The Herd with Colin Cowherd - Colin Cowherd Podcast - Top 5 College Football Programs, Is Brian Kelly Right For LSU? Michigan Headed For Decline?
Episode Date: September 17, 2025Colin is joined by college football guru Josh Pate to talk ball. They start with UCLA being over their skis in the Big Ten and why it’s not a good job for a head coach (3:45), and debate which s...chools are truly the best five college football programs (9:00). Colin argues that Michigan is viewed as a better program than it actually is, believes the program will decline in the coming years, and they preview their upcoming game against Nebraska (12:15). They debate whether Lincoln Riley at USC and Brent Venables at Oklahoma will work long term (27:30), and Colin expresses his surprise that Texas A&M beat Notre Dame (33:30). Finally, they discuss whether Brian Kelly is the right coach for LSU (44:00). All lines provided by hardrock.bet (Timestamps may vary based on advertisements.) Follow Colin and The Volume on Twitter for the latest content and updates! #VolumeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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the GameTime app today. All right, Josh Pate joining us. He cuts through like nobody else with
college football, obviously host of Josh Pate's college football show, which is fantastic.
So I got into this discussion the other day. I'm known as a USC Homer. So, and I lean into it
because I think it's obnoxious and funny, but whatever. We all have our team or our region or whatever.
And I was talking to a friend the other day who's a UCLA Bruin, and I said, I just,
don't think, I don't think UCLA is a good job. I think it's one of those where it sounds like it
should be good. You're like, oh, there's a lot of money in Bel Air, but it's an international
university. NIL punishes college football programs. You can make, you can be a top 10
college basketball with about $4 million a year in college basketball. If you're not at 16 to 18,
which is where USC's at now, I mean, there's a reason U.S.
USC's defensive front looks better.
They bought a lot of it.
So my take with UCLA is
they are bottom half of the Big Ten and NIL.
Because it's in Bel Air, Josh,
you can't really, and it's a public university,
your coaches have to drive 45 minutes
or an hour to work.
I don't think it's a good job.
I do not think it's a good job.
If I was an agent,
I would not send my best clients there.
I don't think it has a huge job.
huge brand. You tell me, you live in Nashville. I spent eight, nine years in Los Angeles.
I don't think it's a good. I don't think it's a good, I don't think it's a good, I don't think
it's a top 30 college football job. I would go further. I don't think it's top 45.
Like, you're talking about multiple G5 jobs that are better than UCLA. When we say that, by the way,
I know people who don't live in this world and who don't immerse themselves in it, they,
they almost think you have an axe to ground.
Like you just talked about, oh, that's USC homerism.
Well, dude, I grew up in Harris County, Georgia,
so I got no dog in this fight.
I'm just telling you what I perceive,
but I could be wrong.
So then you ask around and you ask,
forget agents, yeah, of course agents are echoing that to me.
Colin, I just go to coaches.
When I see a coach's name and they're running for these jobs,
I'll just go to the coach,
and I'll ask him, and they'll usually shoot straight with you.
And I just think probably even I've been a little taken back
by how many people who in a previous lifetime we would look at it, the job they're at,
and you would think, oh, it's a slam dunk.
Yeah, if he can get the UCLA job, he's going to take it that in the modern day,
look at it and say, dude, there's no way.
And we're not just talking about head coaches.
Like I'm telling you, there are coordinators out there.
There are pretty high-level coordinators out there that would not leave where they are right now
for the UCLA job.
And you mentioned its bottom half of the Big Ten.
And well, that's in a vacuum.
So yes, it's bottom half of Big Tenant vacuum.
But then, like you said, when you factor in, hey, if you take the Indiana job, I mean,
you could do like Signity and blow it up.
But even if it's not what Signity has made it, you're going to live in Bloomington, Indiana,
very affordable.
So you're asking me to go take a bottom half job.
You're going asking me to be distant second in my own town.
You're asking me to be second on my own campus when it comes to the athletic department.
You're asking me to take over a place where the NIL infrastructure is.
really discombobulated. They're not fractionally as put together in football as they are for basketball
there. And you're asking me, by the way, to compete with superpower programs like Oregon and Ohio
State and Penn State and Michigan. There's just, I don't have much good to say about it. I wish I was
wrong. I wish you were wrong. We're not. Yeah, I mean, I, and the football stadiums 45 minutes off
campus, I think there was a time when you could get away. There was a time when it was
Terry Donahue and then Dick Vermeel and it would get on ABC and it was part of the PAC 12.
