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Greg Rosenthal
T Mobile stats are as impressive as your favorite athlete's highlight reel because T.
Dan Patrick
Mobile helps keep you connected from the.
Julie Swearingen
Heart of Portland to right where you.
Greg Rosenthal
Are on America's largest 5G network switch. Now keep your phone and T Mobile will pay it off up to $800.
Julie Swearingen
Per line via prepaid card. Visit your local T Mobile location or.
Greg Rosenthal
Learn more@t mobile.com keepandswitch up to 4 lines of your virtual prepaid card. Allow 15 days qualifying unlock device, credit service support in 90 plus days device knowledgeable carrier and timely redemption required. Card has no cash access and expires in six months. Hey Will, do you ever get overwhelmed by how much science happens these days? Constantly. I'm like, ah, there's so much science I can't keep track of it all. Then it's a good thing. Our podcast, Part Time Genius is counting down the 25 greatest science ideas from the past 25 years. That's right, Mango. We're talking animals in a paper called, quote, chickens prefer beautiful humans.
Julie Swearingen
Right?
Greg Rosenthal
This was actually the title of the paper. They all discovered that, much like humans, chickens are attracted to symmetrical faces.
Julie Swearingen
Got it.
Greg Rosenthal
We're talking medical miracles. He's an endocrinologist who found a way to stimulate insulin producing cells using, wait for it, the saliva of a Gila monster. There's no way to make that not sound crazy. We even talked to some of the experts behind these breakthroughs. It's a week full of fact packed stories you won't want to miss. So listen to the Part Time Genius countdown of the 25 greatest science ideas of the past 25 years starting Monday, March 3rd on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
What's up everyone?
Greg Rosenthal
It's Greg Rosenthal and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs, mock drafts to my top 101, free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast.
Julie Swearingen
What's up everyone? Julie Swearbinks here along with former NHL player Nate Thompson. We're doing a new podcast together. Here we go, the Name Energy Line with Nate and jsb.
Greg Rosenthal
Each week we'll get together and talk about hockey life. All topics are Fair game, right?
Julie Swearingen
Exactly. And you'll never know who will drop by to join us. Julie is pretty well connected. She has text threads going that you wouldn't believe. Listen to Energy Line with Nate and jsb on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts.
Greg Rosenthal
Or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
We all have a moment that splits us wide open. On my new podcast, Wide Open with Ashlyn Harris, I'll sit down with trailblazers from sports, music, fashion, entertainment and politics to explore their toughest moments and the incredible comebacks that followed. Listen to Wide Open with Ashlyn Harris, an iHeart women's sports production on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Presented by Elf Beauty, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Dan Patrick
You are listening to the Dan Patrick show on Fox Sports Radio, hour two on this Thursday deathbed confessionals. We stumbled upon that at the end of last hour. We'll explore that. We've been talking about that during the commercial break. Come on in. Stay a while. Yes, Fritzi is here. Seaton, Marv Polyers. Truly the backroom guys as well. New poll question coming up. Mike Florio from Pro Football Talk on the smear campaign with Shador Sanders. Also, we'll talk to Jim Jackson, former NBA player, get his thoughts on the best duo in the NBA. I said it's Luke and LeBron because LeBron is playing as a top 10 player, maybe top seven, maybe top five. And then you put Luca in there when Luca is able to play like he normally does, is there a better duo now? You could say Tatum and Jalen Brown, and I'd have no argument with that. They're obviously a very, very dangerous tandem. Joker, Jamal Murray. I mean, there's a couple of teams that you can go down the list and say, all right, those two guys are really, really good. But Luca and LeBron, with the way they're playing now, they got the Knicks in town tonight. And I got the lakers favored by 4 1/2 according to DraftKings. Stat of the day brought to you by Panini America. The official trading cards of the program. And our garage sales going on, our yard sale, our tag sale. We're clearing out inventory. And you can pick up some great deals at Dan Patrick, 877-3-DP. Show operator Tyler sitting by. He'll take your calls. And good morning, those watching on Peacock. Some of the headlines here. As I mentioned with last hour, we talked a lot of football and we talked, you know, the guys who were coming and going. The fact that Joey Bosa got released. Max Crosby is now the highest paid non quarterback in the NFL, at least for the time being. Sam Darnold, is he going to resign with the Vikings and if not, where would he end up? Daniel Jeremiah, the draft expert for NFL Network, said he could see maybe the Colts stepping in because the Colts are ready to win now. But DK Metcalf wants a trade and the Chiefs traded one of their more decorated offensive linemen, Joe Tunney, to the Bears. Alex Ovechkin is nine behind the great one. Cavs have won 12 in a row. And as I mentioned, the Knicks at the Lakers. Coming up tonight, deathbed confessionals. We were talking a couple of these and we had a listener who said, you know, would you want to know Michael Jordan, the flu game? That's not what I want to know. From Michael on his deathbed. I want to know, did the commissioner suspend you for gambling? Pete Rose? I already know what that story is. Barry Bonds, do you care if he said, you know, I did use steroids? I don't care. I already know it. So it, you know, what is the mystery? And then Paulie goes, you know who I would love to hear the truth from? And I go, who? And he goes, manti Teo. I go, wait a minute, he got catfished and he was at Notre Dame.
Julie Swearingen
Yeah, Paulie, I've seen an interview or two. He's have a nice media career going on right now. But man, that story, when the Manti Teo story broke, that still is jaw dropping. Everything that happened that two or three month period, I would, I've got about six questions I would like to just check off the box.
Dan Patrick
Yeah, but he just got catfished. That's all. He had an imaginary girlfriend. But they did, didn't they answer everything in the documentary? I guess I got him.
Julie Swearingen
It's just fascinating.
Dan Patrick
He's not the first guy to get catfished, but he's probably the first Heisman candidate to get catfished.
Julie Swearingen
He's the first Heisman trophy candidate to show up to New York and have that star story told on national TV that he knew was false when he walked in the Heisman ceremony. Yeah, that's.
Dan Patrick
Yeah, but he just got down too far down the rabbit hole. He was embarrassed. Like, what do you say? Hey, I really don't have a girlfriend. Hey, I have an imaginary girlfriend. Hey, my girlfriend just died. Like it was one of those where it happened and then all of a sudden you didn't realize that it was going to be that big. But it's Notre Dame. Heisman candidate, and all of a sudden you're trying to defend. Explain what happened. He just got catfished. He believed that he was communicating with somebody who was his girlfriend or going to be his girlfriend or wanted to be his girlfriend. And then. Then when you watch the documentary, like, man, there's other layers to this. This is really, really deep. And. And Manta, I tell you, I'm happy for him. He's got a good career. I think he's been doing some stuff. NFL Network, charismatic guy, but, yeah, that's still one of those. Where. And I wonder if his friends. I don't know if he's married. I think he's married now, but did they joke with him if they met one of his girlfriends or. He said he had a girlfriend. They're like, oh, can we meet her? Can. Can you? Like, can your buddies do that to you?
Julie Swearingen
You've got to be very, very, very good friends.
Dan Patrick
Whoa. Hey, look at this.
Julie Swearingen
Hold on. Let me pinch you. Sally.
Dan Patrick
Hey, you're real.
Julie Swearingen
That's a little joke from before.
