The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - The Big Suey: Kawhi (Don't) Wanna Earn (feat. Pablo Torre)
Episode Date: September 3, 2025"Welcome to sports, Steve." Despite his busy day as the most popular man in sports journalism, Pablo Torre joins the show -- welcomed by top-tier Pablo Drop™ imaging -- to explain the details of... his bombshell report about how Kawhi Leonard, Steve Ballmer, and the Los Angeles Clippers are tied to a fraudulent company that may have helped them circumvent the NBA's Salary Cap. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to the Big Suey, presented by Draft Kings.
Why are you listening to this show?
The podcast that seems very similar to the other Dan Lebitardt.
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 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. This episode of the Dan Levitart show
with Sue Gots is presented by Draft King.
Draft King, the crown is yours.
Pablo Torre joins us now.
By the way, Greg Cody, Dominique said on his show the other day that the Colts are a team
that is not getting enough attention or respect and that they were his pick for which
team would be surprisingly good.
I'll pass that along to Greg.
I wasn't talking to you. I was talking to Greg.
Okay.
Nice chatting with you.
Pablo, are you joining us right now from the Harvard Club?
Why am I, why am I being doxed on your program in which I thought I was a friend of the show,
a family member in fact, and now you're alleging.
I'm sorry I found out.
You're alleging these unverifiable claims.
I'm sorry.
You can't prove that.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry I reported something that makes you uncomfortable.
You think this is crimson?
You think this red is crimson?
No, it's something else.
You're at the Harvard Club, aren't you?
No, that's off maroon.
That's off maroon.
Pablo Tori finds out has exploded as a podcast.
Today is his first day and its first day with the athletic.
And he started with a beast of a story that took seven months to report
and that he was very nervous that somebody else was going to break before he reported
what was in 3,487 documents.
So starting first, tell the people what it is that you reported.
today at 5 a.m.
Yeah, so people may recall how there's this.
What is happening?
That's how we're introducing.
When you drop a Pablo.
When you drop a Pablo, when a Pablo drops, that's our imaging.
Chris Cody has had seven months to produce imaging for this story.
It's good, right?
And that's what he has produced.
This is how we.
Lance Stevenson blowing in my ear.
This is how a Pablo gets dropped.
This is how we.
This is how we celebrate the biggest story in sports today.
So tell us what it is, please.
Whoever, whoever just yelped, it's good, right.
I just, the sweet nothings, the sweet nothings.
It's a sweet something is what I've brought you guys today.
2019, the NBA investigates, okay, how did the Clippers get Kauai Leonard?
They found no proof, right?
This was something that the NBA was infuriated by around the league.
It was the Lakers, it was the Raptors.
everybody wondering, how did Steve Bomber and the Clippers get Kauai Leonard?
We have an episode that explains in, I think, like, 4K detail how it happened in terms of
how Steve Bomber, the owner of the Clippers, has paid Kauai Leonard off of the books using,
and this is where the story gets wild, because this is about the extension Kauai signs in 2021,
but it involves, true to the alleged setting that I'm in, to Harvard graduates, to Democratic
politicians starting what turns out to be a $2.3 billion
value-weighted scheme around climate change and saving the planet that brings in as the
following a roster of endorsers. Robert Downey Jr., Drake, Leonardo DiCaprio, Cindy Crawford,
Orlando Bloom, the list goes on. What has never been reported, though, until today is
the most important, most highly paid endorsement deal they say.
signed, which was more than four times the combined value of every other celebrity.
And that endorsement deal was signed with one of probably, I would say, the worst pitchmen
when it comes to, like, good athletes in America, and it's Kauai Leonard.
And this was a company that was funded to the tune of $50 million by Steve Bomber, another
Harvard graduate, and the owner, of course, the richest owner in all of sports.
And so we have documentation, we have seven sources, we have a source voice modulated on tape,
kind of whispering some facts into your ear, if you listen on YouTube or as a podcast.
