The Herd with Colin Cowherd - 3 & Out - LIV Golf is being SHUTDOWN? NFL Draft Thoughts + NFL Offseason Mailbag
Episode Date: April 16, 2026On this episode of 3 & Out, John Middlekauff dives into the ever-evolving world of money in sports, breaking down how finances shape decision-making across not only the NFL, but LIV Golf as well. ...He also explores the idea of conflict of interest in today’s sports landscape, looking at where lines can get blurred between teams, media, and business, and why it matters more now than ever. Plus, John shares his latest NFL Draft thoughts, team strategies, and what makes selecting players so difficult as the draft approaches. Finally, John answers your questions in the latest mailbag segment. Follow John on Twitter, and Instagram for the latest. All lines provided by Hard Rock Bet #VolumeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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John Middilkoff, Three and out podcast.
Another beautiful day.
We are officially a week away from the National Football League's draft.
Very, very excited.
Cannot get here soon enough.
Today, I want to do some big picture stuff.
The big story today is this live golf league funded by the Saudis is going to eventually crater, whether it be soon or at the end of the year.
And it got me thinking, like, why do we watch sports?
And one issue we've had over the course of the last week with the Rossini story is conflict of interest, a story today about Troy Akeman and the dolphins and their draft.
And I just kind of want to dive into that as well as, you know, the advantage some of these longtime GMs have when it comes to experience on Thursday and Friday of next week.
As well as we'll do a couple mailbag questions.
At John Middlecoff.
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Get your questions answered here on the show.
And we'll bang some of those out and we'll just keep chugging away.
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Let's talk some sports.
But I did want to start with money in sports.
Because the NFL is a good example, right?
Their salary cap number has never been higher.
The teams have never been worth more.
The players have never made.
We just had a center from the Raven signed with the Raiders for $27 million a year.
The Live Golf operation that was funded by the Saudi investment firm Piff
just started buying players years ago, right?
They gave Phil Mickelson a couple hundred million dollars.
Kepka, Dustin Johnson.
Recently, John Rahm got supposedly $300 million.
They literally just bought talent.
And this has happened before I was just, I was in the plane.
I didn't record any podcast.
My internet wasn't working.
And I had Steve Young's book on tape that I was like 70% through.
And, you know, this is a long time ago for you young people, but there was a league in the mid-80s that bought guys like Steve Young and Reggie White and tried to have this startup United Football League that ended up going belly up.
And I think one thing that, and listen,
The live golf story for me who loves the sport and who likes aspects of business, I thought was really fascinating.
But, and hell, I even went to an event last year with Colin, and it was cool.
Being on the grounds, Kepka came up and talked to us.
Sergio Garcia came up to Colin.
It was a vibe there.
But the events never resonated with people.
Because I think in sports, history matters.
And now you're talking about the NFL.
that has been around for a long time, right, since it merged with the NFL,
and the Super Bowl era has been going since the late 60s, early 70s.
The NBA has been rolling in terms of fame and big-time players now
since well before I was born.
Obviously, Major League Baseball was a really big deal like the 20s with Babe Ruth.
So the history behind these sports make for us that watch it as
entertainment, and I do this for a job, but when the game is on, I still enjoy being entertained.
When the college football playoff was going on, and Indiana was trying to take down Oregon and
Alabama, it never crossed my mind. Oh, Fernando Mendoza is making a couple million dollars.
Or Dante Moore, if he comes back, he'll make seven or eight. Obviously, we talk about it,
and it's interesting, but when the events are actually going on and the reason we watch has
nothing to do with that.
Right? And even now, and I was thinking about the week one last year, it was the Bills
against the Ravens, and the Ravens were kicking the shit out of the bills, and remember
Derek Henry fumbles, and the bills have this crazy comeback. And never once during the game
were we thinking, do you know that Josh and Lamar make a combined $100 million?
It was like, these are two of the most talented guys in the league, two of the most physically
gifted guys we've ever seen, and this is just really enjoyable. These are two of the best teams
in the league, two teams have just played in the playoffs last year in the second round.
Like, this feels like a really big deal because of what's on the line for these guys,
legacies, can they ever get over the hump?
Who's better between the two?
Right?
These guys are polarizing guys because they were, had pole position right behind Patrick Mahomes
as the best quarterbacks in the league.
And the money doesn't matter.
It's like, can the bills ever win a Super Bowl?
Will Lamar Jackson, the Ravens ever get over the hump?
hump. And I think Liv serves as a pretty good example. And Scott O'Neill, who is the CEO of
Live, just came out with a comment, who again, took really good care of me and Colin, really
impressive guy. Like, I really enjoyed my time with him. I think he will be successful at whatever
he does if Liv goes under this week or at the end of the year. I immediately texted a picture
to Howie Roseman because he's a Philly guy and they're really close friends. Like, high level
people like this guy, he's a high level guy.
And I was blown away.
I'm like, live as a, you know, I know Greg Norman took a lot of crap, but this is an
impressive guy.
This is someone you would meet that would be involved in the NFL.
This guy was part of the NBA with David Stern.
The problem is, is when your events are just bought and paid for, it doesn't feel
important, regardless how much talent you have and how much they're making.
Right.
part of these tennis tournaments when Federer was going against Nadal or now it's Alcaraz
against Sinner, you have a lot of history and context behind those events. It's why people
in Philadelphia, when some of these articles and these podcasts come out against Jalen Hertz,
they get his back because they go, this guy has been a starting quarterback for two Super Bowl
teams. And in one of them fucking was awesome and we won. And last, last,
time I checked winning the Super Bowl means a lot, you know, and we can debate if 15 different
guys could have won the Super Bowl as a starting quarterback. They didn't. He did. And we have
context between all these leagues, all these events. It was like Michigan going up against
Yukon. When the game was going on, it wasn't like, this guy's making this, this guy's making
this, NIL here. It was just, you know, this is a historic program in Michigan. This is a historic
program in Yukon, and this thing is a war zone.
I mean, Yukon played that game like it was football.
That was one takeaway I had from that national championship game is I don't think,
and maybe it's a little hyperbolic, but I don't know if I've ever seen a team play
harder than Yukon.
Like, the effort in which they played was a 10 out of 10.
Like, their effort, you know, when you're taught Little League or high school basketball
or even some of these college football products.
prospects.
When they've been at Miami or Ohio State,
like, you can play harder,
you can play harder, you can play harder.
We need you to play harder.
And then when I'm evaluating you at the Combine
or during the pro day, it's like,
I wish you would have played a little harder.
