The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - Sex, Love, and One Sick Joke: A Special Sit-Down with Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe

Episode Date: February 13, 2024

America's stratospheric sports power couple joins our Valentine's Day episode — part unnecessary couples therapy, part post-retirement exit interview — with down-to-Earth perspective on marriage, ...kids, the evolution of acceptance, the limitations of love language, and how to get some in a long-distance relationship. Plus: Trump, kneeling, the tragic humor of a career-ending injury, the metronome ringing in an athlete's brain, and the joy of not working out. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Pablo Torre, finds out I am Pablo Torre, and today we're gonna find out what this sound is. Tell your sister's boyfriend, Macaulay Culkin to shut his damn mouth. It's like, top five. It's top. Right after this ad. You're listening to DraftKings Network. The year was 2019.
Starting point is 00:00:32 Megan was on a little bit of a run in the World Cup. I couldn't go because it was during the WNBA season, even though I was hurt, I couldn't go to the final. So I haven't seen Megan in, at that point, probably like a month and a half. And so I fly to France for the final. I get there like the day before the final. So I haven't seen Megan in at that point probably like a month and a half and so I show I fly to France for the final I get there like the day before the game so the night before the game is I'm seeing her for the first time in over maybe more than a month and a half yeah because they you know pre-camp in the whole camp so I go to dinner with some friends because they have meetings and video and film and things and so I can't see Megan until let's call it
Starting point is 00:01:05 eight o'clock that night. So I'm at dinner with friends and we all went around the table. There was like seven, eight of us. And the bet was like, is Sue gonna get some tonight? The Draft King Super Boost. Is Sue Bird gonna get some tonight?
Starting point is 00:01:21 It's like, are you guys gonna hook up tonight? And I was kind of like, I was a little torn. I was like, I don't know. Like the girlfriend in me was like, of course. The athlete in me was like, I don't know. You know, we just, we just did a hug it out. We just did a hug it out, you know, hug and kiss it out. Roll around.
Starting point is 00:01:40 But roll around a little. Yeah, on top of clothes, dry hump. Yeah. Something like that. Just some, you just said dry hump. Yeah. Let's take a moment for that. Just some high end heavy petting.
Starting point is 00:01:52 Mm-hmm. Whatever you want to call it. Mm-hmm. I served you guys a drink of your choice at the bar of the Metalark Media Office and now Megan Rubino and Sue Byrd. You guys are getting loosened up. Yeah, we're ready. I'm excited too. Hold on, I wanna do one thing
Starting point is 00:02:27 before I fully loosen up here. Yeah, you heard it too? Sue heard it. It's just that her voice came very faint. Pablo, you're gonna do. I go, cool. Okay. I wanna point out, actually, I wanna start this way,
Starting point is 00:02:40 is that Sue Bird is already point guarding this podcast. Yeah. So Megan, this is kind of a thing I realized. Welcome to Megan's life. Yeah, welcome to my life. Right. We talk about this all the time because, and this is how I say it,
Starting point is 00:02:52 there is a very small irregular tax that I have to pay that allows me to have Sue Burt as the point guard of my life. And this is how it shows up. Sometimes we get to JFK an hour earlier than we want to, which means probably, no, we're in the 30 to 45 minute range. And it's random, it's just irregular, it's small. I'm like, yeah, who can navigate this? It could take you 30 minutes,
Starting point is 00:03:23 it could take you an hour and 30 minutes. Yeah, but we can figure this out. It's so nominal. It's just, but the rest of the time. I get you in that lounge though. Okay, so we'll get back to the Delta lounge in just a little bit here, but this is the place where I feel kind of compelled
Starting point is 00:03:42 to just recap the medallion status of Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe. Because Sue, first off, was a 13-time WNBA All-Star and a 4-time WNBA champion and a 5-time Olympic gold medalist and a 2-time national champion at the University of Connecticut. Nobody in WNBA history has more assists than Sue Byrd. Megan, on the other hand, won two World Cups for the United States, won both the Golden Boot and the Golden Ball,
Starting point is 00:04:13 given to the top scorer and the best player, respectively, at the Women's World Cup, and she also won an Olympic gold medal. And also the presidential medal of freedom, you know, for the whole fighting for equal pay and equality in general sort of thing. That made Megan the first soccer player to ever receive that award.
Starting point is 00:04:34 But the reason that I really wanted to have two of the greatest athletes of all time on the show together, just one day before February 14th, is simple. This is our Valentine's Day episode. I've invited, as I say, stupidly excited for this to talk to you guys. We've hung out but not with microphones on. So thank you for letting me be my favorite version of myself, which is messy and invasive.
Starting point is 00:05:01 I love that. We watched the AFT title game together with friends. That was fun. But this, I do wanna get into like, can I ask some blunt questions? Sure. So like, I've been trying to think of a comparison for your relationship in like sports history.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Have you guys played that game? No, not really. Where it's like, okay, so you guys played that game? No, not really, no. Where it's like, okay, so you're already embarrassed by this. So forgive the bluntness. Andre Agassi, Steffi Graf, right? Same sports are not quite the same, but you gotta be good enough to be into this conversation. And a lot of relationships have happened,
Starting point is 00:05:39 but I would say that they have not been of the caliber of you two. Sue hates that. Here's the question. Okay. Is athletic greatness for you guys in Afrodisiac? And I mean that, when you guys are contemplating, this is now the person that I'm falling for. Oh no, I'm falling in love with them.
Starting point is 00:06:08 Oh no, I'm all of the things. How much is actually being good at the sport you guys played? How much did that actually figure into how you felt? I have an answer. Oh yeah, go ahead. That's a good question. It's a part of it, right? And not because of the athletic piece of it,
Starting point is 00:06:31 I think like who Megan is, her success on the field is tied back to who she is in a lot of ways. The same way like, I don't know, if somebody were killing it on Wall Street, that would have some sort of sex appeal to it. So I think it's, you can't like, I always say, it's like, you show up in a room, you can't, you're not checking any of your identities
Starting point is 00:06:51 at the door, like they come with you. Is it the reason? No, but does it like make somebody attractive when they're great at something? Of course. Want to get to the personal aspect of like, also you guys are gay. Yeah, so gay.
Starting point is 00:07:06 Love being gay. I'm pretty gay, yeah. What was coming out like? Looking back in hindsight, I was definitely always gay and I wish someone would have just told me when I was like three, so then I could have gotten on with it,
Starting point is 00:07:19 but nobody did, which is not really anybody's place. And then I figured out that I was getting college, and I was like, oh my God, and then the whole world made sense to me. And I feel like the world has sort of made sense since then, and that really threw me out of my shell and gave me a solid footing to stand on,
Starting point is 00:07:40 because I just, I was kind of like, things aren't really adding up, whatever they're saying in the movies, I'm like, I get it, I guess I'm just having was kind of like, things aren't really adding up, like whatever they're saying in the movies, I'm like, I get it, I guess I'm just having met the right guy, I don't know, this seems weird, whatever, and then I figured out, again, I was like, okay, this makes sense. And then I think from then, I was like,
Starting point is 00:07:54 oh, this is awesome. That's kind of my coming out story. I don't know how I've like, Is that a cinematic? Yeah, I don't have like a struggle, and I feel really fortunate for that. Like my family was pretty accepting. We went through some like early, you know, like,
Starting point is 00:08:10 oh, what does this mean? And like, how are people gonna treat you? And just like, you know, it's all very uncertain. And then everyone kind of like quickly got over it. And it was like, okay. So I don't have that like sort of typical struggle story. I don't think you really do either. No, totally.