It's a story that's an 80-minute documentary we made.
And it's, yeah, it's crazy.
It's actually a crazy thing to sort of pour through.
Is there any proof at all that Kauai Leonard did any work at all to earn that $28 million,
dollars anything other than basketball play basketball for the clippers which he's only kind of done
i would argue the basketball part um that's my favorite part is that typically in a story like this
you say okay there's no evidence and that's a problem here the absence of evidence is kind of the
evidence he was signed to a 28 million dollar endorsement contract and did nothing nobody has proof
of anything that he did zero things no likes no retweets no posts no tree plantings this was a
a company that was supposed to plant trees to zero out your carbon footprint and help save the
planet.
Kauai did nothing that anyone could find.
There's no evidence on the internet anywhere.
And that to me feels like all of the evidence you need in terms of this being a no-show job
if you're an endorser of something, I would argue.
Pablo, part of the gall of this scam is the stupidity of it.
Wouldn't it have been extremely easy just to have Kauai film a couple of P.S.
ass endorsing this whole project instead of doing absolutely nothing.
It's a great question that Callais Campbell has just asked, I believe, because who just
asked that question?
It's a really good question.
There's sloppiness in this.
There's sloppiness all over the place because, yes, all you had to do was do a couple of things.
But the whole, this is the legend, right?
Like people are saying, yeah, you're snitching on Kauai Leonard.
Kauai Leonard, to me, is not the villain of this story.
Kauai Leonard is maybe the most clear.
cut example of a straight-up capitalist, right? Bored man gets paid. Dude wants money. Dude
doesn't want to work. He wants to get paid. And so Kauai Leonard could have done some of that
stuff to get everybody plausible deniability. He preferred not to. He signed a deal in the contract
which we have. We have the signed and executed endorsement contract. And it's Kauai Leonard,
his autograph right next to the guy who turns out to be, by the way, the youngest speechwriter
in White House history for Bill Clinton, Andre Charnney, the co-founder of Asperation.
In that contract, he has outs that our pal David Samson poured over in which you clearly see
Kauai was also not obligated to do anything.
They just didn't count on people like me, I guess, ever caring enough to follow the clues
down the rabbit hole and find out that, oh, wait, this was a job that required you to do nothing
and you did nothing.
And so that feels like a problem.
Got to want to learn, got to learn.
Kauai don't want to learn.
Kauai don't want to earn.
Pablo, if they did
what Kaleas Campbell was suggesting,
which is just a little
thing here or there for Kauai
to do, wouldn't that, if I could
check the counterpoint, wouldn't that have
then tipped someone off
to this
endorsement he's doing? And then maybe
we would have found out that bomber was
funding. And of course it's like,
hey, the bell rings that
wow, that's probably not
a good thing for the salary cap.
Yeah, that's also, I mean, logical question.
Now, the thing about this story, though, was that aspiration, while totally obscure until really, like, it goes viral this morning,
they were announced to be the $23-year, $300 million-plus founding sponsor of the Intuito.
They were announced.
We have press conference footage of Steve Palmer sitting next to Joe Sandberg, the guy who's now pled guilty to two cuts of wire fraud, by the way, and a nine-figure fraud.
as investigated by the DOJ and now still the SEC.
So this was out there.
It's just that nobody knew Kauai was working for them.
But Zaz, to your point, like the reason I found out about this is because in the bankruptcy filing,
because the company has, of course, collapsed and it's into disgrace and financial ruin.
In the bankruptcy filing, you see the list of creditors.
And buried there, which were publicly available, by the way, was this line item that said $7 million
dollars outstanding to
KL2 Aspire
LLC and I
looked up what that was in the
California Secretary of State database and it was
oh, Kauai Leonard's LLC
interesting. I then Google
did he ever do anything for
aspirate because I've never seen that and it's
weird to have Kauai Leonard as one of your top endorsers
and there was nothing
and at that point that's when I'm like something
doesn't add up here and it turns out a lot
didn't add up for anybody.
