open space, make yourself available. This is all basketball 101
that guys learn when they're kids. And I thought
there were a couple of times during that game that Tatum found himself
kind of in no man's land and Holiday bailed him out. There were a couple of times during that game that Tatum found himself kind of in no man's land and Holiday bailed him out.
There were a couple of times, too.
I was sitting next to some of the reporters on press row.
Very generous with the assists, I thought, some of the stack keepers on that one.
There were at least two, three dribble assists in that game.
Twelve did feel a little high, I will say.
Did that feel like a twelve assister?
There were a few of them in that game.
My question with where you put Tatum
is what happened to the post-ups?
The foul line post-ups?
Yeah, where has that gone?
That was a big part of Tatum's offensive game all season.
Is it something they're seeing in Dallas
that it doesn't make sense?
Is it because Washington is a stronger player?
But we heard all year long
that Tatum had developed
into a much better mid to low post player.
And especially as a passer, like he was really good
at passing out of those positions.
I mean, I think if you're going to make an adjustment with him,
you know, give him a little bit of diversity.
Don't force him to make decisions off the dribble quite as often.
Let him put his shoulder down, get to the basket,
get to the foul line.
This guy's capable of going to the foul line
10 times a game.
We've seen that during the regular season.
Just give him a chance to get easier looks
than just these dribble drives
where he's walking into three different defenders.
Use him as a screener.
Post him up on the foul line.
Put him 30 feet on the left
so he has a running start going to his hand.
It's all stuff.
I mean,
he had no shots at the foul line in game two.
He had no shots basically from eight to 15 feet.
We took 22 shots in one foul line jumper.
Like that's crazy to me.
They're using them wrong.
Um,
and then the other pieces,
I do feel like they were attacking Kyrie a lot.
I,
I feel like they can do that even more and put some miles on him.
They have two guards that are really good at using screens,
attacking the basket and kicking out, and they can leverage that.
And Jalen, I think, who he wasn't as good in game two as he was in game one,
but has really been, and he had a bunch of turnovers,
but has been really smart about I'm going to attack, I'm going to get in the paint, I'm going to attack, I'm going to get
in the paint. And so that mentality was there. I just didn't think they shot well. And you know,
the Hauser piece of it, just wide open shots that it felt like they could have been up by 18 at
any time. Give me, so you're sitting with all the seatmates. Who's the winning lottery
ticket when you're at these big
games? Is there anybody that's just great
to sit next to that is just
spouting wisdom the whole time? Is there an MVP
that person doesn't exist?
I don't think that
person exists. I get stuck
next to Jay King
for these games
who is
the worst dressed member of
media that I've ever seen.
He rolls in
like he just played 18 minutes at the Y
for every game.
There's that part of it.
Sitting
next to the Boston
media cartel is fun.
Sitting right behind Christian Megliola during these games is fun.
Just telling everybody to calm down about Tatum.
That Tatum game, it was funny because from a national perspective,
I think people were surprised that a lot of people, including me,
like we're in Rosillo, we're talking about like the Tatum.
That was a weird Tatum game.
Why are you even talking about that?
You're up to nothing.
And then on the local level, it's the complete opposite
where that's probably all they were talking about
for the next 24 hours.
Is Porzingis really hurt and what's wrong with Tatum?
It just never leaves the DNA in Boston.
It just doesn't.
Because there were other really fun storylines to talk about, like the Drew Holiday, how magnificent he's been, what an amazing trade that was. He could go run the gamut. But I think it's because Tatum's been in our lives now, really since that draft, since the flip back, and then just was immediately on a big stage from the get-go. And now we have this seven-year reservoir of experience. I was telling somebody,
I don't remember anything like this
with people murmuring
when they don't like what they're seeing from Tatum
as the play's happening
with another Boston player.
You would see it sometimes in baseball
with a pitcher.
If the pitcher throws two balls
and it's certain pitchers
and you could kind of hear murmuring in the crowd like, oh, God.
Like this would happen with Derek Lowe in the early 2000s.
Oh, no.
Oh, God.
I used to call it the Derek Lowe face.
It was like, oh, God, he's making the Derek Lowe face.
Oh, no.
But you could feel it in the stands, right?
Like that was a real.
I wasn't crazy.
Like you could.