No one who watched Yukon play that game
went, they could have played a little harder.
They literally played as hard, not as good.
Obviously, they could have been better.
But in terms of effort, it was elite.
And that entertained me.
Because the game in terms of like the shot making and the enjoyability of quote unquote great basketball,
you know, it was somewhat forgettable, but the effort was not.
And as a fan, like, I found that really enjoyable.
Not because Braylin Mullins is a seven-figure guy or how are they going to,
who are they going to buy in the portal after this game.
I didn't give a shit.
No different.
and I think this speaks to the Indiana story.
I think this speaks, you know, this year when it comes to the Super Bowl to Seattle.
There was, and this is what I said about Sam Darnold's story.
It was just really genuine.
You know, it wasn't about that, you know, he was the third overall pick,
and he signed a $40 million contract because people were like,
well, you had to become a backup.
He was already filthy rich.
And then when Seattle signed him to a team-friendly deal,
he's still making $30 million a year.
I don't know about you.
don't know that many human beings that are making a W-2 job making $30 million a year.
Like, the guy has generations of money.
But the reason it resonated with actual people, Google the average income in America
that can't relate to that level of money or that level of lifestyle or that level of fame
because it was most of us can relate to like we've been through some shitty times.
We've hit adversity in our life.
We've been in the fucking mud.
life sucked for a period of time maybe a month maybe a year maybe you went through a bad five-year
stretch and you just kind of crawl your way out of it you hope to get a break maybe someone throws you
a you know a lifeline maybe someone throws you a job opportunity and it sets your life on a positive
track and all of a sudden you come out like andy duffrain on the other end and sam darnald by all
accounts great guy high character seems like a very likable human who could get along with
lot of people. And I think most people, unless you were a Patriot fan in that Super Bowl,
were just kind of rooting for the guy. Why? Because it was an easy story to get behind. And that's
what sports is. Rory McElroy, I mean, the Masters has done like historic ratings the last
couple of years non-Tiger Woods. And I think the reason it is, because Rory's story was just
something that draws people in. He can't get it done. He can't win this tournament. He's
never going to win this tournament.
And then he finally wins the freaking tournament.
And then a year later, all of a sudden, he's kicking everyone's ass.
He's just going to do it again.
He went a decade plus, couldn't win a major, let alone this tournament.
Most times he underachieved and wasn't even in the mix.
And now he's going to win back to back.
And then what happened?
He started falling apart.
One of the most relatable things in sports, watching someone play golf and struggle
and not play well.
It's why I think millions upon millions,
millions of people watch that tournament.
And we don't have that many events anymore than a lot of people watch together, right?
I might watch a show, you might watch a show, you might watch a show.
They could be on three.
I'm watching this one on HBO Max.
You're watching something on Netflix.
And I'm watching this show every day on Paramount.
And it's like we get to the water cooler or if we play golf together,
we all are not watching the same.
This isn't 1998, where everyone watch Seinfeld or,
in 2004, everyone was watching The Supranos.
That's not really the world we live it anymore.
Everything's really fractured.
So the couple things that draw most of us,
especially as sports fans, to a television,
really have little to do with money.
And the reason Liv failed is because their whole business model
was based on cash.
Without it, I had a buddy that works in finance.
And he's in charge of dealing with a lot of people
who are trying to get funding,
loans, right, support from a financial institution.
And some people qualify, these are businesses, right?
Trying to get a line of credit, 5 million, 10 million, 50 million, whatever.
And it's all based on what they're making.
Hey, we're doing this much revenue.
We project this much revenue.
Here are our costs.
And they go through their books with a fine-tooth comb.
There is not a soul in America that would have invested in lives venture given what they had to pay to get everyone involved.
Not a soul.
Not one single investor, not named the PIF, would have been interested.
And that's why it never resonated with anyway.
It's just a fake operation.
Because without this unlimited fund, it wouldn't have existed.
And listen, a lot of startups happen and then fail.
But at one point in time, they were able to pitch it to someone in a room to give them a check to go,
you know, that's a pretty good idea.
And the one thing that has never changed and still has thriving.
are these live sports events,
specifically football,
which is the most unique of all the sports
because it's a one-off every week.
There's only one game.
Basketball, you're playing three or four,
baseball, you're potentially playing six or seven,
and in football you're playing once,
and all the games matter.
And you can't fake that.
I know it, you know it, we all know it.
And that's what, like, I understand, like,
listen, we're on Netflix.
The world is driven.
dramatically changed. 10 years ago when I got out of radio, it was so evident to me. My biggest
advantage was this phone in my hand. Because when I got into a car, we had at the time maybe five
plus years of cars in the, you know, from 2010 to 2015, 16, 17. When I really got into podcast,
it was probably 2017, 2018. So we had a five year stretch where people connected their phone
to their car. And I just started thinking to myself,
Over the course of the next decade, really where we're sitting now,
there are going to be a large percentage of people who get into their car and never turn on the radio.
And turn on, whether it's Pandora, Spotify, Apple, podcast, connect to whatever they listen to
and will never know channels, whatever they are.
Like I did as a kid, because that option didn't exist.
And then we're 10 more years of existing of radio as we,
knew it in the 90s and the 2000s will not exist. It will not be a viable outlet. And I got lucky.
I got forced in that life. And it was very evident to me very quickly like this isn't just
the future. It's literally happening right now. And we're never going back. And so I've always
supported when people push back. And one story that doesn't interest me that much is this collusion
and these politicians going after the NFL. When there's actual substance behind us,
it, I will get interested, but I don't have the bandwidth with a kid to read legal jargon.
But I also know, and I've supported these leagues from going into business with all these different
streamers of, they have way more money than these traditional networks.
So if Netflix wants in on more NFL games, guess what?
They can blow away the competition in the bits.
Now, football, their advantage, like UFC or WWE in WrestleMania,
is when an event is happening, everyone in that world knows.
Like, I don't even follow wrestling anymore.
I know the WrestleMania is happening this weekend.
I don't follow or watch, I guess I loosely follow.
I don't really watch UFC.
But if something happens that everyone's telling me,
this is historic you got to watch,
I'm kind of drawn in and I'm paying attention.
It's why I've watched people can make fun of me.
Jake Paul fight all these people.
It's an event.
That's what football has.
It's why when they played on Netflix on Christmas,
everyone knows about it.
Now, whether you have time,
you're at home,
whether you're going to watch it or not,
is up to you.
But if you're a sports fan,
you know where that is.
