The Zach Lowe Show - LaMelo Ball to the Timberwolves! Reactions and Grades. Plus, Mets Corner!
Episode Date: June 25, 2026Zach is joined by Jon Krawczynski and Mo Dakhil to make sense of the Timberwolves acquiring LaMelo Ball. They discuss what Minnesota’s offense will look like, how Naz Reid fits in Charlotte, and oth...er trades made around the league. Then, Sean Fennessey joins for Mets Corner after a particularly embarrassing stretch. (0:00) Welcome to The Zach Lowe Show! (1:40) Jon Krawczynski and Mo Dakhil join the show! (5:52 ) Initial thoughts on the LaMelo Ball trade (12:26) The fit with Minnesota should work (18:02) Why did Charlotte do this? (26:48) What will Minnesota miss most from losing Naz Reid? (31:05) Charlotte still has a deep team (39:24) Do the Timberwolves have real concern over losing Ant? (48:35) Al Horford coming back to Golden State (52:21) What will happen with LeBron? (55:52) Isaiah Stewart heading to Memphis (1:04:38) Mets Corner with Sean Fennessey! (1:08:43) The Mets are an embarrassment (1:28:03) The Mets have no hope (1:36:24) More likely to win a title: Mets or Jets? Host: Zach Lowe Guests: Jon Krawczynski, Mo Dakhil, and Sean Fennessey Producers: Jonathan Frias, Billy Gil, and Mike Wargon Social: Keith Fujimoto and Michael Szokoli The Ringer is committed to responsible gaming. Please visit https://fanduel.com/playwithaplan to learn more about the resources and helplines. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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on the Zach Lowe show, we're back.
We're already back after analyzing a whole big pile of NBA news just yesterday.
Here we are again.
La Mello Ball traded from Charlotte to Minnesota along with Josh Green for Nas Reed and a whole bunch of draft assets that's going back to the Charlotte Hornets.
Minnesota uses the last bullets in its NBA trade chamber for the Mello Ball to pair him with Anthony Edwards after losing Julius Randall.
and now Nazree, two of their three core big men, a complete sea change of identity,
a gamble on one of the most polarizing players in the NBA.
Is it a smart gamble?
Is it a dumb gamble?
What are the wolves doing?
Does this give them any kind of shot to compete in the Western Conference?
Is it the wrong player to go all in on?
We talk all about that with John Krasinski, Embo DeKiel.
And then we also discussed the Charlotte.
Wow, what an astonishing response to the most exciting Hornets season in a long, long time.
talk about ruthlessly taking the long view.
Was this a little too ruthless?
Or what is Charlotte up to in getting off a lamella balls?
Is it just health-related?
Is there something more?
We talk about that.
And then Mo sticks around to talk about Warriors future, LeBron future,
Pistons sniffing around, some interesting stuff,
everything that's going on in the NBA.
And then it's time.
It's been a while.
We're back on Met's Corner and it's not going great.
Sean Fennessee's here.
That's coming up.
Do the Zach Lowe show.
I told you we'd be back if there were news.
And boom, there is news that is both surprising and not that surprising.
The Minnesota Timberwolves have acquired Lamello Ball,
every 10 and under's favorite player and top jersey seller.
From the Charlotte Hornets, the feel-good story of the second half,
a legitimate semi-dominant second half of the season,
and out goes their offensive engine on to pair with Anthony Edison.
in his draft class back in the day in Minnesota. In exchange, Timberwolves fan favorite,
Nas Reid, whose very name is just code for being a fan and for being awesome. People just say
the name, Nas Reid as they walk around Minneapolis. And an unprotected 2033 first rounder,
three first round pick swaps in 2028, 2029, 2030, and three second round picks.
Josh Green also goes to Minnesota, which is not a trivial bit of salary.
A blockbuster and just a fascinating deal, a fascinating vote of no confidence by the Hornets in Lamello Ball after his healthiest season in a long time after their most successful season in ages, a season that ended for the third time in La Melle Ball's career in a play-in blowout, which I think is not irrelevant here.
And then on the flip side, a fascinating bet by the Minnesota Timberwolves who salary dumped Julius Randall in order to do something like this.
I think they have another move coming in free agency, likely to address the void at power forward.
A complete sea change for the Timberwolves.
Two of their three main rotation, Big Man, Randall and Reed are gone.
And in their place is a guard heavy, faster, smaller, more dynamic, potentially offensive team with Gobert still on the back line.
John Krasinski from the athletic is here.
Mode DeKille from everywhere is here.
Guys, this is a fun one.
How's everybody doing?
Doing great, Zach.
Super fun.
Yeah.
It's like, I want.
went to bed last night thinking it could happen,
woke up this morning and it did happen.
And credit the wolves, man,
they are never shy about making polarizing big deals
in trying to go for it.
And here they go again.
You ain't kidding, John.
Tim Connolly is now traded for literally two of like
the five most polarizing players in the NBA,
Rudy Gobert and now Lamello Ball.
Obviously the price for Lamello lower than what they paid for Rudy Gaubert.
But I want to start.
First of all, Mo, how are you?
I'm doing well.
And they kind of echoed John's sentiments.
I woke up this morning, you know, started doing my routine, making the coffee for my wife, all that stuff.
And then, you know, it's like, oh, wait a minute.
I should check and make sure nothing's happened lately since I woke up.
And I'm on the West Coast.
So it's a little bit, you know, later than everybody else.
And I'm like, oh, the trade did go through.
And then that kind of started.
I was like, just turned to my wife going like, I probably will be on the microphone a lot today.
Yeah, the mellow.
Three years at about $43 million a pop left on his contract.
Nasreys had three plus one at about 23, 24 a pop.
And in addition, as I should mention, right away, the Hornets re-signed Kobe White or agreed to terms with Kobe White.
Three years, $74 million.
He will likely replace low mellow ball as the starting point guard of the Hornets, although he is not really a point guard.
Super interesting.
I'll get to the Charlotte end of it in a bit.
John, is this.
going to work in Minnesota because the bullets are out of the chamber. The only bullets left in
the seven years where teams can trade picks and swaps and all of that are now trading out of
your asset class of very good players. That's the only way you can sort of flip the table and recoup
draft assets. So this is a, hey, if Anthony Edwards is even wondering a little bit about this new
ownership regime, about whether there's going to be some penny pinching about, wait, we just
traded Julius Randall who flamed out in the playoffs again. How are we going to compete? What
what's happening right now. This is the answer to that question. I've heard Lamello is very excited
about this, despite some shell shock that Charlotte dumped him after what a wonderful feel-good story.
And he and aunt have known each other for a long time. What's your initial take on this?
Yeah, I think that I will say I've talked to so many people within the organization today about
how this came about and what they thought.
And I put it out on social media,
but the overwhelming reaction has been elation.
And when you think about all of the questions
that are around Lamello's game,
around maybe his maturity and all of those things,
you would think there would be a little bit more kind of,
yeah, we'll see.
But they have been trying to get Lamello ball
for a couple of years now.
They've checked in several times with the Charlotte Hornets
to see if they would be willing to part with him because they think that his passing,
his playmaking, his shot creation, his handling is exactly what they need next to Anthony Edwards.
And they believe, Zach, that bringing Lamello Ball into an organization that has been in the
second round three straight years, that has won at a pretty high level that has veteran guys
who know what it takes to be competitive in this league, they think that will be good for Lamello Ball,
that he will get into this culture and they will help cover up whatever weaknesses he has.
But they needed a point guard to take some of the pressure off of Anthony Edwards.
They needed someone so that the Spurs and Thunder could not just mercilessly double Ant as soon as he walked across half court.
And they see Lamello Ball as that type of a player.
And, I mean, people are just doing backflips over there right now about being able to get him.
Well, I'm going to put you on the spot.
give the Minnesota Timberwolves a letter grade for this trade.
And I'm only doing this to set something up.
But I just give me your just quick letter grade Minnesota Timberwolves,
acquire lamello ball for Nas Reed and all these draft assets.
And they get Josh Green too.
Yeah, I'm probably going to go with a C plus.
And I think part of it is the price they paid.
It's,
I'm not as worried as everybody else about pick swaps,
but I still think it's a high price in terms of the 23,
unprotected future,
28 to 30 pick swaps and things like that.
And that might not matter at all.
But I think I think two of those pick swaps,
29 and 30,
John, you've probably read the 17 paragraphs on a real GM more closely than I have today,
have already been previously swapped.
So this is now swaps of swaps.
And I got to tell you, there comes a point where even I am like,
just fucking wake me up when these swaps convey.
But in this new lottery regime, if it persists into these years,
those swaps could be valuable.
but continue, Mo, you are giving them 78% C plus, do better, see me after class.
Well, it's more of the cost of what I worry about is what could you have done down the road better in the future.
You know, what are you get what, what guy is going to come up available and we're going to be like, damn, which we waited and we could have made this offer and beat that.
You know, I think the challenge also for me where I'm really most concerned for the wolves is,
the defense event.
Like Lamello has never really showed that much interest.
And it comes and goes.
He has the size where you think he should be at least a average defender.
But a lot of times it seems like he's uninterested in that regard.
So I worry in that area.
And then they're incredibly thin.
Like you said, Zach, they got a look.
And we think another move is going to come at some point with a power forward.
You know, but it's it's now Rudy Gobert.
It's Beringer coming into the second year where it's not like he played a ton of minutes last year
where we could feel confident.
And I think he's going to be good, but I still think he's raw and needs a lot of work.
I'm just kind of worried of, you know, if this was your last bullet, did you really have to fire it right now at this moment?
And was this the right guy to target?
So that's kind of where I'm concerned.
Offensively, everything works for me.
And off the ball, lamello working, you know, all that stuff.
I do worry a little bit about still shot selection stuff.
Hopefully they can, Finch can beat that out of him a little bit.
but we'll see what happens.
So to be clear, the wolves, I think John, are right at the first apron as of now.
They're not capped at the first apron.
They haven't done anything to prohibit themselves from going over.
I expect that they will go over the first apron to address this whole at Power Forward.
And like, I don't really even know.
I think they have to figure out what their starting lineup is that one, one iteration is
Lamello and McDaniels, Power Forward X and Gobert.
And another is let's just put McDaniels at the four.
start all the guards together and go bear at the five.
I think Terrence Shannon Jr.
is a critical backup now who can play the three and the four for them.
And Barangay,
Barangay is,
you know,
they love him and he's going to get a chance to play now.
Josh Green could help them.
And just the ball,
I.
And trio being able to have at least one and probably two of those guys
on the floor at all times sort of mitigates the pain of Mike Connolly,
maybe not being here next year.
Bones Highland,
we'll see he was a big part of,
their team, is he going to be around next year?
That's a lot of ball handling to go around.
I asked Mo for the letter grade because he gave it a C plus.
To point out how polarizing this trade is, John, I'm sure you've seen the wolves are getting
Ds in a lot of places.
Yeah, Zach Harper, our guy, D plus.
I only read a couple because I wanted to get a sense.
And I think this is a really interesting trade for both teams.
I think it could go really badly for either team.