And there was something to be said about you're playing in the Rose Bowl and the weather was cold
everywhere else. And now you're like, oh, it's warm in UCLA. Like I could see a quarterback or
wide receivers. And they do put guys in the NFL. But I think there was a moment when Chip Kelly said,
I'd rather go be a coordinator in a Big Ten school than the coach of UCLA.
And to me, it's like, oh, that's the tipping point.
Because Chip knows, you know, Chip, Chip, Chip's coached in Oregon.
He's coached at the NFL.
He's like, no, yeah, and I know Chip.
Chip was at my 60th birthday party.
Chip likes L.A.
Chip and his wife love L.A.
It's not that.
He's not an outsider.
So, you know, it's funny.
I said years ago I felt this.
I don't feel it anymore.
I said years ago, I thought the Texas job, I said, take away the top three quarterbacks in the NFL.
Whoever has those, and they're in their prime, those are the best football jobs in America.
Kansas City, Buffalo, Baltimore, you know, those are the best jobs.
You have an NFL pension.
Your coaches don't leave.
You don't have to recruit players.
But I always said fourth is Texas.
and as we talk about what kind of job it is,
I always think like Texas is the best college job, Ohio State, Georgia,
then we can argue.
Like Notre Dame, there's an academic umbrella.
It's kind of, you know, it's in the middle of nowhere.
It's, you know, it's small, it's private, bad weather.
I mean, my wife wouldn't be overjoyed to move to South Bend, Indiana, like all things
consider.
If I said to you,
top five jobs. I want you to consider pressure, pay, conference, geographic location. Remember, Oregon,
you know is an outsider. If you don't have a lot of players in your state, you generally don't have a good
program. Phil Knight changes that. California changes it. If I said to you, top five programs,
all things considered, where are you? You're going to think I'm joking with you, but Kentucky football
would be the job that I would want to take. Mark Stoops makes close to $10 million,
a year. The goal there is to win seven games. It's in rural Kentucky. You can be there forever.
He's got a massive buyout. And unlike a lot of these other guys, he is the only place where
you blend SEC pay scale without SEC pressure. I can't believe people don't look at Mark Stoops
and say, that guy figured it out. Now, if you do want to compete for a national championship,
the answer is the University of Georgia. Georgia has long been that. And I remember,
when Sabin was at Alabama and everyone would look at Saban and is he going to go to Texas.
But I remember someone saying, no, forget Sabin to Texas.
Like, yeah, if he were to take that job, it would suck for Alabama.
But he'd do probably the same thing at Texas.
I don't think you could dominate much more than Saban did at Alabama.
But what people kept saying was you need to be paying attention to what happens with Georgia.
This was like the Mark Rick, Georgia era.
Yeah.
Georgia for a long time, I grew up there for a long time.
And Georgia, like, good was the enemy of great.
And they were just good.
It was pretty good.
It was kind of good.
And there was this, like, nether region.
There were never bad enough for a firing to happen.
They were never good enough to win a title.
And the rest of the SEC was so happy with Georgia being like that.
And finally, it got to a tipping point.
I really think Sabin and to an extent Urban Meyer turned the heat up in the SEC enough
to where Georgia made a move.
And then Georgia went and got Nick Sabin's guy and Kirby Smart.
and the day they hired smart, there's no guarantees in this world, but I thought to myself,
if that is the guy that can replicate Sabin's model or come roughly close to it, if you take
those ingredients and you throw them in Athens, Georgia, I just thought it was a powder keg,
the likes of which in a generation prior to me being born, they used to talk about Florida.
You read the books, you listen to the interviews, you read the Paul Bear Bryant quotes when he was
at Bama of hoping no one ever figures out Florida.
because if anyone ever figured out the University of Florida, then they'd be a monster to deal with.
So Kentucky, if I don't want to win a title, Georgia, if I do want to win a title, would be my two answers.
Michigan sounds like a greater program than it is.
So Ohio State is essentially the SEC just north.
The obsession, the passion, the relentlessness.
I mean, Luke Fickle gets an hour.
You're out.
That's the SEC.
Michigan's patient.
Michigan's got the medical school, the business school.
And the truth is, if you take Harbaugh out, they'd ham and egged it for a lot of years where it's like, well, they're okay.
They're not special.
When they hired somebody on staff, my first take was, oh, that's Michigan.
That's not going to work.
That's not going to work.
That as much as I loved Harbaugh in Michigan is that Michigan is a program that people instinctively, helmet, fight, song,
Harbaugh, Brady, think of a top five or six program.
But I don't think it is.
