And we're back. Thank you all for tuning in for this week's episode. I'm Peanut, and as always, I got my trusted guy room with me. What's up. Well, I wouldn't say it's just an episode. This is a whole experience right now. And before we jump into this experience, all right, I want to first of all, thank all of our listeners for tuning in as always, can you.
I want to make sure you guys give us a follow, a rating, and a review wherever you listen to your podcast at, whether it's Apple Podcast, I Heart Radio, or anywhere else you get it. So with all that being said, thank you again, and let's set the scene right now, Peanut, we are at Super Bowl fifty seven Radio Row. This is my first time. I've been here numerous times, it's never done Radio Row. This is my first time. It's kind of cool, it's early, it's kind of weird. I
don't like how security keeps checking my freaking bads. You are getting a little get it gets a little chapped. I'm a little chapped about this, all right, But we're gonna get over it and we're gonna move on. So Kansas City versus Philadelphia, it's already super Bowl fifty seven, Peanuts, it's three days, six hours, and fifty minutes until the game. I'm excited. Who you got? I got you? How did you know? It was a big screen that? How did
you know that? So impressed? I'm a math guy. I'm a math I want to university in LA like weth all Day. Don't know it is a huge screen right here. I did not see until right now. And Peanutic is correct. Uh everything at UL is pretty good because I just found out last night that Peanut was actually part of the student government Association at UL. This man is a pretty big time. He has his college ring on which everybody gets confused for a super Bowl championship ring. I
let him know it. It's not a super Bowl ring. Yeah, if they really looked at the details, they would know that it's a college ring. Whatever did you do? You have a college ring the national championship ring? And uh no, we stuck when I was there if you know this, and but I do have the real ring, so I'm the one that I'm over too. Well. I didn't want to go there. I was gonna kind of let it just kind of happen over time that we talked about. You know, this is super Bowl for the seven. Peanut
has been the two super Bowls. I have to I'm over to year one. In one we lost one together. Yeah, and you take all the steam off all my jokes when you say it first. But yes, Peanut is over too. I am one of one. I hate you so much. I try not to bring it up because I don't think I would lose the Super Bowl if you weren't on my team. But I wouldn't much rather be on my team and me get to know. If I would have played in the second one, I think we could have won it. I mean if I started, I started all.
If I would have played, I think we'd work. But we got some um, we got some important guests you know, lined up this week. We got some We got some stuff today. We got some stuff tomorrow. Uh. We got Dion Sanders coming on. Uh, Brian Dawkins, one of my former teammates, Brandon Marshall. We got a whole crew of people lined up. So y'all gotta stay tuned in and
it's gonna be. We got some good stuff coming. I can't wait to you know, Number one, I still don't know how to address Dion, whether it's Prime Coach, Prime, the MR. I mean, he's so legendary. He is what every dB looked up to. He's literally on my wall. I just call him Dean. Yeah, I just I don't know, man, But I'm still kind of nervous. But anyways, so when I meet Hall of famers, I get really nervous. That was probably about the most normal I've been, you know,
like I'm yeah, I just I get nervous. I'm like, man, this this is a goal. This is a gold jacket. I know people get nervous with like Rhanna and man, gold jacket ain't but a hundred three hundred something like that. So magic, pan up when you get the call, because I'll be there, um not in the Hall of Fame, but when you get the call for you to go
to the Hall of Fame, hope. So will you be nervous when you look at yourself in the mirror, like damn, Like look at that guy, like are you gonna practice it? Are you gonna wear it? Or like my coat, I'm wearing my coat to go to the gas station. I'm it's I'm I'm a one. That thing in the middle of damn January in Chicago. I'm gonna get some gas in my coat, Like I'm I am not taking the record, not taking it off for a year. They're gonna have to give me multiple I'm I'm wearing it with it.
