03-19-24 Hour 3 of Broncos Country Tonight - podcast episode cover

03-19-24 Hour 3 of Broncos Country Tonight

Mar 20, 202435 min
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Well, theme do it Broncos country tonight. But with all Brian Dick, Ferguson, Grant Smith, CSU upon Virginia, Let's see if they can hold it. No, right, we're just smiling somewhere. Virginia's is that team in the NCAA tournament that always disappoints. They always find the ways. I saw somebody on lines like I'm willing to risk it all for Virginia again and you'll be disappointed. Oops. CSU up twenty seven fourteen. Looks like just

under two minutes left the first half. Look at the NFL six pack here in a second, Yeah, CS, you put it to Virginia. Looks like Colorado basketball will be going in. Then, of course we get the Sea Buffs men's basketball tomorrow, also at tend Seed. Also a play in game. We had Mark Johnson on earlier, had a chance to talk with him that interviews up Broncos Counry Dot that Com Slash podcast pregame six thirty Tip seven to ten right here on Anyway, right here exclusively on Kley, Official

Home of the Cu Buffs. It's time for the NFL six back. It's time for the NFL sixth pad I'm going to trade at yarn insight and insight information you can't find anywhere else. No. Six. The top six NFL headline on the Minnesota Vikings are the betting favorites to draft JJ McCarthy from the Vikings trade up to get to the first round draft pick last week, widely viewed as the first step to the forty move into the top ten to draft

their franchise quarterback. Michigan's JJ McCarthy is expected to be that quarterback. Betting odds have the Vikings as the favorite to lam Mcarthury. They're minus one fifteen. The biggest question is how high they need to move up to get him. Caleb Williams is heavily favored to go first overall, Jade Daniels favorite to go second, Drink May favor to go third, trading up to fourth. Maybe the goal for the Vikings bit currently owned by the Arizona Cardinals that the

Vikings don't draft McCarthy. The Giants are of the team of the next best odds plus three point fifty, and they're followed by the Broncos at plus four thirty and the Patriots at plus nine hundred. Basically, if you want to get one of these quarterbacks, you've got to get into the top six. If you want one of the big forty, you've got to get in the top six. This is shaping up to go exactly the way that we've been

talking about it here on this show Minnesota. Does that make Minnesota funny or an enemy for stomping all over the Broncos plans by signing Sam Darnold and then jumping ahead of further ahead of them to draft JJ McCarthy. No, it doesn't at all, because the Vikings decisions should not impact the Broncos as far as what they want to do. The Minnesota Vikings are making decisions based on how they see their team right now in the future outlook, So they set

themselves up properly to make that movie if they want to. But you were mentioning about, well, if you don't have the draft capital to get the top four quarterbacks, then you're out of the mix, which we know the Broncos don't really have those picks. But at the same time, do you really need to get one of those top quarterbacks to be successful in the NFL? History has shown us no, you don't. You just need to get your guy. You need to get your guy and give him time to develop.

Two. The Carolina Panthers have agreed to terms with wide receiver David Moore, but more importantly, linebacker Justin Sternad. Sternad, of course, was previously with the Broncos. It's a one year deal for Sternad, which reunites him with the Garo Riverro. Obviously, Josie Jewel already signed with the Carolina Panthers, giving them an interesting tandem there that both know the defensive scheme. How do we feel about Jaro Rivero loading up on former Broncos there in Carolina.

I like it. I like to see guys move on and continue to play in the similar system. And what it means is that somehow you made an impression. And obviously, based on what Josie was paid, he made one hell of an impression. Where the Panthers we're willing to give him up

success a lot more than the Broncos are willing to give him. But I'm happy for both players and Scherannad has an opportunity, you know, to work himself into that second role, backing up maybe Josie, but you know he's going to be there as a player that helps him out on special team.

