The Herd with Colin Cowherd - 3 & Out - Why a head coach is a head coach, The NFL Draft is a reality show, Relax with NIL
Episode Date: April 8, 2025John discusses what it takes to be a head coach in the NFL and why certain coaches who may not seem like great head coaches continue to get jobs and why other coordinators who are great, don't work ou...t as head coaches. Next, John talks about the NFL Draft and how similar the draft is to a reality show, the Jags picking up Travon Walker's 5th year option, how we all need to relax with the NIL, and his take on this season of White Lotus. Lastly, John answers your questions during this episode's mailbag segment. 5:49 - What it takes to be a head coach 12:36 - The NFL Draft is a reality show 24:00 - Travon Walkers staying in Jax 30:01 - Relax with the NIL 32:38 - White Lotus take 38:24 - Mailbag Follow John on Twitter, Instagram and YouTube for the latest. Check out Gametime - the fastest growing ticketing app in the US, and the official ticketing app of 3 & Out and GoLow - for tickets to all of your favorite NFL, NBA, NHL, NCAA teams. Concert and comedy show tickets, too. Go to Gametime now to create an account, download the app and use code JOHN for $20 off your first purchase. #Volume #HerdSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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And we had some teams starting.
They're voluntary, phase one, a lot of new coaches,
Ben Johnson, Aaron Glenn.
It's not Vrabel's first rodeo,
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And I wanted to dive into the reality show that is the draft.
We're going to do something on the draft every single day moving forward.
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The next week or two are pretty slow
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not, you know, the free agency
has come to a screeching halt.
Obviously the pro days now
are basically over.
So the NFL, I don't want to say
goes into hibernation.
because the franchises are working, the draft meetings,
and the players are back in town.
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like they have been over the last month,
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One thing that probably fascinates me in sports,
but specifically football, more than most,
is the plight of coaches,
and I love going to a wiki page and seeing where they start
and how they got to either become a coordinator
and obviously how to become a head coach.
And a lot of these guys, it's a very nomadic profession.
I mean, there are some individuals you see.
You're like, wait, this guy's 43 and he's already worked for seven teams.
It's like, geez, Louise.
I mean, one time you get fired, another time you move up a couple times,
and then you get a promotion somewhere else.
You just bounce around a lot.
Maybe you started in college and then you got your chance in the NFL,
but you had to take a step back.
And listen, like when you hire Mike Vrable or Pete Carroll, you kind of know what you're getting.
When Starbucks hired the CEO from Chipotle, they were pretty confident he knows what he's doing,
given that he had not just revamped and taken care of Chipotle and taken it to another level.
He had done the same with Taco Bell.
This wasn't something like, oh, we're getting this COO from Company X.
Now it's like, this guy's got a track record.
but anytime a guy goes from becoming a coordinator to a head coach,
it's a completely different job.
Like they don't have that many parallels, right?
As a coordinator, all you care about are schematics
and the guys that are available to play that given week and the game plan.
As a head coach, you deal with things that you could never envision as an assistant coach.
You are dealing with training staff, with equipment staff, with the ownership,
with the front office, with people's emotions, good and bad, with injuries, when people get in trouble.
Everything that happens when it comes to your team comes to your desk.
That is not true as a coordinator.
And honestly, even when it's on your side of the ball as a coordinator, you have no decision-making power when it comes to like, do we cut them, do we trade them, do we suspend them, do we bench them?
Like, that's not your call.
And Mike Vrable and Pete Carroll's been making these calls now for three decades.
Mike Vrable had felt like was born to be a head coach.
I'm fascinated by these guys, especially a guy like Ben Johnson,
who was like best offensive coordinator since like the McVeigh crew, right?
Since the Shanahan's, McVeys, LaFlears, Kevin O'Connell.
Like, he's the next.
I know he's not from that tree.
But the way we talk about him, he might as well be.
This guy is a genius.
It doesn't get any better than this.
Well, now he's the head coach.
And today, in these early voluntary workouts,
don't really have anything to do with football in terms of on the field running plays.
But I think the first phase is a lot of working out and getting in shape for the second phase,
which then gets a little more in depth with the coaching.
But like today was the first time in his career,
he's got in front of the entire team as the head coach.
Now, him and Aaron Glenn have obviously talked to the team over the years.
when it came to the lines as coordinators.
I'm not even just talking about their unit.
They have gotten front of the team countless times.
Training camp during the season.
It's just a natural thing that coaching staffs do.
Sometimes they rotate depending on the coach.
Some guys talk more than others.
But there was no confusion who in that building was the boss.
It was Dan Campbell.
So when Aidan Hutchinson shattered his leg,
like that's Dan Campbell and the GM's job
to figure out what we're going to do.
Not Aaron Glens.
now that he's in charge,
like those decisions fall on him.
And it's easy to root for these two guys.
It's incredible what these two guys have done.
And we know they both know football schematically.
Why?
Because they came from a CEO head coach.
And they got to control it all on offense and defense.
But they are both going to a place where you look at the history
is not a place conducive to success when it comes to being a head coach.
The Jets fire a lot of.
coaches. So do the Bears. And I think when you look at these two guys, they're easy to root for.
They seem just like high-level guys. Dan Campbell swears by them both. But it is going to be very
challenging. Now, in theory, the Bears job should be easier than the Jets job because at least they
have something to work with at quarterback that people are very hopeful on. We'll see on Justin
Fields. But the one thing I'd say about the Bears, that division is no joke. That is not an easy
division to lead.
But I think any time that you take this step, we have no clue how it's going to work out.
It's a little like the draft.
How many times have we seen like, God, it's one of the best college players we've ever seen.
This guy dominated in the SEC, in the Big Ten, in the Pac-12, and then they get to the NFL
and they're kind of an afterthought.
Because it's just a projection.
We don't know how it's going to work.
It's an enormous step.
Same thing with being a head coach.
The pressure, the stress, now deep.
Defense or offense, not your side of the ball, is also on your plate.
Getting to know those players, the way that you conduct yourself and act good or bad,
positively or negatively impacts everyone because everyone's looking at you for direction.
And I would say the one thing about the two lions guys is they came to a guy pretty comfortable clearly in his own skin.
When it came to leadership, you would say Dan Campbell has vaulted himself near the top of the list in the NFL.
of handling all that type stuff.
These guys handled the schematics football-wise,
but in terms of leading the group, leading the troops,
handling, messaging, he was a lead at that.
And now this falls on them.
And, like, he dealt with the GM
because that's what head coaches do.
