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Tony Kornheiser
Hey, it's Tony. On today's show, we'll talk with Michael Wilbon about the NBA playoffs. And we'll also talk about the Indy 500 with Ryan McGee. But first, commerce. You know, there are a lot of passions. Some days it's sports. Other days it's cooking or music or just diving into a great documentary. The thing is, whatever you're into, it's on Prime. Amazon prime isn't just about fast delivery, though. Getting stuff the same day is pretty great. But it turns out it's so much more Prime. Video, Amazon music, the whole range of services. It's like a hub for all kinds of curiosity. Prime helps people stay connected to what matters and keeps the journey of exploration going. Whether watching something inspiring, listening to a new artist, or getting gear delivered fast to chase a new hobby, prime makes it easier to dive in. So, yeah, whatever you're into, it's on Prime. From streaming to shopping, it's on Prime. Visit Amazon.comprime to get more out of whatever sparks your interest. Amazon.com Prime Summer is coming right to.
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Tony Kornheiser
Previously on the Tony Kornheiser Show. I had a contract on a day.
Michael Wilbon
To day for over a year.
Ryan McGee
You guys were magnanimous and said focused.
Michael Wilbon
On that show for the first month or so. And then I came back to do.
Tony Kornheiser
Stepboy and I never let go. I never wanted to let go.
Michael Wilbon
And I was able to sign on for 23 years.
Tony Kornheiser
That's wonderful story. I mean, I'm sure that Mike and I said, what do you mean he's doing a show, we need him here. Let's stand in the way of his career completely if we possibly could, let's ruin his life and let's keep him here. Right? That's consistent with who we are, isn't it?
Michael Wilbon
I think that's the direct quote.
Intern Harrison
The Tony Cornet show is on now.
Tony Kornheiser
I got a lot of very positive feedback about talking to reality. I did. I don't usually get that on this show, but not in emails. I mean people seeing me or writing me texts or emails. People were very thrilled to Hear reality. Yeah.
Guest Speaker
It was a lovely, lovely chat with someone we were very fond of.
Ryan McGee
I love reality.
Tony Kornheiser
Totally.
Intern Harrison
His energy is infectious.
Guest Speaker
He really is.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Still got the energy of a 25 year old.
Guest Speaker
Yes.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay, so first of all, he came.
Intern Harrison
To see me in a high school musical. I'm thinking about this because Harrison here is from Marie. He came to see me in a high school show. He must have been 22 at the time.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, I mean, we got him right out of college. He had just graduated from Fordham. You know who else is in the sports business from Fordham? The sports announcing business. Mike Breen went to Fordham.
Guest Speaker
Really?
Tony Kornheiser
Spiro Dedes went to Fordham. These guys are.
Guest Speaker
The only other name I know from Fordham is Frankie Frisch, the Fordham flash.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Didn't Vince Lombardi go to Fordham as well?
Guest Speaker
He may have.
Tony Kornheiser
I think Vince Lombardi went to four.
Guest Speaker
I look that up.
Tony Kornheiser
So anyway, so we have news. Thank you for mentioning our intern, Harrison, because we have news. He has completed his tasks. He. The other day we asked him.
Intern Harrison
And addressing the microphone, we.
Tony Kornheiser
I mean me, I said, go get a couple of flowers and go get a couple of zucchini. Zucchini. And he came back with one of each, not understanding that a couple meant to, you know, even though I had pointed out the various pots these things were going to go in. So he went. And you also got. Yeah, he got seed. Zucchini seed. We're a little late on the zucchini seed this year, but maybe next year. Yeah, but you went back. You went to Merrifield Gardens. Yeah.
Ryan McGee
Right.
Tony Kornheiser
And you went back and you brought back yet another flower and yet another zucchini. And the tip tray, all the money was in it. This is. I hope you feel a great sense of accomplishment.
Michael Wilbon
Yeah, I do.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Because this is all you're being asked to do. You're being asked to sit here and then occasionally do plant some things, yard work. You know, if. If the, if the eyes sprout on those potatoes, we're gonna have you plant those.
Intern Harrison
I'm looking on with the green eyed monster of jealousy as you are standing over young Harrison teaching him how to garden. And I'm just 20ft away.
Tony Kornheiser
Well, you know how to garden. I've taught you how to garden.
Intern Harrison
Yeah. I went straight back to a ninth grade lesson with the quote, I've begun to plant thee and were able to make the full of growing.
Tony Kornheiser
That's great. Growing is nice.
Guest Speaker
Yes.
Tony Kornheiser
Like I planted these things two or three weeks ago. Three weeks ago now, I'm sure around Mother's Day and there's enormous growth in the tomatoes and the peppers. No flowers yet, no fruit.
Intern Harrison
It's still early.
Tony Kornheiser
So no squirrels yet. Yeah. No varmints yet.
Guest Speaker
Yeah. We're still waiting on the sonic disruptor.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, I thought that was coming last week.
Guest Speaker
It was supposed solar powered. Yes, Yes.
Intern Harrison
I haven't had the sun for it yet.
Tony Kornheiser
I watched.
Guest Speaker
Oh, you absolutely correct. Vincent Lombardi, Fordham.
Tony Kornheiser
I watched a thousand things over the weekend. I didn't watch anything all the way through, but I watched the PGA Tour golf. I watched the Senior PGA Open at Congressional. I watched the basketball games, the hockey games briefly, some lacrosse games. I watched everything you could watch until I said, that's it. I'm done. I'm going to sleep. It's just too much. I don't want to keep watching these things. And then, I mean, I was interested. I had a proprietary interest in the Senior PGA at Congo because we had played there. We had played there. And Patrick Harrington choked. And he knows he choked. He says he choked.
Intern Harrison
He's one of the most refreshing interviews because he's so honest.
Tony Kornheiser
Totally. He was minus 10 with three holes, four holes to play, his first bogey, and Cabrera was either 7 or 8. And then he hadn't had a bogey all week. He doubled, and then he bogeyed 18.
Intern Harrison
And it's the. If you remember, it was our second to last hole. It's the hole that has the moguls up to the left of the green, a blind second shot. They have a guidance. Essentially a guidance pole in the background. The backdrop in front of the big clubhouse.
Tony Kornheiser
And you ask the caddy, is that where I am?
Intern Harrison
And you can bang it at 30 yards to the left. It'll likely find the front edge. I mean, it's a tricky hole, but that's why his feels he admitted it.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. And so Cabrera won. Cabrera finishing the interesting double of going straight from jail to a couple of senior majors.
Michael Wilbon
Yeah.
Tony Kornheiser
And you know. And you don't really know what to think about this.
Intern Harrison
Yeah. Right in front of going back to Oakmont.
Tony Kornheiser
Right. Where he won.
Michael Wilbon
Yeah.
Tony Kornheiser
And where he hit like huge drives time after time after throwing darts, literally.
Intern Harrison
And I watched.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, I watched that. I watched a little bit of the North Carolina kid, Ben Griffin won a tournament and almost was completely rattled when the guy playing with him or playing one hold against him chipped in.
Intern Harrison
Yeah.
Tony Kornheiser
Chipped in and went, whoa, what happened here?
Intern Harrison
You know, it did not look like it was going in.
Tony Kornheiser
No. Went in. So I had. I watched that, and then I watched Again the basketball, and watched again the hockey, and then said, enough, I don't want anymore. And then I went out to play yesterday, and I'm going to just talk briefly about how terrible I was. I was looking forward to playing. Well, I.
Intern Harrison
You were not looking forward to playing?
Tony Kornheiser
I have to. Yes. I have to be honest.
Intern Harrison
Rewind.
Tony Kornheiser
I have to be honest. Walk that back. Right. This was a. This is the Memorial Day tournament of Columb. They have a Memorial day tournament, a July 4th tournament, a labor Day tournament, and you play in teams of four, usually full handicap.
Intern Harrison
And this was a tee time event, not a shotgun, which becomes important to the story.
