Transcript of The Big Suey: Nick Wright's Weather Theory (feat. Nick Wright)

The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz
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00:00:00

Welcome to the Big Suey, presented by DraftKings.

00:00:06

Why are you listening to this show? The podcast that seems very similar to the other Dan Lebitard podcast.

00:00:11

I'm sorry. I'm not going to apologize for that. In fact, the only difference seems to be this imaging.

00:00:16

I have been tempted in restaurants just walking past tables to grab somebody's fries if they're just there. That hasn't happened to you guys? I've done it.

00:00:26

And now, here's the marching band to nowhere, Fatface and the Pitchou a Liar.

00:00:31

This episode of the Dan Leventard Show is presented by DraftKings.

00:00:34

Draftkings, the Crown is yours.

00:00:37

nick Wright is the host of FS1's First Things First. It's very popular. He's very popular. And What's Right with nick Wright, That is the podcast he does with his son. That, too, is very popular. He's got a lot of opinions on a lot of things, and I want to do inside and outside of sports with him. But the first thing I want to do is play this Jeff Halfley sound. The Dolphin Coach says that the dolphins will no longer be reputed to be soft as long as he's in charge. Let's listen to this sound together.

00:01:08

It's so damaging. When you hear the word soft, how can you take that and really lean into it and say, One thing we won't be, we will not be defined as soft. Well, I think you asked me what I want this team to look like, and that's exactly the opposite of when I close my eyes and I picture what it's going to look like. I think to me, after we play a team, I want them to know that they just were in a battle and it hurt. But I think there's one thing talking about it and the other thing is doing it. So that's why it starts April sixth when these players get here. And I will do everything in my power to make sure that nobody ever says that again.

00:01:47

Nice. He doesn't have that power. Nick Wright, go ahead and tell us what your thoughts are there.

00:01:52

Yeah, that's not going to work. Yeah, that's not going to happen. Sorry. There is a level of You are the city that you represent, and it's why I thought Mike McDaniel maybe would succeed. But I don't know that you can play professional football in Miami. And over the course of the season, you are going to be as tough as teams that play in Buffalo or Green Bay or Boston or Baltimore or Kansas City or Detroit. I just don't. And so I almost think McDaniel tried to lean into, We're not tough. We are just fancy and fast and fun. And God forbid, we have to play a cold weather playoff game. And Andy Reid has icicles falling from his mustache, and I look like I just want to leave. That's a bad spot. But if we could one day get home field and then bring you guys down into Miami and you guys down in the distraction and the good weather, we'll be better equipped. So I just, I don't know, I've been watching football my entire life. There's a lot of different ways I would describe the Miami Dolphins. Tough, hard-nosed is not one of them, and that has been independent on who the coach is.

00:03:07

This is an interesting theory he's floating here. He's saying you have to be in cold weather in order to be tough, partly, don't you?

00:03:14

Sperano's team was tough.

00:03:16

How so, Mike? Tell me. I'm going to trust your memory of this.

00:03:21

Ricky Williams and Jason Taylor and Zack Thomas, these were tough players.

00:03:26

Wild Cat was like a Smash Mouth style.

00:03:28

Yeah, Listen, it's pro football. I'm not going to argue that you can't have tough elements to it. But the argument I am making is you are never going to have the toughest team in the league in Miami, which is not.

00:03:45

I just- Let's align the line of demarcation, because Tampa has won a Super Bowl with a tough, hard-nosed defense. Their identity, if you were to look at the Bucks franchise, say, Oh, yeah, we're a tough team over our history since the late '90s.

00:03:59

Yes, but They got over the pump once they brought in the offensive genius, and then they got over the pump again when they brought in the greatest quarterback of all time. They certainly did have Warren Sapp and John Lynch and Derrick Brooks and some of the greatest defensive players of all time. Again, I know this is going to seem like somewhat fuzzy math, and I won't feel as silly about it being silly, given that I have what is, I'm going to guess, 22 bouncing heads of Steven Ross and Jeff Hathaway. Four heads. And I'm not sure anybody else. But I do think there is an element of the best teams take on the identity of where they're from. I don't think it's unique that the greatest USC teams of my lifetime were flashy and fancy, and the greatest Michigan teams of my lifetime wanted to beat you 10 to 7.