Pablo this is a
at the foot of the NBA right now and the commissioner,
what do you imagine the repercussion might be of this story?
Before you answer that, Pablo, let me just hear some Callais Campbell sound
to see if Pablo's got it right because he does indeed find out
that whoever that is speaking in that modulated voice sounds like Calais Campbell.
Well, thank you. I thank you. I thank you. I thank you. I thank you. I thank you. I think
that is a compliment as well. Calleus, I have a hell of a player. I'm sorry.
You're so friendly.
What a friendly, friendly, friendly, friendly giant.
Yeah, I mean, this is the parlor game that I find absolutely fascinated because Steve
Bomber, to reiterate, has, A, denied any wrongdoing, didn't know about any of this,
says it's provably false, I await the proof, frankly.
But nonetheless, Steve Bomber is the richest owner, not just in the NBA, but all of sports,
right?
He's the good guy who saved the clippers from noted racing.
Donald Sterling. He has Barack Obama sitting court side. All of this stuff means he's both
powerful and a good spokesperson for the league that wants to be on the good guy side of things.
But yet, you have this other dynamic where Steve Bomber, who paid for the Intuit dome
with personal private money, no public funds, right? Great on him. He has spent so much
money to expand his front office because that's uncapped. Here you have the problem of why Adam Silver
recalled in 2019, according to the athletic report on the investigation, a cardinal sin of alleged
cap circumvention in which the NBA, per that report, had outlined possible consequences, forfeiture of
draft picks, million-dollar plus fines, at the most extreme end, the nullification of contracts for
the players whose salaries were circumvented. So I go back to history and I'm like, what's the last
time this happened. And the only analogous case in terms of documentation and salary caps for
convention was the Minnesota Timberwolves, Joe Smith, which I don't know if anybody in the
container even remembers, but Joe Smith and Glenn Taylor, the owner of the T. Wolves, had worked
out a side deal and it was written on paper because they were afraid Glenn Taylor was going
to die before the completion of that contract. It's a total side fascinating story. But this has the
potential to be the biggest salary cap crime that we've seen? Yes, yes, $28 million. And by the way,
for the T-Wolves in that era in the 90s, five first-round picks, suspensions for the owner of
the team for Glenn Taylor, as those other punishments down the line. But this, this has tied into,
again, an ongoing SEC DOJ investigation into fraud by this Green Bank, this climate change-friendly
company whose biggest investor, or at least the most important, influential, notable investor
was Steve Bomber who put in $50 million of his own money.
I mean, this is not merely a story about caps or a convention.
This is now a question that the seven sources I spoke to are asking, what else did Steve
Balmer know about?
How does one guy have influence over this company in this way and yet total ignorance about
everything else?
It's just a question being okay.
That Joe Smith thing happened over 20 years ago, and Glenn Taylor's still around, which is also interesting.
Howdy, folks, it's Mike Ryan.
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Don Lebertard.
Pablo leads all of podcasting in reading while smiling.
If you listen to ESPN Daily,
he sounds like he's having the time of his life.
Stugats.
Coming up next,
I'm going to tell you,
the Savannah bananas for changing face.
How do you know I'm in the bananas?
How do you know I'm smiling?
That's how I find my vocal range.
Sometimes I just say savanna bananas.
This is the Dan Levitar show with the Stugats.
Legacy Media Media.
independently verify your bombshell reporting, but the NBA did just announce several media
partnerships. They're basically on every night. They have so many big-time media partners. So far,
I haven't seen ESPN touch this story. Do you actually think this gets traction beyond where it is
right now? I know you have a big partnership with the athletic. They're going to be pumping it out
there, but do you think the big-time partners of the NBA are going to touch this with a 10-foot pole?
That's a great question. It's a really good question.
We await, I feel like, what is an obvious,
obvious decision to, of course, cover
the biggest news in basketball today.