Dan Patrick
Wait, what are they talking about? Manti? It's nothing. I had imaginary friend. We all have imaginary friends, don't we? Didn't we? That's all he had. An imaginary friend that turned out to be a girlfriend that wasn't a girlfriend? Yes.
Julie Swearingen
Paulie, one more NBA mystery that I know you know about and covered. Did Patrick Ewing. Did the NBA get Patrick Ewing to the knicks?
Dan Patrick
Was the 1985 NBA Draft Lottery fixed?
Greg Rosenthal
Yes.
Dan Patrick
Okay.
Julie Swearingen
Because people could see how the NBA would want it to be fixed. You can't exaggerate how big Ewing was at the time. And to go to the Knicks, that needed a breath of life.
Dan Patrick
And even though David Stern, rest his soul, is dead, I still feel like he could somehow come back and haunt me if I even talk about this. I remember talking to him, and I remember him telling me to shut up. I'm with him in his office, and we were just talking about, you know, NBA top and, you know, variety of things. And I said, you know, I. I was there in 85. And he said, where? I said, at the. At the lottery. He goes, oh, Patrick, don't tell me you're one of those guys who thinks. And I go, well, I'm just curious. Like, could you. And, homeboy, I'm. I'm already nervous saying this because, you know, Stern would yell at me, you know, you could freeze the car. And he goes, shut up. And I said, but, you know, that was.
Julie Swearingen
Shut up.
Dan Patrick
And I was like, okay, all right. And I'm thinking you could freeze the card. That was the big story, that they put the Knicks card in the refrigerator. So when David was, you know, rifling through to find out, you know, what order that he felt that card and then the next won the lottery. Damn. Yes.
Julie Swearingen
That's another one that sets up for.
Greg Rosenthal
Massive deathbed disappointment for me.
Julie Swearingen
Was the lottery fixed? No.
Dan Patrick
And then that's it.
Julie Swearingen
Like, oh, crap. All this time I thought it was.
Greg Rosenthal
Fixed, and it wasn't.
Dan Patrick
That's a. Yeah, but what if it was? What if they truly fixed it? If you're the commissioner, you want to have a star in New York, you want the Knicks to be competitive. Why didn't they keep doing that plan? Couldn't they have rigged the draft a little more for them then? Oh, my goodness.
Julie Swearingen
Okay, Going Back to when LeBron was 18, would you have fixed it for him to go to Cleveland or elsewhere if you were fixing that draft?
Dan Patrick
I would have. Well, the Cavs did fix it. They tanked so they could get the number one pick. I would have. I would have had him be in Cleveland. He's from Cleveland. You got to have other franchises that are healthy, competitive. I mean, you want to play the hits. You want to have Philly, Boston, New York, D.C. but, you know, you got the hometown kid. And that's why they were tanking. And I don't think anybody had a problem with it back then. It's like, yeah, they're losing. They want to get LeBron, keep him in Cleveland. Yeah.
Julie Swearingen
See, where are we fixing the draft for Cooper Flag?
Dan Patrick
I wouldn't send him to D.C. although, when you think flag and patriotism, Washington, D.C. but I wouldn't do that to that kid. That's where I'd go. You know, I really like college, and I'm proud to be a Washington wizard, or at least I know I can play. So Cooper Flag, where would I put him?
Greg Rosenthal
Not Charlotte.
Dan Patrick
I. I don't want to say San Antonio, because it. I don't know that people would be angry that the spurs won the lottery again. He wouldn't be in a big market, but I got him with Darren Fox and Vic Victor. Wembanyama. I would love that. I would. I would love that. Yeah.
Julie Swearingen
Paul, here are the top six teams for the NBA draft. You got to pick one of them to fix it for Cooper Flag. Washington, Charlotte, Utah, New Orleans, Toronto, Brooklyn.
Dan Patrick
Boy. I mean, if you're in New York, you're not. If you're in Brooklyn, you're not in New York. You know, he would be a guy that would get some national TV games, but not a good team. Cooper Flag and Zion. The. The Dookies. Maybe. D.C. no. Charlotte, Toronto.
Greg Rosenthal
Utah.
Dan Patrick
Right.
Greg Rosenthal
No.
Dan Patrick
Yes, Marvin.
Julie Swearingen
Another year in Durham sounds pretty nice.
Dan Patrick
Yes, it does. Especially with Nil. Yeah. I wonder what he's making now. And, you know, you get Gatorade or Nike or whoever, and he gets an endorsement deal. Let's say you make $5 million. Yeah. More.
Julie Swearingen
He's already got the New Balance sneaker deal also.
Dan Patrick
Oh, okay. So if he's getting at least 4 million, if he decides to stay, maybe you get 7, 8 million. And then you take your chances that. Okay, who is going to be bad next year? Washington, Utah, Toronto. He's gonna be like, oh, damn. All right. 8773 DP show email address dpdanpatrick.com that's kind of ugly. It is. It is.
Greg Rosenthal
None of that's really ideal.
Dan Patrick
Yes, Marvin.
Greg Rosenthal
At least college basketball will have a returning superstar.
Dan Patrick
If he does.
Greg Rosenthal
If he does decide to come back, I doubt it.
Dan Patrick
But if he does, KD in Texas leads us off. Hi, kd. What's on your mind?
Julie Swearingen
Hey, dp. What's going on, man?
Dan Patrick
Hey. First time, Long time. Six, one, two, six.
Julie Swearingen
I just wanted to call in and say thanks, man.
Dan Patrick
I listen to y'all every morning.
Julie Swearingen
Y'all pretty much start my day off great every day. But speaking of this Cooper Flag, surely if they're going to rig it, they got to rig it for Dallas after that Luca trade, right?
Dan Patrick
Yeah, I guess. I guess you want him to be able to be on a good team instead of, hey, I'm going to tune in because I did this with the Spurs. The spurs weren't a good team, but I wanted to see Wembanyama. I don't. You know, it's tough to watch a game when you're only watching one player on the other team and go, yeah, this is entertaining. They're down 14 at the end of the first quarter, but. And you know, we're going to find out the greatness of when Benyama now, because he's got Deer and Fox. And that's the thing that the spurs didn't do. They didn't have a really good point guard there, even Chris Paul. Now they do. C. Castle's a really good player, but, you know, Darren Fox is. He's an All Star. And now you're going to find out how good Victor can be. You got to have players around you, plain and simple. I mean, Joker has to have somebody to throw it to to get all These assists, you have to have some kind of talent there. And that's the problem with Cooper Flag. You go to Washington. I, you know, at least New Orleans, you got Zion there, and Zion has played really well. The question is, does he want to be there, and do they want to. Now, that's a team where you can say, could they have the same approach to Zion that Dallas did to Luca? Of do you want to give him $350 million? I would have more questions about Zion moving forward than I would have Luca, because we saw Luca be out of shape, but he at least played when he was out of shape, and he played at a really high level. And they went to the NBA finals a year ago. Jeannie Buss had a comment on the trade that, you know, got them Luca. And Jeannie Buss was interviewed on NPR's Morning Edition, and she said, hey, we couldn't get past Denver. We had to do something different. Anthony Davis was complaining. He didn't want to be a center, wanted to be a forward. And Jeannie Buss says, we gave up a lot to get Luca. We're happy we have him. We had lost the last two years in a row to the Nuggets. We really didn't have anything that was going to look different going into the playoffs again. Yeah, I get it. I mean, I don't think it was a big decision to trade whatever you traded for Luca, but that's where if, you know, you got to have a humble brag there. If you're genie, boss, you're like, you know, we gave up a lot. We did. You don't want to be like, can you believe we got Luca and that's all we gave up? Because that's what you're thinking, wait a minute. What do they want? They want A.D. max Christie. And what, are they serious?