I got my coat on right now. I also want to know, do they when you get a gold jacket, like, do you just take that to the cleaners? Do you ever get it dirty? Do you do you ever do things where all these these things would happen. I think that's a very uh a good question. I don't know, maybe we'll find out at some point in time. Well, anyways, I'm looking forward to it. Today, we're gonna it is Thursday before the super Bowl. We're gonna have a special
episode released today. We're gonna release another one tomorrow, and then we're also gonna release one on Saturday before the super Bowl. So three episodes coming up for you. We're very thankful. I can't wait to get all these guests out here. It's gonna be a great time and I'm gonna enjoy Radio Rod for my first time. So me and Peanut, let's go and get it and uh, let's have a good time, bro and stay tuned because we've
got Dion coming up. We're joined by Hall of Fame NFL cornerback and now head football coach of the University of Colorado, Mr Dion You know what you do? You think? Hey man, we just we're trying to follow suit. You know, we appreciate it. First of all, let's just be honest. If you're a defensive back in the world at any point time, that's my age or probably younger. Now that you look up to Dion Sanders, you are, you are the man you are. I had to release the Hall
of Fame. I had to shoes. I got him in, I got and we got right now. Yeah, I got the red and one you had him in San Francisco. Thought that was the best color combo out of all of them, really hot ones. And I didn't do the strap either. I would not strap. I would not. You was laming if you strapped it completely. Well, you know the strap was because we had I used to spat. We all sat up up so that situated the dispatch.
So it was always a purpose to everything. I used it for basketball shoes, Oh that was that was my thing. I used it for basketball, but I ain't even playing mine. I bought mine when I was like, I ain't nothing of them and it was too big. You know, you brought him in junior, don't grow and it just I just hung on to him though. It's all good though, but Prime, I would can we call you Prime man?
Thank you appreciate it? All right? This is your question that a lot of people on the outside want to know, and I would love to know your opinion too, because it's something about when you talk to more old school guys in football versus new school guys getting credit. This another who are your top five defensive players of all time? Not getting an order I'm not getting because somebody's gonna be sensidive because when I said, they get sencidive. That's
why I've never ranked dvs rank. I do like L T S lists. I think it's it's misguided where I stand, but I do like it. I do like it. That's why we asked you because LT said number one was l T all right, of course, which I hope you would put yourself. One. Two was Reggie White, three Deacon Jones. Then he had four Dion Sanders and then five Nie So at least you were the first defensive back. Yeah, I like that. Shoot it's man just thinking about these
type of players. It's some guys that really change. You can't get on the list unless you really changed the game. Change the game. You gotta change the game. Meyl blunt us, Come on, Manyl, he changed the game. They changed the rules because of male blunt his physicality. Shoot, that's who you were, y'all were male blunts, you know. Yeah, well that's what Peanut does, all right. So I gotta just know because now you see, I gotta go off to go off a little bit. Now, Tiffany's is trying to
do a little whistle thing. Yeah, they're trying to bring out a whistle as a necklace. Now they don't know who did it first. They do, I will know. I want the people who did it first, because as a coach, you gotta war your whistle. I don't know how you coach with that whistle. I've been wearing my whistle since my boys are young. And I said, you know what, I'm I'm coached. Now, I'm validated like the like the check on the ground. I'm validated as a coach. Now
I gotta take the whistle to theother level. I hear that, so I put you know, the goal. What's with the Damna's in it? Now? Prime, here's another question. Now, I want you to give us a deep dive in just in who you are and what you want your legacy to be as a coach. As a coach, as you said, that is it? What is it getting guys to the league? Is it getting guys paid? Is graduating all your players? Like?
What exactly if I win a national championship? I'm sorry, when when I win a national championship and we don't graduate seven percent kids? Did I win? So? When we win a national championship, ninety seven percent of your kids graduate, but fifteen of them are having kids, you know, before marriage, and you know they're not ready to be fathers. Did I win? It's so many different aspects of winning. You gotta really seriously take a look at that. And mine
is is like the wholeness of a person. I want these guys that went on the field, off the field, in the community and at home um as well as in the classroom. That's a win for me. So it's it's the entire man to develop the entire human being to get him to the next level that he can't even fat them right now, that's a win. It next level in life. Not even just nine of these kids ain't going to pros. So I focus is on the nine.
