The Herd with Colin Cowherd - Hour 1 - Rich's Mom Wears Work Boots
Episode Date: May 8, 2025C&R laugh about the fan who almost caught the Yankees ball that rolled to another fan! It triggers a fun "finders keepers, losers weepers" topic! The guys have some great stories. Plus, NBA road d...awgs, Pickens/Cowboys, Mr. Overrated strikes again & feeling old!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Gonna turn your hump day into a hump night.
I say that every week and I'm still trying to figure out what
that means. I don't know. Sounds good though, right?
Yeah, by listening to our show.
You get some booty tonight. It's like instant
pheromones are kicking in. And you're like,
yeah, brings out the inner. Yeah.
So tonight, you'll be all fired
up for the yeah.
Anyway, yeah, whatever that means. Yeah, whatever that means.
Hope you had a
Pacers, Warriors sort of night.
Well, we're going to have a kick-ass day
today as we do every Wednesday,
midweek major. The biggest
stories know what the sports and pop culture
are the stories mid-week,
or major, we'll get to that.
Mike's Wednesday, Words of Wisdom,
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We got stories to tell.
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CNR on FSR.
I hate you with a fun fact
to start the show?
I mean, is it really that fun?
I mean, arguably, like,
mildly fun fact.
I'm not even certain.
It's a fact if you probably got it on TikTok or something.
Is it about you on Broadway again?
No, no, not my days on Broadway, Danny J.
A term was,
developed today in 1877.
And I know you love these stupid-ass fun facts from back of the day.
It was the Cincinnati Inquirer who termed this phrase that we still use today in the world of baseball.
Slightly different, though.
They referred to this area where the late fans would gather and they would push them all together like cattle.
What do you think the area is?
The bullpen?
The bullpen.
And then they later use that term to.
to, you know,
think to fight where the relief pitchers would warm up.
But the bullpen originally was where all the late comers of the game
would hang out down the line by the outfield.
I heard your doctor when you were born came up with the term little nubber.
Is that true?
Stop it.
They're like, it's a boy.
How do you know?
You're like a little number.
Little number.
And then that's how that came to be.
A lot of people don't know that.
So that's Rich Davis.
I'm Steve Kavino.
Thanks for the fun fact.
I do often wonder, though, Rich.
where those sayings came from
or how they started, right?
Well, I mentioned that yesterday, not to overdo it,
but that documentary
about Spalding and Rawlings
and Wilson on the History Channel
does make you realize that these sports are not
that old. We've talked
about how nacho chips
and pizza and all these things were developed
in our parents' lifetime.
I think pizza is the biggest
mind blaster. Our parents didn't
grow up ordering pizza.
That's crazy thought.
What?
Well, know what I thought.
Super Bowls are numbered, correct?
You're going to be, if you knock on what,
live a nice, long life,
you could make it to like Super Bowl 100.
You know, in the future, Rich,
our kids are going to say,
you believe torpedo bats were invented
when our parents were old?
That's a phrase that went away already.
Who cares about torpedo vets?
I don't know.
The Little Eagers of the future.
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Well, I'm going to do with Star Search style.
I'm giving you three and three-and-three-quarter stars.
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So let me start by asking a rando question based on your New York Yankees.
And then we're going to get it to NBA.
Listen, last night just proved that, is it a bunch of road dogs in the NBA?
Road teams winning.
All four road teams won for the first time ever.
And that's the beauty of sports.
Ever.
There's always something you've never seen before.
Like last night's Yankees game.
Speaking of the Yankees, Aaron Judge hit a bomb.
Aaron Judge is the bomb.
Net is high.
Net is far.
Net is gone.
All rise.
The judge hit a bomb.
Or as Michael Kay would say.
see ya and this kid made a really great catch in the outfield and as I explained to Rich
and everybody else who's willing to listen if you're catching an Aaron Judge home run in today's
game that's the equivalent of catching a home run for Babe Ruth that's the equivalent of catching
a home run from a Shoahe Otani a modern day be broodhue there's no one bigger or better
and as the saying goes nowadays Aaron Judge might be probably as the greatest right-handed
hitter these eyes have ever seen.
So when you catch a home run,
line drive, home run, opposite
field from Aaron Judge, that's a big
moment. I mean, that ball only goes out of Yankee Stadium,
by the way, just for the record. That's a,
that's a fly ball
to right field. That's a frozen rope.
I wonder where that came from. That's right a nine
in the scorebook and any other stadium, Rich.
The frozen rope.
So that was a rocket out of
Yankee Stadium. Some kid catches
it. Him and his buddies go ballistic.
