Cottman,Crawford and the Jersey guy.

Debating GOATs and Evolving Game Rules: The Passion, Rivalries, and Future of Sports Fandom

Keny, Louis, Tom Season 3 Episode 27

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Ever wondered how a Yankees fan can be indifferent to sports? Join us as Keny, Louis , and Tom—aka the Jersey Guy—bring you a rollicking discussion on everything from the ongoing Olympics to fierce rivalries between Mets and Yankees fans. Our friend Steve, a passionate sports aficionado, chimes in as we dissect how legends like Tom Brady and LeBron James have shaped their sports, sparked rule changes, and influenced the prima donna narrative. Get ready for a blend of personal insights, humor, and spirited debates that highlight the diversity of sports fandom.

Imagine comparing LeBron James to Michael Jordan or Kobe Bryant—can you really call him the GOAT? As we navigate through the evolution of sports legends, we question how extended seasons and game changes have affected record-breaking achievements in baseball. The conversation dives into the intricacies of comparing athletes across different eras, considering factors like athleticism, competition, and game conditions. We recognize the complexities and biases inherent in such comparisons, making for a compelling discussion on what truly defines greatness in sports.

Remember your first love affair with a football team? From the allure of the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders to the agony of being a New York Jets fan, we take a nostalgic journey through the emotional highs and lows of football fandom. We explore the evolution of sports broadcasting and the convenience of modern viewing options like NFL RedZone. Finally, we shift our focus to the Olympics, the evolution of athletes' conditioning, and the economic and infrastructural impacts of hosting the games. The episode ends with a light-hearted reflection on how technology and fitness are reshaping sports, from esports to drone racing, proving that the world of sports is ever-evolving and endlessly fascinating.

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Speaker 1:

Cotman, crawford and the Jersey Guy podcast.

Speaker 2:

Hey everybody, kenny Cotman, lewis Crawford.

Speaker 1:

And I'm Tom Ramage, the Jersey Guy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, what's up, what's up.

Speaker 1:

What's going on, gentlemen? What's going on? Everybody, how's everything, how are?

Speaker 2:

you.

Speaker 3:

Good, all right, everybody good. Yeah, real good, real good, welcome right.

Speaker 2:

Everybody good.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, real good, real good Welcome back.

Speaker 2:

Thank you very much.

Speaker 4:

We've got a friend here, steve again with us. Yeah, we've got a good video yeah yeah, yeah, now you know what it looks like he. We'd have him back again for sports, yup Cause I know he was a big sports fan. He's a baseball fan. I know he's watching the Olympics. I know I'm watching the Olympics. So while that's going on, I thought that would be a good topic to talk about, especially now that the Olympics are going on.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, definitely, sports are always good, always, for sure.

Speaker 2:

Talking about sports all the time. Yeah, I. So I was like ugh.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's a good thing I'm wearing all black because I'm the black sheep of the group.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you see, because I'm not a big sports guy. You know what I mean.

Speaker 1:

But it's good, I'll give my point of view you know, yeah, man no.

Speaker 4:

But he is a Yankee fan. I am a Yankee fan.

Speaker 1:

I have periods in my life when I was into maybe a certain sport or guy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I'm more of the football, I'm not too much into baseball.

Speaker 3:

I know you guys are heavy baseball, football, baseball, that's number one for me yeah, oh, hockey, right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I'm football, um uh, not so much baseball, but I'm a mets, fan, brought up raised some would say, some of us would say that's not really baseball yeah, yeah, pretty much so you're kind of like a bandwagon thing, so when they're doing good you might be like oh, no, no, no.

Speaker 2:

I always rep mets, no matter what. Okay, I'll talk shit about yankees and everybody else all day long. I always represent the mets, never anybody else, right, you know, for baseball, um, but you know, so it's not joining the. You know, jumping on the bandwagon I just always. I just don't follow them enough, like I almost feel like I'm like superstitions because I'm like, oh, I don't want to watch them because then they're going to end up losing for real.

Speaker 3:

I think everybody does. I just hear about it. The reality is, being a Mets fan, there's not too many times we get to jump on a bandwagon. Yeah, yeah, yeah no way.

Speaker 4:

Pretty much Years in between. I and they suck, and just for me if they're doing good at watch, but as soon as I see them playing hard, I just shut it off. I don't even bother to put myself through that torture, through the whole game. I'll watch a giant game or another football game just to watch. I kind of flip through football Hockey.

Speaker 2:

I'm watching Hockey Week all the way through.

Speaker 4:

It's like one of my favorite sports for sure.

Speaker 1:

And you of my favorite sports for sure, and you said you don't watch none. No, I mean, I I watched yankees for a while and then after, like the whole, like I think, like jeter was like the last person to retire from okay, yeah I kind of stopped getting into it after, I don't know right and it was a lot of judge fans and stuff like that oh, he's, yeah, yeah and it's funny because I I, if I saw him in the street, I wouldn't know, right yeah, he'd be a really tall guy.

Speaker 3:

I would be like that guy's really tall. I would be like that's Mike Judge. Oh okay, aaron Judge, mike Judge.

Speaker 2:

Mike Judge is a family guy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm thinking of Beavis and Butthead.

Speaker 4:

Beavis and Butthead. That's freaking great. That's how really bad.

Speaker 1:

I am Like I said, I don't watch it Well.

Speaker 2:

So then, if you guys don't mind, I'd like to start off with a question for you guys Well, most of you guys because you're into it more. So I said the reason why I fell off of really watching, like so, football, Football is my number one. I stopped watching so much because of Brady.

Speaker 4:

I can't stand, he's not playing anymore.

Speaker 2:

Listen, linda of Brady, I can't stand. Listen, linda, I can't stand Brady. Can't stand Brady, because I feel like he has taken away what the game was. And then now basketball, lebron is doing the same thing. You know what I mean? It's like just flailing on the floor. Are you serious? And, brady, you've got the floor. And it's like, are you serious, you know? And Brady, you know, you've got the ball.

Speaker 3:

You're the quarterback. They're trying to get you.

Speaker 2:

They changed rules for him Right and they changed and all that stuff. So then now with baseball. I said I don't follow baseball the same way, but is there? Are there, like you know he strikes out he strikes out. Yeah, like the prima donna, he strikes out. They're throwing the bats or whatever it's not like that.