They work hand-in-hand with the GM,
not the coordinators.
Not saying the coordinators don't have interactions
and don't talk to them.
They don't run ideas by them.
But the buck doesn't stop with them.
And now it does.
And, you know, Mike Vrable, when he got,
He's comfortable in that role, why he's done it for a long time.
Same, like we said, with Pete Carroll.
But for these guys, it's going to be fascinating to see.
And same whenever the Cowboys start with Brian Schottenheimer,
it is a massive, massive step.
And you really have no time to like,
there is no time for a learning curve
because the season's five, six months away,
and then you're playing games.
And all of a sudden you're playing Dan Quinn or Sean McVeigh
or Jim or John Harbaugh or Mike Tomlins.
Like, these guys just know what they're doing.
So good luck to all these teams.
It's exciting.
And this is why Ben Johnson and Aaron Glenn now got huge raises because you're in charge.
I was thinking about this when it comes to the draft.
You know, ultimately what the draft is, it's a gigantic reality show.
Right?
It intermixes college football, the pros, and then all these guys getting sent to different teams.
and a lot of them on a given draft star-studded.
I think the highest-rated draft in recent years was,
now it's somewhat unique, 2020, which, you know, not great times.
We're all stuck at home.
That was the draft when Belichick had the dog.
You know, everyone's, all the head coaches and GMs are drafting from their homes.
It was also a star-studded draft when it came to quarterbacks.
You know, Joe Burrow had just had one of the great seasons we've ever seen.
LSU had won the national championship.
Tua.
I mean, there was tank for Tua going on.
And Justin Herbert, who it's weird, he was the third quarterback taken,
but he had basically been a four-year starter at Oregon,
and like 16 million people watched.
Last year got enormous ratings.
Why?
Quarterback-centric.
And a draft in terms of popularity,
it's like, John, when are you going to break down, Will Campbell?
Yeah, probably not happening on this show.
Besides just, yeah, his arms are a question mark.
but like no one's if I started breaking down his feet and technique,
not that that interests me at all,
it definitely would not interest you and you would turn off the podcast.
So I think we love talking about quarterbacks.
We know they're the most important position.
And they also drive a draft, right?
The Johnny Football's, the Carson Wentz Marietta years,
the RG3 Andrew Luck years.
Like those are enormous times for the interest of this product.
and I think this is we're kind of caught in no man's land
and I was thinking about this.
The best thing that could happen for this draft,
especially on draft night,
and listen, I have no clue what's going to happen to Shador.
I like Shador as a player.
I enjoyed watching him this season.
I think he's a pretty good player.
I gambled on him a lot and he won me some money.
He made some huge plays.
I mean, that throw he made against Baylor,
rolling to his left.
I remember watching it live.
Like, my jaw hit the floor.
It was freaking awesome.
I don't disagree with,
people saying like, you know, historically he's not some all-time great prospect, and that's
100% true. 10 years ago, a guy like this probably goes in the second round. Well, a home used to
cost 400 grand. That same home now costs 900 grand. Things change. And that's what's happened with
quarterbacks, right? They used to, guys like Derek Carr and Andy Dalton and Jimmy Garoppel
used to fall to the second round, no one thought anything of it. Those guys now all go in the top
20. We just saw it last year. Everyone's like, Bo Dix, not a first round quarterback. Not only is he a
first round quarterback, he's going to go 12, and then he's going to be a starter immediately and lead a team
to the playoffs. Now, lead a team would be strong, but be a starting quarterback on a playoff team.
So could Shador go three? Because now Travis Hunter is the betting favorite to go number two. Sure.
Could he go six? Could he go 15? Could he go 20? Yeah, I don't know. But I know the drama on the draft.
He by far is their biggest character. I'm not proud to say this. And I've never been a Bravo watcher.
but my wife, she loves a couple of the shows.
Southern Charm, she's addicted.
And I'd be lying if I said, listen, I hate watch it, but I also like it a little bit.
And, you know, Summer House is another one of those shows.
They are two of the most popular shows on Bravo.
They crush.
And on some of these shows, these people break up.
They have these long relationships.
They break up.
And they are still on the show years later, together, even though they're dating other people.
You're like, how weird is that?
Because most human beings, when they break up with somebody, typically, especially when you're younger,
you probably don't spend as much time around that person anymore.
But in these shows, they do.
And the reason is because they're paying these people so much money that, like,
it's too lucrative for them just to quit.
On Summer House, these two were engaged.
They broke up the last episode of the season.
Their engagement, a month before they were supposed to be married.
And then this season, they're just.
back on the show. And it's like, how could you be around someone that you were engaged to, that you
dated for a long time? This chick's now pregnant with some other dude and spend around. It's simple,
money. And you know what? That creates a lot of drama. That creates interest. Bravo's got these
people by the balls paying them 25, 30, 40 grand an episode. It's like they're paying them too much to
quit. And that creates the interest. And that's all the draft is. It's a huge reality television
show. And Chador, I would say, is the biggest reality television character in this upcoming
draft. We have seen in years past, it's been other people. Last year, by far it was Caleb Williams.
It was not even close. But the other quarterbacks were pretty big. You know, Jaden Daniels' Heisman
Trophy, LSU became a pretty big deal. Bo Nicks had played at Oregon. Michael Panix had played at
Washington. Those were big-time programs. And their stardom had grown and grown and grown. And it's a huge
reason why football is so big is because college football and the NFL are just so closely
connected. And they flow right into the draft, which is one of the biggest events, you could argue,
the biggest event non-game of the year. So I think the Shador thing is just fascinating. I would
have no problem if I needed a quarterback taking them. I think the Giants thinking that you can keep a
job with Russell Wilson and James Winston wouldn't just be naive. It'd be crazy. Now, if they say,
hey, we like a quarterback, we can get in the second or third round more than him, then I hear you.
Take Abdul Carter, take another player. But you better be right because you're going to lose your job.
And I'm telling you, Pete Carroll, I would not be shocked at all, especially with the power that Tom Brady now yields in that organization and his connection with Shador.
but I think by far no one knows.
It's the best part about draft season.
No one actually knows.
Because what a lot of the media is being told,
as Morgan Wallen would say,
are lies, lies, lies.
I mean, you can't believe anything this time of year.
Things are coming all over the place.
These teams now for the next week or two
are really hammering down their draft board.
Coaches, let's face it, have big mouths.
They talk a lot.
Some of these coaches are not in the loop.
that they do not know what's going on.