Starting point is 00:08:27 But times are only five years apart, but the times are very, very different. Okay, wait, so speak to that though, because I guess when you zoom out and you realize gay marriage was illegal. Yeah, wild. Not so long ago, all of this is sort of new, but even still within that five year frame you're saying.
Starting point is 00:08:48 This is the best way to tell it. I have like vividly remember this. I graduated high school in 98. I graduate college in 2002. I would say both those experiences in women's sports, they were gay women around, kind of like prototypical, the gym teacher, that kind of a thing.
Starting point is 00:09:06 And it was always like, oh my God, so and so is gay. Ooh, and we all essentially, like gossiped about it. And then I remember hearing three, four years later, I'm now in the WNBA, hearing about other people who went to my high school or other people in college where they're open. And it was like just in that short period of time, it went from gossip, which for me, especially in college, I didn't wanna be a part of the gossip. So there was a girl that I was hooking up with, but like nobody knows that, or well, now they do,
Starting point is 00:09:38 but like nobody knew that. I would have died before I let any of my teammates know that. Like literally, that sounds really dramatic, so I don't wanna use that word lightly. But I literally would have died before I let any of my teammates know that. Like literally. That sounds really dramatic, so I don't want to use that word lightly. I literally would have gone to the grave not telling anybody that. It was way different. It was just way different. How much work did that take to keep it among your teammates who you see all the time? A lot of sneaking around, a lot of lying, going to the mall.
Starting point is 00:10:01 Those that know will laugh at that. I'm going to the mall, Those that know will laugh at that. But I'm going to the mall guys. Yeah, true. What I am laughing at also though is just the presumption that like, but wait a minute, in women's sports, you had to be closeted on the Yukon women's basketball team. Pretty much. It's not, by the way, it's like, I'm trying to think now.
Starting point is 00:10:25 Was anybody gay? Like my senior year, was anybody openly gay? No. Nobody on my team. Which again speaks to just the crazy amount of societal development. Yeah. Yeah. Quick, just in five years.
Starting point is 00:10:40 It happened really quickly. Yeah. And I think it depends on, you know, where you are. I went to school in Portland and there was already people on my visit that nobody was really talking about gay, but I was like, well, this feels different. What are these ladies? This is obviously very different.
Starting point is 00:10:56 They're drinking out of now jeans and... Driving exteriors. Looking gay, you know? The exteriors, the huge shit. But in a different way. Yeah, exteriors, yeah, the yellow one. But no, it was very different. I mean, to your point about your experience though,
Starting point is 00:11:09 it was kinda like everyone was kind of doing this low-key closeted thing, so like nobody was gonna poke too much. Nobody was gonna ask too many questions, it's coming right back to ya. So I feel like you guys all kinda had an understanding, like different to men's sports still, that's like, I feel like these men,
Starting point is 00:11:31 because they're obviously out there, feel like, hey, they're the only, only, only one, and like they can't, nobody can find out. Whereas I feel like you guys kinda knew like, other people kinda were, cause you were obviously looking up at someone, but like, it was just sort of like low key, but also it was like already in the world.
Starting point is 00:11:48 I was too focused on sneaking around to care about anything they were doing anyway. Like I was way more worried about if they were going to quote unquote catch me than thinking about where they were sneaking off to. Yeah. That's another part of it. Yeah. True. Yeah. So that's college. Yeah, that's another part of it. Yeah, true. You know? Yeah. So that's college. Yeah, that's college. Then I get into, you know, the WNBA and professional now. It takes probably
Starting point is 00:12:09 by my second year in the WNBA, I'm now like comfortable and confident in my sexuality. And I'm now telling friends, telling family for the most part, like zero issues. There was a couple like, why didn't you tell me sooner? Not about you. Yeah. So that's for it. The quickest way to tell you, not about you. But then there is the public coming out
Starting point is 00:12:35 that didn't happen until I was 37, which is crazy. Is that right? Yeah. Okay, so explain that strategy. Yeah, it's not strategy. Okay, well. There are all the strategic things we've been discussing, there was zero thought about this. What was it?
Starting point is 00:12:48 In terms of the public part, I think I was just caught in an old mentality of, like I said, keeping it private, but also this like marketing thing. Okay, so- Like people aren't gonna like you if you're gay. So how did, how did the straight gays? G-A-Z. Got it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:11 But the... I was like, ooh, straight gays. Who are they? But how did that figure in? Like the idea that like, wait a minute, there are some dudes who like who think I'm hot or they want to, they're a fan of me or whatever it is. I don't know what your presumption would have been.
Starting point is 00:13:27 It was basically told to me that the only way I was gonna have success from a marketing standpoint is to really sell this like, straight girl next door. You have the quote unquote, the look. So these were things that were told to me. And at 21, I was afraid of all of it. And I openly admit this, it's like,
Starting point is 00:13:46 the way I feel now about all of those conversations, I have opinions, I have thoughts, I have no problem talking about them publicly. At 21, I was afraid. I don't wanna give away all my secrets, but I'm pretty normal. People probably think that there's some crazy story behind the basketball player, but there's really not.
Starting point is 00:14:05 I am Sue Bird. Take one. And now you're telling me that my career might not take off if... So I just had it in me that this wasn't something I would share publicly, even though I was living my life that way. And as far as like the male gaze, G.A.Z. goes... I mean, I was aware of it, and I think you could even go back in some of my interviews, and I might even have said, in fact, I know I did, things like, well, yeah, like, sex
Starting point is 00:14:30 does sell, and it's, but if we get people into the arena, then they'll appreciate the game. I mean, vomit. It's like, but I was scared. I mean, like, that's just the truth of it. And this is what I'm being told. I knew what I felt, but that wasn't enough to override what I was being told. Whereas like now that feels different.
Starting point is 00:14:47 And actually, a lot of times I get asked like, you know, like, how do you speak publicly about these things now or why? And it's like, because I missed 20 years of doing it. I like, you know, I'm not a 20, but like 15 years, I didn't say shit. I knew what I felt it, I could see it, but I was quiet cause I was scared.
Starting point is 00:15:04 And it's like enough of that. Yeah, how much can you both laugh now at what the marketing used to be? Well, way worse for me than you, lucky. You're so lucky you figured it out early. Yeah, way worse for you guys. And you have a lot more intersection of like race and sexuality and what all that means and how you guys were marketed.
Starting point is 00:15:32 I mean we had that too but we were like the pretty white girls next door and you guys obviously have a lot of black women and there's just like a lot of racism and a lot of homophobia and so many of the things. I mean, I think we can look back now and be like, okay, it is so much better, but it's still there. Oh, the question of like, how do we sell this game to the target demographic that we think we need. Yeah. And I think even just in men's sports, like if you're good in men's sports, then you're the one that gets the endorsements.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Like it doesn't matter really what you look like. Like if you are sort of societally attractive, that's like a plus. Yeah, the archetype from the movie. Yeah, like if you're not, it's also fine. But if you're amazing as a woman and you're not like quote unquote pretty by whatever that means, like it does hurt you. And if you are pretty by whatever that means, you're like turbo boosted as a woman.
Starting point is 00:16:36 Like we just, we still know that and that is like still happening. So I think this, this conversation for that reason is still like really important. I think it's a, it's way more open. There's way more space for players to be themselves at such a younger age. I can see it with my, I'm gonna call my teammates or my old teammates now and younger players and just having those conversations way earlier and way more space but it still very much exists. And then obviously in men's sports, I mean, there's no gay players.
