The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - The Big Suey: 7 vs. 70 (feat. Mike Florio)
Episode Date: June 30, 2025A bacon salesman, a mail carrier, and a hitchhiker walk into a bar, and Mike Florio is there to greet them with details on NFL owners colluding. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices....com/adchoices
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Welcome to the Big Sui, presented by DraftKings.
Why are you listening to this show?
The podcast that seems very similar to the other Dan LeBattard podcast.
I'm sorry, I'm not going to apologize for that.
In fact, the only difference seems to be this imaging.
I have been tempted in restaurants just walking past tables to grab somebody's fries.
That if they're just there, that hasn't happened to you guys.
I've done it.
And now here's the marching man to nowhere,
fat face and the habitual liar.
And now the looks like game with Tim Kirchen.
Does Joe Madden look like your grandma's new boyfriend?
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Does Kyle Schwaber look like the kid
in your fourth grade class who can burp the alphabet?
Does Bartolo Colon look like Andre the Giant when he was in third grade?
Does Bryce Harper look like the guy who married Hunter Pence's wife while Hunter Pence was
lost at sea.
Does Mel Kuyper look like the bodily protective eagle?
Does Adnan Brooke look like the agent who after 007 has been felled, removes his mask,
extends a hand and says graciously,
welcome to Tangier, Mr. Bod.
Does Paul Skeens look like the up-and-coming country singer who just had to publicly apologize
after old tweets resurfaced?
Or does he look like the small town cop who looks the other way when local college kids buy beer from the corner store as long as they bring him his favorite candy bar, a Snickers,
a Mountain Dew, and a copy of that day's paper when they lose?
Does Adam Shepard look like the scientist in a white lab coat on a gasoline commercial? Or, or, or does he look more like the squeamish veterinarian
from a Wild West movie who audibly gulps
when a weapon is placed in his hand?
Does Adam Silver look like a decorative caviar spoon?
Does he look like a small town's water tower?
Does he look like he administers truth syrup?
Look at him.
Does he look like a library reference desk clerk who moonlights as the lead singer of
a Devo cover band. Does he
look like the mentally unbalanced Russian nuclear scientist with no spoken lines in
a Sylvester Stallone movie?
He looks like a lone French fry in a bag of onion rings. Oh, it's so bad. I can't believe
you do that to this guy.
Does he look like a tire pressure gauge? Yeah.
Does he look like a nurse at an old folks home?
A dissipating smoke from a blown out birthday candle?
A teed up golf ball?
Does Adam Silver look like
golf ball. Does Adam Silver look like a generic proctologist on a community college pamphlet for Crohn's disease? Does Adam
Silver look like Dracula unusually long middle toe?
Does he look like Bob Barker's microphone?
Does he look like a xylophone mallet?
Does Adam Silver look like Scott Van Pelt 15 seconds after opening the Ark of the Covenant?
Oh my god.
Greg who are you railing against particularly when you yell about Bill Zito's omission
as executive of the year?
Do you know who you're railing against? against you know who the voting committee is on this
i do not
okay because the executive of the year it's known as the jim gregory general
manager of the year award it's forty two member panel thirty two j g m's okay
five n.h.l. executives and five print or broadcast media member and roy
journalists roy
so that's the group dotes forty two so who are you rail like what are you
railing again sit the g m zim are the ones who are telling you that
that's the vote okay though the majority of the voters okay there's
something fishy here
if if i'm speaking to those forty two voters right now
i am saying
why not the two-time champion who was swung this deal and that deal and this
deal and that deal and and the catch up trade one of the greatest in the history
of the league what exactly are you looking for in that trophy
that bills you know hasn't earned i want them to explain their decision making, that's all.
I think if you, I'm backing up my dad here.
If you put all the GMs in a room and you just say,
the last, I know it's a yearly award,
the last two years, team you would like to be,
team that seems to be put together the best.
I mean, isn't it obvious?
Like this is, it's crazy.
It's not like they're a Cinderella,
like this team everyone acknowledges, like is just the depth it's crazy. It's not like they're a Cinderella. Like this team, everyone acknowledges,
like is just the depth, every position.
They're not weak anywhere.
So the Stars GM has won it three years in a row?
Three years in a row where they've lost
in the conference finals every season.
All right, so this is what I wanted to ask you guys
within the context of this, because I saw that last week,
and I didn't want to just skip right past it,
that Masai Ujiri was out with the Raptors,
and this was a person who I knew to be good at his job.
He won a championship in Toronto,
he made the right moves that allowed him
to get the right players.
This was someone who's talented at his job.
But the thing that I wanted to present to the audience,
because these things expire fast, right?
That genius is now gone.