I don't think Michigan is a top 10.
Now, I'm saying this.
You take the job.
Okay, you take the job.
Oregon has Phil Knight.
Ohio State has historically been more obsessed.
Penn State's got even athletes.
Oh, damn, now Washington and U.S. C are in it.
That I would not be surprised if Michigan went 10 years and was kind of an eight-win
program. I would not be shocked.
That's a lot.
Let me break this down. Okay, so my perception,
my perception was kind of with an asterisk next to it when Jim Harbaugh left and they
give Sharon the job because I could never prove this, but you could, you'd be tough
for you to convince me there weren't some conversations in that building of we've got this
looming NCAA thing. Don't really know which way it's going to go. Let's just build a bridge right now.
And who knows, maybe Sharon's the perfect guy and it's a moot point, but at the very least,
let's just give ourselves an ability to have this conversation again two or three years down the road.
And if he's great, it's a moot point.
And if he's not, it'll give us an open door.
I still think there's a little bit of that.
And there's a lot of remains to be seen on that.
Here's what I wonder.
All right, so the malaise that was Michigan, which was basically my upbringing.
Like I came up, I'm in high school, mid-2000s, my college years.
That's the area you're talking about with Michigan.
I'm sort of on the back part of Lloyd Carr, and so I hear about when Michigan was great more than I'm watching them.
I'm great.
Texas, kind of the same way, Mac Brown towards the end, and then Texas is the same way.
I wonder if you're allowed to have that for an extended period of time anymore with the way money is in the sport right now.
And so also how volatile roster churn is.
Because if it's going to be, here's what it's going to do.
It's going to be really hard to gauge a.
coach because it used to be like I would define program as a four-year rolling blend of staff
grades and recruiting rankings and development and NFL draft production.
Well, how am I even doing that if we've thrown it all in a blender and 38% of your roster
year over year is coming from someone else's program?
So I don't really know how to grade a coach so much as I know how to grade a talent
acquirer.
I just wonder if they don't look at it and say, what used to be okay here is not okay
anymore. That's why it always helps when your rivals are winning. It helped Auburn down in the
south when Alabama is winning. There's no way Auburn goes and wins a title in 2010. If you don't have
the reverse reaction to the Sabin thing, and likewise at Michigan, you've got Ohio State, which will
always turn the heat up on you. But I'm more interested in what you're talking about. The new
additions to the conference, what is Oregon long term? I've actually got semi-high expectations
for Washington long term, probably higher. Same. Same. Same. The country, yeah. Um,
I just, I see where you're coming from.
Okay, I feel the same way.
About the profile of the program, I feel the same way.
I just don't know if they, if you've got big enough money that walks around and does what it took for them to get Bryce Underwood,
I'm not sure that they just sit there and say, I guess we're good enough with eight wins.
Like, if that happened, I just think they'd be overly aggressive and keep hiring and keep hiring until they hire their way out of it,
which is a horrific strategy in college sports, but it doesn't mean they wouldn't try it.
Think about this. Harbaugh won instantly in San Diego, instantly with the Niners.
He won instantly with the Chargers. Turn him around.
Stanford, he didn't win instantly, but he was a 40-point dog, went to the Coliseum and beat USC, so instantly he changed the culture.
Michigan took a while.
Oh, dude. That's its own documentary. Yeah.
Michigan took a while for Jim Harbaugh.
Yeah.
Because I always said this. If you're too worried, one of the advantages the SEC has, like culturally, they really don't care about the swim team. There are certain universities, the West Coast really cares about it. There's some ACC schools that do. Michigan has always looked at Ohio State is like, well, academically, there are junior college. We wouldn't do what they would do. And my take is Oregon just entered the conference. Oregon has no effect on,
Ohio State. Either does USC or Washington. But I think Oregon, Washington, and USC can beat Michigan
regularly. I don't think they can beat Ohio State regularly. And that's my take is that when the
Pact 12 came to the Big Ten, there was this sense that, oh, those West Coast schools, it's big boy
football. And my take is, oh, Jim Harbaugh leaves. Michigan in five years, we're going to look up and go,
they're the school in trouble.
That USC's humming.
Oregon's going to hum.
Washington, whenever they get the right coach, is a top 10 program.
Let's be honest.
James Franklin is one of the top five recruiters of the sport.
They're going to be fine.
I mean, they have dudes.
I just think Michigan, and I know everybody loves Underwood, myself included.
But I look at it and I think, hired within, conference is much stronger.