So I like when players find themselves in these situations. Stas twenty seven appeared in fifty games five starts with the Broncos over the last three seasons twenty twenty three, seventeen games, five tackles, three hundred and ninety five special teams snaps, So it gives you some versatility there are owners are not likely to vote on Tom Brady's bid to buy a piece of the Raiders next week. The Super Bowl Sunday Splash report suggested that Tom Brady's moving closer to having his

effort to buy a piece of the Raiders approved now. Mark Maskis of Washington Post reports NFL owner is not expected during next week's annual meetings to vote on Brady's bid, borring a last minute change. The deal was done more than a year ago. The effort he became derailed when the NFL adopted a rule remitted owners from giving equity to employees. Raiders owner Mark Davis spoke out against the change. Is believed he wanted to use employment by Brady as a way

to partially consummate the deal. Since then, it became clear that Davis had agreed to sell roughly ten percent of the team at a deep discount. That does not sit well with other owners since it needs to devalue their equity as well. Now, the potential issue is Brady's looming debut with Fox as the network's number one analyst for NFL games. It's an obvious conflict of interest from Brady will have an actual rooting interest for the Raiders and against any team at

which they are competing. Coaches a certain teams reasonably would and should bar him for practice and or production meetings. But it's Tom Brady tends to get what he wants, except what it has to do with their pressure of footballs or the whereabouts of certain cell phones. How do we feel about the owners refusing

to vote on Tom Brady's potential ten percent ownership stake in the Raiders. I think at some point they're going to have to deal with this because there are a lot of players who are growing in financial resources and popularity, and those players are going to want into the ownership market. The only thing that's different here is that Tom is scheduled to broadcast for one of the league's broadcast partners, and you could see it as somewhat of being a way of being biased.

But there are ways around it, like everything else. I mean, if you say, oh, Tom By gets a portion of the Raiders from an ownership standpoint, you don't have to do the Raiders freaking games. The networks can determine that. Yeah. So for me, it's not a big deal. And I would love to see Tom Brady being part of NFL ownership because it opens doors for more players. Yeah, I would as well. I think just ethically, you'd have to make sure that you know lines are

crossed. That kind of stiff. I think if you could come on, man, Troy Aikman does a lot of Cowboys games, You think that's by coincidence? Well, no, but he also doesn't own anything of the Cowboys. There's not I mean he played for them, and there's probably loyalty there, but there's no incentive to I would say financial incentive for him to do anything. Well, why would Brady somehow on the broadcast if he has the Raiders? What is he going to say to benefit the Raiders? Is not

going to change the wins and losses. I'm not saying it's saying on the air. I'm saying it being a lot of production meetings, seeing strategy ahead of time. Like a lot of those guys, that's what happens. You go in there and the coach is telling you what they're going to do that week, can so you can be prepared for it, to talk about it on the game, you know, talk about it on the air and all that kind of stuff. Just don't do Raiders games. Problem solved there,

It is okay, come with it. Four. Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro is pushing for Pittsburgh to host the NFL Draft s Barauer a letter of the NFL Commissioner, saying that the Steel City is an ideal location. Pittsburgh has quote established itself one of those dynamic cities on the East Coast, the birthplace of professional football. It's the best choice in the country to host the NFL Draft,

Shapiro said. The draft and surrounding activities but have three hundred fifty thousand visitors and an impact on the Pittsburgh area economy or one hundred million dollars. For half a century of the Draft was always in New York City, and although the event's stature grew as a major television event, it was never seen

as a big deal as an in person fan experience. But in twenty fifteen, twenty sixteen, the draft moved to Chicago and it was accompanied by a major outdoor fan attraction, and since it has been moved, viewed by both the NFL and most of the cities, is a major tourism events. Since taking place in Philadelphia, Dallas, Nashville, Cleveland, Las Vegas, Kansas City, this year's draft is going to be in Detroit, which we gave away an all expenses paid trip to back on Saturday. Next year's is going

to be in Green Bay, which is an interesting logistical choice there. I know that Denver would like to host the NFL Draft. What do we think about the possibility of the NFL Draft in Pittsburgh? What do we think about the possibility the NFL Draft here in Denver? Well? I like the fact that they're moving the draft around. It used to be Radio City Music Hall in New York City. And why not? Could Pittsburgh have the Super Bowl?

I mean that Super Bowl for the NFL Draft. I mean Cleveland has had it, Nashville has had it, Dallas, Philadelphia, and if it's going to Green Bay, I mean, if you going to Green Bay, you need to have it in Pittsburgh because I don't know if you've been to Green Bay, Yeah, there's not a lot to do. If you want to do something in green Bay, you got to go to Milwaukee. Yeah.