The five got this, five y'all, y'all had this. Yeah, I gotta make sure I put my efforts in my staff and my team to make sure that ninety five is ready for the world. Now when did you and I know at some point you said you realize it was too much like getting shined on yourself, and you made the conscious decision to try to shine or not excuse me, try to shine like on others. At what moment in time or in your life did you make
that decision? It's always been like that, honestly, because I understand I had to build a brand to make sure I take care of my mother and secure my mother for the rest of the life. That I promised it when I was seven. But in the journey of building that, I've always looked out for this one or that one, of this one of the family or this one. I've always done that with my teammates as well as the community. I've always been that way. But people don't want to
hear that. When you pray, they won't prime. They didn't want du So that's the dichotomy of that I got you, So tell us what you are doing with OI close. First of all, I'm excited. I'm happy, um elated that this is our second year straight. We had a Supervow Commercion commercial, but we up to Annie because this year it involves the entire family. God just my mama and my son who's the quarterback, but my other son, my daughter, my sister, and it's something that we always do. We compete,
you know, we could. I'm just compete, you know, and that's what we're doing. So we're competing right now. And I'm happy that we found a brand that could just take who we are and what we are and how we are in turning it into a commercial, especially for Super Bowl in the African American family. Dad, That's what I like. I love that And not only that, but I just wish you to say that I got mama. Mama. Now, oh, I just said that, you know, I was trying to
I was trying to be writing up. Y'all are so articulate. I'm trying to clean it up. You know, y'all ain't just regularly both. I've been saying both all day. Both stuff florid. Yeah know that my guy rights, like I talked, so you know, and this is the last thing. And I gotta be selfish here because I said this before the interview. How the research I did on my man Primes, the e k Emmanuel cons for all this that don't know, like me who did not know that Primes favorite glasses,
that's what that wore. And your elder son lost your favorite pair, yes, like the look back, like the iconic look back when I had on, like the reverse Jackett. When I was leaving to get ready to go, get to play and play the two sports he loves, I gave him those. Man, my kids have lost so much stuff. The old jury that I had, he has lost five
thousand dollars. It don't seem like a lot, but then the five thousand dollars watches, you know, just just stupid stuff that so do you know, like forgetting the money. The sentimental part of this, like I handed this to you like you was the prince baby, you the bag. They just they if you don't earn it, you don't care, be good they to earn it. This is good advice. I'm gonna let my son watch this. And he said, not need great as to be honest with your kids.
I'm honest with am I telling where they rank that, I tell them who I care about the most. Like you this month, you're like fifth. Yeah, ranking put does that and he does a really good job, not that great. You gotta rank them. You gotta let him know what they're staying. All your life, hadn't you been ranked, been subjected to criticism? They need that because guess what you're raising them? You you you raised you want a dog, but you're raising cats. Yeah, okay, you want a dog,
but you're raising kids. My youngest is a dog. He lives in a cat environment. So you better make sure because the environment you grew up was totally different and that's why you where you are. So you're raising you want a dog, but we're raising cats. So you get to be hard on them at some point in time. Let's go. I'm just trying to come out to Colorado.
You know you want specialists. Well, if you if I could teach all your dvs how to pin up when you First of all, people don't understand for you to do what you did successfully, you had to be there. Oh yeah, that's what they don't get you couldn't make a play unless you were there, understood. Okay, that's what they forget about. You were there to make they play. You can't do that if you're not there. So I want you when you come and putting you to work,
you believe that let's do it. I'm walking away. I'm letting y'all do your thing. I'm promise you that I'm ready. You know. The Disturban is there too. Yeah. D T was my d C. And Jackson so he's an analyst as well, So I had to take care of my dog's Yeah, he's there too. So we gotta we gotta play through of guys that from from the old school that could really enjoy that everything that you've done. Uh, not only bless the the young men who you're coaching,
but also the coaching staff. And just continue to shine like man. Whenever it's beautiful. It reminds me of uh. And I never compare my younger daughter to you, but one thing I always tell her and I would tell you, is that when you shine, it literally allows so many others to signs as well. So continue to let your lighte be great continution because we need that as well, because what we're doing that thing and some bulli junk happens, which bull junk happens about four times a year, each yeah,
each quarter. Yeah, And we need folks to have that back because y'all know what time it is. Appreciate being done, and I appreciate you all for keeping it one hundred. Thank thank you for joining us. Appreciate, appreciate you, Thank you so much. Look at clean trying to be like ya. The custom dbs and changed the game. They used to think we can articulate that s but not looking at us. We everywhere. Thanks for appreciate. We gotta pay some bills.
But before we go, we're honoring Black History Month troil Blazers past and present. And here's NFL legend Max Strong honoring Heisman Trophy winner Ernie Davis in nineteen sixty one. Ernie Davis was the first African American Heisman Trophy winner.
As we continue to celebrate Black History Month across the league, we shared the accomplishments of the past and the president Davis High School, All American followed the Jim Brown's footsteps and starting at Syracuse University, Warren Brown's number forty four Jersey Davids put together a dominant senior year, which garnered him Heisman recognition. He was drafted number one overall by Washington in nineteen sixty two before joining his hero Jim
Brown and Cleveland be a trade. Unfortunately, before Davids could play in an NFL game, he developed leukemia, an illness that would end his life tragically at mandaids of twenty three. His number forty five jersey is still retired to this day. All right, we're back the episode here and we're back at Super Bowl fifty seven at Radio Row. We have a great guest today, well this time with Mike Golic, NFL veteran, former NFL veteran, Eagles great and broadcast extraordinaire.
