The Shohei Live Experience, Plus the Maxey-V.J. Show, Surprise NBA Contenders, and Early Trends With Tim Legler

1h 55m
The Ringer’s Bill Simmons talks about his experience attending the epic, 18-inning Game 3 of the World Series between the Dodgers and the Blue Jays (2:12). Then, Tim Legler joins to discuss the talent around the NBA, Wemby and the Spurs, the Philly situation, and much more (25:52)!

Host: Bill Simmons

Guest: Tim Legler

Producers: Chia Hao Tat and Eduardo Ocampo

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Runtime: 1h 55m

Transcript

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Speaker 1 We are also brought to you by the Ringer Podcast Network, where it is the last week of Halloween. So, of course, we had to do a horror movie.
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Speaker 1 You can get that wherever you get your podcast. So go check it out.

Speaker 1 I'm going to have Tim Legler on here. in a second to talk about everything that's gone on in the NBA through one week.
He's been lucky enough to sit at Quartzide for a couple of the games.

Speaker 1 There's been a lot of storylines in play, and he's coming up after the break and after Pro Jam

Speaker 1 and after I tell the story about going to game three Dodgers, Blue Jays World Series last night, which turned into some sort of a life experience. And I'll explain why in a second.

Speaker 1 Let's take a break, Pro Jam. Then I'm back.
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Speaker 1 All right, so I went to game three of the Dodgers Blues Jays World Series last night in Dodgers Stadium. And by the time you hear this, game four might be about to happen.
It might be happening.

Speaker 1 It might have already happened. Not the point.

Speaker 1 I think I went to one of the best World Series games, at least of this century and maybe of the last 50 years. And God only knows.
I mean, there's been, we always do this with new stuff.

Speaker 1 We forget about some of the classics over the years. There's been a lot of awesome World Series games.
There's nothing like being at the World Series, the theater of it.

Speaker 1 Nobody leaves ever, especially in a close game. It's one of those baseballs.
Nobody's thinking about, let's beat the traffic. People are just like, we're here.
We're staying here.

Speaker 1 And the game itself,

Speaker 1 there are all these crazy defensive plays. You know, it's just like a, this is what you want to see when you're at the highest level of whatever sport.
You want to see like real artistry,

Speaker 1 just. Awesome defensive plays, just everybody, like even Vlad had a really great slide somewhere.
I can't even, oh, the whole game blends together, but

Speaker 1 just some really good baseball across the board, right? But then there's this Otani thing that,

Speaker 1 you know, is its own regular season subplot.

Speaker 1 He's this generation's babe Ruth. It's just a thing that happened.
It took way too long to get him on one of the signature teams to get him in some of these playoff moments.

Speaker 1 He finally gets to the Dodgers. We finally get to see him raise his level

Speaker 1 to match some of these magical moments. And in the last round, he had, you know, one of of the great individual games in the history of the sport.
So, then in this game,

Speaker 1 he's DHing.

Speaker 1 Every time he comes up, nobody, if it's an Otani inning, nobody gets up. Nobody's coming in, like, I'm going to go run to P.
I'm going to go get a drink really quick.

Speaker 1 It's just people in their seats waiting for him to bat. And he cranks this double.

Speaker 1 It felt like one of those games where the momentum was going to be against the Dodgers, but he cranks just this hard line drive double in the gap, gets to second, does this whole thing, comes up the next time, hits a home run.

Speaker 1 And then the next time he came up, and I had awesome seats. I was like right there behind home plate.

Speaker 1 And I don't usually videotape stuff when I'm at games unless it's something, you know, it's like the last play of a basketball game.

Speaker 1 And I'll do it where I'm watching and I'll kind of hold the camera like this.

Speaker 1 But Otani came up and I'm, and I think everybody in the stadium actually thought he was going to hit home run, which I don't really remember ever experiencing that feeling before where there's like a collective anticipation of,

Speaker 1 oh yeah, he's probably going to hit a home run. Even Ortiz, who had some red hot moments in 04,

Speaker 1 who in 2013 got so hot that

Speaker 1 the Cardinals just started walking him.

Speaker 1 This is like, I've never seen anything like this, where it's not surprising that he's going to hit a home run.

Speaker 1 The only time I can ever think of other than a couple Ortiz hot streaks was

Speaker 1 Barry Bonds during the height of when he just turned into a superhero for maybe some chemical reasons.

Speaker 1 But it just felt like every time he was up, he was going to hit the ball 600 feet or get a walk. And Otani is doing this now.

Speaker 1 I barely have the phone and I'm about to hit record and it's... It's a new iPhone where it's like you could zoom back to one, two, three, four, five.
And I put it on two and it's too close.

Speaker 1 I'm like, oh shit, that's too close. I'll put it on one.
And I look up and the pitch comes and he just cranks another one. And people just were losing their minds.

Speaker 1 They, they just, nobody can believe what's happening with this. This is, you know, this is Tiger in the late 90s just destroying Augusta.

Speaker 1 This is Jordan shrugging at Magic in the 92 finals, like this like last level of somebody being so much better at the sport than everybody else they're playing with that kind of nobody knows how to even wrap their heads around what's happening.

Speaker 1 You know, this is Brady being down 28-3 in the Super Bowl and just like, I'm scoring every time from now on. And he just does it.

Speaker 1 And at some point, you're watching going, this is, I've never seen a sport played like this. Otani gets, so he hits the homer.
People lose their minds.

Speaker 1 And then every time up after that, they walk him intentionally. And I'm watching the next time he comes up.

Speaker 1 you can see the dugout and i'm watching the manager and i'm like don't walk him come on you got to pitch to him everyone wants to just pitch to him and he does like the the intentional walk thing.

Speaker 1 They walk Otani. Everybody goes, boo.

Speaker 1 But it turns out it's the right move because

Speaker 1 if he's maybe going to hit home run every time he's up or hit a double or do something terrible and the other team psyched out by him like, all right, just put him on.

Speaker 1 Let's pitch, let's pitch to Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman. So anyway, it goes from being this.

Speaker 1 awesome World Series Otani, you know, yet again putting his stamp down as the signature guy of this generation on top of all these great plays. And it's like, whoa, this is a World Series classic.

Speaker 1 And then the game just doesn't end. And it's getting colder.
It dips from like 68 to 63, but in Dodger Stadium, it's a little wind tunnely.

Speaker 1 So people are getting, and everybody is not dressed properly except for the people that go to every game. So it's getting colder.
The balls are starting to die.

Speaker 1 The Blue Jays take out, Springer gets hurt. It looked like he hurt his oblique or something.

Speaker 1 They take out Kirk after the 12th. Busheet comes out at some point.
All of a sudden, the Blue Jays look like they're an expansion team with Vlad Guerrero.

Speaker 1 So you figure they're basically never going to score unless the Dodgers are just walking people.

Speaker 1 And then on the flip side, the Dodgers, they're walking, they're pitching around Otani and nobody else can basically either hit a home run or really do anything.

Speaker 1 And they're just, it's zeros after zeros. And when you go to Dodger Stadium, I know, like, you know, I certainly, when I lived back east and you'd watch the Dodger fans, you're like, oh, they suck.

Speaker 1 They leave after the seventh inning.

Speaker 1 It can't be overemphasized how hard it is to get in and out of Dodger Stadium.

Speaker 1 It's like basically going to a football, to an NFL game that's an hour and a half away, even if you live 20 minutes from there. Like you just, you can't get in, but you especially can't get out.

Speaker 1 And everyone who's at any Dodger game, you're always doing the calculus of, well, we could stay for the night, but that's another hour and a half in the parking lot. And I'm not kidding.

Speaker 1 It's an hour and a half. So people are doing that calculus, but this is the World Series.
You can't leave. So people are there and everybody's doing the math.
And there's,

Speaker 1 I was thankful and grateful to be with people who are like, there's no way we're leaving. This is the World Series.
So we're just like, you just kind of give into the game.

Speaker 1 And the game's going and it's going. And now it's like six hours, even with the pitch clock.
And it's heading toward midnight. And you're just doing the math in your head.
Like.

Speaker 1 Wow, I might not be home till three in the morning, but this is worth it. This is one of the great games.
We're looking up. We're checking out like, oh my God, if we get to the,

Speaker 1 I think it was the 14th or 15th inning,

Speaker 1 this will be the second longest World Series game ever.

Speaker 1 And you start putting that in context. Like, they've been playing the World Series since I don't even remember when it started.
You know, it's like 1900, 1903. I used to know this stuff.
Now I'm old.

Speaker 1 And you just think of all the different World Series games and you start thinking of the history. It's like, whoa, I get to tell people I went to this.

Speaker 1 But at the same time, you're going,

Speaker 1 but what's going to happen? Am I going to die in my my seat?

Speaker 1 Like, do they need to start making food again?

Speaker 1 Like, do they need to

Speaker 1 reopen

Speaker 1 the refreshment stands, all that stuff?

Speaker 1 At the end of the,

Speaker 1 between

Speaker 1 the bottom and the top of the 14th inning,

Speaker 1 they redid.

Speaker 1 Take me out to the ball game, the seventh inning stretch. They just did it again.
It was a double stretch. I've never been to a game where that happened.
The longest game I've ever been to was

Speaker 1 in 2004, game four, game five. One of those games was 14 innings.
I think it was game five. I can't remember.
Those two games just blend together into 26 innings.

Speaker 1 But that one, there was no pitch clock. And that was my favorite team.
And I, you know,

Speaker 1 I wrote one of my favorite things I ever wrote after that game. That was like, when it's your favorite team, this is, it turns it another level.

Speaker 1 You're just basically getting a root canal for seven hours and you're having a heart attack the entire time.

Speaker 1 I didn't, I bet on the Dodgers, but I didn't obviously care about who won in the same way I would have if it was a Red Sox game.

Speaker 1 But I had Dodger fans, friends at this game that it was like they were being operated on, you know, and you're just, you don't know what's going to end.

Speaker 1 The stress at some point, I don't know how long human beings can be stressed out for. You know, it certainly happens in hockey where you have,

Speaker 1 and I've, I mean, the most famous one for me when I really loved hockey was the triple OT game that Peter Klima beat the Bruins in game one, 1990.

Speaker 1 But in hockey, that's really hard, but at least you have a break, right? It's like it's a root canal for the entire overtime period.

Speaker 1 And every time something happens, you're convinced, like, it's going to be the worst thing ever, the best thing ever. And it's just this roller coaster.
But then it stops.

Speaker 1 And you get to like, all right, I have 20 minutes now to regroup mentally. I can get a drink.
I can go to the bathroom. In baseball, it's like three minutes.
We're doing another half inning, guys.

Speaker 1 Let's go. Here we in Toronto's batting at the top.
So you're trying to just get through that inning. And then the Dodgers come up as well,

Speaker 1 you know,

Speaker 1 maybe it happens here, but nobody can get a hit on the Dodgers. Nobody, everything's going dying in the warning track.

Speaker 1 And there came a point where we're like, what,

Speaker 1 how long,

Speaker 1 how long could we make it? Because I was just not leaving, but it was like, could there be a triple seventh inning stretch? Could this get to the 22nd inning?

Speaker 1 Like at one point, will I be telling my great grandkids that I went to this game? I probably won't be alive for great grandkids, but hypothetically. Anyway,

Speaker 1 everyone is just in disbelief by the 15th inning. And then it gets to the 18th and we're looking it up and it's like, wow, this is the longest World Series game that's ever happened.

Speaker 1 And I know from experience with the 2018 World Series, when a game goes this long, you start thinking like whoever wins this game is going to win the World Series.

Speaker 1 When the Red Sox lost the previous longest game ever in the 18th inning, which was Nathan Avalde, he should have been on the Red Sox for the rest of his life after I pitched in that game.

Speaker 1 But when they lost that game,

Speaker 1 I just assumed they were going to win the World Series, lose the World Series. It felt like it was like three losses.

Speaker 1 So I knew from that experience, because the Red Sox came back and won the World Series over the next couple of games. I knew that it wasn't life or death.
But all the Dodger fans that are around me um

Speaker 1 i think you start to feel it a little bit because they were going to run out of pitchers and they couldn't have pitched otani because you can't really with him he's the dh he's you know he's going to pitch the next game and so at some point we're all talking about are they going to bring in like who would they bring in if they had to bring in a position point would be mookie betts Mookie Betts, who's, you know, the greatest, one of the great athletes in the history of the sport, who's just playing lights out shortstop yesterday, even though he's second base center field right field wherever he plays he's one of the best in his position yesterday he's just playing awesome shortstop um but we were wondering maybe it's mookie maybe he's the one who pitches um

Speaker 1 all of it was amazing the one thing that we were pretty certain of was the only guy who could beat the dodgers was vlad guerrero who's absolutely terrifying and we were sitting really close to where the Blue Jays would go in the on deck and you're just watching this dude.

Speaker 1 He's just this mammoth, mammoth guy. He's turning around.
He's engaging with the crowd. He's so fucking confident.
And there was this unbelievable moment in the game. They bring in Kershaw.

Speaker 1 They're running out of pitchers.

Speaker 1 And Kershaw has this, you know, sadly storied playoff history with the Dodgers, where he's like one of the most beloved Dodgers of all time, but has one of the, he's basically the Carl Malone of baseball.

