The Bill Simmons Podcast - Part 1: An NBA Popularity Check and Tyson’s Big Comeback With Wosny Lambre and Van Lathan
Episode Date: November 14, 2024In Part 1 of a two-part podcast, The Ringer's Bill Simmons is joined by Wosny Lambre to discuss whether tanking in the NBA is possible with as much talent as the league currently has, the new-look Kni...cks, the serious Cavaliers, and the confounding 76ers (2:07). Then Van Lathan joins Bill and Wos to zoom out on the NBA and wonder whether it's in a better or worse spot now than in other eras (31:29). Finally, they discuss the upcoming Jake Paul–Mike Tyson boxing match and remember Tyson's turbulent career (1:01:51). Host: Bill Simmons Guests: Wosny Lambre and Van Lathan Producer: Kyle Crichton The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit www.rg-help.com to learn more about the resources and helplines available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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We got a two parter today.
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Wanted to talk basketball and wanted to talk about
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All right, Big Waz is here. We're taping this 1230 Thursday afternoon.
Last time I saw you, we were doing the league pass rankings and trying to figure out who
we like the most, who we were the most excited to watch.
What's changed for you since the season has started?
Has there been a team jump out?
Has there been somebody that captured your fancy?
Has there been a new league past mistress for you that you didn't expect to be
cheating on with some of the other favorites?
Yeah.
It's, and I owe a big apology to Justin Barrier.
It's the Chicago Bulls.
Oh, look at you.
Barrier thought the Bulls were going to be fun and Josh Kitty was going to have this
new role and DeMar DeRozan was going
to open things up.
But like they've been way better than I could have expected.
Obviously they beat the Knicks last night.
Yeah.
Crazy last second foul on a three point shot.
But they're just so well coached.
Kobe White's hair got fouled.
I really think that's what happened.
I thought he hit his hair.
I've never seen that before. That is what happened. I thought he hit his hair. I've never seen that before.
That is what happened.
I don't think he actually fouled him.
But you know, he airballed the shot to make it look like he got hit pretty bad.
But yeah, it's Kobe White, it's Zach Levine, who I don't know if he's found clarity in
his role on the Bulls or if he's really dying to get traded because he was so unhappy this
off season.
I just thought, they lost their most consistent player in DeRozan.
Zach Levine has been sulking for like a year and a half.
They're bringing in Josh Giddy, ushering a kind of youth movement kind of thing.
I just thought they would stink and it's been the opposite.
And Vucic has been playing some of the best ball of his career.
He's taking and making threes.
Like the guy looks rejuvenated.
They've been to me, the team that has kind of jumped off the screen.
Like, wow, I thought you guys were going to be horrible and you're way better.
They're five and seven, which sounds like it's bad, but that's the sixth seed right now.
I'm with you.
I was thinking about it last night.
Watch that next game.
Everything they seem like they wanted to do on paper,
including like pick up the pace, play with some pizzazz.
It's all happening. I think they're a really, really frisky five and seven team.
And Levine, like I know, yeah, I get it. He was upset about whatever he's got.
I don't know what he's upset about. He's certainly got an amazing contract.
But you watched him last night against the Knicks.
My thought was, this is actually a great situation for him.
He's got guards that push the ball that are pretty,
Gidey's pretty unselfish, right?
Kobe White, I don't think is like a Trey Young,
monopolized the ball type guy.
And just seems like Levine's in a nice spot.
And what stuck out to me yesterday, they win the game on that weird Kobe, Kobe wife foul,
get the Brunson toilet bowl in and out to win it.
But you watched the way their bench was celebrating.
It actually seems like they liked each other.
Last year did not.
No, it was, man, last year was toxic as hell by all indication when you talk to people who was in and around the team
at that time.
And I think with Vuchovic and Patrick Williams,
who I'm still like, whoa,
what were they thinking with that contract?
Yeah, he's like one of those, what do you do?
I don't know if it's the three or the D.
What's your specialty?
I don't know.
I'm still trying to figure it out.
But he's been a more willing shooter.
Yeah.
And like with Vujicic finally being a stretch four, Levine is playing with like a really
spaced out floor in front of him.
And the guy is really talented.
Like he's not afraid.
Well this year he's not been afraid to take it to the basket.
And there were just some isolation plays last night in the fourth quarter, where
it just felt like the Knicks had no chance against Zach Levine, which like,
when's the last time you've said that about Zach Levine?
He looks incredible.
And then, you know, the Knicks.
Wait, hold on on Zach Levine, because I want to talk about the Knicks.
I was thinking about him, Brandon Ingram.
Yeah.
I think Trey Young's about to be in this boat.
These guys that got these big deals.
Julius Randall.
Julius Randall.
These guys that are being paid like they're superstars.
They do put up production and yet there's not a market for them.
And it's because of the second apron.
Kurt Goldsberger was talking about them in my pod on Tuesday.
It's changed the dynamic of roster building of how we think about players.
We take somebody like Brandon Ingram,
who was available all summer for anybody
who wanted to offer anything and they couldn't trade him.
Now he's scoring 23, 24 a game, Zach Levine, same thing.
And we're moving into this new era of these guys
that it's like, well, this is my price.
I don't want to pay that.
I'm stuck with you. but you're still producing.
Yeah.
I don't remember another era like this.
The only time I could think was that 2000s when guys were getting those six,
seven year deals and you would just be like, ah, I guess we have Allen
Houston now for the entire decade.
Yeah.
I think that's the difference between now and 2011 or 12, which is like when I first
became a regular on League Pass.
It was like, whoever the bulls were, when they decided that they were going to stink
up the joint, they were going to have basically three rotation worthy guys in the starting
lineup and everybody else was kind of going to be like, okay, this team is headed for
17 wins. Yeah. They're playing the lottery lineup and everybody else was kind of going to be like, okay, this team is headed for 17 wins.
Yeah.
They're playing the lottery game and whatever.
Nowadays, like the Bulls we expected to be a bottom four Eastern Conference team, but
because they haven't gotten rid of, like they would have sold off Vujicic, they would have
sold off Levine, they would have sold everything off.
But now because they kept those guys guys like they're just not a given
win there's no like given wins and then even the Wizards on some nights of first
game I think Brooklyn's another one Brooklyn yeah like this Toronto there's
no process Sixers is what I always say like that process Sixers team where
Michael Carter Williams was leading that team in scoring for an entire season.
That was insane. And we were like, he's not good.
And he was like, when the rookie of the year, it's like, well, he's 20 points a game.
Exactly. You know, this is a really interesting point.
Can you have tanking when there's too much talent in the league?
Because I think about that with Brooklyn. I watched Brooklyn. I saw them in person on Friday.
I talked about it in the pod. Watch pod watched him yesterday the Celtics played really well and beat them and they played one of their best games, but I
Watched Brooklyn. I'm like, I know they wanted to be terrible
It's gonna be really hard to be terrible with some of the guys in this team like Schroeder is a
Above average point guard cam Johnson's good cam Thomas is a 28 a game guy now. They have shop walking.
This is not like in 2013, 14, when you can just be like,
yeah, we're going to throw a year away.
Like think about what the Lakers had during the last couple Kobe years,
where it was like, here's Kobe and nobody else.
Yeah.
It's so different.
And I don't know if it's just the talent.
Like these dudes have just come out and played with a lot of pride.
Like just quite frankly.
Do you think it's social media?
Like I wonder if it's just hard to suck now because if you suck.
With the fantasy and the everyday gambling aspect.
That might play a part, man.
I feel like it's social media because I was thinking about this.
Vince Carter got his number retired in Toronto.
And I was just thinking how fucking crazy that is.
Yeah.
That's where he started.
Because I was writing for USPIM back then and he completely tanked on them that year to the point that...
I was reading those columns.
Yeah.
He tanked on them to the point that the trade that they made for him is probably the worst superstar trade anyone's made.
They had to like take back Alonzo Mourning's contract and a couple other bad contracts.
They got two shitty picks.
It was like a 20 cents in the dollar giveaway.
It was because he stopped playing for them.
But we didn't have the apparatus we have now to be like, oh, my God,
did you see what Vince Carter did last night?
Like, he just didn't give a shit.
I don't think anybody can do that now.
Yeah, but I mean, it's it's it's really hard to explain why none of these teams
have come out and been, you know, just dog shit.
And again, it's early, like nobody's had...
I guess the dog shit team has probably been Philly.
Yeah.
Right?
Sorry, Chris Ryan, but yeah.
They stink.
But there's a reason for it.
No, there's a reason for it, but they still stink.
Yeah, they've been god awful.
Well, think about the other day,
JJ, D'Angelo Russell had that point in the corner.
And whatever he did, he got his three-pointer blocked.
He did some stupid step back.
And the camera showed JJ so fucking mad,
and he sat down, and he just sat and stung,
and he was like a parent mad at a kid.
And even that, so now he's like, like a parent mad at a kid.
And even that, so now he's like,
well that'll never happen again
because he just saw the video of it,
it became a big deal the next day.
He's like, I can't do that anymore.
I just think there's a lot of checks and balances now
for bad basketball, lazy basketball,
lethargic basketball, people don't give a shit,
people going through the motions.
I don't know if you can do it anymore.
And I think what's crazy too is that like the NBA
because of how they handled some of this load management
stuff have been-
How did they handle it?