There's like murmuring sometimes where it's like, oh, God, seven seconds left in the shot clock and Tatum's got the ball 35 feet from the basket. This is just such a bizarre relationship because on paper, he's everything you would ever want from a star. And MVP voting. Is he a top six player in the NBA? You know, is he capable of doing like what we've seen Jokic do in the playoffs? What we've seen or just recently saw Jalen Brunson do in the playoffs. The problem with Tatum is that, I mean, it's not that Boston has so much talent,
but he's not been asked to do the things that some of these other players
have been asked to do.
So there's the question of like whether or not he's on that level,
regardless of the stats he puts up, which, which validate that,
which prove that out that he is on that level.
That's what the conversation is like in Boston.
When, when it comes to comes to Jason Tatum.
Is he the guy on this team? And look, all the stuff we've talked about, the six conference
finals, now two NBA finals, right now, when it comes to Tatum, it's almost being used as a
negative. If they win this series, and I think ultimately Tatum's going to have a big part in
it. I mean, he's already played a big role, but if they get I think ultimately Tatum's going to have a big part in it. I mean, he's already played a big
role, but if they get to four wins,
he's going to have a massive
scoring night in one of them. I'm convinced of that.
If that happens,
all of a sudden, all the stuff we're criticizing him
for becomes part of a more
positive narrative. It's like, well, he won
one championship, and he went to six conference
finals and two NBA finals. So, once
you get that championship,
all the times you came up short go from being negatives to part of a positive story,
if that makes sense. Yeah. It's also a fundamental misunderstanding of why this team was so special.
Like when the 2004 Pistons were ripping off wins and ended up just killing the Lakers in the finals,
nobody was like, who's the alpha on this team?
Is it Rip Hamilton or Chauncey Billups?
It's almost like a fault of how we talk about basketball now.
I think one of the great things about the Celtics team,
and one of the reasons I thought they're going to win the series,
is they can win games when Tatum isn't good.
They can win games when Brown isn't good.
And it's great with Porzingis. They could win games when Tatum and Brown weren't good. They can win games when Brown isn't good. And it's crazy. With Porzingis, they could win games when Tatum and
Brown weren't good. As long as those guys were out there and doing a bunch of different
stuff, they could still kind of patch wins together. And that was what made them
crazy. The Mavericks, especially this series, cannot
win if Luka plays badly. And they probably can't win in Boston
if Kyrie plays badly and Luka's
like, fine, not great. There's limits with both those guys. They just can't replace the offense.
They scored 89 and 98 and they just can't put the points together. The Celtics can,
and they can have these random games where they'll just hit 22 threes and
maybe Tatum has one of them. So when? So I, so when I hear that stuff
about, well, can he be the guy in a title team? It's like, well, they built a really good team.
Like maybe that should be the topic. Like they, you know, they, they have more depth at a high
level than any teams in a while. Right. You're probably going back to the mid 2010 warriors.
And if you're making a list of the top 60 players in the league,
they have five of them.
And they might even have five of the top 45 or 50.
So that's why I think the Tatum thing is kind of silly.
It's like, yeah, could it be Jokic?
Probably not.
Jokic is one of the top 20 players of all time already.
But I said to Rosillo on Sunday night,
what's your take on this?
I felt like Tatum's not a finished product yet.
And I still think there's more work to do,
especially with shot selection.
And I mentioned that little,
that jumper eight to 15 feet.
And I think Rosillo was more on the side of he's 26.
He's played in over a hundred playoff games.
This is kind of who he is.
Do you think this is who he is or is there another level?
I think he's 90% of the way there.
I think that's a good percentage.
You know I love percentages.
You've got a little bit of wiggle room to grow.
We've seen that growth. You want to go 89%?
We'll go 89%. What about
90.3%?
50, 40, 90. One of those.
We've seen growth
the last couple of years we talked about
we talked about the post game
like that
early on
that was not part
of his repertoire
he wasn't a post player
he wasn't a very good passer
out of the post
he became both those things
this season
so I think there's room to grow
the mid-range stuff though
it goes back to what we were talking about
like
you know
Tatum is a
Kobe acolyte
right
like Tatum
came up loving the mid-range game.
He loved coming off screens and shooting the 18-footer.
Right.
They kind of beat...
Do you remember they went to the conference finals that first year?
Of course I do.
And that was the year that details came out on Tatum,
the Kobe series on ESPN Plus,
where Tatum watched that like a dozen times.
He was just obsessed with
Kobe's insight into his game. So he wanted
to be like Kobe, and Kobe was
for the most part a mid-range jump shooter.