And by the way, it's not merely, oh wow,
we have to do this whole thing.
They spent 80 minutes on this documentary.
How can we possibly do that in a segment?
The question would be, what should the MBA do
if these allegations are proven, right?
Like, how do you handle this?
Capsar Convention and Kauai Leonard, that is a, it's a talker.
And so, by the way, like, yeah, I don't know who has or hasn't covered this stuff yet.
But I can tell you that the NBA is, they were not aware.
This is not a story they had previously investigated and said, oh, there's nothing here.
This is catching them with a level of surprise that I think says a lot about how secret this entire operation was.
Pablo, you named also celebrities who were listed as endorsers and had some involvement with this company.
So were they duped or were they potentially in on what was going on?
They seem to be victims.
That said, I think the question of like, what are you obligated to know about the thing you give your name to?
Is the thing I think about all the time working with you guys.
But also, when a common step people trying to be good guys who are getting to,
partnerships with people who are not so good, actually. The question would be, Linaar DiCaprio,
did you know, or Robert Downey Jr., when you made that commercial that we put into the episode,
did you know what you were really endorsing? A question that many celebrities have fallen
into traps about, in fairness to them, so that seems all logical. But when you're alleged to be
the greatest investor of the last 20 years, a guy and Steve Bomber, who was a titan of industry,
again, the sixth richest person in the world who has a personal relationship to the players involved here.
And by that, I mean the actual executives at this company that you partnered with them,
$23 years, $300 million, right?
How is it that you don't know would be the question?
And that's a different question for a celebrity than a businessman.
Pablo, this is a cap sport.
This is an unfair advantage.
I imagine other teams are pretty pissed off about this.
But also, I got to imagine, across all the cap sports in this country,
there might be some teams and owners that are a little bit nervous.
Is it likely that Steve Bulmer just invented this idea and was the first to execute it?
Or do you think the league has to do some asking around right now in terms of punitive measures?
Because this might be a bigger problem than just this story.
Yeah, if you think about every owner's foremost incentive as self-interest,
then the question becomes what else have ever, what else have you guys been
doing? You know, what have you guys been up to? I doubt that there has been a story with this
level of documentation and depth in terms of how they tried to do it. That was only caught again
because the company collapsed into bankruptcy. But I think it's interesting, right? If you think
about the room where they have to debate this stuff, the foremost voice when it comes to complaints
to the league office about how small market teams have basically been crushed by rich guys now,
These new billionaires, the new owners, the richest guys in sports history like Steve Bomber,
that team has been the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Historically, they always raise this stuff.
They can tell the difference between what they can do and what they can't.
That bomber, for instance, could.
That team happens to be the team that won the trade for Kauai Leonard that won the title
using the guy that they got in.
Jake Yilders-Alexander, who won the MVP in the finals, then in the regular season,
and won a title this year.
And so it's just interesting.
I just wonder, like, what does that team have to say, given that their trade partner
happens to be maybe the entity that they should be philosophically opposed to, but in this
personal context, you know, maybe that's a different calculus.
I should clarify some of the word choices I had earlier when I called it the biggest salary
cap crime that there is.
This isn't an actual crime.
It's just within the context.
in the context of basketball, I don't think that we've had anything around the salary cap
that has a player of this magnitude or dollar amount of this magnitude.
The language there is important and also speaks to the whole thing.
Like, in the NBA, there is a justice system.
There are laws that the federal government ostensibly cares nothing about.
The difference here in what we report in the story and very carefully report,
using, again, seven sources to work for the company, is that the very thing that is
getting the clippers into hot water today because of this reporting is the thing that has caused
those seven sources to actively wonder about what else Steve Bomber might have been aware of,
which is directly relevant to what the SEC and the DOJ are curious about. We are not alleging
anything. We are simply saying this is a sports story that has actual resonance. Even if the one
thing is not a crime, the question is, what else in the world of
legality might actually be connected.