Starting point is 00:17:06 So, I mean, they're also like there. What do you mean? No, what? So, you know, that is still like, we're still deeply in the closet there. It is a crazy statistic. It's crazy. Right?
Starting point is 00:17:17 It's like, guys, we don't believe you that there's nobody here? I know. And it's like, you're gonna, yeah. Like, I mean, it's hard. I feel for them. Honestly, there's so much fear. But it proves the point about how young this history is.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Yeah. Mm-hmm. Like, truly, like you guys have lived it. Yeah. You just retired and the people who are still dealing with it have not figured it out yet either. And that turbo boost marketing thing, I wanna go back to that just because Sue is cringing
Starting point is 00:17:49 inside of her own existence at what? As a traditionally pretty person? As a traditionally pretty person. Which you are, I mean. For people who aren't familiar with the marketing campaigns, and I did, of course, course my research and I saw like 76ers Jersey With the you gotta explain this though for people who are not seeing this. Oh wait. I have to explain it
Starting point is 00:18:14 Yeah, Jersey dress. There's a couple pictures from one photo shoot It was dye magazine and they were like racier at the time anyways like even some of the photos they did when they covered And they were like racier at the time anyways. Like even some of the photos they did when they covered male basketball players were a little on the racier side or edgier side. So that's kind of what they were doing. I had to say no to like three other poses. This is the stuff that you permitted.
Starting point is 00:18:38 There is more that crossed the line. Yeah. Like one of them I had, I didn't, they wanted me to not have a shirt on at all and like cover myself in different ways. I mean, it's different with the ESPN body issue because I felt like older and it was a choice and all these things. This felt, this didn't feel that way. Like just to give it a little bit of a contrast. There's like space for being sexy or having sex. I hope that the takeaway from this conversation is not those prudes.
Starting point is 00:19:07 Yeah, no. Pretty sure that's not it, but to your point. No, yeah. I think that's the better way of saying it. Yeah, exactly. The theatricality of this is what it means to be. I was like, and this particular, I vividly remember the day. I was solo, so my agent wasn't with me.
Starting point is 00:19:23 So this was on me, and I just described myself at whatever, at this point, I'm probably 22. I just described myself during this era. Like, I had to say no, which took a lot. So no wonder those other pictures, quote unquote, went through, if you will. But yeah, it's like, what? No way.
Starting point is 00:19:39 And just the pressure of being told as, you know, one of the young stars of the league of like, this is the, A, the only way that you're gonna get marketed. So you can either be here or not, I guess. But like, this is the way that we're gonna sell the league and like, do you wanna help the league grow? Or do you not? And it's like, that's an impossible situation.
Starting point is 00:20:01 Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. I wanna get to though, the ways in which the positions that you play, athletically, sort of are obvious in your personal dynamic. So like Sue Bird, point guard. So I wanna establish people who don't know your works, right? Like Sue is the point guard. Sue's superpower is somehow that she is attending to the people around her and making them better, but that also means that she's hyper focused
Starting point is 00:20:46 on like what they could use. And I was looking, I was actually looking on Wikipedia for, because I'm a journalist. Obviously. There's just a funny thing that Wikipedia used for Megan, where it was, where I'll just read it. Rapinoe is internationally known for her crafty style of play and her activism off the pitch. And I'll leave activism aside for a second though.
Starting point is 00:21:14 But like, what does it mean to be, um, yeah, one of the craftiest soccer players in sports history and also, um, a leader of a soccer team in a way that is inherently different from a basketball team. What would you say Megan's superpower is or was on the pitch? Her fearlessness, like risk taker, whether the president of the United States is tweeting at her or she's lining up for a penalty kick to win a World Cup, she doesn't think about what's gonna happen next if Phil in the blank, if she misses,
Starting point is 00:21:53 or if she doesn't think about that. She's fearless in those moments. The craftiness I think speaks to the entertainment in which you played with, but the fearlessness for me is what, that's who you are as a soccer player. I always joke that, she would have hated me as a teammate because,
Starting point is 00:22:11 I think that like, and you would have loved me. I would have loved you. Oh my God. No, you would have been like, what is she doing? Oh my God, it worked one out of five times. Like you were always,
Starting point is 00:22:24 I mean, I think by nature of your position, because you're the point guard, you always had a lot of responsibility. You were always charged with like literally calling the play and doing the things. I mean, I think I am a risk taker just in general and I was that way and I had coaches when I was younger that was like, yeah, do that crazy thing.
Starting point is 00:22:42 And that was like cultivated. But I think also my time early on the national team, I was never, I mean, honestly, even until well into my 30s, I wasn't that leader. I wasn't the captain of the team. I was only captain team for a very short time. I wasn't the biggest player. I just got to be this really complimentary piece
Starting point is 00:23:02 that like I'm going to do wild sometimes. And it's going gonna go bad. It's gonna go really bad. But there's also that part that I kinda had that leash and I think I earned that leash over time to be creative. Okay, but let's put this in the basketball context. There is the equivalent of Megan on your team. How are you managing this person
Starting point is 00:23:24 who is going to turn the ball over, but also give the greatest highlight that you saw that month? Well, by the way, your toe tapping on a discussion slash argument that we have around just our sports and which lens to risk taking. We can get to that another pod. Wait, I wanna know a little bit more
Starting point is 00:23:44 about the argument that you walked into this room, have it? No, no, not argument, just conversation around. So I think soccer, it lends to risk taking because you have to take risk. Because there's so few goals. Yeah, and the penalty for the risk is not as great as basketball. You can't be as risky as you can in soccer,
Starting point is 00:24:04 in my opinion, in basketball. No, I agree. It does require more risk and less precision because we're using our feet. But what you're implying there is that in basketball, it's harder to be a Megan. Oh, yes, yes I am. It is harder. Because the reward has to be so great on the other side
Starting point is 00:24:21 if you're gonna be a Megan. The leash is shorter for a Megan in basketball. But there's a place for it. If there were five of me on the court, it you're gonna be a Megan. The leash is shorter for a Megan in basketball. But there's a place for it. If there were five of me on the court, it wouldn't be a good team. It'd be a little bit boring. It'd be a little bit like, there wouldn't be as much risk. I take risk when I have to, but way more calculated.
Starting point is 00:24:38 You need the mixture. We'll bring it into the relationship context. Something goes wrong. How is Sue, as the self-appointed or in this case, long authorized leader of this team? And is that okay to say that? That she is the leader of our team? The leader of our team?
Starting point is 00:24:58 Yeah. Yeah. Wouldn't you want to super leading your team? Yeah, I'm like, yeah. You know, yeah, you're the leader of our team. Okay, but something goes wrong and the leader of your team is handling that how? What have you done, Megan? What have you done in this hypothetical or real example from life?
Starting point is 00:25:17 I'm working on this, but sometimes it's, Megan, which is so bad. I know, and I'm like, I know. I don't like it when you talk to me like that. I'm an adult. But we're working on it. We're working on it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:32 I think it depends on what it is. No, I think you put so much thought and care and you think ahead so much. I am definitely more off the cuff, which has its obviously positives and negatives, and I think we do a pretty good job of balancing that like in our life. But yeah, sometimes, I mean, I say this all the time, like it's annoying being me. I annoy myself.