It was over the years with Peacock
when they first did the playoff game,
Amazon Prime last year on Black Friday.
You knew where it was.
Well, last night's a great example.
I don't watch the,
NBA anymore. I follow it. I know what's going on because I list some podcasts, but I don't watch
games anymore. But if you tell me the play-in game, it's a winner get in, that piques my interest.
So I flip on my television. I don't have the cable box anymore. And it comes up and all I,
the only game I see is the Phillies playing the Cubs. So I go, oh, they must be playing
Wednesday and Thursday. That's when the playing games are going. And then all of a sudden, I get an
alert that the heat and the Hornets game is over.
I'm like, these games are going on and it was on a streamer.
I didn't know.
And basketball is a good example of someone who just made a lot of money on their television
deal.
And a lot of it was through the streaming platforms.
The problem is, is unlike football, they're not a destination event operation right now.
And I didn't have the opportunity to watch it because I didn't even know it was on.
If I had done a little more research, I guess I could have looked, what channel was it on.
But I got a kid, I got a wife, I got food going on, these aren't my teams, I'm not gambling on it.
I don't care that much.
And they made it a little more difficult.
And the pushback on football always are they making it too difficult to consume?
And I'd say, well, if you have the means, you could argue it costs more, true, but it's not easy to figure out when the games are going on.
It's very well established.
What time and where they're happening.
And last night was a stark reminder to me.
It's like football's advantage of their event operation is not even,
doesn't parallel any of these other leaks.
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Hey, it's us, the Jonas brothers, and guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, name?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called, Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to a...
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with a name, Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember
I think it was on a call about what we should call it
And we were thinking I'm originally calling it
One of the early names of our band
Before Jonas Brothers
This is how you guys remember it going down
Yes I have a very different memory of this
We were talking about a thing
A bit for the podcast
For people could call in and say hey Jonas
And then I wrote down on my little notepad
Hey Jonas and offered it up as a potential title
For the podcast
But thanks for remembering that
guys listen to hey jonas on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcast just listen
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Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the I-Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
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Last night, a blown call changed a game.
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Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
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One comment I've heard a lot lately is conflict of interest.
And I've said this forever.
And listen,
I like a lot of traditional media people that I've got to meet over the years.
I have a lot of respect for their job and how hard they work.
And, you know,
it's not easy to go into locker rooms and be a beat reporter.
Like, I respect it.
I have a lot of respect for it.
It's much more time consuming in terms of like traveling and stuff than what I have to do.
and I wouldn't want to do it.
And I have a lot of respect for the work.
But I've seen a lot.
I think the media sometimes misses the mark on the fans.
And this all exists, the media, the leagues, everything because of the consumer.
I'd argue they're all that matters.
They pay for everything.
Without them, these leagues aren't getting filthy rich.
These media entities like me couldn't exist.
no one forever, like they read the newspaper, they watched the shows, they watch the games.
Without them, none of it matters.
There are a lot of good golfers playing money games on Wednesday night.
No one watches, you know?
So the fans are the heartbeat of it all.
And you get on Twitter, I think companies make a mistake of looking at comments and thinking that matters.
because if a story comes out
and if it's as salacious
as Rusini and Vrabel
if she's going to post something
people like she put out a trial balloon
last week on Twitter
look at the comments
no shit
that's social media for you
what do most of us do if we're bored
sometimes if you click on something
that you know is a polarizing post
on Twitter, Instagram
for those of you on Facebook
we check the comments
because we know what's coming
it doesn't represent
Do I think most people that watch football
truly give a flying fuck
about Rusini and Vrabel?
I do not.
If you told me tomorrow
Rusini had the biggest story in NFL history
and posted it, that's all I just want to consume it.
And I think most fans would.
And do I care that Schefter
might get presents for his sources,
my vacation with his sources,
might do whatever it takes to maintain and gain news sources,
I do not.
I just want the information.
I think most fans, when it comes to that job specifically,
just want to eat the hot dog.
They don't need to go to the factory to see other things made.
They truly don't care.
Now, I understand why this story of them holding hands at this exclusive resort
becomes a big thing.
Like I do.
Like, I was just talking to a buddy.
if I was in that photo, I would not be in my office right now.
Because I would have been kicked out of the house.
That's just a fact.
Like this, I say it all the time.
I'm in a marriage that is a lot like baseball.
There are a lot of unwritten rules.
You know what's okay and you know what's not okay.
And I would imagine a lot of people listening are in those as well.
And that photo of holding hands on top of a bungalow
at a $3,000 couple retreat resort in Sedona by the Red Rocks,
would be a no-go in my world.
We all agree.
I don't even think this story is like that complicated.
But I also don't, like, feed me the information.
That's all I want.
Why did Twitter work and dominate the news cycle
and make newspapers and some of these other entities
kind of worthless and social media in general?
Because it just gives me the story.
And that's all we're looking for.
Give me the story.
And you could argue the consumer
has never cared less about the context behind the story
as they do in 26.
Maybe they never truly did, but they definitely do not now.
And so the story that Troy Aikman is going to be in the Dolphins draft room, right?
He's a consultant.
He helped hire these two guys from Green Bay.
He's been on the record forever saying that, like, you know,
at one point in time, he thought he was going to be a GM,
and then, you know, his daughters, and it just didn't work out.
And I bet if you were having some beers with Troy and just maybe a hard cocktail and truly getting deep,
he'd be like, you know, one regret I have is I see guys like John Lynch or some of these former players like Dan Campbell and Vrable being coaches.
Like, I miss being in the trenches because of what I learned from Jimmy and running the Cowboys as the quarterback,
like I know I could have done a good job.
And he's kind of alluded to that in different interviews.
But I think he misses being in the trenches.
You know, I do.
And is there a conflict of interest of him now being the right-hand man and being a guy that the GM and the coach probably going to lean on when he goes into other organizations?
Yeah, if you are Howie Roseman or Elliot Wolf or Brandon Bean, I understand being uncomfortable with Troy Akeman and giving him some dirt on a backup that maybe he could steal, right?
or a practice squad guy that he could tell his guys about
and then they claim off your practice squad.
Totally understand.
But as long as he on Monday night football
lets it rip like he always has,
I don't give a shit.
I truly don't.
No different.
Same thing with Tom Brady.
Like it's an issue for Andy Reid or Sean Payton
or Jim Harbaugh.
Like I get them.
But to me, if Tom Brady's calling the Eagles against the Cowboys
and he's doing a good job, that's all I care about.
that from my vantage point of just the consumer,
that's the only thing that matters.
