The Ringer NBA Show - The NBA World Reacts to the Tragedy in Minnesota. | Real Ones
Episode Date: January 28, 2026Logan Murdock, Raja Bell, and Howard Beck react to the postponement of the Warriors-Timberwolves matchup following the death of Alex Pretti at the hands of federal agents in Minnesota on Saturday. ... (0:00:00) Intro (0:53) NBA World Reacts to Tragedy in Minnesota (37:20) Mailbag Hosts: Logan Murdock, Raja Bell, and Howard BeckProducers: Victoria Valencia and Clifford AugustinProduction Supervision: Ben Cruz and Conor Nevins Additional Production Support: John Richter and Chris Wohlers The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please check out rg-help.com to find out more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hello, everyone. Welcome Murdoch from Real Ones here. As you all know, this is a basketball podcast that tends to stick to basketball.
With the current political landscape, we'd be remiss if we did not acknowledge what's transpiring in our country right now.
Over the weekend, federal agents killed Alex Prattie in Minneapolis, two weeks after federal agents shot and killed Renee Good in Minneapolis.
In this episode, myself, Howard Beck, and Roger Bell explore how the NBA is responding to these killings.
It's a very, very scary time in this country. And after the break, we'll try to make sense.
of how the basketball world is dealing with it.
And then we'll get to your mailback questions.
All that up next are real ones.
Bobbin. Real ones.
Logan Murdoch here.
Roger Bell there.
Howard Beck in the cut.
It's going to be a little somber first segment here
with everything that's going on in Minneapolis
in the wake of the killing of Alex Pready
at the hands of federal agents.
Two weeks after federal agents killed Renee Good.
sparked mass demonstrations in Minneapolis over the weekend after Saturday's killing.
And a lot of those demonstrations ventured their way into Target Center for the back-to-back.
For the first game of the back-to-back, excuse me, of the Warriors and Minnesota Timberwolves over the weekend.
And I just want to get right into it because Howard,
was in the middle of all of this.
And let's get to that part first.
And then we'll talk about the ramifications of everything that has transpiring league-wide.
You know, kind of give our take on it in the most responsible way that we can.
So Howard, can you kind of give us a play-by-play of your experiences
from touching down in Minneapolis on Saturday
and up until where you are right now?
back in New York over the last couple of hours and just what kind of transpired from the beginning
until now. Yeah. So guys, as you know, I was, I had a long plan trip to Minneapolis to catch
up with the Warriors because they were going to be there for three days and it was going to be
two games over three days, right, Saturday, Monday. So it was off day Sunday. Plenty of time for me
to to work on some things that I had arranged with them. Minneapolis is often a good market to go
to to, like, get teams that when they're in their home markets,
especially a big market team like the Warriors, it's a lot calmer on the road.
And especially in a, you know, a smaller market like Minneapolis.
So at least that was the thought when I set this all up weeks ago, having no idea.
And of course, the days leading into my flight Saturday with like, the Renee Good at that,
like that incident had already happened.
A lot had already happened.
Protests had already happened.
So I knew I was going into something.
But I was on the plane Saturday morning.
I took first flight out of JFK.
my flight was landing right around the time that on social media, as I'm following on blue sky,
I start seeing things about a shooting, another one.
And, you know, because of the way our news environment works these days, like, my first thought
was like, I let's hope this is just chatter.
This is not real.
The details were really sketchy.
I didn't even want to retweet what I saw initially.
But this thing was literally unfolding as I was landing in Minneapolis and then watching
it as on my way to the hotel.
And then the details start to fill in.
The videos start to come out.
And it, guys, it was just surreal to land in the middle of this
and to have this awful juxtaposition of this struggle between the people of Minneapolis
and these federal agents as I'm coming in for the very trivial, relatively trivial
assignment of doing some basketball reporting and writing. I was in a day Saturday.
Like, listen, like, everybody takes, you know, takes us in their own way. Everybody, I think the
warriors felt it, the Timberwolves felt it as a visitor to town. I love Minneapolis.
This all happened, by the way, it was like about a mile from the hotel I was staying at.
And it's ongoing. And all you can do is sit there in disbelief and things.
think like I can't I just do not believe this is what's happening in our country and in this
city that I just arrived in and following it in real time. I was in a day Saturday. I think everybody,
you know, I think people all across the country probably were and certainly people of Minneapolis
were. I've only had a couple of times in nearly three decades of covering the NBA where
events around us made me feel like what we do, the game, the league, my job.
is just fucking trivial.
It's a different scale than say 9-11.
But like when 9-11 happened, two weeks later,
I had to get on a plane to Honolulu for Laker training camp.
And all I could think was, who gives a fuck?
Who cares?
Is Robert Rory still going to be starting it power forward?
Or was he going to get supplanted?
I think that was one of the themes in 2001.
Who cares?
And there are some moments where it's hard.
And I talked to some other writers and some other basketball, NBA people,
while I was there over the weekend about this,
It's like, yeah, there are moments where our jobs and this game and this league seem incredibly trivial.
And it's hard to focus.
And that leads us to Sunday's game where really you could see it in the Timberwolves.
Like they were carrying the burdens of that city.
Steve Kerr flagged it immediately afterward.
He said his quote was, their group was suffering.
We could tell they were struggling with everything.
And just calling it a sad night.
There was just, you know, we can get into it about what?
the arena was like, but it was just a really weird energy in the arena on Sunday. It became a
back-to-back. So Monday was maybe a little bit closer to normal last night. But, you know,
a lot of, you know, ice out or get ice out and those kinds of signs both days, both nights at
the arena. Some, you know, there was the moment of silence Sunday night at the, you know, before the game,
And as soon as the moment of silence was kind of coming to a close, you had people yelling,
fuck ice, and then it becoming kind of a chance and just a lot of, you know, a lot of,
a lot of anger and a lot of, a lot of just frustrated energy.