And you know you're great when all of a sudden they start drafting your kids right behind you into the same business. Yeah, that's pretty cool. But I love good coaching. This is well, you know, if only he would admit that, it's amazing he got into this business. My son, Mike, and I thought he would be on like bended knee. Oh father, teach me the profession man. That dude came after me right away. I mean just just disagreeing with everything I was saying. I'm like, dude, come on, so
when you do, you give him some advice. Now I give him bad advice the way he's coming after me. No, no, no, I definitely do, but but I give him some But he's really learned along the way. You know. It was one of those where I was a tenth rounder. Again back when there were twelve rounds. I was going to say, yeah, exactly, yeah there and even before that there were seventeen rounds. Yeah, that's how old I am. So what you were drafted?
What year? Tenth rounder? Mike was an undrafted free agent, So we all we came from the boy you gotta, you know, bust your hump to get a job and stuff. So you just basically carry that over. We just carried that over into this and you know, tried to try to try to make it. Five was a good year for the Bears, a good year to get drafted. It was that will you know, we did not. William Perry was in my draft. Of the first pick my year was Bruce Smith. He was a number one pick. He
was number one. I was number two fifty five, So that was a little different. The only thing we had in common was two things we played the same position and we were drafted the same year. Other than that, our our carreers went different past so I got so was it eight? I think it was eight? Eight Fall Balls, Eagles,
Big Bears. Yeah. I couldn't see maybe ten fifteen yards the during that game because they didn't want to postponent I remember being on fielding the rough the stand in the fifty yard line and he was talking in his microphone to the to the upstairs and he said, yes, I can see both goal posts from here. I looked at me and I said, what the hell are you looking at, dude? I can't see fifteen yards that way. There'd be a play to the outside and the person
would disappear, but they didn't want to postpone it. So whoever was going to be ahead in that game by the time it rolled in was gonna win. And that was yeah. So what's what's your fondest memory of that of that of that game? Nothing, because we lost and I couldn't see anything. I mean, it was it was probably a memory, and I guess it wouldn't be a fond memory. Is Listen, we've all played a long time, whether Little League all the way through the NFL, so
we played in snow, sleet, rain, all wind. I have never seen anything like that. When we all saw the fog rolling in off the lake. First we thought it was fireworks and smoke from that, but then it just kept coming in and all of a sudden we were engulfed. It was something none of us on either team had ever seen any buddy throw the ball right, yes, yes, yes, short passes, okay, because there would be. They tried a
couple of longer passes, and I kid you not. You know, you're you're rushing and then they throw the ball and you look and you just see the ball disappear, and you literally don't know the For all I know, the ball could have bounced right into a receiver's hands and they could have said it was a reception. Had no idea it was. It was crazy store alone. It's gonna bounce off the ground. But I'm a pick it up act. And let me tell you, I think of what you
could have got away with no more contact contact. You're doing that anyway, right? You got to nowadays with the way the rules are. That's true. You want any kind of edge you can get as a defense you're trying to take you guys are The worst position at all is secondary guys. Now, it's horrible the line is now considering what you have to do with the quarterback, I mean, if it could today. Yeah, that's the question I wanted to come at you with was would you like? How
would you like? What is your opinion on if you had to play in days era? So I was raised. You know, my dad played football in the Canadian Football League. He's a former Marine, big, strong, tough dude. And the way they taught football back then was when you tackle somebody, you run through them and you land on him and try and plan them. That was legal. You know people might hear that and go, oh my god, but that
was what you did. We had a guy, Clyde Simmons who would come off the edge and he would we call it the tuck, suck and drop. He would tuck the quarterback's arm and suck him up and drop him right. He separated three one again. It's that that's the technique. But you were to do it now, I mean, I think it's so unfair a for dbs they have to pull off the way they do, and for d lineman when you're tackling a guy, what the hell are you supposed to do. I'm supposed to twist in mid air,
so I don't land on him. It's earlier. I understand the safety part of it, but I think they're breaking too many eggs to make this omelet of times for sure. For sure. So you've been in success with TV radio pod play by play, like, what's been ultimately your your favorite platform that you've been doing well from from? It's interesting I'll answer this way. First. People always say, do you want to be remembered more as a football player broadcast?