But over time,
the Celtics during the season, Drew
Hanlon in the offseason, they drilled that out of
him. They made him three-pointers or
gave the basket.
I don't think you can expect that part of his game to come back
because nobody wants it to come back.
I mean, we might, but nobody internally in Boston wants it to come back.
And certainly in the offseason, they're not really working on it.
Where I think the next 10% is finishing.
And again, it's what we discussed.
When I see Tatum dipsy-do around the lane
and not using that 6'9", 240-plus pound frame the way he should, it's maddening. And that's the next step. When he starts finishing over guys and through guys and not worrying about using an angle off the backboard. If he starts doing that, he's A, going to score more, and B, going to get to the to the free throw line a lot more. So that's where the 10%, I think,
comes in with Jason Tatum.
You know what?
I'm dropping that to 85%
because we each had our own things
that we thought he could get better at.
So maybe that's our answer.
I agree with what you said,
but I also think I'm right too
because as you pointed out,
he used to be really good from 14 to 18 feet, and they've thrown this
away.
And yet you watch like some of the baskets Jalen got, especially in the first game, were
the kind of shots Tatum doesn't take.
Jalen was getting those like little eight footers, those little push shots or like,
okay, I'm fine.
I'll take this little 12 footer here.
And Tatum just doesn't seem interested in that.
So that's how I feel it can get better. I mean, I look at Jalen Brown. People thought that guy was a finished product,
right? I think we thought maybe he could dribble better, but what did he do? He got stronger.
He got way more aggro. He really committed to the defensive end in a totally different way.
And I thought he was a good defensive player before, but something is different. Like he takes that,
I mean, he was pissed he didn't make all defense.
I don't know if he was that great.
But if we voted for all defense
with six guards, six forwards, and three centers,
he might've had a chance
to be one of the six forwards, you know?
But I think he's better than he was last year.
And he's a year older than Tatum,
which makes me think there might be up for Tatum.
One guy who's not going to be probably much better, but I think is getting better from the
IQ point though is Drew. Drew is like those guys. I remember when I hit this point and pick up
basketball before my body parts started to go one at a time, when you're just smarter than everyone
you're playing.
And it's like, all right, all these guys, but I know exactly what I can do and can't do and
what spots to go to. And you just, everything kind of slows down a little bit. And you've
been in so many games and watch so many games. You're just like, oh, he's going to do that.
So the rebound is going to come here and things click in a different way. And that,
that was what I thought. Drew is becoming like the old guy in the pickup game in some spots where, you know, he's like,
oh, Tatum's going to take that shot.
The rebound's going to go right here.
I'm going to get it.
He gets 11 rebounds.
He's 6'3".
And then the other thing is, anytime they wanted somebody to stop scoring, where did they go?
It was Drew.
So I think Drew has a real chance to be finals MVP.
It's weird.
He's plus 750 still
that's crazy
I don't really understand
don't you think
if you had to vote
after two games
who would you have voted for
I would have voted for Holiday
I think he's had
two elite
defensive games
and one
great
offensive game
whereas Jalen
had
one complete game
and then one
good game
in game two.
I think I would edge
Holiday in that one.
The thing I love most
about Drew's defense
is that not only
can he anticipate
where a guy is going to go,
but when he anticipates,
he sells out completely.
Like, you know,
that Nembhard steal
he had at the end of game four,
he anticipated him going right,
and he didn't just hedge over there or take a half a step. He went all the way over and forced Nembhard's steal he had at the end of game four. He anticipated him going right, and he didn't just hedge over there or take a half a step.
He went all the way over and forced Nembhard
to effectively come into him.
And what I've watched in this series against Dallas,
he knows Kyrie wants to go right.
So he is putting his entire body
between the right side and Kyrie Irving.
And if Kyrie wants to pivot around and go left,
yeah, he might have a bit of an opening
there for a minute or two while Boston adjusts.
But he's just not going to let him go right.
He's going to form that wall right in front of him on that right side.
And I love that because sometimes you see guys, you know, gamble a little bit, step
out, you know, do a little bit of hedging.
Not Drew Holiday.
He is all in on these anticipation moves.
And like 90% of the time, they pay off.
One of my favorite players.
Future Hall of Famer.
Winning player.
I love that he's on Team USA.
It's like the exact type of guy who should be on Team USA every four years, right?
Are you ready?
I asked my dad on Thursday's pod.
I was like, let's retire second row. Joe.
It's over.
He's now first row.
Joe,
he's doing a good job.