Julie Swearingen
Do it.
Dan Patrick
Do it. Do it, Rob.
Greg Rosenthal
Do it.
Julie Swearingen
Now.
Dan Patrick
You imagine you hang up the phone, you got to be giggly. Yes, Mark, what decision is worse?
Greg Rosenthal
I'm gonna.
Julie Swearingen
Maybe not decision, but if you're the Giants GM would say Quan.
Dan Patrick
Or if you're the Dallas GM with.
Greg Rosenthal
Luca, what's going to age worse?
Dan Patrick
Well, they got embarrassed. Imagine if Nico Harrison was doing the deal and he was on TV on camera. That would be great. If he's like a genie. You interested in Luca? And then you put your hand over the phone. Are we interested in. I don't know.
Julie Swearingen
Everybody be quiet. Be quiet.
Dan Patrick
Maybe. Maybe. Why? What are you proposing? I think it's real. Oh. Anthony Davis. Max Christie.
Julie Swearingen
Holy.
Dan Patrick
You know, I'm gonna have to run this up the flagpole there. I'm gonna have to talk to Rob and JJ and, you know, just make sure it's gonna work. Okay, but we gotta act on this now. Okay, you know what? I'll get back to you in 15 seconds. Oh, man. I better think about it first. I would just love to know at least if you're the Lakers, you have to have. You have to have pause where you go, why are they getting rid of this guy? That's first thing I would think of. Why are they getting rid of him? Because you have to ask that. Why? Yes, Todd, what if a Bill Belichick.
Julie Swearingen
Type was the Mavericks coach? Then you're like, wait a second.
Greg Rosenthal
Something's very fishy.
Dan Patrick
No, no, no. If Jerry west was calling, good call. Then I would go, a red Arbach. Then I would go, oh, something's not. Not right here. All right, Mike Florio will join us. We'll get to more phone calls. I think we touched on deathbed confessional. We'll get to more phone calls coming up. Back after this Dan Patrick show. Fox Sports Radio has the best sports talk lineup in the nation. Catch all of our shows@foxsportsradio.com and within the iHeartRadio app, search FSR to listen live. Hey, Steve Covino.
Julie Swearingen
And I'm Rich Davis, and together we're.
Dan Patrick
Covino and Rich on Fox Sports Radio.
Julie Swearingen
You can catch us days from 5 to 7pm Eastern, 2 to 4 Pacific, on Fox Sports Radio. And of course, the iHeartRadio app. Why should you listen to Covino and Rich? We talk about everything. Life, sports, relationships, what's going on in the world.
Dan Patrick
We have a lot of fun talking.
Julie Swearingen
About the stories behind the stories in.
Dan Patrick
The world of sports and pop culture.
Julie Swearingen
Stories that, well, other shows don't seem to have the time to discuss.
Dan Patrick
And the fact that we've been friends.
Julie Swearingen
For the last 20 years and still work together, I mean, that says something, right? So check us out. We, we like to get you involved, too.
Dan Patrick
Take your phone calls, chop it up, as they say.
Julie Swearingen
I'd say the most interactive show on Fox Sports Radio, maybe the most interactive show on planet Earth.
Dan Patrick
Be sure to check out Covino and.
Julie Swearingen
Rich live on Fox Sports radio and the iHeartradio app from 5 to 7pm Eastern, 2 to 4 Pacific. And if you miss any of the live show, just search Covino and Rich.
Greg Rosenthal
Wherever you get your podcast.
Julie Swearingen
And of course, on social media, that's Covino and Rich.
Greg Rosenthal
Hey, Will, do you ever get overwhelmed by how much science Happens these days constantly. I'm like, ah, there's so much science, I can't keep track of it all. Then it's a good thing. Our podcast, Part Time Genius is counting down the 25 greatest science ideas from the past 25 years. That's right, Mango. We're talking animals in a paper called quote, chickens prefer beautiful humans. This was actually the title of the paper. They all discovered that, much like humans, chickens are attracted to symmetrical faces.
Julie Swearingen
Got it.
Greg Rosenthal
We're talking medical miracles. He's an endocrinologist who found a way to stop stimulate insulin producing cells using, wait for it, the saliva of a Gila monster. There's no way to make that not sound crazy. We even talked to some of the experts behind these breakthroughs. It's a week full of fact packed stories you won't want to miss. So listen to the Part Time Genius countdown of the 25 greatest science ideas of the past 25 years, starting Monday, March 3rd on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
It's Julie Stewart Banks. I'm doing a new podcast from iHeart Podcasts and the National Hockey League, and I'm paired up with one of my favorite players, the always quotable Nate Thompson.
Greg Rosenthal
I wore nine NHL sweaters and I.
Julie Swearingen
Have story after story to share.
Greg Rosenthal
And believe it or not, I have.
Julie Swearingen
Plenty to say, and not just about hockey. Believe me, he does. Energy Line with Nate and JSB is the name of the podcast and it's gonna be, well, it's gonna be quite the ride. We're officially linemates, Nate. We're the Energy Line. We'll have plenty of folks join us.
Greg Rosenthal
Current players, some of my former teammates, hall of Famers. And wait till you see some of.
Julie Swearingen
The connections that Julie has.
Greg Rosenthal
She has quite the Rolodex.
Julie Swearingen
Okay, we'll lean into Nate's playing experience and tap into our interests away from hockey and try to do what energy lines are supposed to do, provide an emotional boost. How do you feel about all that, Nate?
Greg Rosenthal
I'm vibing. Julie. I'm ready to roll.
Julie Swearingen
Listen to Energy Line with Nate and jsb on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts.
Greg Rosenthal
Or wherever you get your podcasts. Ever wonder what it would be like to be mentored by today's top business leaders? My podcast, this Is Working can help with that. Here's some advice from Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JP Morgan Chase, on standing out from the leadership crowd.
Julie Swearingen
Develop your eq. A lot of people have plenty of brains, but EQ is do you trust me? Do I communicate well? You know, when you walk in a room, do people feel good you're there? Are you responsive to people? Do people know you have a heart? Develop the team, develop the people. Create a system of trust. And it works over time.
Greg Rosenthal
I'm Dan Roth, LinkedIn's editor in chief. On my podcast this Is Working, leaders like Jamie Dimon, Mark Cuban and Richard Branson share strategies for success and the real lessons that have shaped them. Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
I'm Tomer Cohen, LinkedIn's chief product officer. If you're just as curious as I am about the way things are built, the insights behind what it takes to create a world renowned product, then tune in to my podcast Building One. There's so much to learn, like how Patagonia innovates with its supply chain.
Greg Rosenthal
We had to go out to farmers.
Julie Swearingen
And convince them it was really damn hard. Or the way Adobe thinks about the first interaction somebody has with Photoshop.