And, you know, the weird thing was it was also like, as previously scheduled like city edition
game night.
So they had their Prince City Edition jerseys and a lot of Prince, you know, music is the
soundtrack.
So, like, what's supposed to be in moments festive,
and celebratory, just fell flat.
And I don't know, man, it was just,
it was one of the strangest games I've ever attended
just because of the atmosphere.
Like, people's emotions were all over the place.
Yeah, I mean, for everybody that is out there,
I implore you to read John Krasinski's piece
in the athletic.
Very sad, very somber piece,
but it really illustrates, you know, what people are going through in the city of Minneapolis
and having to try to compartmentalize watching a basketball game during these,
honestly, dire straits that are, that has been put upon to people of Minneapolis at this time,
you know, talking about businesses who are losing businesses, losing business because of the presence
of federal agents in the region.
and then also just the human element of, you know, John being scared to, you know, take his kids to school, right?
And the fear that goes on right there. And, you know, what I always think about, you know, when people say, you know, keep my politics out of sports, I think you're taking away the humanity of a person's feelings and how they live their life and assume that they can put themselves around a bubble when everything that is going on, you can.
see on the way to the arena. And over the last few years, Minneapolis has been a, just a lot has
been going on there, you know, from George Floyd on down in terms of the protest in terms of,
you know, the fight for social justice. And I just, Rajat, when I think about this, we often ask
players and coaches to compartmentalize for a number of reasons, right? You know, not just something
that happens in a time like this.
But I just don't know how you do that.
I don't know how you do that in a situation like this, right?
And I think you saw it on the floor in both games when the Timberwolves played, right?
There was trying to be some sense of normalcy.
But I really don't.
I think this is really going to affect the Timberwolves.
And it's really trivial that we're talking about it from a basketball perspective,
but that's just the type of show that we are.
But how do you even do that?
Yeah, I'd say it's virtually impossible if you're a member of the Timberwolves.
Like, you know, this isn't even a ice take or a now what's happening, you know, in the world take.
But like major catastrophes in your local market, as a player or as a human being even, sometimes when that's not your market, you don't live there.
You're not like state adjacent or city adjacent to what just took place.
it's easier to kind of look at it while you might feel for it you don't feel it the same way as
if you're living in that catastrophe right and but when your boots on the ground and that is your
market that is your home those things are affecting you and the people that you see on a day-to-day
there's no compartmentalizing that like that's that's life you're driving through it you are
you know seeing it every time you leave your house these are the people that you interact with
on a day to day, every human being has that network of people that is their world and their
day to day.
When those people are hurting and feeling a certain way and scared for their lives,
like that's going to affect you.
There's no running from that.
Now, once you get into the building, typically an NBA player would be able to, to whatever degree,
treat their craft and their professionalism as such for that moment of time that we're working.
Like we're in a, I'm lifting weights.
I don't know necessarily that my mind is reflecting on everything that happened,
you know, this morning on my way, right?
Once we get to playing, playing was always a safe haven for me.
Once I could get on the court from anything that was going on in my world.
Like that was where I like to be because I can forget about all the bullshit that was
happening over there, right?
And so in that regard, there is a compartmentalization.
to a degree. But I mean, that is just for that fraction of time that I'm out there and that I'm
doing it like full scale. If I sit my ass on the bench for a few minutes, my thoughts will wander.
Do you understand what I'm saying? While I'm working, I'm consumed. But when I'm not working,
I'm going, I'm not consumed anymore. My thoughts are going to go to everything that's happening,
you know, locally and with the people in that area. And so it becomes almost impossible to really
truly compartmentalize and focus on your job. Now, you are professionals. You're paid a lot of money
and you tried to do your best, but that's unrealistic. And anyone acting like it should be realistic
is quite frankly an asshole. Like because what's happening, what's like, it's just, look, I'm not a
political person by nature. Like I've got people in my family that are way more political than I
am. But I'm a human being and try to live by the, you know, at minimum,
we're all human beings and I can see your side and you can see mine and we'll try to figure this out.
But like, if you can't feel for some of the people that these things are happening to and you can't feel their pain, then, you know, I don't know what to say about that.
Just building on that, I want to go to Howard because he was there.
How much of that did you see while you were in the arena, not just from the players and coaches, but even staff, security guards, everything that was around, them trying to make it as normal as possible?
versus it not actually happening because what Raja is saying is very much mirrors what we saw on
television, right, where, you know, there was an attempt of normalcy to go to this game,
but it didn't seem like that attempt actually came to fruition because, you know, of the ice chance
and everything that's going on outside and the signs.
What was, how was, how did the attempt go and what was the results of that attempt in your mind?
I mean, the entire spectrum of emotions was, was present, right?
But also, even just in terms of fans' intent and being there, I was standing pregame usual deal.
Like, I'm on the court and I had kind of posted up baseline when Steph was doing his usual pregame routine.
And as you guys know, Logan certainly knows.
Steph's pregame routine is legendary.
This is like must see, not not must see TV.
It's like it's a show.
It is, if you are going to attend a game that Steph Curry is playing,
and especially on the road,
because you don't get the chance to see him most of the time.
He comes to your town once or twice a year.
You get there early to watch Steph do his routine with Bruce,
with Bruce Fraser.
And there's a whole, it's a set routine and it's pretty much the same every time.
