The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 1: I'm Just Glad Mark Cuban Loves Talking (feat. Pablo Torre)
Episode Date: October 14, 2025"Have you never scored a game?" "No, because I'm an adult who has sex." It's Internet-Brained Truth-Poster vs. Internet-Brained Truth-Poster in the latest episode of Harvard Huckster Finds Out. We ...also head back to Days of Yore for an audio description of a wild baseball play. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is the Dan Levitar show with the Stucats podcast.
Pablo.
No, you can't do that.
You can't do that if he doesn't have big news.
You can't do that if he's just doing first take with Mark Cuban.
You can't.
No, that only happens with big news.
Apparently, you weren't listening an hour and 15 minutes in because I heard some pretty good stuff there.
There was not news there.
They still donating?
even after he hates the guy?
All right, we'll find out in a second.
I'm finally reading,
I'm finally reading some criticism of Pablo Torre.
This is from Jay Marietti's substack.
Any investigation of Steve Ballmer
should center on one dude, Pablo Torre.
And then the subheadline is, once again,
Tori is in a mess as he asks us to find out on his podcast.
The NBA vetted and approved Balmer's deal with aspiration,
which suggests he says,
wrong in suggesting the owner was crooked. What is Jay Marriotti's problem with you?
So, hello. Chris, thanks for listening to some of the episodes. I really appreciate that
sincerely. Is Jay Marriotti? I haven't read this yet. Is Jay Marriotti still blaming me for the
cancellation of Around the Horn? Yes. Okay, so is there that? Is my question number one?
Number two, for anyone who's wondering, who is Jay Marriotti? That's a fair question. You should
Google J. Marriotti sometime and maybe just throwing the word stock just as a matter of just
general guidance. You might want to see what he had been up to at some point. The third thing,
I love, so the Cuban thing is I hate when Dan cut to the core of me because yes, me and
Mark Cuban did some first take allegedly about my journalism. Really, it was arguing. I love it though
because I want people to give me arguments
so I can try and defend the work
because I frankly want to make sure
I'm not missing anything.
And I've been asking everybody,
what are your criticisms?
What are your arguments?
And the Clippers, we've seen what those are.
They don't have any.
Media Day did not have those leaks.
Typically, you get some good leaks
from like media sources of the team.
We haven't really had those either.
and Jay Marriotti is here now.
And so I just feel like, I don't know, maybe the story's over now.
Maybe when you get to the Marriotti line, the story's actually over.
Because I don't think he knows what he's talking about.
He's blaming you.
Tori has done this on my former program around the horn.
The second ESPN show he allowed to fade off the air.
And it's time his editors at the athletic tell him he's leading the majors in strikeouts.
So a couple of cleanups there.
I did not allow High Noon to get canceled.
I was canceled.
I feel like it's okay for a cancellation to be involuntary.
The second ESPN show he allowed to fade off the air.
I want to apologize to Tony Realli for doing the thing in Titanic that Jack and Rose did.
I let him go.
I took the door we were floating on and I let him go.
I allowed around the horn to go away.
What was the other thing he saying?
Why is he blaming you?
I don't know. When you come on, when you come on, what do you mean you don't know?
When you come on and say, is he blaming me again for around the horn?
And I didn't know he had been blaming you until reading this.
Why is he blaming you for around the horn?
I'm just glad he said it.
I might be the reason why.
I've never talked to Jay.
I assume Jay is thrilled.
One of my favorite things about Jay Marriotti's Twitter account, which I have just looked up here, is that he inserts manually a photo of himself, like posing for everyone.
And I don't even care to make fun of him for the engagement on his tweets because that's its own.
I hate when people do that.
To me, it's just sad.
Ignore the numbers.
Just look at the photos.
He picked a good one for this one.
He's like him in front of like a duck pond.
I like that.
No, you say that that's the good part of the bio.
The best part of the bio to me is that he writes in ESPN ratings king.
Yes, yes, that's right.
You didn't know that, Dan?
I did not know that.
Did you know that, by the way, did you know?
This is also news to the editors at The Athletic that they're my editors because they, of course, are not.
