Factors are Dolphins factor drawing Parker Textower. What a win for this Miami Dolphin team. Wow? What is up, Dolphans? And welcome to the Drivetime Podcast, part of the Miami Dolphins official podcast network, covering your Miami Dolphins each and every day. How is it going to everybody? Good to be back. I am your host, Travis Wingfield, and I am here to bring you your daily dose of Miami Dolphins football. And on today's show, it's a busy one.
We've got a hodgepodge of Dolphins news, NFL news, my trek across the country, the return of Major League Baseball, a major trade in the a f C East, a trade for your Miami Dolphins. And we kick off the training camp preview series by taking a look at the tight ends strap in as we have got a busy one for you here on this Monday, July edition of the Drive Time Podcast, our first official Drive Time podcast
from South Florida. That's right, the Wingfields have taken our collective talents to South Beach and we are here, well, not quite in South Beach. We are staying in Hollywood before our move to Miramar next week. And I was a little bit terrified for that flight, a six hour flight with my two month old daughter, but she was an absolute trooper. Well, she slept the entire time, so
at least she does that favor. And if there's one, like one single shot upshot of all of this, it's that flying is exponentially better just because I don't pack the plane full of passengers. We had our own row, which was very, very nice for a six hour flight, and we are really enjoying ourselves down here. So far. We've enjoyed the weather. We've gotten to go for a nice little family walks together in the morning, scoping out all the crazy wildlife. Saw some iguanas an alligator at
one point. I've been forewarned about snakes, which are positively my greatest material fear and all of life, well second to maybe the dentist like a twelve year old, but
those are my fears. My wife's fear down here is those gators, and we saw one on the side of the road off a Sheridan the other day, which prompted her to go do some research on the likelihood of gator attacks, and she essentially prepared what was what amounted to a power point presentation to give me all the facts about gators and attacks from alligators, like the chances of being attacked are one and two point four million.
Did you know that? Well, now you do. And also how gators can outrun their prey, including humans, in a twenty foot sprint. So she's got those facts dialed in all avoid the snakes. She'll take care of the gator information. The wingfields are ready for South Florida. Now back to the flight. How great was it to see baseball back on our televisions and laptop screens? Oh, Live sports, How I have missed you so so very much. Nice to have sports on the social media timelines compared to bickering
and fighting and division. The Mariners are back. They went one and two over the weekend. I was kind of hoping for oh and three because we're gonna be dreadful this year. We can't get anybody out with that bullpen or starting rotation. And I do think they are rebuilding this thing the right way in Seattle for what seems
like the first time in two decades. I kind of want my Bryce Harper or my Carlos Korea, So I kind of want to lose a bunch of games, and the guy I'm positively stoked about is outfielder Kyle Lewis couple of homers in the opening series game winning single in the one victory over the Astros. He can use all fields with power, he can play all three outfield spots, and it's just so refreshing to have a young slugger that can handle the bat the way he does. For
the Mariners. It's always been false hope with guys in their late twenties or maybe even their thirties, with like a one month surge of production from a guy like a day Ho Lee, for instance, who could never hit a curveball, but because guys were throwing him fastballs and he produced early, fans got excited. But then the Pedro Serrono curse came to life, like in month number two. The guys that you just know are not going to sustain that level of initial success. That is not Kyle Lewis,
and I am here for it. But how about that season opening game. I had a terrible stream on the airplane, but I was so grateful to see it that I
just didn't care that much. And that Yankees Nationals opener had the best regular season Major League Baseball ratings for a game, a regular season game since two thousand eleven, and I think you can probably project similar results to the other sports league starting back up here soon, especially as we get close to the start of America's second most popular sport in basketball, and then of course the king in the NFL. And with that, let's go ahead
and talk about some news. The Dolphins have been active the last few days, trimming the roster down to eighty
three players. The Dolphins released Jake Rudoc the quarterback receiver, Ricardo Lewis, an undrafted defensive lineman Ray Lee who actually was reported that he decided to retire his football career before it began, and Edges, Avery Moss and Trent Harris now Ruddock, Lima and Lewis never played a regular season down for the Dolphins, while Harris and Moss last year combined for more than six hundred snaps on that defense. And this goes back to the theory of always churning
the bottom of the roster. There was a great segment on my favorite podcast once again, as it seems to be referenced this podcast once a week here on Drive Time to Move the Sticks podcast and how Daniel Jeremiah and Bucky Brooks had this idea about taking advantage of the sixteen man proposed practice squad idea this year and churning over that part of the roster so you can bring in new guys to get a look at some fresh bodies and try some guys out for some in
house workouts over the course of the season. And I think back to the Seattle Seahawks more than anybody else. More on them here in just one minute, but when they first hired Pete Carroll and John Schneider, they were doing that. They led the league in transactions that first year.