He's got the winningest record of any coach after two years in the history of
the sport.
The Celtics are,
there were seven and 70,
77 and 20.
We taped it.
Now they're 70 and 20.
I think it's been night and day him last year versus this year.
The, a lot of the stubbornness is gone with him.
He has a sense of the flow of the game now
and he'll realize the game's drifting a certain way
and he'll actually call timeouts,
which he just never did last year.
I just think he's way better.
He's been better dealing with the media
except for his foil Gary Washburn,
which I'm sure will be a seven-part 30-for-30.
But having assistants, I think, has really helped him.
I mean, he lucked out with Charles Lee,
who everybody loves,
but the assistant coaching side's better.
What else are you seeing from covering the team with him?
What's different?
A more relaxed version of him.
And that's hard for people to see
because publicly he just kind of comes off very different,
right?
He's a different guy.
You know, how many coaches defend three-pointers after timeouts?
Like, I mean, there's just a general oddness to him that's not going to change.
But he's much more comfortable in his own skin this year than he was last year,
which is completely understandable. I mean, sometimes we don't give enough credit to what
he had to go through last year. He was a backbench guy about to get a promotion,
then three days before his boss leaves in a sex scandal. And then you mentioned the assistants,
he's got a bunch of assistants around them. Probably half of them
thought they deserved the job, right?
All those guys go at the end
of last season. You bring in guys that
are comfortable in their roles. You mentioned Charles.
He's been great.
I think Jeff Van Gundy's a strong
candidate to take that role next year
with the team. And
Sam Cassell. If Sam Cassell doesn't get a job
at some point, there's something wrong with the NBA because that guy's paid his dues. He's a really
smart basketball guy. He has a great connection with players. He has been exactly what this team
has needed as that second assistant on the bench. So I think all those are factors in Joe
being better as a coach. A natural evolution
which for a 30-something enrolled
is inevitably going to come.
And then having guys around you that want
to be there, that want to help you succeed
as opposed to maybe kind of
begrudgingly being there on the bench.
Yeah, which we've seen
that a few times with basketball.
When somebody takes over midseason,
it always gets a little dicey with the assistants.
I still wonder if they got swept
by Miami last year,
if he would have gotten fired.
So the only,
I don't think that
they would have fired him
and hired somebody else.
I think if they got swept last year,
Witt Grosbeck probably would have looked
at Brad Stevens and said,
you fix this.
You know, this didn't cause the Ime Udoka
mess, but
we elevate your guy, Joe
Mazzulla. We failed
to live up to expectations. If they got
swept by Miami,
you've got to go down. Look, I remember asking
Brad after the Udoka
stuff went down, did he consider
taking the job? He said no, but then
Wick came on and was like, yeah, we had that conversation.
It was a short one, but we had that conversation.
My guess
is that it would have been
a Brad Stevens problem.
He would have made Brad take over
and try to clean up
the mess that was there.
That would have been a tough
story.
It's weird, but game four of Miami,
when it just felt like that entire team was going to roll over,
the coach was going to get fired, and the team might be blown up.
Then what do you do with Jalen Brown?
There were 19 different things that come out of that.
Then they just played really well for two games in a row.
Then White hits the miracle putback.
Now we're going to a game seven.
And at least that saved some stuff
and gave some levity and perspective to,
all right, how should we actually approach this?
Okay, Jalen, you're getting paid now.
And I just, I really wonder what happens
if they just get,
if they roll over in game four in Miami.
I don't know what happens.
And I don't even know if J, I honestly don't know if Jalen's on the team. Like, I don't know what happens. And I don't even know if Jalen,
I honestly don't know
if Jalen's on the team.
Like, I don't know how much
they would have blown it up.
Yeah, I don't know
if they would have blown it up.
I think a coaching change
would have been possible
because if you're getting swept by,
granted, Miami is one of the best
eight seeds you'll ever see.
But if you get swept,
I think a coaching change
was certainly...
But it would have been off
of game three,
which was so dispiriting.
And then you think game four
should have been just as dispiriting
if you get swept.
And then now you got to look in the mirror
and go, all right.
I mean, my thing never changed.
I'm not, I don't want to break up Tatum and Brown.
I never want to break those guys up.
But when it's bad and you're angry
and you're mad and you haven't won in a few years,
that's when weird shit starts happening.
So maybe the coach would have been.
But even trading,
I mean, how funny does the Marcus stuff seem now when they traded Marcus?
How many people texted you?
Why would they trade that guy?