I think the most likely scenario, in my opinion, is it goes pretty well for both teams.
And I'm including the wolves in that.
I get what Mo is talking about, about the opportunity cost.
I talked about it with the heat and Yonis.
When you put your chips in for this particular player, you got no more chips for the next
particular pro.
And I went through the heat, like, okay, who in the next three years, what kind of
stars are going to become available that you could have thrown this gigantic trade package
in that you threw for Yonis?
Well, the Timberwolves already did not have that kind of access to a gigantic trade package.
This was about the best they could do one pick outright and some swaps in a second and a good player.
So I don't even think they would have been competitive in that class of players that I talked about with Miami, Donovan Mitchell.
I just made up names like guys in tier one NBA guide unless they were going to throw in a McDaniels or somebody that they did not want to throw in.
So I don't think the opportunity cost is that that severe.
it does lock them in really to this team unless they flip one of these main guys and go a different
direction. I would give it probably a B B plus. And I, as many people know, am one of the top 10%
Lamello fans in the national media. I think he's been wildly underrated this entire time,
very carnivalesque, some shot selection issues and late game brain farts that made you wonder like,
does this guy like know what the score is and that these NBA games?
count in the standings and that there's like a prize at the end for the team that wins.
But I thought he cleaned up a lot of that last year when he got a real team around him.
He started to try more on defense.
And I just broadly think that the fit with Ant is going to be really, really good.
And the fit with I.O. and Ant and him together, their ability for Ant to run inverted pick
and rolls and hunt small defenders and all that stuff is going to be really good.
and to the point about Lamello's carnivalesque elements, his carelessness, his laissez-faire
to use a French term on a team that just loves French players.
I think it's going to be very interesting to see Lamello Ball as the clear-cut number two
guy at best on a team after being the number one guy on a bad team for most of his career.
I think there's like a material difference between how he will have to play with Anthony
Edwards over him in the org chart.
And between Ant, who can dial it up on defense when he wants to, McDaniels, who's an all
defensive level player, and Gobert, who's an all defensive level player, who's used
to putting out fires all around him.
Lamello is at least big.
And I think they have the ability to kind of protect him a little bit more on defense
than they're being given credit for.
I think this is going to work in terms of giving the wolves a different look, a more
interesting, diverse look on offense.
I don't think they're going to win a championship with it,
but I also don't think any path is likely to make you championship favorites
in a world where the Spurs and the Thunder exist,
and that's an unfair grading curve.
And at the very least, they're going to,
you can't beat San Antonio in Oklahoma City by trying to play like them.
They are now going to go at these teams with a completely different,
free-flowing, fast, guard-heavy dynamic that is at least going to make them different.
and tap into a different set of strengths.
So I like, I get the risk, and I'm going to talk about why Charlotte moved on from La Mello Ball and why he's even available to begin with and all the negatives that come with it.
I like this as I like this as a gamble for Minnesota.
I would, I think the D's and stuff are just wildly too low on Lamello.
And I think this will work to a reasonable degree.
Do you agree, John, or am I crazy?
Yeah, no, I mean, I definitely see the optimism.
And it might, I would say like my only reservation and I'm interested to hear both of you talk about.
this is why another organization gives up on an ultra popular player when he's 24 years old.
I'm going to have to go to pick up my daughter at swim practice and there's going to be crying
11-year-old boys. I've spent the last month answering their questions about the Knicks, which is
fun. And now they're going to be like, what do I do with this jersey that I have? I don't know what.
They're going to be inconsolable. Exactly. I mean, he's ultra popular. He had a very, very good season last
year.
I mean, the...
All NBA votes.
He got all NBA votes deservedly.
The advanced metrics are off the charts.
Plus 11 when he's on the floor offensively, plus 9, plus 10 when from a net rating.
Like, he really did have a great, great season.
And so then you just like, why are the Hornets when, Wendy?
What's going on in Charlotte?
Like, why are they doing this?
And so that's my one reservation.
But I will say this in watching this Timberwolves team, when they got,
dismissed by the spurs in the second round,
something needed to change in a material way
if they were going to continue to show Anthony Edwards
that they are committed to winning,
that they are trying to make up ground on the spurs
and the thunder.
And the thing that stuck in Anthony Edwards craw the most
coming out of that series was,
these guys, and he didn't use guys,
used much more derogatory terms,
were doubling me immediately.
What am I supposed to do against that?
And the Spurs did not have to worry about Julius Randall hurting them from three.
Did not have to worry about kind of many of the things of Rudy Gobert at all.
Well, even DeVincenzo's injury was a big part of that.
Huge, huge part.
But like, and then guess what?
The aunt sees cat win a championship.
Like those are like important things in the, in, in,
building to get to why the wolves did this.
And so if you're looking for ways to lighten Anthony Edwards load the most,
lamello ball is right at the top of the list,
the guys who can do that in terms of getting an aunt off the ball more.
And is one of the best catch and shoot shooters in the league.
And he didn't get enough of those opportunities last year.
Lamello is going to get those to him all of the time.
And so, and there's just going to be with O'Mello,
there's going to be an electricity here, man.
Like, you know, we talked a lot about this team being kind of moody,
a little downtrodden and sullen a lot last year.
Lamello is going to come in and going to be throwing the ball all over the place.
It might go into the third row.
Who knows.
But he's going to bring some juice.
And I do think that that is going to be welcomed on this team.
Look, he's going to take some crazy shots.
The one-legged threes that drive everyone bananas.
That went in more than I think people,
want to give them credit for because when they miss, particularly early in the shot clock,
it just looks like like like heresy, basically, like basketball heresy.
And I get it.
I've always said you can't find the size, the passing, and the shooting in one package
very often.
And it's why I was always going to bet on Lamello.
I was always going to stick with him as an NBA prospect and an all star level player.
And I thought last year he really did make real efforts to, A, try to.
wriggle his way into the paint more and get to the line more,
sometimes successfully, sometimes not.
B, modulate his late game decision making a little bit.
Remember, this is a guy who James Abrago would bench in clutch time a lot
because of just how unreliable his like time score awareness was.
And defensively, he's always been a gambler.
That's never going to change.
I thought he just sort of played with a little more alertness
and physicality getting around screens and stuff last season than he ever did before.
And I think this is going to work offensively.
pace, space, matchup versatility, all that stuff.
Obviously, they've got some holes to fill out.
And to your question, the why, why would Charlotte do this?
I think there's a couple of, I think there's a lot of reasons and really one reason.
The lot of reasons are his health issues in the past and selling high after his first healthy season a long time.
All the decision making stuff and defense limitations that I just talked.
talked about and what that means for if he's the best or co best player on your team,
how far are you really getting?
I think they've now insulated themselves looking forward from if you just project
optimistically, max for Brandon Miller, max for con canipple, three maxes or three max level
contracts is just really hard to then build a team around that.
And they've given themselves more optionality, obviously more draft assets.
The team has a ton of valuable draft picks starting with Dallas's top two,
protect the pick next year.
All of that is well and good.
If you ask me, why did they do this?
I think it really comes down to a physical toughness question that they have about
La Mello Ball, that you watch these playoff series, Oklahoma City, San Antonio, San Antonio, New York.
And you just envision like, this is a dude.
Frontrunner is too strong of a term, fast and loose.
Like when the game's fun, that's when he's at his best.
what are you going to do in game 5-0 playoff series
when Steph Castle has been in your jersey for five straight games
when you're switching between Jalen Williams and Kaysen Wallace
and Alex Caruso bumping you physically
just manhandling you up and down the court?
Are you actually game for that?
Because if you're going to be a serious team,
that's what you've got to be game for.
And I think this trade says,
yes, there are these ancillary salary pick benefits
and faith in Brandon Miller and Concanipple and all that.
The Hornets know the number.
They know their offense wasn't good when Lamello was on the bench.
They know all of that stuff.
And they decided they decided anyway that we just don't think we can win the biggest games with this guy on our team.
I think that's really what it boils down to.
And just to wrap a bow on that before I shoot it to Mo.
I think these play in disasters are fact, have factored into it.
Now, there was like a four year gap between the last play in disaster and the current one.
But if you look at Lamellos and the Hornets numbers, 2021,
20, 22, 2026. I mean, they just got railroaded every time they were in the playing.
Some of that was his fault. Some of it was not. He did have 30 in the first playing game that
thriller over Miami this year that they won. And I don't think he was really the problem when they
lost by a million points to Orlando. He had 23 points in that game. They were only minus nine when he
was on the floor. Conniple crapped the bed in all those games too. But I think in totality,
they were just like, we haven't really seen this guy in a serious NBA game and we can't
picture him in those serious NBA games where it's just so physical.
Like the rest in the playoffs has let these teams be so physical.
Is he going to be able to withstand that?
Mo, what do you think of all that?
Yeah, I mean, I think that's a big reason for it.
When they kind of looked at it, you touched on it when, and this is what everybody's doing,
right?
After the finals, after the playoffs, we're all looking at going like, well, what did we learn?
You know, Bill does it a lot when he looks at the draft when he was talking about it, right?
Like, can I see these guys playing in playoff games?
Can I see?
can they hold up?
And I think, you know, Charlotte just kind of said,
they've just sort of said,
we don't think he could do it.
We don't think he can hold up in the playoffs.
That's why they're so willing to get off him.
And then obviously all the other details,
contracts and all that stuff to come and how it kind of changes the team.
They found the right opportunity to sort of jump ahead.
This is a sell high moment for them, right?
They finally get a season where he's healthy almost the entire way.
I think he played 72 games through the course of the season.
It's their opportunity.
right there. They can't go into next season and hope it, you know, for them, hope it works out again.
Because if he gets hurt or whatnot and he's out for a long time, the team's going to tank.
And then on top of that, his value is going to tank. So for them, it was a sell high opportunity to kind of answer the question, John, as to why they would, why a team would give up so on their guys so quickly after the year that they had.
And I think, you know, for me, it's really important to see for Minnesota how, and Zach, you touched on it, how he handles being the number two guy.
because this is a new scenario for him now,
for the most part,
especially after the last few years
when Charlotte's been really bad,
he's been able to just kind of do whatever he wants.
Now will he be a little bit more disciplined?
Can he come in and be a little bit more straight line into these things?
Like, you know,
can he do even a little bit more defensively than what he should?
Yes, he should be able to.
I mean, he's already an elite defensive rebounder.
And so he has the size to do that.
Before I go back to Minnesota,
I will say the other thing is they sold high.
the Hornets did.
They better be competitive next year because if they take a huge step back and the
fan duel odds, our producer Mike Sammy, the fan duel odds, they did not take a big step
back in fan duel in terms of their conference finals odds and all that.
And I think that's appropriate.
Like I think they should be decent again next year.
Khan gets better.
Miller gets better and healthier.
Kobe White, who I think that three year, $74 million deal is fine.