Speaker 4:

In baseball you can't, because it's a team more of a. Well, basketball is too right, I mean, but with baseball I don't know if you can change rules because of a certain player well, they did the catcher rule a number of years back when Buster Posey got that one?

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's right that one. He got trampled At home, right he got. He got mowed down.

Speaker 3:

And also In 2015. Was it 2015 when Ruben Tejada Of the Mets Right Got taken out?

Speaker 4:

Of second base Right. So now the catch has to Kind of move out of the way Now, right.

Speaker 2:

They can't block the plate Unless they have the ball, unless they have the ball, unless they have the ball.

Speaker 1:

Okay, both leagues national and yeah MLB it's not because I know there's some rules with National League and American.

Speaker 4:

League. Yeah, no, well, that's different as far as you know, you can? I think you could have a pitch hitter in American League, but you can't in no, no, everything's.

Speaker 3:

It's just one set of baseball rules oh, now it's all the way through. Now they did change it a With interleague play, they just kind of change.

Speaker 1:

All right, fine, there's not even so. The pitchers don't bat anymore.

Speaker 3:

No pitchers bat anymore. Yeah, Okay.

Speaker 1:

And there used to be like American.

Speaker 4:

League and National League up days, except for one on the Angels.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but not when he's pitching Not when he's pitching. I don't think so I don't think when he's pitching.

Speaker 1:

Are you sure? Yeah, so that's cool.

Speaker 2:

See, I was a little bit behind on that.

Speaker 3:

Right yeah yeah.

Speaker 4:

It took them so long to get there, and that was the only reason why I didn't realize that they did it. I didn't realize they did it.

Speaker 3:

Well, it added players, it gave another player, so like an older player who was no longer effective in the field but still can hit, like the Mets have JD Martinez Right, he's a great hitter a lot of guys really good hitters, so they, they keep, keep an extra player. There's an extra player that they that doesn't lose a job because he can't play the field anymore, so they basically just took over American League rules mostly yeah, yeah, okay alright now also in baseball.

Speaker 4:

They did this too. If you go into extra innings, they put a guy on second, which I hate. So like if it's extra innings, it's extra innings Right, yeah, but now they put the guy on second so they score quicker, and then the game is over. Obviously, home team gets the last lick, so they get up in their head.

Speaker 2:

So then now you say that the new rules they put in this year right, because this is the first season that they're doing it, that the game is shorter.

Speaker 3:

No, they started that last year or two years ago. But the games are much shorter. Because, of the pitching. Well, because there's the pitch clock, the batter has to be in ready to hit at a certain amount of time. I forget what it is.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, he can't do what Cheetah used to do Do his gloves all the time. Remember Noam Darcy-Parrott with the yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Stuff like that. That's superstition. Yeah, but they cut that out. But they can't do that anymore. Yeah, they cut it out.

Speaker 3:

I think they get one. You get one timeout per bat, so like if you're coming low on the clock, the batter can call a timeout and he gets to step out and then he can mess around with his gloves and his bat and his helmet and all that stuff. But it does speed it up quite a bit.

Speaker 2:

Now is it making it more exciting Because I said I haven't watched.

Speaker 4:

Listen, when the games are good, they're good. Then you like the game, and usually it doesn't go in extremes Make an extra game. So then you're fine with that. But I think the thing I like we were talking about baseball with, like you were saying like when Brady got hit Right, yeah, lebron, the thing with me with baseball players I'm sorry, but hockey players and football players are probably the toughest Hockey definitely.

Speaker 4:

Hockey definitely Baseball players. They hurt a toe and they're out for three weeks. Yeah, and it's bullshit to me, right? I'm like really, yeah, tape that shit up, put it in. You're making a lot of money, I'm serious. Yeah, I'm with you, bro. And then look at these gymnasts in the Olympics. Yes, they tape their legs up. They're doing all these crazy flips. I mean it's unbelievable.

Speaker 2:

And a baseball player is out for three weeks because, oh he has an oblique pull or come on.

Speaker 4:

You're not going to tell me those guys back in the day when they were playing ball Right, yeah, they had to and they played through.

Speaker 1:

I know their mentality is can be at 99%.

Speaker 3:

You can have a. I'm 99.3%. I've got to wait.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, exactly, but then now. So there was the thing that was being said about them taking. I can say that they pulled a hammy or whatever and it really wasn't. They just wanted to take days off, because they.

Speaker 4:

Well, you can always ask the manager take days off because they? Well, you can always ask the manager.

Speaker 2:

Well, I, was just saying, but I thought it was a thing that they weren't supposed to get, like a day off or whatever.

Speaker 4:

They just got to come and play. No, no, no. Most players like Judge. They'll either make him the DH and then someone will play the outfield.

Speaker 2:

That's his day off. All he's doing is hitting.

Speaker 4:

Or he won't play at all.

Speaker 3:

A lot of times they do with catchers too or older players. But then you get guys, like you know, again, I'm a Mets guy so I can talk Mets all day. But like Francisco Lindor, I mean he averages 160 games a year. So I mean he misses two games. Guy did something to his finger last year too. He hit it in between sliding glass doors, couldn't bend it. He missed like one game. So I mean, that's it. These guys, they, some guys are gamers and they play all the time they play through it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and I think sometimes it also depends on your contract too. I mean, if you're a star with a big contract and you need a day off, you're taking it off. If you're a young player who's looking to get a big contract and show what, you can do.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you're going to have hanging out and you're playing. You're playing every day. Put me in, coach. I'm good, that is great. Yeah, All right, Kubi. Those are my questions.

Speaker 3:

I hate defending LeBron because he's become like that big, whiny baby. But one thing we got to say about LeBron is he's been in the league for how long? Now 20 years, never a scandal. You never hear that he's at strip clubs cheating on his wife. You never hear that he's involved in drugs or gambling. You never hear. You never hear any bad stuff. Okay, I'll give you that. He donates millions of dollars to charity. I think there's. I think every year, like there's, he has a college or a school where everyone goes for free.

Speaker 2:

Okay, um, in cleveland right like as far as being a good guy, yeah no, no, no, I'm not talking about yeah, but he's become a bit of a bitch. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm not talking about that. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

But, like you're saying, he's kind of like that, very like stand-up person, yeah, like Jeter or Jordan, right yeah.