Green Bay is such a small I've worried logistically and I gonna have a hotel rooms because more people go to the draft than go to a game, absolutely, you know, and a lot of the game it's locals or whatever else. Like you got unit people coming from all over the country. In Green Bay, it's not big and they don't have a lot of hotels. Well, you mentioned something about whether the Denver would be able to hold the

draft. I asked Troy Vincent about that, and he was he wasn't ready to commit to it, but he did say that it was a possibility. And obviously there's enough space downtown at the convention Center, and you got the hotel, and I know the one big argument was that living here in Denver, you never know when the snow is going to come. But still with the hotels and proximity to the convention Center to the east, they could make it work. Yeah, it just seems like an oprainer to ring it here.

To Ben at some point, so I imagine that's going to happen probably in the next ten years. It'll be fun, fun experience. If you've never been to the draft, like I've been the one that they had in Nashville and like they've never been to a big time fun experience. It's it's an all week party, it's a it's it's a fun experience. Five before Jerry Judy even attended a practice with the Browns, he has received a new

contract. We talked about it earlier. Judy as agreed to a three year contract extension worth up to fifty eight million dollars forty one million guaranteed at signing, according to multiple reports, a first round a first round pick. Obviously back in twenty twenty, Judy was slated to become an unrestricted free agent next March after completing his rookie contract. Now he's going to be tied to Cleveland

through twenty twenty seven. Judy twenty four years old, as two hundred and eleven career receptions for three thousand and fifty three yards eleven touchdown in Judy seven games. While he's battle through injuries, it's on the field for sixteen games that the Broncos last year and he's the season with fifty four catches seven to fifty eight yards to touchdowns. Best year obviously twenty twenty two sixty seven catches nine to seventy two sixty d's it was the top receiver of Maury Cooper is

sitting the last year his contract tied in. David and Jigoku is under contract through twenty twenty five. Brown set the Broncos a fifth and sixth round pick in twenty twenty four to acquire Judy earlier this month. I think we know your your feelings on this. But before we go any further into Jerry Judy's contract, right after we got done with a Justin Sternad story, he has

had a change of hearts reversed, keep right back to the Broncos. Yes, so if you listen to the NFL six fact, the Justin Sternad stuff I just talked about scratch all that he's coming back to Denver. Does it was a tract? Right? Yes, he's coming back to Denver. It makes you wonder with him just only moments away from aching to deal, what made him come back? Now? Maybe they told him that you're going to

have an opportunity to compete for a starting job. I don't know that, but maybe it was money, because money has a way of changing people's minds. So maybe that was the case of having Justice Ernard back in the building. But in the case of Jerry Judy, hey great for him. We just have to watch and see if it all pans out. And if Andrew Berry, Uh, with the decisions that he's made with Deshaun Watson's contract and Jerry Judy's contract, is he going to come out on the bright side of

this. If not, the people in Cleveland, they're gonna come out with their pitchforks and they're taking torches, and he's gonna be out of the job. So we get a chance to see what or how it all plays out. Yeah. I As far as the uh Sternod thing, I mean, we've seen a few guys change their minds, Eric Kendricks, there have been a couple of people change their minds, Will Lutz, Will LUTs That's two different people that if we're going to go somewhere else to the Broncos and elected

to come back with a change of heart. So kind of interesting to see that a little bit. As far as the Jerry Judy thing that it's mine of the opinion that getting at the Browns gave him too much money. I'm not mad at Jerry Judy for it. I love the fact the player secured the bag. I'm always gonna root for that from the But if I put my GM hat on for a second, like what the world of the Browns doing paying that much money to a guy who's gonna be at least the fourth

option in that offense? They must have seen something in Jerry Judy when he first came out of Alabama to what they wanted in limited production here with the Denver Broncos and say, well, we could actually turn Jerry lou was supposed to what he was before. So maybe that's to frame them on I'm not sure. Yeah, I mean this, this situation is fascinating to me, sick as is the other one. I want to talk about here. How much is Jimmy Garoppolo getting from the Rams because nobody knows. Four days ago