And it ends with, you know, Bruce and Steph, you know,
kicking the ball back and forth soccer style until Steph then.
catches it and in one one fell swoop catches boom hits it and if he doesn't switch it he does it
again so I've seen this so many times and there are people there who are excited to be there
because it's it's you know steps one of his few times coming through so I ended up in conversation
with uh he was a father with his three kids they'd driven like almost two hours from like the western
side of the state like closer to the dakotas and they were really disappointed when the game
got postponed, but they were glad they still were able to come on the next day, and it's a weekend.
And, you know, his kids are all, they're all teenagers, like, like 14 to 18 and son and two daughters.
They're really excited. They're all wearing their Anthony Edwards jerseys.
And I'm explaining to him, like, keep an eye on Steph and what he's going to do now because
this is really cool. This is a really fun part of it. And so, like, they're true, they're very much
enjoying that one of these rare opportunities. They'd never, they'd never been able to see Steph in person
before. They're obviously Timberwolves fans, but they wanted to see the show that
Steph can put on both pregame and obviously during the game. And pregame Kerr had said
that Steph was dealing with a little bit of a knee thing. And so I told them, I'm like,
listen, I hope he plays. But like if you watch, like, I think he was. He was moving a little
ginger leave in pregame. And I saw him bobble the ball a little bit more than I normally would
in his pregame routine. But so there was an excitement, right? But it was a muted
excitement and we didn't get into the politics of it. They sat in the very back section of that
baseline area and just like two rows in front of them were three of the folks who had the ice out
now signs, which I took a photo of which I, which I had posted on blue sky and some other places.
So within that section, like there was the contrast right there, excitement, outrage, and people
wanted to come out to support their team, but also wanting to make a statement. They know the
cameras are there and especially the next night. So Monday night,
it's a peacock game national game and i think there were more signs last night that i saw
and certainly when when anybody's shooting free throws at the at the baseline near where i was
sitting they were holding them up because they knew the camera shots were going to catch their signs
in the background um so i i think people were trying to like not everybody obviously
everybody's different who's in the arena 19 000 people whatever but they're people were trying to
check every box right i want to go
I want to see Steph Curry play.
Unfortunately, he didn't play Monday night.
I want to see Anthony Edwards.
Unfortunately, he didn't play Monday night.
I want to root for my team.
I want to make it clear also to anybody who's watching this and to anybody who's in the arena
and to anybody who's listening that what's happening in my city is not okay.
And people were channeling all of that, you know, I feel like simultaneously.
And, you know, I don't know when things are going to feel normal again for folks in,
Minneapolis to St. Paul. I do know that, you know, I, you know, took, you know, lift to and from the
airport and both my drivers was all they could talk about. And both my drivers were hyper-conscious
of this because they both looked like people that ICE might be targeting. And I could just feel
it in the way, like they, you know, they bring it up immediately, you know, how they're feeling.
I'm not prompting it.
You know, you sometimes do that, especially as a reporter in town, like, well, what's going on in your city kind of stuff?
This is just like this is the only conversation because everybody's feeling it and living it every day.
They're, you know, as citizens of that area, they were under siege.
And the woman who drove me back to the airport this morning, she's Somali and she's Muslim.
And, you know, we talked, you know, the entire way there about this.
She, you know, she had a great energy about her.
She had this really kind of, I think, the kind of positive vibe of like, kind of like we're getting through this.
And I had a neighbor who was suspicious of me.
And when I first moved in, this is, you know, several years ago and before all this stuff was going on.
And talking about how they kind of finally connected.
And he realized like she's like, just because she's Muslim and from somewhere else, she's not a threat.
She's lived here since she was 11, she said.
And fled some extreme violence in her country.
awful things happened to her family to push them to move here in the first place.
And she was just very open about it all.
And, you know, I just, I just have so much sympathy and empathy for what folks
that are going through.
I hope this nightmare ends soon.
I just, I just had a thought, Logan, and I, like, I want to be careful because
I don't want to marginalize anything that's going on.
But as it related to like, you asked about a basketball player and how they compartmentalize that.
And so many of us are in the NBA are young black men.
While it's hard to say, it's sad to say, it makes me want to tear up.
But like, this is not a reality for us on the regular.
I talk to my boys who are mixed about being out and protecting themselves from the people that are supposed to protect them at times.
Just as awareness, not to try to pit them against law enforcement or anything like that,
but if I don't arm them with my experiences, then I could get a call from someone one day saying that they have done something wrong in the traffic stop.
And, sorry, but like, you asked how it affects NBA players.
Like, it's not that far from what we grew up dealing with from time to time.
And that's sad.
And it's unfortunate that, well, fortunate or unfortunate, depending on how you look at it.
I'm sorry, but like, this is what people have been yelling about in our community for a long time.
Yeah.
And, you know, I'd be remiss if I didn't say that.
Like, it's just, it's unfortunate.
It's terrifying.
It's, it's, you know, but like, an NBA player may in a weird way be able to cope better
because they've dealt with that in the past.
And not only have they dealt with it in the past, it's an omnipresent thing.
Right?
It's an omnipresent feeling of everything that people are going.
through right now. It's an omnipresent feeling like I mean over the last, you know,
year or so, I mean, every time I go out, you know, you go on, you know, you go on,
you go on, pick the little hum me up from the daycare and then you go on your little afternoon
walk and, you know, you see what's going on on on television and you don't know, like, make sure
you bring your ID and make sure you have this cool experience of just walking around with the
fan, but you don't know what's going to happen every give.
the moment and that is omnis, that feeling is omnipresent, right? And, you know, and players, they're in a
bubble, but their friends aren't, you know, the people that are around them aren't, you know,
the people that aren't as famous as they are, but are in their bubble, aren't. So it's a lot to
deal with. Um, now one of the other things I want to talk about before we get out of the segment,
you know, I know, it's a heavy segment, but it is something that I think that we need to address,
you know, as a as a basketball podcast in the world that we live in,
but, you know, the response to all of this, right?