Some of them do.
So this information getting out,
it's impossible to know what's correct and what's not.
Obviously, the betting markets now are hard not to take seriously
because they clearly kind of know what's going on.
And sitting here today, we know Cam Ward is going number one.
I feel really confident on that.
And that's not because the betting markets.
I mean, hell, a month ago, I was told that by someone that would know.
And when it comes to two and three,
like it does feel in some order that the other the two top prospects in this draft
Carter and Hunter will go and then Shador's like we'll see I but I would never rule out like
okay Shador ended up with the Giants wouldn't shock you it wouldn't be like Michael Pennix last year
with Atlanta so it's it's going to be fascinating how this works out but don't ever get this
twist so this is a gigantic reality show and it's listen it's someone that has a love
hate relationship with reality shows I do respect kind of the business model of it all
and like it's whether it's scripted regardless what it is like i i do think there's some validity to some of these people's emotions
but it's hard for them to get out if the network wants them to stay because they're paying them so much money and it's a little like that with like chador is just in this gossip loop
which is part of the reason this event is so highly anticipated and then watched the fight for the jacket is on in augusta get in on all the action at draft king sports book from the open
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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
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.
Oh, 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,
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
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.
The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis,
and I know firsthand because I competed there myself.
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I'm breaking down everything happening at Roland Garris.
Every match, every upset,
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Jen she went.
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She's an outsider to win the French for me.
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Listen, Lena Rubakina is arguably the best player in the world right now
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Consider this your court side seat to the French Open.
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Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
Imagine an Olympics where doping is not only legal but encouraged.
It's the enhanced games.
Some call it grotesque.
Others say it's unleashing human potential.
Either way, the podcast's Superhuman documented it all,
embedded in the games and with the athletes for a full year.
Within probably 10 days, I'd put on 10 pounds.
I was having trouble stopping the muscle growth.
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Another thing that happened today is like,
Trent Balke is a polarizing figure.
I've been talking about them for years
because it does feel like a lot of people in the NFL
don't like them.
Definitely do not trust them.
And it felt kind of mob style this year
that Liam Cohen in a weird way,
indirectly took out Trent.
It's like, hey, Shod, you want to hire me?
I'll never work for this guy.
So if you want me, you better get rid of this guy.
and then he was fired.
A couple years ago, he made a draft pick that was, I would say, pretty balsy.
Aidan Hutchson was as close to of a can't miss.
Again, I say it all the time.
There is no such thing, but there are players that it's going to be harder for them not to be a contributing member of a team.
That's Abdul Carter and Travis Hunter.
Are they going to be All-Stars?
Are they going to be Hall of Famers?
I don't know.
I have a hard time seeing Abdul Carter and Travis Hunter, health permitting, not be good players in the NFL.
I said the same thing about Agent Hutchinson.
It's like, yeah, I didn't know if he was going to be as good as he is.
But if you watched him play at Michigan, you're like, this fucking guy can play.
And he took Trayvon Walker, who at the time was on this star-studded Georgia defense
that had first rounders all over the place, and he wasn't the best player.
But it doesn't always play out that way when it comes to a draft.
Like, what are your measurables?
Physically, the guy was a freak, even though he wasn't the most productive.
Like, I don't want to say Trent Balkey got it.
right because I would still rather have
Aiden Hutchinson over Trayvon Walker
but he definitely didn't get it wrong
Walker's had 10 sacks each of the last
two years. He just got his fifth year
option picked up by an administration
that had nothing to do with him.
Liam Cohen, I think
Gladstone, maybe I'm screwing up his name,
the new GM from L.A.
and Buselli. The Jags actually put out
on YouTube
behind the scenes video of
Cohen, the new GM and Besselli.
It was really, I
I enjoyed it.
I watched it on YouTube probably within the last week.
Tony Bisselley feels like just a high level,
impressive guy.
Ran into him once at Starbucks.
He is fucking massive.
He looks really skinny and good right now.
Maybe a little ozempic going on.
But it feels like the Jags got some positive momentum.
But any time you get a new operation,
like you saw Mike Vrable come in and Josh McDaniels
and they're like, Joe Milton, you're out of here.
It's like, you just drafted me.
You don't want, you're gone.
See you, buddy.
And they just trade them for basically.
nothing. It's like we just want them out of the building. Why we're setting the tone. We want
our guys. And some will say, well, they wanted to clear the decks for Drake May. It's like,
yeah, Drake May is not worried about Joe Milton, but like Mike Vrable wants, no questions asked.
And a lot of times when you get new administrations, they just, if you're not our guy,
it's like a wait and see approach. And there was no wait and see approach to this. It's like,
yeah, 50 year option, we'll pay you $15 million and wouldn't shock me. If things go well,
they give them a huge contract extension. So, Trent Balkey takes a lot of shit.
currently unemployed, probably getting paid to do nothing.
Give them some credit on that one because it was controversial and not even necessarily
correct because as of the day it wasn't the correct decision, but it wasn't a wrong disaster
either.
A couple other things.
Non-football.
Vlad Guerrero Jr.
The son of Vlad Guerrero, I don't think he's senior, he's just Vlad Guerrero, who I loved.
I mean, the guy, he's swaying out of his shoes, hit bombs.
is, Black Guerrero, the dad, made, I think, almost $150 million playing baseball.
His son, who is a big bopper like his father, but definitely built a little different,
a little more physical, you know, size-wise, is just signed a contract for $500 million.
And listen, I have seen the internet and seen people with takes all over the place.
Like, you're just a year away, you've waited this long, you could have seen what the market.
can you imagine someone putting $500 million in front of your face
and turning that down?
We just had a question the other day on the mailbag about a guy's business
and he could make $2 million, he's in his mid-30s.
It's like, this is, listen, I love, I own this company,
things are going great, it's like, should I do this?
And it makes you think, you probably have some sleepless nights.
I would never forget being in Philadelphia.
when I first moved there, Cole Hamels was like this, I don't want to say the star pitcher because they had Roy Halliday as well, who was better.
But it's like they were going to give Cole Hamill's an extension.
Maybe he was going to make it to free agency.
And it was like, he signed for $120 million.
And I remember someone saying, like, can you imagine being Cole Hamels and trying to drive a hard bargain?
And then they put a, and 15 years ago, $120 million, might as well have been like $2.50.
Put that money in front of you and saying, yeah, I'm going to, I'm going to wait another six months.
It's hard to pass up this money.