reports emerged the quarterback Jimmy Ggaropolo is going to sign with the Rams. Today, the Rams officially announced the move. He had his intro press conference, and there's no disclosure from any guind from anybody he as to what he's gonna make with the Rams. Six years ago, Garoppolo was briefly the highest paid player at NFL history, through a five year deal that average twenty seven and a half million per year. Now, whatever he's getting isn't worth his isn't

worth his agent, don yee leaky, it's anybody. General thumb is the numbers don't emerge, they're not worth writing home about. And it's been four days for Garoppolo inevidently will see him between his PD policy suspension to start the season, in the fact he hasn't played at high level little While I would expect it to be impressive, do we care that Jimmy Garoppol's numbers aren't out there yet? Now, we don't really care because at this point, how

much do you anticipate Jimmy Garoppolo actually playing this year? Now, if you look at the depth chart, Stephan Bennett is still listed on the depth chart. What is this situation with the club? I mean that's still ongoing. We still really don't know. But because Jimmy's played in a similar system under Kyle Shenhan, it boes well for Sean McVeigh to have a backup quarterback in

waiting who has Super Bowl experience, Jippy Garoppolo. Obviously, we missed the first two games of the season, which is going to for ped suspension, which is going to create a situation where they're going to have to find a quarterback for those two games. So it'll be interesting to kind of see what goes on with those situations. Yeah, Justin Sterrenaud coming back to Denver after initially orally agreeing at least to a deal with the Carolina Panthers to go join

a Gerald verro who you know he coached. But that's it. That's fascinating to me. That's the second time we've seen a player turn around and come back to come back to Denver. One year deal for him here. It makes you wonder within these negotiations what's being said, because obviously you have to figure that Stannard had already had talks with the team through his agent, and the team might have decided, Okay, well maybe we're going to go in

a different direction because you want too much money. But what was it in that twenty fifth hour that force or convinced the Broncos to go back after Strenaud and convince him to come back. I don't know. I'm interested to see that if it's you know, I mean, obviously, if Errol is a guy who coached him twice for for you know, for coach him for that season that he was here, I mean, you know, obviously the Panthers made it an effort to well. But I guess I guess he likes it

here. I guess there's a loyalty to the team that drafted you, and you know, maybe Sean Payton convinces him come back. See see, that's that's like player in coach speed, I'm loyal to the team that draft me. Let's be totally honest. We know what talks and we know what walks in marathon. So I'm thinking there had to be something like that to convince him to change his mind. Because if you look on a Carolina Panthers depth chart, he's on the depth chart. Yeah, right, as a free

agent. Now, maybe they offered him a life supply of riz. You know, I don't know, maybe they stood outside and played players. Maybe come back. I don't know. Great, looks like you wanted to say something. Well, we'll find out what that is. On the other side, Rocos Country tonight. Welcome back to it, Broncos Country Tonight. Benjamin Albrighten, Nick Ferguson, Grant Smith here with you. Hope you guys have a good night tonight. I have some fun here. Dave Tepper lurking around

there. I see him somewhere. He was in here a minute ago. CSU doubled up Virginia early on playing game. Did you see this kind of taking place? I have money on CSU, so I mean to cover the spread or just overall, like win to win? Wow? Okay, yeah, I had money on CSU to win. Well I didn't. I didn't. In the interest of full disclosure, be yes, see you after that game has got a tough road to ho because you get Florida and you know

Marquette. I think you know waiting. But man, the idea of the tournament is you just win the first one, right, you survive in advance, and you can't look at the bracket and how it sets up and try to anticipate what's going to happen. You have to be in that particular moment because just think about it. I mean, you play all season long to get into the tournament, and for certain schools when you think about CU and CSU. How long it's been since they appeared. I think twenty twenty one

for one school, and think twenty twenty twenty twenty for another. But you're in this moment and the only thing you can think about is what you're going to need to do to help your team advance. Because we've seen some of the looks on the players faces over the years, that look of where you distraught and guys on the floor crying and all that. To me, if you want to make sure that you prevent that, you have to go out there and you have to play your best game in that moment. Don't worry