Greg Rosenthal
I was always so fascinated by how people navigate and find their way.
Julie Swearingen
Ever wanted to know how Nike builds emotion into the Jordan brand?
Greg Rosenthal
You have to be obsessed with the current state of the human condition.
Julie Swearingen
And it doesn't stop there. What about how Gleam reinvented knowledge search with AI? You can learn about how a Michelin star chef is redesigning seeds for flavor and how Pixar is nurturing a creative culture.
Greg Rosenthal
Listen to Building One on the iHeartRadio.
Julie Swearingen
App, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Rosenthal
Have you ever wondered if your pet is lying to you?
Julie Swearingen
Why is my cat not here and I go in and she's eating my lunch?
Greg Rosenthal
Or if hypnotism is real, we will.
Julie Swearingen
Use the suggestion in order to enhance your cognitive control.
Greg Rosenthal
But what's inside a black hole? Black holes could be a consequence of.
Julie Swearingen
The way that we understand the universe.
Greg Rosenthal
Well, we have asterisks for you in the new iHeart original podcast Science Stuff. Join me Jorge Cham as we tackle questions you've always wanted to know the answer to about animals, space, our brains and our bodies. Questions like can you survive being cryogenically frozen? This is experimental.
Dan Patrick
This may never work for you.
Greg Rosenthal
What's a quantum computer?
Julie Swearingen
It's not just a faster computer. It performs in a fundamentally different way.
Greg Rosenthal
Do you really have to wait 30 minutes after eating before you can go swimming? It's not really a safety issue, it's more of a comfort issue. Well, talk to experts, break it down, and give you easy to understand explanations to fascinating scientific questions. So give yourself permission to be a science geek and listen to Science Stuff starting March 12 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Dan Patrick
Mike Florio, Pro Football Talk Live co host and contributor to NBC's Football Night in America all three of Mike's novels Father of Mine, Son of Mine, and on our way home just $0.99 ebooks on Amazon Mike, we stumbled upon something thanks to one of our callers Deathbed Confessionals in Sports if I said NFL deathbed confessional, who do you want to hear from to solve a mystery?
Greg Rosenthal
Wow.
Julie Swearingen
Boy, I had never really thought about that for years. It was the whole did Frenchie Fuqua touch the ball before it caromed into the hands of Franco Harris for the Immaculate Reception? But that was 50 years ago. Nobody cares about that anymore. I need to think that through a bit more. There's got to be something Brady and Belichick related that we'd love to know the answer to. And we may never know the answer to Malcolm Butler. Possibly. There's a good one. What happened with Malcolm Butler? They'd have another ring if they had just used Malcolm Butler at all in Super Bowl 52 in Minnesota when they lost the Eagles. That's a good one.
Dan Patrick
What do you think happened?
Julie Swearingen
Something happened that pissed off Bill Belichick to the point that he made a personal decision, not a best interest to the team decision, and he wanted to send a message. He wanted to show Malcolm Butler who's boss and ended up doing something that he believed would not cost the team the game, but that many believe cost the team the game.
Dan Patrick
All right, let's look at what's happened so far since the Super Bowl. Biggest surprise so far is what or who.
Julie Swearingen
Well, based upon the way Travis Kelsey was talking right after the super bowl, if you're that far down the road of retirement and his comments on the New Heights podcast just a few days after the super bowl, man, Dan it sounded like he was done. Yeah, it sounded like he was walking and he was just coming to terms with it. And in a few weeks we'd find out that he was moving on. The the fact that he so quickly decided to come back really surprised me. And I've seen some suggestion that he was ill for the Super Bowl. Of course, illnesses don't always get disclosed on the injury report, so we didn't know he was sick. But if that explains why it kind of looked at times like he was just going through the motions out there, maybe that maybe that helps justify and explain why he feels so determined to come back and go out on a higher note. Hard to get back to the Super Bowl. But with the Chiefs, they get to the AFC Championship Game every year, so he may have a chance to walk off into the sunset with yet another ring.
Dan Patrick
Yeah, you get players who chase their tail because you don't want to go out that way, but there's only one team that wins the Super Bowl. Is he. Is he okay with going out by playing a really good game in a loss? That's what I would be curious about.
Julie Swearingen
Yeah, and I think you're right. And it's going to be hard for the Chiefs this year. They've got a lot of work to do. The gap between them and the Eagles was made abundantly clear at the Super Bowl. So I. I think it's a combination of love of the sport and. Look, Dan, you got the rest of your life to do whatever you're going to do next. And we know he's going to do great things. Once you stop playing, it's done, it's gone, and it's never coming back. Unless you're Brett Favre. But even then, at some point, it ends and it's done and it's never coming back. So I can understand why he wants to keep doing the thing he loves if he feels like he can keep doing it, because for the rest of the life, his life, once he retires, he won't be doing it.
Dan Patrick
Biggest story out of the combine was what?
Julie Swearingen
Well, yeah, you mean the thriller in vanilla latte that wasn't that weird when that all happened? Like, I was both dismayed by and proud of the fact that I actually did. Reporting to find out what happened, why it happened, who said what to whom.
Dan Patrick
Okay, give us the background on it.
Julie Swearingen
Well, it was the whole Jordan Schultz of Fox, Ian Rapoport of NFL Media. They had an encounter at a Starbucks in Indy, which makes it a great coincidence because Jordan Schultz's dad was the CEO of Starbucks as it became a worldwide brand. And one guy got in the other guy's face. Some words were exchanged, words we can't say on an FCC regulated broadcast. And NFL Security was alerted. NFL Security investigated. And the thing about the combine is every year it's lather, rinse, repeat the same stuff. This guy's, you know, this guy can't work out. This guy's not working out. And then every four or five years, there's one that pops. And this is the one that popped. Because my wife said to me, number one, why do you Care. And number two, why does anyone else care? It's like they just do things like this that are so different from the usual NFL news grind and are fascinating and bizarre and kooky. Everybody goes nuts for that.
Dan Patrick
Have you been confronted by another member of the media or a player or GM or coach?
Julie Swearingen
Oh, I've been confronted verbally by several. Not people in the media per se. Usually it's by text, usually coaches, players, et cetera, it's by text. But I've had an awkward encounter or two in the 20 years I've been doing this, and I'll leave it at that.
Dan Patrick
Come on, it's old news.
Julie Swearingen
You don't care. It's been like nine years ago. Dirk Cutter. Remember Dirk Cutter, the former Buccaneers coach at the league meetings and I think it was in Florida that year. I had asked him a question when I interviewed him when he got the job two months earlier. And I never heard boo after the fact that he was upset. So me, like an idiot, I go bounding over to him like a sheepdog, hey, Dirk, how are you? And I got the verbal uppercut about the BS question, although he didn't say BS that I asked him and he'll never do another interview with me. And he went on and on. Usually I've learned that if you just take Peters out and then you find a way to flip it into something positive, that's the one guy who I let him chew on me. And then when it was done I thought maybe I can flip it. No, it didn't flip and it was never flipped. And that's my dirt Cutter story.
Dan Patrick
He's Mike Florio, Pro Football Talk Live co host. And you can see that program on Peacock preceding hours, the wide receiver market here, free agency wise. You got DK Metcalf, you got, well, Debo going to the commanders, you got devonte Adams going to be out there. You got, you got a few of these players. Why all of a sudden this flood of the market?