He's the heart and soul of the team.
How crazy does that seem now?
It seems completely nuts.
I think you have to factor in that
he was traded before they knew they had Holiday, right?
Like he was part of that Porzingis deal.
So at the time, I was looking around going, well, who's going to be the point guard of this team?
Is Derek White going to be able to do it?
Do they have enough depth at that spot?
So it definitely raised a lot of eyebrows across the league.
I mean, not that they thought there couldn't be an upgrade for Marcus, but you were
doing a deal that didn't net
you Tyus Jones too, right? Like you didn't have
a built-in
replacement there. So I think
in that sense, it did raise intent. I would
say one thing, you mentioned that Derek
White shot. I'll always remember it because
we all have stories that wind up in
the saved folder forever.
After Derek White made that shot, I managed to get Dave Roberts on the phone the next morning.
That's your fault.
I was going to write a story about...
Because Dave stole second base.
He's known for that in Boston forever.
He could do no wrong in Boston, regardless of what happens in LA.
Derek White was about to become that guy.
If they had won game seven, Derek White
would have become that guy
and had the whole story
written,
ready to go
if they won game seven
and they lay that egg
in game seven.
That would be a good website.
Stories,
stories I wrote
that I had to just
put in the junk mail.
Yeah.
I remember,
I remember writing
a couple,
like,
two-thirds, three-fourths of a column and writing a couple, like two thirds, three fourths of a
column and then a game shifting and just like, okay, toss that to the wood chopper.
So state of panic in Boston with the KP news, with these parts of the body that I don't even
know how to pronounce. We went from a one out of 10 panic to, I would say,
probably like an 8.5, but that could
ratchet up if they lose Game 3.
Luke Cornett, you're on Luke Cornett watch.
I need
Luke Cornett to have a
positive plus minus in
Game 3. If he has a positive plus
minus, I think they win.
If he's like minus 6, I think they win. If he's like minus six,
I think they lose.
So if he's Sheldon Williams
in whatever 2010 finals game that was,
what was he,
like a minus 11 in three minutes?
Still like the record
for worst half I've ever seen in person
by anyone in a big game.
And then,
you know,
maybe this will be,
maybe this will be the Tatum quiet down game.
Who knows?
My gut is that Boston in one of these two games is going to shoot really well
because I've watched them do it all year.
And they do it when you don't expect it, which makes me think,
could it be Wednesday night?
What's the biggest fight of the summer?
Biggest fight of the summer so far is probably that massive Saudi Arabia card that's coming to LA on August 3rd.
It's Terrence Crawford against Israel Madrimov.
That's the top end of like a card that is stacked.
Like one thing about these Saudi cards is that every fight on the card could be a main event
somewhere else.
Like you watch the fight
with Fury and Usyk.
They had like eight or nine
other fights on that card.
So you've got like Andy Ruiz
against Jarrell Miller.
That's a slobber knocker.
You've got Isak Cruz
fighting on that card.
So I think it's that,
I think was it,
they changed the names a lot of times.
BMPC Park, whatever it is in LA.
That's the biggest one.
Headlined by Crawford, but, you know,
probably half a dozen or more big fights on that card.
And what's the heavyweight fight you want to see?
I mean, so Usyk and Fury are going to fight again
in December, and I don't think that's going to go
any different, But if as
a boxing fan, you're kind of rooting for
Tyson Fury to come out with the wings, you can finally
get Fury and AJ. Because that's
really the only mega fight
that's left to be made in boxing.
Like Usyk right now is an all-time great man.
He has taken care of
Anthony Joshua. He has taken care of Tyson
Fury. He's taken care of Daniel Dubois.
He is just cleaning out the heavyweight division. He's only had six fights in the heavyweight division. He's taking care of Tyson Fury. He's taking care of Daniel Dubois. He is just cleaning out the heavyweight
division. He's only had six fights in the heavyweight
division. He's beaten all the top guys.
How many times has the cruiserweight come up
and just wreaked
havoc like this? Because Holyfield came up,
but he lost a couple of those.
He did. And David Haye had some
success at heavyweight, but not like
this. Not becoming
undisputed. And again, not
rolling through the very best. You make a list of the
top five heavyweights in boxing
right now. Usyk's beaten like four of them.
And he would beat all five if he got in the ring with them.
So, you know, the
never-ending debate is
is he one of the great heavyweights of all time? Probably not
because he's only fought six fights at heavyweight.