Starting point is 00:25:55 I'm like, it's not all fun and games over here, you know, when you do the same dumb thing that you just did, like why didn't I think ahead to, you know, would do whatever? What's a thing though? So I can potentially relate. That I always do. Cause I'm not the leader of my household. My wife is definitely the suburb of our relationship. And I do stuff all the time,
Starting point is 00:26:17 like come home 15 minutes to an hour later than I said I would or make noise when she's sleeping because she has to get up early. That's me. Sue's a mouse. I'm a mouse. I know. I'm told that I snore, which was a tough thing for me
Starting point is 00:26:36 to have to reckon with, but yeah. Oh, that's not really how I thought it. That's what I said. That's not a choice. No. Sometimes you do it because you broke it in your nose so many times. But I just give you a little elbow. I just give you a little shake or push and then you'd like move around I
Starting point is 00:26:50 Think like one of the things recently that we've been Talking about I'm trying to get better as I where's this going? I think I like get just kind of in honestly We spend a lot of time together Especially now that we're both retired so like our days are kind of around each other time, but we are sort of like working at the same time and there's a lot going on. And so if it's not, if I haven't like written it down
Starting point is 00:27:14 and it's in my calendar, I mean, it's in the ether. Like it's, I'm working on it, but it's just, it's not getting in there. You're really going there. I was just gonna say, you don't turn the lights off. Oh yeah, I don't turn the lights off either. But one thing is that's one where I'm like, just turn the lights off.
Starting point is 00:27:29 I know, I'm like, I walk out in how am I supposed to know when the lights on behind me? You know, cause I've already walked out. So, we've gotten over that one. That's kind of, cause I just turned them off now. Yeah, cause all the bulbs are burned out. But this one is like, I ask her a lot.
Starting point is 00:27:45 And this is like a dependency thing too, where I like ask her, you know, either like what she has going on that day, or if we have any like plans for the night, or what we're doing, and like she'll tell me, and then, you know, inevitably like an hour later, or the next day, I'll like ask again. And she's like, you know, it feels like I'm not paying
Starting point is 00:28:04 attention and like not listening. So then it's like, damn, and I'll ask again. And she's like, you know, it feels like I'm not paying attention and not listening. Yeah, I've been accused of this. Damn. And I know it too. I'm like, but then I'm like, why don't I have your whole schedule in my head? And you know, but I'm trying to slow down a little bit and be more thoughtful.
Starting point is 00:28:21 Yeah. I'm never gonna be as thoughtful as you. Well, I mean, in this category, you can just hold so much in your head at the same time. It's amazing, like your ability to hold all these things in your head is like nothing I've ever seen and I aspire to, but I don't think I'm gonna get there. I am getting the sense too that when there is conflict,
Starting point is 00:28:43 it's not, Megan, even in like the descriptions of how you are immediately apologetic or like immediately like. Are we going there? Yeah. Okay, so what is that? Because that's a type of person that is- It's annoying is what it is. Yeah, it's annoying.
Starting point is 00:29:04 Why is it annoying? Because on one level to immediately be like, hand up is some element of what you want, isn't it? Yeah. It's the hand up about the same thing all the time. It's like, well, okay, the hand up is really not enough. Now you need to actually change the behavior. And I'm like, okay, I'm turning.
Starting point is 00:29:24 Oh, it's like, it's actually less that for me. Or it feels like I'm trying to shut you down. Yes. So again, back to a sports analogy, because here we are. Is this a sports show? Apparently, in my experience, when I go up to a ref, and I'm like, what the, like what?
Starting point is 00:29:39 Like, how'd you miss that? And they go, yeah, you're right. I'm like, okay, thank you. And you have to just walk away. There's no longer this, you know? So when your partner, after you maybe express something, it's just like, yep, you're right, my bad. You're like, wait a minute, is that real?
Starting point is 00:29:56 Are you just shutting me up? And that's where we've actually talked about that a lot though in our time. So, okay, so wait, this is, I'm learning about myself too, I should say, while I'm asking you deeply invasive questions. But like what you're saying is that you're not getting the pushback that would reflect
Starting point is 00:30:11 the authenticity of what you are actually feeling, that you're trying to keep it moving versus like actually engage on the thing that clearly you are not willing to engage with me about. Well, I just feel like, let's say it was a choice she made or a decision to do something. You probably did that for a reason. And then you're just gonna let go of that reason in the moment that I bring it up
Starting point is 00:30:33 to avoid the conflict or whatever. That's a real point guard mentality though. You made this decision for a reason. What was it and why aren't you telling me? I don't know. I don't know, I just, I didn't mean it. No, but I will say she also is very open to way more than me in some ways, like way open to like critique or not that I'm criticizing you.
Starting point is 00:30:54 It's not that it's really just like presenting. I'm presenting how it made me feel. That's really what we're talking about. We're talking about feelings. Yes. Yeah. No, we're talking about feelings. This is a show about feelings.
Starting point is 00:31:04 Yeah. Sports and feelings. That's right. There's this term that I've sort of marveled at as it has become blindingly obvious in retrospect, but also a cliche, which is love languages. What are you guys' love languages? Well, oh no, we know. We talk about it. Yeah, okay. Which ones are we saying? They just have their limits. I think, I think. No, no, no, they're all of them. I talk about it. Yeah, okay. Which ones are we saying? They just have their limits.
Starting point is 00:31:27 I think they're all of them. I feel like everyone's all of them. Everyone's all of them. It's just some of them are more prominent. Yeah, yeah. I would say I'm more like acts of service. Yeah, I think acts of service is like where mine shows the most.
Starting point is 00:31:40 Yeah. Both receiving and giving probably. Mine's definitely more like physical touch. Maybe gift giving? Yeah. I think physical touch. Oh, you're definitely physical touch. I would say words of affirmation. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:54 Words of affirmation. Yeah. Yeah. Giving and receiving. Different there, huh? Yeah. I'm just keeping- You can see where we run into some issues.
Starting point is 00:32:02 Just writing down some of this for my files. Yeah, yeah. She's like, I run your whole life and our whole life together. And I'm like, just tell me that you love me. You're like, I did. I did. Because I just ran your life. Yeah, I just got you on this plane on top.
Starting point is 00:32:19 Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Oh yeah, totally. We're in the Delta Lounge chilling. I love you. Yeah, totally. We'll be like in a random- My love language is the Delta Lounge. No, truly. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:30 Yeah, those are it. What is easier about dating someone who did roughly the profession that you yourself devoted your life to for so long versus, you know, generally and also specifically speaking like, I don't know, civilians, normies, regulars, regular, muggles, yeah, narps. Normal as regular person. Narp. As the ambassador from the nation of narps.
Starting point is 00:32:59 Yeah. Yeah. What is it? What is it about that that actually made this all easier than it might otherwise be? I think our general disposition and the way that we interacted with our sport was a big part of it. I think we both always enjoyed getting away from our sport, doing other things in our regular life, from our sport, doing other things in our regular life, allowed for our relationship to grow. And I think, you know, if you don't have that
Starting point is 00:33:30 and you're just sort of like all focused on that, that would be a little bit harder. And then I think it's just like, you just get it. You get the- That's where I would go. Just like someone who got what it meant to have a physical, spiritual, emotional commitment to sports.
Starting point is 00:33:50 Yeah, it's like a shared language. Just like that understanding of what the other is going through, even though it's different sports, different lifestyles in some ways, you get to skip the explaining part. It's nice to have somebody that understands that right out the gate. We have to be away. We never really were like so sad or upset about being away from each
Starting point is 00:34:13 other because we're just like, well, obviously, like your team is here. My team is here. I'm at camp. You're in game. If anything, it was harder when one of us came back. I was like, oh, you're in my living space again. Yeah. What's this? That was hard for you. That's hard. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:34:31 I'm like, that was like, oh, the lights are on again. Yeah. Here we go. All this physical touch. The reentry. What is that? Yeah. When I think about how you guys handled the spotlight, how you handled like a microphone, I don't consider you guys following the same playbook.