Julie Swearingen
Well, you've got older players who have contracts that no longer match their current skills and abilities and more importantly, what their projected skills and abilities are. And Devonte Adams is no surprise. When he was traded to the Raiders three years ago, he did a five year contract with two. And this is a technical term, phony baloney, back end years that were just aimed at bumping up the average. So they say, oh, you got $28 million a year. Yeah, but the last two years are 35.64 million each year. That deal was never going to go beyond year Three. And if he was going to stay with the Raiders, it would have been a major redo and restructuring. But when you're with the jets and he's not going to do a restructuring with the Jets, Aaron Rodgers is gone.
Greg Rosenthal
He's.
Julie Swearingen
He was always going to be cut and now he's available. He's not going to get 35 million a year. He'll get good money. He's still got gas in the tank and he's available to anyone who wants to get him. And all the jets have to show for that third round pick is 11 games during which they went 3 and 8. And I'm sure they'd love to get that third round pick back and have never done that trade.
Dan Patrick
What's the market for Sam Darnold now?
Julie Swearingen
Nobody really knows because the big question is, can what Sam Darnold did last year with Kevin O'Connell drawing up the plays with Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison and T.J. hawkinson catching the passes, can that be duplicated somewhere else? Or does he revert to the seeing ghosts Sam Darnold from early in his career, that Monday night game when he was with the jets against the Patriots? So if you make a major financial investment in Darnold and you can't replicate what happened in Minnesota, you made a mistake. I mean, Darnold and I think a lot of it had to do with how it ended that Week 18 game that everybody saw. He got the yips at the worst possible time, biggest game of his life. And then the Vikings didn't show up across the board in the playoff game. That's the caveat now. And I think that's why the Vikings are still kind of lurking here as they figure out, do we, do we go with Darnold where we know what the floor is? Maybe the ceiling isn't as high as we'd like. Or do we go with a guy that we don't know what he's going to be because he hasn't played yet in J.J. mcCarthy. And I have a feeling they're really wrestling internally. People who have been dealing with the Vikings come away with the conclusion that they don't know who's running the show and calling the shots. But they're going to have to make a decision fairly soon. They might let Darnold go out there and see what's available or what's not available, and then maybe whatever they have budgeted is kind of a lowball number. Maybe that's what he takes and, and that makes the decision for them. But there is some dismay and if he does, like a two year deal to stay in Minnesota and the Vikings say we'll just do the Aaron Rodgers, Jordan Love, J.J. mcCarthy sits for three years. I believe that's not going to go over well with McCarthy. And the next domino could be McCarthy saying, I want out.
Dan Patrick
Let me give you this scenario. Let's say you're the Giants and you have the third pick. You could maybe sign Sam Darnold and then take Travis Hunter or you could go up and get Cam Ward. Now I got Malik Neighbors, I'd have Travis Hunter and I have Sam Darnold. We're already a whole lot better than we were last year. And I don't have to get rid of draft capital or I can go up and I got to spend a little bit of, you know, draft capital to get Camward and I got a rookie contract here. What would you do?
Julie Swearingen
Well, here's the problem with the Giants. You've got an owner who's decided to keep gm, Joe Shane and Brian Dall. But the owner also said, I've just about run out of patience. So through what prism are decisions being made in New York? Is it we just got to put something together this year and get to the playoffs and we'll worry about 2026 and 2027 when they come? Or is it we're trying to lay the foundation for a long term contender and this is what happens with dysfunctional teams. And I got to give the Giants credit, they've somehow won a couple of Super Bowls this century, but by and large they're basically the same as the jets and there is dysfunction there. And the ultimate dysfunction is having coach and GM clearly on the hot seat and thus motivated to make short term decisions. Because long term decisions don't help us if we're not here to see the fruits of them. That's the challenge for the organization. The best long term approach is stabilize the quarterback position for years to come. The worst long term approach is to grab the short term shiny object like Aaron Rodgers and try to put a playoff run together. And then next year it's like, what do we do? I don't know. That's not good for the Giants over the long haul.
Dan Patrick
You and Chris Sims talked to Chador Sanders, what, four days ago? Five days ago at the combine. What was your takeaway after the conversation?
Julie Swearingen
Great personality, magnetic. You can see that his dad is Deion Sanders. Very worldly, kind of mature, beyond his years, knows how to deal with people very well. A lot of emotional intelligence. I was impressed with him, but But I. I knew it was going to happen. The chatter's already begun. And I think the chatter stems from one very simple fact. When we had Deion Sanders at the Super Bowl, I pressed him on this question of, are you ever interested in coaching in the NFL? Because he's given different answers over the past couple of years about that. And he told us the only way he would ever coach in the NFL is if he was coaching his son. That creates for some coaches, I think, a hesitation to ever sign off on your team drafting Shador Sanders because you might be signing your own pink slip because Deion ends up being the coach of the team. That shoulder Sanders goes to, at least that's one of the concerns that one of these coaches would have. So I think that's where some of this noise is coming from. You've got coaches who are thinking, wait a minute. I don't want to have Deion Sanders hovering over me if we have his son as our quarterback. And I think the. The 4D chess that Deion might be playing here. By saying what he said, you scare away the coaches of the dysfunctional teams, the coaches who would be worried about outside noise from Deon. And maybe you engineer a little slide down to a team where it is stable, it isn't dysfunctional, and the coach is sufficiently secure and confident that he's not worried about the possibility that Deion Sanders would want to become the coach of the team that his son's playing for. So it could work out well for Shador. The noise that's going to start, and it's already started, it could cause him to. To drop, but he could drop into a good spot. Not a team with a history of derailing the careers of young quarterbacks.
Dan Patrick
Paulie and I have a pie to the face bet Shador Sanders over under first five and a half picks.
Julie Swearingen
Wow. I would say at this point he will. And I don't know what over under is. I guess it's over. I think that his window opens with the Raiders at six.
Dan Patrick
Okay. Don't you owe us a pie to the face, Mike?
Julie Swearingen
I think I owe you a couple.
Dan Patrick
Yeah. Thanks. Yeah. Yeah.
Julie Swearingen
I was hoping you got.
Dan Patrick
I know you don't want to hurt the hair, but, I mean, at some.
Julie Swearingen
Point, I don't want to knock off the toupee.
Dan Patrick
Your hair looks great.
Julie Swearingen
Thank you.
Dan Patrick
Just like Tom Brady's.
Julie Swearingen
Thank you.
Dan Patrick
Yeah.
Julie Swearingen
Mine's real. I don't know about his. Mine's real. My wife says from time to time you should just shave your head so everyone can See, it's not a toupee. I am afraid of two things. Number one, it might not grow back. And number two, Dan, I am afraid that my head is misshapen and I don't want to find out along with the rest of the world that it is.
Dan Patrick
Not everybody looks like Michael Jordan with their head shaved.
Julie Swearingen
That's true, that's true.
Dan Patrick
Remember Scotty Pippen, I think had his head shaved one time and I was like, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope, nope. Are you going to be at the draft in Green Bay?