Tony Kornheiser
Tee time event. And I'm gonna play. It's Team Coco, so I'm gonna play with Courtney. Michael has Arch, doesn't. Doesn't play much anymore. And Pete Creedon went to Florida and live here anymore. And you brought your friend Frank.
Intern Harrison
Yes, Frank. I went on a golf trip with Frank Steinberg 20 years ago, and he.
Tony Kornheiser
When you were in high school, he.
Intern Harrison
Moved to the area after college, and he joined Columbia in the last couple years, so.
Tony Kornheiser
And he's good player, so. So we're going to play, and I sign up to play in this tournament, and then I find out that we have PTI on Memorial Day. I mean. What do you mean? What do you mean we have PTI on Memorial Day? What do you mean we have PTR on July 4th?
Intern Harrison
The glasses.
Tony Kornheiser
Because we don't have on July 4th, and we don't on Labor Day. No. So why do we have it on Memorial Day? You know, there's no adequate explanation on this as to why, you know, I'm playing. But I find out I'm going to play about five or six days before the tournament. And I say to Matt Kelleher, who, by the way, Dean listens to this show. Isn't that wild?
Intern Harrison
Wow.
Tony Kornheiser
Why would. Dean. Dean's like 21. Why are you listening to the show?
Guest Speaker
Hello, Dean.
Tony Kornheiser
Hello, Dean.
Intern Harrison
Maybe it helps to get her the correct headspace for the goalie, you know?
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. I mean, he's a goalie at Columbia, so it's important to have a preparation to play. So maybe this is part of his prep. Anyway, so I say to Kelleher, well, I signed up. What do you mean? Are we on ESPN2? And he goes, no, we're on ESPN. I go, really?
Ryan McGee
Yeah.
Tony Kornheiser
And Wilbourne finds out.
Intern Harrison
It's the middle of the NBA playoffs.
Tony Kornheiser
Wilbourne finds out about this like five days later and goes, what are we doing on the. And I said, I had this Conversation. I don't. Nothing I can say. So I. Kelleher says, take the day off if you want. I was gonna take this Thursday and Friday off to go to Delaware, so I didn't want to take all that time off. So I said, no, I'll try and play. And Michael said, you can play. It'll be all right. We have a 7:22 tee time. You're going to be done by 11:22. I know.
Intern Harrison
Your normal production call.
Tony Kornheiser
I know. I know. Your call is normally at 11. He says, you can call from 15 or 16 and just tell Matt what's going on. And I said, okay. Okay. But I was so nervous about this because I am a creature of habit. Worse than a dog. Yeah. And I need the time to prepare, even though I don't need all of it after all these years. I don't even need any of it, but I think I need it. So I was upset to the degree that I couldn't sleep Sunday night. I slept maybe three hours. And I got out there and I was. And I didn't say anything to anyone, but my play was so terrible that very quickly it became obvious that I was, as they say, of an animal, off my feed. I was. I did things. I. Okay, I put the ball. I. Every single chip shot I had, I missed. I bladed. Even though on the range, I was great. I gagged. I put balls in the water all over the place. I put balls in deep rough that I couldn't get. I put the ball in my pocket on two. I never do that. I play it out. I don't care if I get a 12. I play it out 2, 3, 7, and then 18. Put the ball in my pocket, which is called bipsick. Ball in pocket, sitting in cart. Bipsick. I was bipsick. My score didn't matter because, I mean, I wasn't helping the team. Now I was upset the whole way. I was so embarrassed. I felt terrible. I think it's the worst my son has ever seen me play. And then I began to think, this is it. You've crossed the threshold. You're an old man. This is all you're ever gonna do. You're not ever gonna get a par again. Then I got a par on a few holes on the back.
Intern Harrison
So there's a chance for you to leave after 15, but you just made a nice par. So, like, nah, I gotta.
Tony Kornheiser
I gotta finish 16. And then I pard 17, which we didn't need on 17 because Frank eagled 17. I mean, I went four, three, and he went two. He went two. So two better than three. And I was. And I wrote about it in my diary, about how embarrassed I was and how I wonder if this is the end and how I ruined my son's life by going out there and playing. Because you took it personally. You felt you were to blame.
Intern Harrison
At 7:20, we're about to go off and you are visibly upset to the point that other people are asking if you're okay. Are you sure you want to do this? And you were pouting like a child in the cart. Yes, I understand. We all. Anyone who plays golf knows that we all have roles that you assume and you sort of figure out, what does the group need from me? Do I need to be the rah rah guy? Am I going to give. Am I going to give some green reads? Am I going to pump you up? Do I have to try and level everyone out? And you, I just have to start roasting you to try and get you back to some form of level. Because I'm sitting here thinking, I don't think you're gonna make it to 15 if we get you.
Tony Kornheiser
It was just terrible. I mean, the worst part about it.
Intern Harrison
Is you have a lovely work life balance where you were able to play golf a lot.
Tony Kornheiser
Yes.
Intern Harrison
You did not need this.
Tony Kornheiser
No, no. But I was at tournament, so. But I began to help. I pard 13. I. Pardon? 15. I pard 16. Didn't need me on 16. I wasn't getting a shot on 16. Pard 17. Didn't even, you know, and then destroyed 18. Just, you know, in my bipsick. Just awful. Again, it was a very bad. I was very bad. I shot well over 100. If I kept score well over 100, I mean, I say I stopped, I would just give myself a seven or an eight and just stop.
Intern Harrison
You got to protect the handicap.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Well over 100. But I helped a little bit here and there. Michael helped, Frank helped, Courtney helped on 18. Very important. So I didn't think we had a chance on shop credit, but we did. We got shop credit. I added wrong. I had us as -10 and we were -11. So not only can't I play, but I added wrong. But we got some shop credit, so I. I sound successful. Yeah, we finished with.
Intern Harrison
In unison. Why do we play?
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, glassware shop credit. Yeah. So finish sixth or so or seventh or something.
Intern Harrison
They do a wonderful job of making it so that a lot of the groups who go out feel like they got into the action, they were able to win something. And it brings you back into the pro shop. It's a win for everybody.
Tony Kornheiser
Yes. I also gave the. On number eight. Number eight is a par three, par three shack. And that's always the traditional hole where you buy shop credit. In other words, any amount of money you want, you buy the shop credit, you take your tee shot. If you land on the green, you get double. You get double. I just missed the green. I just missed. I had a pretty good shot. I was in the rough. I missed it by a foot and a half, something like that.
Intern Harrison
I hit the green and Kelmar. The pros laughing at me as it rolls off the front.
Tony Kornheiser
That's right. Rolled off. So I don't know. So all of it. The only thing was bad. So this. The other thing I did, provided lunch, they give you breakfast, and lunch, they give you breakfast. And in my case, I take the breakfast sandwiches, which are not. They're fine, but they're not as good as Bethesda bagel sandwiches, which Harrison gets one today. Very excited for that. So I put them in the cart and eat them as I go around.
Intern Harrison
Some food safety questions here, but, yes, continue when I.
Tony Kornheiser
When I am done. When I was done salmonella, I felt I had to get something to eat because I paid for the food. I had to get something to e. So I got another beautiful buffet, another breakfast sandwich, which was just like, that's too many breakfast sandwiches. Then I went to the buffet to try and get something to go and ate quickly and just destroyed my system for the entire day.
Intern Harrison
Did you go with the sausage?
Tony Kornheiser
I did the sausage.
Intern Harrison
I went. The chicken breast was great. I normally would not get something like that from the buffet line, but it was wonderful. Marinated chicken breast.
Tony Kornheiser
And we were done so early that the food was still hot. You know, I mean, we were like the fourth group. The group in front of us was so slow. What are you doing?
Intern Harrison
The best part about playing early like that is I had. I felt like I had two days because we still were able to go to a, you know, Memorial Day barbecue in the afternoon, play with the kids. Yeah, it was great.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Well, thank you for. For not yelling at me. We.