Poorly.
They've been so effective in messaging that the regular
season doesn't matter.
This isn't real basketball playoffs where things really
start and people are playing hard.
That's not been the case to start the season.
Like every single one of these games feels like super competitive.
People are playing like the people aren't playing with super low voters.
There's some teams that are like seem to have a bit of a hangover.
I think Denver started the first four games of the season with a bit of a hangover.
Minnesota's hangover has been extended.
Minnesota's not just hungover. They're like lying in bed with the shades dry.
Yeah, they still can't drive. Yeah, they're way over the legal limit still.
Yeah, 100%. But for the most part, man, teams have come out and been playing out the gates.
Like OKC feels like they got something to prove.
Cleveland.
I got something to prove. Cleveland, I mean, my God, they've come out like gangbusters and it's made the regular
season excellent for it.
I'm going to read you some of the 2013-14 Sixers.
Leading scorer, Evan Turner.
Wow.
Michael Carter Williams, your rookie of the year, shooting 264 from three and 40%
from the field. Thad Young was our number three. Spencer Hawes.
Number five, James Anderson playing 29 minutes a game, 80 games.
Who was James Anderson?
I don't know.
I was, I was on a studio show that year and I don't remember who James Anderson was.
James Anderson. He went to first round pick from the... I remember him.
Okay. Henry Sims. Tony Rotten.
Yeah. Tony Rotten.
That was a Tony Rotten apologist in those days.
Hollis Thompson. LeVoy Allen was their ninth man. This is our point.
You look at the ninth man now in the Nets.
The game I went through Friday, like Jalen Wilson's coming.
I'm like, this guy's good.
Should he play more?
That six years team would challenge the Bobcats in terms of worst win.
No question.
In terms of worst win loss record ever.
And teams just aren't that horrible.
And some of it, like you said, is the second apron where, you know, contenders, I think in a
different era, Golden State would have looked at, they would have said, you know what, instead of
doing the melting and buddy heel to replace Clay, we're going to pull the trigger on Zach Levine.
In a different era. But now with like all of the salary constraints.
The Lakers would already probably have them.
100%.
And you know, maybe they're keeping the powder dry for Trey Young.
Who knows?
But yeah, it's just a different era, man.
2014 Bucks who were 15 and 67.
Brandon Knight led the team in scoring.
Ramon Sessions was second.
Remember him?
Oh my god.
A young Chris Middleton third, Ilya Sova, John Henson, OJ Mayo, Larry Sanders, Hey Now,
playing 20 games.
But man.
And then Young Giannis was just that.
That was great for Young Giannis.
Larry Sanders is pissed right now.
KD like smokes weed openly.
Yeah, Larry Sanders is like, I tried this.
Why didn't it work for me?
They kicked me out the league for this.
Yeah, so if you think about the actual bad teams,
Toronto is probably like fundamentally the worst team,
but then Scotty Barnes can come back and who knows?
And they're competitive on a lot of nights.
They can rebound. They can shoot threes.
The other thing is we didn't talk about the threes.
Like this is the first season the threes are 40% of the shots that everyone takes.
Yeah.
That's just the variance that comes from that.
You just never know.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
The threes is always, it's been a sort of, you know, less talented teams.
You want to up your variance factor with the threes.
Everybody's kind of known this for like seven, eight years now.
But like, but the discipline with which coaches are actually able to enforce it.
Yeah, it's different now.
It's just better infrastructure to make sure.
Like, is this one thing to say, like, we're going to play with pace.
We're going to, you know, I mean, we're going to shoot the three point shot.
We're going to encourage as many threes as we can.
But to like actually coach it and get your guys
to be doing a consistency, to go against their instinct,
to dribble, dribble, dribble, shoot a long two is different.
You were going to mention the Knicks.
What about them?
I miss last year's Knicks.
I miss Hartenstein. I miss last year's Knicks. I miss Hartenstein.
I miss Dante.
They were just more fun to watch last year.
And I know they'll figure it out.
The Towns has been incredible.
Brunson's not been as good.
They're five at the end of games, which it seems like it's a little better offensively,
but it's definitely worse defensively. The that's when the rim protection isn't there
in the same way.
And there's a bunch of it, now that we have a sample size,
some of the advanced stats are like, huh,
this isn't really the profile of a tips team.
So what are you seeing?
Yeah, I mean, yeah, the Carl Townes rim protection,
we knew that was going to be a problem
coming into the season.
And we just talked about this on group chat with Rob and Justin.
Mikhail Bridges is getting smoked on defense. He's just not been a deterrent at all. And again,
OGN and OV.
You can't mention this to the Knicks fans.
Well, listen.
I mentioned last week, I was like, what was the point of trading five first for this guy if he's going to shoot 13 times a game?
But the other side has been interesting too.
I think that I think the scoring is going to come.
I think that he's going to learn what spots to pick, when to attack, when to just let
it fire.
Give them the ball more and just have run through more stuff on them.
I guess the Towns Brunson pick and roll is so good.
They can't afford to because their defense is so bad.
Yeah. Like if you're getting cooked, you kind of have to look at your best player
and say, yo, we need points right now.
If they were stopping people, then they would be a lot more patient about
who gets to do what on offense.
But when like you're constantly having to put out fires because you just gave up,
you know, 10 points in a row.
Like at a certain point it is,
you got to give it to Brunson.
What I'm encouraged by is that
the towns in Brunson pick and roll
is clearly difficult to deal with.
It's a nightmare.
They're putting defenses in a bind
because Brunson, unlike a lot of these star point guards,
can be the center on a switch.
Like Halliburton's been having trouble with it this year.
Brunson, as soon as you put a big man on him, he's killing that guy.
And if you, God forbid, you drop on freaking Carl Townes, like that's a nightmare.
And so I like that that's already started to figure itself out.
Wait, can we say one thing about Townes?
Sure.
He's been kind of a winner of the season because he's been, I think,
better offensively than anybody could have ever expected on the Knicks. And then Minnesota
feels worse. Minnesota is definitely worse. And it's like, oh, we missed Towns. Like,
I feel like this has been a win all the way around for Towns. And then instead of the
Knicks fans being mad at Towns for whatever, they can just now be mad at Bridges. So he wins in every way.
Look, I think the Bridges thing is everybody's in a patient wait and see moment.
It's been 11 games.
I'm not crazy worried about it.
I do wonder if you stopped playing defense for like, you're just on bad teams for two
years.
Like I wonder if it almost you have to get back in the hang of what it's like to be on
a really good team.
It's not just that, though.
It's like when guys start conceiving themselves as 20 point per game scores
and all of a sudden it's like, no, you're back to being that role guy that you were in Phoenix.
It's like, no, I was a ball in Brooklyn.
I was like, can I show you a YouTube clip of my game winners?
He got to get back to what he was doing in Phoenix for sure.
If you truth serum them,
I wonder what they would say
about the whole Yanis piece of this.
I know you saw the,
and I know you saw the graphic last night
where they like showed all of the picks
that the nigg sent out to bring bridges in.
A couple of them were like good pics.
Yeah, decent.
Like we didn't know that this whatever that Bucs pick which is so complicated where New Orleans gets it if it's one through four
and now Brooklyn gets it if it's everything else, but I don't I think the Bucs are a 500 or worse team.
If anything happens to Giannis for a month that team's gonna be a bottom five team in the league.
They're pulling these games out of their assholes.
Well, it's like they've won three games.
Well, but the one yesterday...
Yeah, that was a miracle.
Guy gets fouled with the second left.
He just has to go one and two and the game's over and he bricks both of them.
And then Giannis wins an OT.
Yeah, I just... I like that they're like...
The next thing, if we're going to be rational about it,
the Towns thing has been a huge win.
All the other stuff is explainable.
Robinson is going to come back.
There's probably some sort of buyout guy that can get in February to replace some of the DeFranciso
because it feels like there's a lot on McBride.
And then the Brunson, I know he hasn't been quite as good and efficient as last year,
but I also feel like it's, teams have been watching this now for a couple of years.
It's like Jalen Hurts on the Eagles where it's like, oh, I know what this is.
How to play a new way.
Like this is a completely reconstructed offense like that.
He hasn't been completely comfortable yet.
I don't think it's the biggest deal.
Um, I just think it's scary that like missing Mitchell Robinson and precious
Atua is this damaging to your
team.
Like that's a that's a bad sign so far.
But again, I think it's pretty early.
And right now the 20th in defensive efficiency.
Just stunning.
Get that down to 13.
But that's the bigger question to me is, is this the right TIBS team?
Is this a TIBS team the way it's currently constructed or is
this a maybe somebody else with a car keys? I mean I think if Tibbs is worth what he
thinks he is then he needs he needs to also adjust players. He needs to adjust coaches.
Should adjust. Can I do a PSA for the other 29 teams? When the Knicks have the
ball with like three seconds or less and they need to score they're gonna throw it to Jalen Brunson in the corner.
He's gonna pretend to go left and then he's gonna do a follow-way jump shot.
I'm just telling you that's what's gonna happen. You can pretend to to bite on the going left but then
dive forward when he's doing the turnaround. That's his move. It works every time.
Do these guys have tape? It's tough in the moment, Bill.
It's like Tatum.
Here's what Tatum's going to do. He's going to dribble through his leg seven times.