Nas Reid, we haven't talked about yet, is a huge addition who I think walks in as
their starting power forward after having the starting power forward job in Minnesota for like 24
hours after the Julius Randall trade. I don't know what that means from Miles Bridges. It could be a
bench roll. It could be a trade. I think Nas Reid will play some backup five. Their depth is still
really solid. The Hornets have a lot of decent players coming off the bench, including the two guys that
they just drafted. So I think they should be solid. But if they're not, this is going to be a tough pill
for the fans to swallow. And look, I'm just saying, I'm just going to point this out, Lamello on
the floor plus nine per 100 possessions, Lamello off the floor plus one and a half per 100 possessions.
And that doesn't change much if you isolate from January on.
In 350-ish minutes with Khan and Miller on the floor and Lamello off the floor minus 11.5 per 100 possessions.
And look, like Kobe White and Miller and Kinniple only played 45 minutes together the whole
season. So we have not seen a lot of all those guys together. And I think the Hornets are right to have
faith that Kobe White can be a bit of a stabilizer and that all that, you know, everything will lift up
to a decent level. But it's, there is a risk in just that sense of are they underestimating
Lamello's impact on their offense? I personally think that they are, but that they can survive it and
at least hover around where they were last year. But I don't know that they're going to be, you know,
I thought they could have won 50 something games next year. I don't see that.
now and I don't see that kind of upside now.
And that's okay, given the long-term stuff that they've probably opened up.
And if they're right about Lamello, it's very okay.
I think they're going to suffer a little bit more offensively than they think they are.
And John, I wanted to ask you, I said, we haven't talked about Nas Reid.
Just what does this mean to Minnesota for this guy to be off the team?
Has anyone talked to him, his agents?
I mean, he is, I remember having Ryan Saunders on my podcast from Las Vegas just after that.
He was he a second round picker or a two-way guy.
Undrafted, two-way guy.
And he said to me before we started recording,
just keep an eye on this guy, Nas Reid, we just got.
I really like this guy.
And then you just see the towels that just say,
I have one.
It just says, Nas Reid.
That's all it is.
It's like an inside joke among NBA die-hards.
What is going to be missed both on the court and just culturally with him out of Minnesota?
Yeah, I mean, briefly on the court, and it's not to diminish it,
but he is incredibly versatile.
He has improved his game from the time he came in to where he is now greater than
any player that I've seen in the Timberwolves uniform.
I mean, he has turned himself into a really good three-point shooter,
a guy who can handle it in the open floor, really tricky around the basket.
He is a handful for anyone to deal with offensively.
And defensively, he puts in good effort, and with the right matchups,
he can be really good.
So they are going to miss him with that.
He was a sneaky big reason they dominated the Nugget so much is because they didn't have anybody for Nasreed.
And so he was a big help in that rivalry.
But I just want to focus more on Nas the person and Nas the cultural icon.
And I am not hyperbole here, Zach.
Like he was an absolute hero here.
and I think he was a symbol for what Timberwolves fans always wanted and never had before,
which was like for years and years and years when the Timberwolves really struggled,
they always saw other teams find diamonds in the rough and develop them and turn them into something.
And like the wolves just never, ever did that.
And then here was this guy who came into Minnesota, who stayed in Minnesota every summer,
worked on his game, turned into a really, really good player.
and devoted himself to it.
Took a back seat to Kat and to Julius Randall
was coming off the bench, selfless.
And, you know, you have the Nasreed Beach towels,
but during their 2024 run to the Western Conference finals,
a local tattooist gave Nasreed tattoos
to people for like 25 bucks as a promotion.
I am not joking.
There are thousands of people in Minnesota
with Nasreed tattoos on them.
That's just what he means to them.
He kind of,
his rise signified the rise of this organization and sort of the blossoming of basketball in
Minnesota again after a very long cold winter. And so there's broken hearts all over the market
right now because they had to give up Nasreid for Lamello. He was as popular as Anthony Edwards was
here locally. That's just what he meant to this fan base and what he symbolizes kind of for
for everything basketball related in Minnesota.
And I think, again, he leaves a void behind at the position that I think they will try to fill.
If they start that small lineup I mentioned earlier, Lamello, I.O. and Jaden Gobert, you know,
I think you'll see Ant Guard Power forwards some in that alignment because Jaden is so good on
the ball defending guards.
You know, I also think not so Nas Reid walks into a starting spot, I think he can play
with Colk Brenner when Colk Brenner's at the five.
I think he'll play the five with Miles Bridges and Grant Williams,
who's ever, if Miles Bridges is even still around.
I think he's going to be a super important part of a pretty deep Hornets team.
Another thing on Lamello, he's never played with a lob threat like Gobert for extended minutes.
I think that's going to help him as a driver and dish guy too.
Gober hasn't had a lob guy to throw him a ball like that in Minnesota and four years.
You never knew where an aunt or Randall mob for Gobert was going to end up.
Let's take a quick break.
So basically, I think, again, these are, there is no perfect move available
when you have already traded as much as Minnesota has traded.
There's no, oh, yeah, this puts them right there with San Antonio, Oklahoma City.
I like this as a bet.
If your benchmark is championship, all your bets are probably going to fail.
And this one probably will too.
But I think it's an interesting upside bet that changes their style of play.
It makes them unique and fast and interesting.
and gives them something, some hope for sustainability on offer.
I would give it a B-B-plus.
I think the Ds are underestimating it.
Let's take a quick break, and I want to hit Moe on the Hornets part of this.
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Okay, the Hornets.
Last year's Cinderella story, they trade their offensive engine
and homegrown rookie of the year, all that.
Starting lineup, Kobe White, Brandon Miller,
Khan Knapple, Nas Reid, Musa, Antlers, Diabate.
Off the bench, they got like a lot of guys.
We'll see if, again, we'll see if Miles Bridges is still here, but he and Grant Williams
at the four.
Kalkbrenner is a solid second year guy now, back up five.
Nas Reid will help in that regard as well.
Cion James, McNeely, the two rookies they drafted, Steinbach and Anderson, I think we'll
walk right in.
They just have like a decent amount, like a Trey Man, I didn't even mention because he didn't
play much last year.
I'm probably even forgetting, let me bring up their death chart to make sure.
No, that's pretty much everybody.
Josh Green is now in Minnesota.
He played a little bit for them.
I think their depth is pretty good.
I've just interested to see, I mean,
where they still have some cap flexibility to spend, you know,
mid-level, they have a huge trade exception.
They can use the full mid-level.
Just an absolutely ruthless move by the Jeff Peterson,
Rick Schnall is the owner, Gay Plotkin.
This is a team that was like, Mark Williams,
like we're trading you once and twice,
if need be before we have to pay you.
And this is as cold-hearted as it gets.
I mean, Lamello legitimately, not only was he really good last year and got all NBA
votes, he liked being in Charlotte.
He wanted to be in Charlotte.
He spent the off-season in Charlotte.
He was a fan favorite.
And they are coming off the first season of relevancy in what feels like ages.
And they pulled a rug out like this for all the reasons I said.
Like, well, what do you think of that roster that I just read off?
It feels like taking a step back for the sake of taking two-step.
forward down the line. But how much of a step back do you think it actually is?
Well, first, has anybody checked on Eric Collins?
Like the the fun he had with the play-by-play and the Lamello Ball era?
I just need somebody to check on him and make sure he's okay.
And the Charlotte PD Traffic Squad, just they can probably be distributed some resources.
Well, I think the Minnesota one better get ready.
I don't know like look, man, snow and ice is a different kind of wild card.
Like you might want to just get an expert driver as part of this whole thing.
It's a different ballgame.
If I can derail us for a second, being an L.A. guy living in San Antonio for a little bit,
there was a day where James Barago was the head video guy.
He sent me a text message.
Hey, man, be careful.
There's black ice around the practice facility.
And I just responded going like, what time are you picking me up?
I've never had to deal with this.
Like, what time are you?
picking me up. I'm not, I'm not driving in this. But back to the roster, though, like,
that is a deep squad, right? Like, I think it's going to be really interesting to see,
like, multiple kind of, like, interchangeable parts, right? Like, you go from, you can go,
Nazrid, you can bring Miles Bridges in. You know, again, assuming Bridges is there.
But then it's Grant Williams. You have a different sort of vibe in the, in the front
court. You have Musa Diabate. Then you have Colchbrunner coming in, again, a little bit of a
different vibe in terms of the, the way they play. But, you know,
you have a lot of different things there.
I think a lot of stuff for them is going to depend, though, on how is Con Cinnipple going to
handle the second season?
You know, and the way it ended those last two games was almost kind of traumatizing for
everybody.
If part of your concern is the Hornets over Lamello Ball's Playoff Sustainability is his
performance in your highest leverage games, you have to at least acknowledge that Con Cinepple
also did not perform very well in your highest leverage games and ended one of them on the bench.
Yeah.
And I think so that's something that you have to kind of.
to pay attention to. You have to see early on. We got to see sort of like him shake that off
and get going and being kind. Can he do a little bit more with the ball on his hands,
off the dribble, off the bounce, you know, and be more just coming off screens and attacking?
And then the same thing with Brandon Miller, where like I loved actually the pairing of the three
guards when it was Ball, Miller, and Caniple, because they all kind of did different things.
Ball was the conductor. But, you know, Miller was able to attack and get down.
Hill coming off screens and curling around. You had Canipal coming off screens for shots and
there's so many different things you can do. Now you got to figure out how are we going to get to
all of that? And as I like Kobe White, the deal, he's not Lamello in the way that he can create for
others. And that's going to be a thing where you have to wonder, that's my biggest question for
them is where is the play creation going to come from on a consistent and irregular basis? I know you
have Kobe White there. You got to hope that the other guys can handle it, but it's not like,
I'm nervous handing that over to Connipple, to Brandon Miller.
Like I just haven't seen enough from them being able to do it.
Even McNeely, who I liked, you know, but again, not really much of a run,
but we're going to have to see how he kind of goes.
This was a lot of pressure on your development staff to make sure these guys are ready.
Like, that has to be your whole off season.
Con, we got to work on you dribbling and making the passes and making,
and con smart player and everything, but can you make the right reads?
How quickly can you process everything with what you're going to.
to see now and how aggressive teams are going to be on you now. It's going to be interesting to
see how they kind of play. I like the way they're set up because, as you said, they got a lot of
depth. I think they're going to still be able to play fast, push the ball up to court, get going,
play in transition, fly up and down there. I think they can be even a little bit more aggressive
defensively. But I think the question still remains at the end of the day, play creation,
where are we getting that? And that's going to be the one thing for me that's the hole that I
need to see kind of get filled before the season begins.
And they're not stupid. They know that.
They know that the risk of this deal is a step back next season after winning 44
games and having like the best net rating in the league after January 1st or whatever it was
for all the reasons that you're saying.
This is a bet on both Brandon Miller and Conkinip will becoming all-stars.
I think that's a pretty good bet.
I don't know that they're going to be like eight-time all-stars, but they're going to
be all-stars.
I think Miller, frankly, was wildly underrated as one of the, if not the key reason
that that run came together.
It coincided exactly when he got healthy
and was consistently on the court as a two-way player.
And I think it's a bet that if they do,
if there is a star that they think is a better number one guy
than Lomello that becomes available,
they now have Dallas's pick, Miami's 27 pick,
lottery protected or unprotected in 28,
all the pick swaps we just talked about,
an unprotected Minnesota pick.