There was a time Ujiri could have had
just about any
Architecture plan he wanted because he was such a hot executive he won in Toronto
How the hell did they win a basketball championship in Toronto?
All of that goodwill is gone because the Raptors haven't been relevant recently and the thing that I wanted to ask you guys about
What we're asking these GM's to be in the modern age when they keep up with evolution.
I saw over the weekend that Andre Drummond opted in with the Sixers for five million dollars.
It is a small contract. Very few people will care about it.
Today's big on free agency and the free agency thing is kind of dead in basketball.
Julius Randall and everyone else is signing with their own teams.
The LeBron thing is interesting,
we'll get to it in a second.
But Andre Drummond, what I wanted to say about him is,
at one time in my life when that man was 20 years old,
I, and I'm assuming Stan Van Gundy said,
I'd like that as the centerpiece
for how I play basketball for the rest of my life.
I'd like a 20-year- size who's going to offensive rebound better than
anyone and dunk a lot.
And the whole game changed as soon as he got into the league.
And so what you're asking these JMS to do is not merely win and be competitive,
but it's also stay ahead of the entirety of the curve because you Jerry won it
one way and then it's super teams came back and won it again.
And now we're back to that's not really a super team as what it has to be.
It now looks a little bit more like what Ujiri built in Toronto and so when I ask you the
assessments right now of that guy won a championship in Toronto, you can credit Kawhi Leonard if
you want but we all discovered Pascal Siakam at the same time during those play-offs.
Ujiri's reputation was solid as the young executive who knows what he's doing, and now he's fired,
and I assume he'll get another job. I assume he's still respected, but what did he buy himself with
that championship if a few years later winning a championship in Toronto gets you fired?
I don't get that move at all, and I implore the audience to go check out that 2019 Raptors roster because
at the time it felt like this is a funky little outlier that took advantage of some Golden
State injuries. That team would still be in the conversation right now. They were friggin
loaded and they were at the very start of this new way of roster construction in the
NBA. He did it in Denver. he did it in Toronto. Toronto was
feisty. They seemed to be... I would certainly hand over the keys, continue
handing over the keys to Masai Ujiri and say, we trust you in this NBA. You've
done it once before. I don't really get the move. There has to be more to it.
Does there? Because I believe the lifespan on these things...
So far we've
got fishy over here we've got fishy on Bill Zito what's the accusation exactly
when you call something fishy I need you I you've done no reporting on this you
didn't even know who you were railing against and yet you called it fishy it
seems like the easiest of conspiracy theories it seems not very journalistic
of you it's a small voting panel I thought it was sixteen or eighteen it turns out to be forty two
uh... what's fishy is that it's very apparent
that bills you know should have won the award
at one point over the last two seasons now
it should be a quantifiable award i'm not saying it has to go to the gm
of the stanley cup champion every year
but that's a pretty good starting spot.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
If you're making an accusation of Fishy, I need to know what it is that you're saying,
because you're saying that something is suspect, it's corrupt, that there's a reason.
It's a bad decision.
No, but Fishy's different than that.
Fishy's a purposely bad decision.
Well, I don't understand the logic.
Okay, I get why he did it last year.
He had a really deep team. He makes it to the conference finals. This year, it ended in embarrassment. He ends
up firing the head coach. This is an award that is handed out during the NHL draft. It
actually looks like Dallas has to rework their roster a little bit. So I'm very confused
as to why there has to be more to it than just on ice success. I don't get it.
Forgive me for spending this much of the show today without addressing the most
serious of things that needed to be addressed, which is that Greg Cody and
his son Chris are trying to create a lane no one in sports media has ever
dared to tackle before on the Greg Cody show featuring i'd i'd believe they are alone in this lane
there are no other occupants historically in
grandpa
against granddaughter
in the greg cody show family olympics
seven verses seventy
i've been told
that we have swimming video of greg cody Cody laboriously swimming across
a very shallow and small pool at a very slow rate of speed.
Less swimming than surviving.
Wearing goggles.
Wearing goggles and now at the end seemingly just walking.
I'm sorry, did they not wear goggles in the Olympics?
Like I don't understand that criticism.
Thank you.
We're not putting in the sound here
because we don't wanna give away who's winning.
This is the finish to a big race.
Who had the better time, the seven year old
or the 70 year old?
I have been in that pool, that pool,
that's the shallow end, at the end,
Greg is simply walking.
He is no longer swimming.
Oh, the start of it, he like runs four steps
before he starts swimming.
Not really.
I'm pushed off like the Olympians do.
I have a question for you, Greg,
and I haven't listened yet.
It's early, I haven't listened.
I'm usually like a Tuesday consumer of the Greg Cody Show.
Billy, in fairness to you,
we're teasing this episode, which comes out next week.
Ah, okay, good.
