Sam Morril
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
We're going to get louder as we get to Nick's playoff basketball.
Well, Cleveland, I don't know. You want to do it about Cleveland?
Well, Cleveland, I don't know. You want to do it about Cleveland?
That's a murderer's row right there.
That's a murderer's row right there.
Well, this is what I would say of this because you guys probably felt me getting a bit obsessed with this last week, right? Because in some ways this is more interesting to me than even the Aaron Rodgers disintegration on where body and mind meet on stuff and somebody just implodes.
Well, this is what I would say of this because you guys probably felt me getting a bit obsessed with this last week, right? Because in some ways this is more interesting to me than even the Aaron Rodgers disintegration on where body and mind meet on stuff and somebody just implodes.
Aaron Rodgers, whatever you think of him now, did that difficult thing better than anyone I've ever seen do it and then... Whatever happened, happened. I don't even know how to explain what happened. And he becomes something far different at the end in his late 30s than this story, which I don't believe has any precedent in the history of American sport.
Aaron Rodgers, whatever you think of him now, did that difficult thing better than anyone I've ever seen do it and then... Whatever happened, happened. I don't even know how to explain what happened. And he becomes something far different at the end in his late 30s than this story, which I don't believe has any precedent in the history of American sport.
A dysfunctional organization that finally arrives at the desperation of expectations. Berries and torches, Baker Mayfield, who's trying to play through 17 injuries just to drag. Drag Odell Beckham and Landry. to nine and seven. The season of great expectations. Then their owner comes in. He's a tycoon. We give too much emphasis to power and rich people. He knows how to lead.
A dysfunctional organization that finally arrives at the desperation of expectations. Berries and torches, Baker Mayfield, who's trying to play through 17 injuries just to drag. Drag Odell Beckham and Landry. to nine and seven. The season of great expectations. Then their owner comes in. He's a tycoon. We give too much emphasis to power and rich people. He knows how to lead.
He's got some secrets. He's got a history that's all sorts of foul. He asks the man on the street who he should draft, and hey, quarterback's tough to play. Johnny Manziel, you cannot play it. The expectations of Browns football.
He's got some secrets. He's got a history that's all sorts of foul. He asks the man on the street who he should draft, and hey, quarterback's tough to play. Johnny Manziel, you cannot play it. The expectations of Browns football.
make it so they offer guaranteed money to something that is quite fundamentally selling the soul of a region in the name of football hey we've got this alleged molester and terrible person let's give him everything let's fight over the right because we all agree well it might be a moral But he's a top five quarterback, and those are hard to get.
make it so they offer guaranteed money to something that is quite fundamentally selling the soul of a region in the name of football hey we've got this alleged molester and terrible person let's give him everything let's fight over the right because we all agree well it might be a moral But he's a top five quarterback, and those are hard to get.
He made the Texans matter more than they ever have because they almost beat the Chiefs. They were up 24-0 in that game. That's the best anyone's ever played for the Texans. It's the only time we've thought a Texans team's getting out of the wild card round. Deshaun Watson was the quarterback.
He made the Texans matter more than they ever have because they almost beat the Chiefs. They were up 24-0 in that game. That's the best anyone's ever played for the Texans. It's the only time we've thought a Texans team's getting out of the wild card round. Deshaun Watson was the quarterback.
All of that short-circuited, and I don't know how to tie how much of it I can to everything that happened with him off the field that made him somebody that an organization tried to work with, and they were dealing with someone physically broken and mentally broken.
All of that short-circuited, and I don't know how to tie how much of it I can to everything that happened with him off the field that made him somebody that an organization tried to work with, and they were dealing with someone physically broken and mentally broken.
This is the part though, Mike. This is where I say RG3, get out of here. First of all, that was physical and the decline can be assigned whatever it's declined to. In his prime, a player in his 20s went from being a top five quarterback, and it's not just his body, to can't play the sport anymore.