Speaker 1 And the Dodger fans are very sensitive of it. They love him, but they also don't trust him at all.
So he comes into this game to pitch to the lefty. I don't even remember what inning.

Speaker 1 It was like the 12th, 13th. Like at some point, you can't even keep track of what inning it was.
And they can't even tell you in the scoreboard what inning it is.

Speaker 1 You have to like squint to see the numbers. And Kershaw comes in,

Speaker 1 and all the Dodger fans are like, not like this.

Speaker 1 Not like this.

Speaker 1 This can't be yet another terrible Kershaw moment. He can't be the one that loses this.
So he comes in

Speaker 1 and you could feel how tense it was. You could just feel it.
Like,

Speaker 1 just a different level. And I've been in, I've been like for Boston teams in games like that, where somebody comes in or you're relying on somebody that you don't trust.

Speaker 1 And it's the worst fucking feeling in the world. We had it in one of those, I think it was game, it's either game four or game five.
Again, those two blend together for me.

Speaker 1 I don't remember which one is which anymore, but Wakefield came in. I think it was the 14-inning game.
Wakefield came in.

Speaker 1 And he's throwing a knuckleball to Veritech, who didn't normally catch the knuckleball. And somebody's on third base.

Speaker 1 And Wakefield was the guy who had given up the Boon Homer the year before, which was just not his fault.

Speaker 1 And nobody even really blamed him as the GOAT because he was so awesome that year, the GOAT of the game.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 how nervous people were for every Wakefield knuckleball, not knowing if Veritech was going to be able to stop it. It was just a feeling.
in the park that I'll never forget.

Speaker 1 And the other one was when Curtis Lascana came in. I think that was game four,

Speaker 1 who was the last pitcher on the team. And we actually needed him to get out.
So it's just like a different level.

Speaker 1 So anyway, the Dodger fans had this, but it was on a whole other level because it's Kershaw and they have all this baggage and they just love the guy so much.

Speaker 1 And nobody wants him to be the go-to the game. So he comes in and his first pitch is a ball and it goes like silent in the crowd.
And everybody's thinking like, oh, no.

Speaker 1 It just, I can't describe how dead it got for like a second and a half where people, everyone's just doing the math of like, oh my God, if he walks in the winning run and it's Kershaw,

Speaker 1 this actually could be such a bummer that it'll swing the series. So anyway,

Speaker 1 it gets to 2-1 and then he miraculously gets out of it. And the relief that came out, it was almost like more relief than when Freddy actually hit the

Speaker 1 walkoff. So we're watching it.
We're watching. We're watching.

Speaker 1 And every time the Dodgers are up, I'm with my friends and we're going, if there's a walkoff, if it seems like a walkoff, we're up the steps. We're out.

Speaker 1 Cause then it turns into escape from New York. You have to get out as fast as you can out of the parking lot.

Speaker 1 Every 10 seconds you can get out of the parking lot before other people is like another five minutes. And if you don't get out in time, you're just there for two hours.

Speaker 1 So we're like, all right, we have our plan. If there's a walk off, we're up the steps.
Like we're up the stairs even before it lands.

Speaker 1 And the catch was the home runs, you just couldn't read them because it seemed like the Blue Jays had had one.

Speaker 1 It seemed like Will Smith had had one. And they would just die in the warning jack.
So Freddy cranks one in the 18th. And

Speaker 1 we're like, oh, oh, oh, that's good. And the crowd's going nuts and it's carrying, carrying.
As it's landing, we're flying out of there because it's escaped from New York. And

Speaker 1 it still took over an hour to get home. We thought we played it perfectly.
We didn't.

Speaker 1 Got home 1.30. This is why I have these big bags under my eyes.
I I couldn't sleep after because it was just too much fun. I love sports.

Speaker 1 I don't care

Speaker 1 who's playing in a World Series game, the atmosphere of it and how locked in everybody is and how nobody leaves and every pitch matters and every moment matters.

Speaker 1 And you just go to games where you want to see there's something special like Gotani or you want to see. the most dramatic game possible.
And somehow last night had both.

Speaker 1 And it was just, it was just awesome. I have no idea who's going to win this World Series, especially if Springer is going to be hurt.
I think that's really, that should be enough for the Dodgers.

Speaker 1 And they may never pitch to Otani again. By the time you hear this, they may have walked Otani five straight times.

Speaker 1 They won last year. They won a real World Series last year, unlike the stupid strike one on the 1981 lockout.
The last year was a real one.

Speaker 1 This one going back to back

Speaker 1 would be incredible, obviously.

Speaker 1 But the Otani thing puts it in another stratosphere. What's happening with him, and it's not just in LA, I think it's everywhere.

Speaker 1 It just doesn't matter the sport when this happens. When there's somebody who

Speaker 1 people who don't care about sports, people like my mom know what's going on. That's like the last level of sport can get to.
This is what the NBA is so desperately searching for right now.

Speaker 1 They have all these great stars. They don't have.
They don't have the Otani.

Speaker 1 That's just the water cooler guy, the guy that you kind of have to go out of your way to see, the guy who has all these magical moments inside him and you don't know when they're going to happen.

Speaker 1 Wembanyama might be that guy for the NBA. There's real signs now that this could happen where it's just something we've never seen before.

Speaker 1 The Otani thing, something we've never seen before, somebody who has a flair for the dramatic,

Speaker 1 who's just really, really, really, really special. And it's just a shame that it took him this long to get.
to the Dodgers and to these big moments. But I was so glad I went last night.

Speaker 1 You know, I'm in my mid-50s. I watched a lot of media members when I was growing up that seemed like they stopped caring about sports in the same way and got more negative.

Speaker 1 And maybe they'd seen too many games, had too many interactions with players.

Speaker 1 I still love this stuff. And, you know, you go to a game like that and it's worth it.
It's worth not knowing how long it's going to take to get there. It's worth.

Speaker 1 not knowing how long you're going to be in a parking lot waiting to get home, especially having cool seats for a game like that. Really, really special.
And

Speaker 1 when I've talked about Dodger stadium before i still think fenway and wrigley are the two ballparks that stand out that and dodger stadium parking aside um

Speaker 1 is is probably the third for the moments like that especially because they've had cool moments in that stadium and they do a really good job of bringing the old guys back which the celtics do some franchises do it you really have to have the history and you have to have the great players in your background to be able to do it but like

Speaker 1 oral hirscheiser was sitting near us koufax was right on the other side. You know, you look around, it's like just Steve Garvey was signing autographs.

Speaker 1 Everybody who meant something to the Dodgers, they figure out a way to get in the ballpark somewhere around.

Speaker 1 And, you know, you really feel the history when you see these games, not to mention Magic Johnson's there. I mean, obviously the LA celebrities that are there, but

Speaker 1 it...

Speaker 1 They've done a really good job, I think, of embracing the past, leaning into the stadium, leaning into all the great players they've had over the years.

Speaker 1 And it really does feel, you know, like a special franchise, which I've always felt the Celtics are like that, too.

Speaker 1 You know, it's one of the reasons we wanted to do Celtic City. It's like the eras, the players, and then how you keep protecting the legacy, all that stuff.

Speaker 1 I think the Dodgers do a good job with that. The Yankees do a good job with that.
I got to hand it to them. There's some teams that understand it and do it correctly.

Speaker 1 And I do think the Dodgers are one of them. But last night, I think just an unforgettable, unforgettable sporting event.
And I will always remember it. So I'm glad I went.
I came home. I was so wired.

Speaker 1 I was watching Goddamn cable at two in the morning,

Speaker 1 sitting on this stupid massage chair we have, trying to crank out my back. My wife sent me my Life 360.
We have Life 360 for our family. And she sent me a screenshot.

Speaker 1 It was like, I think it was the top of the 18th. And it just said, I was in the exact same spot at Dodger Stadium for eight hours.

Speaker 1 And I'm just going to screen save that and put it in my iPhone album because there will never be another game like that. So

Speaker 1 awesome World Series. I hope the rest of the games are as good as that one.
I want to tell the story.

Speaker 1 And it was an honor to be in the photo of the second home run. They had this really cool photo of the Otani bat flip and you could see us in the background.
I'm like, that's great. I'm framing that.

Speaker 1 Anyway, we are going to take a break. We're going to come back with

Speaker 1 the one and only Tim Legler. And we are going to talk basketball.
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Speaker 1 applicable prices may vary delivery available from participating locations with online orders only copyright 2025 lce incorporated all right tim legler is here we're taping this on uh early tuesday afternoon pacific time he's going to be popping on the ringer all through the year on my podcast and on zach lowe's podcast couldn't be more excited to to have you aboard and congratulations on being on the uh the top espn team i feel like we've already seen you a lot yeah i appreciate it man yeah we have we have it was a big opening week for all of us we got new partners in this too so it was a big big opening splashy week for the uh nbc amazon us uh abc everybody so it's it's off to a great start really excited to be part of that crew and um we got two under our belts now with mike richard and myself and um we're happy with with the start we've had and we know it's just going to get better and better Well, people don't realize what a mean guy Mike Breen is.

Speaker 1 Like just mean to everybody, like just snaps at people. And like he's just really an awful person.
So I hope that. Is there a better guy in the business, Bill?

Speaker 2 Is there a better guy in the business than Mike Breen?

Speaker 1 He really is.

Speaker 1 He might be in the running for most liked person who's in sports media, which, you know, sports media could be a hornet's nest, but people agree at very few things, but one of them is I like Mike Mike Breen.

Speaker 1 All right, so I want to start here. I sent you a bunch of things I want to talk about, but I did not send you this one.

Speaker 1 I think we have the most talent right now,

Speaker 1 not only from like a top player standpoint, but maybe even like a top 35 to 40 standpoint, there's so much talent everywhere.

Speaker 1 And the only time I can think of that was like this was that early 90s, which was ironically when you were in the league, where we just had all these future Hall of Famers.

Speaker 1 We had all these great players in their primes. You could see it with the dream team, but you could also see it in the playoffs.
You can see it in the All NBA stuff.

Speaker 1 It was just kind of a unicorn time. And it feels like we're coming back because this kind of Wimby level, those guys, the under-25 guys, are now ascending, but we still have the other group of guys.

Speaker 1 And then we even have some of the old guys like Curry.

Speaker 1 I just don't, I can't fathom how much talent we have. And I watch, I'm flipping around league pass, and it's like Charlotte, I kind of like their team.
They're going to win like 25 games.

Speaker 1 And you look at the talent, you're like, I kind of like these guys.

Speaker 1 Have you noticed that even from the games you're going to? Like, holy shit.

Speaker 2 Yeah, because I, I mean, can you ever remember a week of a start of a season that had as many huge scoring outbursts as we just had over the past week?

Speaker 2 And that includes, from a team standpoint, some of the numbers these teams are putting up, but mostly from an individual standpoint, we've had some unlikely guys have 50-point games already in the first week.

Speaker 2 We've had some other guys that, like, okay, our first game, like, you know, we get Shea Gilgis Alexander, he goes for 55. You're like, okay, that's not shocking.

Speaker 2 But, you know, you get Austin Reeves dropping 50. Laurie Markinitz had a 50-point game.
Aaron Gordon had a 50-point game.

Speaker 2 So, yeah, the shot-making capabilities across the league, the number of guys that have a lot of high-level shot-making in their bag, whether it's off-the-dribble deep or mid-range or whatever it may be, there's just more dudes that can check into a game and make shots at a high level than we've ever had in this league.

Speaker 2 And when you combine that. with what these teams are all trying to replicate with pace and style and spacing and the whistles, which we're going to talk about, I think, at some point today.

Speaker 2 When you add all that up, you get what you're looking at now, which is like the league is tailor-made for guys that want to add these types of things to their game, an ability to shoot the ball with escapability off the dribble first to create their own, the step back, the side step three, like all of these different shots they can go.

Speaker 2 The runners and floaters and the array of shot making that guys can make now on the move toward the rim. There's just more guys on the court that can do all of these things.

Speaker 2 And yeah, it's been pretty, pretty eye-opening.

Speaker 2 And it's been like this for a couple of years for me, but I don't recall ever in the 25 years I've been at ESPN, this is my 25th year, seeing a week at the start of the season like this in terms of these box scores that are just absolutely popping, you know, popping off the page.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I was trying to think of reasons other than sometimes talent just comes in waves, which certainly happened your first few years in the NBA. We just had a lot of talent.

Speaker 1 There might be 40 reasons for that. There might be no reasons.
It might just be luck. But I do feel like when you think about how the league shifted,

Speaker 1 basically right around when Curry started to hit with the Warriors and we started spacing and the whole concept of a big man started to change.

Speaker 1 We had all this trial and error for 12 years and now the league plays the way it plays.

Speaker 1 But then you also have all these people coming in through AAU, high school, college that are trained to play that way.

Speaker 1 And I watched somebody like Vijay Edgecombe coming in, who, you know, I really liked in the draft. I thought, like, this guy has a chance to be a star.
He'll come in. He'll be an awesome athlete.

Speaker 1 He'll be a defender. He'll be athletic.
He'll be a work in progress. It's going to take some time.
He was like running offense for Philly last night. I watched the second half of that game.

Speaker 1 He was running their offense when Maxie was out and just has a level of sophistication at age 20 that I wasn't prepared for.