And then when there's two seconds left, he's going to do a step back 26 footer.
We know all these moves.
LeBron, he has this specific spot on the court.
He's going to shoot a three from there.
He's going to make you think he's going to the basket high-ack.
The actor in step back.
There's some guys that you just, you know what they're going to do.
And then there's other guys like Durant where I'm like, I have no idea what he's
going to do.
For sure.
He's going to go right.
He's going to pull up.
He's going to do the turnaround move.
Brunson's, yeah.
He's going to try to create space with a little shoulder face.
He's got to be so hard to guard because I think they know what he's doing and he's
still get, he's, he does that pound.
He's got a little Luca in him in terms of the stop and start.
Like he's not the fastest, but he can get accelerated faster than everybody else
and decelerate faster than everybody else.
Yeah.
It's not, it's not easy from the couch, Bill.
That's what they would tell you.
You know, it's, I think the secret hardest move is the Luca two on one.
When he slows down
and then almost makes it like a low post move.
Yeah.
Where he's got momentum, but he stops
and the guy's like also playing the pass
and then Luca just like, I'm just gonna bounce off you.
Four times against the Warriors the other night.
I don't even know what that move is,
but I feel like he's perfected it.
And I'm like, that's Trey Mon Green,
one of the best defensive players in my life
and he can't even stop it.
It is weird. Are you scared of the best defensive players in my life, and he can't even stop it. It is weird.
Are you scared of the Cavs?
The Cavs, man, listen, I know like every single smart NBA person, you guys included on the
over-unders had the Cavs over Kenny Atkinson winning coach of the year.
And I was like, yeah, they're going to play better.
They're going to be way healthier this year.
But like, I don't know.
They kind of took off last year when their guys weren't playing.
Yeah.
But Kenny Atkinson has been smart about deploying the lineups, letting
Mowgli play center at times, being the lone big, he's gotten these guys to
understand like the importance of spacing and they're like, Niang, for
instance, this guy is completely unconscious.
Like he shoots with the green light
of a fucking Kevin Durant at certain points.
And Donovan Mitchell, God bless him.
He's getting off of the ball a lot faster
than he has at any other time in his career.
That's always been my biggest criticism of him
is that he doesn't see the floor as well
as a lot of the guys that I think
are a little bit better than him.
But this year, he's seeing it.
They're believing it.
I think there's something to everybody feeling like they have ownership of the offense, which
Atkinson, you know, he spent some time in Golden State with Steve Kerr.
We make fun of Steve Kerr a lot of times with his hippie dippy, like the ball finds energy
shit.
But Atkinson has brought it.
Hippie dippy.
That's what it feels like to me.
It feels like he's on a commune
when he's saying some of that stuff.
But Atkinson has brought that ethos to Cleveland
and they've been way better for it.
They've smoked the teams.
And he brought Ty Jerome.
Cause he knew Ty Jerome was good from like two years ago.
Revelation.
It's like when football, when the guy,
like when the guy Dan Quinn went from Dallas to Washington,
he took like a couple couple Dallas guys with him.
It's like, I know this guy's pretty good.
I'll grab this guy too.
I'm 100% in on the Cavs being real.
I don't think there's any fluky shit at all.
It totally may, from the first, second, third game,
you can see it.
And there, I talked about it before,
but there's like a charitableness now
with Mitchell and Garland.
I don't think Mitchell cares if he doesn't have the ball in the last minute anymore.
I felt like he did last year.
I think Garland did a little bit too.
I just feel like they've sorted out something.
And then, you know, they can defend.
They can switch.
They have a bench.
As Celtic fan, they're on my radar because I thought we would have the one seed
unless somebody got hurt. Now it's like this seems, I think it's going to be tough to
steal the one seed from them. You start out 14-0, 15-0. Just think about it logically.
For the rest of the way, you just have to go like
45 and, you know, 18 or whatever. It's, it's not the same pace to get to 60.
Yeah.
And the Souths are going to have trouble getting to 60.
And if you look at the Eastern Conference standings right now, a lot of teams are
going to have trouble getting to 50.
Um, it's crazy how these things flip because, you know,
there was all this smoke around Donovan Mitchell for years
that he was not going to, he was not long for Cleveland.
Yeah.
He ends up doing his extension.
Shams puts out that report that Garland's representation
might see betrayed.
Oh yeah, I forgot about that.
Yeah.
If Mitchell's still on the team because he feels
like he's not being optimized.
They bring in Kenny Atkinson and shit, man.
Everything sort of flips and everybody has this level of buy-in.
It's just so crazy how things can turn on a dime in this league.
Kenny calls him and he's like, I'm going to optimize your shit.
And, hey, just bear with me, buddy.
They've bought in and they look so much better for it.
And like I said before, it did feel like a your turn, my turn situation.
It did.
With Mitchell and Garland where I'm just like, man, these guys have complimentary
games, they both can shoot, both can drive it.
They should be elevating what each other do.
And this is the first time in that partnership that I actually feel like it's
happening and it's been exciting to watch.
I'm good at very few things.
I can spot toupees.
I can make meatballs.
That's like me with BBLs.
I can spot the year turn my turn.
Yeah.
I'm just a toon. I've been watching basketball my whole life.
You know it when you see it.
You know when it's not perfect.
Look at what Tatum and Brown got rid of that dynamic where they now elevate what each other do.
Where back in the days we were like, oh, these guys are too duplicative.
Like we might have to move on, blah, blah, blah.
Now these guys actually play off of each other.
I always believe.
That is a freaking lie.
I always believed in my guys.
No, I think you can tell the difference between your turn, my turn, competitive versus elevation.
And now I feel like those guys elevate each other, which is a boring topic for a podcast
or a YouTube video
or an NBA content segment, but it's what's happening.
That team's playing super unselfish, and then you watch a team like Philly when Embiid comes
back and how they have to navigate.
How do you take care of Embiid?
How does Paul George make sure he's involved up?
Oh wait, there's Maxie too.
Oh, there's Jared McCain, who might be the rookie of the year if he could just get play in minutes.
How do you navigate all this stuff?
He's got to beat out Eric Gordon.
And what happens with right. And what happens with zombie Nick Nurse? Does he ever turn
back into Toronto Nick Nurse or is he just zombie Nick Nurse now?
I mean, Nick Nurse did a great job last year. I think the Sixers definitely overperformed
most of our expectations.
Maybe the playoffs wasn't ideal.
Playoffs are pretty rough.
They overperformed most of our expectations.
And I think what we can be bullish about is-
You're nice, you're in the Nick Nurse Kool-Aid drinking camp.
I'm just saying last year they were good.
Wasn't on my research.
Last year they were good.
The thing is, Embiid, I know a lot of people killed him for saying, I don't care about
MVP, it's about the playoffs, it's about winning.
I like that for a team that's trying to incorporate Paul George that has Maxey who's ascendant.
I like the idea that he's not going to feel the onus to dominate every possession like
he traditionally has for the team, basically
his entire career.
And so that's a good sign.
I think they're going to be straight.
You know what I mean?
When Embiid is beating dudes up in the locker room for writing bad columns and you know
who got all the guys.
Well here's the thing.
Yabba Selle and McCain are guys who could play in a playoff series.
So you know when they're operating on the fringes and trying to, you're picking out of the lottery,
you're trying to grab, take flyers on dudes,
and usually it doesn't work out.
And it seems like both of those guys,
I feel like, could be in a top seven on a good team.
So, but the NBA is gonna be the big thing.
Let's take a break and then I got a couple more things
for you.
Van Lathen is here, we going to talk about the NBA Cup,
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No, they're going to lock up.
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Alright, we're back.
Vin Lathan has joined us.
What's up?
This is the fun of having an office
when people are in there.
We're just like, fuck it.
Let's turn the mics on and go.
You know how I feel about this.
Vin, you've been preaching this forever.
Yeah, you know how I feel about this.
Bring people to the office and shit goes down.
I'm just saying, everybody's about to get mad.
I'm glad I'm not going to slack because it's going to go crazy. But I think that first
of all look it's a new time. Toxicity is best. So I feel okay saying that I think everybody
should have to come into the office at least 20 hours a week. Like that's three days or
two days depending on how many hours. 20 hours, three days or two days, depending on when.
Take your 20 hours, it's not that bad.
20 hours, three days, however you want to do it.
You can still have your Thursday and Friday off.
But I'm just not from the era where it was offensive
to act on the work.
You didn't show up to work.
I'm like, I'm not going to work?
Oh, I laugh at you.
I don't care how it comes off.
I laugh at you.
I'm not from the era where it was like,
one time back in my day, I was on a movie set.
I actually brought air mattress to the set.
Oh my God.
Because I wanted to be there, work,
then sleep there so I could be there early again.
That's the toxicity I was brought up in.
Yeah, yeah.
Honestly, I'm more in the middle of you
and some of our Gen Zers who just see any stress
related issue related to work as unaccepted.
Van loves live bodies to just talk.
I just like to talk to people all day long.
He just wants to hop in conversations.
Hey, how you doing?
By the way, were you just talking about Melrose Place?
I have some buds.
Boom, here I come.
By the way, Gen Z, turns out not as woke as we thought.
So we can leave it. We can stop pretending now. Everybody come to work. It's a new day.