They are, if anything, horrified to hear that.
God bless our partners, but they are not editing these things.
He just doesn't know.
I mean, look, if I can, do we want to talk about how Jay Marriotti was the ratings
at ESPN or do we not talk about the thing that ESPN.com reported, which Jay Marriotti has
misinterpreted into something that I am kind of like baffled by, in a real way, but I can go either
direction on it.
Now, let's just talk about what you did this morning with Mark Cuban, because he has entrenched
himself on this in a way that leaves him, I think, largely alone.
Where are his supporters, first of all, before you tell us what it is that you and Mark
Cuban did on the latest episode of Pablo
Tori finds out. Where are Mark
Cuban supporters? Yeah, who else? Who else
is publicly against you
when you keep throwing facts at people
that are vigorously reported? I
thought all of these people scattered. I
thought there were a lot of people that confused
me at the beginning and it suggested that people just
hate the media because a whole lot of people sided
with Balmer at the beginning and I
was really confused by it. But since
then, you've done so much reporting
that I've seen no one but Mark Cuban
still standing. And now Jay Mary
Yeah, I was going to say, I think it's Clippers PR, it's Mark Cuban, and Jay Marriotti, to give you a sense of what's going on here.
And in fairness, a lot of, like, people with Kawhi Leonard or James Hardin avatars on Twitter.
It's generally that, that's the dojo that I walk into ready to fight every day.
And it's a bummer at this point.
But I, in all sincerity, like, the reason I wanted to have Cuban on the show was because I think it's really important, especially now for
journalists who do this sort of work to defend their work to be able to defend their work it's just
key to how you make sure that people are hearing about your work but then it's also i think only fair
to the people that you're investigating or reporting on and so in this case like mark you've been
coming into the studio into our dojo as he called it a dungeon which is fair that's windowless
and small but you know full of uh yeah journalism and in this case uh two people yelling at
each other. I'm so grateful he did that because we got to have what I would say is the most
generously proportioned conversation about a complicated topic in which he got to say everything
and anything he wanted. And so that is what I wanted to make sure people heard is that this is
the best that people got. And so it was. What did he say that you found interesting? What did he say
that was different from what it is that he said before um i look i asked him i think the fundamental
question in all of this which i will ask everybody and i ask truly um NBA clippers balmer um
everybody why was this deal never announced and mark cuban provided a theory i had not heard before
which is simply that uh they had just announced a red sox deal at the end of march and they didn't
want to step on that deal. And then I guess they never got around to announcing the Kauai
Leonard deal. They made plenty of other announcements, Pablo, but they just kept omitting Kauai.
For some reason, it's hard for me to just objectively, of course, describe what he's arguing
because I argued against it in the episode so lengthfully. But it's just fucking insane.
I'm sorry, it's just insane.
You signed Leo DiCaprio, Repetani Jr. Mike, you signed Drake, and you're like, look who we got.
You spend more than four times all those A-listers combined on Kauai, and you never announce it.
And then you forget, apparently.
You forget to announce it is basically what happens.
Business changes, and it's just like you had months.
You had months, and you never did it.
What's in it for Mark to just refuse to give an inch here?
I mean, we know how difficult it is in these trying times for any man to admit,
and they are wrong publicly.
But why does he simply refuse to make,
we're not talking about grand logic leaps here.
Like, he is asking for you to acknowledge something
that doesn't make any sense when you present him the evidence,
but he just holds firm there, refusing to give an inch.
What's at play here?
He keeps trying to lead the audience on saying,
listen, this is good for the Mavs.
I could just turn around and say, no, it's not good for the Mavs
because there are a lot of people out there on the Internet theorizing
that allegedly this is happening all over the league,
and you don't want people poking around.
This is what it makes me wonder.
The initial yawn on this from people is like,
oh, I hope nobody comes snooping around here
because there are all sorts of suspicious things
that rich people do to compete when you try to curtail their richness.
I'm asking Pablo to do something that Mark apparently refuses to do,
which is connect the dots here.
Explain to me why Mark Cuban is so entrenched in his position.