Pablo, rather than the league possibly voiding Kauai Leonard's contract, would the better
punishment be that the clippers have to keep Kauai?
Yeah, I thought about this one too.
This whole trade, man, like, it's funny.
Like, do you, if you're the clippers right now, it's kind of a, it's a bit of a blessing
in disguise.
If you think that Kauai Leonard is no longer worth the max plus contract that he's been signed
to, right?
If he's not healthy would be the operative question.
All of this, though, it reminds me, right?
Like, man, it was such the obvious choice at the time to get Kauai Leonard and Balmer looked like a genius for doing whatever he did to get him.
Because there's no better player than a prime Kauai Leonard coming off a title with the Raptors, two-way player, all that stuff.
And now it's like, yeah, welcome to sports, Steve, is a bit of what's happened here.
The double insult, the double bind is this story today for a guy that you may not even want in the season.
same way anymore because his body turned out to be not trustworthy either.
Do we know if trees were actually planted? Because like Dan said, like, well, it isn't actually
illegal. It's just them getting around the salary cap. But if they're raising money to
replant trees and they're just using that money to pay celebrities to do nonsense, then
crimes might have actually been committed. Oh, I mean, there. Look, so the co-founder of the company,
Joe Sandberg, who was a big Democrat politician in California, pled guilty. Two counts of wire fraud,
nine-figure scheme, all that stuff.
Guilt it to being a glib.
There is, but by the way, the climate change pose, right?
Like, Trump's administration comes to an end, the first one, and people are like, it's time
for the good guys to make some bank.
And so their logo, their motto was, clean, rich is the new filthy rich.
And then part of the investigation, Billy, and it's, again, a very good, a very good thought
is, did you guys even plant the trees?
And the source that we have in the episode points out that in their experience at the company,
in that all this documentation, there was precisely one visit to a tree planting site.
So, in short, the answer seems to be no.
They didn't really plant all of those trees, despite claiming, by the way,
Andre Charney, whose signature was on the contract of Kawhi Leonard, he had claimed we plant as many trees every day,
even more actually, more trees every day than there are in Central Park.
None of that seems to have been true.
I should let everyone know that at 3.30 today, Eastern, Pablo and Amin and Samson will be popping up on our YouTube
because I'm sure after seven months of investigation that there was a lot left on the cutting room floor.
These are exhaustive episodes.
And so if you want more information than anyone else is going to be able to give you at 3.30 in the afternoon today,
Eastern, Pablo will be doing something that, you know, takes you places where I think people might
suspect that sports go sometimes, but it's damn near impossible to ever prove this stuff,
even when there's an NBA investigation.
What didn't we ask you that we should have asked you?
What are the other things here?
I don't know how the reporting on this began.
I don't know what you think the most revealing things are that your sources told you.
Oh, I just love the fact that, like, by the way, Doc Rivers was a guy who invested in this.
And so it was just like, okay, we had David to assess the contract language as the former president of the Marlins guy who signed many sponsorship deals.
We had a mean on because if you don't think that we tapped into his Doc Rivers, you have another thing coming.
Yeah, we have this whole thing, man.
This whole thing is absurd.
It's just absurd.
He wasn't there for important things.
he was just there for his Doc Rivers impersonation.
That is important, Dan.
It's a good impersonation.
I don't think you appreciate how good that impression.
He had an Obama in this episode because Obama comes up.
He had a doc in this one.
But then it's like truly, and for the David's side of things, like just imagine the absolute,
just like the pig in manure dynamic of David getting to just put on his little glasses
and read a contract that he has no idea what's in.
And he gets to point out all of this stuff.
That's crazy.
Like, there's a part of the contract, right?
So, Kaua Lederd does nothing, gets paid more than anybody else combined more than four times as much as all the A-List A-List we mentioned.
DiCaprio, Robert Downey, Jr., just the A-List of A-List.
Drake, Drake, you know, Orlando Bloom.