I'm bringing a text thread combo that Van and I were having to Oz about the NBA.
About the phenomenon of a league that is having its games watch less but feels like it matters more and
What's going on and we all have theories on this is the NBA in better worse or the same shape? I
think it's a little bit worse than the peak of our recent peak of 2016 where Steph was like a
global phenomenon and like
where Steph was like a global phenomenon and like him and LeBron playing that epic seven game finals. Like, I don't think we're anywhere close to that level of health in terms of the league,
but they do have the most famous players in American sports.
Again, the teams don't like people don't watch games as much as they might even watch the Jacksonville.
So you take Mahomes, Kelsey, Lamar and you would take 40 NBA guys.
It's not like Lamar who I love, that's my guy.
Is he as famous as Jalen Brown?
I don't think so.
Lamar, no no no he's not. Playing football and basketball famous is like a ridiculous losing game for the football players. Yeah, they're just not.
Like they're recognizable people.
So like they can get people to pay attention to them,
whether that be for who they're dating
or what clothes they're wearing, whatever,
they gotta find a way to monetize that attention.
But I think once you're in a space
where like you create celebrities,
like even recently, like a jam or rant,
that's a good place to be. And they just to get more creative about getting people to love the game
Um, it's interesting talking about the celebrity because I would argue that awesome reasons more famous in LA than Justin Herbert is
Okay
This is what I would say those players still exist in the league and they are the most famous guys
But they'll they're less consequential in the league than they used to be. Sure. So they're not... It means something at the top of your league to have your most famous players also be your most important players.
And I would argue that Steph, LeBron, KD, all of that older guard, they're not really serious.
Although you could argue this year with how the Warriors are playing.
Serious threats for the NBA throne. Oh, don't tell the Laker fans that. So they're seven and four.
JJ's got this team
going. Why do you do this? We beat Scottie Pippen Jr. last night.
Why do you do this? We beat Huff.
Bill, the vindictiveness towards the Lakers. No, it's the Laker fans. Hold on, We got it and because we're on this because I have to talk to you about this
Carl towns over LeBron in the top 100. I didn't do that. I had LeBron. I had LeBron 15
Yeah, I'd towns 25
Over over LeBron now I towns 25 don't 25. Don't you think you're too influential a voice
to have this specific bias?
Well, don't you think like you every single shot.
I just want to see the Lakers play Oklahoma City
and some of the other good teams.
They played Cleveland and lost by 100.
Nobody's beating Cleveland.
The crowd was chanting for Brawny
with six minutes left in the Cleveland game.
Nobody's beating Cleveland right now.
Wait, can we go back to, you're talking about those three guys.
This is what I said to Van on the text thread.
These unicorn situations they had with six guys, Bird, Magic, Michael Jordan, then Kobe,
then LeBron, then Curry.
Sure.
I don't know if we can replicate that with any under 30 American guy in that way.
Even the Kobe thing, if Kobe goes to Charlotte
instead of the Lakers, what happens to him?
The problem is that you're describing
40 years of the NBA basically.
Like when you're talking about those guys,
you're basically going from 1979 all the way up.
I'm talking about our last six guys
that broke through in a real way.
I know, but think about the sample size of those guys.
That means that every single generation,
they've been able to find a guy or two like that.
And if this is the first generation why they can't,
it's probably the scope of society and culture has changed
and not the actual NBA.
And so when you look at social media and the other things,
for example, you have Zion, you have Ja, right?
Like, Ja is an incredibly likable player
with an incredible fan-friendly style.
30 years ago, him with the blik-blik-blik-blikki,
like, posting it also, it's not a thing.
Right, he would post it on the blikki. It's different, so maybe making stars is harder now
because of the screw.
I think it's harder because of the stars and the culture
around our stars themselves.
Like, I was asking somebody who's now a huge F1 fan
about the Netflix show.
I was like, do they get into anything on that show?
Because I've never watched it.
She was like, yeah.
Like, they'll be like, that team is cheating.
This owner's a, this person's an alcoholic, blah, blah, blah.
Like, they've made the characters compelling as opposed to that damn NBA show on Netflix,
where Jason Tatum is like, I love my mom, I love who?
And I love my son.
These are the things we learned about Jason Tatum,
who's one of the 10, eight, seven best players in the league.
Like, they don't make themselves interesting.
People don't care.
Well, they're afraid to be interesting,
because it makes them less marketable.
I'll just bring up something, and we're potting.
Have to talk about it.
If we talked about Kobe and what Kobe was able to become,
if Twitter's around when Kobe has a situation that he has in Colorado, he doesn't about it. If we talked about Kobe and what Kobe was able to become, if Twitter's around when Kobe has a situation
that he has in Colorado, he doesn't survive it.
I mean, his legacy, I'm telling you, it's-
I think he survives it in LA.
He might survive it in LA, but in terms of things like that,
and as murky or whatever you wanna say that they are,
things like that used to happen to athletes.
There used to be narratives about athletes.
You talk about room for error, for lack of a better phrase.
Things used to happen and they just wouldn't stick.
Like we are retroactively punishing Karl Malone.
You know, things used to happen and they didn't stick.
So making stars was that, right,
there was less margin for error.
You could do it easier.
Now, you got a gun, you got an adult star going at you
for three weeks, harassing you on Twitter.
All of that stuff, it sticks to you in a little way,
and it changes people's perception.
And we have to ask if all of that's like,
it can make you a star,
but it can also take you off your perch.
I wonder how much of that stuff actually sticks to people
off of the internet, and I get it more and more
of our society, our internet-based creatures,
but I do wonder how often and how long that stuff sticks.
To me, what I'm talking about is Drey Drey Monk goes on his podcast and he's
like, yo, Clay freaking ghosted Steph. Steph was going to say some nice words about him before the
comeback game. And after the lack of, or the conversation that he had with Clay, called PR
and said, I'm not doing it anymore. You telling me you put that in that Netflix show, that kind of stuff.
But do you think that people won't be interested in the story of the NBA?
I think they would.
But that but that but being interested in the story of the NBA is starting to become
because you don't have to watch the games to this is a Tommy.
I don't want to watch that.
No, you don't have you don't have to watch the games to be involved in that drama.
You could follow that drama.
You can follow that drama without watching the NBA.
This is what Derek Thompson, he came on my pod, I don't know how many months ago, and
he was talking about how he's this new breed of NBA fan that loves the NBA but doesn't
watch it that much, but loves everything around it and loves following it.
My son's like that too.
My son wasn't watching Bucks Pistons last night,
but he knows what happened with Giannis,
that Giannis had 59 points.
And you know, when I was a kid,
I felt like anytime the NBA was on,
I was like, oh my God, the NBA's on the USA Network
on Monday night, I'm watching, I can see the bullets.
I never get to see the bullets.
Or like, sports center in the 90s, you'd watch, you'd come home,
come home from drinking.
It felt special.
1.30 in the morning, it's like, oh, Craig Kilburn and Rich Eisen,
they're going to tell me what happened in the NBA.
I have no idea what happened.
Oh, Karl Malone had a 30 and 25.
Oh my God.
And it just felt special.
Now it's so available, not just the games, but like, the players.
I do wonder if that's a piece of it too.
Like all these guys have podcasts.
There's no mystery with any of them.
And then if you feel like you have mystery,
you have something like the Netflix show
where it's like, not buying this version of you.
I know there's more.
It's crap.
You know what I mean?
Is there anything, just to ask,
is there anything about specifically the quality of the play that lends itself to any of this? I've heard this
I think basketball is better now. I really do I've been there the whole ride
I'm like amazed by the skills
I watched the Warriors and Mavs
That game was awesome
130 and at no point was that like this is an interesting
Competitive compelling like I don't know.
I think people could fall in love with it how it is.
I think the TV product is a problem.
And I know this is like not a populous thing to say.
I think they should ban LeapPass
or just like make it as extremely expensive as possible.
Like cost per hand.
Or just you only get to pay for three teams.
You don't get all 30. Or something like that.
I'm not understanding.
Make the product less accessible.
Make it less more special.
Make it more scarce.
You know what I mean?
Because I think there's got to be a way to make this thing feel less accessible.
There's a game every single night.
And like, what do you really miss?
If you missed the Heat game last night, what did you miss?
You didn't miss anything.
Yeah, but sometimes.
Well, the schedule is too long too.
It's the other piece. And they're never going to change that. But But doesn't if you do that with league pass, I've actually never heard that
It's really interesting
But if you do that with league pass doesn't that put the game back in sort of a regional space?
Because right now if yeah, like Charlotte will never I want to watch
LaMelo. Yeah, and Charlotte's never gonna be on national if I don't have league pass. And then that makes the game more regional.
You know, LaMelo is a Vans type of player.
Oh yeah, for sure.
He puts up huge stats, fun highlights,
and then the wins and losses don't matter.
That's Vans wheelhouse.
Bill, Bill full of shit.
I like to watch players that are fun to watch.
Yeah, fun to watch over winning is Vans Vatra.
Is this like a Westbrook thing?
This is-
Yeah, he loves Westbrook.
No, no, no I don't. But this is what I was saying. Bill wants to thrust this onto me, boss, but because of his
Jokic thing. He's still holding on to that. Oh, it's not just the Jokic thing. What else? What other winning player don't I like?