They care about stuff that a lot of.
lot of football powers don't. I have a weird vibe about Michigan. And Ohio State now is playing,
I mean, they are rolling. Right now, they are, they feel like Georgia four years ago.
I remember when I was, I used to work in a warehouse and listen to you all the time, describe
fan bases. And you would talk about sweater vest fan bases. And you're kind of describing the
sweater vest ishness of Michigan. So another layer of that theory to test out here is,
I noticed a different vibe off of them over the past 24 to 36 months with the whole
stallions thing with the whole NCAA investigation.
There was this sort of throwing back in Michigan's face, the hypocrisy water balloon of
do you guys have looked down your nose at the rest of college football for so long?
And it's you that's wrapped up in this?
And instead of looking and kind of defending themselves or apologizing for it,
they just kind of said, you know, like if we got to get the sweater of us dirty,
if we got to get some dirt under our fingernails, then so be it. And I don't know long-term,
what kind of ramification that has. There are always these inflection points in the trajectory
of programs or businesses or whatever. And you look back on it when you're, you know,
doing the documentary, you're writing a book 20 years down the road. And this moment in time
affected this, this, this, this and this downstream. I still don't think we know fully how much
that right there, that past 20, 24, 36, 40,
must was an inflection point that changes the attitude around there. And it could be nothing,
by the way, but it could be something that makes them a little less apologetic about being a little more
serious about football. It's not that they weren't, but your point's well taken. Some places,
they will literally do whatever it takes to win. I grew up in the south. I grew up in the south.
There's about eight of them. Yeah, we never perceived Michigan that way down south. We perceived Ohio
state like that. We always thought, we always thought Penn State may be like that. We never
thought that about Michigan. And recently, there's a little more of that vibe coming off Michigan
to where I still question if they would let it sink back to that eight or nine win degree
without getting ultra aggressive in the hiring. Hiring doesn't guarantee anything. I just don't know
that they would sit back and, you know, cross the legs and, you know, sit back in the rocking chair
and say, oh, well, at least the GPA is high like they used to. Yeah. So, by the way, Michigan
faces Nebraska this weekend, and it's probably going to be a field goal game.
It's at Nebraska.
I don't know.
I probably would take Underwood making a play and winning the game late.
If I had to bet, I would just say, two really talented quarterbacks.
I would probably take Michigan, again, Underwood, close game, 27, 24 makes a play late.
What say you?
I am going to this one.
Never been to a Nebraska game before.
forward to it. I believe in a lot of that rule, year three stuff, at least at the college level.
If that's right, and he's there year three, and they scratched out a win against Censi early on,
and Censi's quarterback ran for over 100 against him, by the way, which is something Underwood
absolutely could do in this game. I just, if a lot of what I believe about them, if their
wide receiver core is one of the more underrated position rooms in the big tent, which I believe,
If I believe that they've got the kind of guys that can stand up at the line of scrimmage,
at least stalemate a team like Michigan, if that's right, this is kind of the way that you prove.
It's the stage you prove it on.
So I don't have a strong feel on it.
Actually, later in the week we've gotten, I kind of do have a stronger feel on it.
I think it's going to be a Nebraska day.
I think they're going to win that game.
And I think the talk around them becomes a little different.
Like I thought this is a fringe playoff team at the outset because I thought they'd get one or two of these key wins,
could afford to drop to and be a 10-2
non-Big 10 championship type playoff team.
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Hey, it's us, the Jonas Brothers,
and guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the news, no?
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 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.
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.
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This week, my guest, S&L's Mikey Day and head writer, Streeter Seidel, help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
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Those people are starving for banter.
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Last night, a blown call changed the game.
The morning, the internet lost its mind.
Highlights are trending, opinions are flying, and nobody's telling you exactly what happened.
That's where SportsSlice comes in.
I'm Timbo.
Every episode, we're cutting through the noise, breaking down the plays, the controversies,
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We go straight to the source, the athletes themselves, their locker room stories, their
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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.
SportsSlice brings you closer to the action with stories told by the people who live them.
Listen to SportsSlice on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
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Listen to Kingdom of Fraud on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Yeah, no, I mean, they have to go to USC if they lose this game.
Oklahoma was clearly the side, clearly the better team, more juniors and seniors.
And I think Oklahoma finally has their quarterback.
And I think it's interesting.
I didn't think Brent Venables would have been my choice.
But I do think when a defensive coach gets his star quarterback, there's a magic that happens.
That's what's hurt Mike Tomlin with the Steelers.
He just, Big Ben got old.
You just can't find the quarterback.