Intern Harrison
We've learned lessons from this. I'm. I'm grateful you did not take the day because I think it's a reactionary show. It was easy for you to do.
Tony Kornheiser
And, yes, it's a weekend, but I.
Intern Harrison
Will not push you into golf when you're not comfortable like that.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, but I was. I'm happy I did it. I was just terrible.
Guest Speaker
You were not happy. Yesterday when I saw you, the text.
Intern Harrison
Message that you left. I get a lot of emotional text messages from you, particularly after family dinners. This one, it's a saver.
Tony Kornheiser
I used to be a writer and I confessed how embarrassed I was. Everything. And you know, and I'm sorry I let you down and I feel terrible, you know. All right, that's.
Ryan McGee
That's it.
Tony Kornheiser
That's it. Let's get to Wilbone. I'm Tony Kornheiser. You're listening to the Tony Kornheiser Show. Now let's talk about that car you own but don't use. The one you're paying to keep registered and insured that's taking up space out front and is just sitting there doing no one any good. Let me tell you what you should do about that car. You should give cars for kids a call and have them take care of it for you. That's right. Just give them the info. They will come to you as soon as the next day. Take that car off your hands at no cost to you. Even better, they will turn that car into funds to help kids. So visit carsforkids.org Tony, that's cars with a K and the number four to donate or call cars for kids directly at 1-877-cars4kids.
Guest Speaker
You don't want to sing it?
Tony Kornheiser
I'm not singing it.
Intern Harrison
Donate your car today.
Tony Kornheiser
Now. I will never get that out of my head for the rest of the day. And they will get that car picked up in a jiffy.
Intern Harrison
Join the band.
Tony Kornheiser
Plus you can get a tax deduction, vacation voucher and life will be just great. They've been around for 30 years and have done this over a million times. Call now or head over to carsforkids.org Tony right now and get this done. That's carsforkids.org Tony, remember, that's cars with.
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Year Old Radio Band
You wonder which is worse, a blessing.
Tony Kornheiser
Or a this is yous Old Radio. This is a song called City Song they are playing at May 31 at the Pearl Street Warehouse. Here is a brief yeah, this week, here's a brief attempt to disavaluate the notion that this band and Virginia Coalition are one and the same. Virginia Coalition was an active band in the early 2000s when we were young and cool. We achieved a fair amount of regional national success. Year Old Radio are a bunch of old guys who are virtually unknown and are playing our first gig, which may also be our last gig depending on how things go. Virginia Coalition still sells out pretty big rooms locally. Well, locally before the show. But let me get the second page here. Year Old Radio has plenty of standing room tickets available, though the seats are sold out on a kind of our demographic being old. Virginia's Coalition has two singer songwriters, one of which doesn't follow sports much and calls me asking, did you do some song about a monkey and Chuck Todd? My friends keep calling about it. Your Old Radio has one singer, yours truly, who's been listening to the show since The Andy Poly am 570 days when it was flanked by Beatrice's Arby Zill doesn't miss a show. Stephen Dawson, thank you so much. Try the curveball May 31. May 31, yes, at the Pearl Street Warehouse. Plays in Michael Wilbond. We'll do all the playoffs. We'll do everything. Minnesota last night, your pick to win. A reasonable pick to win. They had destroyed Oklahoma City by 42 points in the first home game. They were playing at home again in game four in a series unlike the other series where in this series all the home teams won all the time. What are your thoughts about what happened?
Ryan McGee
It's a great game. Last night it was the best game of playoffs. Best game of the playoffs. Best. And you know everybody's going to blame Anthony Edwards because he.
Tony Kornheiser
I know I am.
Ryan McGee
Whatever. Shots. Yeah, but you got to watch the game, not the clips. And the game I watched before. Before meaning when Michael Jordan was Anthony Edwards, age and even a little older, 24, 25, 26. The Detroit Pistons shut him down. They limited his shots. They followed him everywhere. They dogged him, starting with Joe Dumars and Dennis Rodman and others. And Jordan could do anything for three years. Yokohama City Thunder has that good of defense on the wings with, with. With Lou Dort, who I voted for as my defensive player of the year with J Dub, who I voted on my second team.
Tony Kornheiser
You need to say who J. There's 7,000.
Ryan McGee
Jalen Williams. No, there's. Jalen Williams is J Dub. There's more than one Jay Williams.
Tony Kornheiser
Jay Williams, who's. Who's referred to as J Dub every time he's on television, radio.
Ryan McGee
I never referred to him. I referred to him as Jay Will, others. But they, they, they basically, they just pass him off. Russo, who is all defense last year with the Bulls, they passed Anthony Edwards off in one possession. They would pass them off to three people and he had nowhere to go. They smothered him again. I've seen this. I've seen.
Tony Kornheiser
You're not actually taken. You're not actually comparing Anthony Edwards to Michael Jordan.
Ryan McGee
Personally, I'm comparing exactly what happened.
Tony Kornheiser
What happened? Okay. Because Anthony Edwards is not Michael Jordan.
Ryan McGee
Anthony Edwards is the guy that scores 27 points a game. He get three.
Tony Kornheiser
His. His bad games are noticeably bad because his. Okay, I think you overrate Anthony. Anthony Edwards.
Ryan McGee
Do you have the Anthony Edwards thing? I can't get into that.
Tony Kornheiser
Well, no, but you. I have it because of you. Because you, you rate him so highly. I just.
Ryan McGee
I. Anthony Edwards, Tony is second team all league. Is that me? It's not my rating.
Tony Kornheiser
Well, Michael Jordan was not second team all league. He was first team all universe.
Ryan McGee
Then even. Regardless, that makes it even more noticeable. Michael Jordan lost to the Pistons three straight years. You may forget that, but I didn't.
Tony Kornheiser
No, I don't. I don't forget that he got taken.
Ryan McGee
Out of games and he had games where he was 6 for 18. He did. I was there. The history forgets that because Jordan is so great that he outran it.
Tony Kornheiser
That's right.
Ryan McGee
But it happened to him. Anthony Edwards, who is younger now than Michael Jordan was then was taken out of a game last night. He's not as good as Jordan. That's not the point. The point is you can take if you have the right defense. And we've talked about this all year. You talked about this too, that they have the best defense in the league.
Tony Kornheiser
They do. They do.
Ryan McGee
And part of that is they have four dudes who are between six four and six, seven. So the Anthony Edwards size and they just bounce him around like a pinball. And last night I'm looking at it and I looked at it some more he was. He couldn't get no space. None. They killed him. And that's what great teams do. This is about Oklahoma City, not about some failing on Anthony Edwards because you're not impressed. Oklahoma City. This is what, this is how they got to be Oklahoma City this year. And now they're about to. It seems they can now step into the role of champion. It seems.
Tony Kornheiser
Seems to me, I mean, I would tell, I would say that the other person that you thought was going to be a difference maker is Julius Randle. He gave them nothing. This is two games in this series where he gives them nothing.
Ryan McGee
And yet, yet they play an even game.
Tony Kornheiser
Well.
Ryan McGee
But what those guys did, they got 60 points from their bench.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah.
Ryan McGee
So last night, this is not a. Last night was the best playoff game I've seen this year.
Tony Kornheiser
Better than ones that Halliburton has won on final shots.
Ryan McGee
Those are dramatic.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah.
Ryan McGee
I'm talking about even. Well, yeah, because those, those games were good too. Those are more dramatic. This game didn't have that drama it could have because with 3/10 of a second left, Minnesota was throwing the ball in trying to get the, you know, lost in the basket like what's his name on Denver won Aaron Gordon. And so I'm talking about just the level of play, not the drama, the level play. Oklahoma City last night played its best game. To me, I'm not talking about the blowout, just the result. I'm talking about Minnesota was up to the challenge last night. They knew they had to win that game. They did everything they could to win that game and they couldn't. Oklahoma City was better when it counted in places. That accounts.
Tony Kornheiser
You expect Oklahoma City to be in the finals now, right? You absolutely expect.