Speaker 2:

So my question is has he just said I can't even think of the words without sounding totally like messed up, you know, I mean I just think he's the bitch of the basketball court. You know you're there, you're playing basketball, you play a play a little bit harder. You know you're a big dude, you know you're coming through the paint.

Speaker 4:

Get in there, hit that layup don't sit there and you know, I didn't know that.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, I didn't know that about, yeah, I'm not a big basketball fan, yeah, and as far as he for me, and as far as lebron is concerned, is that lebron, a lot of his early years was being carried by some of the greats, you know what? What I mean? Him getting in, he played with Kobe.

Speaker 1:

He played with Jordan.

Speaker 2:

Like they're the ones that he was a good player I'm not saying he wasn't, but to what it is now, I think he fell off. You know he doesn't have that Like calling him a goat. There's no way, on God's being nerfed that this man is one of the greatest players of all time. He's not that kind of good.

Speaker 4:

Well, he some would argue with you. Obviously, exactly when you bring up jordan, people say like I remember watching shack talking to I forgot what player he was talking to, but he was on uh, I think it might have been espn or something and the guy was talking about lebron, right, and then he's like, and then he was comparing him to jordan, right, and and he was like yeah, no, no.

Speaker 3:

I think he said something like LeBron is great, but he's not as good as Jordan nobody was as good as Jordan.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, the second person to come as close as Jordan would be Kobe. You know what I'm saying and then you can go down the line.

Speaker 4:

Actually because each generation at the time, or they, you know, there was always another player, or somebody yeah, or a few yeah yeah, yeah, I'm sorry, that's like a legendary status, right?

Speaker 2:

yeah, exactly for all that they did but then if you look at what, how they played, so the same thing, I guess, is you know, even with baseball, you know, like I think, that they are giving a lot of these players way too much credit, because, as far as breaking records are concerned, if I'm correct me, if I'm wrong, the, the seasons were shorter back when. Yeah, so then all that they did in a shorter season, that's a record breaking in any sport.

Speaker 1:

As far as I'm concerned, you know what I mean, or the short the season much longer right.

Speaker 2:

So of course I've got teams and right yeah, so that then now, if you know a hundred and how many games now.

Speaker 3:

It's 162 in baseball, in baseball.

Speaker 4:

So now you figure what was it originally back in the day I think it was in the like 140s and then they went to 150.

Speaker 3:

But also, I mean, you went from the players weren't as good.

Speaker 4:

I don't you know.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

They weren't as good.

Speaker 4:

But for their time. They were For their time. They were, yes, but compared to now.

Speaker 3:

These guys, no matter what sport, they're bigger, faster, stronger than they've ever been. It's unbelievable.

Speaker 2:

But they're still not breaking those records in the same season time as back when.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, Judge has already. He got the 60. What was it?

Speaker 3:

He got the 60. What was it? He got the 62.

Speaker 2:

Yeah for American League record Right he got it, but was it under the 140?

Speaker 4:

games. No, it was 162 games it was during the season.

Speaker 2:

yeah, but that's what I'm saying so, the 140 games back when? And who's holding the records? The record for the most home runs.

Speaker 4:

Babe Ruth.

Speaker 2:

All right, and he did it in 140 season game 140 games, you mean 140 games in a season, right?

Speaker 3:

So then now, or whatever it was back then Right, he was also playing against subpar competition in the next day.

Speaker 4:

So and then you got, you're right. And again for that time those players were the best for that.

Speaker 2:

Time'm just saying for me and how it registers in my head.

Speaker 3:

I think it's impossible to really compare. Can you imagine that? Yeah, you can't compare it.

Speaker 4:

You can't Because it's the same with hockey. It's the same with football. If you look at players, even in football when we were growing up, compared to now, the players are faster, they're bigger, they're.

Speaker 2:

For that time. They were faster, they were bigger, they were stronger.

Speaker 1:

They had better scouts. Now too.

Speaker 4:

The equipment changed, the rules were different and everything progressed and changed a little bit to make the game a little better or whatever it was, or safer for the players. But I don't compare like that because when I see Judge do it and he's doing it in 162 games- it is what it is, yeah I hear you.

Speaker 2:

I just don't, I don't agree with it is what I'm going to say I'm with that.

Speaker 4:

You gotta say he's breaking the record with more games.

Speaker 2:

So you have okay I right I can run a mile right and you're telling me that now I've and I can't do the the 10 minute mile 18 20, you would have been an olympic gold medalist you feel me right, and that's what I'm saying but it was a shorter amount of time. Like I said, I can do anything and and I can do whatever and, and you know, 15 minutes and I'm gonna be good at it practicing at this 15 minutes but see that comparison one second time.

Speaker 4:

That comparison for me doesn't work because when players were playing at the time, even in the Olympics back in the day, people who did marathons, whatever it was, triathlons, everything, for that time, everything progresses. We get better as we move on Right, whether it's physically, mentally, both Right. The food gets better, like Tom was just saying. You know, weight training, weight training, everything. We've got to remember baseball players back in the day when they were doing it. They had jobs during the wintertime.

Speaker 3:

That's what I was going to say. Football players too, Football players too, and they got in shape during spring training and preseason. Whereas now they're in shape 365 days a year. Right.

Speaker 4:

And they're getting more injured now than they did before because I think back then they didn't get as injured and if they did, they didn't say anything and they played through it.

Speaker 3:

So it's going back to what we were saying earlier. Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 1:

So yeah.

Speaker 4:

I'm not. I mean.

Speaker 1:

I understand your point of view but I have a you know kind of overlapping one of our previous episodes recently. But like what, what, if? Could you imagine if, what, what if? Like, like Babe Ruth back in the day, had the knew about the, they had the sports and nutrition fitness Right and actually had him like right now Peak shape, Cause he was like he was a fat

Speaker 4:

guy yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he was in like super peak shape.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, right, like yeah, didn't have to go to his regular job and they didn't know what they knew.

Speaker 1:

Now, right the body yeah, like the records we have today, right, but like, if he was like training and like doing all that stuff with everything we have today, he probably like, and he was probably one of the highest paid baseball baseball player back then.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, what if babe ruth played against the competition that there is today?

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Would he be as good as he is?

Speaker 4:

Would he be able to hit the ball?

Speaker 2:

Hitting 100-mile-an-hour fastballs splitters that drop into hell from a pitcher at 95 miles an hour, curveballs that break 12 to 6.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

We don't know.