Should I do this, though? I should...
Time to throw away all journalistic credibility
and get reckless.
Here is something we like to call
reckless speculation.
You're good.
This is not journalism.
This is not mock raking.
This is Pablo being asked for his opinion.
So I think Mark Hube is genuinely
an internet-brained true poster.
And I say that as an internet-brained, true poster myself.
I think he just is super, super online.
He loves it.
I mean, look, that's the generous interpretation,
which is he just loves to argue about.
this. And even when I pointed out that he had written 17,000 plus words or whatever it was on Twitter about this, he then comes back and says a lot of that was chat GPT. So I'm like, all right. So, okay, I mean, whatever. Mileage varies on how much work he's putting into the Twitter thing, but nonetheless, he's super into it. The other part, which I raise in the episode, which I find very interesting, is more in the, I would like Mark to connect these dots for me, which is that,
Something that he never told me that I, and I hate to step on sort of like the finale of the episode.
But something that I establish is that I did not realize that Clippers co-owner Dennis Wong, who was Steve Ballmer's college classmate, his best friend has been described to me, the guy who put in money into aspiration, despite all these disclosures, having never put money in before in December of 2022, that guy who's been talked about ad nauseum.
I didn't realize that Dennis Wong lives in Dallas now.
And in the episode, we basically play a series of things, clips that Mark Cuban is in,
in which they are done at these institutions, the Dallas Museum of Art, for instance,
the George W. Bush Presidential Center, both in Dallas.
We reference the fact that he owns this pickleball team, the Dallas Flash.
We do these sort of references, because at the end, what I end up asking him is whether he knows that Dennis Wong lives in
Dallas, and whether he knows that Dennis Wong is also heavily involved with all of those
organizations I just name-checked for you in the last minute.
Dallas Museum of Art. He's on the board. George W. Bush Executive Center leadership thing.
He's on the advisory council. He is an owner. Dennis Wong is of a major league pickleball
team that plays Mark's team, as well as the fact that they're on the board of governors together,
have been for a half dozen years until Mark sold his majority stake in the team.
So I asked him that, and Mark said,
He laughed. He laughed at all of it.
And so, look, you could take that as he's genuinely ignorant of the other NBA owner,
who's not a Mab's owner, who's in his city that is involved with these same organizations.
Or you could see something else.
I am merely Dan asking a question.
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Don Lebertard
Pablo leads all of podcasting
In reading while smiling
If you listen to ESPN Daily
He sounds like he's having
The Time of his life
Stugats
Coming up next
I'm gonna tell you
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Sometimes I just say savanna bananas.
This is the Dan Levitar show with the Stugats.
Did you have a Stugat.
timeline in your head as to like when there may be discipline in this.
And then I guess like another question is, is there like a smoking gun that's still out
there that you're trying to find?
Because as someone who's not as invested, obviously, as you, it feels like the longer this
goes, the less likely there will be consequences for all of this.
So that is actually something that came up in this ESPN.com article that Jay Marriotti
turned into some, whatever the opposite of a smoking gun is, you guys can workshop that.
What is the opposite of a smoking gun?
I don't know.
Cool pistol.
I don't know.
Cool.
No, that is just another gun.
A rock?
Right.
It's a freezing bulletproof vest.
The freezing bulletproof vest that Mark Cuban saw in that dot-com article, or sorry, that
Jay Marriotti saw on that dot-com article, is something that I think Mark Cuban is also rooting
for, which is that this investigation, in that article, it was speculated for the first
time I had seen might not be done until after the 2026 NBA playoffs. And so you're right,
Billy. Like the whole thing here, the whole game, which I keep on trying to say, why is it weird
that Adam Silver said that he had never heard of aspiration before? And then after I tweeted out
the documentation for the $300 million contract, he then says to front office sports, oh, I misspoke
in a way that is completely, completely incoherent as an excuse when you watch back the initial
video. There was no wiggle room there for miss speaking, by the way. So then, when this ESPN.com article
comes out, the one thing that it establishes is that the NBA had, in fact, vetted the $300 million
deal, not the Kauai Lander $28 million deal, but the larger Clippers thing. And my only real
takeaway from just that bit of news, which I kind of already reported because I found the documentation,
but nonetheless, let's go with it. The only bit of news there is that, oh, the NBA did in fact expressly
approve this. So why did Adam say that he had never heard of it? Maybe again, he genuinely
was ignorant of it, or maybe connecting dots here potentially, there was some other motive.