Has everybody seen this clip or no? Danny G. You see this one? Sam, you see this one? Iowa Sam's on the ones and twos. Danny G. Super producing. Dupes here. This is a great John Quignonese. I'll reenact it for you. Okay. Can you imagine the feeling of a line drive home run coming your way. You're one of 55,000 people. Ah, you brought your mitt like a 12 year old. Ah! Catch it. Line drive. You feel like the chosen one. You snag this home run. You and your friends. Gah! Yeah! While they're celebrating this moment.
Michael K is like, and a nice catch from the fan.
But what you don't see is that when they're jumping around like a bunch of idiots,
which I totally understand because I would do the same thing,
the ball squibbles out of the guy's glove.
And it rolls on the fence.
It like bounces on the fence.
Boing, point.
Dude, this guy.
A guy right next to him picks it up and like puts in his pocket like what, didn't see anything.
I'm looking at it right now.
Dude, it was the most heartbreaking clip because.
I was like, you got to, you got to give the guy the ball back.
And the kids were, after their celebration, they look in their glove and they're like,
what happened to the ball?
Where to go?
I mean, listen, you've always been the type of guy that says, finders, keepers, losers, weepers.
And I've always said that if I caught a home run or even a foul ball,
I'm not giving it to the kid next to me.
You know why?
Because I've waited my whole life for that moment.
So I'm going to keep it, give it to my own kid, even if my kid's not with me.
I'm going to give it to somebody, my nephew, or keep it, depending.
on what it is. This is baseball for.
If it's an Otani or Judge Home Run, this is a
judge home run, right? And he's having
a magical season, MVP already,
putting up crazy numbers. He's batting 400,
hitting bombs.
And as a guy that says,
you know, I would keep it and not give it
to a kid. I'm not saying I would take it from a kid.
I would have to say in this moment,
if someone dropped this ball that they caught,
you would have to automatically
give it back to them.
Now this guy played it off like, yeah, I don't know what you're talking about.
It happened all so quickly.
But John Boy broke it down.
It went viral on social media.
Everybody was talking about it.
It does pose the question of what would you do.
And I will tell you that the guy that ended up retrieving the ball, the guy right next to the kids, he gave it back as of today.
But I really do believe he did it because of social media pressure.
Everybody zoomed in on it and saw that the guy caught it because MLB even acknowledged it.
And they wrote finders keepers.
I do wonder your thoughts on the whole finders keepers, losers, weepers.
Was that your Yankees thought or question?
It was actually.
Oh, okay.
You know, our dumb brains are on the same page.
Nice.
Well, that was one of the bigger stories last night.
But I think when you think about that phrase, finders keepers, losers, weepers,
it brings up another story that I saw in the news.
And it does go back to, well, if you find it, is it yours?
In fact, there's two other stories.
Did you see that Brink's truck?
in Chicago. They forgot to
latch the back of it.
$300,000
was just
blowing around the neighborhood.
That's crazy.
If you pick up a stack, Danny G.,
are you giving it back?
It's like those dumb machines, radio stations
used to have at remotes.
Yeah, where they let contestants go in and try
to grab as much cash blowing around as they
could. Because there's a few stories
that has to do with finders, keepers,
losers, weepers. One, the Aaron
Judge, Home Run Ball. Fan that
snags it, just dribbles out of his glove, and the guy next to him, sneaks, sneakily gets it.
Second story, if a bank truck doesn't latch the door and hundreds of thousands of dollars are just out there,
are you giving it back?
I would try to keep that unless it was traceable because I'm like, whoa.
Yeah, they can trace the serial numbers.
Well, then in that case, you're doing the right thing by giving it back.
That's what you're going to.
If they can find out it to me, then I got to do the right thing.
I don't know.
I mean, Sam, it feels like.
Or you buy a really nice purchase with cash real quick.
Like, oh, let me buy a car.
Cash.
Here you go, bye.
But they could trace it back.
Like, who's the groponi that, you know, paid with this money?
I don't know.
I would feel too risky to keep that when I would want to keep it.
And then there's another story.
It was like a local story.
Some old guy.
Some old guy who needed money.
He was broke already.
He looked like a broke Santa Claus.
Some older dude goes to a third.
thrift shop like a Goodwill.
And he buys a couch, like an old couch you see in your grandparents' basement.
It was orangey and brown.
You know that orangey brown couch that everybody had in the 80s with the wagon wheels on it
and flowers and it's orange and brown?
This guy bought a couch and he's sitting on it and he's like, it's kind of uncomfortable.
And he opens the cushion on the ottoman and inside the cushion was $43,000.
And he couldn't believe it.
One would think that, oh my God, good karma's finally coming back to me.
The gods have spoken.
Today's my lucky day.
But this guy felt an immense level of guilt or something because he then reached back to
goodwill to see, well, who donated this couch and returned every penny.