about what's around the corner of who that next opponent is. What though you call look ahead and I mean, it's just like in the league, you know, I mean, the last thing you want to do is be looking ahead, miss what's right in front of you, you know, And I think you know, I mean, sees you looks like they're going to pull this out, barring up a late collapse. But if you're Colorado, that's how you have to look at it. You gotta handle business against Pois and

not worry about the fact that you've got Florida and Marquette looming. But see Ben, that's the greatest thing about And we asked Mark Johnson about this when he was on Early earlier, is these are the things that we love about March Madness because you may see a team in the first half that looks like they're gonna run over the game and they have a big lead, and then all of a sudden, they relax, they get comfortable, the other team

started knocking down some outside shots, they get to the free throw line, they get the other team in foul in trouble. Next thing you know, now we're waiting for that buzzer beater, because that's what March Maddness says. To me. It's about those buzzer beaters because at the end of this we always see the one shiny moment. You can call it cheeky or whatever,

but it's all filled with big shots and big moments. Yeah, in this particular game here, I think CSU doesn't really I don't think it's gonna come down to a buzzer beater in this one. They are actually beating the breaks Offvirginia right now. But I do I think there's going to It takes hard work, and preparation and all that kind of stuff. But there's an element

of luck and a component of that. And I know some coaches will say, well, luck is just preparation and opportunity, But at the same time, I mean there's an element of that too, having the ball at the last second, being able to take that shot. How many times out of one hundred is Kyrie hit that shot over Yokic, Oh, one hundred times? Maybe maybe twenty, like five. I'm only going to give him twenty

because he's Kyrie and he's made big shots like that. Right. Well, in the tournament, there's always some unsuspected team, some unsuspecting player who hits that game winning shot because no one thinks that he's going to make the shot. So guess what, they don't even guard him. Yeah, and that's the guy who you know puts that dagger in your coffin. Yeah, I'm you know, I'm I'm hoping to see you can make it. If they win tomorrow And by the way, we'll have exclusive coverage here starting at six

point thirty tomorrow night to off just after seven. If they win tomorrow night, they'll play Friday as well right here on KOA. So look, you know, hoping to see you Buffs men's basketball do. We're also gonna have the CEU Buffs women's game Friday as well, so if you're if you're looking forward to that, that will be right here on KOA as well. We

talked a little bit throughout the show. We talked to Ryan Michael. You guys can get that at Broncos Country Tonight dot com, Slash Podcast, talk to Mark Johnson, get that same place, you know, wherever you get your podcasts. We have. I have one of the things here. We wanted to talk about how one college coach is hurting the game. One college coach is hurting the game of football. And I got to ask you at the annual meeting of the Knicks, how do you not tell coach Saban you're

ruining football? Well, I mean coach Saban's been coaching for a while, so he comes with a lot of clout right and wait behind him. And sometimes the individuals like that, I mean, they've been doing things so long the way they've been doing that, they may not be open to hear input from other people. Why do you think that he is hurting the game?

He DROs Nician, He's Dros's nician. I mean, he's out there with Ted Cruz, right, and I'm not saying that these are congressional hearings, but he's going through political individuals and he's talking about Nils and how Nil's is hurting basketball, and he's talking about how he remembers those days Alabama sitting in his living room or dining with the players and their families and talking about the

players' futures. And he's say, well, college football has changed because as soon as you talk to a player, they want to know how much money you're going to give them. And I just thought that was so wrong of him to now try to put these players on blast. Now, don't get me wrong, there needs to be a system in place to make sure that things don't get out of hand, because they're a little out of hand.

But I'm just like, well, where was this before. I mean, when you were dominating college football LSU Alabama and you were making a significant amount of money, you were not talking about how players there needs to be balanced in landscape of college football. I mean, you were taking whatever money that you were receiving from the institution, whatever car dealership that your name was attached to, in Alabama, you were making money hand over this. But now

with nil since has been introduced, now it's balanced the playfield. Those players that you were able to get before you now have to compete with Michigan, Wisconsin and other schools. So now you're trying to somewhat stifle some of these kids from getting this paper that you've been getting for so many years. Yeah,

I think, I mean, I don't wrong. I think Nick Scament has some points, but I think the game in the sense that how you recruit Snick saban By with the nil he just didn't know how to do it anymore. He knew how to go in and charming the pants off a family, and you know, he comeing to Alabama. You future all that kind of stuff. But the playing field has changed, and it is a dollar amount and it is about collectives and those are a large portion of the process.