00:04:56

Does this apply to college? Because the University of Miami was plenty tough this last next year.

00:05:00

Absolutely. So you know what? I haven't baked into the math of the transfer portal and its impact on that. Mike knows I was a big University of Miami fan, and I hope the Kansas City Chiefs draft Ruben Bain. So I'm not quite certain. This is what I would call a loose working theory that my gut reaction says is true, that you are going to an outdoor professional football be tougher given if you have to play in bad weather repeatedly. And I think the Dolphins path is not going to be in a division where Mike Vrabel is the head coach of one of the teams, you ain't going to be the toughest.

00:05:44

Okay, so to clarify, because you mentioned there, it's a working theory for an outdoor sport. We're only talking football then, right? Because basketball, the Miami Heat make their bones on being physical and tough.

00:05:57

No, it has to be outdoors. And it's It's one of the reasons why if the NFL goes... I hate that the Chiefs are leaning towards going to a dome stadium in six years. The elements in the weather and being able to win in very different conditions in different ways is one of the great things about pro football. And so, yes, it only applies to outdoor sports. Nick, I hear you, but have you ever been to Miami in September when it's 130,000 degrees? Josh Allen almost died on the field a couple of years ago. That's my point. But that's tough, too. That's my point. Different type of tough. Really? Let's be honest. Wait a minute. The sun is a mile away from you. It's burning you to a crisp.

00:06:39

All right, so people at Lebitard show, when are you tougher? When are you a tougher human being if you're in crazy amounts of heat or crazy amounts of cold, because I like this theory that he's espousing.

00:06:52

Well, hold on. Wait a moment here because you're being disingenuous with it. I am not arguing that it is definitively tougher to live the Inuit life in the outer banks of Alaska than it would be to live in the Sahara Desert. But Miami in September ain't that. So if you want to ask people, When are you tougher? In real feel of negative 20 with a wind chill or real feel of 102 because of humidity? I will go with the former rather than the latter. And this heads thing is really dumb. I understand you want to distract the audience for my less than traditional dispatch.

00:07:36

No, it's just the dolphins have hired a lot of people with substantive foreheads. And so it began as foreheads, foreheads, and now it's just become something else. But Greg Cody has been wanting to talk to you for 10 minutes.

00:07:48

Hi, Greg. How are you doing? I understand that your theory is under construction, the theory that the city and its climate and all that relates. I can't recall, did you include Kansas City as a city that exudes toughness?

00:08:05

I can't recall. I did because of the weather and because I think it is a blue-collar-ish place compared to You certainly compared to the more cosmopolitan cities in the NFL.

00:08:18

Okay, so let me ask you this then. Was Kansas City a different city with appreciably different weather for the five decades that the Chiefs weren't that good and weren't Is that winning anything of note?

00:08:31

No, but the only good Chiefs teams were teams that were excellent defense, hard-nosed Marty Schottenheimer Chiefs teams. And the reason that this Chiefs team has won multiple championships while Josh and Lamar have had multiple coaches is because our quarterback can play in all conditions. The snow doesn't come and all of a sudden, they're playing 10-7 football games. The snow comes, and he's breaking his helmet running through one of your soft-ass Miami dolphins while they're blowing them out in the playoffs. So no, I understand Greg. It feels like Greg came to me with a smile and tried to knife me in the back, but I was too quick. And Greg remembers those Schoenheimer Dolphins teams of the '90s because they were in the same boat as your Moreno-Schula... The Schoenheimer Chiefs teams of the '90s because they were in the same boat as your Moreno-Schula Dolphins, the Schottenheimer Chiefs teams of the '90s, because they were in the same boat as your Moreno Shula Dolphins' teams, consistently good, never quite good enough.

00:09:34

We have a lot of subject matter that we want to carry with you here, and we don't have very much time left. So amid the three stories of Bill Belichick, LeBron James, and Minnesota, which would you like to tackle?