Julie Swearingen
Yeah, I've been to the draft since the last time I was in New York. It's so much easier to work it from home because the only people at the draft are the people who run the cards to the to the podium. Now the players are there. But it had gotten harder and harder to get good access to them for interviews and stuff ahead of time. And we just do zoom interviews with them. And I do it all from here. I go down to the barn and we do videos after every pick and it's much more effective here.
Dan Patrick
Great to talk to you once again. All three of Mike's novels, Father of Mine, Son of Mine, and On Our way home, just 99 cent ebooks on Amazon. Thank you, Michael.
Julie Swearingen
Thanks, dan.
Dan Patrick
Mike Florian, profootballtalk.com you can see that show with Chris Sims prior to ours on Peacock. Every morning we'll come back deathbed confessionals that you're interested in sports wise. I just had a friend send me one that's really spicy or as he says, juicy. Have that for you. Coming up. And we play the popular game that's sweeping the country. It's called in or out. You're either in or out. After this, be sure to catch the live edition of the Dan Patrick show, weekdays at 9:00am Eastern, 6:00am Pacific on Fox Sports Radio and the iHeartRadio app.
Greg Rosenthal
Hey, Will, do you ever get overwhelmed by how much science happens these days? Constantly. I'm like, ah, there's so much science, I can't keep track of it all. Then it's a good thing. Our podcast Part Time Genius is counting down the 25 greatest science ideas from the past 25 years. That's right, Mango. We're talking animals in a paper called, quote, chickens prefer beautiful humans. This was actually the title of the paper. They all discovered that, much like humans, chickens are attracted to symmetrical faces. Got it. We're talking medical miracles. He's an endocrinologist who found a way to stimulate insulin producing cells using, wait for it, the saliva of A Gila monster. There's no way to make that not sound crazy. We even talked to some of the experts behind these breakthroughs. It's a week full of fact packed stories you won't want to miss. So listen to the part time Genius countdown of the 25 greatest science ideas of the past 25 years, starting Monday, March 3rd on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
It's Julie Stewart Banks. I'm doing a new podcast from iHeart Podcasts and the National Hockey League and I'm paired up with one of my favorite players, the always quotable Nate Thompson.
Greg Rosenthal
I wore nine NHL sweaters and I.
Julie Swearingen
Have story after story to share.
Greg Rosenthal
And believe it or not, I have plenty to say.
Julie Swearingen
And not just about hockey. Believe me, he does. Energy Line with Nate and JSB is the name of the podcast and it's.
Dan Patrick
Going to be, well, it's going to.
Greg Rosenthal
Be quite the ride.
Julie Swearingen
We're officially linemates, Nate. We're the Energy Line. We'll have plenty of folks join us.
Greg Rosenthal
Current players, some of my former teammates, hall of Famers. And wait till you see some of.
Julie Swearingen
The connections that Julie has.
Greg Rosenthal
She has quite the Rolodex.
Julie Swearingen
Okay. We'll lean into Nate's playing experience and tap into our interests away from hockey and try to do what energy lines are supposed to do, provide an emotional boost. How do you feel about all that, Nate?
Greg Rosenthal
I'm vibing Julie. I'm ready to roll.
Julie Swearingen
Listen to EnergyLine with Nate and JSB on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or.
Greg Rosenthal
Wherever you get your podcasts. Ever wonder what it would be like to be mentored by today's top business leaders. My podcast this Is Working can help with that. Here's some advice from Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, on standing out from the leadership crowd.
Julie Swearingen
Develop your eq. A lot of people have plenty of brains, but EQ is do you trust me? Do I communicate well? You know, when you walk in a room, do people feel good you're there? Are you responsive to people? Do people know you have a heart? Develop the team, develop the people. Create a system of trust. And it works over time.
Greg Rosenthal
I'm Dan Roth, LinkedIn's editor in chief. On my podcast this Is Working. Leaders like Jamie Dimon, Mark Cuban and Richard Branson share strategies for success and the the real lessons that have shaped them. Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
I'm Tomer Cohen, LinkedIn's chief product officer. If you're just as curious as I am about the way things are built, the insights behind what it takes to create a world renowned product, then tune in to my podcast Building One. There's so much to learn, like how Patagonia innovates with its supply chain.
Greg Rosenthal
We had to go out to farmers.
Julie Swearingen
And convince them it was really damn hard. Or the way Adobe thinks about the first interaction somebody has with Photoshop.
Greg Rosenthal
I was always so fascinated by how people navigate and find their way.
Julie Swearingen
Ever wanted to know how Nike builds emotion into the Jordan brand? You have to be obsessed with the.
Greg Rosenthal
Current state of the human condition and.
Julie Swearingen
It doesn't stop there. What about how Gleam reinvented knowledge Search with AI? You can learn about how a Michelin star chef is redesigning seeds for flavor and how Pixar is nurturing a creative culture. Listen to Building One on the iHeartRadio app, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Greg Rosenthal
Have you ever wondered, if your pet is lying to you, why is my.
Julie Swearingen
Cat not here and I go in and she's eating my lunch?
Greg Rosenthal
Or if hypnotism is real?
Julie Swearingen
You will use this suggestion in order to enhance your cognitive control.
Greg Rosenthal
But what's inside a black hole? Black holes could be a consequence of.
Julie Swearingen
The way that we understand the universe.
Greg Rosenthal
Well, we have asterisks for you in the new iHeart original podcast Science Stuff. Join me Jorge Cham as we tackle questions you've always wanted to know the answer to about animals, space, our brains and our bodies. Questions like can you survive being cryogenically frozen? This is experimental.
Dan Patrick
This may never work for you.
Greg Rosenthal
What's a quantum computer?
Julie Swearingen
It's not just a faster computer, it performs in a fundamentally different way.
Greg Rosenthal
Do you really have to wait 30 minutes after eating before you can go swimming? It's not really a safety issue, it's more of a comfort issue. Talk to experts, break it down, and give you easy to understand explanations to fascinating scientific questions. So give yourself permission to be a science geek and listen to science stuff starting March 12 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Dan Patrick
Deathbed Confessional Sportswise Friend of mine sent this in during Cal Ripken's consecutive game streak. Did the Orioles cut the power to the stadium in one game because there might have been an incident between Cal Ripken and Kevin Costner and that he hurt his hand? Do you remember this? The consecutive game streak? The rumor and I don't know enough about it. I know I know enough, but not enough enough about It. I remember the story cuz I was working at the mothership. We're like, wait, the lights went out. It's an ugly story. Yes, it is. It's not good. It's not.
Julie Swearingen
Not great.
Dan Patrick
But. But we. They the. The night the power went out at Camden Yards and so the consecutive game streak would continue. Do I. Is that a Kevin Costner deathbed confessional? Cal Ripken deathbed confessional. Dang. That's an ugly story. That was dark. And then my friend signs it juicy. I go, all right. Field of nightmares. Yeah. Okay. I see what you did there, Todd. Thank you. Bull Bleep Durham bs. Okay, creepers. Alrighty. Alrighty. Time to play the popular game. It's called in, in or out. You're either in or out. Paulie, give us the topics here again.
Julie Swearingen
Dan, you say in if you're in, out if you're out. I'm gonna start in the back row. The running back position in the NFL is hot again, Fritzi.
Dan Patrick
And on that. Absolutely.
Julie Swearingen
Seaton.
Dan Patrick
In.
Julie Swearingen
Hot. Marvin in. Yeah, yeah.