I think there's a Kings pick swap in there somewhere even.
Like those are pretty valuable that they can
it in on that. And like, we'll, we'll see.
A other side thing before I talk Minnesota again, I don't know what the Grizzlies are
going to do with John Moran. Like I'm looking around and like, I don't know what the team is
for John Morant now that Minnesota and Miami have made these moves for big salary players
and lost a lot of their trade. Just, just not that John Morant is going to require a bounty
of assets. They might have to attach assets to Grizzlies to get off of him. But just like mechanically,
both of those teams have used a lot of their bullets.
And they were coming for a job, just so you know exactly.
The wolves were not coming for them.
They considered it a little bit, but it was not going to happen.
And by the way, I think the Raptors were legitimately interested in LaMelle the Ball.
I don't think that was a smokescreen.
I think there was real substantive discussion.
I don't know how far it got, but obviously they didn't get him.
I'm not sure that they're going to be a, I don't know.
To be clear, I don't know.
My assumption is for most teams, it's going to be a stayway.
So I don't know what this means.
I don't really know what this means for him.
But John, before we let you go, the one thing I wanted to take your temperature on,
you know, I mentioned yesterday that when I was at the draft combine in Chicago last month,
maybe the hottest topic just sort of burbling around was, hey, have you heard that aunt is like kind of unhappy in Minnesota?
And like they just got eliminated and this and that.
And I checked in on it and I was told you can stand down on that.
That's not like that real of a thing.
but it was going around and then Tim McMahon kind of resurfaced it earlier this week.
And then this Randall slash Reed slash Lamello stuff happens.
What did you heard about all of that and the level of concern internally?
Yeah.
I mean, internally, and I talk, I mean, I know people in Ants Camp fairly well.
And I don't think it was ever a real concern for them right now.
Yes, Anthony Edwards was disappointed and frustrated with how the season ends.
that they took a step back.
I mean, he was injured, Dante was injured,
Iowa was injured.
There was plenty of reasons for it,
but it was certainly not anything like,
hey, you know,
I'm starting to think about my future here.
It wasn't that.
He likes being in Minnesota.
He likes being in a place that he can go around
and not be swarmed and really bothered.
He likes living here.
He loves his teammates.
He has a great relationship with the coaches staff
in front office.
So, like, they weren't immediately concerned,
But there's certainly a recognition that when you have a star of Anthony Edwards caliber,
your organization is always on the clock.
There is no taking for granted.
There is no waiting.
It is you have to constantly be doing things to build around him so that you give him all of the belief
that this, that where he is at can be competitive over the long haul.
And Tim Connolly's been super aggressive in doing that.
But there was a sense from the entire organization after that spurs.
series that some things had to change and that they had to get more kind of, I guess,
suited or situated for Anthony Edwards than what they were. And I think a trade like this
acknowledges that is that there's a recognition that we've got to make things easier on it.
We've got to bring things that will help unlock even another level for him and show him
that we're going to continue winning at a high level like we have and try to do even more.
So it was certainly a motivation, watching Katwin the title was certainly a motivation.
But it was not like Ant was holding their feet to the fire.
And look, that triple big lineup was off and on, not always, but there were weeks, months
where it was just a little unwieldy where like this combination would be a little clunky and
this combination would work.
And then I had always said on my podcast, I like when they would put Jaden at the fore.
And it was just not a look they could functionally get to when you're paying these three big guys.
like $100 million combined per year, whatever it is.
And I'm excited to see them play like a faster,
squeaker, more dynamic style.
And we'll see what happens.
But before we let you go,
is there any Minnesota angle that we haven't covered?
Is there an offseason?
Is there like a free agent from their team
that you think is likely, unlikely to be back?
Is there something we haven't hit
that you think we should hit in the new look wolves?
Well, just in terms of like the context of this deal and what they gave off,
I think that they view that they had to part with Nasreed who they love and a first round unprotected picket 2033.
The swaps, two of the swaps are pretty protected.
And so they're not really that concerned about those.
But it's all in the context of they were also in on Jalen Brown.
Like they were having real conversations with the Celtics about Jalen Brown.
But it was really made clear to them, understandably so that it was going to take a lot more than this.
package that they gave up for Jalen Brown.
It was going to take Rudy, Nause, a young player like TSJ,
their Tarynx Chan, Jr. or Yuan Berenjay, and all of the pick stuff that they sent.
And that was going to be a lot and maybe a bridge too far for a player that probably
doesn't fit quite as well as Lamello Ball did.
And so they were beating the bushes for a lot of other options in addition to this
lamello ball one, but this is the one that they preferred.
They will look for a power forward.
They will look for more shooting to kind of fill everything out here.
So they are not done yet.
But yeah, they were heavy in on Jalen Brown and really having real conversations about that
until the Lomelo thing really became crystal clear that this was going to be able to happen.
Can I just say a name we're going to be hearing a lot?
Mo, go ahead.
Just real quick, I do appreciate Minnesota taking a swing and taking the risk and not, you know,
But like we've seen so many teams over the years kind of stand pat and say, hey, just a couple
things didn't work out.
It would have been easy to use the Dante DiVincenzo injury and I.O. being hurt,
aunt being injured.
We were right there against San Antonio.
Like, I do appreciate that, like, Connolly did take a look and saying, this has to change.
And I think just being willing to take the cut and that says whatever, wherever you land on the trade,
risk or is this crazy or whatnot, they took a chance.
And it's just saying, because we knew the way they were set up going to work here.
Like, I think we just kind of that understanding.
I think willing to take the risk right here is something that I at least appreciate in the sense from Minnesota saying, like,
hey, we're going to take a big swing and let's see if it works.
And on that mode, like, they're paying the luxury tax again.
It was looking like a possibility.
And you were hearing whispers that they were not going to pay the tax this season.
They dumped Julius Randall.
And it was like, wow, are you really not going to pay the tax when Anthony Edwards is about,
to enter his prime. Mark Lorry and Alex Rodriguez got on board and just said, yeah, we are going
to, we like Lamello. We think he can be a difference maker. And so we're going to do everything we can
financially to make this happen. And that's a big move that was not a given, I think, when this
offseason started. Yeah, they're swinging. They're swinging like Tom Brunanski and Ken Herbeck in
1987 on my freaking RBI baseball in Nintendo, regular Nintendo. And yes, they were my team. They're just
that power up and down.
That's what I'm talking about.
Up and down the lineup.
If I will,
even the swing stuff is like,
I do think it's important for Morant and also for Lamello.
Like his contract is not a $65 million five year albatross.
It's three years.
It's not that long.
Like this year is a given.
He's going to be on the wolves.
After that, it's two years, 41, 43, 46.
Like 25% of the cap.
It's not like a crazy unmovable.
I'm in jail.
Now, the next one is.
if you maxed him out, would be, but they're not there yet.
Like, I don't think it's that, it's not like crippling like that.
John Krasinski, where else can we find you at The Athletic?
You have the John Krasinski shows, which is your podcast, all things in Minnesota.
What else we want to promote here?
Yeah, the athletic.
We'll have a big story coming early next week.
Keep an eye out for it.
Did a little bit of traveling for it and really excited to see.
It'll be at the athletic.
Did you get interviewed by Walk Till Lippton, Rosen, and Katz for the aspiration?
Is that why you travel?
I wish that was it.
I wish that was it.
But he avoided the interview that way.
That was how he got out of town when they said they want to interview him.
I did do a big interview that I've been chasing for a long time.
So I'm looking forward to that.
Oh, great.
That's exciting.
Yeah, the John Krasinski show on Talk North weekly.
We recorded something today.
And that'll be out later this afternoon as well, all things, La Mello Ball as well.
All right, John Krasinski, thank you, sir.
We'll say goodbye to you.
And Mo and I are going to continue now with some of the Flotsam and Jetsam that have gone on around these two big trades.
But John, you're the man.
We'll see you soon, bud.
Thanks, guys.
Okay, Mo, let's talk about a couple of other transactions that have happened in this last couple of days.
Let's start with Golden State just for Schitts and giggles.
Al Horford is coming back on a two-year $14 million contract.
Al Horford last seen burying the clippers under a hail of three-pointers in the playing tournament.
That's not so interesting on its own.
What's interesting to me is the Warriors now after selecting Yaxo Landaborg in the first round,
of the draft are up to like about
$190 million in payroll with
with Draymond Green's player option is just like a
placeholder for his salary.
And they have not brought back Gary Payton
the second and more notably Christophezz
Porzengis.
That figure puts them more or less
$1920 million underneath the first apron
and only like 10 to 12 to 13 under the tax.
They're going to go over the tax.
The apron is interesting because
if you use the full mid-level
exception. The big one. You cannot go over the first apron. And so you're just getting into a math
problem of Porzingis, full mid-level, Draymond's player option. Is Draymond willing to opt out and take
less to facilitate some combination of things? And then, oh yeah, LeBron James is still floating in
the ether as an option potentially for the Warriors among other teams. And I think the market for him
is pretty wide from what I've heard. I think there were some negotiations before the draft
with Porzingis as people from what I've heard.
Obviously, they didn't result in a deal.
I just sort of, I think the Warriors are, they're the Warriors.
It's Steph Curry.
It's always going to be interesting.
I just, you know, this season, Jamie Butler is going to miss a lot of it.
Moses Moody's going to miss a lot of it, if not all of it.
I do think the Porzingis question is interesting.
And if they bring him back what the cost is, and then the Draymond option thing,
maybe they get LeBron.
That would be fun.
I don't know mechanically how.
all these things are going to happen.
But it just feels like, you know, the Warriors are going to do what we thought they were
due, which is just sort of try to make the best of the end of Steph's career and not really
be a contender, but maybe it be kind of fun.
I don't know.
Any Warriors thoughts?
Yeah, it's kind of interesting.
Like, I thought this would have been the summer to try to maybe get a little bit younger.
I mean, obviously the Yaxel helps with them in that regard with their draft pick.
But I think, you know, look, Porzingis, not.
not them coming, not being able to come to a deal with
Prisings, I think not yet. Not yet. Not yet. Not yet. But if
they don't, I mean, I think just having Horford in the,
in the fold at least kind of gives them a little bit of just backup, at least we have that.
It is, I mean, as great as Horford was in that Clipper game,
it's, you know, he only played like, what, 35 games this season. Like,
it's been a, a tough year for him in terms of just staying on the court.
And, you know, going into his 20th season, like it's kind of surprising there.
but committing the next two years financially, I thought was kind of interesting.
It's not a big dollar amount or anything, but sort of where they're at and the fact that
they're probably going to go over the apron and have to figure out everything, all of that
matters and plays into it.
And then just sort of adjusting minutes of where you're going to go and they have so
many moving parts, Zach, it's kind of just, I don't really know where they're going to
be at yet.
Like it's hard to have that opinion for me where it's like, might be in on LeBron, might not
at LeBron. We don't know the Dremont Green situation. It almost feels a little bit like
we're in the movies and everybody's kind of killed the joke, but it's like one last
job and let's get the, you know, let's get this guy. It's the Ocean's Eleven's and let's grab
this guy and that guy and this guy. If you were a bank robber, like a part of a crew,
what do you think your job would be? Like you could be the heavy. You could be the safecracker.