I'm just saying, I'm saying, I'm agreeing that you love watching LaMelo. I love watching LaMelo. He's fun to watch and he's unpredictable.
Career-winning percentage, 440.
He is unpredictable and he's playing better this year.
No, he is playing better.
So what I'm saying is...
Shout out to LaMelo.
You get into...
And he's playing better.
I've enjoyed watching him.
We get into a situation where the regionality of it and the sport starts to feel like baseball a little bit.
Sure.
But, so I don't know.
I think that's an interesting idea and I've never heard it before.
But we didn't talk about... One of the things we were talking about in the text thread is feel like baseball a little bit. Sure. But so I don't know. I think that's an interesting idea. And I've never heard it before.
But we didn't talk about one of the things we were talking about in the text thread is
if your best players in your league are all foreign.
That's a problem.
What is the history of people connecting with foreign players in America?
Because like, I loved Hakeem.
Hakeem was amazing to see in person.
He was fucking awesome.
He was a badass.
Like he would, there's videos you'll see on Twitter that just be like,
Hakeem punches a guy.
He was like a badass.
There's multiple videos of him just turning around and popping some of that.
He was the Dreymon of his day.
He was amazing. He was an amazing defensive player.
He was the best low post player of his generation.
And people are like, ah, Hakeem's boring.
It's like, I don't...
Yanis, Luka, Embiid, Wemby now.
I think Yannis' appeal has been mismanaged
by the league, by Nike, like.
Oh, what's this case?
This is good.
I just think like this whole like, oh, the poor,
humble immigrant who was selling, you know, yogurts
in Greece for a dollar a pop.
Like, I just think that was just
mismanaged. They should have leaned into, like, the insane competitor, freakish athlete, whatever guy.
Like, the way he's been packaged to America as this, like, cutesy immigrant story, I think,
was done a disservice to, like, his actual star appeal. And Giannis is somebody who's actually embracing Americana
in a way that YoKich and Luca just don't.
They're just not interested in being American celebrities.
They're just like, yo, I want to hoop, win, go home,
be a great teammate, move on with my life.
But Giannis is interested in being a cultural figure.
And I think that could have worked.
I just think that they did it for him.
I think Yannis is pretty compelling.
But I think the freaking foreign stuff does hurt the league.
If Luca was from Indiana, bro, he would be outta here.
Well, I'm trying to think, what would be the best
town or city for Luca to be in if his name was like Luke, Luke Doncher.
Either Indiana or Kentucky.
Oregon, Kentucky, all of those places.
Kentucky would be good.
Where white hoopers thrive.
We need-
Be like, oh, did you see what Luke did last night?
Yeah, seriously.
And he would have been a phenomenon in the state of Kentucky.
He would have went to UK.
He would have been this- Basically, what I Kentucky. He would have went to UK. He would have been this.
Basically, I have a Drake Bang, North Carolina superstar Drake Bang.
Yeah. Or or Cooper flag your new obsession.
All these obsessions have something in common.
Oh, so look, this is the thing.
This is a boxing problem. We're big boxing fans.
Yeah. So boxing has insanely good stars right now.
I'm talking about good in their skill.
Terrence Crawford, Oleksandr Usyk,
Tyson Fury, even though he lost to Usyk,
Inua, like all of these different guys, right?
People care for reasons that really,
as fucked up as this is,
they care for reasons other than how good you are. Like stories make people care. Like UFC's like this too. Skills make champions.
Stories make stars. And you have to be able to relate to a story. Now some of
these foreign guys, they have stories that are just as interesting as anyone.
Really more interesting. I left war torn whatever like if you ever like
Yo, could just stories really right Francis and Gano
Yes, like all of that stuff. The problem is isn't it's accessible to audiences even in boxing when guys
When they don't speak English or when they can't really get over to American audiences
Sometimes you have problems making stars with them
The only difference there is that for somebody like a Canelo Alvarez his
Country backs him such a big to such a degree that you can still make a worldwide star
Yeah, what I wonder about the NBA you gonna have to you gonna have to have some dude from LA
You're gonna have to have some guy from Ohio Cooper flag as much as we joke about it
Chet Holmgren as much as we joke. Those guys
are important to the league. It could be. 100%. AJ could be the guy. 100%. This is the first. If
AJ lands on the right team, AJ DeBansa, a year from now, he might be the guy. Because I feel
like it has to be a wing. This is, Wemby has two problems. Centers have never resonated. Yeah.
With people like, we talked about that with the Nike contract.
It's like nobody has ever been like, oh I got, like when I was a kid in the late 70s
we weren't like, oh I gotta get Kareem's shoe.
Or like, oh I gotta get you in your stock.
Could you imagine?
Yeah, yeah.
Shaq was a huge stock.
But Shaq from a shoe standpoint.
No, it wasn't the thing.
And also like I was there for Shaq.
Shaq was pretty polarizing for the 90s.
How do you mean?
He's just like, people were like,
eh, like why are you making so many movies?
Why aren't you in shape all the time?
Why'd you leave Orlando after four years?
We're talking video game, movie, rap games.
No, I get it.
But people felt in the moment and they weren't right,
but people felt in the moment like,
why does he care about all this other stuff?
Why isn't he just trying to win titles?
And then he had the MVP season and it flipped.
And I've said this before, I think another thing,
if we were doing the foreign players thing right,
we would be doing it like boxing
with the xenophobic nationalistic sort of spin
that we do with every fight.
Like I do remember when Floyd came out
to fight Oscar De La Hoya in
the sombrero. Like I'm not saying we should do that in the NBA. I'm not saying we should
do that in the NBA. But think about Floyd though. But think about Floyd though. Floyd
just went total heel. Yes. To like total heel.
And today's NBA players aren't comfortable with that.
So do we need heels in the NBA?
Maybe that's a piece of it.
You definitely need heels in the NBA.
That's Jimmy Butler.
It's sitting there for him right now.
But he's also 35 now.
Draymond tried to do it and it just made people mad.
He's a great heel.
He is the best heel.
He's a good heel.
He's at this point now with the,
because I really like watching the Warriors this year where like he had his arm flailed and almost hit this guy and okay, see whatever the team the other day.
It's like no, no Draymond. No, don't ruin this. No. Please.
It's the best.
But do you think Wemby could be the biggest star in the week as a 7 foot five French guy. I've never seen a player that the NBA fans
that I know, the diehard NBA fans,
had more invested in him being good.
Like if you, there have been guys
that have come into the league that it's like,
hey, I like them, hey, I don't like them.
If you talk, Jacoby is fucking great.
Because if you talk shit on Wimby,
you get 50 different people telling
you that Wimby is basketball Jesus and there's nothing to it. I think if Wimby lives up to
the hype, he's a global superstar. People just love Victor Lupien.
Yeah, they love him. I made the same mistake because I don't know if you guys remember
the Adrian report where it was like people were saying he's the best prospect of any
sport ever. So I had this bit on the show where I was like people are saying he's the best prospect of any sport
ever. So I had this bid on the show where I was like, oh, he's the best prospect since
Satchel Paige and Ty Cobb. Like I would come up with some old whatever every time. And
like, cause you know, I was like kind of, kind of a little bit doubting it at first.
And my goodness, man, like the people, like whatever Twitter is just what it is, but in
person people be like, I heard you said about Wemby you're crazy you're wrong blah blah blah.
Like you're right about the Wemby investment.
So like I do think he has major potential.
I think Wemby's broken through honestly in terms of culture.
Like even when Britney Spears got beat up by his bodyguards
at summer league for trying to talk to him that one time.
God damn what?
I'm just saying you don't, Britney Spears wanted his picture.
I know, but you throwing so much gas on that.
Britney Spears got beat up by Spice.
That's how she represented it on the internet anyway.
I wasn't there, I didn't see it.
But yeah, I think Wemby's definitely up there.
One thing that he has, and I think Edwards has too,
and I've seen this happen over the years,
is when we really want it to happen for somebody.
Because you really felt this when Jordan retired
and there was that whole, it was like
we were auditioning the next star.
It was like, would you, would you like to have
Grant Hill, maybe?
How about T, this T-Mac character.
T-Mac, Vince Carter.
And then Kobe, I feel like starting the 2000 finals,
kind of grabbed it.
And then Vince all of a sudden, that one year
when he went ahead to head against Iverson,
was like, oh, could he grab it?
Iverson, even though I think he had his base,
but I still feel like it would have been really hard
in 2001 for him to become the guy.
But the thing with Iverson, Iverson is a good example.
He was like a belated after the fact
people appreciated him more. Iverson is a good example. He was like a belated after the fact people appreciated him more.
Iverson is a good example of what we're talking about.
In a time when the NBA was looking for the next Jordan,
Iverson was able to carve out his own superstar aura
by being completely antithetical to Michael Jordan.
He was able to be, and now what we have,
I'm sorry, bro, these dudes ain't got no personality, bro.
He's 100% true.
Like, I mean, they are.
Edwards does.
Edwards has personality.
Edwards does, Edwards is our big hope.
He's great, but the older guys do.
Steph has personality, LeBron has personality.
The way we judge people and the conversations
that we have around people and the way that we excoriate
them for every little, the food getting a little bland.
And if you want to be a superstar, you gotta be spicy.
There's gotta be some spice to it.