So, meanwhile, Kaui Leonard has this clause in his contract where he doesn't have to do anything if it's not in accordance with his, quote, beliefs.
And it's just an incredible.
And also, he doesn't get paid if he doesn't play for the Clippers.
So I'm just like, they can try to spin this in lots of ways, but on some level, there's an IQ test dynamic.
Here are all the facts he reported.
Here are all the documents.
Here's the source on tape.
Here's a guy doing a weird Doc Rivers impression.
Here's a guy telling you what these endorsement deals are supposed to be like.
What do you think?
I can't really do much more to the NBA than give them all the things they need to allegedly care about the justice that they talk about being.
Cardinal sent.
Pablo.
Don Levatard.
This is the quickest it goes.
Hey, this is the quickest it goes.
Stugats.
Everybody, this is the quickest it goes.
Yeah.
This is the Dan Lebatar show with the Stugats.
I love the picture that's behind you that they're going to put on the full screen,
Dan, of one David Sandler.
and looking through the contract
and the context of, like, O.J. Simpson,
if I did it.
Like, this is how I would have done this exact thing.
And then I'm also looking at the setup on that screen
where Pablo, those are props.
Like, that's blank copy paper that you guys stacked up.
It's like, here's 7,000 documents when we go.
Like, that's insane.
That's freshly taken.
Those are, like, just reams of paper, correct?
Absolutely not.
Absolutely.
How dare you?
How dare you?
You guys put one paper clip on one little stack on the top.
and everything else.
It does look like in the movies when they put $100 bill on the top of the suitcase
and everything under it is just a bunch of confetti.
The prop person did barely more than Kauai did for trees.
In fact, they did worse for trees because they wasted trees on all that paper.
Looks like a prop contract.
Wow.
Prove it.
That's what I have to say to you.
Prove it.
You think you can find that out?
Prove it.
Pablo, to your point, the absurdity of all this,
if they do
one commercial with Kauai Leonard
You already said that, all right, we got that,
we got that, thank you, we've got you,
it's absurd, Pablo, see you
later, Pablo.
This whole thing is aborted.
He's one of the great defensive tackles
in South Florida history.
You're going to treat them like that?
Boblo.
Thank you, Pablo.
Defense event.
Pablo Torre finds out,
go check it out.
It's already exploded.
The original tweet this morning
about the Pablo.
episode is over 3 million views because he's the only one who has this information.
He's going to be the only one for a while.
He'll be ahead of this story.
3.30 live on YouTube.
He will give you more information.
We're going to get out of that now because we've got football to get to.
Good see you, Pablo.
Thank you for the reporting.
Thank you for the work from the Harvard Club.
Having seen the episode, I will tell you guys that this part made me laugh.
Because if you don't know what the story is about, Amin, David, and Pablo, talk
for 15 minutes, a full 15 minutes at the top of the episode without telling you exactly what the
story is about. And it reminded me of a mistake I made many years ago. My reporting on the Dallas
Cowboys White House many years ago where Michael Irvin had a home where the players away from their
wives partied, I put that in a column about 20 paragraphs in a story about Eric Rett going to a
nightclub and Super Bowl partying.
So 20 paragraphs into a story.
I didn't actually put in that the Bucks had one of these two that they called the Batcave.
What?
That is correct.
And the thing that the Dallas Cowboys did that I was reporting, I thought wasn't as important as what it is that you're reporting.
I don't understand why it is you guys talked for a full 12 minutes before telling us what the hell the story was.
Hold on, hold on, hold on, Dan.
Did you watch the Sixth Sense and be like,
they waited till the end to tell me that he saw dead people?
Come on.
What are you, what are you, what are you bad at?
Spoiler alert.
Also, there's a bat cave.
What?
Get out of here.
Why are you holding out on me?
Good talking to you.
See you later.
Thank you.
Good, good tip.
Good work.
A tip into the, into the, poplatory finds out, tip line.