He returned every penny.
That just happened.
They better have given him a big reward.
Dude, I said give him 20%, give him 8,000.
And the guy even said he needed it, but he felt better returning it to its rightful owner.
Apparently, like, the person's grandfather stuffed that couch at $43,000 and nobody knew about it.
So he had no legal obligation to return that money.
But that's another current story that just went viral this week.
So what would you do and do you believe in finders keepers?
I think Danny G's wife, Brenda, would divorce him if he gave the money back.
I'll tell you what.
In that case, I'm keeping that money.
Absolutely.
I think I'm keeping that money.
a couch, you feel like, whoa, why is that not your destiny?
Man, I guess that's, whoa.
Grandpappy probably put the money in there.
He had, you know, dementia, forgot about it.
It's your money.
At that point, it's been so long the serial numbers are no longer traceable.
That's your cash.
And by the way, the grandkids or whoever ended up getting that money back, the kids of
the guy, they had no idea that this money ever existed.
They didn't know where it came from.
But this guy who bought that couch from the thrift shop said he,
felt like it was the right thing to do.
And I guess, you know, from a moral standpoint, maybe it is.
I will get from a moral standpoint.
Each case is different.
Let me ask you, from a moral standpoint, you see this happens every year there's at least
one of these stories.
Someone's at an estate sale or yard sale.
And they find a painting.
And they're like, yeah, 10 bucks.
And they don't realize it's like a million dollar painting.
Or, yeah, to me, that's very similar.
That's an old box of 1950s baseball cards?
Yeah, 20 books.
that happens on pawn stars every once in a while.
Rick acts like he's some righteous dude
where some guy wants like,
yeah, I'll take 50 bucks for it,
but Rick knows it's worth, you know, a few thousand.
And because he's on TV, he's like,
I'll tell you what, man, it's worth a little more than that.
I'll have my guy come in and appraise it
because he doesn't want to rip him off on TV.
That's really what it comes down to.
But it's sort of that same thing.
What would you do in these situations?
87799 on Fox.
The baseball dude, I would have gave it back.
I'm happy to hear today that he did.
I do feel that he felt the social pressure to do so, though,
because it looked like on TV that he had no intention to giving that ball back.
He was trying to play it off.
Too many people saw it.
The couch money, if I bought furniture or bought anything from a garage sale,
like you said, Rich, and ended up being valuable, to me, that's just,
man, that's just luck on your side for once.
Danny G, your prayers were answered.
You could pay off your debt.
You know what I mean?
Whatever the case is, like, oh, my God, that's my kid's college money.
To me, that's when you keep it.
What if something was accidentally stored inside your purchase?
Like last year, this lady who flipped home, she bought a dresser and it was taped up from moving.
And the person she bought it from, they didn't remember that they had packed the family's China inside the dresser and then taped the dresser up.
So she gets this dresser home that she bought online from the person opens it up and there's this expensive china, all these dishes in China inside the,
the dresser and she got a hold of the person she bought it from and she returned the family plates.
Remember I said case by case?
China to me means didly squat.
China.
China.
China.
China.
China.
But you know she could have sold it.
That's worth a lot of money.
I get all that.
But that to me seems like a family heirloom of sorts that I wouldn't give a didly squat about.
Kind of like people's family pictures almost.
Yeah.
Like, you know what?
This is probably meant for you guys and it was probably passed down.
the cash money, that's universally good for everybody.
How much is a random home run ball worth?
It's probably not worth really anything.
So he should give it back.
It's just a memento.
And he did as of today.
But man, what a funny clip, guys.
You got to see, if you haven't seen it, the quickness of the guy next to him.
Because again, it's squibbled?
Would squibble be the word?
Yeah.
Squibbled along the top of the wall.
And some other guy snagged it.
Kind of wild to see.
What would you do?
You say yoink?
He yanked it.
He yonked it.
I don't know.
When I bought my house, the same family had lived there forever, like since it was built.
So when we're going through the attic with our contractor, I did find stuff that I put aside.
I'm like, let me call the OG owner if I can and be like, hey, do you want like your kids' high school yearbooks from the 70s and 80s?
I thought I was doing a good deed and they're like, nah, you throw it out.
So sometimes people just don't want that crap when you think.
they might.
Trash and treasure, all that stuff.
But yeah, money, man.
$43,000 is a lot to give up if you found it.
Give me the ruling on not $43,000 in a couch or in a vase or something.
I feel like it's also the plot line of like a comedy where you take the cash, you think
it's yours, and then you're going to knock on the door.
It's like the mob.
Like, it's like some mobsters.
Like, yeah, you got on money.
You bought that couch.