The current episode is something whole different.
We have a hitchhiker and a bacon expert on this week.
Yeah.
Wait, your daughter's picking up hitchhikers?
No, no, no.
Just me and my dad talking to a hitchhiker
who's hitchhiked over 250,000 miles in his life.
68 year old man.
You're trying to bring back the hitchhiker,
which you pointed out among many other, you know,
problematic things with the hitchhiker
is the murder rate climbed with hitchhiking,
and then hitchhiking fell out of favor,
you explained to us last week.
Now you're just continuing the thread on the tapestry
that is the Greg Cody Show featuring Greg Cody
by bringing on a noted hitchhiker and also a bacon expert
because you left here with a truly breathtaking
amount of bacon last week.
It's more bacon than I've ever seen a single human being
go or leave a place with.
Yeah, I can't eat it fast enough.
No, you said you'd eat it all.
I'm like, you will never eat all of that bacon.
It's not possible.
You will die before you eat all of that bacon.
Yeah, and not necessarily, but we have a bacon salesman from Minnesota,
a mail carrier from Queens, New York, and a 68-year-old world globe-trotting hitchhiker
on the current episode of The Great Cody Show podcast podcast but then next week is the big one Yeah, but but today's is very much an experimental podcast
We're gonna see how it does we get to know three of our biggest show fans who all have interesting stories to tell
I was gonna ask why the mail carrier the bacon we kind of set up the hitchhiker
We kind of the mail carrier just seems a little out of the blue.
It's interesting, I mean everyone here gets mail,
deals with mail, we ask them, we get into the nuts and bolts
of the ugly parts, the pretty parts of being a mail carrier.
What should people never say to a mail carrier,
is the carrier versus dog real or imagined?
Do you judge people by the mail you're delivering to them?
You know, stuff like that.
At which point he's like, I don't snoop in their mail.
That's what you gotta say though.
If you're a mail carrier, that's what you gotta say.
Come on now.
It won't surprise you guys at all, right?
That I've probably gone more than 10 years
without getting a piece of mail in my hands.
That's not true.
It's impossible.
No, it's not.
In terms of that gets through my wife
and it stops before, I haven't gone to a mailbox,
I haven't seen a piece of mail in more than 10 years.
I'm not even joking.
And yet you buy explosives.
It is odd, it is odd.
I mean, maybe it's just been a setup, Greg,
you know what I mean?
Like, I haven't seen mail in 10 years, but I have all these explosives.
Just make sure you don't put these things in there.
I've never been at the post office, but I like to go to the bank.
This guy.
It's odd. Yeah, something's up here. Keep an eye on him, FBI.
Fishy, fishy, fishy. So much so.
We buried the lead. We also have my dad climbing a rock here.
No, I'm not. I'm going to get there. Hold on a second.
Wow.
Silbert, sorry.
I'm getting there the slow route. This is the big payoff, I'm not. Really? I'm gonna get there. Hold on a second. I'm getting there.
I'm getting there the slow route.
This is the big payoff.
I'm not in a big hurry to get to your dad rock climbing.
Now we've teased it properly.
But I also have him running with an egg in his spoon.
Look at my height advantage there.
I'm gonna dominate or will I?
Just great executive producing all around.
We'll get to that.
Yeah.
Pace ourselves.
We've got a whole Olympics in front of us
and the Greg Cody Show featuring Greg Cody
requires promotion.
Now, Greg, I don't want to cast doubt or question
onto your seven versus seven D Olympics.
You guys, I will say, love the Olympics.
You guys are constantly having competitions
against each other every summer.
It seems like it's a thing you guys do a lot.
Now.
She's gonna win when it's eight against 80.
Well, here's my question.
I hope you didn't get any spoilers there.
Here's the question though,
because a lot of grandpappies,
they let the granddaughters win.
Is this something that we as the listeners
should be concerned about?
You may be throwing it to build up
Lil' Graceland's confidence,
like you let her win some of these competitions
to keep things competitive.
If only that's how it went.
I want some integrity in these seven versus 70, you know?
I think it's a very fair question that Billy asks,
and I can honestly say no, I'm gonna crush her if I can.
All right. Okay.
That's what I wanna hear.
I'm gonna be honest,
because I don't believe in coddling someone
and saying, oh, here's a consolation ribbon a participation ribbon no if she can't climb a rock wall
faster than then pop it's not a rock wall it's not a play place he doesn't
deserve to all right but let's and forgive me I I'm sure we'll I'll be
hearing from my math friends that it can't be eight again 80 if it's seven
against 70 but let's let's play this aforementioned rock climbing please where you guys can see
both the dramatic tension of Greg trying to indeed kick his grandfather's ass.
Now he gets off to a good start.