And, you know, one of the biggest things that I,
I think, I don't know if disappointed is the right word,
but I think surprise is definitely the right word
about the response,
about the things that have been going on over the last couple of years
from the players and how it's changed since 2020,
right? You know, I think that around 2020 and even in the years before that,
anytime something that would go on socially, you would expect a, you know, something to be said
from, you know, players and some kind of pushback, right? Players, coaches, you know,
I think even during the pandemic organizations would make forceful statements against what they felt were wrong, right?
And even when it was going on during the pandemic, when I, you know, saw corporations doing that,
I kind of looked at it as like a side eye because I did it necessarily, you know, I could, I wouldn't put my hope into, you know, them, you know, pushing back against everything that people felt that were wrong.
But it, but the reason why they did do that is because of the pressure of players and team employees and things like that.
And I don't feel like that pressure has been put over the last year, right?
I think about, you know, Jalen Brown talked last night about, you know, the goings-on in Minneapolis.
But I hadn't heard him talk about anything socially.
And I don't know how long, right?
Probably since there was a shooting in Memphis in 2023 when I think he had said something.
But he's been largely silent on the types of issues that he,
you know, purports to speak up against, right?
And now I know that he put out, you know,
the MBPA put out a statement and Carl Towns put out a statement.
But the MBPA statement,
it felt like a lot of players were, you know,
treading this line of fear and we have to say something.
So we're going to say it in an individual statement.
And another person that, you know,
that I expect to hear from who purports himself
to talk in these situations is LeBron James,
who during,
over the last few years has, you know, pushed back on the notion that players should shut up
and dribble and, you know, has done initiatives like more than a vote.
But over the last few years, you know, he hasn't really used his voice to speak on these types
of issues, even in the last presidential election.
He didn't make an endorsement until days before he wasn't as politically active.
And I talk about the more than a vote, you know, before last election, he sees.
that off to Nekka Gumuke.
And if you're going to, as a player,
and I'm not saying all players,
but I'm saying if you are purporting that
as a thing that you are trying to be,
you have to stand on that,
not only when it's easy to speak out,
but also when it's harder to speak out.
And I'm not, this is an NBA podcast
so I can keep it to NBA,
but across sports,
every player that has said that they are pushing back against the notion of,
I'm not somebody that shuts up the dribbles,
have been largely silent over the last year or two when, you know,
the masses have said that, you know, they have been wrong
and they purport themselves to be the mouthpiece of the masses and the minorities.
They had, I think that they have dropped the ball on that.
And then also, you know, the NBA has definitely retreated.
I know the NBA PA has put out a statement, but has the NBA put out a statement?
Haven't heard anything from them.
They've been silent.
Adam Silver has been silent on this, the same person that, you know, when he got pressure put on him by the players,
put Black Lives Matter on the floor.
And I know the NBA got pushed as a liberal league afterwards, but quiet as kept,
he was the first person to take that off of the floor.
NFL is still doing it.
And you start to see, you're starting to see a lot of subtle changes.
And I get it.
It's a very scary time right now.
Very scary time for a lot of us.
Chief among them, black NBA players, it's a scary time.
And, you know, players from marginalized groups.
It's a scary time.
But I guess I don't have a question for this, but I would like to get to, you know,
how the panel feels about it.
but I just feel like, you know, the NBA,
or at least the people that have reported themselves
to be people that speak up during times like this
have been largely silent.
And I think that that has been a surprise.
I don't know if it's a disappointment
because I don't know all of these people personally,
but it's definitely been a surprise based on everything
that they said during 2020 that they were about.
So, I don't know.
Howard, you got anything on that for the leads?
As a league dropped the ball.
I want to hear from Raja first on this because he's got a perspective that I don't as a former player.
And it's, I do have thoughts on this.
But yeah, Raja, I'm curious how you've seen this unfold.
Yeah, I don't really know exactly what my thought is on that.
I have always tried to take the approach of, you know, understanding as it came to when people felt like it was necessary to,
use their voice and what they wanted to use it for. So I rarely get involved or concern myself
with when and why they should be doing that. I would agree with you though, Logan, wholeheartedly
in that if you are a company, NBA, or players who in the past have stood on certain
things as it relates to like social awareness and and that's kind of your lane because not
every player's lane is that lane but if that is your lane then yeah I probably would
side with you in that we expect to see and hear from you now more than ever this is this is
scary shit, regardless of who you are or what color you are, or this is scary on a human level.
And if you are and have in the past, use your platform to raise awareness for things
that are even, you know, minutely close in category to this, then we should be hearing from you.
I would agree with you on that, Logan.
I typically as a player, though, and as a person, try not to count other people's money
or tell other people what they need to be standing up and speaking out on, right?
So that's difficult for me.
But if you've made a habit of it in the past, that's kind of who you are as a brand.
You've pushed back when people have challenged your right to do so.
Then I would expect that we should be hearing something.
And it's interesting.
So, you know, I'll admit that in real time in the 1990s,
when I was not covering the NBA yet. I started coming the NBA 97, but earlier in the 90s,
when the whole issue of controversy came up about Michael Jordan, not endorsing, there was a black
Democrat running against Jesse Helms, the white, ultra-conservative Republican in North Carolina,
and Jordan sat out because at that time it wasn't common for players to be injecting themselves
into politics and that was around the time of the, you know, infamous line of Republicans by sneakers
too, right? So I'll admit that personally in real time at that time, I was among those who was
disappointed that, you know, Michael wouldn't get involved. Like, you've got such incredible influence.
