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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
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If your roof's already banged up, it ain't going to get better after what's coming through here this afternoon. Easton Roofing, integrity matters. Danny, how are you, buddy?
Doing just fine. Hoping for the best for everybody out there. We don't get any severe, more severe weather. I'm sure we're going to get something kind of severe. But just all the best and be careful and don't drive through puddles and all those things don't...
I think that now on the crawl, on the weather or whatever, they always put a thing, I think, I don't know which state developed it, but it was like, turn around, don't drown, right? for entering puddles, which I think is a very good slogan.
Absolutely. It would be amazing if people go, oh, I can make that. I can make that, sure. No, you can't, probably.
I was at a stop sign once in Lawrence, and I didn't enter a puddle. A puddle entered me, and it was, I mean, the water was like, just all of a sudden.
What do you mean? Can we...
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Chapter 2: What insights does Danny Clinkscale provide about the NFL Draft?
Right. And you could go down at nine and 29. Yeah. But he seemed to map out that it's, here's our plan. Like, okay, we may have- Not touching anything else. Well, it seemed like there may be a guy that he thought it would be worth- making a move up for at nine. But if he did, what he would do is fall back at 29 to try to recoup the picks he used to move up.
And likewise, if he came down at nine, well, now I got extra ammunition and that's burning a hole in my pocket. And so at 29, I'm going to be coming back up I would like to see you move down at 9, hold your water at 29, and hang on to those picks, and maybe listen again at 29. I wouldn't mind down at 9 and down at 29.
Would you move up from 9, as expensive as each step is in the top 10, for a whiteout? I think you move up for something more. Would you move up for Julio Jones? Because the Falcons did. Would you move up for Jamar Chase? The Bengals didn't move up for him, but would you move up for him? I mean, I think it depends on... It depends on what is Jordan Tyson.
I don't think you could possibly come to the conclusion that he's Julio Jones or Jamar Chase with all the injury history. It's great that he's healthy now. That helps. But it doesn't erase all the injuries he's had. So... Because someone thought he was healthy before the last time he got hurt, and that happened. Yeah, and he re-aggravated a hamstring injury.
Well, one phrase you used during that answer was, hold your water. And that has not been written on the business card of Brett Veach.
He even said that yesterday. I'm still working on my patients. Right. And he's been doing this for almost a decade now.
So I would say it's sort of built into his DNA. That's what I would say. He's that's just his nature. And, you know, sometimes it's obviously it's helped in the grandest way. He wasn't in charge of it then, but apparently he was.
influential enough that they got a generational quarterback by doing it and then a couple other and then you know trent mcduffie that was a move that obviously bore great fruit for them so you bore them but the 29th pick in the draft this year but right in the other and then some and some other times it's been less spectacular so uh it's it's um you know i it's a very important draft i think one of the things that i've been thinking about is that
Is the Chiefs' mindset really that this is really kind of a reset of where they're at roster-wise?
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Chapter 3: How does Danny analyze the Kansas City Chiefs' draft strategy?
They care about a million things besides actually just acting like what they would if there was no camera in the room.
Yeah. So... But as far as to take it back to Tyson, I mean, I think he healthy and plays as many games as any other wideout. I think he's the number one wideout in this class. But he hasn't been healthy. So how do you view that, if you're the Chiefs? One of the things, an interesting point was made by Jeff Chedia this morning.
He said, kind of like when the draft is not supposed to be that great, which is what everyone has decided this draft is.
And they've decided that next year's draft is great.
And if there are four Hall of Famers in the top ten and three other guys that are perennial pro bowlers, and then there's two other Hall of Famers sprinkled throughout, I can't wait to hear years from now when everybody goes, oh, what a great draft. I mean, we loved it. I mean, this guy was great, and that guy was great.
We had 37 first-round greats in 2020. I don't know what everybody else was talking about.
Exactly. But if it is that kind of year, and you're like, well, Reuben Mayne has short arms, and the Georgia offensive tackle, Freeling, has only started 18 games, and... You know, like the other guys on your ā and Ward's a safety, not a high-impact position, and running backs get hurt, and we already just signed a guy.
Like, well, isn't this a year you can justify more than ever swinging for the fences with the best wideout? The best wideout talent?
Right, or you could couch it in a way that said there's not ā you know, there just aren't that many great players there, and we had a chance to get one, so we did. But it also will be interesting to hear the post-draft press conference, because why do they always go up there and say, well, he was much higher in our draft board.
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Chapter 4: What are the implications of the Chiefs' two first-round picks?
But I think there's two ways to look at pick nine. Like, are you going for the home run, or do you need the floor? Because if it's the floor, it's probably Ward, the safety from Ohio State. Because everybody agrees he's going to be a really good NFL safety player. Right? Maybe the upside is Ed Reed and the downside is I don't know what.
And shouldn't safety start to be more impactful as teams run the ball more? You would think. Before, it's just like, well, it's just an extra cover. It's just an extra corner who can't run quite as well.