And if the motive that everybody in the league is telling me is that they don't want to punish this
to the degree that you're reporting is suggesting, then there are lots of just, yes,
freezing bulletproof vests and smoke screens and whatever else to just get in the way of
of actual punishment.
So is there a smoking gun that I am searching for?
There are about a dozen that are out there.
You know, I just don't, I just not ready to report those.
It just kind of feels like, yeah, from the outside,
if they wanted this to be punished,
they could have done so already,
and they're just slow playing this.
And if the investigation is not going to start
until after the season's even complete,
the hope is, I guess, that, you know,
the public forgets about it or just doesn't care as much,
and then they can just kind of sweep it under the rug.
Well, so the investigation is underway, but the completion of it is what the article said
may not be done until after the postseason is conveniently done.
The other big part, which is, and Adam said this, by the way, NBC, they had a big announcement
about the NBA deal.
Adam was asked about this.
He said that there is, quote, no contemplation that the All-Star game would be moved because
the All-Star game is, of course, at the Intuit Dome this coming February.
And so there's no contemplation that they're going to move it.
And so look, there's, you don't have to be Columbo to see why the NBA wouldn't want to derail the biggest party of the year, as well as the richest owner in the league, as well as the commissioner of the league.
But what I'm simply telling you is that that's how towering the implications of the story are.
All of those things are ostensibly on the table, that's the NBA in their fake justice system says actually none of it's even.
on the table. Put it on the poll, please, at Lebitard show. Is a young person required to come up with
a more modern detective reference than Colombo? The reason that I say that is because, and this is
charming about my parents, the last three Saturdays, they have texted me, are you watching Colombo?
Because evidently there's some sort of marathon on Saturday nights. Do we not have a more modern
detective than Colombo that we can be referencing there because I don't know, you know,
I'd go Sherlock Holmes, that's obviously not younger. What are the modern detectives that everyone
understands here should be modern detective three? And also, Pablo, do you consider yourself a
muckraker? I'm not sure I know the definition even formally of muckraker. Billy, can you find me
the definition of muckraker, please? Do you consider yourself, Pablo? Would that be a term of
endearment? I think I'm a mark raker, I guess. I am, I'm a muck and a mark raker. Um,
muck raker is a compliment. What? What? I thought that was pretty good. I thought that's
pretty good. Just changing, you know, two letters. Um, I think that muck raker is a compliment. I think
that, look, I think it started with Upton Sinclair. I think when he was investigating like the meat
factories, uh, of whatever, like days of your. Um, fact, that track check that from you as well,
please, where Muckricker started.
Upton Sinclair and Days of Yore, which is the more highfalutin of the sounds than Upton Sinclair
and Days of Yore.
I'm referencing Uptonsinclair's the jungle, I believe.
You know, there's that.
Yeah, man, I rake some muck.
What of it?
What is the definition, Billy?
It's someone who searches out and publicly exposes real or apparent misconduct of a prominent
individual or business.
There you go.
I mean, he's a muck wrecker.
He is referring to the jungle from 1906.
Upton Sinclair, Days of Your.
Is Benoit Blanc, a good modern detective?
Hey, you know what?
Knives out, I would watch, Knives Out is sort of franchise where I will watch
a zillion sequels to that.
I'm all in.
Daniel Craig's character in that?
Okay.
So can we play the stat of the day music here?
Because I've got an NFL stat of the day that do we have an NFL
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Dan, it turns out you may have been right about the historically bad dolphins defense.
According to at Lord Rebes on Twitter, the dolphins have allowed opponents to score on a league high 60% of their possessions this season that is the highest rate for a team through six weeks of a season in the 2000s.
That is a good NFL stat.