But he's now one of the
best fighters of the generation.
No question.
He has that one skill that some of the greatest guys have.
Like Hopkins was my favorite for this.
Figuring out what the distance is.
So the first few rounds might look a certain way,
but then he just kind of figures out his angles
and the exact distance where he's not going to get hurt too bad. And then that's it. And it's always in the middle of the fight.
He just seems like he would be such a pain in the ass to fight. You know, he does, just has
crazy chin and just kind of solves you as, as the fight goes on. It's like watching, uh, you know,
like some of the great basketball, like what Jokic can do against certain defenses where it's like,
okay, you're doing that. All right. And he and he puts in his supercomputer but that's how i think of him
he's almost like uh like a chess chess guy his thing too is that he's never switched off like
he has these these quotes that people love because they're in this broken english and before the
fury fight he said i'm not going away or something of that effect and what he meant
and what he did was that you have to box him for the full 36 minutes of every fight he is constantly
in your face and that's a that's physical pressure that takes a toll on you but more than anything
it's mental pressure like if you have to constantly be thinking about this guy who can crack, who is left-handed,
who has great head
movement, footwork, if you're constantly
thinking, that is going to wear
you down over the course of the fight. Then we saw
the ninth round, it paid off.
Usyk was losing for
the first six rounds of that fight.
He got buckled in the first half of that fight,
but then just the constant pressure
got to Fury, and then that ninth round came when he looked like Trevor Burbick in that Tyson fight from back in the first half of that fight. But then just the constant pressure got to Fury.
And then that ninth round came when he looked like Trevor Burbick in that Tyson fight from back in the day.
When he's just bouncing around off the ring ropes.
That's the greatest strength of Usyk.
The constant pressure for all 36 minutes.
Well, that reminds us of Brockton's own Marvin Hagler.
Another guy like that.
He was the all-timer of that.
He just kept coming. The only way to really fend him off
was you had to do like what Mugabe did
and just, all right, let's throw bombs.
Let's go.
I'm not walking backwards anymore.
We're just throwing bombs.
Herds try to do it.
But yeah, Usyk,
he's never going to be a bigger deal
because he's not Mr. Excitement
and it's really hard to say his name,
but he's been pretty great.
And then the Garcia getting DQ'd and looks like that was
a tough one because that was a really cool story
that all of a sudden went
into the woodchopper.
And now we're left to wonder
what the New York State Athletic Commission
is going to do with Ryan Garcia.
It's a foregone conclusion that they're going
to overturn the results
of that fight.
They'll probably make it a no contest. Haney's team is pushing for a dq but i don't think they're
going to get that and then there'll be a suspension six months to a year but the bigger problem is
that ryan garcia he's kind of unraveling we saw the news just a couple of days ago where
he got arrested at the waldorf in la for tr in a hotel room, like $15,000 worth of damage.
His team is now
just talking about his mental health
and saying he's going through a lot of stuff. Well, you kind of
knew that months ago. His behavior
was erratic.
I can tell you, Bill, I've been around Ryan
since 2018, like every one of his fights.
Who he was
before this Devin Haney fight
was completely different
from the guy I've seen in the buildup
to every other fight.
You watch his behavior before the tank fight.
Yeah, he's energetic and he's talking some trash,
but he's not kind of going off the deep end.
He's not spouting conspiracy theories.
Something happened to Ryan Garcia
over the last eight months
that caused him to become a different person and
as somebody that really likes the guy uh I hope more than anything he gets it squared away well
couldn't part of that be the fact that he lost the tank fight no I don't think it was that I think
there's there's deeper rooted issues with Ryan I mean he look he he's only a couple years removed
from needing a mental health break from boxing he He stepped away for almost a year after the biggest win of his career.
He had that knockout win over Luke Campbell.
He was flying high at that point and had to step away to deal with his issues.
I think he's probably going to have to do something like that again.
Look, again, I think he's a good guy.
I really do.
And he's obviously great for boxing because he's exciting.
I just hope he gets this stuff kind of squared away so we can at least resume his life.
The PD stuff with boxing is really tough when it comes out after the fact.
Because if it's like basketball and it came out, I don't know,
Luka was on steroids when he beat Minnesota.
We'd be like, all right, well, you talkers.
But when it's boxing and there's real damage that sometimes guys might
not be totally the same after they take all the left hooks that Haney took, you know,
and you think like, all right, not only do you lose the fight unfairly, but he might
not be the same boxer now.