You were not supposed to buy that.
And you already spent the money?
Yeah.
Have you guys ever seen the movie a simple plan with Bill Paxton and, uh,
Billy Bob Thornton. First of all,
Rich loves the band. A Simple
Plan is an excellent movie. It's about
these two friends who find this plane
crash in the woods in Maine. They find
like $200,000 in cash in a bag.
And it's not the people coming after
them. It's what happens between the two
friends and how they try to divvy
up the money and all kinds of chaos ensues.
It's a fantastic movie. But Sam, if you found
money, wouldn't that be
like a modern day version of like you found
the treasure? You found the hidden
treasure. That's your treasure.
one-night Willie's treasure.
The rule of El Dorado.
This is our wish.
This is my wish.
This is my treasure.
I think that's way different than the ball, way different than anything else.
That's my money.
I try to be a good person.
I want to do the right thing, as Spike Lee said.
But in this case, I'm keeping that treasure.
I found it.
If you felt guilty, couldn't you just replace the money with a whole bunch of IOUs?
Yeah.
Just as good as money.
Dumberstein.
Yeah.
All right.
So, I break it down this way.
You walk you down the street.
Yeah.
You see a $20 bill on the floor.
do you immediately pick it up quickly and put in your pocket or do you look around like hey
do you look in the vicinity like maybe that lady dropped it like how quick are you to just put
in your own pocket pick it up and you do the you know look over each shoulder sort of thing
yeah first you make sure it's not on a string so you don't get punked yeah yeah little
chokers are there or something right now you got to look over each shoulder I I do wonder
to what extent would you say finders, keepers, losers, weepers,
when it comes to, I mean, anything for that matter,
are you, if you're in a hotel room and the previous person
left something there, you're not taking it,
yet people do, because the reality is,
people take things all the time.
We're giving ourselves a lot of credit, and we shouldn't.
We're just being reasonably good people.
How many times have you left something in a hotel room,
called back 10 minutes later, they're like, yep, can't find it.
All the time.
Because that's it like something stupid, like a charger or something.
I left my laptop charger.
Yep.
Really?
Because I left an hour ago.
Someone took it.
God.
Hey, you know, I left a leather jacket in the closet of the hotel.
Hold on.
That's my point.
Well, it's not there.
Someone took it?
That's karma working to your advantage.
So how many times that happened to you in your life, right?
And you're like, man, I just can never do nothing.
Now you walk in and you have this prize there.
Why are you going to give it back?
This is how life makes things even for you.
Man, that's my money.
My mom.
My mom.
recently found a gift card laying in a parking lot.
And just for the heck of it, she picked it up and went into that store.
And it had like 80 bucks on it.
Oh, that's a good one.
I was like, I don't think that's a finders keepers.
Because what do you do?
Hey, did anyone drop a gift card?
Is that why your mom's wearing workboots from workboot warehouse?
I didn't tell you where the gift card is from.
All right.
So your thoughts at 87799 on Fox.
Really funny story out of Yankee Stadium last night.
Yankee fan.
You gotta see the video though.
He catches the homer.
In fact, we'll put it on our Instagram story at Covino-Ritch.
Guy catches the ball in celebration squibbles out of his glove.
The guy next to him in the slickest way possible, I was saying.
If you see how slabs it, puts in his pocket and starts typing again.
Hold on.
You don't see it in real time.
That's the thing.
Because I saw this in real time and didn't notice.
I thought, man, what a great catch.
You didn't see it until they slowed it down in instant replay.
So what are the rules of finders keepers, losers, weepers?
We'll get to that. Plus, we'll talk some NBA,
and Tom Brady has finally talked about
Shador Sanders and what happened draft night.
So a little TB12 and Shador, some MBA,
and of course we do midweek major with Spot.
And Mike's words of wisdom, we're going to fit this all in.
Oh, yeah.
Action pack, CNR right here on Fox Sports Radio.
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Hey, welcome back to the showgram program.
The world famous CNR and FSR.
Always posting great clips at Covino and Rich
at Fox Sports Radio.
Spots back today, but yesterday our buddy, Elijah and Sager,
posted a clip where you called me out.
I thought I invented playing angry.
Rich posed a question,
is it all right to teach kids to play angry?
And I was like,
didn't coach Klein say that
and the water boy?
Water sucks.
And it's a really funny clip
for your viewing pleasures
at Covino and Rich
at Fox Sports Radio
if you want to play along at home.
If you ever want to call in
it's 87799 on Fox
again we're live from the Fox Sports Radio
Studio.
Now later in the show
midweek major spots
getting ready for the biggest stories
in sports and pop culture
are they midweek or major
plus we're giving away prizes.