Yeah, and I remember David Stern's dress code thing
that everybody said was like mega racist
and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, right?
And you know, it was just the idea that like a lot of these guys from the streets or
whatever we're called inner city, whatever euphemism we want to use, were less polished,
less media trained. Right. Our league is now way more suburban. These kids come from way more
affluent backgrounds. They're way more media trained, focus group, consultant,
freaking to death.
And as Van says, it's not as fun.
It's just not like, I love Devin Booker.
I love watching him move.
He's famous enough to date Kendall freaking Jenner.
Nobody knows anything about him.
Nothing.
Nobody knows a single thing.
A lot of people don't even know what this guy's voice sounds like.
But then the flip side of everybody is like,
Hey KD, can you stop being so out there?
Can you get offline?
Keep doing it.
I like that.
Keep doing it.
I like it too.
We need more of that.
I think KD is interesting and I think the fact that he has embraced the facts.
Yes.
I like it.
Me too.
I think he's one of the most authentic superstars we've had in any sport this century.
100%.
Like almost to his own detriment a lot of the time.
Like could you imagine Donovan Mitchell?
He's another one of these guys who's like perfect.
Like great suburban upbringing, says the right thing, beautifully eloquent when he speaks,
like he's so polished.
Could you imagine him ever saying anything as interesting
as KD does on a freaking daily basis?
No, and I don't think that's a good thing.
Now, while we say this, once again,
I want to come back to the climate, right?
Because we, part of this is because if you're James Harden,
and you like to go out to the strip club a little bit,
that becomes your whole identity.
You know what I mean?
So what I'm saying-
He's earned that identity.
He's earned it.
Once again, I like him.
But all I'm saying is look, the NBA is not boring.
It's so much fun to watch.
All these storylines are so much fun.
But loosen up a little bit.
Have fun, play basketball, but everyone.
Not just the players, the fans too.
I don't need 12 saints that never did anything wrong
or never said anything wrong playing basketball.
Your favorite players from back in the day,
I'm sorry, these guys were intensely flawed.
The GOAT is a legendary asshole.
One of the other guys is a legendary whore.
And one of the other guys,
if you said the wrong thing to him,
he'll throw your ass through a play glass window.
So these are people that play basketball.
The people part makes the superstar.
And so I think that turning them into robots
only makes the league a little bit more.
Larry Bird, bar fight during the 1985 playoffs, hurt his hand.
Yeah.
Shooting went south.
One of the reasons we lost the title.
I was like, what if that happened now?
Yeah, that would be a problem.
It's like, oh yeah, Anthony Edwards got in a bar fight,
and now Minnesota's out of the playoffs.
And what I would say too is like, Adam, God bless him for all
of his shortcomings, in my opinion.
I can't wait for this take.
He went out and got these guys the bag.
Is 10 years?
Oh, I thought you were going another direction.
No, he went out and did that.
And you did a great job.
Bravo, Adam.
Now your next freaking job is to get people
to care more about what's happening on the floor
in your freaking league.
So it's not.
And I get it.
He was putting all his energy.
It's not the NBA Cup courts?
No, it's not.
Oh, there's a green one. The NBA Cup courts. No it's not. Oh there's a green one.
I think Adam has amazing business sense.
He's smart enough to get the Emirates involved in name and rights.
He is incredible at getting the corporate partners to buy into what they're doing.
Now he's got to be better at the basketball part and getting people to care more.
The number one thing to me that tells me that that's not gonna happen is the schedule,
which I've talked about a million times in this podcast.
The fact that it's 82 games and not 70, or 72 even,
like that they don't care,
they have too much of their product.
They love the inventory.
They love the inventory, and it's too much.
It's way too much.
It's just night after night,
there's eight games, nine games, 10 games, none of them.
You never know what's special, what's not special.
It's been 82 forever.
At what point did it become that you would have thought,
what was the point to where you felt like
they needed to scale back?
Late 2000s.
Okay.
Yeah.
I also think, I talked about this Tuesday.
I think that sports much harder to play
and it's a big reason why these guys are getting injured.
For me, I got religionally in 2014
when everybody was praising Popovich for not playing they were playing the heat
too that it was the Spurs and he set like three of the story everybody yeah
everybody ruined the Saturday game yes and everybody was like the NBA media
consensus like pop is such a genius and blah blah blah and I gotta give it to
our guy I mean he was like it's cool when the Spurs do it but when everybody's
doing it yeah it's not gonna be good and our partners pay us for these games this
is how we make the bulk of the thing is they just paid them more money for the
games yeah like they they know they got blessed with the media environment with
these live rights are so, so impactful.
But like, that's when I got religion on it.
When everybody was like, yo, Pop is a genius for this.
And I'm just like, well, if teams need to load manage
their stars and that means we need less games.
Like that's just the obvious.
Think how good the 72 would be right now
with like Philly's situation.
Where it's like, holy shit,
they're two and nine in the 72 game season.
Like this is, this is dangerous now.
They can't fuck around.
They, you know, they could be like number 10 playing team.
They'll be fine.
They'll finish in the top three of the East.
I have never, I've asked so many people
and there's some people in the league
who've really pushed for it.
Like Steve Kerr is like a massive advocate for it.
And he's like written letters and all this stuff and there's no answer other than nah, we don't
want to give up the money. That's it. It's 100% money.
Mind you, these are the masters of the universe. This is what we're told. These are the smartest
business people in the history of planet Earth. And like you get this massive increase in
revenue with your new TV deal, you would
think that it's like, all right, with this windfall, we can make the product better.
It might like hurt us in the short run in terms of our inventory, but we're going to
find a way to make these games feel more interesting, special, and better monetize the decrease
in inventory.
But instead they're just like, no, we're gonna bash them over the head with 82
from now till eternity.
Well, I mean, they're probably,
I mean, the conversation now around the league
in terms of the quality of the games, the viewership,
might spawn something,
but there's been no reason to, right?
The league has been incredibly popular.
Yeah.
The NBA was like,
the NBA helped to normalize
the American society in the bubble after.
Like they should have won some kind of social award.
This is dumb, I've said this to you before, bruh.
I literally was driving around LA
like a zombie during the pandemic.
And then I heard on the radio, people were like,
I've heard that there are rumblings of the NBA
getting everybody back together in one city
and playing all the games.
And I was, hope, hope.
Hope brings eternal.
I was like, oh my God,
if I could just watch some NBA basketball.
You know what's crazy about that?
I was thinking about that the other day,
because it feels like it happened 130 years ago,
and it was four.
Three years ago, yeah. We were putting cardboard cutouts of
fans in the stands. Not only did we not have fans in the stands, we were pretending to
have fans in the stands like that Stallone Cobra thing behind Van Schelder there. And
it was like totally normal. That's how desperate we were for Bass let's take a break we had talked Mike Tyson all right Mike Tyson
against one of the Paul brothers which Paul brother is it Jake I say Logan
Jake I Bill what are we were right Billy man. Take everything personally. Jake, you're going to find out. I'm old. Don't take it any person.
No.
No.
Jake Paul.
Wes, are you old enough to remember early Tyson?
Or just the clips of early Tyson?
No.
Tyson, my first real memories of Mike outside of like OVHS
was when he came out of the first prison stint.
Like the Bruno and all of those guys.
Yeah.
What do you remember of early Tyson?
I remember the way things used to go back
in the olden days was whispers reality started.
That's how it was with Shaq.
My uncle wrote a letter from prison to my dad.
And it was like, yo, have you heard about this boy
from LSU, seven foot one, 290 pounds?
Have you seen him?
He should kill O'Neal.
Whispers, boom, and with Tyson,
it was this unbelievable wrecking machine.
Then you see him on HBO, reality, and then start him.
And so from, I guess he came out,
at no point in my young life do I not remember
Mike Tyson not being the baddest motherfucker around.
And when you watched him, it was obvious
you were watching something different.
That's my memory as well.
Well, although I was older, but it was
Sports Illustrated cover, HBO fights,
This Is Must Watch, saw literally every Tyson fight. Everyone cared the most about his fights versus really anything else in sports,
except maybe like the Super Bowl.
That's crazy.
And I don't know, the audience doesn't match up with that, but just...
No, no, no, they do.
No, it was a huge thing.
It was boxing, because remember now, boxing isn't an interesting place at this point.
Muhammad Ali is gone in 1980, but really he's gone.
And nobody liked Larry Holmes.
Before then, Larry Holmes comes in at the lower weights.
Sugar Ray Leonard is your baby.
The middle weights and the welter weights took over
for half the decade.
And then there's an unstoppable heavyweight buzzsaw,
and that becomes must-see television.
But it wasn't just the buzzsaw.
It was the way he talked.
It was how weird he was. wasn't just the buzz-off. It was the way he talked. It was how weird he was.
He was just the most compelling person.
He was dangerous.
His interviews after the fight,
he would just use crazy words
and had like this weird empathy for somebody
who he just sent their nose through their forehead.
I'm just, I'm telling you, that was the biggest part of it.
The biggest part of it was,
you didn't, you never knew which mic you were gonna get,
right?
No, I don't think he knew either.
Right, and so, and then mic becomes ubiquitous.
He's got the-
The punch out video game.
The punch out video game.
I remember that.
Well, the Spinks pay-per-view is what pushed her over the top.