00:09:50

Well, let's start with Belichick. I understand. Dan, did you coin the term, Are you the You're the person that coined the term Captain Easy Stance? Is that your intellectual property?

00:10:04

I don't know, but I did accuse Stugatz of it. Yes, very often.

00:10:08

Okay. So that is one thing. Unlike Club Superstar, which was my invention, and then Amin was like, But I rank stars, too. This is something I unabashedly stole from you. And so you were first to market with it. I do get today that everybody is saluting including the flag of Captain Easy stance. Bill Belichick is a Hall of Famer. No shit. We all know it. I get it. Do you know he won six Super Walsh? Eight, if you count the Giants. We know. We were there. Am I the only one that's not just morally wounded by the fact that a coach who has multiple documented to where the league had to step in, cheating scandals? Themselves, them saying, wait a year. You're going to get in. Wait a year. Am I the only person that's not like, utterly and totally gobsmacked? How could they do this to this guy? I don't know. The guy cheated a bunch. And some guys, like Barry Bonds, don't get into the hall ever. They're like, you're going to wait a year. And maybe they could turn this into something really awesome because next year, Gronk is eligible the The year after that, braided is eligible.

00:11:32

And sitting waiting is Rodney Harrison, Vince Willfork, and Adam Vinatari. So I want to turn a negative into a positive. The NFL should this offseason be like, Hey, by the way, new rule. If you have more than five Super Bowl rings, you don't have to wait the five years to be eligible. Braided, you're eligible next year. And next year, the Hall of Fame class can be a celebration of the greatest dynasty ever. Bella That gets in on the contributor list. Braided, Grank, Vinatari, Harrison, Wilfork, just an all-Patriots class, a big Patriots party. This is actually something that I ran by Grank a couple of months ago when I first thought of it. He cosigns on it. So that's fine, and that's a way to write the wrong here. But the guy cheated a bunch, so he has to wait a year. I'm not as horrified by it as others.

00:12:23

I heard David Samson posit that maybe this has more to do with Robert Kraft than the cheating allegations and confirmed cases of cheating that Robert Kraft didn't exactly want to go in potentially in the same class as Bill Belichick because that makes it uncomfortable for him. Do you make anything of that?

00:12:41

Listen, I think there might be something to that. I would say, absent the cheating, Belichick is ahead of the queue. Belichick should be prioritized ahead of Kraft. I also, Ever since I saw the clip of Samson's, what's the word for it? God awful and factually incorrect LeBron take, I don't really want to use his sports opinions as the standard bearer for what may or may not have happened.

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00:16:48

Dan Levatard.

00:16:49

This is the Quickest It Goes. Hey, this is the Quickest It Goes.

00:16:54

Stugatz.

00:16:55

Everybody, this is the Quickest It Goes.

00:16:58

This is the Levatard show with the Stugatz.

00:17:05

Let's play the sound of Victor Wembenyama, who I thought has better on this subject than any athletes that I've heard in America, Wembeya. You know what? Brianna Stewart was also very good on this subject. But in the NBA, I hadn't heard the subject of Minnesota tackled this well by anybody until Wembeya tackled it. Let's play that sound for nick.

00:17:30

Pr has tried, but I'm not going to sit here and give some politically correct. Every day I wake up and see the news and I'm horrified. I think it's crazy that some people might make it sound like it's acceptable, like the murder of a civilian is acceptable. Every day, I read the news and sometimes I'm asking very deep questions about my own life. But I'm conscious also that saying everything that's on my mind would have a cost that's too great for me right now. So I'd rather not get into too many details. Is that a big factor in this, that people have that fear that if they speak openly about an injustice they see, there can be repercussions? For sure. It's terrible. I know I'm a foreigner. I live in this country. I am concerned, for sure.

00:18:40

Is that part of your hesitance, being a foreigner? Does that play into your- Oh, for sure.

00:18:46

For sure. I mean, it's... Yeah.

00:18:49

So a lot of things interesting there about his hesitance there, nick, including him starting with, PR doesn't want me to do any of this.