On Wednesday
it's your turn to win
but it's your turn to pay attention.
That's hard to do in today's world.
Can you repeat Mike's Wednesday Words of Wisdom,
word for word?
If you do, you could win a Swiggy later on in the show.
But we're wrapping up our John Quignonas segment of the day
with what would you do?
It's a tough one because I think it's so,
finders, keepers, losers, weepers is a great phrase from our childhood.
I got one for you.
I got a scenario.
When I was a kid,
we all experience.
I think this is a relatable one.
I think we've all experienced this.
We got into baseball cards.
For me, it was around 86, right?
And I got way into it.
Ooh, I was a year later.
By 87, I was neck deep into those wooden wooden ones.
I was an 87 kid.
The wooden border.
My basement paneling matched the baseball cards.
Yeah, those 87 tops with the wood border.
So I got way into it.
Any adult that would listen to me, I would tell them about my baseball cards.
And I found out through a family member that Uncle Victor and Uncle Angel used to collect cards all the time.
I'm like, they did?
Yeah.
They're probably in the basement in an old house that my grandma still owned, but she rented out.
They're probably in there somewhere.
Dude, 30, 40 years must have gone by.
50 years must have gone by since anyone ever cared.
So I was a little kid that took it upon myself to go rummaging to try to find them.
Even though my uncle Victor and Angel had their own kids and maybe they rightfully belong to them,
they didn't care about it.
And I'm the one going into another town in the basement of another home to try to find these in old cigar boxes,
in old storage boxes and bins.
They're not finders, keepers, mine now because I'm the only kid that cared?
Is that the same day you found one-eyed willie's map?
It's the same day I found the treasure.
but dude I can't tell you how many 63 mantles
I'm trying to think 64 Maris mantles clementes that I got
because I was the only kid willing to look for him
I mean you can't tell you I was supposed to find them and give them back to my uncle
they didn't care about them didn't tell anyone though did you hell yeah
I was bragging everybody told your cousins though they were too little to care I was
the only one I wanted them I hope they're not listening now because they're going to try
to cash in on it come knocking 40 years later but that's not finders keepers I think
Finders, keepers, losers, weepers, is a case-by-case thing.
You know, you do have a moral obligation sometimes.
If you have a conscience, that also applies.
But sometimes I think karma works to your advantage, and you got to, like, live in relish in those moments.
I think it's also, you could say it shouldn't matter, but I think it matters who the OG owner is.
Like, Danny, the one where it's, the guy found 40-something grand in a couch cushion.
If you found out who the OG owner of that couch was and it was like, the Buxons, who live
in Calabasas. I'm keeping the money.
Or someone from the Gambino crime family.
Yeah, you might be like, uh-oh. But if you find
that it was like, yeah, single, single mom just
donated that couch because she needed the cat.
Like, I think it really depends.
I think... It's not supposed to,
but it does. Yeah.
You know what happens to, though, sometimes?
And Rich, I know you alluded to this
before, but I got to mention it again.
You think you're doing the right thing? And then
that person's like, yeah, whatever.
You ever hear that story that Tom Seguera
tells? Comedian Tom Sikora.
talks about that he was in a cab or something and he found someone's license.
That's right.
You heard that one?
And he's like, you know, I felt this moral obligation to maybe keep it.
And I had this kid's license forever.
He goes, I s you not.
Like years later, he's being waited on.
He goes, hey, you're Justin.
And the guy's like, yeah, so what?
He's like, I got your license.
He goes like, can you mail it?
You got it with you?
Can you mail it to me?
Like, he's like, do you realize the coincidence?
I got your license.
You're waiting on me.
How are you not thankful in this moment?
Sometimes you think you're doing the right thing
and you think you're going to get all this praise
or the gods are going to smile on you
and you're granted great karma for the rest of your life.
They don't care.
I've done nice things before and they're like, yeah, thanks.
Steve, you said that he had a moral obligation to keep it
or send it back.
Tom Sigour kept it because he was like, you know,
I guess I'm throwing it in the mail one day or whatever.
The kid ended up waiting on him at a table.
table. Did he actually send it back to the guy?
I don't say it's a comedy bit, Sam. I don't know. It's not a comedy bit.
It's a true story. It's like if he kept it, then he's not doing him any favors.
It's a true story though. Right. If you keep it, what's the point of keeping someone else's license?
But the point is, he's like, you don't find it crazy that I remember your face and I have your license and now you're waiting on me.
And a kid was like not thankful and didn't care at all. Was it a trifold wallet or?
It's almost that same feeling we're at a counter and you don't have to tip. You put a five.
in the tip jar, and they don't even acknowledge it.
They don't even look.
Oh, I hover my hand there until I see them look.