Speaker 1 So do you think that's a piece of that, that they're just kind of used to how the game, how the game goes at this level and they just come in and can fit in? Or are these guys just freaks?

Speaker 2 No, I think it is a lot of that.

Speaker 2 I think they're sitting there watching the league, some of these guys, and they're seeing this league is now tailor-made for the opportunity that having that kind of offense presents.

Speaker 2 And they're jumping all over it. Now, what you don't know.
When these guys come to the league, I also loved Edgecombe. And I thought it was like really almost divine intervention for Philly.

Speaker 2 And look, I like Ace Bailey too. And Ace Bailey Bailey might turn into a really, really high-level NBA player.

Speaker 2 But it's just funny how that played out for Philly once Ace Bailey's like, well, I'm not even going to come interview.

Speaker 2 And kind of to me, if I'm running a team, that takes you out of the equation for me. If I hear that, that's right.
And I think that kind of led to it.

Speaker 2 Now, it's like, well, then it's definitely going to be Edgecombe. And obviously, these people in Philadelphia know a lot of these are my knucklehead friends who love the Sixers.

Speaker 2 They're losing the money.

Speaker 1 You lift up my life if they try to trade it. They try to trade it for a month and a half.
And they kind of do. We'll take Edgecombe.

Speaker 2 coham and now he's awesome that's a great point so this in a lot of ways it's almost like they were kind of forced into a corner with this pick and him being at that that point like the obvious guy to pick and they picked him so you see the talent i loved the the athletic ability and the like the strength but what you don't know until you see a guy take the court in the NBA is what's his confidence level like from day one.

Speaker 2 Some guys just hit the ground running with that. They don't have that overly deferential gene and they just go and they just play.
That's what Edgecombe is doing.

Speaker 2 So everything is kind of funneling in that direction for him right off the bat. The guy's sensational, 34 in his first game, and he really hasn't let up since.

Speaker 2 You know, other guys, they have all the talent, the size, the skill, whatever it may be.

Speaker 2 And the situation's there. They're getting minutes.

Speaker 2 But there's something about the wiring that takes a little longer for them to understand and recognize, like, it's okay for me to be an alpha right now on this trip, on this possession, in the open floor.

Speaker 2 Like, just go and not think. Let muscle memory take over and just be what you are as a natural athlete and player.
Some guys get there earlier. And Edgecombe, he got there immediately.

Speaker 2 Like, as soon as he walked out of the tunnel the first night in Boston.

Speaker 1 Yeah, that's comfort is. So think about comfortability and confidence.

Speaker 1 And when a guy can come in and have both of those things, which usually doesn't happen for rookies, we have multiple guys that were like that this year in this rookie class.

Speaker 1 Like, Dylan Harper is like that now. Like, he's, oh, yeah.
I don't know where he's going to be, but he knows how to already play with and without the ball. Edgecomb's like that.

Speaker 1 Knipple is just like the ideal third or fourth guy for any team. Like, he can basically do whatever, you know.
And you just go down the line. And then Flag.

Speaker 1 who I want to talk about later, because I really have an issue with what they're doing with him. But Flag's another one who's really comfortable.
Like Flag in the, I think

Speaker 1 the Sunday game, at one point,

Speaker 1 he did like a Tatum

Speaker 1 put fake forward step back three.

Speaker 1 And I was like, you're 18.

Speaker 1 What the fuck was that? How do you, you should have that in like year five? Like you're shooting that now in a third quarter. Like I couldn't believe it.

Speaker 2 I first laid eyes on Cooper Flag when he was about 14, 15 years old. And I started telling everybody I knew about him then.
Like, I'm just like, just wait till this guy's ready for the draft.

Speaker 2 At that point, of course, you don't even know where he's going to go to school. You know any of that.

Speaker 2 I just know that when you see what jumped out to me immediately was this dude has a competitive toughness about him, like an edge. And he was a target.

Speaker 2 Every time he walked onto a court at the AAU level, like every team was looking at him. They were talking to him, starting with the opening jump ball circle.

Speaker 2 He's got somebody in his ear telling him what they're not going to let him do to them tonight. And he's been hearing that since he was, you know, literally 12, 13, 14 years old.

Speaker 2 And some guys can handle all that. Some guys can't.
He clearly could. Then it became a matter of, all right, he's got the athletic ability, the size, the toughness.
He loves playing defense.

Speaker 2 That jumped out to me, man. He's got a lot of want to.
Then you just don't know, like, how much will he add between now and like the time he's 18, 19, and he's ready for the draft.

Speaker 2 And he added a hell of a lot. Now, I think his shooting is going to be streaky this year.
He's going to contribute to them in winning ways.

Speaker 2 I think a lot of nights without necessarily having big scoring nights, the shooting is going to be up and down and all over the place. But what's not going to be up and down is that guy's desire

Speaker 2 competitiveness and like winning attitude about how he approaches the game.

Speaker 2 That to me is what stood out more than anything else.

Speaker 2 So the confidence level's there, but it doesn't happen like the way it's happening for Edgecombe very often this fast where you get into that kind of rhythm and everything's going in early.

Speaker 2 And so Cooper Flag will be fine. I think he's a can't miss, but obviously he hasn't had a great start offensively here.

Speaker 1 Wow. I mean, I would say 90% of that is they're asking him to be the point guard of the team and run fast breaks.
And,

Speaker 1 you know,

Speaker 1 I just think that should have been like a year four, year five thing. I know they don't have Kyrie back.

Speaker 1 It almost makes me wonder if Kyrie's coming back this year and they're like, we're just going to take our lumps with this until he figures it out.

Speaker 1 And then we can play D-Low on the side here for 25 minutes a game, but we need these other 20 minutes from flag. It's a team that I was really bullish on them because of the defense and the size.

Speaker 1 And I just think it's going to be choppy, but I'm not giving up on it.

Speaker 1 But the one thing with him, his ability to rebound, bring the ball down and find somebody like either a cutter or like three on two fast break. He's doing stuff that is pretty high level.

Speaker 1 But then you watch like some of the pressing stuff that's happening, which was one of the things I wanted to, we could talk about it now. I'm shocked by the, and this started last year.

Speaker 1 Now it's really happening this year is teams pressing and teams trying to put miles on the best players of other teams.

Speaker 1 The Celtics did it in the Pistons game where they had Hugo Gonzalez just like, just bug the shit out of Cade.

Speaker 1 Just follow him around everywhere, really put the miles on him. And it's something I feel like Indiana started and now more teams are doing it.

Speaker 1 And they're using deeper benches and just trying to put miles on the other team. That's one trend.
Is that, do you, are there other trends you're seeing other than that one?

Speaker 2 Well, I want to talk about that one for a second because you're right. And a number of coaches that I talked to, and I got a chance to talk to all of these guys at the coaches meetings, right?

Speaker 2 A couple weeks before the season started. And now we've had, I've had two games, so it's four more coaches you could talk to about these things.
And the metrics pointed out.

Speaker 2 The data shows them that that stuff matters in terms of attrition over the course of a game and pressuring up on these guys, particularly guys that are constantly initiating and always have the ball first in the back court.

Speaker 2 It's going to affect guys less if you have a secondary ball handler that could do that at a high level, or if just these are some guys, you know, that are really high-level players,

Speaker 2 they'll run up the floor without the ball, you know, a good amount throughout the game, and then they get into action from there.

Speaker 2 But there are guys in this league, if they're on the floor, it's almost always in their hands coming up to court, particularly after made baskets or dead balls.

Speaker 2 and that they're seeing on film and just the numbers bear out it matters over the course of a game and it wears guys down a little bit in the case of cooper flag the thing that i really loved about him when i saw him in vegas was and i know he wasn't playing against you know nba rotational players for the most part but he was able to handle the ball against smaller much quicker players who could beat him to the spot.

Speaker 2 But he didn't have any problem manipulating the ball up the floor against that. And that really stood out to me.

Speaker 2 Like, man, I didn't know he had that kind of command of his handle where he was not affected by the pressure of some of these guys that were in that 6'4, 6'5 range that were really quick picking him up.

Speaker 2 Didn't seem to phase him at all. I agree with you, Bill.
I think it's too much to ask out of the gate.

Speaker 2 For a guy that's trying to find his confidence as a player at this league, a lot of pressure, a lot of eyes on him to now say, okay, can you also please like help facilitate and coordinate and orchestrate where guys are going to be and get guys shots?

Speaker 2 It's not that natural to him. There's a big difference between being a ball handling forward and a point guard.
Those are two entirely different things.

Speaker 2 So when I got D'Angelo Russell, I said, hey, this is a perfect pickup to buy time until Kyrie comes back.

Speaker 2 D'Angelo Russell has played some high-level basketball in this league at the point guard position. Let him play point.

Speaker 2 Let Cooper Flag have some situations where he gets to handle in ball screen and handle in transition if he takes off the glass himself. That's a weapon for your team.

Speaker 2 That should not be, to me, his focal point on walk it up situations. I just think it's too much to put on his plate right out of the gate when you've got a guy like D'Angelo Russell sitting there.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and I think they'll move away for it, maybe run more of the half court with him. But, you know, I watched the Celtics put this on Tatum slowly over the course of five, six years, right?

Speaker 1 Where he and last year he was really good as a point forward of finding people and creating stuff.

Speaker 1 There's still a last level, though, that I just don't think you could ever ask for somebody like that who's not a natural point guard. Like they're still

Speaker 1 true point guards. They're taking care of everybody.
They're thinking about everybody. They're like, oh, Anthony Davis hasn't had a shot in four minutes.

Speaker 1 I got to get him one or he's going to stop playing defense. Like there's these little things that you just can't expect somebody like Flag to know, right?

Speaker 2 Let me sum it up this way.

Speaker 2 That's a great point. And here is the difference psychologically.
And I actually actually talked about this.

Speaker 2 And the guy that I used as an example of somebody that can do it at a really high level, who I love watching play was Lonzo Ball, who joined the Cavs this year. Right.
And here's the difference.

Speaker 2 Guys like that, that have been doing that their whole life, when there's one guy in front of them or there's, you know, it's two-man action they're running either way, they're already scanning and anticipating the next reaction of the next defender.

Speaker 2 And they kind of know what these chain of events are going to lead to based on what I do. This is what should be open.
And there's multiple reads taking place.

Speaker 2 And all it's about is the next defender that's not in the initial action. Whether that's the ISO guy in front of him, he's looking at the second defender that's going to be the help guy.

Speaker 2 If it's a two-man game he's running, he's thinking about the next defender that's going to get into the paint or whatever they're going to do. based on the action they're going to run.

Speaker 2 And he's thinking about making a play for that guy on his team. Scorers that can make plays, it's a totally different thing.

Speaker 2 Their playmaking comes after their own scoring has been exhausted, like those options have been exhausted. And now, like as an afterthought, okay, there's a play to be made.

Speaker 2 And look, some of those guys do it at a really high level and they can give you those 35.8 assist nights, but the assists come after they have hunted for themselves.

Speaker 2 And now something organically happens for a guy.

Speaker 2 That's different than thinking the game the way that I described when you're already manipulating the pieces defensively with your eyes and you're understanding what the next thing is going to be.

Speaker 2 And that's the chain of events that's going to dictate where I throw the ball.

Speaker 2 That's a totally different level of thinking of facilitating and like running a team that most like scorers at a high level, at the NBA level, aren't going to really do it at the level of the guys I'm talking about that have played that position their entire life.

Speaker 1 Yeah, at some point it's a seesaw.

Speaker 1 And when you have the ball, the seesaw is either going to be like, I'm more of a scorer or I'm more of a creator for other people, right?

Speaker 1 My favorite players were always the ones that were always thinking about creating for everybody else and then could shift the seesaw if they actually needed a score.

Speaker 1 Jokic being the ultimate example of that, but bird of magic, like we've had a lot of those.

Speaker 1 I'm glad you brought up Lonzo, though.

Speaker 1 Kim on the calves is a really intriguing wrinkle for the season that I kind of didn't, you know, you never know if he's going to be healthy.

Speaker 1 They don't have their full team.

Speaker 1 It's going to be a while but i just think he's one of the most you know if he's one of your nine guys he's so additive when he's out there he's just so much fun to play with and the better i don't think he's ever been on a team that had players like this and i just it just made me think like man when they get everybody back

Speaker 1 what kind of lineups are they going to use? Are they ever going to have a drop off when you have Garland and Mitchell, but then you have Lonzo as this third guard?

Speaker 1 Like, I actually think that team has a higher ceiling than maybe I thought. Now, who knows if he could stay healthy, but did you notice that?

Speaker 2 He's definitely is somebody that I paid attention to the acquisition. And I've always been a huge fan of his, really, really cheered for him, making his way all the way back from what he went through.

Speaker 2 Most guys wouldn't have had the will to do it. So I pull for guys like that because he loves it.
And now you see the acquisition and they lost Ty Jerome who had a very good year for them.

Speaker 2 And they bring in Lonzo Ball. And I'm kind of like, okay, that's interesting.
Let's see how that looks.

Speaker 2 And then I talked to Kenny Atkinson a few weeks ago and just talking about their team, their season and whatever.

Speaker 2 And what he was saying about Lonzo Ball and what he was seeing led me to think going into that first game we called Cavs Knicks that now I was really anticipating his impact.

