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Host
You're listening to DraftKings Network.
Advertiser
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Stugotz
Dan, you did it again. To me.
Dan
What'd I do?
Stugotz
We went through the whole show. You don't want to hear about my listener league experience?
Dan
How I never do. I never do one here. I don't. I'm just not interested in any way about your listener.
Stugotz
Why, you can be. You can participate. Join us, Dan, everybody. You could do it. DKNG CO Smirnoff. Presented by Smirnoff, the world's number one vodka. Please drink responsibly.
Dan
That was too fast. You need to help people get the information.
Stugotz
What do you mean?
Dan
In a way that's slow.
Stugotz
DKNG co Smirnoff.
Dan
Yeah, you just have to do it correctly and not that quickly so that people understand what you're saying.
Stugotz
I just, boom, boom, I get it in and then I talk about it a little bit more and then boom, boom, I get it in again later on. That's why Is that. You know what? Maybe that's what it is. Maybe I've been reading it too quickly and that's why you haven't joined the league yet, and that's why you're not interested in the league.
Dan
It's one of the many reasons I would put on the list that I'm not interested on. Although I am tired of hearing stugots talking about how well you and Witty are doing. And he's doing, like, during the break.
Stugotz
No, that's not the one. That. DKNG Co slash. That's a different league.
Dan
I'm not interested.
Stugotz
The legalities of that league are questionable at best.
Dan
But does anyone here have a league I would be interested in. Are you in any good leagues that people would be interested in?
Host
League of Legends. Do you want to play with me?
Stugotz
Damn. I'm trying to tell you, John, who had a great week for me? He was a steal of the week. I got him 31.1 points. You know who wasn't? Russell Wilson. Terrible performance. He really shit the bed. 7.3 points. Speaking of shit the beds, Greg, you had something about potty training.
Dan
Good natural segue, Billy. I'm glad that we just offered you that. As during the break you said you had a good way to lead into it and you showed me nothing. Thank you for that. I don't want to talk about Greg Cody's potty training. I want to talk about college football.
Greg Cody
Potty training. I've been potty trained for about 67 years.
Stugotz
When you lose your faculties, and I'm not saying that you have, but you will at some point. When you lose your faculties and you go back, you can't repotti train right.
Greg Cody
You know what? I'm going to cross that bridge when I get to it.
Host
It's an incontinence thing. I think you want to use the toilet, but you can't hold it anymore.
Stugotz
So you're still technically potty trained.
Host
Yeah, I think so.
Billy
You're always potty trained.
Dan
Jessica, over the weekend, and I know that this happens all of the time where professional football engulfs college, but in a season that hasn't had a college football team that is actually flawless. Although there are unbeaten records, seeing Oregon whiff and wheeze and just barely eke out a road victory at Wisconsin suggests to me that basically winning on the road for college kids is really hard just everywhere. And that there's not a. There's not actually a team talented enough to be able to consistently overcome it. Even though Oregon did win that game against Wisconsin. To me, Oregon this weekend did more damage to all the things that I think Oregon is by winning, even though they won at Wisconsin reputationally than anybody did by losing. Because I'm watching that game against Wisconsin and Wisconsin is wildly unimpressive to me.
Host
Yeah, Wisconsin's offense isn't great. They fired their offensive coordinator, Phil Longo after the game because it just really hasn't worked out. They're on like their third string quarterback because Tyler Van Dyke got hurt in the Alabama game earlier this year. But also, I think like Oregon, it was a, it was a close game. Like it was a really close game. Oregon was not very good in the red zone. Like they weren't good at finishing drives, kind of like the Steelers on Sunday, honestly. But it was also like they, they haven't had a bye week since like week three. And so it's like their eighth game in a row and now they get a bye and play Washington. So really they just had to get through that long stretch and be undefeated. And I don't really picture a scenario now where they miss the playoff because they're going to beat Washington. I'm pretty confident of that. And then they're undefeated. So yeah, it was a, it was a close game. I think Wisconsin, like, they're confusing because they haven't really been great this year, but they're not like they were. The players were up for that game, especially the defense, and it was a home game and like, the energy was really great. And so I think all of those factors kind of play into it being a little closer than you expect. But Oregon, obviously, they get the result and that's all you need in a season where you already have, you know, 10 other.
Dan
But you understand what I'm saying when I see that game and I'm like, oh, came away less impressed. You're undefeated. Yes, but came away much less impressed about any. I believe that any team in football that we put in the playoff can beat that one.
Billy
It was a bad win, huh?
Jessica
Yeah. But I think that's where college football is and I think people, media and fans alike are really struggling viewing this sport any way than they used to.
Billy
Right.
Jessica
Which is. Wow, that's a, that's an indictment on Oregon. I don't think it is. If you provide the context of. It's their. A straight game. It's their third time traveling to a different time zone within that stretch. It's a conference road game in a historically difficult place to play. Winning is hard. There isn't a dominant team in college football this year. There is an entire tier that pretty much anyone in that tier can beat the other.
Greg Cody
I think it's a fascinating season for some of the reasons we're mentioning. For example, a second tier team like Miami looks at Oregon, barely win and they're emboldened to think, why not us?