You could be like the explosive guy. You could be the negotiator. You could be the getaway driver.
there's probably other roles like, you know, logistical planning.
Like I memorized the blueprint of the bank.
Like, what's your skill set in a bank crew?
Well, I think the, there's an obvious answer out there that I don't want to give out.
But I think I would be the getaway driver.
What do you, wait, what do you, there's an obvious.
Are you a bank problem?
I'd be the, I'd be the explosives guy.
Wow.
That went right there.
Well, I mean, that was that was sitting there.
But I like to think of myself.
myself more as a getaway driver.
I'm not a good enough driver to be a getaway driver.
I'm a very good, like, normal driver.
Like I'm like Costanza.
Okay, you don't know what's going.
You don't even see what's going on here.
But like, is a normal driver, fine.
But as a getaway driver, no.
I'm in L.A.
I can be a good getaway driver.
I can navigate the streets every day.
You know what I watched on YouTube?
I don't even care.
It's fucking June.
I don't care.
I watched to, for some reason,
oh, because since Sean Fennacy's new newsletter
are projections about movies.
He mentioned, I'm blanking on his name, the director,
I don't know how to pronounce it correctly anyway,
the director of drive among other strange and interesting movies.
And I was like, you know what I want to go do?
I want to go watch the first 15 minutes of drive on YouTube.
Because it's like one of the best opening scenes of all times,
speaking of L.A. getaway drivers and features Ralph Lawler calling a Clippers game,
which is one of the things that makes it.
I would be the safecracker.
I think, you know, with people staring at me and a clock ticking,
and I've got to get this done before the alarm goes off.
I can execute that.
I have steady hands.
I have calm hands.
I'm good with numbers.
I can memorize things.
Like,
I think that's my job.
But if you choke at that job,
I mean,
the whole thing falls apart.
It's over.
It's over.
It's the most important job.
It's over.
What the hell we're talking about?
Oh,
one last job for the words.
Basically what I'm saying is,
as of now,
if they pay Porzingis,
what his market is,
which is something,
then they're not going to have access to the first,
the big mid-level.
because they'll go over the first apron and you can't do that.
And so you just have a math problem.
As for LeBron, I legit don't know what's going to happen with LeBron.
Like legitimately don't know.
You have all of the like all of the known options are financially interesting or tricky.
The words we just went through, the calves are way over the luxury tax and have tons of offensive creators already and a power forward and Evan Mobley who plays his position to some degree.
The Lakers are the Lakers, right?
They just signed Austin Reeves.
To a Max Steel, I talked about that yesterday.
They have to figure out how to use what.
I mean, they don't really have cap space if they have LeBron's bird rights.
And so how do you do that juggling that?
Someone, I don't know.
I don't think this has necessarily been decided yet.
But someone who would know told me yesterday the Clippers are telling, are behaving, I guess,
as if they are going to have cap space in the off season.
They can't open much.
They can open like 20 million,
but they have to like cut some options and renounce some guys.
And that got me thinking like LeBron Clippers,
but I still,
I've always said,
I don't think LeBron ever wants to play for the Clippers,
even though it's in Los Angeles.
I just don't,
I still don't see that as an option.
So I don't,
I don't know.
The simplest answer is,
goes back to L.A.
I don't know what that means for their cap space and his bird rights
and how the order of events kind of works.
But I don't know, man.
I will say they had something with Luca Reeves and LeBron is the third banana.
That was a real thing.
I don't know where he could go and really kind of find that again in that sense.
I mean, listen to those places he can go, they'll automatically be, it's LeBron.
We're going to say contender and whatnot.
But like the situation he had set up in L.A.
where him being kind of the third banana when they sort of fell into that.
And, you know, it was kind of perfect for him.
Let him rest, you know, work off.
And then when he needs to turn it up, he can turn it up.
And we've seen him be able to do it.
But he doesn't have to do it all game.
He's got Luca and Reeves to do all that.
And then he can kind of go off of that.
You know, I think they run into trouble when he has to be the first or second guy, you know, when they had injuries and things like that.
Then it becomes a bit challenging because I think he just tires out and at this point where he's at in his career.
I kind of just feel like the best place for him is really L.A.
Obviously, they have to figure out the money and how to make every.
work in that regards.
And the Lakers still have also a lot of things they got to do.
They got to add more shooting.
They got to find a bona fide rim runner.
I know that most likely Aiton's going to pick up his options.
Smart's most likely going to pick up his option.
They got to decide on Nick Smith with the team option what they're going to do.
And I think they have to figure out where they're at.
But I don't feel like there's a place I look at with LeBron going like, oh, he goes to Golden State.
I don't feel like they're going to be fun.
It's going to be great to watch.
It's going to be exciting.
going to tune in, I don't feel like they're at the level where I can say, okay, they're going to
make a run of the title or anything like that. Like, I just think it's a little bit hard for me to
see it. And I just think the Lakers kind of just present the best situation for them.
I think there are other teams outside this sort of select group that also would kick the tires
or have kicked the tires and there's sign and trade possibilities and all that.
We'll see. We'll see. The other, the only other thing of note that we haven't gotten to as of
now is I just thought to snuck under the radar that the Piston salary dumped Isaiah Stewart
to Memphis. I really like what Memphis is doing in terms of just coward, Edy, Camboozer.
It's a really nice place to start. And then the other guys they drafted and the picks they have,
it's a nice starting spot. I love Camboozer. I think he's going to be awesome right away.
He might be, I mean, I think he'll be the best player on their team next year, even though
Zach Edy was Godzilla for 11 games that he played last year.
I just think it's interesting because Detroit, you know, when I went through a couple weeks ago,
my just most interesting offseason teams, and it was teams that weren't involved in Yannis
and that for the most part were not in the top five or ten of the draft, just teams that are
interesting in different ways.
I had Detroit on my list because, and I just said, I think they're just going to do something.
I think they got to the playoffs.
What they lacked was laid bare for them.
The fact that the East is getable for them.
Now that the Knicks obviously torched everybody, but whatever.
They've played the Knicks pretty well in the playoffs and the regular season.
I just think they're going to be aggressive.
That's just a gut.
That's just my gut feel.
And so they dumped this Isaiah Stewart's salary.
And they can now open up a decent amount of cap room,
depending on what they do with Duncan Robinson's partially guaranteed deal.
And Paul Reed's partially guaranteed deal.
And Tobias Harris, who they have bird rights on.
And so they'd have to renounce him to open up space.
They have a lot of optionality now.
There's been these Kauai rumors that they're going to go big game,
hunting. I heard they at least checked on Kauai last year, but then I was told that that was
maybe not true, so I don't really know how true that was. This is the due diligence you have to do.
But obviously, he'd be a plug and play fit. He's eligible for an extension. The aspiration
thing is happening. I don't even know how movable, portable he is in any possible way.
I'm just sitting there. I don't know if it's Michael Porter Jr. I don't know if it's Tray Murphy
the third. I don't know if it's Jalen Brown. I doubt that it is financially.
I just think they're going to do something, and I'm excited to see what it is.
Yeah, it's interesting.
So, like, when they made this move with beef stew, it was more, okay, we're going to now be in the running to try to go get somebody.
I think, you know, they were before Reeves agreed to the deal with the Lakers, I think they were the biggest threat.
They take him away from the Lakers.
I think, you know, we're hearing a lot of the Norm Powell might be, you know.
That's a good one.
Yeah, that's, I forgot to mention him.
He'd be perfect there.
Yeah, like that's a guy, I think that they're kind of targeting.
and Miami obviously wants to keep him,
but I don't think they're going to be able to do it financially.
That's a double win if you're the Pistons.
You fill a need and you hurt one of your East rivals.
Yeah, it's kind of perfect.
It was reading Jake Fisher and Mark Stein this morning,
and they had some stuff on Kauai,
and it sounds like Kauai was not willing to sign an extension
if he gets traded to Detroit.
I don't know.
By the way, if I'm Detroit, depending on what the price is,
I might be cool with that.
Now, if the price is just overwhelming in terms of
kicks and stuff, then I'm not cool with it.
But that's, you know, call the, call the bluff and see what happens.
But I think, you know, there's a level of like, they have to make a move.
You know, it was, I was a bit frustrated at the trade deadline looking at the team going,
you got to make a big move.
And Hurtor being their move wasn't obviously it.
And I think we all kind of knew that in the moment.
But I think, you know, this can't be a offseason, kind of like the wolves where I was talking
about, they took a swing.
They have to make a run at somebody.
Maybe they not get it.
Maybe it's the wrong guy.
Maybe things don't work.
But they got to make a run of somebody.
And I think they understand that that's why they made the beef stew trade.
Right.
And now it's figuring out, you know, it's opening up space for them to go after somebody, whether it's pal, whether it's in trade discussions or something.
I think that's really what I'm looking for.
They are one of the most interesting teams in free agency because we just saw what they did.
And they need somebody to bear with Cade Cunningham to go to work here and try to continue the run.
that they want on. They can't just be a one-year wonder at this point.
What is Egypt's prognosis in the World Cup right now? What's their next game? What do they need
to do? How are you feeling about life? I'm feeling pretty good. So, you know, I'm living in.
Egypt's the closest country to me. I know. I know you're rooting for Egypt. I'm dying hard for
especially Mosala, obviously being a Mo. So it was going, it was going nuts after they
beat New Zealand. And I enjoyed all the videos afterwards.
Now the way it looks is we're going to move on.
We're going to play Cape Verde in the knockout round.
And if we win in that one and Team USA, which the way it looks now is going to play Bosnia,
we could be facing a Egypt team USA one.
And that might be a problem for me in terms of torn household and who do I root for?
And my wife already told me if that's a scenario, you have to root for the USA.
but you know you know you know who you might be facing is bosnia herzegovina don't sleep on those
guys no don't i won't at all i saw them the game the game my wife and i went to was switzerland
bosnia now switzerland put it on them but bosnia had a pretty good showing but more importantly
i'm impressed with the the the crowd from bosnia because they outnumbered everybody in the switz
the swiss crowd you're going nuts you goes i i know i'm married to one they're everywhere the the post-war
diaspora where they have settled they have settled in mass and they are Toronto was like Croatia
for the game that I went to.
And they have a great, great time at these games.
I had a very good time.
I just, I can't take the tension.
And it's, it's agonizing.
It's just agonizing.
And well, when Egypt went down one nothing to New Zealand, I was like dying.
I was watching that game.
And we were all cheering for Egypt because they were so clearly the better team at outplaying New Zealand.
But, yeah, Croatia has a game left against Ghana.
That's in two days in Philadelphia.
Everything is on the board for them.
They could win the group.
It's very unlikely England would have to lose to Panama.
I don't see that happening.
Well, England got given the biggest gift by getting away with a massive penalty.
Like, that should have been a penalty.
That was insane.
I didn't see it.
that was against the tie, the zero-zero tie.
And Croatia could come second.
Croatia could come third and move on.