You're the most popular athlete in the country, maybe the world, one of the most influential.
Like, why not use your platform? You knew where he stood, even if he wasn't going to say it.
It was kind of, it was kind of understood.
good. But I've evolved in my thinking over time in covering this league and just growing up,
which is that it's not my place as a journalist and certainly as a middle-aged white guy
to be telling young black athletes what they should be doing with their wealth, their influence,
their platform. That's not my place. I'm not sure it's anybody's place, frankly, but it's
definitely not mine. Can I still be on some level personally disappointed or wishing that there was more,
Or, yeah, I admit that. I'll be honest.
And for the sake of this conversation and in the context of what we're talking about and what's just happened, what is still happening in this country right now, there's a part of me that's like, yeah, where did it, where did 2020 go?
Where did that go?
But I had this conversation with somebody else in the league some months ago before all this stuff was going on, but just generally about this curiosity about like where did it go.
And the feeling was like there was just kind of a fatigue and a fear.
And those are the two things that I think are kind of tamping down everything right now.
There's a fatigue from having done all this and been out front and taking all the backlash that comes with it and all the stress and the spotlight.
And yeah, it's difficult.
And not everybody's cut out to be an activist and a political leader, right?
And just because you have a platform, just because you're a celebrity, just because you have a,
influence doesn't necessarily mean that you're comfortable injecting yourself in that or that you want
to expose yourself and your family and your friends and your business partners and whoever.
Like, you know, you still do have to protect yourself too. And so, you know, I get that.
But there's also a fear and that fear comes without getting into it. Like the fear comes from the
way the political climate has changed since 2020. And so I do think that is at least a partial
explanation to Logan's question about why things are a little bit different now.
A lot of players have, as they've been interviewed in various markets spoken, like Dearen
Fox said something. And of course, Tyrese Halliburton had by far the strongest response of any
of the players with his tweet. Carl Anthony Towns, you know, people were like, oh, that was kind
of, you know, a bland statement. But he made it very clear he stood with the people of Minneapolis.
He took a side. You could say that the language was tame, but or measured. But he took a
side. And the Players Association statement, which when I posted it, I said strong statement from the
Players Association and a bunch of people hitting back on Blue Sky saying like, that's not strong.
And I think it's because they wanted it to be stronger. But like, again, they took aside the Players
Association representing all 450 plus all the two way guys, whatever, it's 480 something now, whatever,
that the number is. Their statement says, now more than ever, we must defend the right of freedom of
speech and stand in solidarity with the people in Minnesota protesting and risking their lives to demand
justice. That is not, that is unequivocal. That is, that is not ambiguous. They are saying we are with
them. If you wanted them to say more, I get it. There's other words they could have used about what's
happening and, you know, but they made it very clear who they stood with. And so it's there,
but yeah, the tenor is different, but the tenor of our country right now is different.
Yeah, absolutely. How do you think, this is the last question.
on this segment. How do you think, I'll start with Howard back to you and I go to Roger.
How do you think this weekend will shape the league going forward, if at all?
I really struggled with this one because of everything we just discussed.
The league postponed they didn't cancel. That was another reaction over the course of the weekend.
Well, they shouldn't play at all. Players should actually tell the league, we're not playing.
You know, there was a lot of that. Again, easy for everybody on the outside.
side to say what the league should do, what the players should do.
You know, the world moves on, right?
Like businesses around Minneapolis and St. Paul are, you know, still open.
And everybody else is like you move on and you keep, you keep doing what you can do in the
course of the day while still running a business and tending to your family and school and all
these other things.
From an NBA standpoint, I don't think anything that happened this weekend is going to change
anything on its own.
I mean, God forbid, we have anything more like this happening, whether Minneapolis or elsewhere in this country in the months and years ahead.
But I don't know this was any kind of catalyzing event.
I'm curious if it sparked more conversations in locker rooms maybe if players might start to use this as a impetus to maybe move more in a direction of where they were in 2020.
But I don't know. I don't know. I think like a lot of things in this country and in this world,
you know, something flares up and we react and then we move on to the next thing. And so a lot of the question,
I think you're question, Logan, like, it's a good question. Like, I think the answer sort of
depends on what else happens on, you know, what else happens elsewhere and the things that are
outside of the NBA's control. Yeah, I would agree with that 100%.
it's big business it's going it's going to keep moving it's not you know like uh if if if if
what we have that has already happened is all that really happens uh it it will not change a single
thing moving forward in the NBA that's just that's just what it is um I can't speak for if we
continue to to see more and more tragedies and and so on and so forth I'd have a different answer
but like if that's what we're dealing with,
the events that have already transpired
and we're not assuming that
there's going to be more, you know, destruction,
then, yeah, I don't think it really changes
the NBA in any way.
It's too big a business, too many,
too many checks that, you know,
have to be made or cashed or paid.
It just keeps moving.
Man, I don't have any more thing,
much more to say on that.
It's just, it's a tragedy for, you know, everybody,
in Minneapolis.
and be safe, please. Please be safe out there.
Take a quick break. And we're going to finally get to your mailback questions.
All right. And we're back. We got Cliff in the building. What's how'd that, brother?
Logan, Raj Howard, man. How are you feeling the day? You know?
Better since we've seen your face.
Tough subject to get through, but we'll get through it and prayers for everybody involved.
Let's just jump right into the mailbag here. Howard actually responded to me about this one specifically.
this trade. So let's get you guys' thoughts on this one. This is from Sean Carroll. The subject
line is Warriors Salish Trade. What up Beck and shout out to Logan and Raja. Y'all are the
best. Hope you can wax poetic about this topic. I can't figure out all the CBA machinations or more
accurately I'm too lazy to try and understand it. But I want the Warriors to shake it up. We will
absolutely bottom feeding trash pandas as a franchise in the near future, just a matter of how soon.