Jessica
I actually don't think Miami's a secondary tier team. I think the first tier's got about like 20 teams in it. I look at Miami and I see, man, if you just have a C plus defense, right, you can win a national title. I'm really excited for the College Football Playoff. I'm excited for this Indiana, Ohio State matchup that we have this week because I think everyone just assumes Ohio State is going to hand Indiana its scheduled loss and I maybe feel a little bit differently than that. I think what's happening with the Big 12, I certainly want to give Deion Sanders his credit because what he's done there this year.
Billy
Thank you. Yes.
Jessica
But there's plenty of people doing that. However, he's got Kansas coming up at Kansas. They've figured it out. Jalen Daniels is really shaking off the struggles of the earlier part of the season. It's a big rat poison week. I love where college football is right now.
Dan
This thing with Colorado and Miami is interesting because similar, both of them are similar in this regard. Stugott, you've got coaches who have fixed it with a band aid. It's not a long term fix. It's a quarterback fix in Miami and Colorado that has made them in year two and three get to a place faster than they have any right to do. But it's not enduring legacy or program building. Deion is using this as a stepping stone. It's the best the Colorado team has been in 20 years to start off 8 and 2. But it's because he's got those two players. It's just come in fix it. And it's not a permanent fix. It's not something that's going to build the program. But it's a great thing to build off because you got the quarterback right. In both Colorado and Miami. You sort of fast track how quickly you get into this conversation in a way that, you know, Florida State tumbles off to the side. Florida fixes some things. Florida all of a sudden now isn't the embarrassment it was made to look like in the first game of the season against Miami. But these aren't enduring fixes. It's all temporary and transactional.
Host
I actually, I think one of the common threads on Saturday was that like there weren't a ton of crazy upsets. But there could have been if not for the fact that having a competent college quarterback is a luxury that a lot of teams just don't have. If Wisconsin has a slightly better quarterback, I said third string, he's their second string. Braden Locke. That game it might actually be an upset team with Arkansas and Texas. Arkansas's defense played Texas really hard on Saturday, but the offense couldn't do anything. Utah and Colorado is the same way. Utah's defense was hanging in there until they couldn't because they just couldn't score. Their offense couldn't do anything. Sue Gods mentioned their quarterback earlier, throwing all those picks like it's just really hard to win in college football when you don't have a quarterback. And it sounds like it's totally obvious but getting a good quarterback in the portal or, or getting someone to transfer or recruiting a quarterback that you can develop, like those are things that good programs are going to have to figure out the balance of doing. But like you can't overstate how important it is because that's been the difference in Oregon winning. Because Dylan Gabriel's played college football for a long time. He's good in late game situations, he has experience, he's competent and he'll get you three points when you need it at the end of the game.
Jessica
And from what I'm hearing, it sounds like Colorado is going to get Julian Lewis, the number two quarterback in this class had just recently decommitted from usc. Colorado feels really good about where their position there. I would say with Miami they're exactly where they need to be for this kind of coach in terms of his approach to roster building. Yeah, you may say they got Cam Ward. Where does that leave them? This isn't a Jordan Travis situation with the way that this head coach builds. Deion's probably a little different because his approach to high school recruiting is different. He doesn't leave Colorado all that often. But that being said, as I just told you, they feel really good about getting a five star quarterback.
Dan
Oh, but no, be clear on this part of it. You can't get to real building unless you get the momentum of it. The reason that I say that these aren't long term fixes is once you remove that particular quarterback. Miami's not a special football team. You're talking, you're talking about getting C plus defense to run this gauntlet through the playoffs. There's no way to go on a winning streak through the playoffs playing defense as poorly as Miami plays it when you're going to be playing against teams that are more complete than the ones they've been playing against.
Billy
I think the Colorado thing is so interesting because I don't think anyone knows if Dion wants to coach past these two players, players his son and Travis. I don't think he anyone knows and no one knows if Deion would continue to be a great recruiter. A great.
Dan
It doesn't even matter. It doesn't matter.
Billy
No. But it does feel like a short term thing where he's there just to get his son through.
Dan
He's done the job that he was hired to do. He, he has done an exceptional job. He has done. Look man, that team was the worst program in the big time of college football when he inherited it. And they haven't been 8 and 2 since 2006. Like, the job has been done correctly. No matter what he can lose against Kansas, the job's been done correctly.
Billy
I'm just wondering, though, if Dion wants to coach past his son being at Colorado. That's going to be interesting to see.
Dan
He has built it so that he can do whatever it is that he wishes to do if he wants to get out of there. To me, what has happened with the business of Colorado is one kind of interesting to me. Optimal for Deion would be to get out of there immediately, optimal not to stay there and worry about whether you have to keep it there or not.
Billy
Right.
Dan
You've got those two players, and it's not just that you're having the best season Colorado has had since 2006. You might get two dudes into the Heisman room, two of them with a program that two years ago was worst in the country. Like, to me, I get out of there with them. Like, I figure out whatever it is, the next. Where. Where am I wanted? Where. Where can I turn this into something? As they're talking on television on first take, whether you should take over the Cowboys or not. You laugh at that. You.