Starting point is 00:35:02 No, no, no, we're very different. We are very different people. Very different. So how much of that was a thing you ever needed to discuss? Or because I would like you guys to describe yourselves and your approaches actually. Megan, pretty famously, I would say pretty much gave negative f***s actually. Like, just didn't.
Starting point is 00:35:30 Well, yeah, just I didn't give the f***s to the sort of obvious people who you're supposed to give f*** to, I guess, I don't know. Championship or bust? Completely, yeah. Championship or bust. Always. So, are you excited about going to the White House? Not going to the White House. No, not going to the White House.
Starting point is 00:35:53 We're not going to be invited. I doubt it. Fuck distribution was something that you handled differently from Sue, is the bottom line. Yeah, no, we have a way, way, way, way different style. I give all the f***s. But okay, but you guys have given your respective press conferences and there is a different amount of fallout, depending on what the thing was discussed that day.
Starting point is 00:36:15 And then you guys meet up at home and it's like, so, how did your day go? And it's like, well, I'm an enemy of the state now. Yeah, yeah. The example I was gonna give was after, you know, Trump tweeted at Megan and it's at the World Cup and all the things. It was like a couple of days later.
Starting point is 00:36:34 And, you know, like we were starting to hear things about what and who was contacting her family who was in Northern California. My sister, so amazing, infamously got a text, like anonymous text that was like, tell your sister's boyfriend, McCauley Culkin to shut his damn mouth. It's like top five.
Starting point is 00:36:57 It's top, it might be top. It's so good. It might be top. But when I started hearing all these things, like I said, what her family's getting, now my sister's getting a text, I call her up, she's in France, and I'm like, hey, like, you know,
Starting point is 00:37:11 how are you feeling around like safety and all these things, like thinking kind of like, not globally, but zoomed out. And she's like, I feel safe. I think over time, I've tried to be more thoughtful about it because it has impacted people. It has impacted my family and I'm from a small conservative town that's pretty tight-knit. My mom worked at a restaurant so it was constantly people coming in and out. My family lives in a place that didn't really agree generally with what I was saying, didn't
Starting point is 00:37:46 agree with kneeling. Like, why are you not kneeling? And I don't mean kneeling in terms of kneeling. Like, what are you doing? What is everyone doing to help? Because everyone knows that we have a problem in this country. Everyone knows that we have serious issues to talk around racial injustice. You know, didn't agree with my comments about
Starting point is 00:38:05 not going to the White House or about that administration at the time. What is your message to the president? I think that I would say that your message is excluding people. You're excluding me, you're excluding people that look like me, you're excluding people of color, you're excluding, you know, Americans that maybe support you. I'm also rich and an athlete and privileged and sheltered in privilege in that sort of way.
Starting point is 00:38:32 And so I just didn't really ever feel like I was actually in danger. And I talk about this all the time and you've seen this in real life and you weren't there for the one time that this happened. One time in real life, someone has come up to me. This man said, I wish you would have represented our country differently. And I was like, oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:38:54 Sorry, you feel that way or disagree. That's literally the only time. A couple of times I've been booed in the stands, but I don't feel like counts. Even with social media, I feel like maybe because I came to it a little bit later, but I think also my experience with kneeling, like immediately showed me that it was all fake. What do you mean? Fake meaning like the conversation that was being had in a negative way was so disingenuous, because it wasn't about what Colin was saying at all. Like, we're talking about the military now.
Starting point is 00:39:28 Like, we're not talking about national security. We're talking about the right to protest and the First Amendment and police brutality and like all of these things. So I just immediately was like, okay, you're just trying to like have a different conversation and one that slings mud at Colin and you know tries to discredit what he's saying and I think from my perspective I was like well I believe Colin and I believe black people generally otherwise you have to accuse like the entirety of like their experience. You have to accuse them of lying which is
Starting point is 00:39:57 insane because we've all seen all of the things. So I think just then I was like oh this is just disingenuous in general, particularly on social media. And I'm not getting that real life feedback that anybody actually feels this strongly about it to ever come out on these streets or at games or in Texas or Florida or, you know, places that are traditionally more conservative, nothing, not one word. So I was just like, man, this is like whatever. So I'm just gonna keep saying what I'm saying.
Starting point is 00:40:27 And it seems like I like know when I'm on track when, you know, that part of the internet starts like saying crazy things. I'm like, oh, thank you for the reinforcement and like acknowledgement that I'm at the heart of it. What's Sue Bird like playing a board game? We don't play games. I know, Megan doesn't play games.
Starting point is 00:40:46 Honestly, honestly, that's so annoying. I might leave you because of it. I know. I am not a gamer. She won't play games with me, Pablo. But I didn't grow up playing a lot. I mean, I've played some board games, but. I mean, I think you're, you are competitive.
Starting point is 00:41:02 You are very competitive, but. Not so much. We're going to like, you know, ruin the night. No, no, no think you are competitive. You are very competitive, but not so much we're gonna ruin the night. No, no, no, no, no. I'm actually, I love playing games. I grew up with card games. My family's big card playing family. Board games, did them all. And this answer was different, even at like 22.
Starting point is 00:41:21 Then I would have been like, almost like sore loser vibes. I think at some point, let's call it mid-20s, I was just like, who cares? Who cares if you win at Monopoly? Like move on, you know? So now when I play games, I don't get super, super competitive and I wouldn't be that way, but she just doesn't like it.
Starting point is 00:41:39 You wouldn't, I know. I tried to teach her backgammon, spades, like name it. You're just not in, you're not into it. I know, you would win though, the answer is you would win. So now I'm just like on my phone playing, computer number two. But I like, You are playing bots actually, you're playing the computer.
Starting point is 00:41:56 It's telling me it's real people, but I'm convinced it's not. They always get the good role in backgammon. I'm like, this is impossible. True. Double sixes again. I wanna be mindful of the way in which we have created these two sitcom characters in a way that I feel like cannot possibly fully represent Megan as a competitive entity. Cause so far you're kind of like, whatever, man.
Starting point is 00:42:18 And I just wonder if for Sue, how, how does that competitiveness actually appear in real life? Okay, good question. How does that competitiveness actually appear in real life? Okay, good question. Or does it? Or am I looking for an aspect here that actually- You mean outside of sports? Or- Because it exists, obviously it exists. However you experienced it, right?
Starting point is 00:42:38 Like when you were like, oh, this person can be both, you know, unlike me in some now documented ways, but also like a killer. No, you're not that competitive in other ways. I'm really trying to think. I think on the, like in the game, like I know how to be competitive,
Starting point is 00:43:00 but I think there's some parts about being competitive and being like a killer like that, that are really uncomfortable and like make me kind of like insecure. And so I think I actually like shy away from games or like, I mean, I don't know how to play a lot of the games. That's a part of it. That's a little bit of a part of it. You're a part of like trying to teach my mom how to use an iPhone at some point. She's just out. Yeah. You're a part of trying to teach my mom how to use an iPhone. At some point, she's just out. Yeah, she just can't. Even sometimes in my career, I would just be like,
Starting point is 00:43:29 this is a lot for practice. And I just, I assume much. Even in practice? You guys do it. Not all the time. And I'm like, Lenny Lupo, I'm like, how can I win this drill? Yeah, they didn't say you couldn't do that.