The Dolphins led the league in transactions last year. And these coaches, these Dolphins coaches, they had a full year's look at these guys, and I trust that they know what types of players they are, what types of players they want, And maybe you want to get a better look at guys you just have not seen yet. Maybe in a year with O T. A. S your opinion can be swayed by what you saw in April and
May and June. But I do recall Brian Flora's last training camp with some of his media availability talking about how, for the most part, you know what types of players you have in your building because you've done the leg work, the pre work on those guys in the scouting process
before you bring them in. But this all just makes sense to get a look at people that you brought in, like a guy you might want to see that hasn't been on the field in a Miami Dolphins uniform, like just for instance, at that same position, undrafted free agent Tyshan Render, what can he do? For instance, we know Brian Flores is going to be active in his own research and checking out players that he can bring into
improve this roster. And I just look at this as another step, another stepping own and taking care of that process and going forward with that mindset. And so we have training camp slated to begin tomorrow on with some significant revisions to the usual schedule. I'll go ahead and wait until we have a concrete outline before we dive into that. But for now, one last bit of NFL news before we dive into the Adam Shaheen trade and
the camp preview for his position. The tight ends Jamal Adams, Jets safety number six overall pick, is now out of the division. They send the all pro safety to Seattle. The Jets get back a pair of first round draft picks, a third round draft pick, and Bradley McDougald, the seahawks former safety, and the Seahawks get the All Pro safety and a fourth round draft pick. Now, that is some really nice draft compensation there for the Jets. You can't
argue with getting two first round picks. That's the cost of business for some of the big time players in this league. Jalen Ramsey, Laramie Tunzel. We saw it with Khalil Mack going to the Chicago Bears. So the Jets do well to get that maximum trade compensation back in their direction. But who can say they're not glad that that dude is out of the a f C East, out of the conference altogether. He's an absolute monster and
a perfect fit for that Seattle defense. We talked about this on the No the Enemy podcast and the article up on Miami Dolphins dot com taking a look at the Seattle Seahawks. How Seattle built up that defense around Pete carroll scheme, Pete Carroll's idea of what defense looks like and that Cover three's coverage scheme on the back end, and one of the key roles during those four consecutive
seasons they had as the NFL's top ranked defense. Was Cam Chancellor playing in that buzz slash force role and if you want to think about what that might mean, it's a little bit of a Rashad Jones role from his peak. What was in that range for your Miami Dolphins recalled that pick six against the Titans and I think it was the first Dan Campbell game. That's what a buzz looks like. You can basically make your read
from that. Asian playing a quasi linebacker role, you come down, pick off the backside crossing route, maybe you step in front of a front side stick route right in front of you, and you can also act as the force run defender. Plenty of sea gap penetration there, as we saw Rashad do for so many years playing outside the tackle and run support and man, Jamal Adams is the
very best in the business at just that. I think he and Derwin James, for my money, are step for step in terms of which guy is the best safety in the NFL. Think Derwin James gives you a little bit more pass rush and that type of thing, but those guys can both make an argument for best box safety in the NFL, and he gives the Seahawks a major shot in the arm. That way, so instinctive, so active and always around the football, A great get for Seattle.
I'm glad that he's gone. And how funny is it that literally the last podcast we did here on Drive Time, I told you guys, I grew up with the mentality
and grained in me to root against the Seattle Seahawks. Well, that's gonna have to go out the window now, because Seattle should be all of our collective second favorite team this year as well as one so as to knock those draft picks down the first round, a little bit down the rung into the late twenties, hopefully for division rival in New York at the bottom of that first round. Now another trade here in the news, and this one
is even closer to the Miami Dolphins. It is the Miami Dolphins, as it has been reported that a conditional seventh round draft pick is going to be sent to the Chicago Bears. And we'll get you updated on a future podcast just as soon as we know the conditions for former second round draft pick Adam Shaheen out of Ashland University. The tight end formally of the Chicago Bears and with Shaheen, let's go ahead and make yet another
move the Sticks reference. They did a podcast back in like I think it was, where they talked to Chris Greer, Dolphins general manager, and he describes some prototypes the Dolphins like in terms of what players they look for for their scouting staff and players they want to bring in. And Chris Greer has a specific prototype that he prefers, but he also mentioned that you can also spanned your
beliefs and your prototypes to accommodate certain players. So Chris Greer is both flexible that way, but also knows what kind of player he wants to bring to the Miami Dolphins, and we've seen the Dolphins stay true to that, especially since Brian Flora's arrived with the size slash athleticism combination players.