And it just feels like the, it's like, oh, he's suspended for six months.
That doesn't seem like a fair enough punishment to me.
It's not, it's not.
And I think these suspensions need to be,
generally speaking, one year or more
because that's the only way to make sure
that they have any teeth.
And you're completely right about the punishments
not really fitting the crime.
Like, we are...
It's not a question of if but when.
We have a situation where a guy gets killed in the ring and then the fighter that does
the damage or the octagon pops pops for peds after the fact and then everybody's gonna care
then yeah it's congressional hearings then we're talking about federal charges you know we're
talking about murder uh charges going up against that guy in boxing it seems to be content not
dealing with it until then.
Because these punishments...
But this speaks to the problem
with boxing,
is that there's no oversight
whatsoever on any aspect of it.
No, I mean, look,
there's been a couple of cases,
I'm not going to bore you
with the details,
but there's been a couple of cases
where, like,
a boxer has tested positive
and the state commission
that was charged with regulating it
did nothing.
Just did nothing.
Just,
you know,
it went away.
Now,
part of that is that this will be the most listened to conversation about
boxing ever,
right?
Like,
because there's not a media covering boxing.
They're not,
they're not out there.
Well,
that's why big fight bill is here.
Big fight.
I like big fight bill.
It was a big fight bill in LA.
Big fight bill gets every fight just for the record.
I just,
you know,
the boxing has the same issue that
hockey has and certain sports where people who are medium-sized or casual fans aren't really
allowed to wade in because the dialogue is happening at such a great level. You can do it.
All the people that come on your pod can do it. But then if I do it, it's like, ah, is he really?
You just get all the big fights. It's like, yeah, guilty.
But I see every big fight. I watch
all of them and I bet on all of them
and I have a great time.
It's so much fun to bet on boxing. Am I going to watch
a random Thursday ESPN2
fight at 11 at night? I'm probably not.
But am I going to watch every
tank fight? Yeah.
It is so much fun to bet on boxing though.
Because if I see a good
fight I'll bet on
winner outcome over
under number of rounds. It's likely I'll have six bets going
on on one fight alone.
It's a blast. The only the only difference between
you and Dame is your big fight
Bill. He's little fight Dame. Like
I'll get texts from Dame about those Thursday night
Thursday night fights.
Like he's all in man. Like he is the night fights. He's all in, man.
He is the most dedicated.
There's some good boxing fans out there.
Van Lathan, big secret boxing fan.
Cousin Sal.
We have Raheem Palmer, who's an open boxing maniac.
But they're out there.
Kevin Clark is a good one.
Yep.
Kevin DMs me some of these big fights.
And even the NBA.
Paul Pierce, huge boxing fan.
I saw him in Boston the other day.
He starts talking to me about fights
that are happening coming up.
So they're out there.
They're in the closet,
but they're definitely out there.
So pound for pound,
you have Usyk one
and who would you have two?
I would have Crawford two
and Noe in a way over in Japan
is number three.
But this is the first time
that I can remember
that the pound for pound
switches as often
as it does. You didn't even say
Tank. Yeah, but Tank needs better
opponents. I make a pound for pound
list partly based on
the resume that you have, but Tank doesn't
have a great resume. So he's the 2024
Celtics? Yeah, kind of.
At least they had to play. At least they
were forced to play. Yeah, they had to play Luka, right.
But Crawford
fights August 3rd. If Crawford
beats Madrimov, who's a really good fighter,
I'd probably bump Crawford back
up to number one. If Inouye has a big event
at the end of the year and wins in dominant style,
I'd probably bump him up to number one.
So there's a fluidity to these
mythical pound-for-pound rankings out there.
Yeah, and then I think the fact that the cards have been coming on these crazy times because they're in all parts of the world.
I actually kind of like that Saturday at 9.30 in the morning, all of a sudden there's a seven-hour boxing card on DAZN that I could just have.
They don't do enough of that, man. Like, I was in between game one and two.
I took the train to New York
to watch the top-ranked card,
just to watch it.
And there were some good young fighters
that I wanted to see on there.
And for some reason,
they started that event at 11 p.m.,
11 Eastern time, at the Garden,
and didn't get over until 1, 1.15.
Like, who are you catering to?
What audience are you trying to build
if you're starting an event at 11 o'clock Eastern time?
Now, the Saudi cards, they're a lot
because for me, it starts like 3 in the morning.
So when you're on site, it's a little bit much.