Ryan McGee
Yes. Yes.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay. All right, let's move to the other series. Knicks in Indiana. An entirely a role reversal series in that road teams have won every single game of this one.
Ryan McGee
Yeah.
Tony Kornheiser
And so I assume you're going to pick the Knicks in this one. Like you picked up pick Minnesota last night.
Ryan McGee
The Knicks, man. I don't know, Tony. Part of me thinks that it's going to be. You pointed this out yesterday, like the Cleveland series where Indiana went home and.
Tony Kornheiser
Lost Game 3, but then by 22.
Ryan McGee
Found itself for Game 4. But the Knicks, the Knicks are tough. They're tough minded.
Tony Kornheiser
Yep.
Ryan McGee
They're flawed. They're not. They're not a great team in the way that we think of great teams over time in the NBA. But they're.
Tony Kornheiser
No, but Indiana is not a great team either.
Ryan McGee
No, they're not. There's not a great team.
Tony Kornheiser
Right, right.
Ryan McGee
Oklahoma City has a chance to show that it is.
Tony Kornheiser
Yes.
Ryan McGee
And can be, but. Yes, exactly. But the Knicks, man, that's gonna be a scrap tonight. That's gonna be a fight like last night.
Tony Kornheiser
Who you got?
Ryan McGee
It was a dog fight.
Tony Kornheiser
Who you got?
Ryan McGee
I think I got Indiana.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay.
Ryan McGee
And I still. I think the Knicks can still win the series. They have games five and seven at home in New York.
Tony Kornheiser
Right.
Ryan McGee
So they don't have to win tonight. It will sure help them. But I don't know. I'm thinking Indiana will win tonight to go 3:1 as well.
Tony Kornheiser
Yes, I agree with that. I think we're looking at five game series, but maybe I'm wrong on both of these things. Were you. Does. Does the Carolina win last night in hockey mean anything at all to get the three?
Ryan McGee
That's what I was like trying to figure out last night.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah.
Ryan McGee
When I turned over and saw the score, it was basically. I mean, it was basically a one nothing game. That's what.
Tony Kornheiser
Oh, the whole way. Yeah, the whole way at the end. Yeah.
Ryan McGee
I don't think so because. Because Florida seems to be not. They don't pay attention to that. They just do what they do in their mercenary. I mean, they're ruthless. So I don't think so. But they did win that game in Florida. They won that game in Fort Lauderdale.
Tony Kornheiser
That's right. That's right.
Ryan McGee
So. So if they can go back home and pull still together. But they were getting. I mean, they were just getting beat up, trashed by the opponent.
Tony Kornheiser
That is a league where you can be down three zero and still win. It's happened four times. The NBA. That doesn't happen. Doesn't happen in the NBA.
Ryan McGee
No, it has never happened, but it's happened in hockey. And, you know, I still think that Florida, you know, will put this away. They don't care. They're going on the road to play in Raleigh.
Tony Kornheiser
No.
Ryan McGee
Tomorrow. They don't. They don't care.
Tony Kornheiser
No.
Ryan McGee
And so I just is like, I got to see more from Carolina before I say, okay, this is a series.
Tony Kornheiser
Did you. I found myself over the weekend watching a little bit of like 19 different things. Did you watch any of the senior PGA golf at Congressional. Did you watch any of the regular pga?
Ryan McGee
I did. I watched some of the regular pga. I watched the women in. Who was in Mexico? I don't know. See, I can't even remember where people were. I watched the LPGA and I watched the pga. I did not watch a single swing of a Club of the seniors. Even though I know the seniors better than the other two groups.
Tony Kornheiser
Did you watch the. Did you watch the auto racing?
Ryan McGee
I watched a bit of Indy and a bit. I watched. I had the TV on during Indy.
Tony Kornheiser
Right.
Ryan McGee
But I didn't have the sound up because I was watching. I had women's across to watch.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Tell people what happened with Northwestern.
Ryan McGee
Well, I mean, Northwestern got to the finals for the third straight year and this is a. This is a coach with eight national champions.
Tony Kornheiser
Kelly Amante.
Ryan McGee
Kelly. And Monte Hiller. In the last 20. In the last 20 years, eight national championships. And wow. We beat Boston College, which is a big deal because Boston College beat us.
Tony Kornheiser
Last year in the final. Yeah.
Ryan McGee
So we beat Boston College in the semifinals by coming from behind. It was 11 to 6 going into the fourth period and we won. We came back and scored six unanswered goals to win the game with our goaltender making a brilliant save with three seconds left that would have taken it to overtime. And I was worried then that that game took so much out of us that we wouldn't have anything left for undefeated or not have enough left to beat undefeated North Carolina. North Carolina was undefeated.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Then North Carolina in women's lacrosse and field hockey wins all the. You know, they don't lose games. They're great.
Ryan McGee
They don't lose games. Except us. We beat for a national championship a couple of years ago and we are the defending two time champions in field hockey. North. Not. Not North Carolina.
Tony Kornheiser
Oh, I didn't know that. I thought it was North Carolina.
Ryan McGee
No, no, no. Northwestern is a defending national champion in field hockey. But they are there. But you're not mistaken. They're great. And now do you have skirmishes with them?
Tony Kornheiser
You have the national championship next year at your place, right?
Ryan McGee
Yes, yes, at Northwestern on the lakefront. 20,000 seats. It's where it should be. As opposed to 60,000 seat Foxborough. Absurd.
Tony Kornheiser
Let me just push back for a second. Just push back for a second. The men, Cornell against Maryland in Massachusetts. Not in New York or Maryland in Massachusetts. Got 32,000 people.
Ryan McGee
That's still half of Foxborough State.
Tony Kornheiser
I know, but it's, it's twice your stadium. What do you do?
Ryan McGee
Well, maybe we can expand it.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay.
Ryan McGee
You know, maybe we don't have the men, we have the women.
Tony Kornheiser
Oh, then. Oh, I thought maybe you had both.
Ryan McGee
No, we don't have.
Tony Kornheiser
That's good.
Ryan McGee
I don't think we do.
Tony Kornheiser
Oh, you should have record. Yeah.
Ryan McGee
You know, attendance for women. A record.
Tony Kornheiser
Right.
Ryan McGee
And. And Northwestern holds the record For a school's home game, which is 14,000, which was this year as well, in that stadium and that. And that.
Tony Kornheiser
Well, you will go. You'll go to that, right?
Ryan McGee
I'm involved in the.
Tony Kornheiser
Yes. Well, I hope so.
Ryan McGee
So I'm, I'm excited about it and I hope we're as good as we often are so we don't have to play Boston college. In Boston.
Tony Kornheiser
You don't.
Ryan McGee
That's not national semifinal.
Tony Kornheiser
Nobody wants that.
Ryan McGee
And just, you know, give every drop of everything you've got and have something left for the final. If we're that good again next year, which is no reason to think we won't be because we've, you know, there's some years where we're not as good, but there's a reason Bill belichick comes to our practices for women's lacrosse.
Tony Kornheiser
Because Jordan is there.
Ryan McGee
His arm around Kelly. No, because he's put his arm around Kelly. Imani hiller as a great coach because he recognizes greatness. Recognizes greatness.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay.
Ryan McGee
And so that's, you know, that's a very cool thing for us. Nobody else cares what we do.
Tony Kornheiser
I'll see you later.
Ryan McGee
All right.
Tony Kornheiser
Michael Wilbond boys and girls. I'll be in the office today. We'll take a break. Ryan mcgee will join us. We'll try to talk about the Indianapolis 500. I'm Tony Kornheiser. I found a kid who swings a golf club like a dream.
Michael Wilbon
I'd like to try to qualify him.
Tony Kornheiser
For the u. S. Amateurs coming to apple tv.
Intern Harrison
Plus, what's your name?
Tony Kornheiser
I'm not into older guys, but I'm flattered. A new comedy series. Stick. I don't want to go on this trip. Your mouth's saying one thing, but those.