Now we had the kid was a kid I think it was Iowa State who showed up, took the N nil deal and immediately hit the transfer portal. And there's no recourse for getting that money back. By the way, when the nil money is paid out that you don't get it back. And this isn't the first time we've had a kid down in Miami who racked up what was it like, a twelve million dollars, never played, a never player, a snap for anybody, just milking the milking the nil stuff and

then bouncing into the portal to try to get the next bag. There's a few bad actors when it comes to that, But I think Nick Saban doesn't understand the evolved landscape. Just putting my feet up right now, yeah, I mean, just just make yourself at home, damn, oh do don't worry. I am. Yeah, But when you think about it, it's just like, well, how is it okay? Smell like corn chips in here? Yeah, it smell like but I don't know. Yeah, if

you're saying, timmy here figures smells like corn chips. I don't want that to perfume cologne, don't want it. It doesn't smell bad in here. As the person with his feet off, well off, they're on your shoes off, but your feet are on the table. I'm just I'm listened. What I would be doing to Nick Saban and this pitch, I'd be taking my shoes off. See what he said. He would tell you, hey, hey, hey, son, put your feedback and shoes, yes, so put a suit on and a tie yes, yeah. Well, let's

be totally honest man about this situation with Nick Saban. Saban has made a substansful amount of money both on the field and off the field. And my ideas, why come after the players now now that you have somewhat taken taken up retirement. Now this is the thing that you want to take up. Now, this is your plight. Now now you are the post to chow for doing these types of things. I think I don't think he's trying to

do that. I think that's an invert consequence of what he's doing. I think Nick Saban is trying to explain that the way that there does need to be regulation on the NIL. But why you go to Ted Cruz then, well, I mean that's that's who's holding these hearings. And Ted Cruz famously represents what state m interesting Texas and where are the two largest Nile collectives Texas, Texas? Once again, they no longer impact Nick Saban because he's not

coaching. Well, I mean, he still has an affiliation with Alabama and I think that he wants, you know, wants them to succeed. Okay, but think about it, Oh, so Bama, you gotta think they have a large collective dowry that they can shove up money for Nio. So he was good. Is it just fact that you don't know how to communicate with players now where you can walk into the living room and you just can't put your rings down and guys go for that. I think so. I

think he didn't know how to adapt. And where I think Deon Sanders has an advantage is that he understands the evolved landscape. He knows that you create a culture in an environment and it is about the dollars and cents, and it is about the exposure and all that kind of stuff. And so I think that he has a built in advantage when it comes to that. So much of being a head coach in college football now is being a recruiter. You got a recruit out of the portal. I mean, some of these

guys don't even recruit high school anymore. You know why bother let him go to a juco or let him go to a G five school and then you can go get your pick out of the portal. Say hey, look,

you tired of playing it Wyoming, Come come play for Alabama. See there needs to be regulations in Io. And what I suggested, or is my plan as far as me trying to make it sense, make it make sense, is that if a guy gets a substants amount of money through the school, it's like, okay, well we're gonna hold this money for you until you decide that you want to leave to I don't know, pursue other things or go turn pro, whether that's basketball, baseball, what have you.

But we're going to keep that in somewhat of a trust. In order to get the money out, you have to make sure that you are in good standings academically, or we're not going to give you the money. I yeah, I think that there are ways to do this, and I think that's what Nick Saban is trying to do, is help evolve what has become a wild West cash grab free for all into something that's a sustainable model going forward. I don't I don't have the assumption that Nick Saban is out here but

drysiness I think he's I think he's doing that on accident. I don't know, how can you once again, you said, like my kids, maybe one hundred and fifty million over his career, Nick Saban do need the money? He's out. I think he's in it for you know. I think he's try to try to build the legacy. At this point, he can't see you have a buy a stick. He's an SEC head coach. No, no, hell no, no it's not. It's not because he's an SEC head coach. It's because he's a coach that made us who stance of