Wow no shoes.
They make you wear these socks.
Those are professional rock climbing socks.
No, they're quite the hot start hot start yes grandpa's getting left
behind I also saw a video of how tired grandpa is but we've got to cut this
video first we got to cut it so now are we so we're cutting to the end he
watches her go down watch now watch Greg here oh we all got very scared that
would have been a 70 year old-old falling on his head.
For the audio audience, my dad sees my daughter
do the classic push off the wall and fall down nicely.
And he like, you see him like a child look at her like,
ooh, she's doing that.
Oh, that's tight right there.
That's tight in the groin.
That's tight in the groin.
Everybody look out, everybody.
Look out, everybody.
That's unpleasant.
We don't want that.
Good for him.
Why are we doing this?
Nope, nope, let's not do this.
Looks like you got a massive hammer there, Greg.
Nope, let's not do this.
I'm glad you guys cut out the ending of that race,
I had no idea how it ended.
There's also a time on the wall,
so you could see exactly what happened.
Greg was unbelievably winded.
At the end of that, I saw a-
Quit showing that.
I saw, at the end of that, I saw a wheezing Greg Cody.
Going back to the point that I was making earlier though.
Hell yeah, Greg.
If I told you guys Andre Drummond as a 20 year old,
would you like to lock up all the things that he is
for the next 15 years of basketball as a high schooler?
You also famously took Dwight Howard
to start your franchise over LeBron.
Yep.
Speaking of LeBron, yes, because I didn't.
You passed that one reflect.
And he wanted Odin over KD.
Yes.
What?
I didn't see it coming.
Dan didn't, no one, very few people did.
Hibbert over Duncan.
Joe Cronin should have probably seen it with Hayden.
Hibbert over Duncan, I forgot about that one.
Jesus Christ.
No, that was just. that was just one series.
Duncan Robinson over Kevin Durant.
That was.
Oh no, that was Pat Riley, sorry.
When you look back at the career of Andre Drummond,
he ends up being just another guy who made a lot of money
and will be one of the best offensive rebounders ever.
And the whole sport changed around him very rapidly and at
the end of his career he's signing a one-year five million dollar deal which
makes him a below league average talent that he's opting into a contract on. Are
you guys gonna be disappointed that there isn't gonna be much in the
transaction realm today but the one transaction that is or was interesting
is LeBron opting back in at that age for
53 million and then immediately declaring through his agent that the Lakers are on notice
They should be building for the future
But LeBron wants to win now when LeBron just opted into that contract and has a no trade clause
Which is a weird public pressure to put on the Lakers when you're beginning right now
to have all the power at the end of your career.
Only you and Bradley Beal have a no trade clause.
It was such a weird thing to see LeBron opt in
and then immediately have Rich Paul put pressure
on the Lakers when he's got the no trade clause.
The Lakers don't have any power here.
Exactly, it gives him more power to get to
wherever he ultimately wants to go, whether that's Cleveland or somewhere else. The Lakers don't have any power here. Exactly. It gives him more power to get to wherever
he ultimately wants to go,
whether that's Cleveland or somewhere else.
Teams that don't have salary cap flexibility right now,
now are in the game for LeBron James.
But there are gonna be very few teams
that end up trading for one year
of $50 million of LeBron, right?
Like that's not, Bobby Mark says there is no trade market
for LeBron on that front, which is a bit surprising.
Would you trade Tyler Hero for him?
I would.
I can't believe that there's no trade market for him.
I would, I would do that deal.
I would do that.
One year of LeBron James for Tyler Hero,
yes, where do I sign?
Is there no trade market
because no one's even gonna bother asking?
Because they like know LeBron's gonna have to decide
to come here.
Dictate where he wants to go.
Like you think Orlando's gonna bother calling
to be like, oh does LeBron wanna come to the manager?
That's a complicated contract to bring on for a contender.
It's not the easiest trade in the world to make.
They can figure it out.
It's basketball, they always figure it out.
Those numbers seem to mean nothing.
Like the salary cap seems so easy to skirt in the NBA
because they always
find the way. If they want it to happen, it always happens somehow. Jeremy, you know something about
me, right? You know when I'm grilling outside and it's summertime, you know how I supplement my
summertime? Of course I do. I make it Miller time. Of course. That beautiful white can. Oh, when it's
so hot outside, I just put it right to my forehead right there and just roll it sometimes right on
the forehead, cool my body down and then I crack it open in some relief and then that first sip brother
Does that first hit that is a top five?
Sequence of events that you can possibly go through
I'm just serenity now when I just imagined that first sip of Miller life just think about it's making me dude
The Sun is out. It's nice. You have your friends showing up.
You got your family there.
You just had your first sip of Miller Lite.