I said, are you kidding me? I said, I've never woken up from a dream and said, oh my god, what a great segment that was. It was always man with a great hit I had in that quarter. As far as broadcasting, I love doing a daily live show, especially in the morning, because people are on their way to work. I'd like to make them laugh a little bit, maybe take them inside the locker room or on the field.
But in all honestly, I would say doing color commentary for games because now you're at the game, you're still kind of involved in the game, You're still involved with the players. So for this one, like I do the the the call for Westwood One, the national radio partner for the NFL. So I'll be in on the in the call for this game for the Super Bowl. So it's it's a lot of fun. I love being involved like that. I think I saw one of your first TV gigs back. I want to say when you first retired,
and I think you you hosted like a Bloopers did. Yes, I did. I used. I used to watch that. I hosted that that I was I was playing with the Eagles, we still playing host. I was playing at hosting. I would do a lot of that in the off season. Uh, we'd get a lot of shows in the camp. One year we did ten shows in Hawaii. I'm like, hell, sign me up for this every year. But yeah, that was a lot of fun. That's kind of what got me going. And I did a piece when I was
in Philly. You know, the quarterbacks get the shows they I had a piece on the Randall Cunningham Show and it so we were just a segment on his I was a segment on his show, Right Time, Right Place At won a local Lemmy And that's when the ESPN called and said, hey, we know you're still playing in the off season. You want to do some stuff with us.
And and then when I was retired by the league, when nobody called anymore, luckily ESPN called at that at that point, Yeah, I definitely know that when when no, you don't want to retire, but you don't get that call and you're you're you're waiting for it. That's well, that's why I people asked me what year you're retired. I said, well, the league retired me. Yeah. Totally hate that. So you gotta you got a family podcast right, yes, yes, sorry in advance, which we like to apologize to the
people before they listen. Yes, it's my wife who got this single. And it's my wife, myself, my son Mike, my son Jake, his wife Jenny, and my daughter Sydney and her her husband Ben Bronncker. He played at Harvard, he played five years with the Mayors, a tight end and now he's in med school. Real underachiever. Uh yeah,
dude's really smart. But we have this and we just kind of go, it's not even sports, I mean, and that's when we find out that, like my daughter in law and my daughter say some really dumb stuff, you know, and we laugh at them and laugh with him. It's just plus it's a great time every couple of weeks just to kind of get us all together. You told me earlier story about it was that you learned that
your daughter in law about rotating times. Well, so my daughter in law thought, rotating tires meant you take it to the garage, you put it up on the jacks, and you just spin the tires. And we were like, what was gonna happen to the tires? I don't know, you just keep spinning them till they're even I'm like, I don't I don't know the thought process of that. But but she she was, and quite honestly, obviously nowadays you throw it out to Twitter, there were a lot
of people that agreed. They were like, yeah, that's what I thought. It was too. I'm like, oh my god, Okay, it's like wow, I said, because you imagine, just put it up on the jack, spin the tires, all right, that will be a hunter bucks. We're ready to go. Your wife must be batting a thousand right now. Because it was her I did to come up with this podcast, and then I saw a recent uh video you did an interview. It was her who picked for Michael Mike
I know, you tried out like or fourteen hosts. And then when he was on the show, he wasn't in a rotation and she was like, he's geeky, but I like him. That take him. It was exactly it I had after Tony Bruno left my original partner. There were thirteen people they brought in between Ober in December of Greeny was a fill and he was doing ESPN News and they were like, okay, one of the one of the actual candidates can't make it in, can you fill in?
And I would talk to my wife after the first segment of every person and she would give me an update or what she thought. And with Greeny, quote was sounds kind of geeky, but he's the one, and sure enough, But like what made him the one? Was it? You know what? I think It was the fact that he grew up a fan and a writer. I grew up a player. You know, we were we were truly the odd couple, you know, and and so that's how we related to one another, and it just kind of worked.