Speaker 4:

You don't know. You don't know. That's why I was saying because for me, when you watch those old films and you see how they played, or whatever you appreciate, it for the time, because anyway, that's how they were that time now

Speaker 3:

as time progressed, they got better, because you know the competition too. There was no, there was no black or Hispanic right right, that didn later.

Speaker 2:

On yeah, and was he a drinker and a smoker?

Speaker 4:

oh yeah, he was a big drinker right and he loved to eat. He would eat hot dogs and shit before he played the game right and he'd go and he'd still freaking, hit home runs and run around the bases and do whatever I think he would. Was there also that he would drink during the game, or?

Speaker 3:

something.

Speaker 2:

I think, or something like because of the film Right, right, right, yeah, yeah, yeah. So I'm like, how fast was he really yeah me but. I yeah, that's freaking great, that is so wrong. That is so wrong. That is freaking hilarious.

Speaker 4:

But that is a good. What, if you know, I think about it. But one thing long ago too.

Speaker 1:

That don't forget. Like remember. All the players were like right yes, some still do they were smoking. They got to hide, keith.

Speaker 3:

Hernandez is smoking, the dugout in the past.

Speaker 2:

That's right, did you?

Speaker 3:

see pictures of him sitting in the dugout smoking a cigarette. I forgot about that.

Speaker 4:

He did when they were playing Boston and he thought the game was over. He went inside right.

Speaker 2:

He said he was watching it from the TV and it's hit the ball between Bruckner's legs.

Speaker 4:

Yes, and everybody just started rallying and then all of a sudden he's like holy shit.

Speaker 2:

He had to run, he had to go back into the dugout because he thought they were going to lose the game. He thought it was over. That's awesome, that is funny. You know that is funny. Well, so that was the first half of the show, so I thank you. First half I I had my questions and talk about the sports. So now they said what do you want to talk about? You're the guest.

Speaker 3:

Well, I could talk about baseball.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's it.

Speaker 3:

I love football too. I'm a big Dallas Cowboy fan.

Speaker 2:

Sorry.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you know what? I'm a big Dallas Cowboy fan because when I was about 10, 11, 12 years old, I fell in love with these tiny, tiny, tiny white shorts and this little blue top tied up with a little white vest on it and these gorgeous women just dancing around and kicking their legs and I was like I've got to watch that. I was a prepubescent kid and man oh man, oh man.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they got the cheerleaders. That's awesome.

Speaker 1:

And that was it.

Speaker 4:

I wonder if that's how they became a popular team. No.

Speaker 1:

Dallas liked to add it to their popularity. Maybe I only remember them as being like the only cheerleaders back in the 70s.

Speaker 3:

I mean, it was like 1975, 76 when I started following them and I don't remember any other cheerleaders.

Speaker 4:

Even if the other teams had them, nobody really recognized them the way they did now.

Speaker 3:

They were just so famous and I would get the Dallas Cowboy Weekly. That was my birthday present. My mom and dad would give me a subscription to the Cowboy newspaper that you'd get. I'd get it on Tuesday after the game, so I'd be reading last week's game, but there were pictures of the cheerleaders and as I got older I followed. Now I watch the fucking men.

Speaker 2:

I watch the football game Now. You watch the game and you don't see the cheerleaders. They don't see the cheerleaders, they don't see the cheerleaders they don't see the cheerleaders well they had to get cheerleaders somewhere. They got them somewhere, you know, yeah well that's funny I forget that stuff.

Speaker 1:

You know, it's funny just how we forget so quickly with technology. Like I'm like oh, that's how fans stay connected.

Speaker 3:

They have like the same newspaper, dallas Cowboys, there was a football football digest, but I think back in the Most teams had their own publication. My buddy who's a big Dolphin fan. He got the Dolphin Digest which was a magazine. Mine was a paper.

Speaker 2:

It was like how the post is A newspaper colored and all that stuff.

Speaker 3:

It had recaps of the game, it would preview the upcoming game, which you usually would get it before that game. Again, you have pictures and all that stuff and it was really cool. So I thought, yeah, and, and I just, and you know, you, I remember watching them a lot, but they probably weren't on as much as I thought, Like like nowadays, you know you can go to sports bars, I mean, but I've been going to sports bars since I'm 18 to watch them.

Speaker 4:

And now they got five or six tvs. Yeah, yeah, I love that brother.

Speaker 2:

Oh my god, I love that. Yeah, like you have the.

Speaker 3:

You know, my friend has the, the package. So you can watch that.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, like that, yeah, but yeah what's the channel they have for mlb? Now the one that, or is it football? They they they go tv yeah no, but I'm saying on the channel they do every oh espn uh, it's every red zone.

Speaker 3:

Red zone, yeah, and they go.

Speaker 4:

They just show highlights of every game. Yeah Right, is that what it is Every.

Speaker 3:

Red Zone is 20-yard lines in. So, whenever a team gets into the 20-yard line, that game will flash. Gotcha. They'll go to that game and they'll go from game to game, to game, to game to game and stuff like that, which is, I mean, it's pretty intense to watch, but it's pretty intense to watch. I like watching my team, I mean.

Speaker 2:

I like watching the Cowboys. For me, I Until the playoffs. If they made it that far, then I don't get to watch them that long.

Speaker 4:

Well, you know, I remember my first helmet was a Dallas Cowboys helmet. I had a Dallas Cowboys helmet. Then I wound up, you know, following the Jets and everything. But now I'm boycotting the Jets this year because of like you were saying about players. Oh yeah, I don't want to say his name, you know who I'm talking about the quarterback. I just this guy annoys the shit out of me. Man, it's just. You know, the Jets are always a joke. There's always something going on, some kind of drama, some kind of bullshit, some stupid crap.

Speaker 4:

Then they get this guy who locks himself in a room for three days.

Speaker 3:

He's smarter than everybody. He knows better.

Speaker 4:

Get me wrong when he was playing ball, when he was on.

Speaker 1:

Green Bay, he was playing good.

Speaker 4:

In the beginning I thought, okay, we're going to get him. When he got hurt in the first part of the game, I wasn't even upset.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 4:

I honestly I was like that figures yeah of course, that's the Jets for you.

Speaker 2:

That's the Jets. This is exactly.