And you know what?
You're happy.
You're blissful.
You're fulfilled.
I've been stocking my cooler with Miller Lite for years,
and for good reason.
It's brewed for taste.
Only 96 calories and 3.2 grams of carbs.
This year, Miller Lite turns 50.
It has five decades of cookouts, laughs,
and ice cold moments that never miss.
It's the original light beer and it's still my go-to.
Miller Lite, great taste, 96 calories.
Go to MillerLite.com slash Dan
to find delivery options near you
or you can pick up some Miller Lite
pretty much anywhere they sell beer.
Cheers to 50 years of Miller time.
Celebrate responsibly,
Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
96 calories and 3.2 carbs per 12 ounces.
Roy, you know that moment when you're out watching puck and the server comes over and asks the table,
what can I get you guys? And everyone freezes up. You know what you should do?
What should I do, Mike?
You've got to have some confidence! Or as Jägermeister calls it, shot-fidence.
I love it.
If everyone's struggling, take control. Just order for the whole table. A round of ice called Jägermeister calls it, shotfidence. I love it. If everyone's struggling, take control.
Just order for the whole table a round of ice-cold Jägermeister shots.
Damn, that's cold.
Because apparently, we've all been drinking Jägermeister wrong.
Well, how should we be drinking it?
We should be drinking it ice cold.
At zero degrees Fahrenheit, Roy, like Jägermeister,
what else is infinitely better ice cold?
The sport of hockey, Mike.
It's in the name.
It's ice hockey.
Ice hockey.
Yes, regular hockey.
Not as great.
Not floor hockey.
Ice hockey.
Real good.
Damn right.
Wherever you are, if you're hanging with friends
or at the bar, call the shots.
Cheers with ice cold shots of Jägermeister.
Damn, that's cold.
And remember to check Jägermeister out
at DraftKingsXJägermeister.com.
Drink responsibly Jägermeister Liqueur 35% Alcohol by Volume, imported by Mass Jägermeister
US, White Plains, New York.
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Don Lebertard.
Yeah, very fast.
Imagine if someone told you you couldn't have a Corvette.
Stugats!
I'm a grown ass man who's not filthy rich.
I can't afford a Lamborghini.
Well, I probably can, but that's...
Whoa!
Hey!
Wow!
Wow!
Wow!
This is the Don Lebatard Show with the StuGuts. I wanted to bring in Mike Florio here because a story from last week I want to continue
to put it in front of you and Florio is also is not just someone who's great at the football
information he's also got a legal background that allows him to parse through some issues
that the rest of the media is very good at avoiding. So Mike, thank you for joining us. I wanted you just to help walk me
through what the Pablo Torre Finds Out story was in reality and why it didn't
reverberate the way that I thought it should reverberate, why that story didn't
have the legs that I thought it had and thank
you for joining us by the way. Hey Dan thanks for having me great to talk to
you again. This all started back really a few years ago when Demora Smith the
former NFLPA executive director was on one of our shows either PFT live or PFTPM
and he said that a collusion grievance was coming on the issue of fully guaranteed
contracts for certain quarterbacks. And within weeks after that, they filed it. This was
October-ish of 2022. The case proceeded from there, and I did my best to monitor it. While
these things are going on, everyone is subject to a confidentiality order and they don't talk much
about it. But we knew what was happening generally.
We knew when the hearing happened.
We knew the ruling was coming.
And then when the ruling came, January 15 of this past year, January 14 to be more specific,
no one said anything.
The ruling came and that was it.
Who won? Who lost? Nobody would talk about it.
And I was like, what the hell is going on here?
Like, why would this ruling not come out?
Well, it's confidential.
No, the ruling's not confidential.
The process is the ruling isn't.
You can talk about it.
Why is nobody talking about it?
So I started banging that drum back in late January,
early February, and you know,
the NFL always has a bright,
shiny object that can distract us,
and things can easily be ignored
and overlooked and forgotten.
And Michael Hawley and I were doing an episode of PFT Live
right around Memorial Day,
and I remembered that this is still out there.
And I became determined, entering the slow time
with no bright, shiny objects to distract me,
I gotta get this thing out there.
So I was determined to do it,
and Pablo and I were talking about other things as Belichick coverage, because I, like him,
believe that it's something that is a bigger deal than many would say who are trying to
shout it all down.
So we got to know each other that way.
We developed a friendly competition.
Let's see who gets it first.
He got it.
And it was amazing because at the end of the day, the NFL was caught with its
hand in the collusion cookie jar.
The arbitrator gave them a pass.
I think the arbitrator got it wrong, but they were caught red-handed telling teams to collude
when it comes to the issue of guaranteed money in contracts, specifically quarterback contracts.