the amount of money. Hey, like you said, he doesn't. He doesn't really need the money now, So why is he choosing now to stand on his soapbox. I think he's trying to answer it the best way he knows how. I just think he's his views are a bit dated, and I don't think he knew how to adapt. I think it's part of the reason he quit. I think he had a couple of years left in him. But I think that he just did not know how to adapt. He

saw, he saw the changing landscape and just didn't understand. It's like, and I agree with that, I'm gonna try to send huh. I think that it's like the scene from No Country for Old Men, great movie at the end of the movie where Tommy Lee Jones just kind of realizes that the whole thing is the world just passed him by, you know, like he just he cannot understand the mechanisms of Anton Sigour, Like he just can't. He can't. And I think that Nick Saban is just kind of in that

same It's a smart guy. He you know, its great football minds, but head coaches in college football anymore aren't even coaching. They're recruiters. We see. That's once again Nick Saban's problem and his deal that he could do it if you realize that you can't do something like they like it's been said those who can't do teach, so go sign up to be a part of

a network show. Is something like that. Don't take your agreemances with the process and then start to make waves when you were making a substantial amount of money. That is just that's my deal with him. Yeah, I get it, and it looks hypocritical. I get it. I think he thinks that what he's doing is trying to do the best way he knows how whether why I agree with it or not. And I don't exactly agree with all

his points, and I do think it's a bit hypocritical. For a guy who made one hundred and fifty million, well one hundred and twenty five million off Alabama, but you know who made over one hundred million dollars to be sitting there trying to create barriers to players trying to get money. It would have been better if Saban came out with some possible solutions. Here's what we can do right to remedy the ongoing issues that Nils have opened up. But

that's not what he chose to do. He chose to say, okay, well, as he was he was doing in the past, the building of men right to the molding of men and how that was his angle. And now the way that things are structured, it's a free fraw and the players are not being developed. But don't you think for a control freak like Nick Saban, that's the frightening thing. Like the someone Force says, you could argue Saban is now in the best spot the voice and opinion. He's no

longer coaching. It's not going to benefit from this. This listener would have a bigger issue if he was still coaching. Well, here's where Nick Saban stands to benefit. He now has a poolpit. He now has an audience and people want to hear what he has to say because he is fresh out of the game talking about something that a lot of college coaches are definitely dealing with. Once again, if Saban came up with solutions, here's what we

need to do. We need to form somewhat of a committee, somewhat of a union, an oversight committee to look over these situations and ensure that hey, listen, says, we are entering into a contract and there is a collective like every single contract that is signed, then now are we going to renew it every single year? And if you jump into portal, how many times can you jump into portal in one given year? If he did that,

now I'm right there with him. But that's not what he did, I know, and I think that I believe he would come around to that. But I think that Nick Saban right now is just trying to It feels to me like he's expressing I don't know how to compete aymore. That's what it feels like when you watch this stuff. It feels like you have a guy saying, hey, I was the top dog in college football and it's changed it. I don't know. I don't know how to navigate it.

And that's what it feels like that he's saying. I think that there's there are people catching strays. I think the players are catching strays a lot of right, because you know the way that he's doing it. I mean, I don't know. I think that there needs to be reforming oversight on the Nile stuff. I just don't know where to start because the problem is is that what's the dam broke on that thing? It broke all the way.

Well, see that was because the NCAA refused to take a look at the inadequacies when it came to college basketball, football, women's because you got to include women's sports due to Title nine. They were unwilling to look at it as long as they were making money. That's the only thing that matters,

specially to think about. You know, all the years of March Madness, as many of these games that are shown on different networks CBS, T and T TBS, and all the money that those networks are making in the coaches, but the players receive none of that. You get a trip to wherever

you're going and maybe a little cash or sweatsuit. No, put some money in those players' pockets, and it definitely needs to be regulated to a point where you can determine how much East player is going to make outside of brokering deals lucrative deals from other outside sources. Yeah, in the NCAA is such an inteffectual enforcement organization on top of it, I do think there's gonna have

to be some major overalls and oversights. I do agree with you though Nick Saban was probably not the right voice to the right Tom Froucice country like k

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