00:18:56

Yeah, that was interesting. And there's a lot of pieces to his response about whether or not he was... I'm curious with the Spurs, who I understand pop is no longer front and center with the team, and he's dealing with what I think is fair to say, some health issues. But it feels like they were one of, if not the most, alongside the Warriors, progressive, outspoken organizations, certainly when he was at the helm. There's a million ways to go about this. And I know, Dan, that I've said I have a heart out. Let's stay 10 minutes here on this, and then I'll push my heart out if you guys are interested. Here is the way I would like to tackle this. Because just like everybody saw the video a few weeks ago with Renee Good, everybody saw the video over the weekend. And that video is as close to an 80/20 topic as we can get in America these days. There are no 90/10s. There are no 99 to ones. There are none. 80/20 is as good as we can do. And that video, I think, is pretty damn close to an 80/20. So I think everybody, not everybody, but the the majority agree that what happened in that video is horrifying.

00:20:33

What is happening alongside it, and some of this is almost humorous, it's so galling, and some of it is just outright horrifying, is the ticking off of what are our constitutional protections one by one on the amendments. So if I may just do a bit of a civics lesson, I guess. The first amendment amendment, which is about, among other things, freedom of the press, freedom of speech, and freedom to protest impeasibly assemble. That is in certain quarters of the country right now, not in effect. The press are getting smokebombed and gassed, just like the protestors on the sidewalk. And we have federal agents saying to people, raise your voice, and I will erase your voice. So First Amendment, really not actually in effect in certain quadrants of the country right now. The Second Amendment, which I have had to my entire adult life, sit and swallow that the Second Amendment is so sacrosanct that we must accept the cost of school shootings. Because while tragic, there may one day be a day where the federal government comes for us and we must be prepared to resist that. Now, forget what I believe to be some logical fallacies in that, but that has been the gist of the argument.

00:22:25

And now we see the federal government saying, well, your second amendment rights don't apply if you are annoying us, even if they apply in every other way. So that's the first two. The third amendment the forgotten amendment, that's the no quartering of soldiers. I'm not sure if this one's hanging by a thread, but I do know there was a hotel in Minneapolis that was like, we don't want your agents here. And the federal government's like, you can't do that. We're going to get your license ripped. So that at least, is borderline. Obviously, Fourth Amendment, no illegal search and seizure. That shit don't apply at all anymore. Show me your papers. Fifth Amendment, And by the way, we don't really need a signed judicial warrant to come into your house. Fifth Amendment, again, the show me your paper stuff, which is, I don't have to talk to you. Yeah, you do, actually. And then the sixth and seventh are about right to a fair trial. And what we're seeing is, man, you may not get to trial. The trial might be a pissed off the wrong guy in the street. That's one through seven, pretty important ones.

00:23:44

And It is utterly galling that the mission creep, and maybe it's not creep, has gotten to this point already, that we are 373 three days in, and we're already to the point to where we're parsing which of the amendments are still fully strong. The repeal of Prohibition, as strong as it was a year ago, women's right to vote as strong as it was a year ago. But those first seven on shakey-er ground. And that should be concerning to everybody that claims to love this country.

00:24:31

I can't believe you chose to talk about Belichick first when that's the one you wanted to talk about. What judgment is that from you? I trust your judgment on these things. I'm sitting here, I'm following you. And then it becomes, Oh, we'll blow my heart out. Never mind about my heart out. I was real worried about my heart out, but never mind. This is the one I want to talk about.

00:24:49

Okay, well, a couple of things. If we're going to talk about judgment, you saying like, Hey, spin the wheel. What would you like to talk about? Something that actually greatly affects our democracy or whether or not this guy got into the Hall of Fame. You could have just steered us one direction. But I, on the other hand, decided, You know what? I wanted to see Cody's reaction to the Captain Easy stance take. I wanted to smile. It's been a bad 72 hours. So I do that. But yeah, I mean, listen, we're in a... And I said this to you privately, I think. I'll say it publicly before I go. I do believe that, as people say, elections have consequences. And I do believe right or wrong, not even right or wrong, even if I hate it, We, as a country, did vote for mass deportations. They didn't slide that in under the wire. They held signs up at rally saying that's what they were going to do. And they got elected, and they did And you know what? Fair is fair. I can hate it. I can say that's not what I... But I lost.