I think it's a big deal, but the NFL doesn't want people to talk about it.
The union buried the thing for reasons that still aren't obvious because the union should
be using it as a hammer.
So that's it in a nutshell.
The NFL rarely gets caught doing anything it shouldn't be doing.
It got caught colluding and no one wants to talk about it.
Even now, six days later, I can't get people to talk about it, mainly because people fear
reprisals.
Darrell Bock Why is it that you and Pablo think it's a big deal and other people don't seem to?
Well, I mean, you always have a bias that your reporting is important when it's the
result of the work that you put in.
I understand that.
But I think the fact that this group of multi-billion dollar businesses
that are supposed to be operating independently,
they have limited antitrust exemptions
that allow them to come together from time to time.
Beyond that, they're not allowed to come together.
And it's been suspected for years.
When they get together four times a year,
every three months or so,
and March is the big annual meeting,
it's been suspected that they do collude.
They do compare notes.
They just usually are cleaner about it.
This time they got sloppy.
This time there was a paper trail.
This time there was circumstantial evidence of both a direction to collude and actual
collusion.
And it made it fascinating because we finally were able to show this is exactly what's going
on.
And Dan, like in so many other situations, the cover-up is worse than the crime.
And the failure of the NFLPA, this is the most fascinating aspect of it to me because
this thing should have become a cudgel in multiple different ways and forms and fashions
to try to give the union some leverage against the league.
They put the thing in a vault and locked it and won't talk about it. And both sides, they wouldn't let anybody read it. They didn't distribute the league. They put the thing in a vault and locked it and won't talk
about it.
And both sides, they wouldn't let anybody read it.
They didn't distribute the thing.
It was like it never even happened.
So what becomes far more compelling, I think, for Pablo
and for me is the idea that once this thing hit, both sides have
worked so hard to keep it a secret.
Do you have any hypotheticals there that we can get to
on why it is that the union wouldn't want any of this scene?
But before I get to that question,
is there anything behind you in what seems like
a really lovely kitchen that has any meaning to you?
Is there any glass back there or anything behind you
that would be something that you're
attached to?
No, it's just what's behind me. And this is actually, and I'm not trying to flex, I'm
just answering your question. This is the wine cellar in the house that we bought that
we keep no wine in. But the guy we bought the house from owned two businesses, a pool
company and a winery. So he's got a really nice pool and a really nice wine cellar.
And I just happen to have a router on the wall next to me.
So it gives me uninterrupted full service.
The guys from Pardon My Take like to say
I'm in an Olive Garden restaurant,
but what's behind me is what my wife has deemed suitable
to be behind me when I do these.
Mike, are those granite or marble countertops because they're absolutely splendid.
They are marble. They are marble. That's a good choice by you. I want to ask you this question.
From a legal standpoint,
had the independent arbiter ruled in favor
of the players union and against the NFL, what would have been the ramification?
Well, that's a great question because we don't know how the damages would have been calculated
because the damages for what started as three quarterbacks, Russell Wilson, Kyler Murray,
and Lamar Jackson eventually expanded to include 594 other players who didn't get fully guaranteed
contracts. The argument is after the Sean Watson fully guaranteed contract, the league decided we
have to stop this.
We have to get the teams to not do this.
So they turned off the faucet.
So every player who didn't get a fully guaranteed contract was in this group.
But you'd have to almost figure out player by player how much money they lost by not
having a fully guaranteed contract.
Because what happens with these contracts,
once you get through the first year or two,
the team has the ability to tear it up and move on whenever it wants.
How many guys had their contracts torn up?
How many guys didn't?
So I think it would have been a very complicated process
for determining damages.
But when you have that many players,
it easily could have become a very, very large number.
And you mentioned independent arbitrator.
That's an important point here because it really isn't independent like a court.
The arbitrator is selected by both the union and the league,
and either side can pull the plug on the assignment at the end of the current term,
whenever they want.
And I think there's a political analysis that any arbitrator in that kind of a setting has
to do when, as in this case, he was expected, the argument was that the owners were claiming
they don't collude, but the circumstantial evidence proved otherwise.
You're basically finding that multiple NFL owners aren't telling the truth when they
say we didn't collude because the circumstantial
evidence proved otherwise.
And I think that made it hard from a political standpoint for the arbitrator to come to that
conclusion because I just think he got it wrong.
I think not only was there an attempt by the league to collude, the owners did collude.
And that's why the league ultimately won.
The arbitrator wasn't willing to go that far and say they did collude.
What a fart noise for you and Pablo, though, for you guys to be here being like the arbiter got it wrong you get the 61
Page report the arbiters sitting there proving all the things that you want proven and then at the end he rules
You're like reading and you're like, oh this is damning this is damning this is damning
Oh, the arbiter got the whole thing wrong.