For instance, to even go back to last year, some of those acquisitions from the a A F like Jared Jones Smith was a guy who was just an absolute mammoth of a human being with an impressive wingspan, good movement skills, and you know what, maybe it doesn't always work out, but that's how this entire process, this entire sport works right, You'll have a certain amount of resources allocated. You weigh risk versus reward, You pick your spots, and you hope the coaching staff can get the most out
of a player's potential talent. And with Shahem, that's exactly what you've got here in Miami. His passing game production in Chicago, I'm sure isn't what he or the Bears had expected through the first three years. Twenty six catches, four touchdowns, two d forty nine yards. He's this sometime during his three years there, and it's contributed to some mixed usage in terms of where he lines up, what he's asked to do, so on and so forth. And now he'll get a fresh start with your Miami Dolphins.
And that's where we kick off the Miami Dolphins training camp preview here as we are just one day away from the team reporting to training camp. Of course, the schedule different this year. We'll talk about that on a future podcast. Let's go ahead and start here with the
tight ends. And first before we do that, my goodness, I love doing these, diving into the Dolphins roster in depth, getting a good look at what each player offers, what the upside is there taking the overall temperature of the room, and that's what we'll do here in general for the
tight ends. George Godzi is your position coach there, and you look at the construction of the tight end room and you basically have what amounts to a bunch of guys that can really possibly compliment Mike Gasicki, who really came on strong last year in your number two as a professional. The builds and the acup of these players that are trying to compete for playing time at tight end, they seem to really complement Mike Gasicki and his ability
to make you flexible from multiple personnel packages. And when I talk about that, I'm looking at like, for instance, eleven personnel, one back, one tight end, three receivers. But because Mike Gasicki is so flexible and can play slot, he can split out wide, he can play in the backfield, he can line up in line, you can basically have a substitution package without substituting on the play, which forces the defense to stay in the same formation they are
in and then you're able to adjust your formation. Maybe you go tempo and the defense can't change. There is because you didn't make any substitutions, and they won't have time to make theirs either, and so we'll see how chan Gailey wants to call it. He's used conversion players at tight end before, like Quincy and Noon Law for instance, with the Jets as his tight end. He's gone without tight ends altogether for the most part in some spread offenses.
And I think that's the most intriguing part about this team this year for me. What does this offense look like? What does it want to be From an identity standpoint, I have my thoughts and my ideas. I certainly think this team could be dangerous in the R P O game, for instance, which requires quick decision making at the quarterback spot, quick processing, replacing the blitzer blitzing defenders with the football. It's basically the football equivalent of you've got to hit
it where they ain't. So that tight end spot is the source of some real flexibility and an offense and a team that wants to be flexible, and that serves as a great segue into the type of player that new Dolphins tight end Adam Shaheen is at that position.
And I do think Shaheen could serve as a compliment to Mike Kasicki because he can do some things as an inline blocker and kind of toughen you up inside that way, but he also features a lot of athletic ability and also downfield receiving ability run after the catch. He kind of has the entire package, just has to find a way to put it all together. As he gets here to Miami and we go over to the r a S, the Relative Athletics scorecard, I always up to start there when taking a look at a new
Miami Dolphins player. This is courtesy of Kent Platt. He's done these things dating back to nineteen eighty seven. I don't think he did it back then, but he went that far back and tracked every single player at the combine since nineteen eighty seven and groups them into these rankings, taking a total scorecard from their height, their weight, their speed, their vertical jump, their broad jump, everything you do with
the combine. He collects it into one score and Shaheen ranked among the four hundred and sixty three tight ends that he measured on the r a S since nineteen eighty seven. This guy is a small school product from Ashland University and he really emerged onto the scene during
the run up to seventeen draft. With that combine, workout scouts noted his movement ability paired with a six ft six frame two hundred and seventy eight pounds, he caught scouts eyes in Indianapolis, like, for instance, NFL Networks Daniel Jeremiah, his third reference of this podcast, who compared Shaheen's movement and run after the catch ability to Kansas Cities Travis Kelsey. He even called him Baby Gronk at one point, so Jeremiah loved him from Adam Shaheen coming out of the draft.