I'm like, yeah.
You want to take it back almost.
At least nod your head and say, thanks.
When you do the right thing, you do want to, and you shouldn't.
I know that's not the reason to do it, but you do want to at least get a little satisfaction.
It's not satisfaction.
What you want is.
It's like the story you told when you gave that.
Well, it back.
You want acknowledgement that you did the right thing.
Like, if you let someone cut in front of you in traffic,
all I want is a little wave.
When I don't get to wave, I'm like,
when I don't get the wave, I'm like, you son of a...
I cut them off again.
I speed up to cut them off again.
Yeah, spot's very spiteful.
I will say this.
I have two stories.
We'll wrap it with this, but Kavino's right.
I have two particular stories that...
Mine's not a comedy bit, though, like Tom Cigar.
But it was funny.
It's not a comedy bit.
It's a real story.
But finders, keepers is the question.
Again, some kid ended up snagging someone else's home run ball
from Aaron Judge last night.
another guy found $43,000 in a couch this week and he gave it back.
There's all sorts of stories.
I have two quickies.
One, I was at JFK.
I was at the airport.
And when I tell you, I'm getting in a car service,
I see some guy get out of the car I'm getting into.
He left his laptop bag in the back of the car.
Actually, there's a car in front of me about to pull away.
I go to the driver.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, wait up, wait up.
Wait, didn't this happen with Lloyd Christmas and Mary Swanson?
Are you just repeating Dumb and Dumber?
This guy's just stealing movie plots every day.
We had several dumb and dumber references already.
Yeah, yesterday was Waterboy.
Now he's quoting Dumb and Dumber.
Samsonite.
I was way off.
Swinson Swappy.
He actually gets it right for a second.
Yeah.
He's like, Swanson?
Swanson?
No, it can't be up.
No.
Sam's tonight.
No, I would say I, S you not.
This is a true story.
It does sound like Samson.
I saw the guy's laptop.
I stopped the car service from pulling away.
I'd stop the guy.
I'm like, yo, guy, you left your Macbook in the car.
Weren't you telling him to pull over?
And he said, no, it's a car to give him, but thanks.
No.
He didn't even say thank you.
He goes, oh.
That is, you were paying it forward.
That's what I mean.
That's paying it forward is when you do a favor for so.
That's how you keep people's hope for society intact.
That's karma.
And God or whoever you believe or what he even saying, you should have kept it.
Dude, I'm not going to keep his MacBook.
I'm just saying, I saw a car pulling away.
I'm thinking this guy would have went on his business trip and were like, where's my MacBook?
Would have had to call Uber, you know, lift, locate his laptop, get it shipped.
I saved this guy a hell of a hassle.
Remember the time Dave Kulay left his iPad in the bathroom?
And we had to track him down and be like, yeah, dude, we got your iPad.
True story, swear to God.
Dave Kulay.
I think you just wanted to name drop.
Uncle Joey. It's true, though. Remember we had a cut back?
He lost his iPad. He left his iPad in the bathroom at Sirius XM.
And it was Dave Kuliers.
What was he doing? And I called him up. I was like, hey, Dave, it's me.
Cut it out. I was like, blow me down.
Cool, yay.
So one less quickie, then we'll get to Dan by for an update.
But along the lines of Finders Keepers, keepers, you would think, I was Sam, you made a great point.
As much as I, you know, busted your chops about the Seguera story.
Well, I just want to know if he actually did ever return.
turn it. No, but the reality is a lot of time, Sam, because that's the only thing that would
matter, right? A lot of times, you're right. You do these things because you're like,
you hope that people do the right thing, right? Like, the whole thing is like, if you do
the right thing, you hope that one day, God forbid, you leave your wallet somewhere. Someone else
does the right thing. I found someone's cell phone at a restaurant. No one claimed it.
This restaurant was closing. I took it. I called the person. I went through their phone
and I called a friend to theirs. I answered it like, hey, I found this person's phone. I'd like,
hey I found this person's phone I'd like them to get it back you know I know what it's like if you lose a phone
do you know the response they gave me was like where are you can you bring it to me yeah
apathic because you guys live out in the northeast and everyone's a jerk dude this is ridiculous
this girl's like I'm on the upper east side can you bring it up here I'm like you
how about I throw it in the river I'm in midtown Manhattan I held on to it the next day she's like
yeah like I was gonna get a new phone anyway where are you you can't come up here I'm like
can't come up here I'm like can't come up
here see that's what I mean sometimes it's like not worth it I told her I'm like I let I
I left it at I wherever I was I went into that store and I'm like I found this phone I told her
it's at this store I'm not I'm out did more than enough out what do you do finders keepers
losers weepers it is case by case that's what we're getting that and don't expect you know
you're doing it for the wrong reasons if you expect some sort of yeah applause and adulation you know
sometimes you're just not going to get that but I guess the world
the universe knows he did the right thing and there's some peace in that.