Dan Patrick
You're gonna have. You're gonna have two running backs in the first round. I'm in.
Julie Swearingen
In temporarily. Hot or hot? Hot.
Dan Patrick
I hope it's hot. Hot. Hot. You know, maybe they're. They're coming back.
Greg Rosenthal
Here we go.
Dan Patrick
Okay. In. In. In.
Julie Swearingen
Sam Darnold's free agency has cooled dramatically. Acro.
Dan Patrick
I am in on that as well.
Greg Rosenthal
I'm going to say I'm out on.
Dan Patrick
That because I don't believe it was ever hot to begin with.
Greg Rosenthal
I think that was a media creation.
Dan Patrick
You don't think that Paulie kept this alive? No, I do think Paul kept this alive. I think the media kept Sam Darnold's appeal alive.
Julie Swearingen
I don't.
Dan Patrick
I don't think that the football teams.
Julie Swearingen
Were actually hot in November and December. He threw 18 touchdowns and two picks and then had two no show games to end the season.
Dan Patrick
He also had years and years and.
Greg Rosenthal
Years and years of statistics before that.
Dan Patrick
Marvin, are you in around?
Julie Swearingen
I'm in.
Dan Patrick
I'm in on the market cooling. I don't know if the market was as hot to begin with, but I do think that there was the. Hey, Sam Darnold. They brought in Sam Darnold to be a backup to JJ McCarthy. The Vikings didn't even know what they had and they may not know what they have, but Mike Florio said he could see a scenario where Sam Darnold, at a reduced rate, comes back and plays for the Vikings. Now, if I'm Sam Darnold And I can go anywhere. I would want to go back to Minnesota with that head coach and those wide receivers. Absolutely. Even for less money than going to the Raiders or going to the Giants.
Julie Swearingen
Yes, Paul, I think I'm out on that, because the clock would be ticking on your time with that team. Eventually, they're going to go with McCarthy. Eventually. Yeah, I know what you're saying.
Dan Patrick
I don't know how many choices he has.
Julie Swearingen
Best chance to play well.
Dan Patrick
Yes, but you can showcase yourself for the next team in two years.
Julie Swearingen
We are playing the Sam Darnold game next week.
Dan Patrick
Oh, my goodness. Early next week.
Julie Swearingen
Total value of his contract.
Dan Patrick
Oh. Gonna have to pick out an outfit for that day.
Julie Swearingen
All right, here we go. In or out. Now you're not a football player. You're just a civilian. I would like to be built like DK Metcalf, but I don't play sports. I'm just built like him.
Dan Patrick
And what's the downside?
Julie Swearingen
You're stunningly jacked, and there's not a big purpose for it if you're not playing.
Dan Patrick
I'd walk around without a shirt on. Hell, I'd walk around without clothes on.
Julie Swearingen
Back row.
Dan Patrick
I'm totally in on that.
Julie Swearingen
I can pass on being some great.
Greg Rosenthal
Athlete if I can be looking like that.
Dan Patrick
Seaton.
Julie Swearingen
Nah, I'm out.
Dan Patrick
You don't want to look like DK Metcalf. I don't want to be six'four and not athletic. I don't want to be built like that. And like, like. And then, like, when you see me throw a ball, it looks like this. Yes.
Julie Swearingen
I don't want that.
Dan Patrick
I'm good.
Julie Swearingen
I'm with Seaton.
Dan Patrick
I'm out.
Julie Swearingen
I wouldn't want my athletic ability in that package.
Dan Patrick
Whoa. Package. All right, Marvin. Gotcha.
Julie Swearingen
Oh, I'm out, too.
Greg Rosenthal
I can't have that physique and work at Verizon.
Julie Swearingen
Right.
Dan Patrick
I think, you know, when I go out to the bar at night, I think I'd be okay. You know, if I go to the beach, I'd be okay.
Julie Swearingen
Do you think girls like 8, 9 girls? Like, then the 8, 9 category. Like a guy like DK Metcalf, who is stunningly good looking and jacked.
Dan Patrick
I've been married for 37 years, and I still don't understand. I mean, I'm still trying to. And I have three daughters.
Julie Swearingen
I think he's in too good a shape.
Dan Patrick
I don't. I don't understand. I try. It's a moving target. Yes, Todd.
Julie Swearingen
So if a girl sees a hot DK Metcalf on the beach, but he just can't seem to catch that Frisbee. Or he's having a tough time tracking down that Nerf football. Like, oh, my God, I thought he was hot.
Dan Patrick
I don't. I don't think a woman is going to go, you know, he can't throw a Frisbee. It'll be like, damn, he can't throw a Frisbee. But it doesn't matter, honey.
Julie Swearingen
He was so good looking, but he just can't catch the ball.
Dan Patrick
All right, in or out, Paul?
Julie Swearingen
Here we go. Dan Cooper Flagg should refuse to play for Washington if they get the number one pick.
Dan Patrick
Wait. Oh, okay.
Julie Swearingen
Todd out.
Dan Patrick
Seaton, out. Marvin, out. I'm out.
Julie Swearingen
But then your career goes in underwater.
Dan Patrick
You play. All right? You Play.
Julie Swearingen
Here's one. LeBron James will play longer than both Steph Curry and Kevin Durant. In or out, Fritzy? Out.
Dan Patrick
Oh, man. I think I'm out because Kevin Durant plays longer. Marvin, I'm out. Also, could you see a scenario when all three bail out in three years.
Julie Swearingen
Or all four on the same team?
Dan Patrick
I think Durant will play a little bit longer and maybe Steph than LeBron, although I see no reason for LeBron to go. Let me put a time frame on this, all right? In or out? Continue.
Julie Swearingen
In or out. Wayne Gretzky's legacy is safer than Michael Jordan's legacy. In or out, Fritzi?
Dan Patrick
I'm gonna say in, because again, the.
Julie Swearingen
Whole debate with LeBron. MJ Gretzky doesn't really have that person that people bring up next to Gretzky's name.
Dan Patrick
I'm gonna be out on that. I think. I think Michael Jordan is pretty much.
Julie Swearingen
Cemented as the king of all sports. Marv.
Dan Patrick
I mean, I'm out because more people have written more things, said more things. Documentary, the Last Dance. I mean, there's so much there with Michael Jordan, and he put that out to remind people of, you know, a younger generation of just. He's the greatest of all time. Yes. Right. When you look across the sports landscape.
Julie Swearingen
I know that one is playing and one is branding. But like, Derek Jeter wore the Jordan logo.
Dan Patrick
Messi wears the Jordan logo like all.
Julie Swearingen
Of the greats of every sport.
Dan Patrick
Where is the Jordan logo?
Julie Swearingen
Yeah, Paul, bonus question. Does Wayne Gretzky have to attend the game or Ovechkin is going to break his record?
Dan Patrick
He doesn't have to, but he will because Wayne will do what's right for the sport.
Julie Swearingen
How many nights, let's say Oveskin goes On a cold start.
Dan Patrick
I think he's gonna have to be there five nights. Five nights following. Great. Eight. Yes. Todd, when do you start following him?
Greg Rosenthal
What if he's three goals away and.
Dan Patrick
Gets a hat trick?
Julie Swearingen
Oh, I missed it.