Michael Wilbon
Eyes are saying something else.
Tony Kornheiser
From the home of ted lasso, you see your shot at redemption. This is your mulligan, Owen wilson.
Ryan McGee
This game takes in it.
Tony Kornheiser
Thanks.
Ryan McGee
The game's finally giving me something back.
Tony Kornheiser
Stick. You know, Arnold palmer iced tea, lemonade.
Michael Wilbon
Mix it.
Tony Kornheiser
I'm missing a nap for this. Streaming June 4th on Apple TV. This Memorial Day, turn up the heat with the home depot. Find the perfect grill and patio set to keep the cookouts coming all season long. Grill up a feast with the next grill four burner gas grill only $229. And complete your space with the stylish Glen Ridge Falls seven piece dining set now on special buy for just $499 with free delivery. Take your memorial day cookout to the next level all summer long with The Home Depot. See homedepot.com delivery for more details.
Intern Harrison
You're listening to the Tony Kornheiser show.
Tony Kornheiser
Once again, this is yous Old Radio. This is a song called Middle Aged Lullaby. It's sung by Stephen Dawson. Michael, if. If independent artists like your old radio want their music played on this show, how do they go about doing.
Intern Harrison
Send us your music by emailing it to jinglesonyquinizershow.com we play everything by everybody, pretty much.
Tony Kornheiser
We discriminate because we play good things, but we're happy to play it.
Guest Speaker
Yes.
Tony Kornheiser
We don't play songs you're familiar with because cost too much money to play. However simple.
Guest Speaker
If Sir Paul McCartney wanted to send us in some songs.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, some stuff, he could do it.
Guest Speaker
We'd love to hear from you.
Tony Kornheiser
We'll take it. All right, so this plays in Ryan McGee. We're going to talk about the Indianapolis 500, which is something. I've said this before on a variety of locales. When the Indianapolis 500 was on tape delay 20, 30 years ago and they had time to put the race together over a two to three hour period and Jackie Stewart was doing the color, it was the greatest television show I ever saw. Now the greatest television show I have seen since then is the coverage of the Triple Crown races, where they go three or four hours live TV and they know exactly what they're doing. They bring you right up to the starting gate. It's fabulous television. The Indianapolis 500 is fabulous television because of the danger involved, because of the speed involved, because it's not something most of us see all the time. Ryan, did you think that it was a satisfying 500 the way it ended and the entire race?
Michael Wilbon
Yeah, it was weird. I mean, it was just, it was, it was a weird day, period. You know, Everybody, your Indy 500 historians will tell you about 1992. And it was, you know, when they woke up that morning, it was in the 40s. And when they started the race, it was like 58 degrees and Roberto Guerrero, the pole sitter, spun out before the race even started. Well, guess what? On Sunday we woke up, it was about 48 degrees and at the green flag, it was about 60 degrees. And Scott McLaughlin, one of the most talented racers on the track, spun out on the pace lap. And in 92, Mario and Michael Andretti, or Mario Andretti, wrecked. And on lap one of this race, his grandson Marco wrecked just. It felt like 1992. I should have been wearing like some grunge jeans or something. But it was a weird day but it was satisfying in that we had a winner that really only had one box left to check to take his place as one of the greatest ever. And the finish wasn't. We've been a little spoiled by the finishes over the last few years. So it wasn't the finish that we've had the last lap pass for the win, but it was, if you are an IndyCar fan, it was very satisfying because of who won the race.
Tony Kornheiser
So, yeah, so I want to get to the last lap of the race because on television, five or six times within the last five minutes of the race, they were saying the recent history of lap, last lap passes and people winning this race, the race ended under caution in the last lap. There was some sort of accident and the race ended under caution. A lot of people I'm sure would say something like, well, no, that you can't do that. You're going to have to restart it and give them all one lap. My feeling, Ryan, was you're in the last lap. No, we're not stopping it now. If it was two to go, that's different. You're in. You're committed to the last lap and this guy is winning. And so I'm okay with that. Where are you on that?
Michael Wilbon
Yeah, and it wasn't just. And for the leaders, they were. I mean, they were in turn four. I mean, they were. They weren't just in the last lap. They were the. On the last stretch of the last.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah.
Michael Wilbon
And so, yeah, and this is a source of great controversy and gnashing of teeth in motorsports. And in fact, NASCAR has kind of gotten rid of this. NASCAR has overtime. They have a rule. They have a different rule.
Tony Kornheiser
That's right.
Michael Wilbon
So when the yellow comes out, you know, if it comes out and they're on the last lap, it's up to race control. It's up to city hall, we call it. And they can determine, you know what? No, no, no, we're going to, we're going to run another lap or a couple more laps. And so. And we sit in the Daytona 500 every year because there's always a huge crash, you know, with the lap to go. And so, so I get it. But IndyCar has always dug in their heels and said, no, no, this is how it's going to be. The one time they tried to do an overtime situation, it was a complete hot mess. And so, you know, and honestly, too, as much as I love the race and it is literally my favorite event to cover the announcements 500 just because of the history of it, 109 times. They run this thing now, but they're also. I just kind of hold my breath for three hours. And so when we, when that thing ends and no one has been chopper to the hospital. Yeah, I'm good. Right. So I don't, I don't need any extra laps. We've already, we've rolled the dice for, for 500 miles. I'm not doing it for 510. So.
Tony Kornheiser
I was a sports writer for a long time and I always watched this race and I don't, I covered it two or three times. I saw people die in it once. I, I'm, you know, I don't know that much about it, but I do know names like Unser and Andretti, you know, and I didn't know anybody in this one. Pretty much. I didn't know anybody. What has happened with Indy cars that I don't know anybody anymore.
Ryan McGee
Well, the.
Michael Wilbon
Quite honestly, the bloodlines are kind of drying up, you know. You know, when I first started covering open wheel racing or motorsports in the late 90s, you know, we had A.J. foyt, had a son and a grandson that were in the races. And AJ Foy still owns a team. In fact, AJ Ford had two cars in the top 10, which was a really big deal. That'd be like Pittsburgh Pirates, you know, making the playoffs. And so it was, it was a big deal. And I saw Al Jr. On the elevator and you know, I interviewed Mario Andretti and his grandson Marco was in the race. But in our minds, Graham Rahal, Bobby Rahal's son, and Marco Andretti, Michael Andretti's son, Mario's grandson. In my mind, they're still young guys. That was Marco's 20th start in the race. He started that race more than his dad did. Graham Rahal, I think Graham told him it was his 18th start. So those guys haven't won and they're starting to age out. And so, yeah, it's an interesting time. The teams are familiar. You know Chip Ganassi, you know Roger PINSKY, you know A.J. foyt. But the drivers are different.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, I get it. That the guy who won, I hope I pronounce it correctly, Pillow. I get that he's a great driver. I had not heard of him. Which leads me to this quote. I know he's Spanish. Can you make a living in the United States of. I know you can make a living doing nascar. Can you make a living in the United States of America being an IndyCar driver?
Michael Wilbon
Those guys are fine, I can tell you that. They are living Comfortably, most of them live in Indianapolis. Most of them are flying private jets to where they're going, at least the ones that are successful. But, but the, the Joseph Newgarden who won the last two. Yeah, you know, Alex Palo, I mean, a lot of these names, the guys that have won a lot of races in the last, the guys dropped from McLaren, they're fine. They're doing pretty well now. Like, it's always been the last 10 guys in the field that, you know, they're barely getting by, but they are racing for a living and that's great. And even in nascar, I mean, telling the money's just not what it was, you know, and that's why we're not seeing, you know, when I came along, you had Rusty Wallace and Dale Earnhardt, these guys that were racing into their late 40s and all the way. If Dale Earnhardt had lived, he would have raced into his mid-50s. But you're not going to see that a lot anymore because, you know, the guys aren't making the money like they used to. And so they're going to put it away while they're racing. But, you know, they're not just going to chase money like, you know, basically like Richard Petty did for the last eight years of his career. They're going to get out of there.