Now, signing a player on the flip side to these 10 plus year deals, 14 years, besides someone you marry,
I don't know if I would do business with anybody and sign a 14 year contract.
That feels pretty crazy.
Obviously, if you have a 30-year mortgage, that's a long contract that you have with a bank.
But in terms of a business partner, and from the Blue Jay standpoint, now, the way that you
amortizes if you are going to give a guy $500 million,
you'd rather do 14 years than
five, but it does seem a little crazy.
And it's weird. Like baseball, all you ever hear
from people on the shows, baseball's dead,
because they just talk about the NBA
when 90% of the NBA nobody watches.
And you see these contracts being divvied out in baseball.
It's like $700 million here, $750 million here,
$350 million, $500 million.
It's weird, like, cool for these guys.
It's an exorbitant amount of money.
it doesn't feel like a great deal for the team.
Now, I get if you're Toronto, you don't want to lose them,
but if you're a great baseball player right now,
it is a lucrative proposition.
One thing I have,
one stance I'm going to take moving forward,
and listen, we talk about it here in regards to a guy moving teams.
You know, it's happening in basketball right now.
You see this guy goes from San Diego State,
and he goes to Wisconsin.
This guy transfers from Washington State to Kentucky.
It's happening all the time.
I'm done with the arguing back and forth about NIL.
I just don't care.
How are people still so worked up over this?
Now, I understand it's not an ideal situation
and it's going to play itself out.
But after a year or two,
I get being like having takes and takes.
I don't understand how people are still arguing this.
I just, like, who cares?
Let it just play itself out.
It's like, this guy wants so-and-so,
wants this much money
well either offer him that much money
or say no
and if you say no and he goes somewhere else
and he gets that much money
that was his value
if you say no and he can't get that much money
anywhere else and he'll take what you offered him
like welcome to supply and demand
I just think some of these takes on NIL
I'm just kind of getting exhausted with it
like I don't give a shit whether this guy gets
300,000 or 500,000
cool for him
I mean, I just don't see how everyone is still so worked up.
And I'm talking more media people.
I see them arguing constantly, like on my Twitter timeline.
It's like, how do you guys care this much?
At this point in time, I mean, we are several years into this.
Let people make mistakes.
Let them not make mistakes.
Who gives a shit?
It's all going to play itself out.
And last but not least, I enjoyed the first couple seasons of White Lotus.
It was really good.
I found this last season awful, like really, really boring.
And my standards for television are pretty low.
Like, I'm pretty easily entertained, given that I watch now Summer House and Southern Charm.
So a show like White Lotus, I welcome into my life.
And the first several seasons were pretty incredible.
Like, they were just, I don't want to say elite television, but they were pretty high level.
this last season was awful.
I thought it was a snooze fest.
Now, I keep watching, and it's weird,
sometimes with television shows,
I get FOMO.
Like, I don't want to miss out
when I feel like a lot of people are watching,
even if I don't like the show.
The best example for me on this
would have been Game of Thrones.
I'm just not into like dragons.
So if you tell me there are dragons in a show,
like it's not going to be for me.
but it felt culturally the show was so big I had to watch
and there was enough violence and enough nudity
I was like I'm entertained
but I did not think it was as like
transcendent as clearly a lot of people
in this space of talking about things
I feel White Lotus kind of fell under that umbrella
like everyone held the show to such high regard
because of the previous seasons
and rightfully so it was awesome
and then this season happened you're like
come on guys this isn't really it
and we all know it
We're watching because we, despite having a million streaming services and a million shows to watch, most of them kind of suck.
And we get into it.
It's not that interesting.
Occasionally you run into like an interesting documentary.
Me and Maria just watched this chick called like Ruby Frank.
She was like this YouTube mom in Utah.
It's crazy.
I mean, it makes you sick to your stomach.
You root for her.
I mean, jail is not enough.
I'll just say that.
Like, I mean, she should, she should go bye-bye forever.
Not in a jail.
Probably down, not up.
But you watch it.
It was really well done.
It was really powerful.
Sometimes you run into like, I didn't even know about the story.
But, you know, you get shows like White Lotus, the build up.
Everyone's talking about it.
And then you watch this season, you're like,
what?
It's just kind of stupid.
But, yeah, it's finally over.
And then the anticipation for season five.
Let's just hope it's better than season four.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers, and guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, news?
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, well, 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, where 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
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
It's Michael and Friends on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis, and I know firsthand because I competed there myself.
I'm Renee Stubbs, and on the Renee Stubbs Tennis podcast, I'm breaking down everything happening at Roland Garris.
Every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on clay.
Jen she won.
I mean, she went down in three to Rovachina, but I'm delighted.
Yeah.
She's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lena Rubakina is arguably the best player in the world right now.
And I actually can win on any surface.
Because if she's serving, well, good luck.
Consider this your court side seat to the French Open.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
Imagine an Olympics where doping is not only legal but encouraged.
It's the enhanced games.
Some call it grotesque.
Others say it's unleashing human potential.
Either way, the podcast's Superhuman documented it all,
embedded in the games and with the athletes for a full year.
Within probably 10 days, I'd put on 10 pounds.
I was having trouble stopping the muscle growth.
Listen to Superhuman on the IHard Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Let's start with Alan.
Again, just firing those DMs.
Thinking about the events of the Super Bowl and what could happen in the next few years from Mahomes and the Chiefs.
Could we see a Steph Curry career for Patrick, wins early, and chose to be the best player in the league,
and then as the team gets older, key players aren't there anymore, and you're just not the same,
but you somehow make a championship game a few years later after that last trip.
We could see Travis retire, Jones get injured, O-line never become strong, Reed retires.
what are your thoughts on the similarities
and can you see something similar
to Steph's career for Mahomes?
Well, I don't think they'll parallel each other
because Curry's, when he won his championship in 22,
it was still with Raymond Green and Clay Thompson,
who had been there since 15, 16, the Durant era,
and then obviously those guys had gotten injured
in Clay mainly, Achilles and ACL tears.
I do think that the best thing that could happen to like his, the team big picture,
if they had a bad year where everyone got hurt and it was just a disaster.
And remember, the Warriors had a year where they had the second overall pick.
They had a year where they had two really high picks the following year.
So if you can bottom out and get a high pick,
and for the Chiefs, that could be like pick seven or nine or ten.
If they just over the next couple years have a disaster.
disaster a season.
Obviously, I don't want this to happen,
but if he were to get hurt,
remember the Chiefs, or excuse me,
the Patriots, I forget
what year it was, but
maybe they never really bottomed out.