So could there be a deal out there to hell marry this season? The dubs have been linked
to the Pels for Trey Murphy or Herb Jones.
Great ideas, but this Jimmy Butler injury flipped the equation.
Why not ship Draymond to the Pelicans and bring back Jordan Poole?
That'd be the main piece movement.
Then add players to match salaries and hopefully we get Looneyback.
We'd further be destroying the dynasty continuity, but in a way it's a fair swap with the
former champs coming back home.
What do you think?
Pull back the Golden State might work if Draymond is gone.
We need offense and if the defense suffers and we suck, it's just a different version
of this shitty team.
Steph deserves a lot, something creative to be tried.
I know trades are hard, but damn, so is being so mid.
Love the show, keep up the great work.
And please do some more live shows, Sean Carroll.
We would love to do more live shows.
Basically, bottom line is he just wants to trade,
he wants to trade Draymond.
That says a lot about Draymond's standing in the bay right now
and how it's kind of eroded over the last thing.
Producer Ben just said,
screw it sure in the comments here.
So,
Ben,
that's where I was kind of at.
I'm going to let you guys do your thing,
but,
but that's kind of where I was at.
I mean,
I kind of agree with,
what,
what was his name?
What was his name?
Sorry, Howard.
Sean Carroll.
I'm kind of with him like,
hey, bro,
you're gonna,
we could get more exciting offensively.
Keeps us pretty much
in the same situation we're in right now.
Maybe,
maybe we get a little more electric offensively.
We're a little better.
I don't know.
I'm not,
yes.
Define exciting, Rush.
No, but listen, Jordan, Jordan, Jordan Poole for whatever, I will, Howard, for whatever,
Jordan Poole can do some shit with a basketball.
I've said this to you before.
There are very few people that I look at.
And as I watch them go through, you know, you can see what's going on in most people's
basketball brain as they maneuver around a court.
He's got a weird, beautiful mind as it comes to some of the shit he will try to do.
And when he gets hot, like it's crazy.
That's fun for me to watch at times.
I'm not guaranteeing it's going to win games or anything like that.
But that's how I described that.
Yeah.
I mean, it's kind of like when we've talked about lamello, right?
Like Jordan Pool is not lamello by any stretch.
But it's a similar kind of thing where it's like there's a creativity and an audacity.
And yes, as you said, entertaining, exciting, maybe not actually impactful for winning.
But like, okay.
Look, the reality here is that as long as you still have Steph and they do,
the obligation is to try to win, not to just be entertaining.
Steph will provide plenty of fireworks himself and good fireworks and fireworks that do lead to
winning.
I think the Warriors have seen enough of Jordan Poole in their own time and in the years
since they traded him to know that he's not helping them in this era or the next one.
And by the way, his numbers in New Orleans, like he started to have like a little bit,
like he started showing some like growth in Washington and it's just like total
backsliding in New Orleans.
Like, it's, his efficiency is in the toilet is like, Jordan,
I don't know what the question is, but Jordan Poole is not the answer.
And if you're going to decide it's time to finally move on from Draymond,
that's not the return you.
I do appreciate Sean's suggestion in the sense of like the symmetry there
and just kind of like, you know, going back to the incident and all of it.
But like, no, I don't.
This is not helping anybody.
I can tell you that Jordan Poole will never play another game with Golden State.
as a home player.
There we have it.
He's never going to play.
He's never going to set foot into that home locker room.
Well, let me ask you a question.
Let me ask you a question, though.
Real talk.
Like, I understand everything you guys are saying.
I fucking get it.
I get it.
I think, I think.
The sentiments is there.
Sean gets it too.
But at face value,
would you rather watch a team that we're going to be,
we're going to be a 600 ball club
either way.
Would you rather watch one
that's got a lot of cool shit
to see in fireworks
or would you rather watch one
that's like,
and I'm not talking about
the golden state
in general or necessarily,
but like,
if we're going to be a 600 ball club
that can't win a championship,
I want to see some cool shit.
I know, no, I feel you on that.
No, I feel you on that.
I think the sentiment is there.
What I will say is,
you know,
if they were going to make that deal
for Draymond,
it's not they should have did that three years ago because I don't think the market is there for him
if I'm going to and I feel like this is a depressing like answer for your you know trying to have an
optimistic point of view about the future of the golden state words and I really appreciate that
but if I were going to give you some optimism Jimmy Butler is on an expiring contract next year
with a high salary slot,
maybe something can happen from there.
I don't think anything is going to happen
that's actually going to change the trajectory
of the franchise necessarily alongside Steph.
But it's something, you know, it's something.
I don't know who's going to take on Jarmann
in any capacity at this point,
based on the production and everything that comes along with Trayvon on the court and off the court.
But you got a salary slot for Jimmy.
It's better than nothing.
Logan, that sounded very summer there.
Tough out here, bro.
You just had been cruising the chat talking about screw it.
Let's trade for Jordan Pull and Kavon Looney.
And Rajah was not in the chat saying that.
Facebook.
Yep.
Yo.
Let's bring it back to 2022.
All right.
This is from, obviously, it's not as, Josh.
This is from Josh.
It says, yo, let's say the aliens have attacked Earth and have the death being pointed at us.
They give us an offer.
They'll spare us if he can beat them in the best of seven series in basketball.
These aliens are so much more talented, quicker, stronger, et cetera, than humans,
but lack communication and chemistry.
Your job is to create an all-time 12-man lineup and coach to beat them.
In this scenario, this team has a month to train together, meaning real life relationships
and personalities also matter, i.e. Kobe Beatham, Wichack, etc.