When he knocked him out in 91 seconds, and everybody was like,
that was one of the early, hey, whose house are we going to?
Which is now a staple of how we watch sports.
Back then, it was like, who's getting the fight?
Are we all chipping in?
What are we doing for food?
And then my mom, I don't even think had brought down the nachos yet.
I had 12 people in the basement and we're all like, yeah, the fight's over, but
the food's still coming, right?
It was just done.
That was the only thing.
Spinks was terrified.
The only that I remember that fight specifically.
Remember the deer in the
headlights? Look at Spinks.
We had everybody over.
He and my
uncle, rest in peace my Uncle Ray.
My Uncle Ray is like, Spinks gonna make
it a fight. Spinks gonna make it a
fight. He from a boxing family.
Yeah. The whole nine, whatever,
whatever. He's gonna box him.
He's gonna box him. He's gonna move.
My hit Spinks Spinks goes down to one
knee. And my daddy like, uh-huh.
And then hit him with the second,
the punch that ended it was one of the single hardest punches
in the history of boxing.
And he's gone, it's over.
He's moving forward like it's like in Roadhouse,
just to like clear him out.
And we didn't really, that was the bit,
we didn't have very much else to do.
Right.
We all had to just sit around
and talk about how raw Mike Tyson was.
The thing with Mike was, he was involved in four,
I remember where I was when I watched it, sporting events,
which is like, I think he might have the record for me
because it was that Spinks fight.
It was getting knocked out by Douglas, which is still-
Holyfield, the ear.
Both Holyfield fights.
The first fight was incredible.
We had that at my house, we had that party,
still thought he was going to beat Holyfield.
So that's the Mike that's in my mind.
And then the ear was also insane.
It's like when he came out of prison
and he had that like sort of exhibition tour
where he fought the big doofy white dude.
Peter McNeely.
Yeah, Bruno in the UK.
Big Massachusetts moment.
Peter McNeely.
And like, you know, it was like this warm up
to like the real big fights against Holyfield and Lennox Lewis
And like I would say even back then the aura still existed and everybody around me assumed he was gonna kill these guys
Yeah, like everybody thought no, it's Mike like he had the fluke. He went to prison. He's back. He's down with the Holyfield
It was a cruiserweight who moved up to heavyweight. I lost to more by that time. It was more mythology though
yeah, we had we had and they knew it because He was the weight who moved up to heavyweight. He lost to more. By that time, it was more mythology though.
Yeah.
We had, and they knew it because they were picking opponents
very strategically for Mike.
Mike beat Bruce Selden for a championship.
Maybe Buster, no, he beat Bruno for a championship.
They actually paid like $4 million of step aside money
to Lennox Lewis at one point so they didn't have to fight him.
So at that point, it was a little bit more
It was smoke and mirrors. It was more mythology. The fights were awesome though. They were. Even the Galata fight.
Yes. The might that we knew was gone even before the Buster Douglas. The way he'd move side to side and the combos
like that guy that guy died in jail. Cuss and Tilly. And all of those other guys like leaving.
But he still had it.
You know, it was another amazing thing about his arc was living it in real time,
watching somebody like fly too close to the sun.
And as even the mistakes aren't even done yet.
And you just kind of knew her.
Like once you started dating Robin Givens, it was like, this isn't going to go well
for anybody.
Something that was always resonated with people about Mike
was the real fight of Mike Tyson's life
was never gonna be in the ring.
Because when you started learning about where he came from
and what he went through, you always were wondering,
it still feels like Mike Tyson won
because he won the biggest championship he could've won.
You were waiting for the,
Mike Tyson has experienced intense tragedy in his life.
You were waiting for the moment that it was over.
And he ended up like in a really bad,
life altering, life changing situation.
And he went through some of those.
But him fighting was was it was a
Happy ending to a degree whenever you saw him in the boxing ring because everybody sold you on just how much he had gone through
You mentioned certain things Mike flies into a rage you mentioned other things Mike breaks down and cries
And so of all the things that he's been through and they are not woke. all the things that he's been through, and they are not woke.
They are things that he's been through.
They are not.
He's a case study.
Because there's an extension of grace
that Mike has afforded even after the sexual assault
charges and convictions that people just have decided
collectively that we're going to extend Mike
some level of grace.
And I think it is some of that vulnerability that you're mentioning right now.
Because like, there's other people who would have gone through what he's gone through
and would have been completely written off by every single segment of society,
except some of the worst elements.
But like, Mike has managed to fight his way through that and be embraced.
We...
This is weird territory that we're treading into,
but I'll say it like this.
Oh boy.
He is brutally human.
He's brutally human.
Like, you watch him and you're like,
this is supposed to be the strongest guy in the world.
Right?
He knocks people out.
He bowls people over their heads.
But there's an interview where,
with him and a guy from Canada,
where Mike's out there to do his play,
and the guy brings up Mike's old case.
And he cannot control himself.
And you get the feeling of, man, I've been through that.
I put that behind me.
I'm trying to move on and be better.
And you're throwing this back in my face.
This guy is mentioning something
that Mike was convicted of.
He is not wrong in saying,
this is something from your past,
but you still look at him like he's an asshole.
You're like, yo man, why are you bringing that up?
You know what I'm saying?
You still look at him like that
because there's something compelling
about the amount of truths
that Mike Tyson has failed into.
And it'll always be that way.
He's one of the last ones that we're just like.
Yeah, I wonder if anybody else could ever have the type of redemption arc.
And you know, some people might say it's undeserved.
You know, some people might say like, you know, maybe human beings deserve to make mistakes
and live past it.
But yeah, I'm fascinated by that element of it.
We're like, everybody understands that Mike has lived
a traumatic life, Mike has mental health issues,
Mike has done some really fucked up things,
but yet Mike is still somebody people root for.
I think it's amazing, honestly.
There's one more thing that might factor into it,
is that he's,
I don't think people think this consciously.
He's been punished.
So he hasn't gotten away with anything per se.
There's a lot of things that he probably got away with.
But he even said that, he said, I didn't do this, but there's some other stuff.
So we're probably even.
Right.
So he went to jail.
He lost a child.
He lost all of his money.
He lost his mentor.
He lost his best friend.
Life has taken a lot from him.
Now he's gotten a lot, right?
And he's been able to come back from all of that.
But you've seen, part of it is,
and you don't wanna, you don't,
I'm trying to pick my words very delicately
because the thing that Mike Tyson went to jail for
is something that we have to root out of our community,
our society, and we have to make sure
that we're serious about talking about stuff like that.
But there's a part of it to where it feels like
it feels like
He's got a chunk of his ass taken out of it because of it. It feels like he's gone through some really terrible
immensely gut-wrenching horrible things. Yeah, um and
Look, if no one ever wants to watch or look at Mike Tyson, I get it.
I get why you would feel that way.
But like even my mother who is...
People love Mike, man.
Yeah, even my mother is just like, she still likes to see Mike Tyson doing well.
You know what I think it is?
Jalen and I interviewed him once when I was at Grantland.
We did a pod with him and it was like a thrill.
It was like really, it was so cool
to just shoot the shit with him.
And I might even said this to him on the pod,
but I always felt like he was one of the most
self-aware athletes that I ever followed.
He was somebody that you would have thought
was a complete disaster and he was,
but he was also completely painfully aware
of all his faults, all his mistakes,
all the issues he had,
and could talk about it.
Which I don't, I can't even think of anybody.
Iverson, I think, has a little bit of that too.
Where there's an interest, self introspection
that was always unusual about him.
Even as it was like, I'm talking Robin Given's era
all the way through.
He always kind of knew, I remember writing a column
about it once about
he kind of became the Tony Montana, say hello to the bad guy character because he kind of knew that was how society saw him.
Yeah.
He was like, yeah, say hello to me. I'm the bad guy.
It's like, one of these people think that I'm an animal, but so I'm gonna act like one.
So I'm gonna do it and I'm gonna sell this fight and I'm gonna intimidate this dude and I'm gonna you know talk about
Crazy shit
Crazy run was the craziest his Mike's crazy run is the craziest run
We've seen by any athlete by any athlete the only person comes close to, it was Kanye a couple years ago.
But like-
Maybe Charlie Sheen too.
Oh, that's, those are,
these are iconic crazy runs.
So in my column, I created the Tyson Zone,
which was when somebody acts so consistently crazy
that you'll just believe any story.
And Charlie Sheen entered that.
Kanye definitely.
Oh my God.
You know, there's certain people where you're like,
I'll believe any story now.
Mike's crazy run. And then it was like, not just crazy, but it was like odd, funny.
Like my back is broken spinal.
It's like odd.
I guess I'm just going to fade into Bolivian.
That's my favorite.
That was the best one.
We went to first year Jimmy's show.
We went to go, he was the guest host.
And we went to, he had like this pigeon coop in Harlem.
And I went with Uncle Frank.
I was like the writer.
And we spent, I don't know how long on the rooftop,
just watching Mike flew pigeons.
And he was like so sad.
And so like traumatized by, you know, his whole life.
But he could also talk about it.
And he really connected with Uncle Frank.
And it was this, this really cool, uh, like five minute video we got out of it.
But even that, it was like, why is he even letting us up here?
It was like, he wanted to win people over, even though he knew he was the bad guy.
For everybody out listening right now, I want you guys to, you're going to,
this is going to be hilarious when you think about this.