And I truly believe this, and maybe some of you disagree,
I truly don't believe the fans care.
I really don't.
Because whether they get a story from, you know,
having sex or get a story from,
what if I pay for two nights for your family
to go to the four seasons and get you a gift card
to the nicest steak restaurant?
Like, just give me the story.
Give me the trade.
give me the information.
And I think the media and a lot of traditional media people now have transitioned to the digital space,
they get very offended because that's their profession.
They follow or have followed the rules.
I've never been a big rule follower.
Now, I don't think, you know, Dan Campbell's going to try to sleep with me
to give me, you know, intimate information on the Detroit Lions and his life.
but I've been lucky enough to know some of these guys
and have close relationships or build close relationships through this
and I'll do whatever I have to do to maintain those relationships
because it's good for my business.
And some of these guys I consider friends.
I like them a lot.
I admire them as human beings.
So I think some of this stuff gets lost in the TMZification of this world.
and where most people are just kind of having a laugh at it.
And those same people, like, throw on the game, no one actually cares.
Before we dive to the mailbag, one thing I saw, and it got me thinking,
is Howie and his press conference yesterday said that he thinks every single day
about the first rounders that he's missed over the course of his career.
And obviously, he's been a GM for, if you subtract the One Chip Kelly year,
for 15 plus years now.
So he's made a lot of draft selections over the course of his career.
And one advantage you have when you're John Schneider, when you're less need,
when you're some of these guys who have been in their position for a long period of time,
you have made awful selections and you have made great selections.
And you have a bank of information and then a human interaction with those players
to know why this worked and why this didn't work.
I say it all the time.
There is no such thing as a safe draft pick.
You are dealing with human beings.
These aren't widgets.
These aren't companies with EBITA and revenue flow and set expenses.
These are human beings who are young,
who ebb and flow on emotions,
who ebb and flow on success and failures.
Some of them have never had that many failures.
It is a very difficult position to be in.
but when you have done something for a long period of time
that is pressure-packed and very highly scrutinized,
the more experience you have is a massive, massive advantage.
And I do think when the draft time comes around,
you see some of these guys,
like let's look at the Jets and the Cardinals.
Like, they're GMs, the Jets' GM's the second draft.
The Cardinals GM has been there for several years.
years has not had much success.
He doesn't even have that much to go off of.
You know, SpyTech's in his second draft.
You don't have, and there's a big difference of, well, they've been a part of multiple
decades of drafts.
John Eric Sullivan, the new GM for Miami.
If you watch his press conference, you go, that's a high-level cat.
But as being, you know, the number three and number two for a long period of time in
Green Bay, there is a big difference in life when you make suggestions.
and when you make decisions.
Think about it when you're a kid.
You give a lot of suggestions to your parents.
We should do this.
We should do that.
Let's do that.
And then you become a parent and you make all the decisions.
Every single one in the house.
Hell, when you get married,
you go back and forth, there are certain things she decides on,
certain things you decide on.
And you give suggestions on and she gives suggestions on,
but ultimately it's one person's the decision maker.
ideally in certain big decisions you come to it as a group but most decisions in life
big ones get made by one human being not by a group and i i just think when you look around
the league these teams that go we've had three misses sometimes that works to your advantage in a
draft coming up because you know what to look for and to avoid and i'm not even just talking in
the player attributes i'm talking the person
Hey, the two guys we missed on, they had these three things in common,
off the field and their personality,
and your ride up on this guy and us bringing him in on a visit
or talking to him at the Combine,
he reminds me a lot of that guy.
And I'm not comfortable doing that.
And vice versa.
Hey, and sometimes some of your biggest hits can be in the second round,
the third round, the fifth round.
The reason that guy picked or hit and has become a pro bowler
and a multiple contract guy and one of the biggest stars in the league
is because we undervalued X, Y, and Z that he brought to the table.
Or maybe it wasn't like that in college,
but when he got here, we fostered it,
and now he brings that to the table.
So many people have opinions on the draft,
whether David Bailey will work and whether he won't work.
And here's the other problem.
And I talk to a lot of people in the league about this,
is the transfer portal makes things a lot more complicated.
Because if you talk to David Bailey, the coaches at Texas Tech,
well, what are they going to tell you?
They fucking love the guy.
Why?
He just had one of the great past rushing seasons and the history of the league,
or, I mean, of college football.
He dominated in all the production statistics.
I think statistically, legitimately,
based on his snaps and based on his production,
it is the most highest level in the history of college football.
But if you talk to the people at Stanford and I did at the combine, it's not as rosy.
So how do you balance that out?
And here's the other thing.
And this is, we haven't talked that much about this, is the Big 12, for example,
how many offensive linemen was he going up against that are going to be in the NFL?
Like Kansas, Kansas State, do all these teams have, University,
Arizona, do they have NFL tackles?
You got to factor all this in.
There's not a right or wrong answer.
That's what makes this whole thing so difficult.
So the more experience you have,
doing that job and making the selections
of guys to fall back on
is something that is just
so advantageous
come Thursday and Friday.
And really Saturday as well.
Saturday's a little bit more of a crap shoot.
But Thursday and Friday,
when you're drafting the first and second round,
Like those are intense picks.
It's very, very serious in those rooms.
It's a really big freaking deal.
And getting it right comes down to getting the person right.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, new?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called, Hey, Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to a...
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
But this one's extra special.
So how did we actually come up with a name, Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember.
I think it was on a call about what we should call it.
Well, we were thinking I'm originally calling it one of the early names of our band.
Before Jonas Brothers was...
This is how you guys remember it going down?
Yes.
I have a very different memory of this.
We were talking about a thing, a bit for the podcast,
where people could call in and say, hey, Jonas.
And then I wrote down on my little notepad, Hey Jonas,
Jonas, and offered it up as a potential time.
title for the podcast.
But thanks for remembering that, guys.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel, help an
a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the I-heart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athletes themselves.
Their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down,
give you context, and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
Sports Slice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slica Life 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
Okay, let's dive into the mailbag.
Add John Middlecough, add John Middlecough, fire in those DMs, questions answered here on the show.
We will start with Alex.
I feel like we get a lot of Alexes that listen to the show.
Followed you on the old platform now on Netflix.
Why do you think the type of material covered for the NFL versus the type of material covered for the NBA is so different?
NFL content creators seem to be better at talking about the actual sport
while NBA creators seem to be set on talking about the storylines
like it's the WWE.