Starting point is 00:43:44 Yeah. And I'm like, is that what we're trying to do? Is that the point of the drill? Like I would get annoyed when people would do that, but I would also get annoyed when the coaches like left big holes in the game where I'm like, well, this is what people are gonna do. This is the loophole. So, but yeah, I think there's something about like
Starting point is 00:43:59 being like Uber competitive that is uncomfortable for me that I don't like that much. We've been talking about, um, what it was like when you guys were, uh, playing sports. I don't wanna do the full retirement deep dive because I feel like we can catch people up to the point at which I'm just curious how you guys mutually decided to, I don't know, was there a strategize?
Starting point is 00:44:40 Like it's just remarkable that you guys both retire within a very short time span of each other. Again, in this way at the top of your respective sports when it comes to just these people that many consider some of the best to have ever done it. And you guys go about it in different ways but also I can imagine that you guys also kind of had a meeting of the minds about this or no? Like yes and no. The timing is totally coincidental in that it was the right timing for me and it was
Starting point is 00:45:10 the right timing for Megan, like on our own time, like 100% that has nothing to do. The, for those that don't know, we retired one year apart. That was not strategy. That wasn't, that was just- Not a vacation you guys were dying to get to. No, no. Better get this done now but I think um okay if I'm wrong because I retired first and I had this experience Megan definitely had a front receipt to that and got to pull from it and learn from it whereas whereas I got to pull and learn from other people who I've retired in
Starting point is 00:45:41 the past um so that's I feel like that's really the main way in which our retirement's interacted. Yeah, and I think just the processing together through your retirement just inevitably brought up questions and we were both talking about it. And there was questions whether you were gonna retire in 2021 and that didn't feel right. And so we were having all these conversations and announcing it while you're still playing
Starting point is 00:46:08 versus just kind of finishing the season and saying goodbye. That was like, that's probably the main one. I think once the retirement question got answered for both of us in our own way in our own time, that's the question that I would venture to say every athlete of a certain status in their sport, that's the one you toy with the most. Yeah, how to do it.
Starting point is 00:46:32 Especially if you're in a league. Yeah. It's the league, because now you're in a season. And it's also, and this is like, reminds me of like when I got married, it was like, this isn't also just about you. Yeah, so I had to learn that. It's for, but okay, so who is it for then,
Starting point is 00:46:52 as you would explain it now, having gone through it? So I didn't think of it, I never realized that it was also for the fans. Powerful, powerful moment. Superd. The most accomplished champion. In terms of announcing it while you're still playing, I never, that didn't get put into the equation until I talked to C.C. Sabathia and listen to his story. He was like, and he's so, I mean, if anyone's ever spent time with him, he was like,
Starting point is 00:47:28 yeah, he's like, Naka, you gotta like announce it and let the fans like celebrate you. And I was like, what? And then I thought about it, I was like, oh my God, that makes a lot of sense. And then I found that it was really important for me to have that experience too, like closure in a way. Yeah, once you allow yourself to admit, I love, again, I love that,
Starting point is 00:47:47 one of my favorite things about both of you is that you are like these, you're alien in the sense that you are representing also a normal point of view of like, you're not taking for granted. Of course, the queen must meet her public. Yeah. Like, oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:48:03 Like, yeah, the double kiss. Yeah. Once you sort of let yourself fully internalize that, oh, people are out there who sincerely want this for themselves, it changes the math. And so I think of your retirement as super well choreographed in that regard. In that like, wow, a pro who strategize, considered various outcomes and so forth. Just like how it all played out.
Starting point is 00:48:29 I didn't expect any of it, except Seattle. That I expect, I knew, I mean, like we have a relationship. So it's like, of course. Right, right, right, right. But the road, like I couldn't, it was difficult for me to get out of arenas. Like getting back to my hotel, I would have like security like sneaking me out the back.
Starting point is 00:48:44 And I didn't anticipate that at all I always have to tell her that she's superd. I do want to embarrass Megan a bit because Okay, so Sue is saying good luck there because Megan has been through some shit Especially recently and if you don't remember how Megan waved goodbye to her athletic career, I should probably just recap how Sue did leave the Seattle Storm like Queen Elizabeth, all dignified and choreographed. But Megan, less than a year later, during her farewell retirement tour, ended up at the World Cup final. This was last
Starting point is 00:49:21 August in the knockout round against Sweden and Everything came down to a shootout came down to penalty kicks and Megan who was the you know Best penalty shooter on the planet arguably did this Megan had not missed the penalty in almost five years, until that point, until her last World Cup moment. And after the game, which the US lost, obviously, she could not help but sound like this. I mean, this is like a sick joke.
Starting point is 00:49:58 For me personally, I'm just like, this is dark comedy I missed a penalty. But that dark comedy, it turned out, was just beginning. Because three months after that, last November now, Meghan was back with her club team in Seattle, and they had made it all the way back to the National Women's Soccer League final, with a final championship on the line. And what happened there is kind of what I wanted
Starting point is 00:50:23 to ask Meghan about most of all. Even like what happened at the World Cup, I put into this a little bit because obviously I would have loved to go and win and you know, sports is sports. Like you don't get to, you get to do everything up until you get on the field and then like what's going to happen is going to happen. With my final game, I mean I even said I just said the other day I was like can you f***ing believe I tore my ghillie to my final game in the first three minutes.
Starting point is 00:50:55 And there she goes down just unattested on the top of your screen off to a bright start and as you mentioned, that would be devastating. It's funny. It's funny. It's not, but it's like dark humor. I mean, if you can't laugh at this, like, you know, you can't laugh at anything. Like this is one of the risks I've dealt with a lot of injury.
Starting point is 00:51:18 I wish I would have had less, but I didn't. It's just the way it goes. Like you step on the field, there's a risk. Could have, anything could have happened. So this was really unfortunate and like, it's really sad, but also, I mean, I don't know, it was like, what are you gonna do? I mean, it's like, what are you gonna do?
Starting point is 00:51:35 You know, now I'm rehabbing and it's giving me a little structure in my life and I'm like taking the best out of it that I can, but yeah, it was a tragically comic ending, comedic ending. What was Sue, what was going through your mind as you were watching this? Did you know immediately, well, Megan's gonna find a way to laugh at this.
Starting point is 00:51:54 She's gonna see the dark humor in this. Or were you feeling it as yourself, which was how maybe? Yeah, no, I think in the moment was just feeling the moment of it. I wasn't thinking about the next day or week or month or how it wasn't, it was just, well. Yeah, no, I think in the moment was just feeling the moment of it. I wasn't thinking about the next day or week or month or how it wasn't, it was just, well, actually, that's a little bit of a lie. I knew it was an Achilles. I'm like pretty much right away, just like classic signs, the look back, nobody near
Starting point is 00:52:19 her. There was somebody who texted me and said, and they're watching on TV, who it kind of threw me off, because they were like, it looks like her knee. And I was like, really, it looks like her knee. But then there was something about the way she sat, grabbed her calf, and then kind of like, sat back on her arms in a way of like defeat, where I was like, oh, she knows.
Starting point is 00:52:42 This is circulates, it's done, it's a rat. And in that moment, I was just really sad for the moment. I was just really bummed in the moment knowing that, yeah, that you didn't get to finish your final game and your final season, just like really sad for that moment. And like I said, my one little lie is I did think like, oh man, this rehab is long, long. This is a long rehab. So I did think that for you too.
Starting point is 00:53:07 But I was in a suite with her whole family. And so there was just a lot of, it was actually nice. There was a lot of commiserating. There were some tears. But very quickly, I think everybody turned to not celebrating that, but just like it turned into, okay, let's cheer on Seattle. Like we know Megan's okay, she's texted us from the locker room.