Speaker 4:

I knew something was going to happen, because it was just too good to be true. And that's what happened and I was like, yeah, the rest of the season sucks you sure you're not a.

Speaker 2:

That is hilarious, bro. I didn't think I was going to hear you say that.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, no, I would like to be able to watch a football game. So, like the Giants, I'll follow. I'll definitely follow the Giants, you know. But that'd be it. But if there are any other games, I'll just flip through and see the highlights or whatever's going on with the games for Sunday or whatever. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

But you got to also. You got to take sports for what it is it's, it's entertainment right, I can't go crazy at it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean when you're kidding.

Speaker 3:

When we're younger, we do that. I mean, I used to take sports, you know my team lost. I was, I was, you know, I was off the wall.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, and it was it was?

Speaker 3:

it was 2006 when the mets mets lost game seven to the cardinals right in the championship series they lost. I was pissed off, I was crying. I'll say it, I was, I was. I was crying, I at 40 years old or something like that.

Speaker 1:

You get emotionally invested. I told my wife.

Speaker 3:

I said I'm going upstairs to go lay down and I went upstairs and my daughter, who was like two years old, she was lying in the bed sleeping, and I laid down next to her and I just started rubbing her feet and I was like what the fuck am I getting mad about? This is one boy and I love my sports and I root my team, but I do not get.

Speaker 4:

I do not like after the game's over. That's it. I'm just saying I did the same shit, but now I don't do that anymore. You know I don't like what. The range is loose, but you put so much heart into it.

Speaker 1:

You know I, I get it, I get it.

Speaker 3:

And after the game, when, they lose, they go out to fucking dinner yeah they go out, they're like they're having a good time.

Speaker 1:

They go out to dinner. They go out.

Speaker 4:

They're like they go out to dinner.

Speaker 3:

They go to show, as they should.

Speaker 1:

It's a job. It's a job, it's a game. That's what it is.

Speaker 3:

And the fans need to realize that, that it's a game.

Speaker 4:

I think they take it more serious than these guys do. Yeah, definitely, for sure, I think we do.

Speaker 3:

We get so mad when a player gets traded or when the team right, like that Right. It's just, it's all part of the, it's all part of the business for them. It's it is what it is.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, yeah, I'll tell you. You got to sit in my house when we went football seasons and cause I'm a giants fan I appreciate Kansas city, you know, but cause I just like the um bug out with Mahomes and just how he plays or whatever, he's a good player, yeah. And then my wife is a Buffalo Bills fan. So we sit there and I'm just flicking the channels, going back and forth and whatnot to all of them and I'm like no, what the fuck, are you Jesus Christ bitch?

Speaker 4:

And then she's like ha, ha ha.

Speaker 2:

Then I put Dallas on because she's a Dallas fan and I'm just like I told my son.

Speaker 4:

If we wanted we could. If we want, I said, listen if you don't want to follow the Jets anymore because his wife and her family are Buffalo fans.

Speaker 1:

I said technically well, not technically they truly are the only New York team.

Speaker 4:

In football, jets aren't Giants aren't because they play in Jersey, so it doesn't count, but Buffalo is the only one that doesn't. So I was like, yeah, I might go to Buffalo.

Speaker 2:

I might just stop by in Buffalo.

Speaker 4:

But I'm going to have the same heartache anyway, because you know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no yeah.

Speaker 3:

They don't get to the Super Bowl either.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, exactly right, you know what?

Speaker 1:

Bills stands for right.

Speaker 2:

Go ahead.

Speaker 3:

Boy, I like losing.

Speaker 2:

Super Bow. That's good. That's great. That's what used to be the mets was. My entire team sucks. Yeah, yes, that is the funniest shit ever. Man, no, no, listen. I like sports, I like to watch and I I sit on weekends and I'll just flick everything. I'm watching golf, I'm watching car races, I'm watching um bicycle races, motorcycle races, um football, baseball, basketball. I've been watching pickleball, I've been watching lacrosse Cricket. Do you know that United States was like in the finals in cricket? I did not know that.

Speaker 4:

I didn't know that either. Where did they go? Did they medal?

Speaker 2:

No, no, no, no, no, no. I'm talking like national cricket thing, not the Olympics. Is it in the Olympics? Yes, I think it is in the Olympics.

Speaker 4:

We won rugby, the women's rugby won.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, that's another one. I was watching rugby last weekend.

Speaker 4:

I think there was a bronze, if I'm not mistaken, but they medaled, and I think it's either. It's the first time, first medal of the.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know yeah.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 4:

That's a hard game, that is an insane game that looks painful all day long well, that's kind of where football derived from, when you look at it and just how it was that's the thing, right, like the culture is not into rugby in the United States, so there's not like a good selective players because our athletes are going to play football

Speaker 1:

and baseball the athletes aren't playing rugby.

Speaker 4:

So you have a small but a lot of colleges here do play rugby.

Speaker 1:

Yeah yeah, yeah. But I'm saying like the athlete that would have been good for rugby is playing football instead Right right. So it's cool that we got it. So that's a big deal.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, no, it is Rugby's not like a big sport. Yeah, are you guys watching the Olympics at all?

Speaker 2:

I haven't had a chance because I got the new job gig thing and right here and about second job. So, yeah, I haven't been able to sit and watch it tanya's hooked on it.

Speaker 4:

She's especially with the swimming and the gymnastics, you know and uh, well, I know the girl lesky for swimming.

Speaker 2:

Yes, she's swimming, she. I saw the highlights. Oh my god, like does she have a motor on her feet? But she was gone.

Speaker 4:

Francis Francis won a lot. It's kind of went down. They've been splitting them.

Speaker 1:

Francis won, Australia's won and America.

Speaker 4:

Those are the three. Great Britain has got a few too. Have you been watching the Olympics?

Speaker 3:

a little bit.

Speaker 2:

My wife loves the gymnastics we were watching gymnastics last night Simone Biles and Sun Tzu Lee. They were amazing, just how these women can just bounce and flip. I could barely walk up a stair. You can't even paint without getting blasted in the head with a metal soap dish. Sure it was paint.

Speaker 4:

Simone Biles we were talking about it the other night when she's doing the floor routine 12 foot five in the air. Really, that's how high she's getting Jeez, and off the vault it was 12 foot nine or something like that. I mean she's hitting, yeah, she's pure muscle.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she is. You see her build, bro, she's like 48.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like my grandmother.