Like that word, what is that?
I mean, he twists himself into knots
to dismiss the best evidence of collusion in action.
And I practice law.
You never get people on the witness stand
admitting that they ordered the code red.
You've got to thread the needle with circumstantial evidence
and then argue to a jury that what the person said on the witness stand isn't true.
And there was so much in there. If this would have gone in front of a jury, I'm confident the NFL would have lost.
It's one of the reasons why big companies don't want to have to answer to juries.
There's something about the collective wisdom of a jury of average people that can sniff through bull crap and come to compelling conclusions. That's what this needed, not an arbitrator,
but a jury that would have quickly found
that the NFL was indeed colluding.
This is what I'm gonna do with Florio.
Now I'm gonna give you a second here
to gather your thoughts on this.
You have read the report now,
at least two times, 61 page report.
I ask you to think what you think the most interesting
or damning or offensive details are in there,
if there are three, if there are two, if there are four or five, and produce for me a top
five list or a top three list in descending order, or in ascending order of what is the
most interesting fact in that report. Are you ready to do this?
I can do that. I can do that. I can give you three.
All right. Let's go. Yes. Let's start with number three the bronze medalist. Well, the bronze medalist is footnote 25 which explains away
JC Treader's
Pejorative criticisms of Russell Wilson because Treader was the NFL PA president at the time
He had some choice things to say about Russell Wilson when he didn't hold the rope in this game of tug-of-war to try to
Make the Deshaun Watson fully guaranteed contract spread
to others because if it had spread to others,
maybe the new status quo would have been
everybody gets fully guaranteed contracts.
So Treder didn't like that.
He said some mean things about Wilson.
And the thinking is one of the big reasons
this thing got buried was to protect Treder
and his aspirations to become the NFLPA executive director at some point.
So.
Your timing was bad on that, Chris Cody,
but I don't blame you.
We're gonna get, we're gonna coach Mike Florello
up a little more on this game.
It's not your fault, it's okay.
What did I do?
No, no, no, it's okay.
We just sort of need number three
and you need to give us like a tight sentence
and then he hits the fanfare and then you explain it.
You couldn't have known, you're a novice to the game.
That's okay, I blame Chris Cody, but it's all right.
Number three.
So number three, footnote 25, which shows
that J.C. Treder had reason to keep this thing quiet.
That's how you get it.
Ta-da!
There it is, all right.
It can be taught.
All right, number two. You can't be taught.
Alright, number two.
Second chances.
Number two.
Number two.
Number two.
Former Walmart CEO Greg Penner giving a crap about his competition.
Bang.
Do you want more details?
Yes, that's where you elaborate.
Yes, you'll get it.
I'm the last one.
You're really going to nail this.
I feel like we're going to dismount perfectly.
So, so the discovery process that preceded the hearing in this case found internal communications,
emails, texts, etc.
Where Greg Penner, the former Walmart CEO who was running the Broncos post August of 2022 and was there when they
were doing the Russell Wilson contract, he was informing his other owners, the other
partners in the ownership of the Broncos about the Wilson deal and making comments along
the lines of other owners will like this.
And the first thing I thought was this guy was the CEO
of Walmart, do you think there are any emails
within Walmart when he was the CEO that had comments
like Target will really like this?
And it is absolute proof that these businesses
that are supposed to be in competition are in coordination, which is another way
of saying in collusion.
You should never care whether your business decisions will help a competitor.
If anything, you want your business decisions to hurt a competitor.
You want the thing that you do that is right for you to be wrong for your competitor and
your competitor be forced to pick a bad
lane.
So that to me was so damning because in any other business, you are never going to think
how much this might help one of your competitors.
Number one, according to Mike Florio, Pablo Torre finds out is the name of the podcast.
This reporting was very strong. This episode, as the podcast. This reporting was very strong.
This episode, as most with Pablo R, was very strong.
Number one, Mike Florio.
Well, and it would come from the table read
that Pablo and I did of the text message exchange
between Charter's owner, Dean Spanos,
and Cardinal's owner, Michael Bidwell.
In that exchange, Spanos congratulated Bidwell on managing to hold the rope and have a non-fully
guaranteed contract for quarterback Kyler Murray.
Along the way, Bidwell said, we fought hard to not have a fully guaranteed deal.
There were comments made about the ridiculous deal that Cleveland did with Deshaun Watson. And Spanos, with the comment that should have
Justin Herbert, the Chargers quarterback, up in arms,
this helps us with our quarterback.
And Herbert would be, now again,
nobody's talking about this, nobody's saying anything
about it, but Herbert would be the prime guy
to stand up and say, hey, this collusion affected me
because my owner was trying to work with the owner of another team to make sure
he wouldn't have to give me a fully guaranteed contract.