Billy
I don't laugh at that.
Dan
You laugh. But the Cowboys can't be worse than they are right now. If I put Dion in charge.
Billy
No, I actually think it would be a great move for Deion to take that job because the bar is so low after McCarthy.
Greg Cody
I mean, Michael Irvin was pushing Deion Sanders to Dallas during the Tyson Paul fight. Sitting right next to Jerry Jones. Michael Irvin mentions getting primed to Dallas. So that's a pretty good lobbyist to have Michael Irvin.
Advertiser
It was funny watching Jerry try to be like, oh, let's talk about something else. That's awkward. Michael Irvin, do you guys think that Ohio State will beat Indiana by double digit? Yes or no?
Dan
I. I believe that Oregon had to win by double digit. Does the second word start with a J, though?
Billy
Double digit. I think I went to.
Advertiser
Yeah, this is like round one for Meech. I think we might have to give this one first round because it's easier than I thought it would be.
Billy
Double digit.
Host
I think you cut out double and just do digit.
Billy
Yeah. Double digit odd. Yeah.
Advertiser
And yeah, we don't do unfair editing, though. We just play it how it goes.
Greg Cody
Right.
Billy
Double digit odd.
Podcast Summary: The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz – "Postgame Show: Lose Your Faculties"
Release Date: November 18, 2024
Hosts: Dan Le Batard, Stugotz
Location: Elser Hotel, Downtown Miami
Overview
In the "Postgame Show: Lose Your Faculties" episode of The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz, hosts Dan Le Batard and Stugotz delve into a comprehensive analysis of the current college football season. The discussion spans team performances, coaching strategies, quarterback impacts, and the broader implications for the College Football Playoff. The episode is rich with insights, lively banter, and notable quotes, providing listeners with an engaging examination of the collegiate football landscape.
The episode kicks off with the usual playful banter between Dan and Stugotz, setting a lighthearted tone. They briefly touch upon the show's format, including the "listener league" experience, though Dan expresses disinterest in participating. This segment serves as a humorous prelude before transitioning into the main sports discussions.
Notable Quote:
Greg Cody introduces a humorous segment on potty training, leading to laughs and playful exchanges between the hosts. While the topic seems trivial, it serves as a smooth segue into the more serious discussions about college football. The conversation briefly touches on the challenges of maintaining consistency and discipline, drawing parallels to team performances on the field.
Notable Quote:
The core of the episode centers around an in-depth analysis of recent college football games. The hosts focus on Oregon's narrow victory over Wisconsin, questioning the team's overall strength despite their undefeated record. Dan criticizes the quality of Wisconsin's performance, suggesting that Oregon's win may not be as impressive as it appears.
Key Points:
Oregon vs. Wisconsin Game: Dan expresses skepticism about Oregon's dominance, citing their performance in the red zone and comparing them to underperforming NFL teams like the Steelers.
Notable Quote:
Wisconsin's Struggles: The discussion highlights Wisconsin's offensive issues, including the firing of their offensive coordinator and reliance on a third-string quarterback due to injuries.
Notable Quote:
Oregon's Future Prospects: Dan remains confident in Oregon's ability to maintain their undefeated status, despite his reservations about their overall quality.
Notable Quote:
The conversation shifts to the coaching strategies of Deion Sanders with Colorado and Miami. Dan critiques Sanders' approach as temporary fixes aimed at short-term success rather than sustainable program building. He argues that relying on star quarterbacks can lead to fleeting achievements without establishing a lasting foundation.
Key Points:
Deion Sanders' Impact: While Sanders has significantly improved Colorado's performance, Dan questions the longevity of these improvements once key players depart.
Notable Quote:
Potential Moves: The hosts speculate on Sanders' future, including the possibility of him coaching the Dallas Cowboys, though opinions vary on the viability of such a move.
Notable Quote:
Emphasizing the critical role of quarterbacks, the hosts discuss how teams with competent quarterbacks, like Oregon's Dylan Gabriel, have an advantage in tight games. They underscore the difficulty for teams without reliable quarterbacks to secure victories, particularly in high-stakes situations.
Key Points:
Quarterback Quality: The importance of securing a talented quarterback is highlighted as a key factor differentiating successful teams from struggling ones.
Notable Quote:
Recruitment Challenges: The conversation touches on the challenges programs face in recruiting and developing quarterbacks, which is essential for sustained success.
The episode concludes with light-hearted discussions and interactions with advertisers, maintaining the show's signature blend of sports analysis and humor. The hosts wrap up their thoughts on the ongoing season, leaving listeners with food for thought regarding the future trajectory of college football teams and coaching strategies.
Notable Quote:
Final Thoughts
In "Postgame Show: Lose Your Faculties," Dan Le Batard and Stugotz provide a nuanced critique of the current college football landscape. They balance factual analysis with personal opinions, offering listeners an insightful look into team dynamics, coaching efficacy, and the pivotal role of quarterbacks. The episode effectively combines serious sports discourse with the hosts' characteristic humor, making it both informative and entertaining for fans and casual listeners alike.