I have a good Pablo Tori finds out stat, which is that today's episode of Pablo Tori finds out is one minute long.
than the 2021 Bob Odenkirk action film, Nobody.
Because Pablo takes a minute to get going.
And now you got Mark Cuban there.
And they're just arguing the entire time.
And he's asking us, as he just did, to listen.
Monk?
How about Monk?
I was going to say Monk.
Monk is such a good one.
I watched all the Monk episodes recently, Pablo.
I also, there was a Monk movie.
I don't know if you saw it very sad.
Whoa, wait, wait, there's a Monk.
Wait, Tony Shalum, is he?
He's still with us.
He's got a new show about bread.
Yeah, travel show on CNN.
He's got a bread show?
Yeah, travels and has bread.
Yeah.
I'm in.
Why is it sad, though?
Why was the Monk movie sad?
I mean, do you want me to spoil anything for you?
He's depressed.
I mean, obviously, we know he lost his wife a long time ago.
Now his, you know, spoiler alert, possible ex-wife's daughter
that she had at the end of the last season that we found out about,
she's moved on and she's doing bigger and better things.
He's no longer detecting, if you will,
so he's dealing with some bad thoughts.
He sees some windows he might want to jump out of.
It's a whole, like, depressing theme throughout the entire episode.
But they bring them back for one final case.
Also, another good detective, Hercules Poirot.
I think that Pablo might have the best of the references
when he's saying Colombo.
We don't have a bed.
None of those detects.
Those are all better references.
They're more modern references.
Ever heard of death on the Nile?
They're more modern references,
but do you think that they are more associated with detective re than Columbo and Sherlock Holmes,
which are the established standards in this realm?
I mean, monk is the standard now for, I think, an entire generation.
Let's put it on the poll at Lebitard show,
Most Famous Detective, and put the four or five of them up there that you want to put up there in the interim.
Let's play a clip from Pablo Torre finds out,
and this is just a snippet of, again, an episode longer than the,
the 2021 action vehicle of Bob Odenkirk. Nobody. They argued for 90 minutes and in it that point
you're making, Mike, about Jalen Brunson, about Dirk Novitsky, about what other examples might
there be that Pablo can sniff around. This comes up between them and they continue, I assume,
to argue. So the question is, and this is truly like not my reporting. So, but the conspiracy out
there, Reddit, our buddy Bill Simmons.
When Dirk had that documentary and Cuban's company bought it.
Is this documentary?
Uh-huh.
So the theory here is that Magnolia Pictures...
Uh-huh.
My company, they own half of them.
That's right.
Circumated the cap by, you know, overpaying to distribute a documentary about Dirk.
How he spent, like, Iron Man level money on the Dirk Dock.
There's $48 million for your diet.
Like, who knows what he spent, but...
How much you think we paid?
Well, what we did was we checked with the producers of the film.
And to your credit, they poured cold water on the whole...
whole conspiracy. The head of the production company told us that your company did a $100,000
deal for U.S. distribution rights. For how many years? 10. So yeah. I'm just look. I'm not here to
like say gotcha. I'm just here like legitimately say I find evidence. You know what? And I thank you.
I thank you for just dispelling all the nonsense. I call the producers. And I, and I, and so just to
confirm, did the Maverick circumvent the salary cap with Dirk Nevitzky in 2014? No.
Very good. Do you think the Nix may have circumvented the cap and taking Jalen Brunson from
your Mavericks? I don't know.
A different answer.
Yeah, I don't know.
I just think there was a lot of play there.
Yeah.
Do you think the Knicks should be worried
about an upcoming episode of Mark Cuban finds out?
You know, that's behind me.
You know, more power to J.B., more power to everything.
Was I happy that they only got dinged for a second round pick?
No.
No, it should have been far worse, but is what it is.
What do you make, Pablo, of the no and then the I don't know?
I'm just glad Mark Cuban loves talking.
genuinely like what other part owner of an NBA team is just going to sit there and just
riff on stuff and even if you believe the riffs or don't all I want is people go on the
record saying here is what I am telling you happened and then I can continue to report it
so we tried to do some reporting on the dirk stuff and to his credit the production team said
they were paid nothing close to what was alleged so that's useful data the Brunson thing
You know, I think Mark is more animated about that than me, it sounds like.