Croatia can come third and not move on.
The only thing they can't come is fourth.
And I just want, just, I just want them to move on.
They do not have the kind of team that they had in the last two World Cups when they came second and third.
That run is not in them.
I'm aware of that.
I'm not expecting it.
Just get me to the knockout rounds.
And you just, just get me the penalty kicks in a knockout.
round game because they've had a preposterous record
in penalty in PK games in the last two
World Cups. You know, just just get lucky.
Who knows, I don't
expect them to go far, but just that's all
I want. By the way,
my pet peeves, talking about England
and all the, I,
this is, this is for all
international sports tournaments.
I get why they have to do it.
I'm going to lead with that.
I get why it happens. I understand.
I hate that
the host nations, including
the U.S. are given tier one status when they divide these groups.
Canada's group is like put us in that group.
We're rolling.
Yeah, it's a different.
How is that a group?
They were gifted.
I said it in the Olympics too.
Only 12 countries make the Olympics in basketball.
It's incredibly hard to make.
And the host country automatically gets in.
I get why.
But when freaking London hosted the Olympics, it was like, oh, great Britain's in and like,
Serbia is not or whatever is it's like, what are we doing?
Like, just, it's not fair.
And I would be, I would be more happy about it if Croatia ended up in Canada's group instead of an England's group.
But alas, it is what it is.
Host nations, although it has, I have to say, the Mexico atmosphere has been awesome.
I wish I was in Mexico for all of this.
Everything I've seen, I just wish I, that's where I've had the most fomo.
That and watching the celebrations with Egypt when they got their first win in the World Cup.
All right.
Mo DeKiel, the second most relevant sports, Mo.
I may be forgetting a Mo.
There's a few others, I'm sure.
This week.
Thank you for your time.
You can always find them on Twitch on Offsides,
on the double-dribble podcast with Jared Dubin,
and Bleacher Report too sometimes, right?
And here, and here.
Moe DeKille, thank you, sir.
Thank you for having me.
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All right, it's been a while.
The NBA playoffs took precedence.
Sean Fennessee's New York Knicks won the 2026 NBA title, which is good for you, Sean,
because the New York Mets are not going to win anything this year.
And it's time to reconvene for a Mets corner.
Before I start, how are you?
It's been a while.
How are you doing?
I'm wonderful.
I've rarely gotten such amazing feedback than the one I got after appearing on your show
after the next one.
And I just want to say at the outset of this conversation,
the Mets cannot hurt me.
There is a force field, an impenetrability.
protecting me because of this next title.
And even I just spoke to our friend Brian Coppillman yesterday.
And we were like, we're 13 days in.
I still feel great.
Like nothing is changing.
So that, I just need to foreground our conversation with that and say,
I'm doing very, very well.
Now, I am going to make some space for what I think is the appropriate reaction to what
is going on here.
How are you doing, Zach?
I'm good.
There's a difference between pain.
an embarrassment. And if you'll recall, the last time we had an angry Mets corner, I said,
the only thing I want is to not be embarrassed living amongst Yankee fans for the most part.
And so here's how this week is gone. I was supposed to throw out the first pitch at City
Field on the 22nd, which was Monday. Of course, it got rained out because why would anything
work out with the Mets? So we're trying to reschedule. And a lot of my friends were going to go,
including Yankee fans' friends, and they were going to buy tickets last minute. And one of them
had not bought tickets until the day of.
And he just gently poked me and said, hey, you know, I don't mean to be me, but it's the Mets.
There's going to be good seats available.
This is what I'm talking about.
I don't need it.
I don't need that in my life.
And that was three days ago.
And last night, Sean, June 24th, 2026 is going to be a day that I remember forever.
And we'll go down in Mets history as an all-time low point.
I get done with a big podcast on all this stuff happened in the NBA.
I have dinner at the house to myself for a few.
nights. You know what? Oh, that's right. They're playing the second game of double header.
Let me flip it on. Oh, they're at 3-1. You know what? I can send some texts about
Lamella Ball, make some calls. They're winning. Alvi has another home run. You know,
look, this season is not going great, but it'll be on in the background. And I sit down.
Simeon makes an error. Little do I know it will be one of six infield errors. The newly revamped
run prevention oriented Mets make
in a game, the most in a major league game, I think,
seven years, six.
We, we, I can't.
And then the exact moment that the season ended,
the exact Ralph Wiggum heartbreaking moment
that the season ended,
Pete Crow Armstrong,
former Mets prospect,
bunts a line drive single,
over Bo Bouchet,
charging from third base.
Bobauchette leaps with all his might, reaching up in the air like you would normally see somebody do an infielder do on the edge of the outfield grass, except he's in the middle of the infield grass, just an absolute comical visual.
The ball rolls all the way to the outfield. The Cubs now lead four to three. That was the end of the season. There were four more errors after that. There were Pete Alonzo chance in the crowd after that. And the night ended with the Met.
trading last year's all-star starting pitcher, David Peterson to the Cubs for a prospect,
because he joins a list of pitchers who have flatlined mainstays, suppose mainstays,
David Peterson gone.
Kodi Senga, I would like to just poochie him out of my life, send him back to
wherever he's from, is now in the bullpen.
Manaya, three in whatever innings last night, fine.
Montes, remember Frankie Montes?
I sure do.
And Freddie Peralta just gave up 10 runs the last time we saw him.
The Mets are now 72 and 101 in their last 173 baseball games.
This team is bad.
It's embarrassing.
And I don't sense the appropriate amount of embarrassment from the powers that be.
And I will now stop talking.
Well, you've just done it all the work.
I mean, that was it.
You just, you summed up, I think,
all of the appropriate detail and frustration for what's gone on.
Let's like, let's try to put some of our context,
since we've been doing this together.
When things were coming apart last season
and the dramatic downfall was happening,
I started talking to you about how we know David Stern's wants his own team.
He wants a team in his vision.
And so in the off season,
he deconstructed parts of the team.
There was one Mets Corner we did where it was a very emotional day
when Pete Alonzo and Edwin Diaz signed with different ball clubs.
And even if you felt like those were the right moves,
that was painful as a fan because we had a lot of strong emotional ties to those two players.
I could see the case for it from a baseball perspective,
why it was not appropriate to bring either of those guys back.
But I still felt bad about it.
I think you felt bad about it too.
We love Pete especially.
The moves that they made in the off season,
I bright-sided them.
I looked at them and I said, man,
if this team stays healthy,
this is going to be a really interesting lineup.
I did not spend enough time thinking about how
the biggest problem that we had in 2025
was the pitching staff.
And the only thing that was materially changed
about the pitching staff, the starting staff,
was we added Freddie Peralta.
In a move that I liked,
and like a lot of other moves,
the addition of Jorge Polanco,
the trade for Luis Robert Jr.,
the development of Carson Benj and the insistence
that he would be a part of the ball club.
All of those choices,
the late off-season signing,
panic signing seemingly of Boba Chet
after missing out on Kyle Tucker.
I found a way to bright side
all of those scenarios.
I wanted to believe.
I predicted 92 wins this season on a podcast.
That's something that happened.
I'm not paid professionally to make these decisions,
but the people who are paid professionally to make them
did a very, very bad job,
a very bad job.
And we are now watching
the fruits of their labor, which is not only
is this a very bad team, as you identified,
it's neither a fun team nor likable team.
It's a bunch of guys
who are either prospects
that we have no,
that we want to have a strong relationship to,
but have not panned out,
megastars who came here from
other places,
or guns for hire,
most of whom are on the back half
of their careers.
I don't really like watching the team.
I'm still watching.
I watched Game of,
one yesterday. You watched game two and you texted me
after that Buns single flew over Bobes.
I said, I texted you and I said, please
tell me you saw that. And I wonder
what I didn't elaborate and I wonder
what your brain thought had
happened. It couldn't be anything.
It could, I don't know what
you thought, but if you certainly, Pete Crow
transformed into an eagle
and sword over city field like
a majestic creature, I might have believed
you. That's how bad things are going.
And I haven't watched baseball all that
much for the last 10 years as we know. This, the last
too, yes. That bun happened.
And I'm like, boy,
I don't think I've ever seen anything quite like that.
But that's just me. And then Ron Darling,
a minute later said, I don't think I've ever seen that happen before.
I'm like, okay, this is where we are with the Mets.
I don't think I've ever seen that happen before.
And it's an unfortunate thing happening to us.
I turned the game on after you made that note to me.
And boy, that was an interesting experience listening to Ron Darling and Gary Cohen
talk about the team for the last three innings of that game.
because that was as direct and negative a communication by a broadcast team
about what was happening to a team as I've heard in a long time.
They more or less seem to be speaking to David Stearns
about the team's decision to retain Carlos Mendoza
and the fact that the team is just undisciplined,
checked out, and bad.
And they were frank, man.
And you don't hear that from broadcast teams a lot
because broadcast teams have a lot of interaction with the team
and the people who work with the team.
And you need to have a little bit of connectivity,
but the phrase rock bottom and despair were uttered
during the broadcast yesterday.
And there have been a lot of bad times in Metz history, right?
Worst team money can buy.
The early 90s teams were extremely unlikable.
Yesterday or two days ago,
I cited to you the 07-08-09 period,
you know, the collapse in 07
and then the failure to make the playoffs in 08
and then the misery of 2009 and 10,
these kind of like forgettable, washed away eras
that we thought in 06 were going to be the beginning
of something special and really were not.
But boy, this just,
even though it's not the worst record
that a Mets team has ever had,
it seems like the least valuable
that the team has been to the fan base.
We don't, we really don't like this.
We're really mad.
And I think our anger is justified.
And if I did not have the next title,
I wonder if I'd be able to not,
be red-faced and shouting at you during this conversation.
And yet, like I say, there is a force field around me and I cannot be penetrated.
I would like to see anger, actually.
And it's one of the things that I've found annoying about David Stern's regular
homestand media appearances is that he's said, yeah, of course, we want to play better.
You know, we're trying to play better.
I think there's a good team in here that'll recover and make a season out of it.
And it's like, dude, can you?
Can you just own some embarrassment and anger?
Because it rings so hollow now.
This is not a mid-market team with modest expectations.
This is the second highest payroll in baseball.
And you are 34 and 46 with a run differential that finally screams like,
oh, no, there is no hope.
It's now minus 46.
A week ago, they were 34 and 41 and like minus 8.
And sniffing around the edges of the wildcar race,
this has put us back into our proper place.
And like I said, 72 and 101, 30 games under 500, basically,
in a little bit more than a season since they had the best record in baseball last year.
That's like you just flat out suck.
The team sucks.
And I don't want to hear any more platitudes about how we're playing better and like this
and run prevention and that.
I want actual like anger and embarrassed.
I'm not calling for anyone to be fired or anything like that.
I just like, let's be upfront about what has happened.
happened here, which is that this is a complete disaster of a team. And the thing that I want to
talk about with you is I mentioned all the pitchers that have like sort of regressed or fallen
out. Like, Peralt is a free agent. We don't know what's going to happen with him. They might trade him.