And major props to the guy that gave back to $43,000.
That's a bigger guy than me.
I'm not sure I would have done that.
All right.
Let's go to our pal and yours.
Dan Byer for an update.
DB, what's going on, me?
Guys, we had to trade the NFL today is the Dallas Cowboys acquired waters.
He were George Pickens in a deal with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Steelers are getting a third round pick in 2026 and a fifth rounder in 2027.
By sending Pickens to Dallas.
Cowboys will also get a sixth rounder in 2027.
What does that mean for Rogers?
As part of the deal.
I don't think it means anything for Rogers.
I think that it's Pittsburgh acquiring D.K. Metcalfe and them focusing on him being their number one wide receiver and getting a third round pick.
It may be a longer, I'll say this in connection to it because this was a deal that was done after the draft.
They're not going to get the pick until next year.
They obviously have their eyes more on the future.
So if Rogers is only there for this year, this year, this.
Steel does not help them in 2025.
Makes sense.
But more of a long-term sort of play, but Piggins is only a couple of years in the league.
So he's got a lot of football ahead of him.
He's good for like thousand type of yard season.
He's got extreme talent, but there's just, there have just been gaps in places that they,
you got to, you got to shore up.
Warriors Guard, Steph Curry will miss at least a week of action because of a grade one
hamstring strain.
Shufford in last night's game one win over the Timberwolves.
That means Curry would be out for games two, three, and four of them.
that playoff series. Game two tonight, Knicks and Celtics.
Seven Eastern, game two, Nuggets and Thunder at 9.30 Eastern time.
On the ice, Panthers and Leaves will skate in their game two at 7 Eastern.
While game one between the Stars and Jets is in Winnipeg at 9.30 Eastern time,
the Utah Hockey Club will become the Utah Mammoth beginning next season
as the franchise will permanently change their name.
They'll also be keeping their current colors.
Day baseball, right now Riches' Mets on top of the Diamondbacks 3-0 of the 7th.
Juan Soto, a sixth home run of the season.
Aisley, the Mariners 5-4 in the 7th.
Dodgers and Marlins scoreless right now in the 5th.
Finals from earlier today.
Guardians beat the Nats, 86.
Astros routed Milwaukee 9-1.
Cardinals blinked the Pirates 5-0 and the Giants
were 3-1 winners against the Cubs.
And PSG onto the Champions League final,
topping Arsenal today, 3-1 on aggregate.
They'll face Inter Milan in the Champions League final on the last day of May.
Guys, back to you.
Thank you, D.B.
And Rich, Rich, he talked about Curry being out for at least a game.
right.
How long?
Three games?
Three, yeah.
Well, way to listen to Dan Byer.
I listen to you, Dan.
I know you're a Kavino guy, but just know who listens closer.
He didn't noted.
No, it got me thinking about what Jimmy Butler said about having a guy like
Steph Curry on the team.
He said that he's the best in the game and it makes his job and winning a lot
easier.
Yeah.
And that's just such a low-key, profound statement, because that applies to everything in life,
to what we do.
We have fun.
We have a great team.
These guys play like Steph Curry.
It makes our job easier.
If you have a great partner in life, girlfriend, wife, whatever,
they make winning easier because they're good at what they do.
No doubt.
Steph Curry is that guy.
And Jimmy Butler said, yo, makes the game easy.
Makes winning easier when you got him on the team.
Well, does it not show you how important it was for the Warriors to have stolen game one in Minnesota?
So now if they could get to game five.
But my point is, winning ain't easy now for the next three.
If they could, if they could snag one of the three and get to game five tied two, two and get Curry back, that's where I think at worst they have to be.
You can't, you can't be down three one because Steph's out.
So good luck to the Golden State Warriors.
All right.
So again, Covino and Rich.
And we got Mike's Wednesday Words of Wisdom and Midweek Major all coming up.
We're live from the Fox Sports Radio Studio and more next.
Welcome back to the show.
Covino and Rich.
always satisfying
live from the Fox Sports Radio studio
and now it's time
it's time
for our Tyraq play of the day
and I'm sure you can guess it
Mr. Overrated
added again
Overrated? Yeah
was at it again
four seconds to go
Halliburton for three
one and one tenth seconds
to go inbound Merrill
didn't get it off, and this rivals the Milwaukee finish.
You have got to be kidding me.
I felt the same way.
You got to be kidding.
They were winning that game.
Were they winning that game every moment, I think, until then?
Tyrese Halliburton game winning three Pacers win, 120, 119.