Speaker 2 And it's so obvious that he got on a court. Yeah.
And Bill, here's how I describe him. And there's not that many guys I would describe in this way.
His sole reason for existing.

Speaker 2 on a basketball court is to make guys better on his own team.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 2 And man, as a shooter that I love when I played with guys that even tried to think that way.

Speaker 2 It's just so fun to play with them because that's, it's really, he's going to take his shots and he's going to read defenses and you know, he'll do his thing.

Speaker 2 But it's, it's really all about if you're willing to expend energy offensively with running and cutting and movement.

Speaker 2 then he is going to absolutely make your life easier and make everything easier for you as a scorer. And I saw it even that night.

Speaker 2 His advanced passes are on that level with like a Jason Kidd, a Steve Nash, where the ball is thrown on a rope up the sideline, 30 or 40 feet.

Speaker 2 And it's kind of a subtle thing you don't notice, but it puts so much pressure on the defense running back that it leads to awesome secondary offense. And Lonzo is so good at the advanced pass.

Speaker 2 And I think you're right. This is going to be one of those role player acquisitions that we're going to be talking about having a major impact all season long.

Speaker 2 I think Al Hortford's another one of those in Golden State. Like those would be two examples of guys that join teams and systems.
I know I didn't mean to put you in a bad mood with the

Speaker 1 soon, Ladler.

Speaker 1 Too soon for us. I know.
I hear you, man.

Speaker 2 Especially with the start they've had.

Speaker 1 Especially when you see the Celtics big guys. Let's we'll take a break and I have a whole bunch of stuff to throw you.
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And now it's time for Don't Settle. A new segment presented by State Farm.

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Speaker 1 Having insurance isn't the same as having State Farm. Don't settle for just any insurance when they're a State Farm.
It's a little like the Patriots right now. The Patriots are six and two.

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Speaker 1 By rule, because this is a basketball podcast today, we have to spend at least five to ten minutes on the Spurs, which not only are the most interesting story of the season, but is the water to cooler topic this year, is the league pass team that has to be on if you're watching multiple games at once, and what Wemby's doing.

Speaker 1 I remember for the year on FanDuel, he was 12 to 1 to win the MVP. Now it's like, now he's one of the favorites.

Speaker 1 I guess we're here. House and I talked about it on my podcast on Thursday where it's like,

Speaker 1 I guess we're here. I guess he's one of the guys now.

Speaker 1 Jokic, Giannis, Luca,

Speaker 1 SGA, whatever order you want. Do you feel like he has to be with those four guys now from just what you've seen in four games?

Speaker 2 There's no doubt about it. I would have said that after probably the first half of the first game because I'm sitting there like everybody.
And, you know, obviously he shut it down last year. And

Speaker 2 we saw things last year too.

Speaker 2 And I had already thought about him, even in the limited amount of time we saw him last year, that I felt like every time I watched Wimbañama, there was something he did in that game that I would say, that's the only guy in the league that could have done that.

Speaker 2 And he gave me at least one of those every night. And so

Speaker 2 the anticipation was there. Let's see what this looks like this year.
What has he added?

Speaker 2 They had already said he got stronger. And that really translates more like functionally stronger than necessarily body mass.
Functional strength is a real thing.

Speaker 1 And so they were like leg stuff, right? He seems sturdier. And his base, he's always balanced.
His base is better. Yeah.

Speaker 2 When he drives and he's got a defender riding his rim and like his

Speaker 2 hip and his rib cage, he's not pushed like where he's not going in a straight line at the rim anymore, where he would drift off toward the baseline and shoot something off balance off one foot.

Speaker 2 He's releasing the ball when he wants to now. He's playing through some of that context so it's more extended toward the rim and it's just improved his efficiency.
So he's stronger.

Speaker 2 I saw the first half of that first game and I'm going, this is, I don't know what exactly teams are supposed to do offensively against this. And it's translating to them being 4-0.

Speaker 2 Look, they've played three bad teams. And if you throw Dallas in there, maybe even three and a half bad teams right now, because I think Dallas will be okay.

Speaker 1 They're not very good right now.

Speaker 2 And then three other not very good teams. And it's okay, but let's look at like what's really going on.

Speaker 2 You can't score in the paint against this team, and they're not giving up anything at second chance points. They're okay in transitionally mediocre.

Speaker 2 When you can't score in the paint against teams, right? Now you're relegated to just taking even more threes than you want.

Speaker 2 Lower efficiency shots probably because you have more guys taking them, but you don't want taking them because you can't get to the rim. This is what it looks like.

Speaker 2 A suffocating defense that really kind of demoralizes you.

Speaker 2 And I've seen some shoulders drop against the San Antonio Spurs so far that you don't typically see at the NBA level, like literally getting dispirited with how difficult this is looking to get to the rim.

Speaker 2 And also then what the way he's scoring at you and making you feel so small on the other end of the floor. It's really been like, wow, moments.

Speaker 2 Like, I can't believe the way that guys are sagging their heads, dropping their heads, because they're that frustrated with what this looks like to them on the court. So, yeah, man, there's no doubt.

Speaker 2 Wemby is in now must-see category. Um, and that team is going to be as a result.

Speaker 1 Yeah, he's surrounded by these pit bulls, basically, and they're flying, they're on their own, really, really athletic, aggressive, scary defenders, but then they're backed by him.

Speaker 1 And they, the cornet thing was big, which any Celtic fan knew that that was going to be good for them.

Speaker 1 They can play them together, which I was expecting, but they actually kind of make sense because Wemby drifts a little more outside.

Speaker 1 He's way closer to the rim offensively, which I think was my biggest frustration with him. And they've really tried, you can feel the geometry of that shifting.

Speaker 1 Then they have this weird Fox situation because

Speaker 1 I want Dylan Harper to play. There's really something there that I think they need to tap into now.
Castle went up a level.

Speaker 1 I think if you talk about like who went up a level this year, like he would be on the first team for that.

Speaker 1 And now they're going to move Fox in, who's been an all-star, who's in the prime of his career, who just signed a new contract. I think that's going to be a good thing, right?

Speaker 2 Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah.
I mean, look, it's going to be a challenge to figure out. how all those guys are comfortable.

Speaker 2 Like, that's the thing because it's, they all, and even Castle more so this year than I saw him last year at all, just with the ball in his hands as a playmaker and like reading high ball screen, like just different alley oops, like all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 1 All kind of advanced stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 2 Fox is more of like, you know, he's more of like an engine, go get mine scorer. He can facilitate, but like even in Sacramento, like a lot of the real facilitating took place through Sabonis.

Speaker 2 Darren Fox just goes. He's got this elite speed, an elite pull-up, mid-range.
Like that's his game. Harper and Castle are different types of players.
Fascinating to watch all of them.

Speaker 2 And I'm curious when they have all three at their disposal, like how those minutes get allocated.

Speaker 1 Yeah, it's funny when you're thinking of nitpicks for the Spurs before the year and like, well, the shooting's going to be an issue. Like those guys aren't.
And it's like, it actually doesn't matter.

Speaker 1 Like these guys are the most frightening athletic, giant, weird team that anyone's going to play all year. The demoralizing thing is interesting.

Speaker 1 I want to, I'm going to look out for that when I'm watching.

Speaker 2 Well, can I give you two examples of it? Yeah.

Speaker 2 So go

Speaker 2 back and

Speaker 2 if I were you, and you can catch this just if you just get the highlight reel from each of his games. Yeah.
And because it'll be an eight, nine minute tape of just him and the stuff that he's doing.

Speaker 2 Right. So take a look at some of the reaction from Zion in that game against the Pelicans.
Take a look at some of the reaction of Anthony Davis in the Dallas game.

Speaker 2 And look, I know the Dallas game, I saw more of it after the score got a little lopsided.

Speaker 2 And so maybe that was part of it for AD. But, but there was definitely kind of like this look of like, like almost like submission, like defensively against him.

Speaker 2 And I was like, wow, you know, and look, it's early in the year. They don't have all their guys.
Kyrie's not out there. They're down 25.
I get it. So I'm not making a big judgment on Anthony Davis.

Speaker 2 I'm actually more complimenting Wembanyama because like if you're doing that to a guy of that caliber, that's that good defensively and his reputation is that good defensively in this league. And

Speaker 2 it's just like what you're doing to this team makes them look futile. And then with Zion, it was more like what he was doing to Zion, like defensively against Zion.
Like Zion's not used to it.

Speaker 1 He's used to just bowling over everybody and getting any shot he wants in the paint. And guess what? That's not happening.

Speaker 2 Put his shoulder into your sternum, move you. And then he's right.
He's got that. He extends it out to his left hand.
He's got all these great touch shots with English.

Speaker 2 He puts on it high off the glass. And he was putting his shoulder into the sternum.

Speaker 2 Actually, on Wemen, Yan was more more like his belly button uh than his sternum and then wemby is like giving ground giving ground giving ground but still reaching over the top of him like an umbrella and so zion they would still try to shoot it and get it blocked and like you could see him like shake his head right and start like shuffling back down the court like on defense like so frustrated uh he looked very young he looked like a very young player getting frustrated right and these are two guys that are elite lead players in this league and that's what wembin yama is capable of doing to you yeah that's a really rare level to get to like you were you were in the league when after jordan came back when him and pippin were together that first season and they were doing some stuff defensively athletically where they were it was almost like watching a great nfl defense or something where they would just the court where they would just kind of ruin the quarterback's brain But it was, in this case, these were really good NBA players who were just like,

Speaker 1 I'm kind of broken. Can you just take me out? Like, you saw it.
And I wonder if you're not going to be able to do that.

Speaker 2 That was the only team, Bill, that I ever played against.

Speaker 2 Those mid-90s Bulls teams that like when you would foul them and now they're going to the line when they've got Rodman, Pippin, Jordan, like that group, Harper.

Speaker 2 And now they're going to the line and you're going, oh, God,

Speaker 2 here comes this press. Like, you know, you don't, you never worried about getting pressed in the NBA.

Speaker 2 Most teams that have tried to like zone press and they would go to like a one-two, one-one press, like that doesn't work at the NBA level. The teams that have tried that in the past,

Speaker 2 you're giving off so much easy, fast stuff the other way. But yet they were so long and so fast and so aggressive.

Speaker 2 And the rules kind of allowed a little bit more grabbing and holding and slapping and like that kind of stuff in the backcourt.

Speaker 2 It was kind of like, oh man, the last thing you wanted to do was break to the ball in the backcourt in the corner

Speaker 2 and catch the ball. And like, so you do anything you could to avoid that death trap down there.
So, yeah. And again, yeah.

Speaker 2 So it's that feeling of like, man, this is like a little bit overwhelming, like this defense, because you hadn't seen anything like it. That was the best defensive team I ever played against.

Speaker 2 And I play against the, you know, mid-90s Knicks teams, those Pacers teams, the Heat.

Speaker 2 These are great defensive teams, but nothing really to me was really on the level because of the athletic ability, quickness, and length of those Bulls teams.

Speaker 2 And now it's like a different level of demoralization with what Wemby can do with the ground he covers and the amount of coverage in the lane.

Speaker 2 I don't know what that even looks like to these guys on the court.

Speaker 2 I'd be fascinated to drop into a virtual world and see what that looks like with Wemby on the court putting his arms out to the side and how difficult that must look to score.

Speaker 1 Yeah, there was a moment in that Dallas game where Flag, who's played against everybody and obviously has a ton of confidence and you could tell he was like, ah, fuck this Wemby guy.

Speaker 1 I'll go right at him. And he had this one where he took him and he was about to shoot and Wemby's giant spider arm came out.

Speaker 1 And he just kind of stopped. And then, but he had already picked up his dribble and then he kind of had to turn and get rid of the ball.

Speaker 1 And you could see him like he couldn't like compute what just happened, which seems like that's every game where these guys who played basketball their old lives and they're like, I'm going to do this.

Speaker 1 Oh, I guess I'm not going to do that.

Speaker 1 Help? Anyone?

Speaker 2 And that's, and now I want to see him. I want to see like, so now I've got a little bit of a sample of it with the two guys I mentioned.

Speaker 2 Now, if that starts happening on a regular basis, where it's just like this overwhelming frustration for some of these guys, it's going to be fascinating.

Speaker 2 The other thing he's changed, Bill, I like we talking about he got functionally stronger. Like what has he added? He's meaner.

Speaker 2 I love it. He's meaner because he's a little older, man.

Speaker 2 He was young, foreign-born player coming into the league, super hyped, really thin, and like guys trying to get up in him when he was handling the ball.

Speaker 2 He had a lot of turnovers that first 15, 20 games he played.

Speaker 2 And we're like, okay, okay, I guess that 7-5 handle is not going to work in this league after all. Like some people drawing conclusions on him right away.

Speaker 2 And I'm going, he's like nice and he's like, he's kind of shy in a way. And like, what do I do? He's, he's got none of that.
He just shed all of that stuff.

Speaker 2 He's got this nasty edge to him now where he is walking onto the court and he wants to rip your heart out. He wants to do the things we're talking about.
I want to demoralize you and frustrate you.

Speaker 2 And I'm coming for you like every trip. He didn't, he didn't have that.
until this year. And so it's really going to be fascinating to see what this guy's season looks like.

Speaker 1 There's some ceiling stuff with that team.

Speaker 1 Like just, I was looking at the fan duel stuff, which always tells you kind of is, has the market caught up with what I think I'm seeing with my eyes?