Which 12 are you choosing? Thank you for answering my question. Best Josh.
Man, that is a great question.
Howard is prepared for this clearly.
I'm not. No, I was going to say I take issue with the premise entirely because maybe
maybe the aliens should just destroy us, frankly.
Let's not put us a fight. We don't know.
I went to a dark place.
Oh, fuck.
Uh
are we
Cliff are you getting the impression
he means like all time like
we could like
yeah yeah
yeah that's why he said like
12 players
Jordan that's why I mentioned
we need both talent and chemistry right
so we need great team guys
yeah right
right yeah
yeah all right well we just go around
like just I'll just start
let's let's start with
with the original let's put Bill Russell
in the middle and go from there
yeah Bill Russell all time
chemistry guy.
I mean, you gotta have Mike on there.
And I think Bill will pull Mike aside
and be like, yo, you know?
It'll be mid-career Mike,
not early, Mike, who was just jacking him.
Yeah.
Um, um,
I'll normally do this,
but I wish you would have sent the question
beforehand.
Nah, this is on the spot.
We're going to have to go PG.
We're going to have to go PG before.
Yeah, that's a tough question.
Yeah, you got to go PG.
Are Steph going to play the one?
We can.
sure it's the real ones 12 so he can you know you have vote yeah no but if he's playing the one
then i got to have a four so much of what he does is off the ball right like so he's on the one
then you need a four that can they can kind of like how about how about magic johnson
at the one at the one you have step running off his screens
at the two then then but puts mj at the three
That's fine.
That's okay.
He wanted a 12-made roster.
If we do this whole thing, we're going to have to have a bunch of...
Yeah, that's right.
We're going to need...
I forgot it was 12.
I'm thinking five just for that for the sake of time.
Yeah, I like Magic and Steph.
LeBron, you got a Bron, I mean, what are we talking about?
Yeah.
He's half alien anyway.
Okay.
Yes, he is.
That's, okay, that's our starting five.
Bill Russell, Michael Jordan,
Steph Curry, Magic Johnson, LeBron.
Can I say who's coming off the bench real quick?
Yeah, let's go.
Let's go.
Let's go.
Kevin Durant coming off the bench.
Oh, sure.
Right.
That's easy.
The ultimate plug and play superstar.
Was that what we always said?
Yep.
And then he has enough guys.
I mean, it's only a month, bro.
Like, it's fine.
What's the worst I could happen in a month?
I mean, you got you, you got to have the diesel, no?
Like, diesel coming off the bench?
Prime diesel.
Check might be a little pouty about coming
off the bench behind Bill Russell.
He's talking about that shit about the
He does have respect for the legends.
What about Tim Duncan?
What about Tim Duncan?
Because Tim Duncan, you're not going to get any problem with.
You're not going to get any problems.
There might be a little problem with Shaq coming off the bench.
Well, Tim Duncan's not going to give you any problems.
So I'm having a long, hard talk with Shaq.
Okay.
It's only a month, bro.
But in his prime, bro, in his prime, prime, Shaq?
Yeah.
He was lifting human beings off the floor.
Also, it's only a month.
And we need the same civilization.
I'm going to take Shaq because, like, I'm going to take Shaq.
Shack should be in there.
Duncan should be in there.
What are we up to?
Seven?
That's eight.
That's eight.
That's eight with KD, right?
Eight with KD.
You know what?
I think Scotty's got to be in there, too.
Ultimate glue.
I mean, Scotty, like the ultimate wingman and can guard everywhere, can do a lot with the ball and
fires, too.
Yeah, it puts out a lot of fires.
Howard. Okay. I have a question for you, Raj. What do we think about Matumbo coming off the bench?
Is that too redundant? Can you play? I'd go Akeem before before Matumbo though.
Yeah, I go.
Akeem? Okay. I can agree with that. Okay. Okay. Hakeem, because he could also, I'm thinking of a big off the bench that is defensive, minded and defensive focus.
All right. How many bigs are we carrying? Because that's three, we got three bigs. We need a back.
Four counting,
four counting Duncan,
but he's at the,
we're putting him at the four,
right?
Wait,
do we need a,
okay,
how about this?
What about a point guard
off the bench?
What about like Isaiah Thomas?
Yes.
Quick guy off,
Isaiah Thomas?
Yes.
Oh,
no,
I'm just saying,
some points.
I was kicking around
to possibly like,
like maybe Jason Kidd
or even,
uh,
even Steve Nash like,
like,
all right,
defensive liability,
Steve,
sorry, Steve,
but like,
but like,
but he's coming off the bench.
He's come off the bench.
Yeah.
Kid or Nash,
I think would be the guy I'd want.
not a kid in Nash.
Nash can shoot better early in his career.
Overall, because I know Jason Kidd could be a great spot-up shooter,
but Nash can do what J. Kidd can do and can hit you and can be efficient from the
three-point line.
I haven't really got a stand from this one.
I'm out.
Jay Kidd's got the advantage on defense and not to mention just those like amazing like hit
ahead passes and lobs and all that, but like Steve can just do.
Steve does more with the ball in his hands, I think, doesn't he?
Yeah, he or he, yeah, I don't know.
I don't know.
It's fine.
Steve ain't never coming on this podcast ever, even though he'd be lying.
So we're going to go with Jay Kid.
Yeah, fuck you, Steve.
What's that?
10?
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.
I, I, I just going to say, I think we need a vibes guy.
We need a guy on the bench.
He's not necessarily playing, but he's throwing a towel, you know?
He can get in there if need be, but he's twirling a towel.
We need a guy on the bench that's kind of like just, you know.