Speaker 4:

Unbelievable Dude. It's insane. Just amazing how she lands and how they.

Speaker 2:

you know, it's just amazing how she lands and how they you know.

Speaker 4:

So again now, if we go back to what we were talking about with baseball, look at the way the Olympics were back in the day compared to now. The gymnasts were built, the way they are now Swimmers and so on. Everything it's progressed because everything's gotten better as time goes on.

Speaker 3:

So you really can't compare the gymnasts used to be like skinny little girls.

Speaker 2:

Right, I mean they used to they. They stopped them from having puberty right, yeah right to keep them so light and this way they could fly and flexible and other stuff there's a couple of 30 year olds who were actually yeah, or simone biles 27 yeah, she's the oldest um the oldest uh gymnast right now to win gold, all right.

Speaker 4:

39 medals, bro. She's amazing. Yeah, I mean all of it. And then when you watch the swimmers and I'm watching them and they're doing like five or six laps four laps, four by two hundred dude, that's insane and they're doing the breaststroke.

Speaker 2:

Yeah they're talking about freestyle and it's like, oh my god, listen the legs are kicking, they're moving.

Speaker 4:

I'm like you gotta be in the of your life to be able to do this. You're kind of in awe a little bit, you're like wow it's incredible.

Speaker 2:

It is, they are, they're awesome. I said the Olympics is the first time that I haven't watched it consistently. You know what I mean, because I did in the last Olympics. But I'm going to tell you what, man, I'm waiting for the highlights, because that's what I do.

Speaker 4:

I just sit there like yeah for sure.

Speaker 1:

Peacock has the something of the day Right.

Speaker 3:

I was watching the men swimming the other day, just a freestyle, and they're going so fast and so powerful that it was like cartoon-like, like how they were almost like floating on top of the water Right. Like rather than like, you know. I swim, but like chopping through the water.

Speaker 2:

Right, so smooth though.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's crazy because they got the movements down.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, it's insane, bro, and they're doing it all right. They're training all year long, a couple of years, or whatever. It is right yeah.

Speaker 4:

Certain countries can do it. I think they do it all the time, like Russia's one, that they probably. I think they train all and now. That's why you can get professionals in the Olympics now, right, because baseball's in the Olympics now too, isn't?

Speaker 2:

it. I think it always has. Now they let in the actual sportsmen, like you know. What is it like? The Professionals? Yeah, professionals.

Speaker 4:

Are they doing baseball? I thought they were.

Speaker 2:

I thought they were too. I thought they were. No, don't.

Speaker 4:

What do they do? They do basketball. What do they do they?

Speaker 3:

do basketball, they do basketball, they do basketball. I could have sworn, they did it. Tennis, tennis.

Speaker 2:

Golf, golf, yep, yeah, I'm pretty sure they do baseball.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm going to have to check on that, because it's baseball season now, so unless it's college.

Speaker 4:

Hockey College. Oh yeah, but that's winter. That's winter around like the old star break or something like that, where these guys can go, but a lot of them go and then they come back so they're not actually on the team, but I think they they actually stopped them from doing it once and then they allowed them to do it again.

Speaker 3:

Break, just like every two years or every four. Is it every four years for?

Speaker 2:

the every four years they may have.

Speaker 3:

You might be right that they let them, for there's a break for them to be able to do that yeah, because it's every two years there's an Olympics Right.

Speaker 4:

You know the winter and then the summer. Right, it used to be every four.

Speaker 2:

Right, yeah, so I looked it up, yeah, yeah, yeah, it was every four years was the winter.

Speaker 4:

They'd have the summer and the winter and the summer Right, yeah, and then they switched it up, yeah every two. Which actually is not a bad idea.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm digging it.

Speaker 4:

Right, so there you go again. So now they changed it in order for it, so it could be done more often, you know entertaining. Yeah, right, exactly.

Speaker 1:

There's also a business end to it.

Speaker 3:

I think the networks get a couple of hours. Yeah, just a little bit. There's a business end to it. I'm sure they're doing pretty well.

Speaker 4:

Yeah definitely.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I know, listen, I'm not like the super sports guy, but I like watching sports. Like I can't sit here and tell you everybody's name and all that other stuff, right, but I like, and I know, you know, I just I like sports.

Speaker 1:

You know. The thing I will say, though, is the fact that there's going to be more frequency is it's good for economic growth of cities and stuff like that. It's a big deal when the Olympics come.

Speaker 2:

Yep To like a city oh absolutely.

Speaker 1:

You know a lot of the cities will prep.

Speaker 2:

Right, yeah, they have to. They build infrastructure for the Olympics, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I remember they were trying to talk about doing a New York City and it was going to be a big cluster Right. But like they were like, but like they couldn't do.

Speaker 4:

I don't know. Yeah, no, no, yeah, they were up for it. I know they do upstate for New York State, upstate for the Winter Olympics, calgary. Yeah, years ago they did, and we're going back to 2035, I think.

Speaker 3:

A lot of places they build up for the Olympics and then, once the Olympics is gone, these places are just abandoned. They're deserted of like abandoned olympic stadiums. Yeah, so many of them right.

Speaker 2:

Well, aren't they coming back to?

Speaker 1:

uh, they're going back to la next one because they're too big to be for the summer. For the summer, yeah, and it's, yeah, it's that big but see.

Speaker 2:

So now here's the funny. So the olympic stadium in la right right he's for nascar. Okay, they do nascar races in the on the track was well, now you know, they paved it out. So that's at the la well one Right. So they're supposed to be coming back next year and I think they say Utah.

Speaker 3:

For the Olympic, oh for skiing, For skiing For winter yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so, because we had it Salt.

Speaker 3:

Lake.

Speaker 1:

City Yep, I know like.

Speaker 3:

Sarajevo.

Speaker 2:

Right, there's a bandstand. Yeah, listen the.

Speaker 3:

Montreal Expos used to play at Olympic Stadium. Rio too right, rio yeah they can't repurpose.

Speaker 2:

They could, but they don't right, because I mean the pool is there, well, no, but I mean if the pool is there, right, it's already built, so technically it's paid for, because everybody that came in you know all the tourists and such it's paid for. So now open it up and there's housing there and there's housing olympic villages right so make that you know use it and they're.