Right. And teams ran the ball more this year. Like the last two years, they've run the ball more than at any time in the NFL going back to like 2000 or going back to like, is it 99 or something? I can't remember what it was, but in 1996, they threw the ball more than the league did in 24 and 25.
So in some ways, I'm almost like, if the Chiefs are now going to pivot and go to run the ball and stop the run, is this actually the wrong time to do that? Should you be like, no, no, no, we missed that wave. Let's keep flipping it all over the yard because everybody's like, I think it's going to be interesting. Do we see four defensive tackles, 320 plus, go by pick 40?
Because right now, nobody's like, you know, the Ohio State defensive tackle who's like 6'2", 320. He's the classic, like, run-stopping. McDonald, I think. Yeah. He's the classic, like, run-stopping D-tackle. He's the only guy you kind of see him or the Clemson kid. Peter Woods.
Peter Woods are the only guys you see creeping into the first round, and they're always at the bottom of the first round. But if all of a sudden we see a whole bunch of D-tackles, like, well, we've got to stop the run. So we need all these big guys, and we've got to get them in there.
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Chapter 5: How does Danny view the current state of the Kansas Jayhawks basketball team?
Then you're almost like, well, then maybe we should be throwing?
Yeah.
I hope that's not the thought after making the free agent signing that they made. I think, you know, with Walker, they need to run the ball and run it effectively. But I think you either think high floor or ā or big ceiling, but I don't think you try to split the uprights. Almost everyone says down says the highest floor. Yeah.
I think him and Love are the two guys that you think have ā if you're like, okay, I'm going to pick one guy and you pick one guy, and the goal is to not finish last, then you pick those two guys. They're not going to suck.
Yeah.
Right. I think you can make that ā that's the way ā if it's a weak draft and you've got a lot of picks, the way you're perceiving it, as you said, that narrative could change. But then it could seem like you could make a case that volume isn't as important this time because ā
why do we want these multiple sixth-round picks when the sixth round's going to be a dumping ground, that it's equivalent of not even drafted next year, and that maybe there's two or three gems here, and if we get two real solids out of a crappy draft, then that's good. But then you could probably come up with a scenario the other way, too.
So what's your dream scenario for the Chiefs?
I still would like them to take an edge rusher. Short arms, long arms. Arms. Club foot. I don't care, you know. But I said it on the little video we did for Easton Roofing.
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Chapter 6: What challenges does Kansas basketball face with roster changes?
I'm not going to be surprised if they pick a wide receiver or a weapon for Patrick Mahomes. I mean, they've got to look at the landscape ofāI think they've finally come to the realization, I would hope, that, you know, Pat can't do everything. He's not a wizard. He's not a magician. He's just great. And we try to heap everything on him.
He's just great.
I mean, he's just great. He's just a great quarterback.
All he is is great.
He's not, you know, he's notā He can't take, you know, the lame and the crippled and turn them into Tyreek Hill. I mean, we've seen it. They stink. I mean, they really have stunk kind of on offense considering who they have slinging the ball. You're in the middle of the pack on offense and Patrick Mahomes is your quarterback. That's inexcusable. I mean, it really is. I don't disagree. So...
But then again... Particularly with the second most expensive offensive line and a first and second round pick at wide receiver and a Hall of Fame tight end. Yeah, that was... Last year was unacceptable.
Right, and the year before... They did let the offensive coordinator go. Right, yes. And the year before, they weren't that much better either. They just transformed it into a fine season. So, I... You can make a lot of different cases. Not getting to the quarterback ever. It's like Chiefs in the dictionary. No pass rush. List the traits of the Kansas City Chiefs. Fine ownership.
Excellent quarterback. Can't rush the passer. I mean, how long has it been like that?
The last two years, because three years ago they were over 50 in sacks.
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Chapter 7: How does the NFL Draft impact team strategies in the upcoming season?
I mean, the hamstring's the question on him.
Explosiveness is what they... Right, but a hamstring can be fine for today.
Yes, it can.
It certainly can.
But it definitely was at least fine for today. So I said, it doesn't erase all the injuries he's had before now.
Yeah, I mean, anybody could see if he went, oh, ooh! Yeah. He lived off the field.
I mean, clearly... Oh, it's good. I don't, you know... First of all, he doesn't have the production to say he's Jamar Chase. Right. Right? But, I mean, when you watch the little videos of the highlights, when he's healthy, he does look like... Yeah, he does. They're giving him... All kinds of cushion because they're worried about him going by him. He comes out of the break smooth and easy.
Gets the head around. The ball comes in. It sticks to his hands. He's not fighting it at all. It's not a body catch. I mean, he seems pretty good to me. But again, all I'm watching are probably some fanboys cut-ups of his best moments. Or his agents. Yeah, the highlights on draft night don't ever show him, you know, dropping the ball on third and five. Oh, drag.
Kenyon Sadiq is a physical specimen as a tight end for Morgan, but he drops the ball. But you never see that on ESPN.
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