00:26:07

So be it. And anybody that can just put pencil to paper on what that meant, the scale of it had to know it was going to be horrifying. And that, I actually think, as much as I dislike it, is fair play. They They said they were going to do it. They ran on that platform. They won. So be it. I've got to stomach it. At no point did they say that those of us that don't like it would then have to do, whether it is the math I think Victor Windman-Yamma is doing or the math Alex Pretty was doing, which is how much of my own personal constitutional rights or safety am I putting in jeopardy by expressing my objection? At no point was that put to a vote. And it is beyond galling to me that there is a real, effective, chilling effect of if you have a voice voice, and you want to be on the record opposing this stuff, and you want to do it in this platform, that they might find ways to make your life more difficult result. And if you want to do it in person, you need to be prepared that whatever you thought were the rules of engagement are off.

00:27:56

And I give Alex Pretty credit because Because he knew that because, reportedly, a week before, they broke one of his ribs. And he still stood there and said, You're not going to shove this woman down. And the Wall Street Journal can say he foolishly assisted a woman who got shoved down and assaulted for exercising her constitutionally protected rights. I did not look at that as a foolish act. I looked at that as a human act. And And he got shot nearly a dozen times for it. I know I got to go. Sorry.

00:28:37

No, I was just going to say, I thought you nailed the discount. So he's the host of FS1's First Things First. He's very good on this subject matter and most subject matter, except whether cold weather makes you tough. He's also the host of What's Right with nick Wright, the podcast. It's also with his son. Thank you, nick. We will talk to you.

00:28:54

Talk to you soon. And by the way, cold weather makes you tough. Look at how tough those people are up in Minneapolis right now. Bam. Argue with that. Now you can't because I got a.

00:29:02

That's right. You did. Bye, Dano. Yes. See you later.

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00:31:03

The WMDBE video and audio, to me, is heartbreaking for a number of different reasons, okay? But if this guy doesn't feel safe to have power to just say what he wants when he's mature enough and evolved enough to have his own thoughts and the pressure from outside. And when I say outside, the pressure from inside, too. The pressure everywhere makes it for, Nobody wants me to do this. There are consequences to this. I want to play this sound again because you understand, I hope, that while we were talking about Anthony Edwards and John Marant as face of the league, if this guy stays healthy, this is going to be what replaces LeBron, and we start with him scared in America as a foreigner to just speak freely about what he thinks with this country's pressures on him and his own PR staff being like, Do you really want talk about this? So let's just play this sound again because he's among the most powerful among us. He's been rewarded in every way to have strength with that power, and he's being discouraged in a way that's obvious to show you what that power is supposed to sound like.

00:32:16

Pr has tried, but I'm not going to sit here and give some politically correct. Every day I wake up and see the news and I'm horrified. I think it's crazy that some people might make it sound like it's acceptable, like the murder of a civilian is acceptable. Every day, I read the news For some reason, sometimes I'm asking very deep questions about my own life. But I'm conscious also that saying everything that's on my mind would have a cost that's too great for me right now. So I'd rather not get into too many details. Is that a big factor in this, that people have that fear that if they speak openly about an injustice, they see there can be repercussions? For sure. It's terrible. I know I'm a foreigner. I live in this country. I am concerned, for sure.

00:33:26

Is that part of your hesitance, being a foreigner?

00:33:30

Does that play into your-Oh, for sure. For sure. I mean, it's... Yeah.

00:33:34

There are a number of things about the last 10 years that make me feel left behind. But hearing an athlete at the height of his powers scared to say the words the murder of civilians, not acceptable. That's the most obvious opinion that he could give, and he's scared to give an obvious opinion in America and being dissuaded from it by both fear and the organization that he works for.

00:34:02

Right. It's flabbergasting. Is he afraid of ICE? Is he afraid of sponsors leaving him over this?

00:34:11

Unknown consequences.

00:34:12

No matter what they are, this guy He's in a position to really be a role model and a leader at his young age if he's willing to take on that responsibility.

00:34:21

But there's nothing controversial about what he's saying.