He also noted the rarity of Shaheen's size speed combination on his draft report. He also mentioned Shaheen's movement ability has a similar vibe to that of a wide receiver at two hundred and seventy seven pounds. No less, and Shaheen's college career began, of course, on the hardwood, which makes sense for how he moved so well. He was a basketball player at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown. He transferred to Ashland and walked onto the football team there.
At Ashland, Shaheen caught one nine passes for one thousand, seven hundred and fifty five yards and twenty six touchdowns, a good touchdown percentage there in terms of catches per touchdown. NFL dot COM's lanzerline echo Jeremiah's thoughts and his pre draft report on Shaheen, saying, quote, he's big, he's fast, and he's tough after the catch. Who doesn't want that? When you watch him dominate his level of competition, it's easy to get excited about the potential result if size
and athleticism translates to the next level end quote. And since that time, Shaheen has dropped some weight. He checked in last year on the Chicago Bears official website in twenty nineteen at two hundred and fifty seven pounds, so down about twenty pounds, and there was a story up on CBS sports dot Com last summer that Shaheen dropped
the weight to improve his flexibility and core strength. Now you know, on this podcast, we love getting into the analytics, the nitty gritty, the metrics, and I love talking about player usage and how this all kind of formulates together. With the Dolphins tight end room, Mike Kasicki came on strong and his second year last year with the Dolphins, he led Miami and snaps played with seven hundred and one offensive snaps. That was six of the offensive snaps.
Durham Smith was second with four hundred and eighty two snaps that's forty four point seven, while former Dolphins Nico Larry and Clive Walford both played less than one hundred and fifty snaps on the year. But playing in eight games for the Bears last year, Shaheen played one hundred and seventy four offensive snaps and a Worring to Pro Football Focus, he was in line, which means attached to the line of scamage outside either tackle for one and
ten of those one hundred and seventy four snaps. He was out wide as a receiver thirty one snaps and in the slot as a receiver for twenty seven of those snaps. He was also considered an offensive lineman for four snaps and in the backfield for two Bears plays. Last year, he was praised for his ability in college to latch on as a blocker and displaced defenders in
the run game. There at Ashland, one of the primary functions of an inline tight end is playing that head up football blocking down in the running game, and in twenty nineteen, Shaheen was in line for sixty five point five percent of his snaps, which of course compares to Mike Asiki being in line for twenty two point seven percent of his snaps and Durham Smith a lot closer, actually even more than Shaheen with seventy eight and a
half percent of his snaps in line in ten. So it tells you about the players the Dolphins have in terms of where they're lined up, where they might be used this season and beyond and tie it ends are typically prominent fixtures on special teams as well, especially guys that make up the second and third tight end spots on the roster, and Shaheen offers that for the Dolphins
as well. During his twenty seventeen rookie campaign, Shaheen played a career high three hundred and eighty eight snaps, including one hundred and forty nine as a special teamer. He joins Gisicki, Smyth free agent signing, Michael Roberts, practice squad member from last year, Chris Myrick, and of course undrafted rookie this year, Bryce Stirk. And we'll go ahead and turn now and break down the rest of these Dolphins tight ends Adam Shaheen joining them in the tight end room.