Pablo, the one thing I couldn't understand from Cuban on his side of things here is it seems like he's incapable of making any sort of logical conclusions or even considering like the humanity side of this.
Steve Balmer, a rich guy, can make a miscalculation for that matter, considering sources, right?
Like every time you bring up the seven sources who might confirm something, he just sort of dismisses that as, well, they're just people who have their own thing.
Why do you think it is that Cuban is having such a hard time sort of processing just the human elements behind this story?
I found it frustrating, too.
I think there's most generously, it's just a lot to keep up with.
Maybe it's just hard to keep track of all of the sources and the documents.
Less generously, I think it's because it's wildly inconvenient when you're saying, this is how I would have done it.
And seven people, and then over time, nine people are saying, this is how it happened.
And so, look, the whole point of journalism, not to be, you know, on a high horse is that, like, it's not good enough to hypothesize.
You need to talk to people, primary sources, who in this case were interviewed by the federal government, who over time are telling you with increasing clarity, here are done.
documents, fact check them, here are facts, check them, go to the clippers, see what they
push back on, no one corrects anything, the documents turn out to be true, the guys that they
pointed to in terms of the actual fraud of the business, get arrested and plead guilty to
wire fraud. Like, it's just funny that a lot of what is being reverse engineered is from like
the documentation around the Department of Justice's own investigation. Key people in that
investigation key sources are my sources and without saying more because i need to protect their
identity i just look forward to the day when those sources may in fact feel comfortable enough
to speak on the record with their names and their faces and their voices because for the time
being the reason they're not has to do with the fact that we are not talking about just like
in truth like fun random sports debate we're talking about one of the richest men 10 richest
men in the world being at the center of their accusations. So that's why they're not doing it,
plus the fact that there's an ongoing series of federal probes. Like, anyway, that's what I think.
I also believe, though, that if you don't believe the sources, that's okay, believe the documents.
And apparently mileage varies on that, too.
Put it on the poll, please, at Lebitard Show. Will you listen to a podcast that promises, quote,
an ongoing series of federal probes, end quote.
Pablo Tori finds out is the podcast.
It is excellent, and he continues to chase this story
because, as Jay Marriotti says,
I tell him to chase people.
Thank you for chasing people.
Pablo, continue to chase people.
Thank you for being my boss, and thank you for the money.
And we have another investigation,
a different investigation coming Thursday,
that I think is going to make people mad.
Is it Jay Marietti dies his hair?
because I have concluded mine.
See you later, Pablo.
Thank you.
And Ibrose.
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Cue the music.
Like NCIS, Tony, and Ziva.
We'd like to make up our own rules.
Tulsa King.
We want to take out the competition.
The substance.
This balance is not working.
And the naked gun.
That was awesome.
Now that's a mountain of entertainment.
Paramount Wolf.
Don Lebertard.
We didn't get to your guys as against this spread.
You're right. You're right. You're right.
I don't have it against this.
Because I wasn't prepared for this segment.
You need an Ian in your life.
You have actively played defense against me today in a way that has rarely been this undercutting.
Stugats.
Defense wins championships, baby.
That's show business.
This is the Dan Lebatar show with the Stugats.
We will get to Tony here in a segment.
We are not going to do that here now because there's a limited amount of time here.
and I wanted to talk about a couple of things from yesterday.
Not the two plays that I wanted to talk about from the football game
because that Bijon Robinson run doesn't make any physical sense
that he would be able to break that last tackle while staying in bounds.
His lower body must be stronger than anyone's in the leagues
because that didn't make physical physics sense to me
that he did not go out of bounds given that there was a defender with an angle on him
and the sideline there.
And also that Drake London play at the end of the first half was just magic.
It was just great.
But before I get to either of those plays from last night's action, I do want to talk about the baseball.
And I want to talk about the baseball, not Blake Snell division, even though Blake Snell,
what he's been doing over the last six starts is something I have not seen from a pitcher before.