00:34:24

Shouldn't be. You're right.

00:34:25

It shouldn't be, but it is controversial because of how the discourse has been framed.

00:34:31

No, but it's not because of what Nick's saying. If your starting point is understanding, there's not going to be 100% anymore. That day's dead. It's always going to be 80/20. If you're with the 80, it's not controversial. Saying that is just I'm not saying there's not bravery in it.

00:34:47

I think that's a blanket statement. No, because even if you occupy the 80, there are a lot of people that say there needs to be a division between politics and sport. There are numbers, people that say, No, this stuff really affects our business. I I think that's what he's alluding to. And I think the 20 %, they've lived a charmed existence with sports over the last few years because they won that. They won that. Progressives, their voices dwindled. They were told to shut up. Anthem protests, that all stopped. Meanwhile, the 20 % that you occupy, you just got to eat it when Donald Trump shows up to the Dayton 500. You just got to eat it when Donald Trump parades around with athletes inside the White House as further propagandizes and normalizes this behavior and gets cosigns from it, or when he shows up to golf competitions, or when he shows up to national championship games, or regionally-specific college football games. It changed. It changed on our watch, too. We were impacted by the progressive talk around here. They won, and I'm encouraged. As terrifying as it is to see Wimbun Yama basically talk about our country as if it's China.

00:36:00

I'm encouraged by these voices starting to come out and say, We're not going to be silenced anymore.

00:36:03

But when you say, though, something has changed, here is what cannot change. The murder of civilians is not acceptable. That's not a controversial statement. That's not a controversial statement when it starts with the murder.

00:36:22

Right. Well, think of where we were six years ago when the George Floyd stuff was happening, sports shut down. All of them. There were a couple of hockey games being played until they realized, Hey, everybody else is stopping. We should stop, too. That didn't really happen. There was one basketball game. That's how much things have changed. Before, social causes would actually stop sport. And the business keeps moving on because of the callous it's developed over the last few years with numbers and business people and people that complain about, Keep politics out of sports, but it's okay when it's my politics actually making a difference.

00:37:00

We've gone from, just to be clear, the last five years, we've gone from during the pandemic, wearing all of the social messages on the jerseys to most powerful player in the sport or one of the most powerful players in the sport, afraid to say, with Every governance around him telling him, Don't say it, afraid to say the murder of civilians is not acceptable. Okay, you're good with that? Everybody good with that? Is anyone good with that? Because that doesn't seem to be a reasonable place where any reasonable people who believe in freedom or safety would live.

00:37:31

Go woke, go broke. That was the whole thing. People didn't want to see group economics and education reform scoring 25 points in an MBA bubble. We moved the line so much that they don't even pay attention to their bogus opinions on it, because as long as it's their politics and their sport, they're okay with it.

00:37:51

I mean, sports has the ability and the power to be pretty influential here. Think about it. All of the major league, NFL, NBA, NHL, MLS, all of them, WNBA, could come out with a joint statement, abhorring what's going on.

00:38:06

Yeah, but there's no way to be influential if your primary need is always to protect business.

00:38:10

The NHL did the math. That's it. The NHL did the math. Right across town in Minneapolis, the Timberwolves canceled their game.

00:38:16

And the Panthers played that night.

00:38:18

Sixteen miles away in Saint Paul, they decided, Let's push through. Did they even put out a statement?

00:38:23

I don't believe so.

00:38:24

So let's lighten this up just slightly here because I sent Jeremy away about an hour to work on a whiteboard where he has just a little bit of trade talk that he wants to talk about because the trade deadline is approaching. This is obviously the Sorbet, the palate cleanser that human beings who want just sports, just sports. Don't tell me what Wemby thinks about murder or civilians. Just give me the latest transaction. Jeremy is here for you. That board, of course, seems terribly inefficient. Where do we start with your NBA Trade Deadline Board as the NBA Trade Deadline is next week on Thursday. Bored, B-O-R-E-D. Go ahead.