Tony Kornheiser
So it's always heartwarming when somebody wins and embraces their parents. And it was nice to see the winner embrace his dad. And a lot of tears all the way around. Should I know more about Pillow? Is he that good? Is he an all timer?
Michael Wilbon
He is now. I mean, honestly, it was one of the things that, and this was the story that I wrote for ESPN is what I talked Alex about on Sunday night, which is, you know, he'd won, he'd won three championships this year. They've run six races, he's won five of them. I mean, he is what he's doing right now. We've never seen a driver start a season like this since A.J. foyt in 1979. And you know, if I start writing things about you that include AJ Foyt and include the names of Alan Sir Senior and include the names of Johnny Rutherford, it's royalty. That's like, that's like Shehu Otani, right? Everything he does now is compared to Babe Ruth. And so if I'm having that conversation, you're one of the greatest. Now, people don't know who he is because Indy cars, indycar is a mainstream sport for four hours a year. But the rest of the year, he's the best to the point that Scott Dixon, who is one of the all time best and is his teammate. At the banquet on Monday night, Scott Dixon said, hey, I've got great news. I'm going to give you the gift of a family vacation for the next seven weeks because they just want him to go away because no one else can win races right now. So.
Ryan McGee
And plus, he's a good guy.
Michael Wilbon
And you're right, it's, it's a great story because a lot of these guys come from money. That's no secret. You know, bucks, no bucks, no Buck Rogers. You know, all these guys, most of the racers you've heard of, they came up because they're, they have money, particularly in Europe, particularly in open world racing. But this family from Barcelona had nothing and went broke so he could go go kart racing. And that's why he was so emotional to have his parents and his and his entire family at the racetrack on Sunday.
Tony Kornheiser
So this is a weekend in which you have an F1 race in Europe. You have the Monaco Grand Prix, you have the Indianapolis 500, and you have the Coca Cola 600. You have all the types of racing that are out there. Which you know, which do you respond to most?
Michael Wilbon
Well, for me, it's Indianapolis. And you're talking to a guy that grew up in North Carolina. I mean, I spent the first half of my career cover NASCAR almost exclusively, but I get on an airplane and leave Charlotte and go to Indy 500. And the Coca Cola 600 is the world 600. You know, it's, the race is more than a half a decade or a half a century old. It's amazing. But the Indy 500 is the original. I mean, my favorite sporting events are the ones where you can't imagine the city without the event or the event without the city. Right. I go to the College World Series in Omaha every year. You know, the Masters in Augusta, you know, Pasadena and the Rose Bowl. You can't imagine, all due respect to the Pacers and the Colts and Caitlin Clark, if they all packed up and left, the city would figure out a way to live without it. If the Indy 500 went away, Indianapolis would lose its identity. That's what you travel the world, that's who they know. So to me, all the things we know about motorsports, no matter what type it is, the green and checkered flag, you know, the fact that they turn left, you know, all of these things, the pre race ceremony, all that started in Indianapolis in 1911. And to me, you just, I'm a History guy. And you cannot replace history. You can't fake it.
Tony Kornheiser
This is. Leads me to the last question, and I'm glad you're a history guy. What is the milk thing? When did it start? Why do they do it? Because I think it's the coolest thing in sports.
Michael Wilbon
So. 1936, a racer named Louie Meyer who grew up in upstate. On a farm in upstate New York, or actually, actually, that's not true. I always say that, but I learned this past weekend. He actually grew up in the city.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay. And in Manhattan. Okay.
Michael Wilbon
He was somewhere less fancy than Manhattan.
Tony Kornheiser
Okay.
Michael Wilbon
But his mother, Yonkers. I think his mother used to give him buttermilk on hot days. And so they had an extremely hot day in 1936. Louis Meyer won the race. It wasn't the first time he'd won it. And when he climbed out of the car, the first thing he said was, somebody get me some buttermilk. Because he was overheated. And his mother had always taught him. So he takes a big swig of buttermilk, which sounds gross, right? But he did. And some very smart person with the. The Indiana dairy farmer saw the photograph in the paper the next day. And so they went to the Napoleon Speedway and said, that was amazing. We sold a lot of milk because of what Louis Meyer did and his pictures on the front page of every paper in the country. And so that was the deal. And it took a few years, but eventually the Indiana dairy farmers were standing in Victor Lane with milk. And now you have a choice. They give you three choices. You can do skim 2% or whole milk. And we all get the list on Friday before the race. And Alex Pillow chose whole milk because he said, why would you skimp at this point? All these guys are fitness nuts, but they all. And they all. Every now and then you get a racer who loves the history of their track and they request buttermilk. And the dairy farmers association very politely says, no, no, you're getting the white stuff.
Tony Kornheiser
Great story. I knew you'd know. I'm happy. Thanks for being on, Ryan. Thank you.
Michael Wilbon
Absolutely, Tony.
Tony Kornheiser
Thank you, Ryan McGee, boys and girls. We will come back with email and jingle. I'm Tony Kornheiser.
Target Advertiser
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Tony Kornheiser
This is the Tony Kornizer show.
Year Old Radio Band
Well, here comes Tony's mailbag. We got your emails, your faxes and, you know, notes. It's time for Tony's man back.
Ryan McGee
We're gonna read some.
Tony Kornheiser
All you folks. That's John Ross. It's really good. Isn't John Ross. Doesn't he teach golf? Michael, Isn't there any.
Intern Harrison
I'll look it up.
Tony Kornheiser
I thought he taught golf. John.
Guest Speaker
He may.
Ryan McGee
I'll.
Guest Speaker
Yeah, I'll check the emails.
Tony Kornheiser
No. Do you want to do the. Oh, yeah.
Guest Speaker
Bethesda Bagels. Today's bagel sandwich day.
Tony Kornheiser
So lucky.
Guest Speaker
Yeah, it's a good day to be in.
Tony Kornheiser
If I was him, I wouldn't come back the rest of the week.
Intern Harrison
John Ross is a certified coach from Falls Road.
Guest Speaker
How about that?
Tony Kornheiser
That's what I'm saying. I don't know if it's the same guy, but it might be the same guy.
Guest Speaker
Bethesda Bagels, we love them. You will as well. Just go to Bethesda Bagels.com for the location in the DC area near Student.
Intern Harrison
Pop on in.
Guest Speaker
You'll be thrilled.
Tony Kornheiser
That's it for us today. Before we get to the mailbag, let me just say some folks like to get away, take a holiday from the neighborhood, hop a flight to Miami beach or to Hollywood But I'm taking a Greyhound on the Hudson river line I'm in a New York state of mind that's one of the great unknown Billy Joel songs. New York state of mind. I don't nobody associates that, you know, they all a piano man and all those other rock and roll tunes. But this is a great song. Thanks to our guests today, Michael Wilbon and Ryan McGee. Thanks as well to today's sponsors. Remember, you can listen to us on Apple podcasts, Spotify and orders. Get the show through Apple. Please leave us a review. This is a long note that we got that Nigel told me about yesterday from Patrick Backroad. I hope I have spelled that. I hope I pronounced that correctly in Rockford, Illinois. And he writes, I've been a loyal fan of Pardon the Interruption since day one, and it's been an absolute joy getting to know you more personally through the podcast. Over the years, your voice has become as familiar to me as a skyline here in Chicago. Steady, insightful, and often hilariously exasperated. I look forward each day to your stories, whether it's your war with modern customer service, tales from the golf course, or your passionate play by Play of the Nats daily drama. As a born and bred Chicagoan, I naturally align with Wilbond's Cubs, Bulls, Bears loyalty. But you got me hanging on every pitch and managerial misstep from the Nats. It's like emotional whiplash. I wouldn't have it any other way. I'm a 50 year old 8 handicap golfer myself. So your daily golf updates hit especially close. Close to home. I wince with you at the bad rounds, cheer the pars and nod in solemn understanding when the driver betrays you. Keep hitting them straight and maybe let your son give you a swing tip or two. Just don't let him put you on Instagram doing it. Your calm and collected delivery make even the most mundane topics compelling. And that's a gift. I genuinely hope you never retire. At least give us fair warning so we can emotionally prepare. All the best, Patrick Backrote. And he says, I know it looks nothing like it sounds. Welcome to the Midwest. So that's. That's really nice. I really appreciate it, Patrick.