Speaker 1 Like they're still for the, for their division, right? Which their division has Houston in it. It has Dallas, Memphis, and New Orleans.

Speaker 1 And I was like, I feel like San Antonio versus Houston, not only for records, but for the division. To me, that's a toss-up because I think they're as good as Houston.

Speaker 1 And I know it's small sample size. Schedule hasn't been great yet.
I don't really care. Like, I think they're as good as Houston if Wemby can play 65 to 70 games.

Speaker 1 But like they're plus 210 for the division. It's like nobody kind of believes it yet.
And I think it's because people just want to see Wemby play for three straight months.

Speaker 1 Can you think of another reason? Because from a talent standpoint, they're with Houston, I think.

Speaker 2 I think

Speaker 2 I don't know if I'd agree that they're necessarily there

Speaker 2 from a talent standpoint, but I think that Wembanyama alone kind of makes up for anything.

Speaker 1 If you look at like head-to-head matchups, maybe factoring that in, though, they have a top five guy. He's the one who's okay.

Speaker 2 I thought maybe you were talking about like just like one through eight, looking at all those guys. Okay.
Yeah. So Wembanyam makes up for some of that.

Speaker 2 That's going to be the fascinating thing for me to see. And I'm just glancing at this.
I mean, this is kind of crazy. Unless I'm, oh, there you go.
They play them

Speaker 2 Friday, November 7th.

Speaker 2 So that's going to be. a first opportunity to see what that looks like.
Because look, Houston has the potential to be top three, top four defensive team in the league.

Speaker 2 They've got athletes and size that they can throw at him, quickness.

Speaker 2 The changing ends of the floor can be something that they can use against Wemby. I'm fascinated to see it.
But I'd look, look, it's four games in. It's been absolutely jaw-dropping.

Speaker 2 Some of the things we've seen out of him. Again, the schedule has been favorable to get off to this kind of start.
Let me see them play some of the true top-tier teams in the Western Conference.

Speaker 2 Then you'll get a much better idea of the sustainability of like San Antonio winning to where like, are they more than like a playing team? Is this a top six team, top five team, top four team?

Speaker 2 Like, is that, did you change your mind to that extent?

Speaker 2 I'm probably going to need to see about 15 to 20 game sample size to kind of come to those conclusions because some weird stuff happens right out of the gate with some of these teams.

Speaker 2 And some, it's not sustainable. And then other teams have been really bad that you know are going to be better.
So I want to give it a little bit more time.

Speaker 1 Well, here's the problem. I'm more easily influenced than you and I'm more impetuous.
So I think they're there already. I think that listen,

Speaker 2 by the way, there's nothing wrong. It's smart to make the prediction now because I really feel this way.

Speaker 1 I really think they're a 50-win team. Like I genuinely do.
I think they're loaded.

Speaker 1 I'm kind of in disbelief.

Speaker 2 You're going to look pretty damn smart. Like people are going to be like, wow, Bill called this after a week 50-win team.
So, and if you're not right,

Speaker 2 I don't think a lot of people are going to hold on to that. So I think it's worth the risk to make that kind of prediction.

Speaker 1 Before the year, we did our over-unders, me and Zach Lowe and Joe House. And one of my locks was San Antonio over 43 and a half.
Cause I was like, I just have too much talent.

Speaker 1 I can't imagine if Wemby's going to play.

Speaker 1 The ceiling for them has gone up in what I watched. I think that Houston game is a really interesting game to point to, though, because you're right.

Speaker 1 On the one hand, Houston's got big bodies to throw at Wemby, and we're going to really see him get tested in a different way.

Speaker 1 On the other hand, San Antonio has all of these defenders and people to throw at this Houston, we don't have a guard situation where it's like, Durant's going to bring the ball up this time.

Speaker 1 Ah, Thompson will bring it up this time. It's like, okay, are you going to still do that when we're pressuring you 94 feet and bringing in waves of dudes and we have Wemby?

Speaker 1 So in a weird way, they're going to pick at each other's warts. And that's just a good rivalry to begin with.

Speaker 2 I totally agree with that. And I think what I think you might listen, I had them at the under on that number because I saw that number too, because I thought they were going to be around a 500 team.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 I'm not 100% convinced yet they're a 50-win team because I want to see them play better competition. But here's what is undeniable.
If Victor Wemonyama stays healthy and he plays

Speaker 2 70 to 75 games, if he gives them that, they're going to be top five defensive rated team in the league without question. And there's going to be a lot of nights.

Speaker 2 If you don't make enough threes against them, you can't beat them because you're just not going to score enough points inside 20 feet. And that's what I'm looking at now with San Antonio.

Speaker 2 I think that part of the equation is sustainable because they've got good perimeter defenders to go with it, funneling it to this guy.

Speaker 2 That's going to give them opportunities on nights when they don't shoot well to win games. So that's going to be there.
Now let's see what great defensive teams can do against them.

Speaker 2 And that's what I need to see.

Speaker 1 If you were Houston,

Speaker 1 Would you say fuck it and use your assets and try to get a real guard and be cutthroat and use the Van Bleek contract and use

Speaker 1 some of the Brooklyn Phoenix stuff and really try to get somebody who could change your destiny and make you a title contender right now? Because they're not without a guard.

Speaker 2 A couple of weeks ago, I said, and I think some people in Houston like lost their minds.

Speaker 2 And I said, if Reed Shepard turns out not to be able to take that leap this year, and first of all, I like Reed Shepard a lot. I think Reed Shepherd's going to have a nice career in this league.

Speaker 2 If it turns out he's not quite ready, and they see that after like 20 games,

Speaker 2 when you've got Kevin Durant at this stage of his career, you didn't bring him in to think about any sort of long-term horizon beyond this season.

Speaker 2 You're thinking about winning it all this year and next year and however many years he plays. But every year, you're recalibrating to win a championship.

Speaker 2 So if Reed Shepard is not quite ready to do that and you're going, man, like this, this kind of run your offense by committee through amin thompson durant and shangoon it is just not good enough particularly in tight games in the fourth quarter when you've got to really execute and organize and make great decisions on the break and like all the stuff you have

Speaker 2 and no fast breaks you're not getting any fast break points at all if you have no point guard that's exactly right and i i said then if that's the case they may look to make a trade and try to bring in a point guard.

Speaker 2 And I do think that's true. Now, we're not ready to quite do that yet.
We're a week in, but let's look at this as you get to late November, like early December and see if

Speaker 2 what's their record

Speaker 2 in crunch time games? What is their efficiency in the last three minutes of close games? That's going to kind of tell you if they think what they have is good enough or not.

Speaker 2 And if it's not, would not be surprised one bit if they went out and added a point guard just because of where you are with Kevin Durant in this stage of his career and how long are you going to have him?

Speaker 2 And you got to try to win it if you have him on your roster.

Speaker 1 It's that simple well we saw it the same way you have to give rude shepherd 20 games they're going to be a playoff team they don't need to panic but when it gets to mid-december range christmas time and also you're going to have a couple teams that either have decided ah we we suck or ah didn't realize we weren't weren't going to be good maybe we should make a trade the celtics are a really good example of this i don't want to trade derrick white but the celtics aren't good i thought the Celtics were going to be like

Speaker 1 an

Speaker 1 eight, nine, 10 seed and win a playing game when Tatum came back.

Speaker 1 I don't think that's happening. And I actually wonder, I was going to talk about this with you later, but we could talk about it now.

Speaker 1 I actually wonder if the way they built the team was kind of a really stealth tank situation. They can't rebound.
They can't protect the rim or rebound.

Speaker 1 I knew this going in, but my stupid Celtics brain was like, oh, they're going to shoot threes. They'll play with pace.
They have the infrastructure. They're not going to get stops.

Speaker 1 They're not going to be able to rebound. And at some point, you got to look at Derek White.

Speaker 1 And I know I'm not the first one to bring this up. I'm not the last.

Speaker 1 But at some point, you look at Derek White in his early 30s, who's a winning player, who's awesome, who would be great on Houston and could be a missing piece for them.

Speaker 1 And it's like, is that a trade that makes sense for both sides? That's the kind of stuff that we don't know now.

Speaker 1 But around Christmas, if the Celtics are 10 and 22,

Speaker 1 maybe you start thinking about it.

Speaker 2 Well, first of all, I was kind of with you in terms of what I thought their ceiling was this year. That's about where I had them.
And again, that probably sounds 500-ish, right?

Speaker 2 That's kind of where I was thinking. I was like, okay, man, this team is used to winning games.
They've still got a toughness there. Like, they've got Jalen Brown to kind of be the main guy.

Speaker 2 Derek White is a great next option. They're going to be fine.
They're hard to guard because of their style. Here's the problem.
And this was the one thing I was worried about.

Speaker 2 It's kind of looking that way early. It's one thing just to say, this is the way we play.
We're going to keep playing that way. We're going to take 46 threes a night.

Speaker 2 And that's what they're doing right now. They're shooting 31% on those.
And you know why? Because the quality of the shots aren't as good.

Speaker 1 Because Jason Tatum. Jason Tatum anymore.
Right.

Speaker 2 Because you don't have Jason Tatum. So Jason Tatum was the magnet to create leverage defensively to shift the defense and to make you accountable in communications.

Speaker 2 And that extra body being four feet closer to the action meant a longer closeout to the role player on the weak side.

Speaker 2 And that meant a difference between a contested and a semi-contested or an open shot. And that's a big deal to role-playing shooters.

Speaker 2 Those guys that are standing out there waiting on the ball, when you've got action taking place that Tatum's initiating and there's this big shift in the defense and now the ball comes your way, that extra half count matters a lot.

Speaker 2 And now you're seeing that with them. So now I'm kind of worried like you are.

Speaker 2 Because I'm going, and then like the, there's not like there's this physical dimension to them defensively where you're like, okay, that's going to keep them afloat every night.

Speaker 2 That's not really been there. Look, Derrick White and Peyton Pritchard are really struggling to shoot the ball right now.
And, you know, and they hit a heater at the same time.

Speaker 2 That's going to help a lot, but it's not going to improve the overall quality on average of the shots you're taking. And that is why they were so lethal from the three-point line most nights.

Speaker 2 That's not really there now.

Speaker 2 And so here we are, one and three. And I texted you a couple of days ago.
If they lose, if they're 0-3, I'm like, if they lose this next one, man, but they got to win.

Speaker 1 I was up with so many Celtics threads about if we lose this New Orleans game the next three or Cleveland at Philly and then Houston the next night. And it was like, are we going to go 0-7?

Speaker 1 Is this like going to be like, what happens if they go, but they got one? But I still,

Speaker 1 I'd find it hard to believe unless they just shot 25 for 50 from three that they're going to win any of the next three games. On the flip side.

Speaker 1 This Philly thing, and we didn't do locks either way. Like the Philly over-under for wins was 42.5.
It's like, great.

Speaker 1 I have no idea what's going to happen with this team, but we, I leaned under because of Ben B. I was, I just don't see it.
I don't think he's going to stay healthy.

Speaker 1 Did not see the VJ Maxi thing coming. What's really interesting is the style and how fast they're playing.

Speaker 1 And then, then, what happened with Maxie, where if you're going to make the list of like leap guys this year, he's the number one. I mean, it's not even close.
He's looks like a different guy.

Speaker 1 And he was good last year. This year is different.

Speaker 1 This year, he's looking like he's moving toward that Mitchell Brunson kind of group, which I would not have expected. What are you seeing with Maxi?

Speaker 2 I agree. That's a good group to put him in.
And I'm looking at a guy that is one of the quickest in the league from 30 feet to the rim. Like he's just an absolute blur.

Speaker 2 You cannot keep, especially going to his right hand. He's got unlimited range.

Speaker 2 He shoots it incredibly well going left off the dribble to the point where like most defenses aren't willing to extend on ball screen. So he gets that shot whenever he wants.

Speaker 2 The one thing he's getting this year pretty regularly is getting calls, which we're going to get into.

Speaker 2 A lot of guys are getting calls, but he's getting the whistle this year, the benefit of the doubt on a lot of stuff he didn't last year.

Speaker 2 Now,

Speaker 2 listen, he's playing out of his mind. They're winning games.
I don't think they're doing it if he isn't doing that at the same time. Edgecombe is playing the way he is.

Speaker 2 It's the combination of the two of them has been this relentless onslaught from the guard positional teams that no one has really been able to figure out here early in the year.

Speaker 1 Do they they put a 136 on Orlando. I know.

Speaker 2 I know. And I watched every second of that game at no point.
And Orlando, by the way, last year,

Speaker 2 in teams I saw live, and it was, I saw, I don't even know, probably 26 teams live last year, I would bet. Orlando impressed me more than any team in the league defensively.
And it was the game.

Speaker 2 It was an ABC game at Cleveland when Cleveland had that long winning streak. It was like 15 games or something.
And Orlando snapped that streak.

Speaker 2 And they did it primarily because they just absolutely got up in Cleveland, who at the time was on a heater like you couldn't believe. Their efficiency was off the charts.

Speaker 2 They were averaging like 125 points in the previous 20 games. And Orlando completely got into them.
And I was so impressed by how hard they played. So you're talking about a top five defensive team.