Has it always been like this?
And am I just noticing it now that I'm older?
It's a good question.
We talked about this earlier on the podcast.
And I think it's pretty simple.
If I do a reaction to Monday night football,
let's say there's a big Monday night football game.
And it's the Eagles versus the Cowboys, right?
And a bunch of other people that talk about football,
from Colin to Orlovsky to McAfee to whoever.
The amount of people that you know all watch the game,
whether you're an Eagles or a Cowboys fan,
or just a football fan,
are watching Siriani versus Schadenheimer,
Dack versus Hertz,
and you have thoughts on the plays of the game,
whether it's a play.
play call, whether it's a stupid timeout, whether it's a miss field goal or a miss, you know,
10 men on the field or whatever happens throughout the game that feels really pivotal or an
individual, let's say, Sequin goes off or Cidie Lamb goes off or whatever, we're all watching
the game. Millions upon millions upon millions of people. It's one of the rare instances
in America where we all sit down and consume. In football, we all
think we are, you know, offensive coordinators or general managers or whatever on our couch.
So we all have similar opinions and thoughts, whether we agree or disagree with each other.
But we're all going through those mental gymnastics.
I'm a good example of someone that follows the NBA through a couple podcasts.
I'll listen to Win Horse.
You know, I used to listen more to Simmons and Rosillo.
I try to listen to Simmons and Zach Lowe.
it just doesn't do it for me.
But like when they talk big picture stuff,
I find it interesting.
When they start breaking down rotations,
and like, I'm not watching the game so it doesn't interest me.
And I think less and less people are just watching
the Pistons play the magic on a Thursday night.
So to break down the individual games
can become very niche, very fast.
and I think talking big picture with the topics of basketball is the only way to keep people engaged
because they're more following it through a 30,000 foot view.
Where if I just found a Packer fan, right, not only does he know a lot about his team,
he watches probably, if he's a diehard Packer fan, he's probably a big football fan,
meaning he's probably watching Thursday night football, Sunday night football,
or at minimum paying attention.
So he's pretty locked in how the Bears are playing,
how the Niners are playing,
like the other teams that they might see in the playoffs,
maybe paying attention to the Chiefs and the Bills and the Broncos.
Like he's going to have some takes on players, on coaching,
on what they're doing operationally.
I think in basketball, like, what's the take to be had for a lot of people?
Now, there are some diehards, but
I just used to watch a lot of, I mean, I grew up loving the NBA.
It was in the 90s, watched it through the 2000s, and even through the 2010s.
I just don't find the product as good, doesn't entertain me as much, so I just don't watch it.
But I would say the same thing for baseball.
I find the Dodgers fascinating, but I'm like not watching their games.
If I was listening to someone break down the fourth inning of a, you know, hit and run or, you know, them yanking a guy early,
I wouldn't even resonate with me.
But if you talk about like big pictures,
is Dodgers team the greatest team ever,
is the best Dodger team ever,
how great so tiny,
like that kind of,
I like that talk.
Now, can you do it every day,
day in, day out for a decade straight?
And I think the NBA has turned into that a little bit, right?
Legacy talk, this guy versus that guy,
which is going to be really difficult.
You could do it with LeBron and Steph,
but it becomes a lot more challenging.
Like, Shea's going to win the NBA.
again, the Thunder, I think, I know these stats from,
else, sometimes I go on Colin and obviously
they talk a lot of basketball. It's like I don't have like hardcore
takes, you know? I just don't really care. It's not really the business I'm in. But
in his business, like he's talking big picture shit. If we were breaking
down the individual games like he would do during football, I would be a fish
out of water. But it's like,
is this Thunder team interesting?
And that's not really what,
it's like the bills. Is their defensive
line good enough? Right. Is
the bills? Have they drafted well enough?
The bills. Are their wide receivers
good enough? Like you're talking specifics.
Where in basketball, most people are not doing that.
Because the amount of people watching
it's different and it would be hard to capture
an audience against a lot of
other people content creating.
Untraditional question for the pod.
I'm a part-time farmer.
Full-time agronomic consultant in Pennsylvania.
When you talk about your dad's brother's farm in California,
it always brings me to smile.
A smile on my face.
What was your involvement in the farm as a kid?
And how do you think that shaped your professional career?
Well, I didn't grow up on a farm.
And my dad was more of the numbers guy for the farm.
I wouldn't say he was out there with a shovel
or fucking driving a tractor.
But, you know, I grew up during harvest season, going with them, spending spring breaks, driving around with him.
Obviously, his job, he was, you know, the farm was very close to my house and his office was, I mean, probably less than seven, eight minutes away door to door.
So it was very easy to get back and forth.
I was around it a lot.
And then when I was probably in junior high, if I would get in trouble,
you know at school or with him
I remember one time I got in really big trouble
and for like a week straight during the summer
I got dropped off with the hoeing crew for tomatoes
and he basically told me the first day he's like
you better bring a lunch I'm like what do you mean
he's like if you don't bring a lunch you're not eating
I mean I was in big trouble and I just remember I was thinking
in my head like fuck you I'm not bringing a lunch
and I just got dropped off out there at 6 a.m.
You know, this is probably 30 minutes outside of Sacramento.
It was probably 108 degrees.
And you just worked the hoeing crew for, I don't know, 10 hours straight.
Luckily, the people on the crew were cool to me and it gave me some food.
I didn't make that mistake the next day.
And then as I got in high school, I worked it every summer, you know,
from driving tractors to, you know, doing all sorts of miscellaneous stuff.
It was pretty evident.
Like, that wasn't my skill set.
it never really interests me
I wasn't good at the things that needed to be done
even though the stuff he was doing
there was probably more numbers based
dealing with banks
interest me now at the time
that definitely didn't interest me
and then all like
the labor stuff on the ranch
I just didn't have that skill set
like that's just I don't bring that to the table
so I didn't bring much the table out there
I enjoyed it because I worked with
the guy that ran the whole, the owner of the operation's son,
who actually my brother now works for.
And my brother is much more equipped.
I'm like a white collar redneck.
And my brother's got a little bit more,
you know, he's much more of like a hunter and a fisher
and kind of an outdoorsman, you know, drives jeeps up in the Rubicon and Tahoe,
which, you know, I don't,
my outside operation consists of like a golf course.
So it's like a specific skill set that,
it just, I don't know, for whatever reason, I never really got into it.
And my brother resonated with him a lot more.
But like I, you know, I remember one time, you know, technology back in the early 2000s.