Dan Patrick
I was gonna go to the next game. Then you missed him. That's it. You tried. That's in or out? You're either in or you're out. Are Luke and LeBron the best duo in the NBA? We'll talk to Jim Jackson, our good buddy, former NBA player, now an analyst. More of your phone calls? Deathbed sports confessionals. Never thought that would be on my bingo card today. Two hours in the books on this Thursday. One more to go.
Greg Rosenthal
Hey, Will, do you ever get overwhelmed by how much science happens these days? Constantly. I'm like, ah, there's so much science, I can't keep track of it all. Then it's a good thing. Our podcast, Part Time Genius is counting down the 25 greatest science ideas from the past 25 years. That's right, Mango. We're talking animals in a paper called Chickens Prefer Beautiful Humans. This was actually the title of the paper. They all discovered that, much like humans, chickens are attracted to symmetrical faces. Got it. We're talking medical miracles. He's an endocrinologist who found a way to stimulate insulin producing cells using, wait for it, the saliva of a Gila monster. There's no way to make that not sound crazy. We even talked to some of the experts behind these breakthroughs. It's a week full of fact packed stories you won't want to miss. So listen to the Part Time Genius countdown of the 25 greatest science ideas of the past 25 years, starting Monday, March 3rd on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
What's up, everyone?
Greg Rosenthal
It's Greg Rosenthal and I'm teaming up with the king of spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs, mock drafts to my top 101 free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Julie Swearingen
What's up everyone? Julie Swearbinks here along with former NHL player Nate Thompson. We're doing a new podcast together. Here we go. The Name Energy Line with Nate and.
Greg Rosenthal
Jsb each week we'll get together and.
Julie Swearingen
Talk about hockey life.
Greg Rosenthal
All topics are fair game, right?
Julie Swearingen
Exactly. And you'll never know who will drop by to join us. Julie is pretty well connected. She has text threads going that you wouldn't believe. Listen to Energy Line with Nate and jsb on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts.
Greg Rosenthal
Or wherever you get your podcasts. Ever wonder what it would be like to be mentored by today's top business leaders? My podcast this Is Working can help with that. Here's advice from Google CMO Lorraine Twohill on how to treat AI like a partner.
Julie Swearingen
I see AI as an incredible copilot.
Dan Patrick
You may use different tools or toys.
Julie Swearingen
To get the work done, but AI.
Greg Rosenthal
Is just the latest flavor of that.
Julie Swearingen
You're still the judge of what good looks like.
Greg Rosenthal
I'm Dan Roth, LinkedIn's editor in chief. On my podcast this Is Working Leaders share strategies for success. Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Julie Swearingen
We all have a moment that splits us wide open. On my new podcast, Wide Open with Ashlyn Harris, I'll sit down with trailblazers from sports, music, fashion, entertainment and politics to explore their toughest moments and the incredible comebacks that followed. Listen to Wide Open with Ashlyn Harris, an iHeart women's sports production on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Presented by Elf Beauty, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
Podcast Summary: The Dan Patrick Show – Hour 2: Sports Mysteries with Mike Florio
Podcast Information:
Dan Patrick opens the second hour by introducing the theme of "Sports Mysteries," highlighting the allure of unsolved questions and legendary tales in the sports world.
Dan Patrick [03:02]: "You are listening to the Dan Patrick show on Fox Sports Radio, hour two on this Thursday deathbed confessionals. We stumbled upon that at the end of last hour. We'll explore that. We've been talking about that during the commercial break. Come on in. Stay a while."
The hosts introduce the segment "Deathbed Confessionals," where they entertain hypothetical confessions from sports legends to solve lingering mysteries.
Notable Quotes:
Julie Swearingen [06:22]: "Yeah, Paulie, I've seen an interview or two. He's have a nice media career going on right now. But man, that story, when the Manti Teo story broke, that still is jaw dropping."
Dan Patrick [06:56]: "He's the first Heisman trophy candidate to show up to New York and have that star story told on national TV that he knew was false when he walked in the Heisman ceremony."
A significant portion of the discussion revolves around the infamous Manti Teo catfishing incident during his time at Notre Dame.
Notable Quotes:
Dan Patrick [07:06]: "He just got catfished. He believed that he was communicating with somebody who was his girlfriend or going to be his girlfriend or wanted to be his girlfriend."
Julie Swearingen [08:21]: "It's just fascinating... He just got catfished. That's all. He had an imaginary girlfriend."
The hosts delve into the controversy surrounding the 1985 NBA Draft Lottery, particularly focusing on Patrick Ewing's selection by the New York Knicks.
Notable Quotes:
Dan Patrick [08:54]: "Okay, but what if they truly fixed it? If you're the commissioner, you want to have a star in New York, you want the Knicks to be competitive."
Julie Swearingen [10:30]: "Like, oh, crap. All this time I thought it was. Was the lottery fixed? No."
A heated debate ensues over the best duo in the NBA, contrasting the synergy of LeBron James and Luka Doncic against other emerging duos like Jayson Tatum and Jalen Brown.
Notable Quotes:
Dan Patrick [04:50]: "I said it's Luke and LeBron because LeBron is playing as a top 10 player, maybe top seven, maybe top five."
Julie Swearingen [04:58]: "You could say Tatum and Jalen Brown, and I'd have no argument with that. They're obviously a very, very dangerous tandem."
Special guest Mike Florio joins the conversation to provide insights into Sam Darnold's free agency market and the broader NFL landscape.
Notable Quotes:
Julie Swearingen [32:38]: "Devonte Adams is no surprise... he was always going to be cut and now he's available."
Dan Patrick [35:20]: "The best long term approach is stabilize the quarterback position for years to come."
A deep dive into Cooper Flag's drafting decisions and the potential manipulation to secure a stable future for the player.
Notable Quotes:
Dan Patrick [11:01]: "I would have had him be in Cleveland. He's from Cleveland."
Julie Swearingen [12:37]: "If you're in Brooklyn, you're not in New York. You know, he would be a guy that would get some national TV games, but not a good team."
Exploring how Deion Sanders' potential coaching aspirations for his son, Shador Sanders, affect teams' willingness to draft or sign him.
Notable Quotes:
Julie Swearingen [37:00]: "I pressed him on this question of, are you ever interested in coaching in the NFL? Because he's given different answers over the past couple of years about that."
Dan Patrick [37:34]: "He's a charismatic guy, but... That's where some of this noise is coming from."
The episode concludes with a fun interactive game "In or Out," where the hosts and callers decide whether they're "in" or "out" on various sports topics.
Notable Quotes:
Julie Swearingen [47:29]: "Dan, you say in if you're in, out if you're out. I'm gonna start in the back row. The running back position in the NFL is hot again."
Dan Patrick [52:05]: "I'm gonna say in, because again, the... I'M SO IN ON THAT."
Dan Patrick teases upcoming segments and encourages listeners to tune into future episodes for more sports mysteries and insightful discussions. The episode blends in-depth analysis with engaging banter, providing listeners with both entertainment and substantive sports talk.
Key Takeaways:
Notable Quotes with Timestamps:
This comprehensive summary encapsulates the key discussions and insights from "Hour 2 – Sports Mysteries, Mike Florio" of The Dan Patrick Show, providing listeners with a clear overview of the episode's content and engaging moments.