Starting point is 00:53:28 Like we know she's okay, and now let's just kind of be in this moment. I am sad about it too. Like I feel like I'm like getting emotional about it right now. Like it is sad. Like I wish that didn't happen. Like I'm just thinking about like my teammates coming over and like, of course it's sad, but it's also like,
Starting point is 00:53:46 I don't know, it's kind of just like life, you know? We want these like perfect stories and you know, I'm like a controversial figure and having people low key like celebrate it, but then also like be so disingenuous about it that that part is kind of funny too. I'm like, wow, you guys are in a special place in hell that you're celebrating this.
Starting point is 00:54:07 I'm not going to that hell. Maybe just pull a tissue out of your pocket. Yeah, pull a tissue out. Where did that come from? It's winter in New York. I'm so sensitive and it's just like, my eyes are running all the time, my nose is running. So I am sad about, I was just thinking to myself,
Starting point is 00:54:20 like this is gonna get clipped and people are gonna be like, well, so you're making things as funny that she did. And it's like, it's not funny, but I also, this is how I like live my life. Like there are so many more important things than this. And like, of course it's sad. I don't think it takes anything away from my career. I don't think missing that panel
Starting point is 00:54:37 needs to take anything away from my career. It's just, it's actually all part of it. And like if you don't, if you don't try, you're never gonna do anything. What you said in the press conference, which got people like just again, disingenuously furious. I'm not a religious person or anything. And if there was a God like this is proof that there isn't,
Starting point is 00:54:56 this is up. So yeah, it just, it's just up because. Somebody needs to check on the Christians. They're not okay. They miss, they also miss the whole joke, but okay. That's the thing is that. I'm like, you guys missed it? Don't act like, hey, you're surprised by me
Starting point is 00:55:15 like making this joke about what happened or, you know, finding a dig. I'm like, yeah, I wanna find a funny like dig. I don't know. Who's it at? God, I wanna find a funny dig. I don't know. Who's it at? God, myself, religion, the world? I don't know. I'm like, it's just funny.
Starting point is 00:55:30 The dig was at yourself too, because it was. What it was, I don't think people appreciated this because everyone was deeply triggered, religiously and otherwise. The dig is, here is yet another athlete who thinks that proof of God is found in them winning in good happening. And if it doesn't, then obviously God does not exist.
Starting point is 00:55:52 That's the joke. And for you to say it at your last fucking press conference, I was like, this is brilliant. And instead, everyone got so bad. It was a whole thing. I really didn Yeah, it was a whole thing. I really didn't expect it to be a thing. I have talked very openly about my belief or lack of belief, rather, in God.
Starting point is 00:56:15 And I feel like that's normal. All of the other signals that I see from athletes is talking about their particular station of faith in life. So why can't I talk about my particular station? Obviously I'm like doing that purposely and I'm like not literally saying that, but I always found it like important for me to at least say that.
Starting point is 00:56:38 Like I'm just gonna, you know, say I'm not gonna sort of dance around sports and faith is like so intertwined in this really bizarre way that does always have to do with like God was looking out for us today because we won. Yeah, it's a deeply selfish. I don't know. Self-centric perspective. Yeah, it's like, it's a whole thing and like. That also makes life hard for people who do not fall inside of the tatechisms and rules of whatever church happens to be the dominant one in that locker
Starting point is 00:57:08 room. Yeah, so I didn't realize it was gonna I didn't even realize it was that big of a thing. Because I don't I don't get into my comments like that. I don't even use Twitter anymore. But then I you know, start hearing about it from lots of different people I was like, oh, that's uh, they missed the joke. I was more upset about that. I'm like, oh, damn You missed the joke. I just want the laughs How has life besides physical therapy besides all that stuff for for people who don't know how it tends to go for
Starting point is 00:57:44 Athletes there's a very famous saying that an athlete dies twice. Oh yeah. Actual death, but also retirement. And I don't know, you guys seem cool. Like I see you guys like hanging out like watching football games and stuff. Like, yeah, it seems like they're doing pretty well, but how, how has that, has that been really?
Starting point is 00:58:04 I think for me, um, but how has that been really? I think for me, I always knew that being an athlete just meant like there was a schedule, there was a regimen, there was the working out and the eating and it was how I always described it was just like something constantly running in the background, just a constant thought about, oh God, I have a game tomorrow,
Starting point is 00:58:23 I probably should get to sleep at this time. Oh man, should I eat this? Okay, what am I gonna do? It's like constant, constant, constant. And it impacts you, right? And so I've definitely gone through like a detox period in terms of letting that go. Do you feel yourself sort of like instinctually acting
Starting point is 00:58:42 as if you need to be somewhere and you don't? A little bit, A little bit. The phantom limb of practice. Yeah. It's a phantom limb. It's a phantom limb. Yeah, that's a great way to say it. That is a perfect way of saying it. And I'm definitely, it's been difficult and I have like guilt connected to it,
Starting point is 00:58:56 especially in the working out part of it. I think personally, since we're going deep here, I think personally the last couple years of my career, a lot of my basketball identity was connected to the fact that I was older. I was now like 39, 40, 41, still able to play, still in this amazing shape. Like, wow, look at that. And I think a lot of my identity got wrapped up in that. So letting go of working out is letting go of that, like what I became connected to. So there's like a shedding that has to happen. So what do you do with the opportunity
Starting point is 00:59:28 to actually be free of a grind for the first time in forever? I mean, I've had the luxury, obviously, of seeing you basically do everything just right in front of me. Yeah, like even just from the time we've met, I'm like, well, what the fuck you're doing? I'm gonna be doing that too. It's like I worked with Susan and like in our retirement
Starting point is 00:59:48 and you know, so I feel like I've had the, you know, the luxury of having that in front of me. I'm obviously very sort of new into it, but I think for me, I was very ready to be done and that doesn't mean I don't miss it. For me, I was very ready to be done. That doesn't mean I don't miss it. I watch games on TV and I'm like, oh, that'd be so fun. I feel like I wish my prime was now because I think the modern game better suits me as
Starting point is 01:00:16 a player. Same, I mean. I spent a lot of my time playing Lefmit in a 442 and that's just f***ing nightmare. I'm like, all the soccer people will know what I'm talking about. But I think like physically I was really ready, clearly for my Achilles in the last second that I ever played.
Starting point is 01:00:33 So my body was like, okay girl, we're done. But to your phantom limb point, I find that like there is a voice in your head. Like this athletes have a voice and it's, it's not like a, it's not mean, but like it's a, it's a metronome. She's holding you to it. She's holding you to it.
Starting point is 01:00:51 Like are you doing what you're supposed to be doing like all of the time? Because it all revolves around your playing. And what I've found is it's kind of weird. Like the voice is gone, but I feel the absence of the voice. And I'm not like, oh, I know what the voice would be saying, but it's like not saying that.
Starting point is 01:01:11 So, and then I'm like, what do I feel? Like, I'm like, I should be working out or working out more, but like, I don't want to and I'm tired. So I'm not going to or like, you know, it's like, oh, we can go to Cabo on a weekend if we want, but that seems crazy to us. Like that seems like, oh my God, no, like what do you, what do you mean?
Starting point is 01:01:32 You can just like do things on the weekend. Like, my partner can show up and we can have sex. Yeah. What? What are you doing here? This is a weekend tomorrow. Yeah. This isn't on the schedule. So I find that like, I'm like balancing that.