I guess they just finished the second
the one time with Matt Castle.
But you kind of got to either get lucky
with some later round draft picks.
But if they were to ever have a bad year
and Vech were to get a top 10 pick
in every round, it would be a problem.
It really would.
And it also builds,
on the hype of, you know, this is the year. Remember when, let's just say they went
9 and 8 and they missed the playoffs. And it's like, ah, Z lost his fastball. And then the next year,
because you have the 15th pick in the draft, you're able to kind of retool your roster.
I doubt that happens. I mean, I'm going to bet the over this year, but I hear what you're
saying. I think there are similarities. The difference is Patrick has never needed, you know,
Steph took a lot of shit
even though he had already
Kevin Durant needed him
he didn't need Kevin Durant
like he'd already won a championship
Kevin came
they won a couple more
and then he leaves
Kevin's never won anything since
Steph's won another championship
it's like
Mahomes won with Tyreek
one without Tyreek
one with a good offensive line
one with an average one
so I actually think he's already
kind of done all the checklist
How does Anthony Richardson
go top five
but Milrow will be a third round
or later pick
was he almost hurt by how much film we had on him.
I've mentioned this before 100%.
If Jalen Milrow had just played 12 games in college,
if Jalen Milrow would have just,
his season last year would have been it.
Yes, he would have gone higher.
The more film we have on a guy,
the more you get nitpicked,
especially when it kind of is an up and down experience,
especially if you're not the most accurate play.
but listen Jalen Milroy saw today is going to the draft I don't think he's going to go in the
first round I think that would be insane I even think as a second round pick that's pretty crazy
third round like Malik willis has gone in third round I can live with that if I'm a team like
project if my OC and my quarterback coach are into it though history would say most guys that
struggle with accuracy never turned that around but we you know milrow it's hard to get that
that Georgia first half which might have been the greatest first half he'll ever play
playing his life. It was pretty awesome.
Everyone loves the guy. I think that's Anthony Richardson had that going for him too.
Now, clearly, that's maturity has been a knock on him. I've never heard that with Milro.
You were talking about Gino and Cousins today, and I thought about other quarterbacks that are
close to that age. Other than Russ, I couldn't think of any that had decent careers.
Is this a product of college offenses being so focused on bubbles and
short passes during that era?
Or was it just a weird coincidence
that guys are left
from the early to mid-tenths?
Yeah, I think it's a weird coincidence
because if that was a trend, we never would have got
Lamar, Josh, Mahomes, Herbert.
I mean, we've gotten a lot of good quarterbacks,
Hertz, golf, over the last
seven, eight years.
So I think it's just a weird coincidence.
We did go through a rough stretch
there, you know, Cam got old fast, and he was really good for a minute.
Obviously, won an MVP, but then his career just fell off a cliff once the shoulder got hurt.
But if you think about, RG3 got hurt, you know, Foles could never quite find a role
beside being a backup.
Yeah, I don't know.
It's just, you know, Russ, Dack, some mid-rounders, do you consider Dack as part of that?
16, probably a little later than you're talking about.
There was a lot of Jake Lockers and Christian Ponders and E.J. Manules.
I think it was just a bad two or three year stretch.
Clearly it feels like we're on a better one right now.
It's crazy how that happens sometimes.
Patriot fan.
Excited to see how this upcoming season goes.
I know you and Colin feel how you guys feel about the over on our win total.
Something to note too.
is that the farthest the team travels this year to an away game is New Orleans,
pending any international games being finalized.
My question is, how important is travel distance to overall team health and morale?
Seems like a good thing that we don't need to do any West Coast games this season.
Listen, I never played in the NFL, so I can't speak to what travel is like on the body.
travel has never been easier for these guys,
unless you're on the craft plane,
which obviously you guys are.
They're like,
there are cigarette.
What was it?
There are not cigarette lighters,
but ashtrays.
That was one dog.
There are ashtrays on the plane.
It's like, oh, sorry, guys.
No one's smoking on the plane.
Who fucking cares?
But I hear you.
It's like we'd like a newer plane.
That's, yeah.
But I would say,
obviously if you're traveling,
I think it's harder to go west to east.
Or excuse me.
It's harder to go east to west
in terms of
if you have a Monday night or a Sunday night game
and you're the Patriots, the Jets,
you know, the Jets this year played Monday night football
in San Francisco.
Well, the game ends at 8.30 Pacific Standard time.
Well, it's 11.30, their time.
So by the time that they get on the plane
and start taking off, it's what,
two, two and a half hours later probably
once you do media, shower, eat
and, I mean, it takes a couple hours
does not only, uh, takes an hour
minimum just to get all your stuff
off, change, get everything to the bus,
probably 20, 30 minutes by the time
you board the plane, I mean, you're talking several hours.
So you don't even get up
in the air till 11.30 at night, Pacific Standard time.
And then it's 2.30.
You know, East Coast time. So by the time you land,
sometimes the sun's coming out.
That to me throws you off.
Vice-first.
Versa, when you play on the east, fly back west, you gain time.
So it makes it a little bit easier.
I do think there is some value, like, if you play, if you're the Patriots, or just any team,
and you've got like a stretch where you play like the Chargers and then the Seahawks or the Rams and then the 49ers.
And it's like you just stay, you know, in Southern California or whatever.
Kind of some solid team bonding.
Obviously, it works when you win.
I think at the end of the day, a lot comes down to like, is your team good?
Because if your team's good, these guys are used to.
Think about now in football, in college football.
You know, if you're Minnesota, you come out to play UCLA and then you play Oregon.
Like, these guys, over the next couple years, are going to get kind of numb to the travel.
And the distances that some of these conferences have to go, right?
If you are UCF, you're in the Big 12, you come out to play Arizona State.
I mean, some of the – then you go to Kansas.
I mean, some of the travel distances now in college.
Stanford and Cal are in the ACC.
That means they play Boston College.
They play Duke in North Carolina,
Miami and Clemson and Florida State.
I mean, these guys, they're used to some long road trips.
Plus, in the pros, these guys are good with their bodies.
The teams take it so seriously how to rehab and recover.
So it's not a big deal,
but it's probably a little overhyped.
I think it's fair, unless you just have an unguided.
godly amount of travel, which the, you know, the coastal teams can get, depending on their schedule,
right? Seattle, the Niners, the L.A. teams, obviously the Jets, the Giants, Patriots, Panthers.
If you draw the opposite end of the NFC West or the AFC East, like you're going to have some long flights.