Who knows? I mentioned all these other guys. Like, McLean's been fine. All things considered
fine. Not great. A little too inconsistent. But like, fine. Like I'm, I'm okay with what McClain
yesterday was disappointing. I think he's still promising, but yesterday was the kind of thing where it
actually feels like this is a team that is not well managed because he was put in a position
to gack a three nothing lead but giving up two consecutive three run home runs.
Fine. He's been just, you can give him like a B minus C plus if you want based on
expectations. Yeah, he's a rookie. How is this team cobbling a starting rotation next season?
Like that's the question that I'm now focused on because I mentioned all the veterans who are
all trending the wrong way slash not in the starting rotation slash not even on the team anymore.
who are the reinforcements that are coming in.
Tong is struggling in AAA, struggling to add another pitch to his repertoire.
And then I'm looking down at the next group of like the Mets top 20 prospects.
Jack Weninger is 24.
And I look at his minor league stats.
They're like fine.
They're okay.
They're not great.
He's struggled this year.
Yeah.
And then down the line, it's like relief pitchers, guys who are 26 years old, guys like Will Watson.
I don't know who Will Watson is, but he has shit stats in double A.
Like, so let's just say this season is gone, right?
And then there's maybe a labor dispute and whatever.
I think the two big questions that we need to figure out is, how do you handle a lost season if you're the Mets?
Because everyone's like, well, are they going to sell or are they going to buy?
The worst thing they can do is buy in a way that tries to save this season for some short-term gain.
But I don't know how you even sell when you are building around Francisco Lendor and Juan Soto for next season.
And if you are building around them for next season,
it's like you're starting a pitching staff almost from scratch.
They have absolutely no reliable starting pitching
and almost nothing coming out of the miners.
Like I don't know what like what is the best case scenario for next year's team at this point?
It's a really good question.
I don't have a strong answer for you.
I think that they have tried to simultaneously go down all three tracks,
which is that they have acquired megastars and had a $350 million payroll.
They have tried to build from within and play young prospects like cars.
Carson Benj and now AJ Ewing.
And they have also tried to find that middle ground
of sort of like your discoveries
or your underrated hidden gems approach
that David Stearns did fairly well
while in Milwaukee.
And all three of them have kind of come up snake eyes
with the exception of the acquisition of Juan Soto,
who is injured right now,
but it seems like maybe is not serious.
And it is having a wonderful season.
This is his second consecutive season.
I would love to see Juan Soto and Francisco
and Dorr play a baseball game together.
It would be nice.
The only thing that I'm looking forward to now is like, can we have both of them in the lineup?
That's the other thing I just want to say is, um, I don't think this team is a 90-win team right now.
But if Clay Holmes and Francisco Lindor did not get injured.
I forgot about Clay Holmes.
I should have mentioned him.
And that guy homes.
Great story.
A great story.
And he was pitching like an ace.
He was pitching like a Cy Young contender before he got hurt.
And he got hurt on a fluky line drive comebacker and broke a bone.
And like that shit happens in baseball.
And each time an injury happened when Robert got hurt, when Polanco got hurt, when Lindor got hurt, when Lindor got hurt.
when Holmes got hurt.
All it did was reveal the stunning lack of depth
and the construction of the team.
Because you're also thinking about other guys
who have been injured this year.
Remember Mike Talkman,
who was potentially going to be a right fielder
with this team and who got injured
right before the season started?
We're consistently running out.
Eric Wagamon, Zach Short,
we're consistently starting backup catchers
because we don't have enough depth
in our DH position.
There's been so much M.J. Melendez in my life.
I can't believe how much of this.
guys in my life. I mean, look, Mark Vientos
is on track for like 400
of bats. He's not a Major League Baseball player. He's just
not. I thought you're going to say he's on track for 400
errors. That as well.
I mean, we're having a heartbreaking thing. I love
Brett Brady and I didn't want to give up on Brett Beatty. He's been
terrible this year. Terrible, Zach.
And so this feeling that we have as fans
right now, and this leads to what happens in 27
and 28 is like, I
kind of want them to cut bait with all
of the tracks that are not Benj,
Ewing, Soto, Lindor.
Like, I kind of don't have any patience for
any of those guys.
And the starting
rotation is
this $100 million
agglomeration
of Manaya,
Senga,
Montas,
Peralta,
a bunch of guys
who were just not
very effective.
We've cast off
one of them
and David Peterson.
And the fact that
we got a top 15
prospect from the
Cubs is kind of
fascinating in that trade.
But nevertheless,
if you want to
bright side it again,
you can say,
okay, well,
we have Nolan McLean,
Christian Scott
coming off the injured list.
They just called up
Zach Thornton.
He wasn't great.
in his first appearance as a major leaguer,
but maybe he'll show us something over the next few months.
Maybe you say,
Jonathan Santucci looks good in AA.
Maybe Jack Weninger turns it around
in the second half of the AAA season.
And then, okay, well, there's like five guys
under the age of 27 who could make up for a rotation.
And don't forget, a lot of money coming off the books
in the next two seasons.
So if you want to go out and sign Tark Scoobel
or somebody like that and give him $500 million or $800 million,
Steve Cohen is your owner and you could do it.
The problem is,
David Stearns is like
one for 32 in transactions
like his hit rate
has just been terrible
and some of it is miscalculation
and a misunderstanding of either the market
or the fan base or player health
or any number of things.
Some of it is bad luck, right?
Some guys just get injured and it's bad luck.
It's bad luck that this is the year
that after playing 150 games for 10 straight years
Francisco Indoor gets hurt
and misses 30 games in the middle of a downward spiral.
but Stearns is in the sights of fans
because he's made a lot of bad choices
and a lot of the bad choices he made
hurt fans' feelings.
When you didn't bring back Pete Alonzo
whose name was being chanted yesterday during the game,
people were upset.
They were real upset.
And he was very strident about that.
He showed a lack of contrition
in those press conferences,
you know, whether or not it would actually matter
if David Stearns got up in front of us all
and said, this one's on me.
I made a lot of mistakes,
but I'm committed.
to making this team a World Series champion
and I'm totally re-evaluating
how I did my job in the last three years
and I'm going to change some things.
Like, that's what people want to hear.
They want to hear, I fucked up
and I know I hurt,
I know I ruined the summer for you guys.
And here's how I'm going to change
and I'm going to fix it.
I promise, I'm going to try to get better.
He's not going to do that.
And even if he did do it,
what would it really accomplish?
It would give us a mild gratification
for five minutes before we started complaining again.
So I have some empathy.
As far as rebuilding the team,
you just got to hope that all of these things
that we keep hearing about how he's
rebuilding the farm system are real.
And what we're seeing from Ewing and Benj, which is good.
Like, they are, that is the bright side so far for real this season.
Those, they look like major leaguers.
And defensively, I mean, Soto called them the psychopaths and all that.
Just super fun to watch defensively flying around.
And so if there's more of that to come, then we can be optimistic.
But yeah, man, this is, this is low.
This is the depths right now.
Christian Scott, I'm glad you brought him up.
He's been workman-like and effective and just,
a stop gap that has been more than a stop gap.
The guy I want to shout out is Brazabon.
Like that guy, I honestly might just give him MVP of the team.
He just comes in and does his job, pitches a ton of endings.
He's been super reliable.
I love that dude.
And I'm happy to have him.
But yeah, I mean, look, I just don't, I don't know enough about baseball to know how
you just fill out a rotation that's like almost a blank slate other than McLean
and maybe Holmes next year.
as Holmes was awesome.
You're right about that.
How often does it happen that like literally a year ago, one year ago,
David Peterson was an All-Star.
That's a thing that happened.
You made the All-Star team.
And Kodai Senka before Pete Alonzo threw a wild ball to first while he was covering
was pitching like an ace, like an actual number one, number one B starter.
He had a simple one-five ERA in the first half of the last year.
How is this more common than I just know because I'm an amateur baseball fan that people go in a year from that to completely unplayable to the point that you just can't be on the team anymore?
Like it just feels like such a stunning drop off from an actual All Star to you're gone to the Cubs and you're throwing after openers.
And Senga, now I don't know what his role is going to be.
He's going to the bullpen and that's going to be it.
I don't think he'll start another game for the Mets ever again.
he does have a very unusual contract where
if he does suffer a dramatic elbow injury,
he automatically has a 2028 option
that gets picked up for $15 million.
So he's on the books for next year.
Sweet. It's great.
That's a tricky situation.
The case for both of those guys
in terms of what you're describing is with Peterson,
his underlying peripherals are not as bad as the 6.09 IRA.
It doesn't mean he would have been good this year,
but it's a little bit of an exaggerated number.
Secondarily, he's a ground ball lefty.
You know what sucks?
the Mets infield defense.
Exactly. It's not good.
You know, they've been playing
second baseman at a position at third.
They've been playing a backup shortstop.
They've been playing an aging second basement at second base.
We shouldn't be out there every day.
This is what we talked about in the offseason.
You talked all about run prevention.
And then you built a team where everybody was playing a new position.
And by the way, everyone's injury prone.
And Polanco and Robert, they might as well,
I don't know where they are.
I don't think you'll ever see Robert again.
I have no idea where they are.
I don't think you'll ever see Robert again.
Polanco, maybe we'll come back.
in the second half of the season.
I saw video of him running in the outfit.
I'm like, great.
Awesome.
Like, is he trained?
Is he training for the steeple chase?
Like, why am I seeing video of this?
You know, so for Peterson,
I feel like in addition to maybe regressing a bit and over,
you know,
I think he overperformed against his peripherals last year
and now he's underperforming.
This happens.
There's a lot of variance in baseball
and it comes to that sort of thing.
With Senga,
I think it's perfectly fine to say he's clearly psychologically fragile.
I've done.
I'm done. I'm out. Ben Simmons, him, let him go become a professional fisherman or a dart player or whatever.
Well, he probably can't be a dark player. I think that's an apt comparison, Zach. I think he is kind of Ben Simmons asking that his skills are extraordinary, but he does not have the mental capacity to push through challenging circumstances.
And don't forget, his first season was fucking awesome. He was really, really good. Was that right before you came in or right when you came in to the team?
Yeah. Yeah. And it's been sad to watch him unravel because,
I almost feel like they were like abusing him,
letting him go out there and pitch two days ago.
Like he's clearly, he's just not,
his head is not on straight and the team is just desperate for starting pitching,
but they're going to just bury him in the bullpen.
And I don't think he'll be on the team 12 months from now.
But yeah, how do you rebuild?
I don't know, man.
They got to get lucky.
They got to hope something.
And you just want one of those weird baseball things that happen to them in the good way,
where a guy who wasn't supposed to be good suddenly becomes good.
I remember this happened with Daniel Murphy some years ago.
Daniel Murphy.
He was great on the broadcast, by the way,
when they throw him out there as a backup, he is really, really good.
But he was never a hotly touted prospect,
and he transformed into a vital piece in that 2014, 15, 16 team.
And so you just got to hope they, you know,
they discover a few of those guys.
But this is a low period.
This is a really, really low period for the franchise.
And it's bizarre that there you have a $380 million payroll.
I always liked Peterson.