Not Oral Hersheiser, not anybody over the last six starts.
It's a soft spot, yeah, for former race.
I do have a soft spot for a former raise, but also Blake Snell is the best left-hander
I've seen since Clayton Kershaw, who's not named Scoobel.
So the thing that I wanted to talk about, though, from the Milwaukee game, and what it takes
to try to beat Blake's now is a double play that has never happened in baseball and is
funny, and I'm going to try and explain to the audio audience, because I heard Mike trying
to come in here today and just understand what the play was based on verbal description.
Because verbal description makes it hard to describe what is a play that has no precedent in the history of American baseball, which has more history than any sport we have.
I'm going to try and explain this in just audio.
Billy's going to delight in this play because he's already wanting to make a mess of my explanation.
No.
I see you, Billy.
I see you lean up.
He doesn't need to do anything to do that.
Billy, I've seen you lean in your chair.
I just, there's ways of describing it with words
and there's ways it's described on the scorecard
and it could have played out differently on a scorecard
to show how unique of a play it was.
The fact that it ends up being on the scorecard numerically
the way it's represented, I'm positive
that there have been multiple instances
where a game has been scored to double play
with those identical numbers.
Go ahead.
What do you mean?
Go ahead and explain what it is that your...
Numerically?
Yes.
Well, numerically, you would go the person who receives the ball to the person who throws the ball to the person who ends the play.
I haven't heard any numbers yet from you.
I've just heard.
You explain the play.
It would go probably 862 or 852, depending on who received it.
Who got it?
862 and then unassisted.
862, then the unassisted.
Now, had it gone 8625, I'm sure that that is not a common double play because of the fact that at the end of the play,
spoiler alert, the catcher decided to run down and touch the.
third base.
So it would make it seem like it could have just been a typical pop fly that was then
thrown cut off and then there was a second out made at home plate on a player tagging,
which is not uncommon.
You want to try and explain this to the audience with words instead of numbers?
Well, I'm just the words and that's why I'm saying.
The numbers don't do it justice.
The numbers never lie.
I don't know the numbers.
I know you're 6, 4.3.
That's all I know.
That's all I know.
Pitcher.
Two.
Catcher.
Three. First base. Stop me when you want me to stop. I want you to stop. It's like astrology. I'm just never going to take it in.
You don't ever do any scorekeeping. You've never done baseball scorekeeping? I'm a grown man who has sex.
You never got the shirt that says four plus six plus three equals two. So you don't know. If I ask you the shortstop, what is the shortstop numerically? You don't know the number?
I assume that's a six because there's a six four three. Yes. And so the shortstop's six, second baseman's the four.
and the three is the first base.
That's all I got.
Okay.
So the third baseman?
You want to try the third baseman?
Nope.
Okay.
It's a five.
There's one number in between.
So this is the play.
The bases are loaded and a shot is hit towards center field.
And you've heard me say that I can't believe the number of outfielders in baseball
who are regularly stealing home runs.
This is something that I'm watching happen in baseball more than I've ever seen it happen.
It happens every week.
It's a really weird thing.
to watch when it used to be an incredibly special play.
But Sam Frailich, Sal Freilich, excuse me, is headed toward the wall
and as he jumps up at the wall, which is very far from first, second, third base,
very far from home plate, it's going to be very hard if you're a base runner to see what's
happened here because he jumps up at the wall, the wall over the wall,
the ball hits his glove, and it looks, unless you're close to it.
it, it looks like he bobbles it and then catches it after it's hit his glove. But as he's out
there, it also hits the wall. So now it is no longer able to be caught because once it hits
the wall, it is now not capable of being an out in his glove. Correct. It's got to be an out
on one of the bases. But you can't see that from first, second, or third base. So what all these
runners have to do is go back to the bag and tag up and then go so they eliminate all the force
outs. But they don't know this. They just, they think that this person may have caught the ball on
the bobble. They're confused. And now the Dodger base runners in a zero zero game, in a game
where the Brewers know they're not scoring on Blake Snell. There will be no scoring on Blake Snell in
this game. They're doing everything they can to stop the Dodgers from scoring a run. And they somehow do it
because the base runners, professional base runners, very good.