Hi, from Down Under. As a fellow podcaster, how do you prepare for your podcast?
It is one thing to prepare for a guest,
but being a solo podcaster,
is at a different level?
What is your key to success?
Also, what coffee do you drink?
I'd love to send you some coffee.
It's like, this guy's got a coffee company.
I just drink, we got a coffee maker for the wedding.
It's actually a pretty nice one with the beans.
So I usually get either Starbucks or Pete's or Dunkin
just the beans at Safeway and dump them in
and a couple shots of espresso in the morning
and then maybe a coffee at lunch.
I would say I've been doing it the same
since I've been in radio to podcasting.
I just find things that I want to talk about.
Obviously, the digital age has changed a little bit.
I make notes on my phone whenever things pop into my head.
And like the day, it's 2 o'clock recording the mailbag.
I mean, the mailbag's pretty self-explanatory.
You guys just asking me questions.
But for anything that's not the mailbag,
I write it out, things that I'm excited about,
angles I want to take.
Yeah, things I think are interesting.
Kind of write it out before the show and then press play and just talk about it.
It helps me kind of get my thoughts together.
It doesn't always work.
Sometimes it does.
Some shows are better than others.
I don't know.
I don't really have like a master plan, but I would say most shows are kind of, I don't want to say written out like word for word, but kind of write the main topics.
I just, it just helps me to handwrite some thoughts down.
And then anything like I usually get up.
it depends.
Like this morning I got up really early
because I had to take the dog to the haircut
so I was at the gym by like 6.45
and by the time you get home,
it's picked up the dog.
It's 8.30, have some coffee, shower.
It's like I got the whole day to attack.
Sometimes if I get up at like 637,
I'll just go make coffee and come right to the office
and kind of just figure out what some ideas
I want to talk about and then go to the gym
at like 9, 10 o'clock.
and that kind of gets my mind rolling.
So it's just every day is a little different.
The off-season is where you make your money.
I mean, in-season, I don't want to say easy,
but like right now, especially these couple weeks before the draft,
there's not going to be much going on.
So it's probably a little more creatively inspiring slash difficult, I guess.
I'm looking for 2006 NFL draft prospects,
and I don't see any stars at quarterback.
Dollar is basically Hakenberg 2.0.
Arch Manning is going to stay at Texas
for a couple more years.
Collective NIL oil money.
Club Nick is small.
Nico at Tennessee is too skinny.
I don't see any quarterbacks
that will become starters right away,
as they all feel like backups.
Do you think teams looking for a future quarterback
are in trouble?
Does this make veterans like cousins more valuable?
Well, if you think everyone sucks in college,
I'm not saying you, which you kind of do,
but like if you're an NFL team
and you always have to all,
also look ahead. So you have to have a pretty good idea. And clearly things change during a season. But,
hey, we like three or four of these quarterback prospects. It was like two years ago. There was a lot of
buzz on Drake May, on obviously Caleb, on J.J. McCarthy. And then guys like Bo Nix,
Bo Nix not as much. Well, a little bit. I mean, he had a good season his first year at Oregon.
Michael Pennix were just intriguing prospects. So you kind of look, I think Club Nix's
Clubnick's kind of intriguing
I don't know as measurables
I think Arch is a major wildcard
He could be a star who knows
I mean but he also might not be
Nico's got a long way to go
Before we can talk about him getting drafted high
But things change
I mean we've talked about this a lot
As at this time
Going into their senior years
No one would have talked about
Baker Mayfield or Joe Burrow
As the number one overall pick
Not a soul
And Baker wasn't a no-brainer
But Joe Burrow sure was
So I think
The powerful part about a
season is like you control your own destiny.
You ball out, you dominate.
Like Nico, what if Nico wins the Heisman next year?
I'm not saying you will, but
if he kind of finally lives up to that ability,
he could be a top five pick.
Cam Ward is a good example.
He's going to go number one overall.
He went back to school because they're like,
yeah, you'd probably be like a third or fourth round pick.
So things change.
change so much. You're on the right
names, but
it's hard to
say for certain
I'm with you on Arch. I think it would be shocking
unless he, Texas
goes like 15 and 0, they don't lose a game,
he wins the Heisman, maybe he just comes out,
he's the number one overall pick.
But the other guys, yeah, major question marks, who knows?
But it can go good too.
Like, it can go bad,
it can go good. The thing with Kirk Cusas is he's
37, he makes a lot of money, and he
doesn't look like he's playing that well.
So I guess it gives him some leverage, but ultimately, if Kirk Cousins is your quarterback, do you feel great about it right now in 2025?
You felt good about it three or four years ago.
I don't know if you feel great about it now.
I just think things change so dramatically that it's hard to know what a future draft will look like.
I think it's really, really difficult.
If I would have told you last year at this time that this 5-8 running back from Boise State is going to be, most people think a top 10 pick,
thought it was nuts.
I'm like, well, he's about to run for like 2,500 yards.
You would have thought Travis Hunter would be a top pick for sure.
But think about some of the other guys.
You just never know.
I don't understand why teams in the draft would take the same position or near the same
position as their star players like the Browns that already have Miles Garrett.
Why would they draft Carter or the Giants that just drafted neighbors,
but they're thinking about taking Hunter?
Can you make this make sense?
with such important picks,
why wouldn't you pick a serious need?
Because the old adage is
draft the best player.
When you take need,
it just brings in more potential risk.
Because sometimes the need,
right,
doesn't equal the board.
So why would you take Travis Hunter
if you're the Giants
and you just took Malik neighbors?
Well, he's by far the best player in your board, for example.
And you go, well, he could also play corner.
We need a corner.
And if you are the Cleveland Browns,
we don't love any of these quarterbacks of picked him.
And if we take Abdul Carter,
we think he's a star pass rusher.
And in a couple years,
we'll move on for Miles Garrett.
And he will be our Miles Garrett.
And for a couple years, we'll have them both together.
So we'll have arguably the best defensive player in the league
to go with one of the young up-and-coming stars.
a position of strength
can turn into a position of need
with one broken ankle
so things can change really fast
most teams aren't like three four deep
so having an extra player at a position
beside quarterback makes a lot of sense
so I don't think teams look at it quite like that
now when the need like I need a left tackle
there's a star left tackle there
it's an easy pick
but this isn't a good draft
so like who should the giant
Giants take.
Assuming they don't take a quarterback.
Just take the best player on the board.
I'll figure it out later.