Intern Harrison
The Gnats are coming to Wrigley second week in September.
Tony Kornheiser
Well, I'm very excited.
Guest Speaker
Talking smack.
Tony Kornheiser
No Nats yesterday. No Nats. I didn't play Memorial Day.
Michael Wilbon
Yeah.
Tony Kornheiser
What I didn't understand that. Didn't play. Not everybody played. They didn't play. From Tom Moore in. In Binghamton. He wrote me this and he also wrote a email. Our Bearcats have won the America east title in the 11th inning yesterday. This is the sixth America east title for coach Tim Sineke's high caliber program. The brackets will be revealed. It turns out. He said, I figured you would want to lead PTI with this, but we all know Wilbon will want to lead with the NBA. Have you been to campus to see the new baseball stadium facilities that go with it? It rivals some of the top programs in the country. The facility should help with recruiting. We beat Brian 6 to 5.
Michael Wilbon
Oh.
Tony Kornheiser
It was an. It was a gift from. From an alum. It's many millions of dollars.
Michael Wilbon
Oh, wow.
Tony Kornheiser
Tens or tens of millions of dollars to build this thing.
Guest Speaker
Well, clearly it's a good.
Tony Kornheiser
I mean, yeah, if we play Georgia. I believe our first. It's double elimination. I believe our first game is against Georgia. I don't know exactly where it is. It's obviously not in Binghamton, but good luck to the Bearcats.
Guest Speaker
Six America east titles.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, we won. You know, we won the softball as well. Now we didn't. We were eliminated in the Nationals. But it's great to get to the Nationals. From Neil Ayervase. Our lawyer friend in Littleton, Colorado. In light of the show's ongoing obsession with potatoes and potato farming and Dr. Tony's stature in the DVM, the Nationals designation of June 8 as Mr. Potato Head Night simply cannot be ascribed to random coincidence. As such, given Tony's Wilbourne like connections to D.C. sports journalism, political community, Nigel should have little difficulty in arranging for Tony to throw out the first pitch that evening. I can already hear the announcer. Ladies and gentlemen, and kids of all ages, on this, the Nationals inaugural, Mr. Potato Head Night. Please give a warm welcome to the sultan of spuds, the titan of tubers, Washington's own Tony Cornhyse. And while Tony cannot still fire a 60 foot 6 inch heater, we can be sure that he won't commit the Wilbon faux pas and tuck in his baseball jersey in his pants, never tucked. June 8th. Maybe. Maybe. I don't know. Michael Benedetti in San Tan Valley, Arizona. Let me get this straight. You have a history of rodents eating your vegetables, mice roaming in the walls, and deer jumping your fence to eat your flowers, and you plan on planting potatoes in your front yard? Just open a restaurant already instead of Chatter. You can call it Critter. Maybe you can hire Bob Ryan as your busboy. It's just. Yeah, I guess we made a mistake here. From Shani Alon or Alon.
Guest Speaker
Oh, yeah, I think this is solicitation.
Tony Kornheiser
Oh, hi. Really nice to see the Chatter offers a wide range of delicious food and unique drinks. If you we could use some funding for seasonal menu expansion or equipment. Would that help? It's totally unsecured.
Guest Speaker
What is that give you money? We don't revitalize. Chad. I think they've missed the boat on that one.
Tony Kornheiser
Bob Boyer. I've been saving this week's shows for a long flight home to Vancouver, British Columbia. So apologized if you've moved on from the five guys discussion, but I thought you might be interested in comparing pricing here in Glasgow. The difference here is that prices are significantly lower than what you would pay for hamburger in a pub or restaurant. My wife and I did have a little milkshake at the court. Cost of I guess 4.15 pounds. For comparison, a One Scoop ice cream cone here will set you back 4.5 pounds and will usually require a long queue. So I guess that it's more expensive in the British Isles, right?
Guest Speaker
I guess. I'm not sure what the euro conversion is.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah, they all have these. He sent me the menu. But the menu is all in pounds. A little bacon cheeseburger I guess this is five guys. A little bacon cheeseburger is 10.75 pounds. That's got to be way more than $11.
Intern Harrison
Yeah, way more. $36 now.
Tony Kornheiser
Jeff Freeland, Carmel, Indiana Just watched Finnegan do what Finnegan does best. Blow another save to the Braves. Lucky for us, I followed your golden rule and pulled up our good friends and show sponsor Fanduel. Dropped some cash on Finnegan, letting the leadoff guy reach and just like clockwork, Boom. Base hit. We're in the money. But why stop at a whopper when we've got five guys dreams? I rolled the dice, put all the winnings on the next batter getting on base. And wouldn't you Cha Ching, he delivers. We're moving up the value menu now. At this point I figured take Sands advice, go full send time for the milkshake. We let it all ride. Finnegan versus Matt Olson. You already know how that ended. Double off the wall, save blown, milkshake secured. So meet me Saturday at the Five Guys Off 146 in Carmel, Indiana. We're cashing in with a bacon cheeseburger full size, plus fries and milkshake. All courtesy of our boy Finnegan who leads the majors in Saint yeah, that's. That's the remarkable irony. He actually leads the majors and said Tom Mule, Official sunrise and sunset monitor for the Tony Kornizer show in Bowie, Maryland. Since the weather is getting nicer in the D.C. area, I thought I would prepare you for sunrises in the D.C. area to start getting later very soon. Don't worry, June 21st will still be the longest day with 14 hours 57 minutes of daylight. Sunrises have been getting earlier and earlier since January 5th. The earliest sunrise will be on June 13th of March at 5:40 in the morning and 37 seconds in the D.C. area. June 9th through 18th. We'll still have sunrises in the 5:40 minute, but June 13th will be the earliest. Sunsets will continue to get later, just a little bit longer. They've been getting longer since December 7th in the D.C. area. The latest sunset will be on June 27th at 8:39pm and 39 seconds. Sunsets will be in the 8:39 minute between June 24th and July 1st before starting to go down even more. I will email again in about six months when we have the winter solstice.
Intern Harrison
It didn't feel like it this weekend with the weather, but it is summer.
Guest Speaker
Yeah it is.
Intern Harrison
Didn't feel you could see with the traffic. It's summer season.
Tony Kornheiser
Yeah. Chip Robinson in Mount Pleasant South Carolina. I was catching up on the pod over the holiday weekend. Monday's mailbag included an email from Tom Leach about your Secretariat picks some years back. Tom Leach is a little. What? Are you kidding me? I know that guy. Well, I know him. But Tom is the play by Playboys for Kentucky football and basketball, and he crushed both. I'm 50 now. I live in South Carolina, but I grew up in Lexington listening to the legendary Kwood Ledford on the radio Call for the Cats. When Kaywood retired, it felt like the days of turning down the TV broadcast to listen to the radio were over. Then Tom came along. One of the great surprises this dopey show has given me over the years is the addition of Chuck Culpepper. Is a big Chuck's writing in the Herald Leader during my high school days redefined what a columnist should be in my mind. I'm unexplainably thrilled to know that he and Tom remain friends. But I'm not surprised. Hearing Tom email you and mentioned Chuck was my own personal David Aldrich moment trifecta. If Tom, Chuck and you ever need a fourth, have Nigel let me know. We'll grab an early tee time, take a Bourbon Trail tour before grabbing an early dinner, and then make the short trip from Lexington over to Cumberland Falls to catch a moonbow. The moonbow is.
Guest Speaker
That sounds spectacular.