This year, we start with a fellow prominent inline blocking tight end and Durham Smith, who has two years of service. This is his third now in Miami, Jersey, number eighty one went to Notre Dame. He's gonna be twenty five point oh on opening day and he has two years left on that rookie deal and going off of his twenty nineteen utilization, there was very little mystery about the type of player the Dolphins beliefs Smythe to be again
on the field. Fort of the Dolphins plays seventy eight and a half of those in line reps and he was near that four eight times. Shaheen ran a four seven nine Smythe round four eight one forty time. And he really excelled in college in Notre Dame's run heavy system. He was a beast on tape blocking guys and moving him off the football. He's also sprung some pretty big runs here for the Miami Dolphins. You go back to the game against the Patriots. I recall this like it
was yesterday. He sprung a huge hole on that Brandon Bold and long touchdown run in that game. He too, was regularly called upon as a pass catcher in college, he had just twenty eight catches in his four years there, and his professional development or deployment rather has been similar. Thirteen catches in two years, but he surrendered just five quarterback pressures on one and thirty two pass blocking reps
over his two year span. His run blocking grade last year improved by more than eleven points on Pro Football Focus from his rookie year to year number two and if anyone's going to beat Smyth for number two tight end duties as he was last year, they're gonna have to prove they're worth On special teams. Smith was second on the Dolphins last year and special teams tackles for Danny Croftsman's unit. He played four hundred and seventy three
snaps as a special teamer since his rookie season. And here's a good quote from George Godsey, Dolphins tight ends coach, who praised Smith's improvement on the field, in the weight room and excelling in the role that was asked of him. This from a December three media availability from God's see quote. This year, Smice put on i'd say twenty pounds from the end of last year, so that's helped him. He's understanding the offense. He does a great job with his
details and knowing the assignments. There haven't been many missed assignments. That gives him a start. And then for as far as executing at the point of attack, a lot of times the runs are directed at him, so it's either point of attack blocks, sometimes pulling, sometimes cutting off the backside. He's had multiple assignments and he's performed well throughout the year end quote, and that kind of goes back to this idea about how much of a role tight ends
have on the offense. They really have to learn the most of the offense aside from the quarterback, because they have to stay in in block, they have to learn pass protection assignments, they have to stay in for run blocking. They have to be able to flex out and run routes as a receiver. So the fact that Smith and Gisiki are both growing and getting better in year two and in year three, that's a positive sign for those guys because tight end, as everyone knows, is a tough
tough position to come in and learn right away. In your number one, so your number three for Smith and Gisicky should get some more improvement based upon based upon those past two years. Another guy I like in this room is Chris Myrick. First year of service last year. This is going to be a second year with the Dolphins. He wears jersey number eighty five. He went to Temple Temple tough kid opening day age of twenty four point nine years old, and he has two years left on
that undrafted rookie deal. He really embodies what the Owl's football program was there at Temple Toughness. We know Brian Flores loves that word, and his collegiate production came primarily
like Derham Smith, as an inline blocker. He averaged one point one catches per game in college, but he earned a spot on the twenty nine team practice squad doing large part of some work in the running game, but he also emerged as a pass catcher with a very strong camp and made some big time plays as a member of the third team offense during training camp and showing his worth uprooting defenders off the edge of the
formation in the running game as well. He goes six ft five fifty pounds and his work in practice last summer really translated into game day production during the preseason. He caught all eight of his exhibition targets, went for one hundred two yards on those eight catches, and moved the change six times on those eight catches. He concluded the preseason with strong marks across the board and Pro
Football Focuses grading system. He posted an overall eighty nine point six offensive grade that actually led all Dolphins offensive players last year. In the preseason, George Gatzi had this to say about Myrick's attitude and work habits during last year's training camp. Quote, he took advantage of his reps. He did well in the run phase, did well in the passing phase, as you saw in that last game, referring to the six catch game he had in the
fourth preseason game. I like the way his attitude is. He comes into work, doesn't say much, as pretty much most of the rookie shouldn't say a lot. He learns from the veterans and then goes out there and gives it the best he can. He's a great effort player too. When you can bind all of that together, that's really
where we made the most. Where he made the most of his opportunity and quote and like Smith, and like Shaheen Meyrick right there with a four point eight one forty yard forty yard dash time at Temple's pro day and twenty nine team he put up twenty three bench reps and had a thirty two and a half inch vertical up next here, going in order of jersey number for the Miami Dolphins tight end room undrafted rookie this year, Bryce Stirk, You'll see him at number eighty seven out there.
Montana State product. He is twenty three years old on opening day. It's got three years left on that contract. Miami's lone rookie in this tight end room is going to attempt to convert from the defensive side of the ball to the tight end position as a pro. He's a former high school tight end. Stirks college career began at the University of Washington and ended with All American production at Montana State. He was six and FCS last
year in sacks and first and tackles for lost. In fact, he made thirty seven tackles for loss in a two year span there with the Bobcats. Hard work as a staple of Brian Flores's Dolphins roster, and that's exactly where Stirk will have to shine to successfully make the transition back to the offense. He has a great story up on the Bozeman Daily Chronicle where he detailed his workouts in preparation for his pro day and how much work he put him to getting ready to play either side
of the ball this run up to the draft. And up next in order of jersey number, we go to Mike Gassicki, who broke out last year in a big way down the stretch. He's got two years in the NFL, entering his third with the Miami Dolphins. You know what number he wears, number eight, Penn State product, twenty four point nine years old on opening Day. He's got two
years left on that rookie contract. And again, I think few players shine brighter on this roster last year than Mike Gassicki during that five and four finish to the season. A former college vaul lleyball player who specializes in out leaping and out rebounding opponents, became a true red zone threat down the stretch and an explosive playmaker in this
Miami passing offense. He tied for seventh and touchdowns with five and twelve in receiving yards with five hundred and seventy yards among tight ends last year in the NFL, and as things started to change for this twenty nineteen Dolphins team. The same was true of Gassicky. From that Week six game against Washington to the finale in New England Week seventeen, Gassicki was fourth among tight ends and touchdowns and tenth in receiving yards and Dolphins tight ends.