Now my brother was telling me, they got tractors, you just press a button, it's like a Tesla.
You know, it just runs itself.
I remember ruining a field because I was driving this tractor, basically leveling it to then plant,
the tomatoes on it.
And you kind of had to be careful because the disc behind you could get, one,
the disc could break.
And two, there could be like a,
basically like too much dirt could get behind it.
And then he kind of gets stuck.
You just kind of got to look behind every once in a while, right?
And I just remember it had a radio in it.
I was listening to Jim Rome, like slamming a Gatorade, feed up.
You just kind of go, long field, just kind of turn the corner.
I ruined this field.
the other time I was driving a bankout wagon
and the bankout wagon is basically a wagon
that goes next to the harvester
which the harvester puts into the wagon
which then the wagon takes to the big semi-trucks
that you see driving around with tomatoes or whatever in it
and the bank out wagon can haul ass
probably goes like 30 40 miles an hour
but it's like this it's enormous way up in the air
it looks like kind of like a monster truck-ish
and I remember backing it into this guy's car
but they were meeting like around this tree so they didn't see it and I don't think they heard it
and I just took off. I just pretended nothing happened.
And it was pretty clear when he came back.
This guy's like dual cab F150 was just indented with a V.
It's like damn, what the hell happened to your truck?
It was like it had to be me.
So that was more me out there on the ranch.
I would say it shaped me and still to this day.
In my first year in college, I worked consistently.
construction, kind of like a demo crew. Like, that's hard work. Like, that level of life, like,
what I do, like working long days or nights or, you know, seven days a week, like, this ain't hard.
Like, that is hard. And I, I'm very, very grateful for those experiences and I still get to be around
it when I go home and go to my brother's office and just kind of see what the hell they're doing.
I went to college at Cal Poly
the ag program is massive
and a lot of the
big farmers kids all went to school there
so there was a big AGR
like an ag frat we used to hang out with a lot
and these guys now are probably running the biggest
all the farms around California that
you know when you see the GDP of California
it's like they love talking about Hollywood and Silicon Valley
like I you guys realize from Sacramento down to
Bakersfield, like the farming community in terms of financially is bringing in a lot of coin,
but they never really gets talked about.
But it's a lot of those guys running it now.
Their lives were hard because when they would go home for spring break, if you ran, you know,
massive dairy or whatever, they had to work.
You know, we go home for spring break.
We like went to Cabo.
They, you know, if you were truly doing, you know, going to work on the farm where a lot of
those people were, which I never was going to do.
I'm curious to hear your take on golfers carrying long, expandable golf ball receivers in their bag.
It seems to me like they're usually carried by hackers who are slow enough as it is.
If we can't ban them, what about making them at least count as one of the clubs in the bag?
If you're playing with a guy, it would probably tend to be like a muny course that has one of the golf ball pond removers in the bag,
I would try to get with a different group.
I, uh, that, that would be an auto, auto no-go.
Like, I would go back in the pro shop and be like, I'm not playing with this guy.
Like, this ain't happening.
That, that would be my response.
The other thing is, like, when a golf ball goes in the water and it's been there a while,
even if you yank out the, you know, pro v or a nice ball, it's been soaked in water.
Like, it ain't the same.
Question for the pod.
How do you think the Patriots will attack this draft?
What are your thoughts on the,
dynamic of Ramandre and Henderson backfield.
Well, I think the big question with them is,
one, is Vrable going to talk?
Like, is Vrable going to do a press conference on Thursday night?
Because if he is, that's the number one press conference I want to see after the draft.
Two would be the A.J. Brown, like, are they trading a pick for A.J. Brown?
I was just writing down because I realized last week I haven't talked about Travis
Hunter in that situation.
We'll do that tomorrow because that was pretty interesting to me last week.
I think Trayvion Henderson could be a really, really good player.
Is he ever going to be like Jamir Gibbs or something?
I don't know about that.
But I think we saw flashes down the second half of the season.
That explosive speed in the open field,
utilize him in that offense, which is obviously extremely difficult to learn with Josh.
once you get a better grasp with that,
I could see him being a monster.
I'm very high in Henderson.
You know, I think a lot of the question marks
with the Patriots are,
is Will Campbell going to get more technically sound,
which a lot of like offensive linemen believe he needs to do?
Does A.J. Brown end up on their team?
And, I mean, anytime you're drafting at the end of the round,
I mean, they're probably not going to come out of this
with that many impactful players.
Hey, John, know you're a big lover of marquee events.
And with the World Cup right around the corner, here's a couple
decently priced teams that I think has a chance to win come June.
Japan, 55 to 1.
They can win their group and have a favorable path to the final.
I'll be honest, I don't know much about the Japanese roster,
though I was just talking to a guy in the sauna,
maybe like two weeks ago, who just got back from Japan.
And every time I talk to someone that goes to Japan,
I think to myself, I want to go to Japan.
I'm not a huge
I'll be honest
I don't need to travel that much
I like where I live
I'm not huge in hopping on planes
and flying all over to Europe
like that's not how I fill my cup
but I really want to go to Japan
and that is a destination
that I want to attack over the course of the next
I don't know decade
Uruguay 65 to 1
they have World Cup prestige
and a very underrated squad
Brazil at plus
750
they're not even in the top four in betting odds
and have the best coach in the tourney
alongside a very solid defense.
I can't really add much there.
I would say Brazil plus 750 feels pretty good.
Here's what I know, and I'm not going to fall for this,
is when we lose and we go
02 and 1 in group play and the don't advance,
and everyone's like, things got to change.
Guys, things are never changing.
We're never going to be as good as these.
other people. We don't prioritize it. We don't care about it. We clearly don't cultivate the talent
here. Unlike the WBC or our hockey team, my expectations for our team would be like, they score a goal.
I'll give them a thumbs up. My expectation is zero. Zilch. I have a hard time closing my eyes and
what's the farthest Japan has ever made it in the World Cup? Because it's like, can you close your eyes?
and Japan win over an Italy, Spain, Brazil.
But I do like those tasty odds.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, name?
Huge news.
We created our own podcast called, Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
Pretty, yeah, pretty wide range of podcasts throughout there.
But this one's extra special.
So how do we actually come up with a name, Hey Jonas, guys?