That to me, there were two smoking guns, one from the league's perspective,
where they're reduced to writing their communications about their desire to
tell the owners to pull back on guaranteed contracts.
From the owner's perspective, the Spanos Bidwell exchange,
it just shows, it shows.
Even though the arbitrator got it wrong,
it shows that they were coordinating
and necessarily colluding.
Florio, I just hate that you and Pablo
can't get this thing off the ground
because you have to keep saying some form of,
even though the arbitrator got it wrong.
I know, and he did, but that's the thing.
Nobody, I don't understand why.
Now, I must have done 15 radio and podcast appearances
last week that I ordinarily wouldn't have done.
So some folks get it, but the people who are in position
to advance the ball, and think about it,
there is an army of reporters who devote
their professional time to covering the NFL.
And when a story like this comes along, there are ways to advance it.
You get comments from players.
You get comments from agents.
You get different angles.
You talk to an expert, if need be, to tell you what this all means.
How many stories do we see where there are quotes from a professor from NYU or this guy
or that guy talking about what this all means?
There has been no effort by anyone to push this thing forward.
So the hope is by the league and the union that it dies on the vine.
And I know I've been doing everything I can to keep it alive.
And I'm glad you're still talking about it because a weekend in the summer can be a hard
reset.
And I'm appreciative that you didn't treat it like that and you're still on it.
PFT live airs weekdays on Peacock, NBC Sports Now channel, and NBC Sports Radio.
Before we let you go, name them.
Who needs to chase this story down?
Name them.
Who needs to be the one putting the work in to chase down the last parts of this story?
Go ask Herbert, hey, how much money did this cost you? Ask Herbert's agent, are you aware that they colluded
in a way that affected your guaranteed money?
Well, anyone and everyone who covers the NFL
on a national basis, all of the insiders
who specialize in telling us what's going to be announced
five minutes before it does, but never finds out
anything they don't want us to know,
they should all be on it, they won't be.
Anybody who covers the various teams
that are implicated in this,
anybody that covers the Cardinals, the Ravens,
the Broncos, the Browns, and the Chargers
should be trying to push this forward
with comments that would either give extra color
and flavor to what was going on,
or push this thing forward.
And no one And no one wants
to bother. Whether it's because they don't understand the story, they don't want to understand
the story, they don't want to step into a bear trap and affect their own careers, I
think it's a cocktail of reasons that are causing most of the people in this business
to just keep their heads low and their mouths shut.
Well said. Let's stop beating around the bush though. Is Mike McDaniel on the hot seat?
Yeah. Well, he should be. It all comes down to though. Is Mike McDaniel on the hot seat? Yeah.
Well, he should be.
It all comes down to what Steven Ross is going to do.
And he's 85.
I remember when Leon Hess, when he was 80, fired Pete Carroll
and said, basically, I don't have much time left.
I'm trying to win.
I don't know what Ross is going to do.
But when I went through a list last week of who I think
should be on the hot seat, I would
say McDaniel's getting there.
It's year four.
We're hearing about culture change every year when you start having an annual conversation about culture change
That gets you closer and closer to coaching change and when they fired Brian Flores
Who was the bill Belichick hard-ass they overcorrected we see that all the time you fire a coach you get the exact opposite
And I think they went too far the other way the guys too nice
He he's too much of a player coach and that started to come back to bite them and I could see them trying to far the other way. The guy's too nice. He he's too much of a player coach. And that's starting to come back to bite them. And I could see them trying to go the other
way. Maybe they'll over come. No, stop interrupting. We wasted his time. No, we didn't. Sprinklers
and leave Shriver right there. Get me back to football. First 15 minutes. We wasted.
That's what I'm saying. We wasted his time for 15 minutes because we threw it into the
wheelhouse of hot seat and all of a sudden Florio's galloping like it's playoff time.
He put together an entire list.
What's the rest of that list look like?
Tell me.
Say it slowly.
Do it in the cadence of a sprinkler at the start of HBO's Hard Knocks.
I got Mike McDaniel, I got Brian Dabal, Shane Steichen.
A little slower.
Hot Seat.
Brian Callahan.
Nice seat.
Ooh, romantic voice please. Dave Canales. Hot Seat. I Callahan. Nice seat. Romantic voice please. Dave
Canales. Hot seat. I'm close. Lewis in the lights. Mike Tomlin. Not Tomlin. Not Tomlin.
Oh wait. Whoa. Hey. What? What? What? What? Everybody wants Tomlin to be on the hot seat except Art Rooney.
They're never gonna fire Mike Tomlin. Ever. McDermott. McDermott. See you later Florio good seeing you. Thanks guys. Hey friends it's
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