Coach George Gotzi highlights some improvements that Gascki made from his rookie year up to year number two on that same December the third media availability last year, talking about Durham Smith, but he had this to say about Gascki. Quote, at for any first year player is going to go through some bumps the first year. Just showing him the tape that we could get better at releases, we could get better at route stems, we could get better at
the top of the route. We can communicate better with our teammates the quarter of a specifically, we can catch the ball more before and after practice. To his credit, he's accepted all of that. He's worked hard, He's taken countless reps in practice to improve his traits. I'm happy he's able to go out there and perform and quote, and Gassicki's usage and production are that of a souped
up wide receiver. Of those seven hundred one snaps he played last year, four hundred sixty one came inside from the slot, seventy eight flexed out wide as a perimeter player, and he was fourth among all tight ends in the NFL and slot yardage production with three two yards from that position and third and touchdowns according to Pro Football Focus with three touchdowns from the slot and of course no touchdown was bigger than Gassick's game winner in that
week seventeen victory over the rival Patriots. His dual functionality we talked about this really perpetuates Miami's preference to play fast and feature an offense that has multiple looks on the offense. This guy is a physical marvel six ft six and absolute weapon with a forty one and a half inch vertical and a four point five four forty time just blowing the doors off the combine back in ten. He allows Miami again to seamlessly transition from a variety
of personnel groupings on offense. Finally, one quick change to the roster here as we're going to go over the final tight end on the roster, but it has been announced on Monday afternoon the Dolphins have cut tight end Michael Roberts, so they'll go forward into camp with Shaheen on the roster now and Michael Roberts now has been cut from the Dolphins roster, bringing the roster tolled down
to eighty two players. On this Monday edition July of the Drive Time Podcast, as the Dolphins have a new looking tight end room to go along with Gassicki and Smythe this year, some new additions there to hopefully get even more production out of the tight end position with Stirk, Shaheen, Gasicki, Myrick, and of course Durham Smythe. As we'll get a look at all of these players and all of the Miami Dolphins players and training camp coming up next month in
the month of August. Football is almost back. It's almost here and gonna get you guys prep for training camp here on the Drivetime Podcast, taking a look a deep dive at each position on this Miami Dolphins roster. Before I get out of here today, I want to make a few quick takes, a few quick notes on a very very popular comedy show here in America. I've been watching The Office a lot, been playing it on Comedy Central almost every single day. I have a few takes
here I want to run by you guys. First. The best episode is the Coup the Crentice, the dentist scene between Dwight and Michael, when Dwight tries to go behind Michael's back and take his job from jam and then Michael finds out about it and tries to play coy and gives Dwight the eminem's and then checks his mouth for that crown. Absolutely hilarious, and I think Rain Wilson is an underrated actor. He does so good in that show of playing that character. It's a perfect character for
that actor. Speaking of a perfect character, I don't think he's a perfect character, but I think that's why I like him so much. Ryan is my favorite character. Is that weird of me? Does that make me crazy? That's just how I feel. I think season three is the best season on the Office, and a runner up for best scene is when Ryan and Stanley go on the sales call together and Ryan asks Stanley to take the lead.
Stanley kindly obliges, and then they get to the office and Ryan goes blank trying to sell the pitch to all of Stanley's friends, and Stanley cannot quit laughing about the hilarity of the entire situation. Tell me how bad my office takes, all right? Know a lot of folks will not agree with those office takes. And one quick apology here for some maybe shaky sound quality. I don't have the best set up yet in the airbnb we are in, but hopefully we get that all ironed out
here very soon. In the meantime, you all please remember to subscribe to the Drivetime podcast on Apple, podcast, Spotify, wherever you get your podcast from. Go ahead and subscribe, rate and review the show. Give me a follow on Twitter. It's at Wingfield, NFL fall the Dolphins at Miami Dolphins. Check out the fish Tank and the audible podcast, and of course Miami Dolphins dot com. Until next time, fins up.