Speaker 1:

It's a good grounds for like festivals right, exactly that's what I'm saying like you know, like these, uh usual yeah, like lollapalooza giant. Yeah, like you know, like stuff like that, like yeah, anything, you know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they can. They can do so much with it, you know, and they just choose not to. You know it's too much work. But if you charge people to go in there, then you know you could still use all those venues. As far as I'm concerned, there's plumbing and all that stuff that's in there.

Speaker 1:

So it's all set up like yeah, right it would be perfect for, like, because did you ever watch that? That documentary not to get too much off topic that documentary they did about the woodstock 99, right? It was a big clusterfuck. Yeah, because they had the. You know, with the they didn't have the plumbing and all that was a big for. Which one woodstock, oh the woodstock, but if they but if, if there had been like a repurposed olympic they could have used.

Speaker 4:

That they could use that for whatever you know, I mean they couldn't do it at the time, for whatever reason, because I don't think they didn't open Bethel Woods or do that. Yeah, yeah yeah. Right, when that particular Woodstock happened.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and that's why it was such a shit show. I don't remember when did Bethel open? I?

Speaker 4:

don't even know. It's got to be over. Like after that it's got to be close to, but after the Woodstock? Yeah, I think so.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, after the second, because that second Woodstock was in the 90s.

Speaker 4:

Yeah it was the 94. And it was bad. Yeah, they talk about it on.

Speaker 1:

PDH a lot. The one that they were talking about was the 99.

Speaker 3:

Okay, anyway, yeah, that shit sucked Not to digress too much.

Speaker 1:

No, but that's a valid point because that's what they do.

Speaker 4:

Was going to say earlier it was Lake Placid, Lake Placid. They're supposed to be having another Winter Olympics.

Speaker 1:

I think, 2030-something.

Speaker 3:

I think that's still active. Yeah, they do. They're still training up there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Hopefully there'll be enough snow.

Speaker 4:

So hey, that was a famous one too 1980, the. American team beat the Russians in hockey and then they won the gold against Sweden. I think it was.

Speaker 2:

Do you believe in miracles? Yeah, that was great man.

Speaker 1:

I still get chills watching that when I see that, I'm like yeah yeah, no, that was the alligator. Lake Placid, that was the gator. Lake Placid no, no, I was talking about the, where they played the oh the hockey, oh yeah Lake Placid called Miracle Kurt Russell.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's right.

Speaker 4:

It was called Miracle. It was a decent movie. It wasn't bad.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, you're talking about Lake Placid, the horror movie? Yeah, that's what we're talking about. Yeah, I was talking about that there's a gator Alligator.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the alligator come out. Yeah, that's funny as hell. But no, but know for them that they want to be the greatest. You know they're just always getting it. So you know, yeah, I do. I appreciate them. I'm at the same time with you. I'm like you know what. You don't need a day off, bro, like you got you know, three months or whatever.

Speaker 4:

Your toes broken or whatever? Yeah, your toes. Yeah, Take that bitch up.

Speaker 3:

Keep, keep it moving. Really You're making all that money. Yeah, I'd be out playing. I'm sorry If I didn't play golf. If I didn't play golf because I was injured, I'd never play golf yeah. I wake up every morning with a bad back bad feet something twinkling Right right. But again, I'm not a professional.

Speaker 4:

But those guys have issues though.

Speaker 2:

Well, after he's got probably like a hundred freaking rods and everything in his leg after that last car accident and he's out there right now. You know, he was just playing before. He's out there rooting his son on now because his son is playing.

Speaker 4:

I'm like man Tiger Woods he was the bombing back in the day, just saying, yeah, bro, he's still playing good.

Speaker 3:

I think he finished like third. I think you know I mean he's been missing. He missed the last two cuts Right Tournaments, but the guys Still. Yeah, I don't like watching golf without him.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Like he introduced me to golf and that's around when I started playing and started watching and I just find tournaments when he's not in the mix very boring.

Speaker 4:

That's funny Because I find them exciting. Well, some of these newer players are really good. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

But they're not Tiger, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I get it.

Speaker 3:

They don't have that. Like you had to watch Tiger, it was like you have to watch when the judge is up Right, Like there's certain Tiger was that guy. Yeah, people go Like on a Saturday, you know, with a two-stroke lead or five-stroke lead. You just had to watch because what was he going to? Do he got a lead. He didn't give it up, and unfortunately now he doesn't get the leads anymore, so he's gone early.

Speaker 4:

And how old is he now? What is he? Not that it matters, because these guys can play to their 60s, 70s if they want to. He's 48.

Speaker 2:

Yep, but the girls, the girls are insane in golf. Bro, I forgot.

Speaker 3:

And look at the shape they're in. Yeah, compared to the way women golfers were back in the day, right, men, too, I love the shape they're in. Women golfers, women golfers. Women's golf has evolved. Yeah, let me tell you.

Speaker 4:

But even the men, if you look at them, they work out. Their arms are bigger, their shoulders. They have these guys in training.

Speaker 1:

They're starting to train like athletes, right as it was like you just had this natural talent on how to hit the ball the right way. Now they're doing everything, yeah.

Speaker 2:

But everything is. I guess almost everything is a sport. I guess we'll say you know for that kind of entertainment, because now gamers, video games, they're doing things. Now you know to be athletic, you know they're working out, they're eating better. You know they're getting their focus on their training.

Speaker 4:

They're not sitting up and drinking like energy drinks all night? Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 2:

Red Bull all night. Oh, what are you doing? You know they're not doing that. They're actually. You know they're doing these things. Drones they have drone races. Have you ever watched a drone race? No, that would be awesome to watch Because you're. They're flying through stadiums, malls.

Speaker 1:

You can watch them in a drone race on a VR headset.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because that's how they're flying it. Oh wow. So the guys are sitting in like this on the chairs and they've got the VR glasses on and they're flying. They're like this and you watch them. They're doing their whole training and getting everything ready for that they go through buildings. Yeah, they're going through buildings I was watching two seasons ago and they do it through abandoned malls or just abandoned buildings, old warehouses and factories and whatnot. They have the whole setup and everybody's got the same.

Speaker 3:

They have technicians, they can go to all the different Olympic villages.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, right, and do it there.

Speaker 3:

We can probably do it.

Speaker 4:

The military's using it now too. Right so they're racing those.