Man, that is your tire rack play of the day for over 40 years.
Man, Tyrese Halliburton, and his dad wasn't even there to see it.
He's been helping customers find the right tires.
how what and where you drive. Ship fast and free
backed by road hazard protection
for free. Convenient installation options also available. That's
Tire rack.com the way tire buying
should be. Now, Cove tonight, speaking
of the NBA. Nick Celtics Nuggey's Thunder.
They're expecting
home teams to step it up tonight. In fact, if you look
on Draft Kings anywhere right now, both double-digit
favorites. Like they think Boston
is coming out strong tonight. So
they are 10.5 point favorites over the
Knicks and OKC
double digit favorites
over the Nuggy. So if you think
that game ones were no surprise
Home teams step it up again? I mean, well,
or have to at this point. Yeah, and I'm saying like
Vegas is saying like, yo, home teams
are going to dominate tonight. So we'll see.
Now, I want to throw a little fun
fact out there that'll make you feel old. I know
no one likes that feeling. Is it really that fun
though? I guess it's really. It's not a
fun fact, really. We've seen
remember when you were a kid,
it was always wild to you to
realize some of your coaches used to play in the big leagues.
Like, I'm a Mets fan.
I remember being like, wait, Davy Johnson was on the Orioles?
Wait, Sparky Anderson played baseball.
Because they looked like they were 105 years old.
You could never imagine that they played ball.
I remember even thinking like, wait a minute.
Lou Pinella was also a player at one point.
Sweet Lou, yeah.
But when you're a kid, it never dawned on you that, oh, wow,
these managers were players when our parents were kids.
And then you started seeing generational guys like,
Carl Griffey and Griffey Jr.
I don't know if we've ever seen this in the modern era.
If we have, please jump in.
When we were a kid, give me one of your favorite.
I was going to say fat, that's not nice.
But I'll say it.
Give me one of your favorite fat sluggers.
Steve Balbonny.
Good answer.
Another one.
I'll give you his initials.
CF.
If you're going to give me the fun fact that his grandson is also in the big leagues,
We talked about that already.
He's not the big one.
I mean, a karate kicker.
He's in the Arizona League.
Yeah.
And, and, but he hit a home run in his first at bat as a, quote, pro.
That's Prince's son, by the way.
So, Cecil.
Yeah, look at you hijacking my thought.
We hijacking your thought.
I'm the one that told you this.
Cecil.
Cecil's son.
Cecil and Prince, both who ended up with 309 home runs.
Prince is long retired now.
And his son's already doing it on a professional level.
Guess what his son's name is?
I forget.
Such a young kid name.
What is it?
Jaden.
Jaden.
Jaden Fielder.
Jaden Fielder.
Already hitting bombs.
20 years old.
Well, could possibly be the third generation slugging fielder.
And there's another one.
Prince has two big boys.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
So amazing to see that legacy continue on.
Off the top of your dome.
Any others come to mind?
As far as legacy, well, as far as family legacy,
Brett Boone was named a hitting coach for the Texas Rangers.
Like out of nowhere.
apparently like Bruce Bochy, like hit him up.
He was like, hey, what are you doing?
He's like, yeah, I got a deal on some white walls.
I call you later.
Yeah, call you later.
And all of a sudden, Brett Boone is now coaching in the bigs.
And DB, you saw that story.
Yeah, did you hear John Morosi's story?
What is that?
So he was covering the Yankees game.
And Aaron Boone said, hey, man, if you hear anything about that Rangers hitting coach, hit me up,
knowing all along that it was going to be his brother.
Oh.
And then so that when Morosi got the news, he was like,
Oh, you know anything, hit me up.
That's so cool. Yeah, Brett wasn't, he ran into somebody somewhere.
Like, hey, what are you doing, Brett?
He's like, you know, just doing the podcast life, Brett being Brett Boone.
And next thing you know, Bruce Bochie's on the phone with him.
And out of nowhere, he's the hitting coach of the Rangers because they had to shake things up a little bit.
The Matthews family in the NFL, I believe they're three generations, but three is a lot, right?
I get those extended families where it's just a bunch of athletes.
The lighters are still doing it.
Now their kids are in the league.
So, yeah, it's crazy to see how genetics are passed down in sports.
No doubt.
And you wonder, is that that's what you ask yourself the most.
Is it nature versus nurture?
Is it because they've had every, every, like, cool advantage?
It's the boring answer of both.
It really is.
Both, I guess.
It really is.
Nature and nurture.
But again, generate three generations of fielders, you know, it would be really crazy
if his son ends up with 309 home runs in the bigs.
That would be the coolest.
Right.
All right.
More.
Give me known Rich and midweek major.
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