Bat cave?
You didn't even answer how the reporting on this.
this started. Maybe we'll find out at
3.30 when he sits down with David
Samson and Amina al-Hasson. So
you guys are in agreement because you guys
are all, you're all saying, oh, this happens all the
time, but we don't have very much proof of this
happening all the time. I don't think it happens all the time.
I don't think so. I think
eventually, look how sloppy
this was now that we're getting
this information, and we're just finding out
about it now. Like, I
don't think that this happens all the time.
There was one high-profile
incident of this happening in the
NFL, and it was a little slap on the wrist. There was salary caps circumvention with John Elway
and Terrell Davis. The league docked the Broncos a third round draft pick and find them $2 million.
I don't know what the penalties on this are going to be. The NBA, as Pablo just told you,
is going to be scrambling to figure out how to penalize the clippers for this. Because I will say
to you, once you're screwing with the integrity of the
structure of the league the lakers were going to get kawai leonard put him with lebron and change how
the league looked and the clippers the laughing stock of los angeles for the entire time they've been
in los angeles before kawai leonard did something that landed kawai leonard there is no way that
the league handles this in a way that is soft something is going to come down on balmer and
It's not because Silver's a badass, it's because of how mad all the other owners are going to be about finding out about this.
Mickey Harrison is going to go into the Hall of Fame this week, and I assure you that the other owners are going to be infuriated, that there is something that looks like proof on, oh, that's how they did it.
That's how the Laughing Stock Clippers managed to convince Kauai and Uncle Dennis to go to the Laughing Stock Los Angeles franchise.
I think it's fun to imagine how David Stern would have handled this if he were a commissioner.
Because Adam's Silver, I mean, come on, you know.
It's not going to be silver, though.
It's going to be the owners.
Like, silver works for the owners.
The owners are going to dictate what the penalty is on this, and I don't think it'll be soft.
Do you guys, we remember a couple months ago we were talking about, do you remember where you were when the Kauai
transaction went down?
And most of us actually had a memory of that.
You remember why we had a memory of that?
Because it was being positioned as the Clippers just.
save the NBA from the next big super team because it was well assumed that Kauai was teaming up
with LeBron and going to the Lakers. There were all sorts of reports of meetings and what was being
asked. And then like a thief in the night came Steve Ballmer and the Clippers. And it was all
predicated on that Paul George trade. And then we saw the whole picture come together. But when this
deal first happened, everybody was super thankful that it did because the league was saved and it was
going to be more parody, especially in Los Angeles.
And don't forget, there were all these rumors at the time of what the uncle was asking of
teams when it came to signing his nephew.
It was, you know, potentially private jet whenever he wants, and it was buying a home,
and it was endorsement deals.
It was ownership stake, and it's like, we can't give you any of that.
You're starting to look at Kauai's entire career a little bit differently because I think if I fell on one side, I was pro Kauai in what happened with the Spurs, this is just another element of shadiness that makes you revisit that.
Oh, but I don't, I'm with Pablo on this in not blaming Kauai for being maximum capitalist mercenary.
The salary cap in general is a stupidity.
It's because guys like Balmer can't control themselves.
when they want something, they know exactly how to buy it.
And so I'd like to see all of those people bidding maximum amount of dollars
because you want to pick Jerry Jones against Daniel Snyder
and see who wants the quarterback more
and see how much that money's going to rise.
The salary cap is a stupidity because these owners,
all powerful owners, cannot control themselves
when it comes to this sort of thing.
And seeing Steve Ballmer want to get in this game so badly
when he's the sixth richest man in the world,
You know how these owners work.
These are their playthings,
but you think they're going to be less competitive with their playthings than they are about money?
These other owners are going to read this this morning,
and that's going to dictate the penalty.
It's not going to be about stern, silver, any of that.
It's every owner waking up this morning.