Speaker 1:

It. Yep, the military's using it now too. Right, so they're racing those, yeah. Yeah, if we get the day where it's like like star wars and we have like pilot drones that we can right.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's what I'm saying, that's, if you like light light.

Speaker 1:

What do they call them? Light aircrafts? Right like you, don't need a pilot's license because they're considered a light aircraft.

Speaker 2:

You could go in the course, but you do the course because so if you get Red Bull TV Red Bull TV shows all of those and they have the guys with the little airplanes and they're doing and they're literally going through slums and whatnot, If you were just to build a giant drone you'd probably pilot it.

Speaker 2:

Watch. I'm telling you, you got to watch all these things, bro, because you're going to bug out the drones. You need to be licensed to fly, right you do. Yeah, like, not the ones you get it like. Yeah, not the little ones.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like the helicopters, right like I'm sure, like obviously you wouldn't be able to fly them around town but you know what I mean. I'm sure in like a closed course you'll get a special license for something and I think you only can go so high, right with them anyway, because of yeah, planes, right, you have to have the license like 400 feet. But if it was right, yeah, something like that go a little higher because it would be like a no-fly zone or something.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, a little out there with it but what he was saying about made me think. Now they have the flying go-karts. Now they have where you're actually in the air maybe go as high as my house and you're flying and they they fly for a good 30 to 40 minutes.

Speaker 2:

I haven't seen that yeah, man, they're freaking amazing. You sit in it, it's like a go-kart but it's like a cage and it me george jackson.

Speaker 3:

It's great man, you know, and they're fast you know, because it's really oh, it's amazing

Speaker 1:

and anybody can do it, because it's like steering a car right in the air. Get that scaled a little bigger and make that our vehicles you can't do that.

Speaker 2:

Well, because you know, yeah, we can't, yeah, we can't do that we can't barely drive on the road. I mean, I think we had this podcast yeah, we had that on the podcast driving, driving lessons by kenny.

Speaker 4:

But again, all the technologies is getting more and more.

Speaker 2:

crash into, yeah, exactly, especially a building. I mean like go on, fall out of the sky, right. Then just you know somebody falling asleep, then you go to somebody's house.

Speaker 4:

I mean you know, it's like instead of driving through, we're falling through.

Speaker 1:

You know what I mean. Clutching isn't for racing. It would be cool.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, it would be. Is I love? I like sports. I'm more like. I love cars, more cars, and like the motor race, the motor sports, I love the motor sports. Um, I said I have red bull tv. I watch all that stuff and you know it's just insane. And a lot of the stuff that they do in red bull, they, they just take it to like the 100th level, you know, between baseball, football, like the way the things that they have them do BMX, it's insane, it's bananas and they do it just to get people to watch more. You know X Games to bring all that stuff to life and whatnot. Oh my God, it's just amazing and like even now, when these kids in football are training, they're throwing the ball and then they're running and catching what they threw.

Speaker 4:

You know what I mean. That's what I'm saying. The athletes are so much longer and faster and everything.

Speaker 2:

It's just incredible how far you can push the body I was watching breakdancing is an Olympic sport now in the Summer Olympics, and it's a Red Bull back and when you look at it now, compared to when we were, doing it right.

Speaker 3:

I think we need to get sponsored by Red Bull.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I'm, and check when you look at it now compared to when we were doing it, right we? Need to get sponsored by red bull. Yeah, I'm just saying, yes, we were, when we were doing it, when it was happening, when we were growing up, uh-huh, right, it was crazy, right?

Speaker 2:

yeah now you look at it and these guys are doing stuff like they could do things with their bodies that, yeah, they didn't even think of doing back then, and back then we thought we were doing what was already crazy and nuts, you know, I mean, I mean, it was just, it was it's insane bro, it was just like I said, I love sports, I love the entertainment of it. You know, I think it's just fantabulous bro. I love it, I like it, I love it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, do they have to like for the break?

Speaker 4:

dancing in the Olympic sports yeah, they have the floors waxed and polished and whatnot. You're disqualified. You brought a refrigerator box. You need a stove box.

Speaker 2:

Not allowed that not allowed that, yeah, but then the funny with that is they don't do the same things, or your own linoleum, is really what, guys?

Speaker 4:

that's what that, like I said, that's the kind they would roll that out and that's what they would do but they don't do the sameills, they don't do all that same stuff they don't watch breaking no, no, they didn't watch breaking, yeah, no they didn't do none of that they kind of, yeah, they changed it up a little bit in the Olympics breakdancing Olympic sports, yeah, I was telling, I was going to tell you it's a pickleball, but at some point, it's going yeah, they'll probably do it.

Speaker 2:

Next Olympics they'll'll do it again. Yeah, they'll get it. They're going to get that one in there eventually.

Speaker 4:

Because, if you're going to get all that other stuff. You've got to get Pickleball, Because it's taking off, I mean everybody's doing it now.

Speaker 1:

Oh, speaking of racing, though, they did it in my town. They got hype. People were talking about it like, oh, we should bring it back.

Speaker 4:

And they brought it back for a couple of years on wheels and people decorate them up and all kinds of erase them.

Speaker 1:

Someone brought this article out on the butler group where they talked about oh look, in the 70s they did the bed racing and people were like, oh, let's do that again. And they did it for two years and then it just faded off.

Speaker 3:

But there's no motor. No, no just pushing yeah, they all push and go to the hill.

Speaker 2:

Yeah right. When I think at all, but there's no motor like it's just no, no, just pushing. Yeah, they all push and go to the hill.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, right, yeah, exactly when I think about, when I see the bad people hey, with the monkey, oh, dude, wow, yeah, that's a throwback there.

Speaker 2:

That is too freaking fun. But so, with that, my gentlemen, that is our time wow, that was good. Yeah, that was good, yeah, yeah you see how I have this comes in really quick, man. Yeah, this goes smooth, man.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, all right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so thank you for joining us, thanks for having me again, man. We're going to have a comeback because, yeah, this is this next one. We'll actually talk about the yeah Well no, I'm saying the sports was a good one because I mean we're way over what we would normally be, you know what I mean, and we probably can go for another hour.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we probably could. We probably could.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, talking about all this stuff. But you know, yeah, and that was just the top, the surface of sports.

Speaker 1:

We didn't even go into specifics, with that being said.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so love peace, holla.

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