And Belichick even proved, like defensive coaches, once the star quarterback,
if you miss on Cam and Mac Jones, like, you get fired.
So I think Brett Venables has found his quarterback for the time being.
And it's like, okay, so he's got a bunch of juniors and seniors on defense.
He knows defense.
He can build culture.
He's a tough guy.
He was at Clemson.
It'll work.
It's interesting with Lincoln Riley.
He's the offensive guy.
He had his quarterback.
He found his defensive coordinator.
So last week, I had my questions about USC, but I watched them last week.
And I thought, because when I watched Oklahoma beat Michigan, I thought, okay,
this coach is going to work. It's going to work. And you can't just fire coaches, Josh, like you used to,
because the NIL, you've got to raise $20 million before you buy out the coach. So this, I've said,
the NIL is a coach's best friend. So Lincoln Riley's an $80 million buyout. They just built
$300 million in facilities. They raised $18 million a year. Lincoln Riley is not going anywhere.
But when I watched Michigan, Oklahoma, I thought, okay, he's going to survive here. They're not buying him out.
He's going to survive.
And I watch, I know it was Purdue, but I watched their defensive front.
And I'm like, oh, shit.
This is a big 10 team.
USC is controlling the line of scrimmage.
They mean, they are pushing up now.
Michigan State's offense is better.
Then after that, it's Illinois as a real test.
I'll be at that one in Champagne, a glorious champagne.
The champagne's better than the town.
But my take was, my take was.
was, oh, I think Venables and Lincoln Riley found their way.
I think the NIL looks like a magic elixir,
but I think both of those coaches experimented with it,
maybe overused it,
and now they feel like they've kind of figured out the portal
and figured out the NIL.
My take is Venables and Lincoln are going to work.
I know it's early in year three,
but I feel it strongly, do you?
Yeah, you are describing something,
I agree with, something I have begged Davoswony to explore at Clemson to no success.
You're describing what Brian Kelly has figured out in the last year or so at LSC.
Yes, yes.
I mean, he walked in that building and almost from an egotistical standpoint, tried to prove
a point by flushing the building of Louisiana people.
And a huge mistake.
And he course corrected on that from a personnel side.
And he course corrected on defensive hiring.
And now, voila, they can win against.
20 to 10 last week and it's hideous, but it's a win.
I fully believe what you're saying about Lincoln at USC.
Here's the shame of it.
The shame of it is he didn't do it when he first got hired.
Like he brought a guy with him that was very inferior as his defensive coordinator.
I've got my own theories about why that happened, but it happened.
All right.
So he makes the right move.
He made the wrong decision at the outset.
He course corrects properly the problem as we, I think you and I talked about this
couple of weeks ago.
Okay, then you find yourself at a man.
major job three years in asking for patience. And no one wants to give you patience. But if they will
get it to him, I do believe it'll work out. I've always believed that about Lincoln Riley.
I just hate that it took this long to figure it out. And, you know, we're still in the stage of
that. But I do think he figured it out. You know, Josh, what happens is, and Sabin found this out
when he left Michigan State to LSU. So when you take a job and you're kind of scooting out of town,
This is Lane Kiffin at Tennessee.
So what you basically tell your staff is, guys, the private jet leads in six hours.
If you get on it, you're hired.
Well, the truth is, with Lincoln at Oklahoma or with Lane at Tennessee, there's a couple of guys on your staff.
You're probably not or hoping don't get on the plane.
But when they do get on the plane and move their families cross country, then you owe them too.
years of employment for their kids and their family. So Alex Grinch got on the plane. I think he knew
halfway through year one, I can't fire him. Yeah. It wasn't working. And so I think, and this happens,
especially in college, in the NFL, guys don't jump team to team very often. You know,
Andy reads, out of a job, then people go bid on him. But in college, you sometimes leave big program to
big program, and you have to get on a private jet and get out of Dodge. And I think what happened to
Lincoln, and this wasn't the Brett Venable experience, this was not him because, remember,
Lincoln left in the middle of the night and everybody's like, oh, oh, we need a coach, and there
was some discussion for a couple weeks. But I think Lincoln had guys get on the jet, and you
have to be loyal to him. I think this version of the staff, the GM from Notre Dame, Lynn,
the defensive coordinator, it's a grown-up staff. It's a really good staff. By the way, Nick Sabin,
near the end of his tenure, Alabama, I thought, had a bad staff.
Yeah, you were right.
I thought he had a really bad.
I watched him a couple big games and I'm like,
there's something missing here.
The defense is not as good.
Nick's the CEO.