If every team needs to spend
at least 90% of the
salary cap over a four year average
per the salary cap
floor rule, where do the media
slash former players get off
by saying teams like the Bengals
don't spend money?
I absolutely have no issue
with it as I'm a Bears fan
and we just paid our way to
possibly having a winning team.
next year. But just curious
because it seems like everybody
is within 10%
of each other in terms of spending
at the end of the day.
Well, I think there's a big difference. And listen, I mean, the players,
especially former players,
are always going to complain the teams aren't spending enough.
Right? I mean, that's the money that they're trying to get.
Which, I've said this before, but it's really kind of crystallized
this offseason.
It's like they're in a partnership, a 50-50 agreement.
you know, some of you listening, and I am as well, you're in partnerships, right?
Most of our partnerships lay out pretty, if you're in a 50-50 or 30-70 or whatever,
a dollar comes in, you split it like that.
Yet the players who are in this partnership are, you know, obligated to their percentage,
yet they have to fight for their cut.
And the teams dictate, I mean, it's a pretty incredible business.
Like, we have to pay these players, but we get to pick and choose who we want.
want to pay. And we're going to make you beg for it. It's kind of crazy when you think about it.
But, you know, the Bengals are a good example. And we hit on this a couple weeks ago.
They just paid their two wide receivers. But they didn't manipulate the salary cap. Both those two
guys, if you combine their salary cap number in 2025, is dramatically higher combined
than guys last year. Justin Jefferson, CD Lamb, Brandon Ayyuk. Their cap numbers, that first year
was really low because you can pro-rate it over the life of a deal.
Hell, the Eagles and the 49ers just make up void years
just to spread out the signing bonus.
The Bengals didn't do that because it actually manipulates their cap
so they don't actually have that much room.
And you can give huge cash bonuses as quote-unquote signing bonuses
and manipulate a contract.
That's not necessarily what the Bengals are doing.
So they're cheap relative to
Jeffrey Lurie, right?
Or some of these owners that are spending a lot of their actual cash.
Last year, Jed York, the Haslams, they spend a lot of cash.
But people would say the Bengals don't.
Now, do they have it or not relative to those guys?
No.
Mike Brown does not have Jimmy Haslam money.
Or even at this point in time, Jeffrey Lurie money, not even close.
But he also avoids those situations as much as possible.
So these are first-class super-rich-guy problems,
but they're just cheaper than other teams.
You know, the crafts get knocked on this.
Yeah, the salary cap, again, the salary cap is just money
that's given through the partnership of the league.
So that money is getting handed to you,
whether you have a good, a bad team, make money,
or don't make money, and all the teams do.
But in terms of, that's the media money
that pays for your salary cap.
Because the media's check is,
if the salary cap's $250 million,
The media money is like $425 million.
So it's impossible to lose money on your players.
And again, you are obligated to give them the money.
They just have to beg and fight for it with their agents.
But I think there's some validity to it, but I'm with you.
I think stuff goes overboard, but that's just kind of the world we live in.
Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, dude?
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.
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,
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, 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 I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The French Open is one of the toughest tests in tennis,
and I know firsthand because I competed there myself.
I'm Renee Stubbs, and on the René's.
Stub's Tennis podcast, I'm breaking down everything happening at Roland Garris.
Every match, every upset, and what it really takes to win on Clay.
Jenchian went.
I mean, she went down to three to Rabakina, but I'm delighted.
She's an outsider to win the French for me.
And she likes Clay.
Listen, Lina Rabakina is arguably the best player in the world right now, and I actually can win
on any surface, because if she's serving, well, good luck.
Consider this your court-side seat to the French Open.
Listen to the Renee Stubbs Tennis podcast on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One, founding partner of IHeart Women's Sports.
Imagine an Olympics where doping is not only legal but encouraged.
It's the enhanced games.
Some call it grotesque.
Others say it's unleashing human potential.
Either way, the podcast's Superhuman documented it all, embedded in the games and with the athletes for a full year.
Within probably 10 days I'd put on 10 pounds, I was having trouble stopping the muscle growth.
Listen to Superhuman on the IHard Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Huge fan of the show. The Titans take Cam Ward at 1. The Cowboys trade Jack Prescott to the Browns for the number 2 pick and takes Shedor Sanders.
The Giants select Travis Hunter at 3, boost their underrated defense, and the Eagles trade AJ Brown, a first round pick, and maybe more to the Patriots for number 4 and draft Abdul Carter.
Vrable would love to get Brown back,
which would be huge for Drake May's development in New England.
The Browns likely had to promise Miles Garrett
they were going to make a move,
and getting a proven quarterback like Dak
makes sense with their win-now mindset.
The Giants secure an elite corner,
making the defense even stronger.
The Eagles already dominant in the trenches
at a game-changing outside pass-rusher
to pair with Jalen Carter and Jordan Davis,
making them even scarier.
The big question are whether the Browns take on Dak's contract
if the Cowboys truly trust Shador Sanders
and if the Eagles value
Abdul Carter
this is
it's a well thought out a lot of moves there
there was a rumor
within the last I don't know
a couple weeks
from somebody
I'd never heard of them
but it made it round out there on the interweb
about
Dak Prescott to
the Browns for number two
I don't know the exact details
that he said I would imagine if it was
number two
Dak Prescott.
I don't even know. Who knows?
It's pretty complicated because they just
paid Dak Prescott a ton of money.
I don't know why you would trade the number two pick for
Dak Prescott, given that there are a lot of
question marks with actually how good he is.
He doesn't have a great arm.
He plays in a dome.
You play in a cold,
not a great environment for weak arm
quarterbacks. It's really windy there in Cleveland.
You play in an outdoor division in Pittsburgh.
in Baltimore.
It's really cold.
I don't think I would do that.
Now, if you were Jerry, again, complicated,
I think it would destroy their cap.
I think you would think about it
from a marketing standpoint.
The chances that Shador Sanders
is better than DAC based on just history,
how often quarterbacks that are drafted
are better than a guy that's been a really good player
for a long time.
Now, we can nitpick them.
Obviously, as flaws.
Obviously, he's not a top five quarterbacks.
but he's a really good starter.
And proven, like, over and over,
you can win double-digit games
with him as your starting quarterback.
There is no guarantee
Shador Sanders can do that.
So from a marketing buzz, it'd be incredible,
but then you actually got to play the games.
So I don't know.
I don't think I would do that if I was the Browns.
Lifelong Chiefs fan.
Help the Miles fall off trucking America.