Tony Kornheiser
David C. In Hanover, Maryland, I had the great pleasure of meeting Gary and Bridget from my dad's chips today as they hawked free samples at Green Valley Market in neighboring Elgin. An endless supply of all flavors at my local market. Yes, please. We chatted for a minute about the show and Gary mentioned how it has contributed to their success. Another box of that is due, I think attaches the best of the series of pictures Bridget took of Gary and me by their table. I couldn't keep my mouth shutter my eyes open, it seems. Go for the chips, of course. Take that moco. Take that moco349 for the big bag, but don't miss the house Roasted Rosemary Daily Turkey at the counter behind us. It's what I was there for. And I got a bonus meeting. The gracious and friendly couple behind the snack phenomenon. Isn't that good?
Guest Speaker
Yeah, it's great.
Tony Kornheiser
That's really nice. It's really nice. Alex Cobb in Springfield, Missouri. It's my distinct pleasure to invite you, Michael, Nigel and the whole clan to the event of the year, my son's wedding on June 14th. Not technically summer, but definitely at the height of wedding season. Missouri is also the home state for the woman related to marriage to Malibu Chris. So please feel free to bring Mr. Salizza along as well. My son and his bride have granted me the distinction of officiating their service, and I will happily work in a lecheserie should any member of the show grace us with your presence. I have listened to the various iterations of the show before this son was born. Nothing would thrill or surprise me more than to make your attendance more than happy to spring for some Johnnie Walker Blue if it sweetens the deal. Thank you for decades of entertainment community building. Please tell Brian Mulder he is invited, but he has to sit in the back and drink the cheap stuff. Tony, Linda Beeson and Sue Heidel from Cincinnati are also invited. That's an all littles affair. That's great. This is a picture of Cleo and Tim. It's really nice. Yeah, really nice. Gary Homolka in Avon Lake, Ohio. Your recent discussion of Necco wafers, which I hold in my chocolate I was watching on his Channel 8, brought me back to a simpler time growing up in the Chicago suburbs in the 80s. Back then, using the Illinois Tollway meant paying 40 cents into a toll basket. That's right kids. No easy pass. Straight cash home. In fact, you need a change. One afternoon a newly licensed 16 year old Illinois Tollway driver pulled up to a cash box frantically searching for loose change. It was rush hour. Cars behind him had already started honking. All he could find was a nickel, some pennies, and a roll of Necco wafers his grandfather had recently given him. In that moment of panic, I realized the Necco wafer was the same size as a quarter. I tossed two wafers in the basket and voila, the gate lifted. A roll of necco wafers had about 35 wafers, cost around 50 cents back in the 80s. Ask Wilbon if he knew that life back then. Love the podcast. That's very nice. And Brandon Borzelli, our great friend from Lebanon, New Jersey, I decided to do what any reasonable person would do when faced with the train debacle you experienced. I asked AI what to do. I plugged in the following to AI should Tony take the Acela train again? I got back a very long answer with pros and cons. Speed, comfort, quiet cars versus price or delays. The summary is if Tony is not in a rush, he might consider a cheaper Amtrak train or a bus. Not satisfied, I ask the following what does Tony need to charter a boat to take to the Delaware House to avoid the Bay Bridge? The answer involves whether or not you have anxiety Desire traffic avoidance. Prefer dramatic or luxurious experience. But the tipping point is the legal or security issues. If Tony is involved in a shady business or legal trouble, potentially a mobster type scenario. So there you go. If you're a gangster, you best stay off the best bridge, the Bay Bridge. If you're out on your bike tonight, everyone, as always, do wear what now don't you tell me you don't remember.
Intern Harrison
Me because I sure as heck fire remember you.
Year Old Radio Band
You wonder which is worse, a blessing or a curse? I can tell you if you want me to. Cities and down yeah, there's no need to freak out about it Some quiet recognition all it do Gonna move out to the country gonna get the hell outta here Starting to question your sense of direction but I never seen it so clear you picked a hell of a time to break down Just make sure that no one's around Ain't it a pity? This city you're holding so dear? All that I know is we gotta get outta here.
Ryan McGee
Sam.
Year Old Radio Band
Gonna move out to the country country gonna get the hell outta here. Starting to question your sense of direction That I never seen so clear.
Ryan McGee
You.
Year Old Radio Band
Picked a hell of a time to break down Just make sure that no one's around it may need a pity this city you're holding so dear all.
Ryan McGee
That I know.
Year Old Radio Band
We gotta get outta.
Tony Kornheiser
Here.
Year Old Radio Band
You wonder which is worse, a blessing or a curse? I could tell you if you want me to. Ashtrays and telephone books are the things when I look at them too long makes me feel old. Hat trick got a hat trick and Benny scored a goal you'll be the first to know if ever I find the guy Damon.
The Tony Kornheiser Show: “Off My Feed” – Detailed Episode Summary
Release Date: May 27, 2025
Hosted by: This Show Stinks Productions, LLC
[07:20] Tony Kornheiser:
Tony opens the episode by sharing his frustrating experience in the Memorial Day golf tournament. Participating with friends Courtney, Frank, and others, Tony grapples with a series of poor shots, leading him to describe his performance as being “off my feed.”
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
Tony Kornheiser [07:20]:
“I was so embarrassed. I felt terrible. I think it's the worst my son has ever seen me play.”
[20:10] Ryan McGee:
Ryan McGee engages in a deep dive into the NBA playoffs, focusing on Anthony Edwards' performance and his team's defensive strategies.
Key Points:
Notable Quotes:
Ryan McGee [20:19]:
“If you have the right defense, you can take him out of the game consistently.”
Tony Kornheiser [25:18]:
“You absolutely expect [Oklahoma City] to be in the finals now, right?”
[34:02] Michael Wilbon:
Tony Kornheiser discusses the recent Indianapolis 500 with Michael Wilbon, delving into race dynamics, historical comparisons, and the significance of traditions like the milk celebration.
Key Points:
Notable Quotes:
Tony Kornheiser [34:02]:
“The Indianapolis 500 is fabulous television because of the danger involved, the speed, and the rich history.”
Michael Wilbon [41:35]:
“Alex Palou is what he's doing right now. We've never seen a driver start a season like this since A.J. Foyt in 1979.”
[44:57] Tony Kornheiser:
Delving into one of the most beloved traditions of the Indianapolis 500, Tony explains the origin and evolution of the milk celebration.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
Michael Wilbon [45:09]:
“Alex Palou chose whole milk because he said, why would you skimp at this point?”
Throughout the episode, Tony Kornheiser engages with listeners' emails, sharing anecdotes, shoutouts, and humorous interactions.
Key Points:
Notable Exchange:
Patrick Backrote’s Email [49:26]:
“Your daily golf updates hit especially close to home. I wince with you at the bad rounds, cheer the pars, and nod in solemn understanding when the driver betrays you.”
[43:46] Michael Wilbon:
Michael emphasizes the significance of the Indy 500 in maintaining the cultural and historical identity of Indianapolis, comparing it to other iconic sporting events like the Masters or the Rose Bowl.
Key Points:
Notable Quote:
Michael Wilbon [43:46]:
“My favorite sporting events are the ones where you can't imagine the city without the event or the event without the city.”
As per the episode’s format, advertisements for Amazon Prime, Target, Indeed, State Farm, and others are present but omitted from this summary to focus on the core content.
In “Off My Feed,” Tony Kornheiser navigates through a gamut of topics, from personal setbacks in golfing and in-depth NBA playoff analyses to an engaging discussion about the storied Indianapolis 500 with Michael Wilbon. The episode seamlessly blends personal anecdotes, sports insights, and listener interactions, offering a comprehensive and entertaining experience for both regular listeners and newcomers alike.
Overall Notable Quote:
Tony Kornheiser [07:20]:
“I felt I was the worst my son has ever seen me play. But I got a par on a few holes on the back. I had to finish 16.”
For those interested in the full conversation and additional segments, subscribing to “The Tony Kornheiser Show” on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or other major platforms is recommended.