There's nothing you could do at his age.
He can't be up 23 hours a day.
But I think the U.S. thing,
I just think the U.S. thing's going to work.
I don't know if it works this year.
But if you doubt if he can coach, watch Jaden Mayava,
he is a completely different player than last year.
Last year he was sloppy.
He was almost immature.
Boy, he is on.
He is a grown-up now.
I'm telling you what else to watch.
He plays within Lincoln's system.
And that sounds commonsensical.
There's a guy starting a quarterback for the Chicago Bears right now
that sometimes failed to do that.
And his talent just bailed him out and he could do circus things,
but also it will drive you crazy as a coordinator,
or play call or head coach.
But what are you going to do?
I mean, you got a guy out there
and he's got top half of first round NFL potential,
and yet he's just sort of winging it,
not playing within your system.
And I've fought for a while,
and I guarantee if you've got Truth Serum
and that staff,
they're probably a lot more comfortable
with their quarterback situation right now
because they got a guy they developed,
but they got a guy that plays within their system.
Because you can coach around that.
Like, you can game plan around that.
The other, same thing with Milrow at Alabama last year.
You can't game play.
around this right.
This right here we can deal with.
Right.
Finally, A&M beats Notre Dame.
I was surprised were you?
I was in a boat where I wasn't shocked.
I was mildly surprised.
I was surprised at the game script, more so than anything.
Two games last week, Georgia, Tennessee, A&M, Notre Dame,
both of them get into the 40s.
And I didn't really see that coming.
I just thought to myself, you know, I went to college station
in the spring, and all they're talking about is, boy, we got that Notre Dame game early in the
season and it's this right here. And we know they're that. And we think we can be that. That's
when we'll go prove it. And we got a three-headed, monster it tailback. Look at this offensive
line. So I'm thinking to myself, 1974-style football. And it did not unfold that way. And so what
you end up having to do, Colin Klein's the offensive coordinator there. I remember sitting there
talking to him in the spring. And he said, I'll tell you one thing we're going to have. We're going to
have an increased vertical element in our passing game.
If our quarterback had executed, because they knew they had hit on those transfer
portal receivers, those guys are monsters.
One of them was kind of hurt last year, Concepcion, so he's back.
Craver is a monster.
He said, if we got a guy that can pull the trigger, we'll have that.
Well, it turns out they needed it in week three.
And they need to trade points and they need to come from behind.
And that was what surprised me, that they were able to sort of on the fly.
It's the same way with Kirby at Georgia, but Kirby's very.
been there a long time. So when that game got uncomfortable for Georgia fans last week and the other
guys scoring an uncomfortable amount of points, they're totally comfortable being uncomfortable as a team.
A&M hasn't proven that. So they don't have that equity. They don't have that benefit of the doubt in
my mind. And it's not they totally earned it the other night, but that is such a huge feather in the cap
because there's always been this crowd anytime I talk about Texas A&M. Oh, it's the great underachiever in the
sport. It's the, yes. It's it's, it's. Yes.
far none. The people say Arizona State, let me counter with Texas A&M, because I always ask the people that tell me they cannot, cannot, cannot, which I believe is just have not, disguised as cannot. I ask, what is it you need to win big time in this sport that they don't have? I already know the answer, nothing. They just don't have the Wikipedia page because they have, they have fantastically fumbled higher after higher after higher, and they don't really know what greatness looks like. So they sometimes get confused into thinking they've got it and they don't.
have it. Right. Right. Mike Elko, though, I will tell you this now. When he came there from Duke,
a lot of the personnel people hit me up from around college football, and they said, don't know if
it's going to work. personalities could clash, all this and that. A&M just hired the best evaluator and
developer that we've seen in quite a while. And these are guys who cover the entire sport. And so,
you know, you get there and you get all that money and you have the apparatus to go sign top
10 classes, go get guys out of the portal. But notice, unlike Jimbo,
notice over the next couple of years the progression and the development of guys on A&M's roster,
the ones who get better.
There are some notable exceptions out there right now of teams that returned a bunch of starters
and they're no different than they were last year.
The mark of a program that's got big time upward mobility is their returning starters
are actually better than they were last year, which sounds like it's easy to do.
It's not easy to do.
That, I think, will be a hallmark of their program.
Like, I don't think they're going anywhere.
think they're going to be in the mix for quite a while.
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Hey, it's us, the Jonas brothers.
And guess what?
We have some big news.
What's the 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 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 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.
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 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.
Welcome to my new podcast, Learn the Hardway with me, your host, and your favorite
therapist, Kear Games.