Think about how jumpy Bill was on the roof of the pigeon.
We're already enticing.
Oh, I loved it.
It was amazing.
It was such a cool experience.
Bill was like, Pookie, nice to meet you.
Like, think, he's like, Pookie.
No, the thing is, it was only him and like one other guy.
Like he, he didn't have the entourage anymore.
Like all these boxers.
He hit that point.
He hit that one in the Douglas fight. He had two people in this corner you think he wins tomorrow what
do you think I'm gonna look at the odds while you talk I don't know what the
thing he's 58 years old which is just like it was was asking could he just
like die if he got punched in the heart like how I think I think he's gonna be
okay in terms of physically I just yeah I just have Like how? I think he's gonna be okay. I think he's gonna be okay in terms of physically.
I just, yeah.
I just have found it hard to believe
he's gonna hit this guy enough times to win.
So from a boxing standpoint,
people like to hate on Jake.
They do.
I've seen Jake in the gym, like in the gym.
He's not bad.
Out at Phil's boxing.
He's certainly not bad in terms of the guys that he fights.
This isn't Screech from Saved by the Bell.
Fuck no.
This is a guy that actually has a right hand,
like a real right hand.
Like he can detonate you with a right hand, right?
And he's a big, strong, athletic guy
who's got a fair amount of rank experience now, right?
So he's not somebody to be fucked over and play with.
Any version of Mike Tyson pre-age 50 will work Jake Paul.
But it's not pre-age 50.
Your stamina goes.
Your punch resistance goes.
Jake's minus 205 on Fandle.
So Jake, I could, I don't know what's going to happen.
To be honest, I don't know.
That's the thing about Mike.
You don't know what's about to happen. don't know but that's what's about me like is this do you think people are gonna watch this fight or people gonna care
And I'm like absolutely one thousand first of all it's on Netflix, which is yeah single most important. Yeah channel we have now
Yeah, it's a Friday night people are gonna get together somebody's gonna get it
It's super easy to queue up Netflix at whoever's house or whatever bar people people are going to get together, somebody's going to get it. It's super easy to queue up Netflix at whoever's house or whatever bar.
People are going to care.
I actually think people are going to care way more than I think people realize.
Yeah, I'm watching it like I thought it wasn't going to happen.
I thought after it got canceled the first time that they would never come back to it.
The only thing that makes me think
that you could see a Tyson victory is that Mike seems
genuinely motivated.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like this young kid, he's just parachuting to my life's work, my sport, and thinks that
he could take me out.
I understand why anybody would be motivated by that, but yeah, the man is 60.
I just can't.
The man is 60. I just can't believe like I was
watching Mike Tyson fight in the mid 80s followed by something like erotic
thriller on HBO and it was like the greatest night. The greatest night ever.
Oh my god. The heart was pumping. Yeah. Oh the hitchhiker's on. And now 40 years later.
Bill was watching Emanuel in space.
I was like, oh, she's in space now.
See? See, everybody tries to act like it's only me. Walls knows what's up.
Oh my god. What? On the weekends? I never went to sleep before 2 a.m.
What's your big boxing fan? Jake Paul. Real boxer?
I think he's an elite celebrity boxer.
Yes, he's really great celebrity.
Yeah.
To me, it speaks to more the evolution of celebrity boxing, which was in the
nineties and two thousands where we would put like screech against.
I don't think he's in the top 100 of actual people in his weight class in
terms of, you know, especially not in the world,
or even in America for that sense.
But like to be that famous and to fight that credibly,
I think is an actual.
It's impressive.
Can I tell you guys a quick story from the gym with Jake?
Oh, story from the gym.
Story from the gym.
Sponsored by State Farm.
Sponsored by State Farm.
Like, philosophy boxing, Woodland Hills, Phil Polina.
Shout out to him.
There was a heavyweight in the gym.
Jake used to come in the gym.
Come in the gym with BJ and they would fight.
Jake's whole team.
Jake Roll, he got a whole team that comes in with him
and they do their whole thing
and they spar different guys.
Pros, normally they would spar people
out of weight class though.
So Jake, at that time he wasn't as big as he is now,
175, 180, the guys he would spar would be middle,
sometimes, sometimes even welter that he would spar with.
I mean they were bringing him along,
but he was taking it serious, he was in there all the time.
There was a heavyweight in there that was like,
just hated Jake Paul.
Just hated Jake Paul.
Like just did not want it, like I wanna spar Jake.
I wanna spar Jake.
I wanna fuck and fight Jake.
I wanna do all of this.
This is start of Creed V.
Hated Jake Paul, hated Jake Paul.
They got in the ring and he was like,
this was a guy I've been bossing for a long time.
They got in the ring and they sparred.
Jake fucked this guy up.
Wow.
When I'm telling you this is like,
this is what I consider to be like a real,
we haven't seen him since.
Jake fucked a, I'm like, you guys,
I know that Van has a reputation of embellishing stories.
This is, when I'm telling you, hurt him bad.
And I was like, oh,
cause I did not think that was going
to go the way that it did.
This was a guy that was his same size,
had been boxing for a long time.
There's literally pictures of him with gloves on
when he's like 13, 14 years old.
Jake beat the shit out of him.
And I'm like, he's going to win some fights.
Waz, are you familiar with Bacoli?
No, who's that?
Oh shit, this is Bill's guy. He's your guy too. He is, but Bill is like obsessed with Mark Bacoli? No, who's that? Oh shit, this is Bill's guy.
He's your guy too.
He is, but Bill is like obsessed with Mark McCauley.
He's a gigantic guy from the continent.
He's from...
Okay, which part?
He's Congolese.
Oh, the Congo, the continent continent.
Okay, I'll just give you the one-sentence sell job.
Congolese Ernie Shavers meets 1974 George Foreman.
Wow.
That's Pacoli.
So is this like more credible
than the Deontay Wilder early clips?
Oh no, no, no, no.
There's nothing like this guy.
Deontay Wilder is, I don't want to take anything from Wilder.
Nobody wants to fight this guy.
Like he can't, he literally cannot get fights.
Yeah, I don't want to take anything from Wilder.
Wilder is a bronze medalist in the Olympics who became heavyweight champion with one of the most devastating right hands of all time.
But like Martin Bacoli is like a, there's a big young heavyweight, Jared Anderson.
Great young fighter. Just got demolished.
The Saudis threw him a ton of money. They're like, will you fight Bacoli?
He said no. And they're like, here's a lot of money.
And he's like, all right.
And he got absolutely, like, his career has been altered.
It was one of those, you ever seen, it's not quite big.
It was like the Frazier Foreman.
I was just about to say.
That's what the finals was going to bring him up.
Like, Frazier Foreman to where you're at.
Paul Frazier just keeps falling over.
Halfway into the fight, you're like, ooh.
Like, halfway into the first round, you're like, ah.
And Jared Anderson. He's just doing it. Give him credit. Dude, you're like, ah. And Jared Anderson, give him credit.
Like one of these guys.
He was landing shots.
That's what he was doing the whole fight.
But it's not just that, like, McCauley is skilled.
Yeah, no, but it's, ultimately, when somebody can just,
and you just see the other guy moving backwards,
and it's like, he's getting hit by a tornado.
And then it became, and so now, after that,
he can't get a fight. Yeah
He's my number one. I just want to see him fight. I'd watch him fight every two months
They made they just jump on the bandwagon was I made a funny one it but it wasn't with
Yeah, yeah
All right
Mike Tyson, so we're all watching. Yep. How are you watching? Yeah. All right. Oh
News for everyone Kyle and I going to frolic
When is that allegedly I don't know sounds great what day is that?
When do we say we're doing it? I said the book the weekend Saturday vibes are great But will they have the games on yeah three TVs not the best stuff. You can go now that LSU seasons over
Yeah, three TVs, not the best stuff. You can go now that LSU season's over.
You can start going to bars on Saturday.
I'll just let y'all know, y'all fuck with me with LSU.
I'm not like a stable person when it comes to LSU.
So y'all, you know how everybody likes to get razzed about their TV and all that stuff like that?
I don't like that shit.
But our season is kind of fucked.
We still, outside hope though. We run the table.
Now you have Jaden Daniels.
You just transfer all your love to Jaden Daniels
for his Washington Playoff run.
And we got, there's a whole NIL battle happening right now.
We're about to play probably 10 million for a quarterback.
Price on the Road.
I don't like this at all.
I saw Cam Ward bought his entire offensive line
diamond chains.
Like he had like a platter out and as a gift
for his amazing season. got them diamond chains.
You should have bought them for the defense.
Maybe they play better.
This is a better podcast for another time but if you told me what is college sports in 10 years I'm prepared for 100 scenarios.
You literally tell me anything. You tell me it's like a 10 college league and everyone else is D3.
And I believe that.
Yeah.
It's a strange direction it's headed in for sure.
I can't say it's great.
Waz, great to see you.
Same.
Van, great to see you.
Thanks for coming on.
Alright, that's it for the podcast.
Thanks to Cochrane and Steve Sturruti for producing as always.
Thanks to Van Lathan and Big Waz, Waznane Lambre.
Stay tuned for part two.
It's coming later tonight.
I'll see you there. I don't have a few years with him.
On the wayside, on the brunette side, never wrong.
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