Speaker 2 They, at no point against Philly, did they contain the basketball for the entire game. At every time you looked up, someone was getting beaten off the dribble in the perimeter.

Speaker 2 And then Philly just the freedom and the freewheeling mentality, like up the floor, even after made baskets, they're throwing like one pass ahead.

Speaker 2 And Kelly Ubre just shoots a 28-footer with no thought to it. So all of these guys are clicking.
It's set up by Maxi and the way Edgecombe has played.

Speaker 2 There's a there's a spirit about this team in the city right now. Like these fans are flipping out over how fun they are to watch.

Speaker 2 And, you know, you've had very little out of Embiid, nothing out of Paul George.

Speaker 1 And yet

Speaker 2 the fan base is almost taking the approach. And I know all these guys.
I'm just, I talk to these people that love the team all the time. They're just like, man, I don't even care anymore.

Speaker 2 Like, this is a breath of fresh air to watch this, this group of dudes having fun, playing fast, so good offensively with like this joy about them. And

Speaker 2 you still have these guys over there in street clothes, you know, that everybody's got one eye on.

Speaker 2 But right now, They've been one of the best stories in the league to this point because of the way Edgecombe's played and the start that Maxi's had.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I came. I was at the Dodger game for 100 hours last night.
So I missed all the basketball. And I woke up this morning, had coffee, and I'm still a mess from the night before.

Speaker 1 But I was like, all right, I got to watch like two fourth quarters, and I have time to watch one half. What am I going to watch?

Speaker 1 I was like, clearly, I have to watch the second half of Philly, Orlando. I want to know what's happening.
And I watched the whole Philly, Boston game last week, too, is what you said.

Speaker 1 They're just pushing, pushing, pushing. And they have Maxi, who's basically like the craziest downhill running back in the league right now, where he's just going and you can't stay in.

Speaker 1 Nobody can stay in front of him. They flipped that Celtic game last week.
I thought the Celtics had that game. We're going to win by 10.

Speaker 1 And Maxi just kind of brought them back, made crazy threes, just kept pushing, pushing, pushing. Then VJ's in it.
And they have this style that, not to be a dick,

Speaker 1 makes zero sense for Joel and Bi, the way they're playing. Like there's no, it's almost like they're two teams now.
And maybe there's a way to kind of meld both of them.

Speaker 1 And maybe he plays like two 10 minute stretches each half but he doesn't make sense with this team and i don't i don't in a weird way i i agree with you i know a lot of sixers fans too and all of them are like i don't care i love vj and max i don't really care what happens anymore i just want to see these two guys so they're going to navigate it but i think they're i they're clearly a playoff team with those two guys if they play like that And I think what's going on right now, kind of with their fan base, is the lack of availability is just, it's just worn on them over years.

Speaker 2 And

Speaker 2 here's where the issue they're going to run into it's going to be a problem for them and and you get a guy like paul george for instance so this team's playing great fast fun

Speaker 2 all these touches from maxi and edgecom you know quentin grimes and uber are the next two guys and they got all the freedom in the world and now okay at some point paul george is gonna play and be going to be out there certain nights everything looks different it bogs down more not that embed's not obviously more dominant player guy's an mvp in this league but it slows everything down it's less touches for these for these fun energetic guys that are putting up numbers.

Speaker 2 And in Paul George's case, I can't imagine like if this team, I don't even know when he's going to play or like what their record's going to be, but if their record's really good and this, he finally sees the court and all of a sudden it bogs down and he gives you, you know, a four for 12er.

Speaker 1 How do you think the Philly fans will handle that? If

Speaker 1 they're slowing the game down, like what do you, they're in the game in real time. They're going to be turning.
It's going to be a mutiny.

Speaker 2 It's going to be a mutiny. And now what happens, what happens is I've seen seen this because, you know, that's the city I lived in for so long.
You go to these games

Speaker 2 in the any of the sports teams of Philly and you feel the heaviness being transferred onto the court from the stands.

Speaker 2 Like, and now it becomes very difficult for that player to kind of navigate through that. And I'm worried for Paul George.

Speaker 1 Paul George, who I wouldn't say is like incredible with adversity.

Speaker 2 It's going to be a very interesting situation.

Speaker 2 You know, this is the best case scenario. Everybody was kind of sitting back and waiting to see what was the start of the year going to look like to Philly.
Here's what's crazy, Bill.

Speaker 2 You can talk about these, all these over-unders. So went through 29 teams when I was doing mine.

Speaker 2 And then I get, I saved them for last because I said, there's one team in this league whose range is 24 to 54.

Speaker 1 Right. It's the Philadelphia.
High ceiling, lowest floor. It's like a 40-story building.
You just have no idea.

Speaker 2 Yeah, it's incredible. And I still don't think we still don't know that.
It's been a great start, but at least it's more hopeful that if, because I'm thinking on that 24 was my thinking of it.

Speaker 2 B, you know, again, he gives you 25 games. Paul George hurt most of the year.
They're going to do it again, 25 wins. But now I'm going, wait a second.

Speaker 2 If those guys do have those kinds of years physically, now I look at this team and go, this style and this level of explosive firepower, they're going to hang in more games than they could have a year ago.

Speaker 2 And so they're going to win more games. So it's not going to be the worst case scenario for that team this year.

Speaker 1 I went through this edge cone thing is so unusual and so unexpected. I went there.
I went basketball reference as that stat head where you can look up careers.

Speaker 1 And I was just looking up guards 21 and under first year. How rare is it for? Because in your head, as the years pass, you're like, oh, Dwayne Wade must have been 25 a game that first year.

Speaker 1 He wasn't, but he was really good. He was impactful.

Speaker 1 But when you talk about guys coming in right away and being really good, just recently, Wade and Donovan Mitchell Mitchell were the two that came in and were just immediately good and were 20 points a game guys and could run a little offense and do a lot of and were explosive and athletic.

Speaker 1 You know, Jordan, obviously, Luca obviously coming in, they were, they were scoring.

Speaker 1 And then there's guys like Iverson and Ja and Stackhouse and Tyreek Evans that were putting up stats, but you wouldn't call them winning players. Yeah.

Speaker 1 The VJ thing is different because he's a winning player who's also getting stats. Like

Speaker 1 it just jumps out immediately, jumped out in the tape from when he was in college, but now it's even better now. Where if he doesn't have the ball, he still knows what to do.
He's still moving.

Speaker 1 He's still like, oh, maybe I can get a back cut. Maybe I can get an offensive rebound.
This guy needs help. I'm going to go over there.

Speaker 1 Like he's just helpful in a way that I think is just so unusual for rookie guards. Like, in my opinion, the Sixers fans cannot be excited enough about him.
Like, he's really special.

Speaker 2 If I was was going to like just share the text thread with all my friends i you what you're saying is that doesn't even come close to how excited these people are about what they're seeing at edgecom and maxi who's already his popularity in philadelphia is already through the ceiling and a beloved guy just the whole thing love him yeah i mean it's just so easy to like him and now on top of you pair him with this guy there's a couple things bill that i see at edgecom that are really going to bode well in terms of just projecting like is this real what we're watching yeah and it's this it's this one he he has the ability to go from a very relaxed state with the ball to buy you in an accelerated state at like a level like I'm not, I'm not comparing him to Shea Giles Alexander, but it's some of that where it's like all of a sudden.

Speaker 2 He's relaxed. You're slightly relaxed defensively.
And then when he decides to go, he goes.

Speaker 2 That first step in push and acceleration is by guys, or he's forcing you into such an over-reactionary retreat, he can stop stop and make an 18 foot jump shot pretty easily it's that's the first thing that is a special god given innate athletic quality that's going to create separation for him all the time that was young wade in miami that first year that's a great

Speaker 2 immediately you're like wait what's going on here why is this coming so easily to this guy so anyway what was your second thought totally great the second one is watch vijay edgecomb when he shoots the ball whether it's at the foul line a three or something off the dribble like a pull-up how strong and like intentional he is with from his like his basically his elbow to his fingertips.

Speaker 2 He is so strong with his follow-through and his wrist.

Speaker 2 Most young shooters come into the league and because things are happening fast, faster than they've ever happened, they don't stay with their shot and they flick it and then their hand is down and they're kind of like, and they didn't stay with it.

Speaker 2 And he has this ability, I guess, because he's just a mature offensive player. He's not phased by the speed of the game.
So he is staying with his release better than most young players do.

Speaker 2 And as a result, he's making shots at a really high level right away to start his career, even deep shots and mid-rangers, contested shots, because he's not affected by the pace of this game.

Speaker 2 And that's very rare for a young guard to come into the league.

Speaker 1 Flag Harper Edgecombe, one, two, three in the running for best one, two, threes we've had potentially, because usually you hit two, not three.

Speaker 1 You don't have three in a row that are like these guys can be all individually, it could be all NBA guys, and all three of them, I think, could be. Edgecombe,

Speaker 1 you know, I love the comparison game.

Speaker 1 I probably do too much, but it really does remind me of young Wade in a lot of ways, who I just thought, you know, as the years passed, Wade played all those big high-profile games. He got older.

Speaker 1 We saw these different versions of his career. But that early Wade, when like even before Shaq got on the team, but then the first two Shaq years was just

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Game Day is all about the tailgate spread.

Speaker 1 Listen, if you're going to have friends over, you absolutely 100% have to have a lot of things for them to eat. Everyone gets hungry.
They can say they're not going to eat, but guess what?

Speaker 1 If you lay out the right kind of spread and you have some good, cheesy, creamy, melty dip with some good crackers, some chips, they're probably going to eat it.

Speaker 1 So why not do creamy shells and cheese, melty Velveeta blocks and cheesy jarred quesos? I don't know. Why wouldn't you? They're taking down one taste bud at a time.
Do yourself a favor.

Speaker 1 Stock up on Velveeta before kickoff.

Speaker 1 Flipping this around to a sad topic.

Speaker 1 is it Orlando panic time yet, or is it just we got to figure out the new guy? Like, I don't like how Paolo's, and I actually, I watched the second half of the game last night.

Speaker 1 I watched some of their other stuff. I don't love how Paolo has played.
I thought he was going to be a leap guy along the lines of what we're talking about with Maxi.

Speaker 1 Their bench just seems like it might suck, which is something that I think they thought was going to be good. And it's a relief, but the 136, I thought, was a major, major, major, major red flag.

Speaker 1 So what'd you see?

Speaker 2 That was a, I mean, they just got completely stripped down by the Sixers off the dribble.

Speaker 2 And that's not really something that's typical of that team.

Speaker 2 I'm not remotely panicking on Orlando yet. I agree with you.

Speaker 2 Like, I had them as potentially, if this Bain thing hit, potentially with their defensive mindset, Bancaro and Wagner stay healthy all year, which last year they weren't.

Speaker 2 They both missed chunks of time. I thought, hey, man, the three seeds up for grabs.
Orlando's in that mix to get the threes because I think New York, Cleveland are going to finish one, two.

Speaker 2 I'd be surprised if they don't. Orlando or Orlando's the next team.
Now, it hasn't been a great start. The one thing that's been surprising,

Speaker 2 their three-point shooting was anemic last year. It didn't give them a chance to win some nights flat out.
It was just so substandard for modern NBA.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Yeah.
And it's just not enough.

Speaker 2 You know, so there are some nights, man, despite the fact there's a great defensive team and you got a couple of really good offensive forwards, you're going to have to make like 13, 14, threes some nights because that's what the other team required you to do.

Speaker 2 And they couldn't do that. So I thought, okay, not only is Bain directly going to improve that because he's going to make, you know, two, three a night.
Some nights he's going to get hot and make six.

Speaker 2 But because of his presence and the way you're now going to rotate to him.

Speaker 2 It's going to mean a little extra time for some of the mediocre to below average shooters they have on their roster that didn't have as much time.

Speaker 2 And I thought, well, then they're also going to be better shooters. bill we're three games in or whatever four games in

Speaker 2 they're averaging on an average night eight for 27 from the three-point line that's worse than last year it's like having a bad it's like having a bad field goal kicker in football where you're just giving away you're just minus six in field goals every game and you can't you have to make up the points somewhere else I know that's a great point and the other the other it's another correlation because I love the NFL like you with the field goal kicking is not only that when field goal kickers miss and you give the other team the ball at their own 40, it's a big deal.

Speaker 2 And it starts to plant right seeds of doubt in your head as a coach. Well, it's the same thing with these guys.
Like some of these misses are triggering breaks. Yeah.

Speaker 2 They're triggering breaks the other way because they're like not close.

Speaker 2 They're in the rim is a long rebound, especially a team like Philly that looks like a track relay team the way that they're getting up down the floor.

Speaker 2 Like, so I'm surprised at the Desmond Bain effect not being there there right from the beginning, but yeah, I'm not even close to giving up on them. Some teams find their rhythm offensively first.

Speaker 2 Some teams find it defensively first. Orlando has not found the same rhythm and physicality defensively that they had a year ago yet.
And I think you got a new guy you're incorporating.

Speaker 2 Their offense will get better too.

Speaker 1 I'm concerned, not panicking, but I don't understand why the defense isn't better. You have Minnesota tomorrow night.
Yeah.

Speaker 1 I went to Minnesota Lakers Friday and had good seats and really was soaking it in. The Minnesota guard situation is a real thing.