00:39:11

You don't want my comments on Wemby and what he said in the state of democracy? All right. Yannis Antetokounmpo. He is the big fulcrum of this entire trade deadline, right? He's the guy that everybody wants. We're not sure if he's going to be moved. And all of these salaries and teams could potentially play into what happens here. Obviously, the heat to want Yannis. And what will that offer look like for Giannis? They can only offer a 2030 pick and a 2032 pick, given the circumstances of that 2027 pick heading over to the Charlotte Hornets. But it's top 14 protected, which means that it could be in 2028. You're not allowed to go back to back years where you don't have your pick. And so in turn, the only tradable assets there are 2030 and 2032. Could the heat potentially acquire another pick to be able to move from there. So Jonathan Kaminga. There's rumors that Jonathan Kaminga and Andrew Wiggens, an expiring contract with a player option, could be a swap with the Warriors, in which the heat would acquire a first-round pick. The Warriors have all of their picks. Another potential asset for the Warriors is the injured Jimmy Butler because he could be a tank commander.

00:40:20

You could trade him for other salary that's potentially expiring or useful players to pair along with Steph Curry, maybe to a team like the Pelican or the Hawks. Obviously, with the Pelicans and the Hawks, you have no trade that's going with Trey Murphy.

00:40:37

That was an important part, Dan. The Pelicans and the Hawks, the first-round pigs in the mids.

00:40:41

I'm into this.

00:40:43

Okay, you want more of this?

00:40:44

It's a little bit. Let's get to the good part.

00:40:46

He's getting to the good part? Yeah. I can't read any of the names on the board. They're too small on the board.

00:40:52

That's true. The Blazers, the interesting part about the Blazers, Stan, is that they have swaps in 2028 and 2030 and the first-round pick with Milwaukee. No, this is interesting because it goes a long-Come back to me when he's interesting.

00:41:06

In the interim, let's have Greg Cody fill out a ballot and see if that ballot is something that he remembers all the names to at the end of the show because he's an older gentleman.

00:41:16

Okay, so what's the best way to do this?

00:41:17

Because I feel like Greg should fill out the ballot here, but he doesn't actually say on the air right now who he's selecting.

00:41:26

The reveal comes in the end when we test him and ask him, did you vote for so and so?

00:41:31

I think the reveal on the end is probably the pain of.

00:41:33

Okay, yeah, I've glanced at the ballot. There's a lot of names on there. The one thing I'll tell you as a caveat is I'm going to vote for very few people on that ballot because I don't have the time to do my due diligence.

00:41:47

And the Hawks. In the Hawks, in 2026, New Orleans or Milwaukee's pick is going to go to Atlanta. And that's the part that's really interesting because- That's the big part, Dan. If you see this pick where that Milwaukee pick, Milwaukee is probably going to go- Oh, no, no, no.

00:42:03

Put them on. No, no. Greg, give us more information on your ballot.

00:42:06

Just like in baseball, I'm famous for doing my due diligence on my Cooperstown ballot. That's why they haven't taken my ballot away. Despite protestations from Lebitard. But in the case of this ballot, I don't have time to correctly reflect exactly who deserves and who doesn't deserve on a long ballot.

00:42:27

He has its own 2026 pick. And if they have their own 2026 pick, that's because New Orleans is worse than Milwaukee. That one goes to Atlanta. And when you have the 2026 pick for Milwaukee staying with themselves, they're incentivized to take. No, wait.

00:42:41

The people I have voted for are the ones that jumped out at me as obvious first ballot guys. Okay, so those are the ones that I'm voting for on this ballot.

00:42:51

So you have the 2026 pick of Milwaukee staying with them, which incentivizes them to tank. So if they give up Yannis, they could potentially take off if Yannis moves to the heat. I don't know when you're talking to me, when you're talking to Greg, in the air, it's all the same. Fade his eyes out. Carl Anthony Towns, he's a potential...

00:43:11

Oh, God.

Episode description

"Bam! You can't argue with that."

Nick Wright is here to discuss why the Dolphins aren't tough, his stance on Bill Belichick being snubbed from the Hall of Fame, and Victor Wembanyama's comments on where we stand in this country. Plus, we dive into the potential hectic week ahead with the NBA's Trade Deadline, with Jeremy standing at the whiteboard.
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