Starting point is 01:01:45 We have to like learn how to make choices for ourselves because to be honest, like our whole lives really is sort of like a macro sense is planned out. Our schedule is planned out, when your games are, when your vacation time is, even during the week, it's like, okay, I'm gonna play on a Saturday and I have Wednesday off, so that means Tuesday night I can go to dinner and have some wine.
Starting point is 01:02:06 Sometimes I just go to her stuff and be like, what are you doing here? And I'm like, plus one baby. Suber's my fiance, so I'm arm candy. Like, that's literally what I'm doing here and that's basically it. So. Can I ask the very rude question that obviously,
Starting point is 01:02:24 me as America's foremost tabloid feelings reporter wants to know is what's up with his wedding? What's up with that? What's up with his wedding? What's going on? Where's my invitation? Oh, 30th person. What's that at?
Starting point is 01:02:38 I'm pretty sure all of our friends just want to party. What kind of card stock you guys are using on these invites? Yeah, probably just e-vice. Things people don't know, ready? Things people don't know. Please. The US women's national team schedule is insane. Yeah. Like proper.
Starting point is 01:02:53 It was a lot. Now we're both done. So that's why the question's coming up a lot. And now people are like, oh, we heard what you told us. Different voice has replaced the other voice. And it's my voice saying. It's a lot of planning. It's just a lot.
Starting point is 01:03:05 Yeah, we're like, we just haven't gotten to that part yet. We would like to. We had a little like an idea. We had a hiccup, a fake news situation where we went to two of my really good friends, Jess and Zee, I played with them in Seattle. They got married in Wales, we went. You dressed up.
Starting point is 01:03:24 Yeah, Sue wore an off-white blazer. I wore a black one. It was my jacket. And not like my outfit. Yeah, it was just like the jacket and it was like we posted a picture and it's funny the way people reached out about it because they were kind of like, congrats.
Starting point is 01:03:39 Like friends. Like friends, like congrats. Like I had no idea basically what they're saying was like, you guys went into this with the autos. A passive aggressive period, maybe congrats period. Yeah, I was like, you'd be invited. I know, we're not gonna do the elope thing. No.
Starting point is 01:03:56 I don't, well I personally don't want that. You don't want that? No. Okay, we don't want that. And so we do want the party that's gonna be very fun and we wanna celebrate with all our people. So for everybody wondering, you will be invited. You will be invited, yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:10 Well, probably not everybody, but actually, I wouldn't mind a loping, but then still having a wedding. Yeah. Like a party. Yeah, and then like showing up and be like, we actually already married. Yeah. Pop the bottle. Yep. That I could do.
Starting point is 01:04:23 So there is no timeline. It's a lot of planning, but it's gonna happen eventually. Yeah. Can I ask it even more? I can't wait. Invasive question. Kids, is it kids? Oh yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:39 It's kids. You have all this time to contemplate what happens from here on out. I am fundamentally as a friend and as, as the father of a daughter. A girl dad. As a girl dad. Well, how do you think about that stuff? Now that you have the time to actually, for the first time, think about that stuff. I mean, you have a kid, right?
Starting point is 01:05:06 You know how crazy they are. Yeah. Sounds pretty crazy. Well, my guy, people are asking me all of the time. When's the second one? I'm like, guys, we're just figuring out how to negotiate with a four year old and not be outmaned here. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:23 So I am, it's hard. It's also all the, here's my perspective. I know, it's like wonderful, but. All the cliches are real. For me. I see it with my sister. I mean, you have, it's like, I have nieces, I see it. I see it. I froze my eggs, so that's like the, I think the best part is that we don't feel a time crunch, although, you know, you don't want to be like a super old parent, there's no one way to do it. I don't know that I want to be a super old parent,
Starting point is 01:05:48 I'm already 43, so like what's the, I don't know if I've ever thought about this, but I'm like what's the line? Superd versus time, the sequel. Yeah, the sequel, part two. So yeah, so that's the good news, is the option exists. I think as of right now, the answer is no. But it has come up a little bit more recently.
Starting point is 01:06:07 We've talked about a little bit more. I've always, I never- I have a lot of respect for it. I'm just gonna start, I have a lot of respect for it. And because of that, I'm a little like, okay, I'm not doing this lightly. One million percent. Yeah, like a lot.
Starting point is 01:06:19 Yeah, yeah. I never wanted to have kids while I was playing. I was just marvel at my teammates and athletes who do it. I'm just like, I don't, how did you do that? How are you doing that right now? Like I'm so tired and it takes, it's just like moms who have kids and come back to sports are superheroes. Like I've seen it like live in all the different ways. Oh yeah. From on field, off field, navigating, parenting,
Starting point is 01:06:52 in that environment. Right, Tina Williams, Candice Parker, all of these examples. It's incredible, the utmost respects. And I just was like, oh my God, I can never do that. I never wanted to. And then I also don't want them like right now. I just, I'm like, I can never do that. I never wanted to. And then I also don't want them right now. I just got to my freedom.
Starting point is 01:07:08 So you're not giving that up just yet? No! For that cute little. At the end of every episode of Public Tori finds out, we establish what it is that we found out today. I found out a lot about you guys, but I'm curious what you guys have found out talking through with me, your lives in a way that feels a bit like part couples counseling, although you guys don't need it, and part exit interview
Starting point is 01:07:42 from your previous life, which is not how I, I didn't want this to be super dramatic, but I appreciate that we've got into some really deep things. So what did you guys find out about yourselves today? That's actually the first time I've really talked about the fear that I think I felt as a young professional using that word, like afraid.
Starting point is 01:08:05 I haven't really just talked about it that way, just came to me and I said it. I did think that too while you were talking. I was like, oh, I've never said it that way. It was always kind of like the way you talked about was like, it was fine, I didn't really think about it that much and then you started dating like the gayest person in the world.
Starting point is 01:08:22 So it was like, yeah, my sister was like- With Holly Culkin over here. Oh my God, it was so funny. I mean, your shout out- To that mean person who said that. Kali Culkin. That was funny. That was funny.
Starting point is 01:08:35 But yeah, yeah, so that's definitely something I guess I learned. What I found out is that you guys are enjoying freedom. Yeah, very much. Yeah, it's nice. What I found out is that you guys are enjoying freedom. Yeah, very much. Yeah, it's nice. I think I like continue to find out that I was very ready to move into like a different phase of life, but I think just like freeing up all this space
Starting point is 01:09:00 is like being very curious about other things and wanting to spend my time doing other things other than just like talking about myself or ourselves. No, no, I was just gonna say, you were saying, yeah, I love this freedom of retirement. And I'm like, and I'm Tom Hanks from Castaway. But I feel like I'm still like, yeah, I'm still laying on the floor with my flashlight.
Starting point is 01:09:20 Can I go back to the island? It was comfortable. Like that's like my experience though, just kind of leaving this other life that I live for so long got comfortable and like, oh, there's a whole world out there. Yeah. Yeah. Megan, Sue, thank you for genuinely sharing more of yourselves than I have any right to
Starting point is 01:09:41 know and allowing me to, you know, ask about your sex life. Yeah, no, we started hot and heavy. Yeah, we got in there. We started hot and heavy. We had to keep it going. Happy Valentine's Day. Happy Valentine's Day.
Starting point is 01:09:55 Likewise. We be my Valentine? Yeah, I'll be your Valentine, babe. Of course. For more Sue Bird, by the way, keep an eye out for this upcoming documentary titled Sue Bird in the Clutch, which just premiered at Sundance and is headed to a streaming service near you. This has been Pablo Torre finds out.
Starting point is 01:10:20 A Metal Arc Media production. And I'll talk to you next time.

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