But if I was just watching as a fan,
I would love it if I could watch the main event
of a heavyweight championship fight
at like 7 o'clock in the evening.
That's great.
Well, I think this is one of the opportunities for, I think we all think TKO is going to
get involved in boxing at some point, just kind of waiting to see what their move is.
And I'm kind of surprised that hasn't happened yet, but I think that would be part of the
appeal if you're them to get in on this because there's so many easily fixable things about
when should the cards run?
You know, what weekend should we pick?
All the stuff they're starting to do with UFC and WWE and just like, hey, why are we
having WrestleMania against this crazy Final Four weekend?
Like, that's stupid.
We should move it to this weekend instead.
So I think with boxing, the dumbest, most poorly run,
most corrupt sport that either of us has ever liked,
there's some room to fix, would be my guess.
And the steroids thing would be definitely a piece of it
because that Garcia thing was bullshit.
Haney got hit by, what, 15 straight flush left hooks
in 10 rounds.
That guy might not be the same.
Guys like, you know,
you see over,
remember, was it Chavez, Meldrick, Taylor?
Was Meldrick, Taylor ever the same after
that Chavez fight? When guys go through
wars like... The answer is no. Yeah, no.
The guys go through, even more recently,
right? We called the Deontay Wilder
fight a couple of weeks ago. I don't think Wilder's
ever been the same since those last two fights against
Tyson Fury, where he was
catastrophically knocked out, especially
in the last one, where he was face
down on the canvas.
How about Pacquiao, the third fight against
Marquez, or the third or fourth fight,
whatever, when he just got knocked out cold? He was
never the same after that.
There's a
big downside. You see Pacquiao's coming back.
You see that?
He's going to fight, I guess,
for a title in September
or October of this year
at 45 years old.
The damaging fight
where you're never the same
is one of the great betting
inefficiencies after the fact.
Like Hagler,
the Mugabe fight for Hagler,
he was never the same after that. Like when he fought Leonard, he wasn't the same guy. That Hagler, the Mugabe fight for Hagler, he was never the same after that.
Like when he fought Leonard,
he wasn't the same guy.
That's one of the cases for
figuring to say Leonard won that fight,
which I still think.
Like Hagler was a shell of himself in that fight.
He wasn't remotely the same.
Riddick Bowe,
who had a couple wars
and was just like shot completely
from some of the punishment that he took.
But then there's other guys,
like Holyfield was in,
I don't know,
12 to 13,
like crazy fights and just kind of kept,
kept going.
Foreman had,
he got knocked out by Ali and he had that crazy Ron Lyle fight and was able
to just come back and fight and fight for another 10 years.
I don't know.
It affects people different ways,
but I'm worried about Haney though,
because that was pretty brutal.
I think he's young
enough that he
can bounce back, and that's...
He's not going to intentionally
be in those types of fights
moving forward. He's
a stick-and-move guy. He's
not looking to get into those types of
fights. I thought the Ryan fight changed
on that very first punch. I don't think he ever recovered
from that shot he took in the first round.
He stayed on his feet, but he was never the same
fighter after that. I think he's young
enough and fights a style that's not
damaging enough
that he can bounce back. And I was talking to him the other day
like, you know,
I don't know what the pay-per-view number
was for the first fight. I don't think it was great.
But if they do a rematch next year,
it's going to be triple that, man.
That's a million pay-per-view buy event
because of all the drama
surrounding the first fight
and how good the first fight was.
Yeah, it's a good call.
All right, Chris Mannix,
I'll see you at some point during this finals.
I saw you from afar a couple of times,
but I'll make a point to be line over.
Thanks for coming on.
I appreciate it.
Don't forget,
what do you want to plug?
Boxing podcast?
Sports Illustrated?
Boxing with Chris Mannix where this kind of
conversation, Bill, you get every single week
on the pod with me and Sergio Mora mostly.
Sergio
could sell your jokes like 20%
better. I'm leaving this in the pod.
Hey, Sergio.
Sergio, be a better teammate sometimes.
I don't know. Somebody's got to say it, right? Come on, Sergio. It's a give and take business.
All right, Chris Mannix, good to see you. All right, that's it for the podcast. Thanks to
Chris Mannix. Thanks to Cochran and Steve Cerruti as always. I'm going to see you on Wednesday night. I'm going to do a podcast after game three
with a special guest.
So stay tuned for that.
Go South. See you Wednesday. I don't have a few years with him
on the wayside
on the brimstone
I never once said
I don't have
a few years