And in recognition of Mental Health Awareness Month, I'm bringing over a decade of my own
experience in the mental health field and conversations with so many incredible guests.
I'm talking.
Trip Fontaine, Ryan Clark.
Sometimes when we're in the pursuit of the thing, we get so wrapped up in the chase that we
don't realize that we are in possession of the thing.
And we're still chasing it.
And we don't know when we've done enough.
Because people scoreboard watch.
Life becomes about wins and losses.
Steve Burns, Dustin Ross.
Because you find it important to be a good person while you hear on earth?
Are you a good person because you're afraid?
Because that's two different intentions, bro.
Absolutely.
And that's two different levels of trust.
I want you to just really be a good person.
Join me, Keer Gaines,
as we have real conversations about healing,
growth, fatherhood, pressure, and purpose
on my new podcast, Learn the Hardway.
Open your free, Our Heart Radio app.
Search Learn the Hardway and listen now.
Jacob Kingston grew up in an isolated polygamous sect.
We were God's chosen, Kingdom on Earth.
He felt good.
destined for greatness.
So when a swaggering Armenian businessman catapults Jacob into an extraordinary world, he doesn't
look back.
Ferraris and Lamborghinis, private jets, meeting the president of Turkey.
I'm Michelle McPhee, and this is one of the most shocking criminal conspiracies I've ever come
across.
When Jacob met Levin this plant to a billion dollar fraud.
But with two kings from entirely different worlds, just how long?
can their empire survive?
The largest tax investigation
in American history. You need to tell
me what you know. Is somebody
coming after me? Jacob told
Levan, you're ruining my
life. Listen to Kingdom of Fraud on the I-Heart
Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your
podcasts. You know, Brian,
I like Brian Kelly.
I've said, I remember
when Urban melted down with the media in
Florida, and I've seen
it college basketball coaches do it. And I've said, you know, you don't see it in the NFL much
because you're in a big city. The media is tough everywhere. And you also have an owner above you
that you don't want to embarrass the franchise. But in college football, the coach is often the
highest paid state employee. You can really control practice. The media is small town. So you get
into kind of this kind of power vacuum where you kind of are the biggest guy in the state.
And you kind of get into your ego. And Brian was got very tribal and protective. And
And it, you know, he doesn't have a natty.
It took him a while to get it rolling.
There was the incident where the student died on campus.
Like, there's a lot of stuff here with Brian Kelly.
He's not always the most likable.
There was the fake Southern accent or whatever it is.
But I still contend that I don't know if he has the relentless recruiting energy he used to.
I like Brian Kelly.
but I found the media historically plays favorites.
For years, they were tough on Harbaugh.
And I'd be like, guys, he got to a Super Bowl.
I know how bad Stanford was.
He can coach.
Take a deep breath.
I think Brian Kelly is a top 12 coach.
Am I misguided?
Nobody yet buys him in the SEC because LSU's been, when they have the right coach, they're great.
I don't know.
What are you, if you had to grade him at LSU, where would you be?
about a B minus, B minus to B. I think, look, first off, I love BK as well. So he's, he's never
rubbing me the wrong way. I mean, I've gotten along great with him. I think that he walked in there,
like I told you 20 minutes ago, and there has always been a very, very unique connection
culturally, just the fabric of Louisiana and LSU football. Yeah. I don't think you can fully
appreciate it unless you've been down there for a long time. That's right. I totally agree.
and he walked in, and his attitude, frankly, I can't blame him for having,
because I think I would have been the same way if I were him.
I would have walked in and said, basically, I'm Brian Kelly.
I know what I'm doing.
I know what the formula to win is.
And contrary to what you people think, the formula to win in South Bend is the same as it is here.
Get good players, develop them by end of the process we define around here and we'll win.
And I think he heard about Louisiana this, Louisiana that to the point where he almost wanted to prove a point.
And, dude, when I tell you he flushed Louisiana out of that building, I mean some people that it wouldn't have mattered whether they stayed or went.
Desk receptionist. Oh, you're from Tibado? Bye. So he flushed that place of Louisiana. Now, it wouldn't have mattered if they won immediately.
Right. They didn't. And because they didn't internally and culturally down there, that's been held over his head. Now, on Saturdays, they're fully behind him. All right. In recruiting weekends, they're fully behind him.
But there are a lot of people that haven't I told you so attitude towards Brian Kelly,
his own state because he did that.
Well, organizationally, university-wise, they course-corrected collectively.
I don't really think that decision was entirely on his plate, if you get what I'm saying.