The chemistry was just one of those things you just it was just kind of there and it just kind of developed even more over the years. So talk a little bit about huddle up, Let's talk obesity. Yeah, so huddle up Obesity dot org as the website to go to and listen. You guys know you've seen teammates, especially from our side of it. Like when I finished playing, I was about to ninety, but you know, playing shape
to ninety. Two years later, I'm three, you know, And I mean an ugly three torenty where I walked out of the shower one day and said, oh my god, I need to do something. And so what I did is it was my wife and my my family who helped. So that's the biggest message I have not only for former ballplayers who go the wrong way, but everybody in
general out there who are living that life. Because a lot of people want to just hide it and they're embarrassed by it, so they won't seek help, and especially men, they won't do a yearly chance. Looks like we have a physical every year. Guys won't go see doctors because we lived the life of the doctor asking you okay, I'm fine, I'm playing. You know. Now, a lot of guys feel well, there's nothing wrong with me at the dime, I don't go to the doctor, and they don't tell
me there's something wrong exactly right. My point is involve everybody. You know what. It's something you have to deal with. It's not just go on one diet. It's a lifestyle change that people need to do. But you need to do with other people. We lived in itinerary life. When to be somewhere, what to wear, what to eat? Now, all of a sudden, you gotta make your own decisions when you're done playing, and a lot of times they can lead to add decisions and unhealthy decisions, and you
gotta be able to pull it back. You need a support group to do right now. As a former football player, we're all used to getting graded here, how would your wife grade you and your whole journey through this now, it obviously started out as an f when I went the wrong way, but God love her, I mean she got me into the two nineties and into the two sixties. I was also diagnosed with type two diabetes when I was in the nineties, when I was about forty two, and when I was in the two nineties, my dad
had it as well. So now I had to deal with that and make sure I lost weight because of That's another thing will be so you can bring on other health issues as well. I'm now the way I was my senior year in high school, So I mean, I feel great, so I think she'd give me. Listen, I'm never gonna give myself an a because I was known for eating a lot of doughnuts and cookies when I was doing radio and TV. I still do, just not as often, right. And also I find also I think,
you know, people say, go, look, you look pretty good. Now. I said, well, I think I'm still worth more to my wife alive, so you know she's feeding me. Well that's the whole deal. I'm to man's bet. I didn't know that. I didn't know she picked your partners. She did. It was unbelievable. Oh yeah, yeah, like I said, that was her exact quote. Sounds kind of geeky, but he's the one and journey sev eighteen years later worked out. Okay.
So one of the questions we always asked some of the guests that we have on the show, your Rushmore, Mount Rushmore, your personal Mount Rushmore, Who would you have for people that influenced your life that hadn't be didn't have to be fully sports right? So I was because not everybody knows. I was never one of those that had a sports idol. My father was always my hero, always, so my dad would be on on there. And then in all honesty, two other guys from my high school.
I mean, those are really such formative years. The head coach there, God rest his soul, Bill got Broad was my coach in Cleveland, Ohio. St. Joe's High just laid a great foundation. And another coach who was a football coach but also my wrestling coach. Me and my brother Bob wrestled in college and at Notre Dame. John Story was his name, was an incredible, incredible developer of the whole person. And I and people always ask you and I go out and do talks, who's your idols or whatever?
And I mentioned these guys. They don't know who they are, but these are the ones that influenced me. So those are the three. And I would I wouldn't imagine I have to put my mom up there. If it's not my mom, it's my wife, because my wife is truly the backbone of our family without questions. They so, yeah, it's not really anybody else crazy outside of kind of who helped mold me, you know, as as a young kid. Yeah, Mike, that's a great list man. So well, thanks for coming
on podcast. We appreciate you on appreciat how you got you guys digging this this world. It's really fun. Me and Peanut get to talk a lot more. He usually just cracks jokes on me. Let him do to heat more. He's I'll call him my my my darker Barbara Walters. So I'm trying to you know, I'm more like laid back chill. But I'll let I'll let him take the whole thing. But I'm just I'm more laid back chill. It's kind of fun not doing sports all the time.
I enjoy that talk about you know who in your life knows how to rotate time because people think you just know sports, and it's nice to get to know the other side of you, the person outside. Yes, we are not just robotic athletes. Don't put us in a box. Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you. Well we are done. It's a rap. First day in the books went It went pretty good? Would you say? I think it went excellent? Honestly, Um, I want to thank Dion
Sanders coach Prime. I mean, he's the living legend that we all got to see and he was custom fit today, clean as always. Blue jean was a blue jean. It was definitely blue Jen okay, custom blue, no doubt. Mike Golick for joining us as well. Well. Spoken, amazing man. He might be one of the original goats from the transition, you know, his second career, his post that what he's doing like he he might be one of the first to go from football to TV and do it so smoothly.
His transition was smooth and it's he's still killing the game right now. So so thank him as well for coming in. Man. Also, I want to thank all of our listeners for tuning in as always. Continue to tell spread the word, tell a friend, to tell a friend, to tell a friend. All Right, hit the pick, follow, give us a review, a couple of likes, hit us up, continue to push it around. Thank you as always, from the NFL Players Second Acts Podcast