Speaker 1 Conley being a year older and you could feel it the last couple years anyway, but at some point he's kind of moving into that Al Horford territory where it's like, all right, this is 60 games, 20 minutes a game, and you're going to have to make do.

Speaker 1 I just couldn't believe Bones Highland was playing over Dillingham. A guy that they gave up a real asset for, and it's year two.
And I thought he had a couple moments last year.

Speaker 1 I thought Minnesota to me was a true contender, one of the six. I had him in there because they have, you know, top seven, top eight guy.
They have size. They, you know, Randall's happy.

Speaker 1 They have a full year to put Randall and DiFicenzo together.

Speaker 1 The guard situation really left me. I left the game and I'm like, I'm actually nervous for that team because they're missing something.

Speaker 1 What do you, as you're preparing for the game tomorrow night, what are you seeing?

Speaker 2 I love this point about dillingham and look i think you know there's a good chance we're not going to see unfortunately anthony edwards luca or lebron so that takes a little luster off the game oh god can they flex is there a flex

Speaker 2 i wish i know i wish i wish so it does take a little of the uh luster off of it um

Speaker 2 but the dillingham point is important because i i really liked him I liked the move in acquiring him because there was such a need there.

Speaker 2 And so now you think about it, we're a year removed from coming out.

Speaker 2 And you're looking, you're four games in. He's played two games, six and a half minutes a game.

Speaker 1 That tells me

Speaker 1 I'm concerned about it.

Speaker 2 Exactly. And I'm concerned, Bill, because when you have such a need at that spot and you still can't find a way to make that happen, that tells me that they're seeing something on a daily basis.

Speaker 2 That I'm a little bit concerned now for like what's Dillingham's future.

Speaker 2 Now, maybe he ends up, maybe it's two years from now when he's on a team that's not as good, getting a lot more run and that plays fast. And now in the open court,

Speaker 2 he's going to score. And maybe we go, okay, Dillingham's going to be a filing, fine NBA player, whatever.
But in this situation, you're going to get limited minutes. It's a team that's contending.

Speaker 2 They've been to two straight conference finals. They want to get to the finals.
So everything is more scrutinized with their supporting cast. And you can't quite crack that yet.

Speaker 2 I'm a little concerned about that. I actually think maybe the two most important players on their team are going to be DiVincenzo and Terrence Shannon Jr.

Speaker 2 because those two guys have got to give them the supplemental offense they need consistently to be able to give them enough because their defense is going to be good enough, I believe.

Speaker 2 Of course, you've got Edwards. Randall's a little bit inconsistent.
So, so where are those, where's that next infusion of offense going to come from like consistently?

Speaker 2 Di Vincenzo has to stay healthy and it'll happen for him if he does. And then I think Terrence Shannon Jr.

Speaker 2 is one of those guys that you play in 15 minutes, he's damn near going to get double figures most nights because he's so aggressive and confident with his offense.

Speaker 2 Um, that maybe that can offset whatever they're not getting out of Dillingham.

Speaker 2 But I'm, I'm, I thought if I was going to see Dillingham right out of camp being that guy that's getting you 18 to 20, 22 minutes some nights and playing very confidently and playing well.

Speaker 2 That's not the case here out of the gate. I'm a little concerned, and I'll see for myself.
If Anthony Edwards doesn't play, there's going to be more opportunity for him on Wednesday night.

Speaker 2 Let's see if Dillingham maybe does something to give me some hope. But right now, I'm not too hopeful how this is going to go for him this season.

Speaker 1 Doesn't look good. My thing is,

Speaker 1 maybe that draft was just bad. Sometimes we have that in football too, where it's like the quarterback class, and then you look back at the quarterbacks.

Speaker 1 It's like Trubisky, you know, like, it's like, oh, yeah. We were ranking all these guys against each other, and none of them were that good.
You think about that draft last year.

Speaker 1 Reed Shepard was third, Dillingham was eighth. And, you know, maybe it was just one of those weird draft beers.
I have another sad topic for you. We're almost done.

Speaker 1 I actually think, so the worst team of the last 30 years was the 2016 Sixers that went 10 and 72.

Speaker 1 Yep.

Speaker 1 There's a team that I think could challenge that and maybe be even worse. And I'm wondering if you're thinking of the same team I'm thinking.

Speaker 2 Well, there's only two teams. There's only, well, I don't know, man.
I wouldn't put Washington in that category. So to me, then I think you're either talking about Brooklyn or New Orleans, right?

Speaker 2 It's one of those two.

Speaker 1 Oh, you'd go New Orleans. Wow.
I wouldn't do that. New Orleans actually has some talent.

Speaker 1 The Brooklyn's thing is

Speaker 1 I don't see it at all.

Speaker 2 My thing with New Orleans was just if like

Speaker 2 Zion,

Speaker 2 something happens to him physically. Like

Speaker 1 where would they pick? Like they wouldn't be.

Speaker 2 Where would it be from an organizational standpoint? So is it Brooklyn? Is that who you're talking about?

Speaker 1 Yeah. I think Brooklyn is, Brooklyn's just really awful.

Speaker 1 And I'm not sure what that draft was last year with all those picks, which didn't make sense when they happened, but a couple of those guys are.

Speaker 1 And I'm not even sure, like,

Speaker 1 you know, Agor, he seems okay. I'm not sure he could be running an offense.

Speaker 1 I just don't see it with them. And I don't think they want to be good either.
And I'm just wondering, like, how bad are they going to be? Because

Speaker 1 they're not in these games. Like, these games are over in the first quarter.

Speaker 2 you took a and then look they used all five picks which was i couldn't believe okay so but they did and four guards and the top two guys were two guards that foreign born and slightly built and are gonna take time yeah so and it's too way too early to know and i saw some nice things and it's just you know it's just summer league it's the first time i laid eyes on these guys the gemin and uh trey or the first time i saw those guys uh i saw some some you know some nice things that i could like analyze out of them at Summer League.

Speaker 2 It's obvious that they weren't going to be ready at the start of the year to be major contributors. So who knows? And when I say it takes time, sometimes that time never gets here.

Speaker 2 Like we've seen guys.

Speaker 1 It's like Poco syndrome. It's like Poco, it's going to take time.
It's not in the league.

Speaker 2 No doubt about it. I mean, you could end up with like a Frank Neil Aquina on your hands.
Like, you know, if you, right? I'm seriously. Like, cause it's a, it's a risk.
There's a lot of risk there.

Speaker 2 And like, you're counting on your personnel evaluators to like think that you hit it. And even though you know they're not ready, but like, no, it's in there and hope they get it right.

Speaker 2 That's risky to take all those guys.

Speaker 2 And no, you're right. Look, you know, Cam Thomas is going to shoot the ball as much as he wants every night.
And, you know, Michael Porter Jr. is going to have more freedom than he had in Denver.

Speaker 2 But what is that going to amount to? Not a lot. So I agree.
Look, I agree. Like, Brooklyn's tough.

Speaker 2 And Washington, you know, they're going to lose, certainly lose their share of games, but like, there are guys I like watching.

Speaker 2 I want to watch some of those guys, particularly Trey Johnson, who was the most natural scorer I saw this summer. And I'm like, this dude is a bucket-getter immediately in the NBA.

Speaker 2 And he's already doing that, like 16 a game, 47%. Like he's, he could flat out score.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they have a semblance of an identity where they just have a lot of assets and a lot of guys who could create offense. And I understand what they're trying to do.
They also...

Speaker 1 probably don't want to make the playoffs, but it makes a little more sense. I was looking back at those early 90s seasons when there was a ton of talent, seeing if there was a really bad team.

Speaker 1 And I think the 92 or 93 Mavs went 11 and 71. And I thought that was notable because

Speaker 1 even when the bad team, like a team like Charlotte that I really like watching, it's probably my Guilty Pleasure League pass team,

Speaker 1 they have talent. Like they can go and just whack somebody 135 to 110, you know, and they're, they're not a playoff team.

Speaker 1 So when you're a bad team and it's not just the good teams killing you, but then it's like, oh, Washington beat us by 18. Like, that tells me you might be really bad.

Speaker 1 I think, I don't know, they're over under 17 and a half right now. And I still think that's five wins too high.
To me, they're like a 12, 10 to 12 win team.

Speaker 2 Yeah, it'll be in the teens. I agree.

Speaker 2 It's funny you said that about Charlotte because, you know, we didn't, you and I didn't go over like our answers. We thought maybe this topic would come up: like, who's your guilty pleasure team?

Speaker 2 That is probably not going to be a great team. That's who I wrote down too.
And the reason, honestly, more than anything else, is I just think Lamella Ball is incredibly entertaining.

Speaker 2 Like he's just, he's just, he's just fun to watch. You never quite know what he's about to do, like trip by trip.
And some nights that translates into incredible games, incredible sidelines.

Speaker 2 You know, he makes some questionable decisions along the way, but one thing you're not going to get cheated on is entertainment value.

Speaker 2 Like, I'm going to sit there for the next two and a half hours, and this is going to be fun as hell. And I also, I really like Brandon Miller a lot.
He hasn't really had.

Speaker 2 kind of the start I was hoping he'd have this year.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Yeah.
He got banged up.

Speaker 2 Because of the injury.

Speaker 2 And I was thinking like, that's a, that's a guy right there that potentially this year, you know, he elevates himself into that 20, 20 point per game type category because I think he's got a lot of that in his game.

Speaker 1 They're fun, man. And I'm on the floor.

Speaker 2 Unfortunately, I don't know how many games are going to win. I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 2 Are they going to get 30? You think they can get 30? You know, high 20s? Like, I don't know.

Speaker 1 High 20s, early 30s seems conceivable to me.

Speaker 2 All right. That's the other one that's

Speaker 1 makes it worth it. Chicago is the other one for this.
Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1 They're just fun to watch.

Speaker 1 And like, if I just gave you a list right now, Orlando, Philly, Detroit, Chicago, Atlanta, Toronto, and those teams are just in a tournament, like they're all kind of around the same.

Speaker 1 I don't know if that's going to be the case in January, but all of them have strengths and weaknesses.

Speaker 1 And if they're all playing each other, I'm not surprised by any result with any of those six teams. That could change in January.

Speaker 2 And look at Chicago's start. This is really interesting here.

Speaker 2 So I kind of separated the East with like kind of like almost like different categories and groups of teams so like i said a while ago new york cleveland to me clearly i almost i'm at i'm almost feeling like if you don't get there this year one of these two teams never when will you like that's kind of how i am with them so they're clearly the top two then you've got like the wild card teams i would describe now philly and milwaukee would be in that category for me like they've got i'm pro-milwaukee as you know oh yes you are you're you're pro-Milwaukee I don't know where you had them

Speaker 2 ranked kind of prediction going into the season of where you thought their seeding would be.

Speaker 1 I thought they were a 47-range team.

Speaker 2 That's about where I had them. And so I've got, and I put Philly in that category with them because they've got veteran guys, like superstar names.
If it, if it hits, things could go really well.

Speaker 2 Now, then you had the next group of teams, which are the most interesting to me, Detroit. Orlando, and Atlanta.
I think they're all kind of grouped together.

Speaker 2 Like, there's real estate to be grabbed in the Eastern Conference.

Speaker 1 That's funny. We didn't talk about this.
I saw this the exact same way. I had those three way closer together.

Speaker 2 Put them right there together, right? And I'm going, you know, young talent. There's real estate available in the Eastern Conference because of what Boston and Indiana are dealing with.

Speaker 2 It's there for you. Guess what? Chicago, right out of the gate.
3-0. You know who they've beaten? Detroit, Orlando, and Atlanta.
So, so, I mean, look, I don't know what this is going to look like.

Speaker 2 They finished the year 15 and five.

Speaker 2 Okay. They, they finished the year 15 and five last year, get into the play-in.

Speaker 1 They had to net rating and all kinds of offensive defense stuff that was really favorable.

Speaker 2 And we're just horrific in the play-in game, like offensively, right? And they're going to go home. But still, they kind of took the confidence builder into the summer the way they finished.

Speaker 2 And here you go, out of the gate. You get these three teams that you and I just described as potentially could have been three, four, five in the East if things broke.

Speaker 2 And they come right out of the gate, bang, bang, bang. They clip all three of them off.
I don't know.

Speaker 2 I don't know what this is going to ultimately mean for Chicago, but what an impressive start to take those three teams that you and I both categorized in the same group and knock them all off.

Speaker 1 And I had Detroit third in that group.

Speaker 1 I was a little more down on Detroit than most. I watched the fourth quarter of the Bulls last night.
I would have watched more of it if I'd been home. Boozellus.

Speaker 1 Stuff's happening with that. And there was a lot of signs, a lot of breadcrumbs during the summer.
He said all the right things.

Speaker 1 He did all the right things and looks like a different player and is actually like creating his own stuff and i actually like their finishing five i think it's i think it's uh i don't know offensively hard to stop they're gonna have submissions on defense but that was uh he might be a leap guy komingo is another one on golden state that i just seems better than he was last year and kessler on Utah was another one that jumped out to me.

Speaker 1 It's like, he just seems better.

Speaker 1 Like he went up a level. Before we go, you got to do, and Ryan Rollins is my favorite random dude.
Um, just, I just want to get that on the record. I just want to buy some Ryan Rollins talk.

Speaker 1 Before we go, you wanted us, you had a referee trend you wanted to hit.