You know, you bring Blake Baker down there as your defensive coordinator.
You bring Austin Thomas in as your GM.
These are people, you cut them open and it's purple and gold.
And not only that, they're the best in the world, some of the best in the world at what they do.
and it's no coincidence that LSU, you all of a sudden feel it.
You can sense it.
You could have sensed it.
Their defense, their defense looks like big boy defense.
Like, I mean, that was the thing last year.
They were atrocious.
So to me, I never worried about Brian's offenses.
Like, I think he'll always figure those that he's rough on quarterbacks.
But LSU's defense is like Georgia.
When you got the right coach, it's just all NFL players.
It's 11 guys who will eventually.
playing on Sunday.
Yeah, which was shocking that you have Jaden Daniels there a couple of years ago.
And if you told me LSU was going to have a Heisman Trophy caliber quarterback come through,
I'd just blindly say national championship.
Tell me who the coach is.
I mean, I'm rolling out a top 25 defense if my mom's the DC there, as long as you're keeping in-state kids in state.
So for that to have failed them was mind-boggling.
It's just like Mario not being able to stop anything last year at Miami with Cam Ward.
It's crazy.
So it's funny that we've talked about this because I feel there's a very, very, like, closely correlated story that's been told over the past few years in college football about Brian Kelly and Lincoln Riley.
Ironically, the whispers were initially, oh, Lincoln may take the LSU job.
Well, then he winds up at USC.
So then LSU goes and gets Brian Kelly.
And they both had the wrong defensive coordinators at the outset.
And then they both correct.
And now they're both massively improved defensively.
I just feel like the story arc is headed for a playoff matchup one day.
I just feel like to get USCLSU one day.
But I do agree with you.
And it's, I don't think it's something that will really be appreciated by them
unless he wins a national championship there because everybody else this millennium has,
who's been the head coach at LSU.
Yeah, I mean, listen, Ed Orgeron, who's a very funny guy.
I love Ed.
Does not consider a schematic, you know, kingpin of the sport.
He's a recruiter.
I mean, for years, I thought he was more of a position coach, like a line coach than even a coordinator,
broke his heart when he didn't get the USC job.
And I would argue today that LSU team with Burrough is the most talented I've ever seen, period.
End of story.
I mean, they had the hardest schedule, won every game.
So if Ed can do it, and that's not a knock.
I mean, Ed would be the first to admit, Ed never scheduled a bad time.
Ed was a distracted.
funny, great guy. But I think Brian's too good of a coach. The older I get, I tend to just
look at people. And if I have to hire somebody or something at the volume, hire smart people,
they'll figure it out is my rule. And I think Brian, it took him a while. I mean,
it just, it took a while. He couldn't get the accent down. But eventually, I think three years in,
I feel like they figured it out. Yeah, they're one of the teams I'm looking most forward to watching here.
the SEC is just going to be a bloodbath by the end of this thing.
And they're one that, you know, the Clemson game goes the way it does.
I was actually glad this week he publicized the Garrett Nussmeyer injury because it's kind of
been whispered about in the South that Nussmeyer had injury leading up to that week one game
against Clemson, like an abdominal thing.
Never got publicized.
And they go and win on the road.
And then they were very lackluster in week two against an inferior opponent.
and then week three, Lagway turns the ball over five times, and LSU wins 20 to 10.
And you can clearly tell, hey, we're undefeated.
Something feels a little off offensively.
Right.
Well, your quarterback's been hurt.
That's what's been off.
Here's the thing, though.
There are teams with healthy quarterbacks that are one and two right now, and you're a 3-0.
That's the surest sign that the defense is fixed.
Yep.
Josh Pate, as always, great stuff, man.
Appreciate it.
The volume.
Football is back, and for the first.
first time it's on Wednesdays from Omaha Productions, NFL films, and Vice TV, NFL
classics. After further review, relives the NFL's biggest games with the legends who played
them and the fans who never forget. Not just a rewatch, but the untold stories behind those
plays. Kyle Branch, the host, Bart Scott, and Method Man for the 2010 divisional round Jets and
Patriots, the underdog Jets stunned Brady's 14 and 2 Patriots. It was a huge playoff upset.
And a cat by Bart Scott's unforgettable can't wait postgame interview.
So don't miss NFL classics after further review.
It's Wednesdays at 9 only on Vice TV.
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 get to ask other 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 tired.
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 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 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 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.
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 IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
And for more, follow Timbo Slicalife 12 in the TikTok podcast network on TikTok.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