Imagine Ishbia, or, well, this is pre-Ishbia,
but all of these, somebody with Ishpia's mindset,
seeing this and being like, wait a minute.
It looks like they cheated to get somebody because they don't care about our rules
when it comes to keeping things equitable.
If the punishment is not as punitive as maybe you're making it sound it should be,
would that be a sign that other owners don't want their business to come out as well?
That's why I'm super curious because I'm sure you have some small market teams that understand
what they're going up against in that league.
They don't have certain advantages.
And now the large markets are going above and be.
beyond the league rules to acquire some of these people.
They're a part of the league, too.
They are shareholders in the league too.
But to the question that I asked Pablo is,
I got to imagine Palmer can't possibly be the first person
that considered something like this.
Nor is Kauai the first person asked.
I've told you guys before,
the amount of ass that LeBron's people made when they got to Miami
because they knew what they were bringing to Miami.
The answer was no.
Please give us hundreds of season tickets.
Hundreds.
You know what those were worth the first year?
Hundreds of season. Imagine what hundreds of seasons of tickets, season tickets would be for the LeBron James crew. There's nothing wrong with making the ass. I learned this. I told you guys this story. I don't know if you remember this at the Clevelander. One of Stugats's friends came in one day. And it was Stugats's friend. And so that person came in and made me take, I'm going to say, 45 minutes worth of pictures with him and his kid. Forty-five minutes.
But because it was Stugats' friend, I did it.
And then at the end of it, I was 40 minutes past my expiration date.
The guy looks at me and says, can you call your father and ask him to come in?
And I look at Stugats.
And Stugats' response was, yeah, you just keep asking until they say no.
Were you blinking?
Like, what was going on?
Like, why would you take so many photos?
New pose, like different spots in the studio?
Like, what happened?
It's a good question.
You can be an awkward photo taker.
About like 70% of the times, the eyes are closed.
I don't blame a player for wanting more and more money in this situation.
I don't think that this is going to do anything to Kauai Leonard's legacy that he wanted more money.
He blinked, obviously.
Yeah, yeah, differently.
No one would just take 45, like for fun.
I remember a lunch we had where a kid came and we took a couple pictures with the kids and that got really, that got dicey because the kid sat in Dan's seat and it was a whole thing.
Gary was talking to us about Nazis.
It was a crazy meeting.
What's on me?
That's on you for, you know, agreeing to pose for 45 minutes worth of photo.
That's ridiculous.
I mean, come on.
You know, and the other thing is we're still trying to wrap our head around.
You burying the lead on that story where you got the Irvin White House in the 20th paragraph.
Where's your news judgment on something like that?
I mean, it seems like an immorality.
It seems like something that.
players having a house where they have affairs.
Yeah. So why wasn't that your lead?
Again, an immorality, it's just a, I mean, it's a little thing on the side.
It's not this story. It's not a story that has those kind of ramifications.
It's just a gossipy TMZ thing.
It's bigger.
It was bigger because it was the Cowboys.
Right. Exactly.
If I'd reported that it was the Tampa Bay Bucks at the time, nobody would have cared.
Zagaki.
That's the way you do that.
That should have been in the,
documentary, the Jerry
Jones documentary. I didn't see
that. It was. It was in the documentary,
because there was nothing fresh in that documentary. They stole
everybody else's report. I'll mention that to
Greg. I think he saw it. Is there any
reason that you don't remember Greg's signature
lines? Because the gacky is something I
was expecting you to say. Even though
he's very much on camera as Greg.
That kind of thing.
Can we come up with a contest
to get you a new expression to utter
because you're using the old recycling
tired ones, and I'm wondering whether it is we should just have a contest where you take applicants
for a saying you're going to start using now. That sounds like something Greg would be interested in.
Trailers for sale or rent.
Room still at 50 cents.
Sing! No food, no pole, no pets. I ain't got no cigarettes. I'm not.
but thank you
thank you everyone
that applause is really heartwarming
howdy folks it's Mike Ryan
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