Speaker 2 Well, I just look, I just want to talk a little bit about these, you know, what we're seeing here early. And I don't, I don't know how it'll all shake out.

Speaker 2 We'll revisit this periodically as we do this together this year and see how it's changing. I think some of these numbers are incredible to me.
So, first of all, I mean, everybody's taking notice.

Speaker 2 We've had four guys get 50 in the first week of the season. Four, four, and three of which, like I said, very unlikely that they would do that.

Speaker 2 Free throws play a big part in that, except for Aaron Gordon, who made 10 threes.

Speaker 2 So it took that kind of shooting performance, or you got to get to the line a ton. And all these guys did it.
Marketing in Austin Reeves, Shea. But listen to some of these numbers, Bill.

Speaker 2 Like here, a week into the season.

Speaker 2 There are 27 teams in the league committing more fouls per night per game

Speaker 2 than the league leader last year.

Speaker 1 Really?

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 2 The league leader last year was like, whatever it was, like 23 fouls a game. There's 27 teams committing more fouls than that a week into the season.
That to me just like blew my mind.

Speaker 2 There's a couple more that just, you don't want to overwhelm people with data, but these are just amazing. There are 10 teams right now, 10, averaging 30 plus free throw attempts a game.

Speaker 2 You know how many did it last year?

Speaker 2 None.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I was going to say, it's like the high last year was like 26, 27 range.

Speaker 2 Denver was like the league leader, like the 23 range or something. I think it was, whatever.
But there's just 10 teams. And then one more.
Right now, there are 11 players taking 10 plus free throws.

Speaker 1 Oh, my God. That's like Yannis' territory.

Speaker 2 One. Giannis Anta Tecumpo was the only player in the league last year.
There are 11 guys averaging 10 or more free throws. I called a game that had 93 free throws in it.

Speaker 2 So, and look,

Speaker 2 here's my point with it, Bill. And this will be the last thing we talk about this.

Speaker 2 I actually think it's because of the lack of discipline defensively.

Speaker 2 I am seeing more guys slap at guys unnecessarily on the drive, going for every head fake in the world, like they're going to block a jump shot.

Speaker 2 How many guys now are going to that little mid-range step back up fake, the Shea, the Luca, the Trey Young?

Speaker 2 But more guys are doing it now. Austin Reeves is great at it.
Maxie's doing it this year,

Speaker 2 And guys are just going for it every time. They're falling for the bait.
Closeouts on three-pointers and recklessly fouling guys.

Speaker 2 Fouling guys at the rim rather than making them make a tougher shot over a contested hit. So I actually think most of the whistles I've seen in the two games I've called have been justified.

Speaker 2 I'm not seeing replays where I go, man, are they calling it tight tonight? No, I'm seeing guys that are careless and reckless and undisciplined defensively.

Speaker 2 And it's leading to this incredible scoring outburst and the types of numbers I'm talking about. Now, obviously, that's not going to stay there.

Speaker 2 You're not going to have 27 teams commit more fouls than the league leader last year. It's going to come back, right?

Speaker 2 It'll deviate back to the norm a little bit, but that just puts into perspective what we have seen a week into the season. It's been a whistle after whistle after whistle.

Speaker 2 And most of it, I think, is the fault of the defense. I'm not blaming the officials.

Speaker 1 Well, it might tie into what we talked about at the start of our conversation, which there's so much talent now. People are just harder to guard.

Speaker 1 It seems like every team has has two or three guys that are really hard to stay in front of.

Speaker 1 The only thing I've noticed from, you know, obviously Conspiracy Bill, who I don't know if you know that well, but is honored to be here today.

Speaker 1 The only thing I've noticed,

Speaker 1 there's a specific call that it feels like everybody is getting now, especially the guards. And Maxi would lead the league in this, but SGA has been getting it forever.

Speaker 1 It's this drive where they're parallel with a guy going to their stronghand or sometimes even their weak hand, but stronghand and shoulder to shoulder where they just go up and they make contact on the shoulder.

Speaker 1 And I feel like for whatever reason, every single player is getting that call this year. And I've specifically noticed it.

Speaker 1 So when you said you want to talk about a ref trend, I thought you were talking about that, but it's almost like they said to themselves, SGA gets this call all the time.

Speaker 1 We now have to give this to Maxi and Austin Reeves and name every other guard. But I feel like everybody's getting that call.
I don't know if that's intentional or not. Well, I agree with that.

Speaker 1 When you're doing your game tomorrow, I will.

Speaker 2 And that call is prevalent. I know exactly the play you're talking about.
It's mostly going, going to your right hand, down the lane, and it's

Speaker 2 going to get a little bit of a bump with your shoulder into their chest. And then you kind of almost veer off sideways and just throw it up and you get the whistle.

Speaker 1 You hope to get the bank for the three-point play, but you usually don't because you have to whip it. It's just, it's an epidemic.

Speaker 2 Well, you know, the one thing that they told us was going to be the point of emphasis this year was they're really going to watch the high-five contest because they felt like guys were getting out of control with it and taking advantage too much.

Speaker 2 And there's too much contact on the hand. Or there was a swipe down and a follow-through hitting guys on the forearm.
They want to protect the shooters to a higher degree.

Speaker 2 Ironically, in the two games I've called, I've only seen that even come up a couple of times. So that's not even really played into these calls.

Speaker 2 Most of them are on reach-ins.

Speaker 2 and grabs and slaps when you're out of position and guys are driving down the lane about to gather to go up the shoot and you're seeing that help defender reach in and they're not in a position to make the play.

Speaker 2 And they're carelessly reaching in and hitting guys on the arm. That's been, to me, the majority of the whistles I've seen, particularly on the scorers.
So let's see what happens going forward.

Speaker 2 I'll certainly be watching for all this stuff in my game Wednesday night.

Speaker 1 Well, now that you're a semi-regular on this podcast and the ringer,

Speaker 1 you get 45 seconds to complain about your NFL team. So I'm just going to offer you, I'm just going to give you

Speaker 1 the Washington Commanders. Yeah.
And your season's already over. So go ahead, take the floor.

Speaker 2 It's just, it's just, it's so painful because, first of all, I wasn't emotionally ready for the leap they made last year. I usually got to build up to that over a few years.
And I just wasn't ready.

Speaker 2 Next thing you know, here I am. I'm sitting in a, in my man cave at my house, watching them in the NFC championship go and going, I can't believe that this is happening right now.

Speaker 2 And of course, we get annihilated in that game. But regardless, you're thinking, okay, we drafted the right guy.
Jane Daniels is the one. And I I love the moves.

Speaker 2 Adam Peters, Dan Quinn, Kingsbury. I'm all in and all of it.
And it's just going all completely off the rails, man. Our season between injuries and just

Speaker 2 not making plays at key times in the game that need to be made. This is where we're at, man.
Three and five with Seattle, Detroit. We're staring at three and seven with all these injuries.

Speaker 2 And the McLaurin holdout, I think, completely derailed his season. He immediately got hurt.
You think that's a coincidence? The guy doesn't have really training camp.

Speaker 2 And all of a sudden, he signs right before the first game and he has barely played this year. And that really, really affected everything.

Speaker 2 Jaden's been hurt twice.

Speaker 1 It's just a Sloan conference study, by the way, studying NBA and NFL contract holdouts. It happened to Trey Murphy last year.

Speaker 1 He was waiting for an extension and then came back and was basically hurt for the first half of the year.

Speaker 1 But I always feel like there's always a stink from not being out there and not being part of the training camp process, it seems to happen.

Speaker 2 I caught like 16 touchdowns last year, including the playoffs, and he caught his first one last night against the Chiefs. And I was at the game, went to Arrowhead for the first time, by the way.

Speaker 2 What an awesome experience, just because it's just old school football town at the stadium, and it's just a really, really cool vibe, even though, you know, we obviously didn't play very well.

Speaker 2 And I say we a lot, by the way. Do you say we when you talk about the teams you love? I sure do.

Speaker 1 I sure do.

Speaker 1 I unapologetically can't help it.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I'm the same way.

Speaker 2 I'm that, I am that emotionally invested in that team. So I'm kind of, yeah, I'm dejected and down.

Speaker 2 There's nothing worse than when this, the team that you love the most, whether whatever sport, you kind of feel like it's just, they're not going to be in it this year. And

Speaker 2 I'm only at the halfway point of the season. That just sucks because it just changes your anticipation when you open your eyes on Sunday morning.
It's just,

Speaker 1 you had a lot of like fourth down luck last year. Yeah.
You had a lot of things go your way. You had some injury luck.
And then they had an older team that I would suspect.

Speaker 1 I went under on them this year because I thought it was the year after the big year. Schedule's harder.

Speaker 2 Schedule's winner.

Speaker 1 With all these old players, it's always hard to rely on those guys to stay healthy. But what's interesting is

Speaker 1 it's really hard to find seven NFC playoff teams, even if you're seventh is San Francisco, who just lost their two best defensive players, right?

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 they might be able to hang around and try to get to a nine and eight.

Speaker 1 You know, maybe nine and eight is a seven seed. So even if it looks bleak, they could go three and seven.

Speaker 1 But you still, if you can get to nine wins, I think you get to the dance with a good quarterback.

Speaker 1 That would be the only thing, nice thing I would say.

Speaker 2 If they get to three and seven and they've got to play the Eagles two out of the last three games of the year, I don't know, man, how we're getting to nine wins.

Speaker 1 Well, maybe the Eagles don't care about the last game.

Speaker 2 No, that's possible. That's, you're always kind of hoping that's the case.
But I don't know. I have a feeling in the NFC this year,

Speaker 2 I think they're going to have to play through the wire to get home field advantage,

Speaker 2 whoever it may be. So I think these guys are good.
No one's really separated.

Speaker 2 So I think they're going to have to play all the way through the wire, which is not great to play them two out of the last three games of the year.

Speaker 1 So do you,

Speaker 1 now I have to ask you another question.

Speaker 1 Do you follow the NFL the same way you follow the NBA where you're like deep into the data and you're studying shit, or do you just follow it like a fan and don't think about that stuff?

Speaker 2 I follow it in terms of, I kind of feel like I know like the whole league, but no, like in terms of like metrics and trends and like all that, not as much.

Speaker 2 And even in the NBA, and I think you'll see this when you, when you see me call a game and, you know, you've known me a long time, I definitely feel like I try to just really pick those numbers sometimes that are really good for the context of this conversation and not just kind of keep spitting them out regurgitating them because I think people tune you out.

Speaker 2 So I kind of very selective when I'll throw those kind of numbers out there when I think it really pounds home a point that matters. The NFL, no, I just.

Speaker 2 I absolutely love watching professional football. Like I'm just addicted to watching the NFL.
I love it so much.

Speaker 2 Even when my team is struggling or not good, all those years from 91 when we won our last Super Bowl to being good again with a 30-year drought, I watched every snap of every game, even at the end of like a four and 12 season.

Speaker 2 I was still watching every play of the last game of the year because I just love football that much. So that's me.

Speaker 1 Well, I like how you do it with the NBA because I think you have the right instinct for it. Have the data, but it can't be too much of the act, right? You got to pick the accessibility

Speaker 1 numbers. Because I think, you know, we saw it happen in baseball and they really struggled with it.

Speaker 1 In basketball, it's a little bit of a seesauce, but with the advanced metrics, I think people tune it out if it gets too confusing. But there is some really important shit, right?

Speaker 1 That like Orlando's three-point shooting, all those numbers last year. That was really meaningful.
Like they had to fix that. So,

Speaker 1 you know, there is some shit.

Speaker 2 I do it real quick before we go. I got one in the NFL.

Speaker 2 I want to get some research in this. Maybe there's, maybe it's already out there.
I didn't look.

Speaker 2 Commanders had a holding penalty on first down on a drive last night, which started them at first and 20.

Speaker 2 And I turned to my buddy who came to the game with me and I said, I really want to know what's the punt rate on possessions that start with a holding penalty.

Speaker 2 I want to know. I want to know what the punt rate is of those possessions because it's incredibly, because there's nothing.

Speaker 2 There's nothing more putative than a first down holding penalty.

Speaker 2 It's seriously, it's like 10 yards. It's just, you know, so it happened last night.

Speaker 2 And I was just wondering in my head, I don't know if the date, what the data says out there, as opposed to like normal possessions where you don't get that, but I guarantee it's significantly higher because we had it last night.

Speaker 2 And of course, we punted three pace, three plays.

Speaker 1 I'm sure somebody has that. I had it last year at the Patriots where they held on, I think, 50% of the first downs they had last year.

Speaker 1 It felt like that anyway.

Speaker 1 Tim Lagler, a true pleasure. I'm glad we're going to do this all season.
Good luck tomorrow night calling a game with not as many stars as maybe they thought five weeks ago. But it's great to see you.

Speaker 1 Thanks for doing this.

Speaker 2 Thanks, Bill. Appreciate it.

Speaker 1 All right. That's it for the podcast.
Thanks to Tim Lagler. Thanks to Gahal and Eduardo as well.
Don't forget new rewatchables, Halloween 2. It's up.
You can go check it out.

Speaker 1 I'm going to be back on this feed on Thursday with some football and some basketball. And maybe even a little baseball.
Let's see what happens in this World Series. We'll see how it goes.

Speaker 1 See you on Thursday.

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