I honestly don't remember
I think it was on a call about what we should call it
And we were thinking
I'm originally calling it
One of the early names of our band
Before Jonas Brothers
This is how you guys remember it going down
Yes I have a very different memory of this
We were talking about a thing
A bit for the podcast
For people could call in and say hey Jonas
And then I wrote down on my little notepad
Hey Jonas
And offered it up as a potential title
For the podcast
But thanks for remembering that
Guys. Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast. Just listen. We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite. Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier. This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel. Help an Acapella band with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform? We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the Iheart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies, and the stories behind the headlines.
We go straight to the source, the athlete themselves.
Their locker room stories, their reactions, the stuff nobody gets to hear.
The laughs, the drama, the triumphs, the moments that never make the highlight real.
From viral moments to historic games, from buzzer beaters to controversial calls, we break it down,
give you context, and ask the questions everybody wants answered.
Sports Slice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to Sports Slice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slicleif 12 in the TikTok podcast.
network on TikTok.
How do you evaluate John Lynch?
The last couple years, I feel like the Niners drafts and signings have been big
misses.
Does he need a great draft class to keep him off the hot seat?
Geez, you're putting John, he just, they were sitting the second round of the playoffs.
I think the thing with John Lynch, and I get told this by a lot of people in the NFL,
and Kawakami, who covers the 49ers who talked about this, I was talking to another GM
that knows the 49ers pretty well.
And he says, John's number one job.
is to handle Kyle.
I don't even know what that specifically means.
I just know Kyle's a lot.
He's a lot on his coaches.
He's an intense, he's just a lot.
And John's skill set of, like,
Kyle couldn't work with most GMs.
This is the same Andy Reid.
His personality is a little different.
And I think John's skill set to handle the star coach
is extremely valuable.
and not to diminish anything that John does in the front office,
Kyle, a lot of the draft picks,
like the two defensive linemen,
the second rounder last year, Collins from Texas,
that was a Robert Soligay.
The coaches have a lot of juice in the 49er land.
At what point do you think there will be an 18th game?
And how does it affect the start time of the season?
My guess would be in the next five years.
So I would say the over-under,
it would be like two and a half seasons.
So this is 26, 27.
I'd say somewhere 28, 29.
I think we're there.
I think my guess would be the start time would be the same.
The season would just go longer.
Could be wrong.
I guess they could start a week earlier.
But my guess would be start time similar,
kind of that first weekish in September,
and just go to the end and just push it back.
So you go even deeper.
And that way you can push the combine back.
You can push the draft back.
And you can just put the whole flow of the season.
Because OTAs mean a lot less now.
So my guess is season starts, similar time.
It just goes a week longer.
I've been hearing consistently that Wembe is the freak of the NBA.
And Otani is the freak of baseball.
Who's that guy for the NFL?
Who would fit that bill?
I don't think there is anybody.
I mean, I don't think there's a comparable to either one of those guys.
I think there are a lot of freaks in the NFL.
Miles Garrett
Trent Williams
You know
Sunny Stiles is about to come into this league
Right you have a lot of guys
That are just physical freak outliers
DK back calf
Right but I don't think there's one guy
Who's clearly the best player
And biggest freak currently
That's the best part of the NFL
There's a lot of them
Good question though
Question for the bag.
Might be a long one.
I heard you mention Rice on the podcast the other day,
and I read a headline recently where he said to an interviewer,
he thinks that he deserves JSN money.
Of course, any realistic football fan knows in no world does Rice deserve anywhere close to that type money,
but his headline made me start thinking about how allegedly physically,
allegedly abused a girlfriend.
The NFL closed its investigation and dismissed it.
This also made me think of how he crashed into the back of a family minivan,
on a crowded highway while racing with his friends
and he leave multiple people injured.
Oh, and he was caught on dash cam footage running off from the scene.
After the NFL investigated that incident,
he got six games suspension.
How does a player with so many public incidences
get so much slack from the NFL?
I think it's pretty simple.
I think the NFL years ago wanted to get out of,
like, we don't want to be the judge and jury on everything.
like that is when you crash into somebody
or there's an issue with a female
like that's on the court
that's on the judicial system
we're in business here
and our business is to make money and grow
if a guy's get in trouble
it's on the judicial system
to figure did this happen
did it not happen
that's on the cops the detectives the lawyers
and if like he's not going to jail
is that the NFL's problem?
I mean, it sounds like, John,
not really.
You know, if I get a DUI and I work for a company,
does that impact me at all if they don't know about it
or if they do know about it?
I don't know, you tell me.
Because, I mean, I never got a DUI
and I don't work for your typical, like, you know, corporation.
But, like, if I get a DUI and I work at Apple,
do I get suspended?
Obviously, if you get a domestic abuse
and you're beating your wife or your girlfriend,
you're probably getting fired if your company finds out about it.
But if you get an incident and you tell your employer, like,
this did not happen.
And then it comes out, nothing happens to you when the case gets dismissed,
you're probably not going to get fired because you have a legal recourse to sue your company.
Would be my guess.
I've never been involved in any of situations.
But why is it the NFL's job to suspend someone if the judicial system does nothing?
Now, you could also argue the judicial system is,
when you have money, you have a huge advantage.
I'd say the number one advantage,
this has always been a take of mine,
walking into a courtroom.
It's like, if you're poor, good luck.
If you're rich,
huge advantage to you.
You're walking in the courtroom with Jordan and Pippin
going into an NBA game.
That's kind of the way it works.
And I just think the NFL is just like,
we don't want the he said, she said,
we don't want to be in that business.
And I'm with you on some of these crashes,
but I don't know.
I mean, I just don't think the NFL wants to deal with it.
And if you're not getting in trouble, they just kind of give you minimum games
because you've tarnished a headline, but it's not, I don't think they care that much.
Do not go to the NFL or any of these pro leagues for setting the moral standard for society.
That's not the business or the world they're in.
They do not care, truly.
They can pretend they do not care.
And I'd argue they probably shouldn't.
That's not the business they're in.
Well, they have a lot of impact on the youth.
It's on their parents to teach them life lessons.
Not on fucking Kyle Shanahan, Sean McVeigh, and Josh Allen.
Definitely not Roger Goodell. He doesn't care.
Week before the draft, is there a chance there's already a handshake deal between A.J. Brown to the paths and some picks.
I think a lot of deals get loosely put in place, and you hear about this after there's like a big trade in the first round, that we had talked about this on Monday or Tuesday.
but there's no, you know, part of a handshake deal is there's no guarantee.
When we sign something like if I sign a player to a contract, he's on my team.
Or if I trade you and it goes into the league and everyone signs off on it, it's done.
But a handshake deal is like those can fall through.
So I'm sure they've had a lot of conversation.