Appreciate you.
My question is, as Kelsey clearly ages,
and Noah Gray seems to not be in,
not be a solution
should the Chiefs trade
for Kyle Pitts?
I'm sure a six-round pick
would pass. I do think
the Chiefs are going to be interested
in doing
like, how are they going to acquire
talent, right?
They are drafting at the end
of these rounds every single year,
so it's harder to get flyers.
It's why they have taken
trying to think in recent memory.
Have they done that recently? Obviously, they made the
big trade with Tyreek Hill, but they trade for someone else.
I don't know why my mind's not working.
I feel like he had a pretty good year last year.
Not really, he had 47 catches.
I think he's, is he going into his fifth year option?
I don't know.
I would probably do it for a fifth or sixth if a year of them.
But I'm pretty sure it's like contract isn't small.
Kyle Pitts contract.
Say this about Google.
The AI thing is pretty legit.
Comes right up.
So Kyle Pitts is scheduled to make $10.8 million.
Better be an expensive tight-end room
because Kelsey makes a lot and then you're paying Pitts 10.8.
I don't think financially it works.
If he was making like he did last year,
when he was drafted so high, he's made a lot of money.
Kyle Pitts, for a guy that it is not gone,
great is doing pretty well financially.
I mean, he originally signed a $32 million contract.
And then next year's fifth year option is another 10.
So he's going to make like $40 plus million in five years.
Listen, it sucks getting drafted high to bad teams if you're a good player and that team stays bad.
But financially, there's a big difference to go in top five than like pick 20.
Big difference.
Okay, last question.
Bucks fan here.
Long question for you.
Why does everyone feel the need to dump on the NFC South?
For the past 10 years, the Falcons went to the Super Bowl with the MVP,
the Panthers went to the Super Bowl with the MVP,
the Bucks won the Super Bowl, the Saints were successful during an era
with multiple playoff appearances, and if it wasn't for that PI call
against the Minnesota Miracle, they would have went to a Super Bowl in the NFC
championship game.
Why doesn't anyone dump on the AFC South, which has done way
less. How does a division with three teams that made the Super Bowl always get
bashed in the media more than the FACC South? Well, you guys are much more relevant.
Like you said, I mean, the Panthers, Cam Newton was just a major story for a decade.
The Matt Ryan Falcons is still talked about the 283 game. The Saints were, I mean, a stalwart
conversation in the NFL once Peyton got there with Breeze and then kill the head, the body will die, the suspensions, that second version of them with Dennis Allen as the defensive coordinator, and the Bucks who were just good. I just think you guys are way more relevant. Like the AFC South is by far, by far the least relevant division in the NFL.
I, you know, the Colts, post-Paid Manning and Andrew Locke, let's like, what are we talking about?
The Titans have just not bringing much to the table.
The Jags are really not bringing much to the table.
I mean, the Jags are terrible.
I think people underestimate how bad their records have been.
If you just go to the Jags over the last, let's just start in 07.
I'm just going to read you win total since 07.
So starting in 08.
5, 7, 8, 5, 2, 4, 3, 5, 3, 17 out of nowhere, 10.
Then they go on a great stretch here.
5, 6, 1.
Forgot that.
They went 1 in 15.
Holy shit, they were bad in 20.
3, 9 and 8, 9 and 8, and 8, and then last year back to who they are, 4 and 13.
They're a bad franchise.
You could argue right now they're one of the worst, if not the worst franchise in the NFL.
They're really bad.
So I think it's that.
So you get the Colts, the Titans, the Jags.
Why do I always forget the other team?
Oh, the Texans.
I think the Texans, it's like whenever I see, should so-and-so move to Austin, Texas?
Like, Texas doesn't need another team.
The Cowboys is enough.
They don't even need Houston, but Houston's such a big market.
and Houston's solid
but I do think Houston
even when they're solid the last couple years
they get overshadowed in that state
by the Cowboys
so it just shows you
I mean I talk about football for a living
and I'm trying to name off the South team
and you just forget that there is not
that there's not another division
the AFC East has had two good teams
for 20 years
the Patriots and now the Bills
yet when you think the AFC East
the dolphins and the Jets consistently
are some
It's like you just, the dolphins and the Jets.
The AFC West, same thing.
It's like, Chiefs have dominated that thing for a while.
The Raiders haven't been good, the majority of my adult life.
And you're just, the Raiders, you know, there's always kind of doing something.
Yet the, I'm with you, the AFC South, you guys take more shit.
It's like, you know, what did, uh, did Reggie Jackson say they don't boo nobody's?
You guys are just a little more relevant, way more relevant than that division.
There's a reason Mike Tomlin gets talked about a lot.
He's a coach of the Steelers.
If Mike Tomlin was a 17-year vet as the coach of the Jags,
it wouldn't be the same.
So it's just like brands do kind of matter.
They matter.
I'm wearing Travis Matthews right now.
I'm wearing rainbow sandals.
I got a Stanley next to me.
You know, it's like the Steelers, the Yankees, the Lakers, the Packers.
Then there's the Jags, the Colts.
I love Nashville.
just got married there.
The Titans are like,
feel like an afterthought in that part of the country.
You know what matters down there?
The SEC.
So I hear you.
You guys are also an SEC country,
but clearly your football teams have just been
just well run.
I mean,
think about the difference of,
like Chris Ballard,
I don't think they made the playoffs in seven, eight years.
And the Jags,
we just read off their win total.
They probably average over the last
16, 17 years,
five, six wins a year.
I mean, you guys,
The Falcons had Thomas Dimitroff for a long time.
Julio Jones, Matt Ryan, Cam Newton, Tom Brady.
The Bucks did suck before that.
Drew Brees, Sean Payton.
So you're 100% correct.
Good, uh, good DM.
Adios, everybody.
The volume.
Hey, guys, it's us.
The Jonas Brothers. I'm Joe.
I'm Kevin.
And I'm Nick.
And guess what?
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.
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.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman help make you funnier.
week, my guest, S&L's Mikey Day and headwriter, 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. I'm Michelle McPhee, and I've been unraveling the
strangest criminal alliance I've ever reported on, a Mormon polygamist and an Armenian businessman.
Multi-million dollar house,
Ferraris and Lamborghinis, private jets,
a billion dollar fraud.
But how long can this alliance last?
Tell me what you know.
Is somebody coming after me?
Listen to Kingdom of Fraud 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,
and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where Sports Slice 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 SportsSlic on the IHart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slicalif 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
This is an IHart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