That one hurt me a little bit yesterday.
I liked him for stupid reasons.
Like he was the starter at the game I went to with my dad and my daughter and my wife last year
when I was really starting to get back into like I'm going in person.
Like he pitched eight innings that game like which seems like a like a Taranosaurus Rex just
walked across the stadium.
That's how rare it is.
And they won five two over the Dodgers.
He struck out Otani like four times.
I should have known that there was some maybe some luck going on because I think he induced like
five double plays in that game.
But that was his game.
That was he was, he was, he was, he was that kind of pitcher purposefully.
He was the longest tenure met too.
He was with the team for a really long time.
And his Instagram account, this is how stupid I know about baseball.
Like his Instagram account, he's always pumping up his own teammates and like congratulating them on stuff.
I think I like this guy.
Seems like a sweet guy.
And now this is just, I mean, there's 80 games left and there is no hope.
Like there was hope at 34 and 41 and no one running away with the second and third wildcard spots in the NL.
the thing that got them to 34 and 41 after the 12 game losing streak was at least they stopped having long losing streaks.
They could never put together a long winning streak, but they would go like two out of three, lose two out of three, win two out of three.
Just a gradual like pick up a game against 500 every 10 days.
And you knew like if they're actually going to get back into this, they're going to need to win like seven out of eight at some point.
And they never showed anything like the ability to do that.
And then the other shoe dropped, which is, oh, actually, you're still bad enough to have a five-game losing streak.
And now it's just over.
And I'm excited to rediscover what it feels like to watch a bad, hopeless baseball team for three months and just sort of find things to be like this Alvarez home run streak is, is fun.
You know that I like Alvarez and wanted to play more.
I do too.
And I'm happy to report that my daughter is still incredibly into it
and doesn't seem to care that they're bad
and still really loves them and roots for them
and wants to watch them play.
And that makes it worthwhile for me.
And Lendora's back for her too.
So she'll get to enjoy him being back.
I think it's going to take him a few weeks to really get on the side of right
in terms of how he plays.
But the five game losing streak that you pointed out is important.
There was a weird hinge in that there
where there was a Thursday game where they won.
they survived.
They hung on 6-4 against the Phillies.
Heading into what was thought to be
a fairly important series in the NL.
Somebody lined out,
Schwarver, I think,
lined out super hard off Air Venture.
Yeah.
Scared me.
Which wasn't really his fall right there.
There had been an error in the inning or something,
but he survived the inning.
Nevertheless, they win 6-4.
They're going into a long weekend,
but there's no Friday game.
Instead, what there is, is a Saturday and Sunday national game.
Saturday game, I think, on Fox, Sunday game on E.
SPN.
And both of those games were calamitous.
And the broadcasts just went out of their way to just dunk on the Mets.
And, you know, rightfully so.
But I've endured 43 years of Loll Mets and it's very painful.
And it keeps happening in these national scenarios.
And those two losses began this streak of games where they gave up 10,
they gave up 50 runs in five games.
You know, like it was really an awful stretch there.
And it does feel unrecoverable.
and it doesn't feel like there's any 2024 magic in this team.
And yet I do still, I'm with you.
I think I'm going to keep watching because I like watching Soto hit.
I'm loving Ben Genuing.
I want Al V to have a bounce back year and to be a,
I think it would be nice if he was just the permanent fixture at DH.
That weirdly, his value is not as high if he's not catching every day,
but he's not an elite defensive catcher.
But he could be an elite power bat if he just focused on that.
So there's stuff to look out for.
I want McLean to turn it around and to have a really solid rookie season.
And to your final question about the fire sale,
they have to do it, and they have a ton of pieces that people are going to want.
You might not realize it, but the Mets have one of the best bullpens in baseball.
Their bullpins have been great, Rayleigh, Williams has been okay,
but like the setup guys have been great.
No, but Weaver has been unbelievable.
Minter has come back healthy and extremely effective.
They have a lot of arms that teams are going to want at the trade deadline.
The question is, does it make sense to sell all those guys if you are trying to be competitive in 2027?
Should you sell Luke Weaver who has another year on his deal when he looks like one of the five best relievers in the sport right now?
I wouldn't.
Unless you're just giving up everything, unless you're just opening the door to the full-on rebuild, which involves painful decisions that we don't want to talk about.
I need somebody around next year to get some fucking outs.
Yeah, I agree.
You know, I have a couple other important takes.
The construction hat sucks and the construction best sucks.
I hate it and it's a stupid home run thing.
Last year was much more fun.
and the OMG sign was obviously way more fun.
I don't know what we got to do to get the mojo back,
but part of it is we just got,
we just got to have a better, a better thing.
Maybe you like it.
I don't know.
What do you think of the spidey mask?
Did you see the spidey masks that they did?
I saw that with Alvey the other day.
It's fine.
Like it was cool.
Just,
what about this?
I have an idea.
Just be good at baseball.
Don't worry about what you're putting on
when you get back into the dugout
after you hit a home run.
Did you see that they lost for the first time this year
for a team with a,
plus four home run differential.
The teams prior to yesterday
that had a plus four home run differential
in a game were 35 and 0.
Again,
they, there was a line drive
bun single over the third baseman's head
that went in actually trickled into the outfield.
I would believe anything at this point.
It's so fucking painful watching Pete Crow Armstrong.
So painful.
Because he is such a dude.
He is just a baller.
I can't believe we traded him for three months of hobby
bias. So painful.
It's not going great.
Did I tell you the story about my daughter going to the game with her school?
No.
So her school's chorus sang the national anthem like a month and a half ago.
I think I may have told the story.
I can't remember if I did or not.
Apologies to listeners if I did.
She's not in the chorus, but the school bought a bunch of cheap seats and she wanted
to go sit with her friends after they sang.
And it was horrible weather.
I didn't go because the playoffs were going on.
It was horrible weather.
windy, cold, and all of her friends were like hanging out in whatever lounge they had access to up there.
And she was like, I don't understand.
I think I want to watch the game from the seats.
Like, where are you guys going?
And then they all wanted to leave in like the sixth inning because it's getting late.
There's some cranky young children.
And she was like, we're not leaving.
Games not over.
We're like, we're going to stay for the whole nine innings, right?
Mom, like my wife was there with her.
And finally she relented because everyone was just miserable.
And I was like, I don't know what I've done.
man, this seems like, this seems like I've maybe
this has gone too far.
And she sometimes runs into my office
like when I'm watching games and she'll just
be like, Daddy Soto hit a sack fly.
This happened out of like, you're so cute
and the team is so bad, but I'm just so
happy that you're into this. It sounds like you need
to introduce her to the New York Knicks.
That's what we need.
You know,
she got into it a little bit
because my wife got super into it.
And they would watch the games
and
I don't know if it's because I work in it,
and she hears about it too much.
She doesn't seem to find it as fun of diversion as baseball.
She did like Brunson,
but everybody likes Brunson.
She was like, I like that Brunson.
He's tough.
I'm like, yeah, it's fine.
But he's the newfangled Steph where a little kid see themselves in him,
you know, him being the littlest guy on the court.
There's something very powerful about that.
But at least she's into it.
And hopefully we get my first pitch rescheduled so that she can come and we can stand on the field and do all that kind of stuff.
And we'll go to, we have a couple other games that we're, we're trying to do this ferry.
Have you heard about this ferry?
No.
There's a ferry now from Stanford, Connecticut right to the stadium, basically.
But it only runs on select, select games.
And it's like, it's like 80 bucks round trip.
But it's like a, you know, it's like a floating bar that gets you to write to Z.
I want to try that out.
So I'm finding, I'm finding silver linings.
but 72 and 101 when I sat down and did the very basic math,
I was like, man, that's like, that's like a really bad team.
I think the last 12 months are the worst team in the sport record-wise.
I think they're worse than the Rockies in the last 12 months.
The Rockies.
That's one of the worst organizations in all of professional sports around the world.
I don't have anything, Dad, except I'm actually, I'm happy that I'm into it enough
that I will still flip these games on, at least for a few endings here,
there to stay in touch with the team. I still enjoy it. I still like bizarrely,
like when they were ahead, 3-1 last time, I was like, maybe this will be the game
where we start the six-game winning streak, you know, mad naive enough. Like, I still feel the
hope and the fandom. So it's still a lot of fun. And you got to get through some lumps. And it's
like, the baseball gods are like, you sure? You sure you want to come back for this? Here's a
bunt line drive squeezed in between six infield errors in one game. And yeah, you know what?
I'm coming back for more. I have one last question for you. I made a bold proclamation last
week in the aftermath of the next win that I now officially believe the Jets will win the Super Bowl
before the Mets win the World Series. The Jets obviously are even more tragic in the last 15 years.
I know you're not a football expert, but what do you think about that proclamation?
I don't know anything about football. I just know that the Jets have been a total laughing stock,
right? And like Aaron Glenn's the coach and all I heard on sports talk radio was like,
Maybe he's a good coach.
Maybe he's not.
I don't know.
But the team was, like, dysfunctional.
Didn't they have, like, no turnovers forced last year or something crazy like that?
No interceptions.
I think it was four, which was the fewest in league history.
I don't know.
No interceptions.
Who's their quarterback?
Gino Smith.
Something bad just happened with them, right?
Prodigal son.
Yeah, there was a report about some very bad behavior potentially that has now been kind of debunked, but we're not sure.
I mean, the Jets are such a laughing stock that if you're telling us,
telling me you believe in them more than you believe in the Mets,
I'm very, very upset and very sad.
But also, football's weird.
People, teams go from worse to first much more often.
The one comparison that I've made between them,
that I think that I think they both made the mistake of not firing their manager
when it was very clear that they're not the right person,
that Aaron Glenn is the head coach, Carlos Mendoza's the manager,
seems like they don't got it.
You know, you know, when you're watching a team and you're like,
this team don't got it.
It doesn't seem like they're listening to anybody.
They're not disciplined.
And the Knicks, of course, made that change,
a very dramatic change before.
last season. Moving on from Tibbs,
bringing in Mike Brown, controversial.
A lot of fans didn't like it. A lot of pundits
thought it was terrible. It turned out to be
one of the best things that's ever happened to the franchise.
So you've got to take risks, and you
got to make changes sometimes. But you know what?
Metz Corner never changes,
you know? Just two guys being normal.
We'll be back. Sean Fantasy,
the big picture with Amanda Dobbins
and the new newsletter
on Substack Projections was I was just reading
before you came on. It's outstanding
and makes me think in a lot
different ways. Everyone should subscribe to that.
You're the man. Thanks for your time and talking about this
baseball team that is part of our lives.
Thank you, Zach, and go Mets.
All right, that's it for today's edition of the Zach Lowe Show,
barring news. We won't be back until next week.
That's what I said yesterday. And then there was news.
So whatever, who knows what will happen, but probably next week.
Thank you to Moe de Kiel. Thank you to John Krasinski.
Thank you to Sean Fennessey.
No thank you to the New York Mets through 80 games this season.
And thanks, as always, to Jonathan.
Mike and Billy on production and to you all for listening to and or watching the Zach Glow Show.
We'll see you soon.
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