The Dodgers are very good at the specifics of baseball.
They don't know what to do with.
I can't see what just happened out there.
And I didn't see and I don't see that this is a live ball because the ball is at the wall.
It looks like Freilik has caught the ball.
That's the part that's crazy is all of the runners stay still for just a moment.
And for him to not just keep the concentration to catch this ball,
but to keep the concentration to catch the ball off of the wall,
when you can later see the confusion on his own face about what's happened
because I'm not sure he even realized that the ball hit off of the wall when he caught it.
He's just trying to throw it in as fast as he can to the cutoff man,
a perfect throw, which then allows that cutoff man to make a perfect throw home to the catcher
to get what is not a play that needs to be tagged, but a forceout at home.
That's crazy.
That is this close.
A force out at home when that ball was at the wall doesn't make any sense.
No, you got to treat that as a sack fly if you're a base runner.
In all essence, you need to go back to the base, wait until at least a second attempt to catch that ball
so you can tag up and score.
So at the very least, it'll probably be a force play a second if you went out.
Roy was walking us through what he would have done differently this morning and how none of that should have happened.
Yeah, it's bad base running.
Agreed, but agreed.
That is not up for dispute, but I understand why the base running was bad, at least in part, because of the confusion at the wall.
But the idea that they then get another out at third base, that they got the outs at home and at third when the ball was going to be a home run.
Like, he kept, the first thing Freelick did is that would have been a home run if he had not had his glove above the wall.
Now he brings it back.
It hits the wall.
And what should have been a home run, how frustrated?
are you if you're this hitter.
What should have been a playoff home run
is forever a double play.
And by the way, a grounded
into a double play, technically.
Now, I have a bone to pick with that situation.
That is not a grounded into double play.
That's how it's scored.
You cannot score grounded into double play
on a ball that's hit 400 feet in the air.
It would be a fielder's choice, isn't it?
To a double play.
No, it's not a fielder's choice
because it ended up being a double play
no one got safe at first.
Right.
Put it on the point.
poll please at Lebitard show, is there any way possible to ground into a double play on a ball
you've hit 400 feet over the fence? Because there's not. And yet I just saw it. It happened.
No, there's not. No, there's not a way. No, there is not a way to ground into a double play
on a ball hit 400 feet over the fence. And ground into a double play in which the catcher
runs to third base about 20 seconds after the ball was hitting the end.
The next thing you're going to tell me is that Cam Ward threw a game-winning
interception for a touchdown.
Hey, audience, I got a special treat for you because I want to talk to you about Miller-Light,
but I want to talk to you about Miller-Light with my good friend, Rose.
Hey, Rose!
Hi, everybody!
When we hang out, and we hang out often, we're friends, I consider us friends.
Yeah, me too.
We're often toasting the good times, and what am I toasting with?
With Miller-Light!
That's right, Miller-Light.
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It just hits different when you got a Miller Light in your hand.
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How beautiful is that?
Is that you doing the sound of a can opening?
Is that your favorite sound?
Oh, no, it is a horsey.
A horsey?
All right, we'll stop doing that.
And here's a kicker.
Miller Light is just 96 calories, 3.2 carbs per 12 ounces.
The original light beer since 1975.
That's right.
And still hitting different five decades later.
You're so good at this, Rose.
I know.
So whatever your game day looks like, remember, Miller Time is always a good time.
Look at us.
We're a great tag team.
High five again.
Can you do that beer sound one more time?
And the horse sound one more time?
I regret asking you about that one, but the Miller Light sound is good.
Miller Light, great taste, 96 calories.
Go to Miller Lite.com slash Jan to find delivery options near you
or you can pick up some Miller Light pretty much anywhere they sell beer.
It's Miller.
Time.
Celebrate Responsive.
Blee.
Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Sin.
96 calories and 3.2 carbs per 12 ounce.
Aung-Sess.
No, it says.
Oh, cess.