And now it's just going to come down to is anyone going to pull the trigger?
But I think there's already been, this is what we're willing to offer?
Are you willing to accept the offer?
doesn't that happen a lot with most business deals?
So I would tend to say, yeah, there's probably loose negotiations,
and whether they're far apart or not,
we don't have Rusini on the beat anymore.
So I don't know.
JMAQ on the herd said that Kubiak is upgrading going from Darnold to Mendoza.
Is that the consensus around the league?
I feel like Darnold is a prospect and a player is superior.
Sam Darnold was a better prospect coming out of college than Fernando Mendoza.
And here's the thing.
Fernando Mendoza has not played an NFL game.
I like Fernando Mendoza and I think he's going to be good in Kubiak's offense.
Two years ago, Sam Donald threw 35 touchdowns on a team that won 14 games.
And then last year was the starting quarterback on a team that won the Super Bowl.
And had an NFC championship game against Matt Safford where he was excellent.
So, like, a prospect, we can debate Mendoza as a prospect, but that's what he is.
Sam Darnold is an NFL starter who's currently underpaid.
We hope Mendoza turns into that.
Now, the power of hope and the unknown is real.
It's like, this draft class in the NBA, AJ DeBanza, it's like, well, yeah, if he turns into Tracy
McGrady or, you know, if the dude, what's his name on Arkansas, turns into
Kyrie Irving or Chris Paul, it's fucking awesome. But what if he doesn't? What if he never makes
an all-star team? A-cuff. Right? What if Mendoza, he might be Jared Gough, but he might not be.
That's part of the draft. There is no guarantee that Fernando Mendoza is going to be a good NFL
player. None. Do I think he will be? I do. Would I bet?
my life on it? 100% no. I wouldn't bet my life on any draft prospect ever. We have way too many
examples. So I would say that they hope Fernando Mendoza in a couple years is as good, is 75% as good as
good as Sam Darmald is now. Because if they do a good job building up a team, they'll go to the playoffs.
This guy sent me a picture, and this kind of has gone viral, that Rory McElroy won the Masters
twice since the last time the New York Jets got an interception.
At what point does Justin Jefferson get beyond frustrated with his quarterback situation?
I know he's been an ideal teammate and a good sport so far given the ups and downs,
but I cannot see another year with poor quarterback play and believe he will remain calm.
He has to believe he is the best in the league and have,
we have not seen any diva out of him, but I think another crap quarterback year could bring
the diva out.
Yeah, man. Also, I think the Vikings need a draft to running back in day two of the draft.
I've heard this is a bad running back draft.
I mean, obviously, Jeremiah loves sweet, but most people say the next best prospect,
who is explosive returner, good player out of the back field,
Price, the other running back from Notre Dame.
Then I think a lot of guys are not viewed as like top hunter players.
This is not one of those drafts where there's like Quinchon Junkins and Trayvion
Henderson's, you know, in the draft.
So I would not, from my people that have been banging the bushes, watching a lot of the
running backs, not a great draft.
I would say with Justin Jefferson, it's naturally a diva position because you're on an island,
you then become a star when you're good, but you also are very dependent on someone else.
So if it's not working, the thing that's not working makes you look bad even though you're
balling.
Last year he's running all around
and J.J. McCarthy can't hit water if he's in a boat.
So I would say this is a big year.
I don't like the Vikings this year.
I'm out of the Vikings.
I think it's not going to go well.
Not because I don't think Kevin O'Connell's good.
Not because Justin Jefferson's not a star.
I just think that they got some question marks with the roster.
The division is good.
And I just can't see this Kyler Murray experiment going.
And I think if it starts slow, I think it could get weird.
And I know they went 9 and 8, but at one point in last year,
they were 4 and 8.
so I think this season could get really weird, really fast.
And anytime a wide receiver, most people are not Larry Fitzgerald.
They just put a smile on their face and are like the ultimate teammates.
Most wide receivers, worst case scenarios like Terrell Owens or Antonio Brown,
but a lot of guys become somewhere in the middle.
Larry Fitzgerald, all-time outlier.
Things would get really ugly.
He just kept a smile on his face.
Justin Jefferson, I think, would have a hard time doing that.
There were moments last year where you could tell he was frustrated.
I didn't even blame him.
Then I met him at the Super Bowl, just high-level dude.
Justin Jefferson's really impressive.
But, yeah, I mean, if this doesn't go well,
I think the Vikings could get weird.
I think the Vikings could.
They don't have a general manager.
Who knows if they're going to hire one after the draft?
I know they've kind of said they might, but who knows?
And it's Kevin O'Connell making all the draft picks.
They do have a good, you know, having Kevin O'Connell and Flores
obviously can carry you a long way.
But I don't know.
This thing could get the cap's a little off.
They miss on a bunch of draft picks because Questi was terrible.
I think I might get, my gut sitting here right now, maybe things change.
Vikings could get really weird this year.
The volume.
Hey guys, it's us.
The Jonas brothers.
I'm Joe.
I'm Kevin.
And I'm Nick.
And guess what?
But we created our own podcast called Hey Jonas.
We invented a podcast?
Well, we didn't invent it.
We just contributed to it.
We're the first people to do podcasts.
We get to ask other people questions because we're sick and tired of being asked questions.
Well, sick and tired is a strong way to put it.
But, you know, tired and sick.
Listen to Hey Jonas on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Just listen.
We don't care where you hear it.
Another podcast from some SNL late night comedy guy, not quite, unhumored me with Robert
Smygel and Friends, me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make
you funnier.
This week, my guest, S&L's Mikey Day and head writer, Streeter Seidel, help an a cappella band
with their between songs banter.
Where does your group perform?
We do some retirement homes.
Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, what's good, y'all?
You're listening to Learn the Hard Way with your favorite therapist and host,
games. This space is about black men's experiences, having honest conversations that it's really not
safe to have anywhere, but you're having them with a licensed professional who knows what he's doing.
How many men carry a suit or armor. It signals to the world that you're not to be played with.
And just because you have the capability that does not mean that you need to.
Listen to learn the hard way on the AHA radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcast.
Last night, a blown call changed a game.
This morning, the internet lost its mind,
and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where SportsSlice comes in.
I'm Timbo, and every episode we're cutting through the noise,
breaking down the biggest moments in sports
and giving you the real story behind the headline.
And we're going straight to the source, the athletes themselves,
their locker room stories, their reactions in the moment,
and the stuff nobody gets to hear.
Listen to Sports Slice on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast,
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