But listen, do we, all right, I don't mean any.
Yeah, he's probably not a vibes guy, but like, do you go prime Larry Bird?
Prime Larry Bird as your 10th guy?
Fuck it.
No, but I'm not even slotting anybody.
I'm just talking about like, we'll figure this shit out next week when we
roll the ball out and play a little bit.
But like, as a skill set, give me a bucket.
I'll beat your ass with my left hand.
I don't know.
I'm asking.
I'm not, I think just for the sake of, you know, do you agree Howard or no?
You know, we got to have, we got to have Larry Legend in there some kind of way.
We're all getting, overall getting fired. Is that what you're saying, look?
No, I'm just saying. I'm sorry. I'm praying.
We're all getting. Two Celtics. How many Lakers do we have on this? We have one, two, three, three Lakers on here. We only have one Celtic.
I'm not worried about balancing coasts or cities or franchises with multiple banners.
He's also Larry Legend.
Larry Legend should be on there because we are, the premise was about chemistry and
like you want team guys.
And like I think Larry Bird, in addition to being obviously one of the all-time
greats, definitely a great teammate.
Also his dream team Larry too.
Like if it was Dream Team Larry, also, you know, 84 Larry or 86 Larry would do as well.
We have one last person on the list.
Who would you do?
What would we get?
And we still have to pick a coat.
Coach is an interesting question there too, right?
Because you want somebody who can manage them all,
but you don't necessarily want like taskmaster type
or too old school.
Like, because again, we want vibes, right?
We want the chemistry part of this was going to matter.
Let's do the last player first and then we'll go to the coach.
Who's the last player on the team?
Why is this so hard?
I just thought a vibes guy, you know?
But I guess we could have a Larry could be a vibes guy.
But I, I, I, there's a lot of great NBA players who were vibes guys.
Who everyone liked, right?
Pre-ancles Grant Hill.
Ooh, I like that.
I like that.
I do like that, too.
Yeah, because everybody loves Grant, right?
I like that.
Plus, he could double as the manager
because he's like head of USA basketball.
Like, he can run the shit.
So, you know.
Okay.
Pop.
Who?
Pop is my coach.
I was, okay, Pops.
What about Chuck Daly?
He literally did with the 92 dream team.
Like we don't need, like, not to say pop is great,
but we don't need, we don't need scheme, he respected.
But I think Chuck, the way he did such a great job with that dream team,
I think he is the archetype for what we want here.
Chuck is good, but what scared me,
what scared me about Chuck, my bad was when Howard said we don't want to old school.
That was a long time ago, and I don't know,
I can't remember offensively, like, I can't remember his, his,
his style necessarily.
You know what I mean?
I've seen Pop evolve and,
and I got another name.
That's why I lean Pop.
This is in your backyard, Rosal.
What about Eric Smolster?
Thought about him.
Thought about him.
What about Dan Tony?
Huh?
What about Dan Tony?
Don't know.
You, hey, offensively,
they would be a mother fumble.
Nah, I think, I'm gonna put Spow on over Dan Tony on this.
Because I think Spow provides
the necessary amount of vibes, the scheme, and also the...
Spoe is doing what...
Spow is...
Spow has expounded on what Mike was doing.
I will give you that.
But like...
Like, that was...
Like, I don't...
Yeah, I don't know.
Mike just hasn't been doing it for a while.
There's no telling what Mike would be looking like at this point.
But is Dan Tony going...
What is...
Okay, when LeBron is doing like his little weird sub-tweeting thing before the game,
what is...
Who is going to help with that?
You know, who is going to...
Bill Russell.
More likely to help with that.
Yeah, I don't think that was actually, yeah, the same way it was Pat Riley here in Miami.
I don't know that that was a SPO.
I don't think SPO was in charge of handling that as much as Pat and the culture was, but.
I might actually take Showtime Riles as the coach of this team, you know?
Yeah, it's only a month, but no, that's why I push back on that.
This is why I push back on that.
I'm still scared and like kind of triggered by the 89 Lakers when he took,
when he just ran them into the ground before the biggest game.
or biggest
series of the season
where he were,
was it,
was it 89 or was it 90,
I think it was 91 when,
when Magic pulled his hamstring.
Like I don't know.
You know,
we kind of need to have a balance.
Magic and Biden and Scott both.
Yeah.
Yeah,
we kind of need to have a balance.
Mini camp in Santa Barbara,
I think,
is the way that goes, yeah.
Don Nelson.
Don Nelson.
I like Don Nelson.
Don Nelson is vibes,
bro.
Nell is there got a lot of,
who we got.
You got a lot of beer drinking,
cigar smoking,
golfing.
like they're super talented hoopers but there's some
that's not going to need their
cigar and all they're smoking
with nelly they're smoking everything
with nelly they're smoking all that'll be a very relaxed
team they'll be the most
the most chill superstar team
trying to save the world ever assembled
I think we are okay so we have
Dom Nelson
Chuck Daly
do we
do we spoke or did we spoke make that or no
let's just make it a
staff.
Like,
Yeah,
make it.
Yeah,
make your staff.
Spoh.
Okay,
I'm going to make my staff.
All right.
I'll make your staff
and then we'll go from there.
Okay.
No,
everybody we just mentioned,
that's the staff.
Okay.
There we go.
Yep.
It's Chuck.
It's Riles.
It's Spoh.
It's Dan Tony.
And Nellie is bringing the goodies for every place.
He's bringing the party favors.
It's a staff.
It's a staff.
All right,
man.
That has been another edition of real ones.
What a great end.
ending to the real ones.
This is how we started.
Tap in with us, man.
Me and Rajah on Friday.
Tap in, ah, ah.
All the shits.
Bye.
