
·E68
Dudes on Jason Kelce & Darrelle Revis
Episode Transcript
When you get to the top of the cream season, rub I tell you right now, you take the top of that cream and you get the butter teams.
Speaker 2Oh yeah, gave it to me.
Speaker 3But welcome to Dudes on Dudes.
Speaker 4I'm Julian Edelman, I'm Rob Gronkowski, and this is the show where your favorite dudes get to talk about their favorite dudes.
Speaker 3And what are we talking about today.
Speaker 2One of the best cornerbacks of all time and a guy that went from six round pick to future Hall of Fame.
And then we wrap it up with voicemails and the Chilliest Dude of the Week, presented by Corusite You Gotta Stick around.
Speaker 3Dudes on Dudes is a production of iHeartRadio Boy.
The season's been rolling along, dude.
Speaker 2It's fine by like no other.
I mean, it's already like the holidays.
We got Thanksgiving, that's already you know, been through us.
We got Christmas coming up, we got Hanakuck coming up.
Speaker 3Man, it's football season.
Speaker 2Football season brings everyone together and it makes a year go by so fast.
Speaker 4It makes it fly by.
And it's been really cool to see in the comments section from everyone that's been following the highly requested people that they were requesting.
Speaker 2Well, who are they requesting?
Joels?
Speaker 4Well, we're gonna have to keep that a secret.
That's called the Geezer right there.
Speaker 3But there's like like a Secret Santa, like a Secret Santa, Like did you ever play Secret Sana?
Speaker 2I play every year with in the locker room.
I never did in the locker room.
Actually, one time when Martellas Bennett was there, we played Secret Santa.
Speaker 3Yeah, what'd you guys get each other?
Speaker 2Yes?
Actually, and I did it in Tampa as well, and I it was not Secret Santa though.
It was kind of like you're turning to pick a gift and then you could steal someone else's gift.
I'm not sure exactly what that game is called.
It's kind of like Secret Santa a little bit.
But I brought in the newest PlayStation.
Yeah, yes, I forgot what I brought in.
I think I brought in like, I don't know what I We used to do them every year, but you forget.
I didn't get anything crazy either.
I think Gunner got me something.
Speaker 3One year.
Speaker 2I got a bottle of wine out of it.
Yeah, wine, which is a great gift.
Yeah, bottle of wine goes a long way.
And then because it goes a long way because you can either have it at like a family event, or you can always regift a bottle of wine to your neighbors something that they do a favor for you.
So like wine goes so far.
Whenever you get a gift that's a bottle of wine, even if you're not going to drink it, always take it because you can always regift it one percent.
Speaker 3Like, and we used to.
Speaker 4I think we used to set money limits because you didn't want like the highest paid guy in the room getting something sick and then a guy that's you know, in practice squad because we'd play with everyone.
Yeah, so I think we would keep it like relatively tanged.
Speaker 3Yeah, very reason two and fifty bus.
Speaker 2Yeah, it was always you had to be thoughtful, makes it harder, exactly.
It was always between two fifty and five hundred.
Speaker 4Well, let's get into these guys that everyone's been requesting.
Let's get into it.
Speaker 2Yeah, let's do it.
Speaker 3What's AI have to say about the first guest, Robbie g.
Speaker 2Well, it's time for this week's Dude Segment Jewels presented by Dude Wipes.
All right, todayday I got this.
Oh yeah, dude wipes.
I'm a dude.
I like to wipe my wipe my bomb.
I'm a tight end, all right, I keep it nice and clean.
And today, Jewles, we are going to be breaking down a dude that just might end up in the Hall of Fame one day.
Speaker 3Well, who could it be?
Speaker 2Well, let's see what AI has to say about them, and then we can figure it out from there.
Speaker 3Let's see, all right, you say it could be.
I think he's in.
Oh, well, who do you even know we're talking about?
I don't know.
Speaker 2You got the picka frame Ryan in front of you.
All right, Hey, you're ahead of the game, all right.
Born and raised in Cleveland, Height, Ohio, this senator played college football at the University of Cincinnati before spending his entire NFL career with the Philadelphia Eagles.
He earned six First team All Pro selections, seven Pro Bowls, and help bring the Eagles their first Super Bowl title.
Off the field.
He is an NFL analyst and podcaster.
Let's get on Jason Jason Kelsey.
Hey, hey, Joels, what's the first thing you think of when you hear the name Jason Kelsey?
Speaker 3Revolutionary?
Speaker 4He made He's been like the most like you know, this could be recency biased, but he's made the lineman like really commercial, you know, kind of like how you made tight ends and like the fun being.
He's kind of did that whole thing for the offensive line.
He's not only just an unbelievable football players, his stats show that, but he's surpassed being a football player with him and his brother and New Heights and their podcast, and he's become something that like it's just been fun to watch.
Speaker 2Yeah, he elevated lineman to a whole new level, whole new level, and linman never get that much credit, and like even though they could be the best possible lineman or our best lineman of all and.
Speaker 3They still don't really get featured.
Speaker 2And Jason Kelcey brought that position, especially the center position, Like left tackles get way more of fame and way more recognition than a center, and money guards get way more recognition than a center.
We're talking about the heart and soul of the line that never gets talked about unless if they mess up.
And Jason Kelsey has taken this position to a whole other level, like you said, to where it's now materialized where people want to be a center where people want to talk about, you know, being alignment and how cool it is because that's what he has done for the position and what he has really shown as well, you know at this position is.
Speaker 3How smart you got to be.
Speaker 2Yeah, how smart of a football player you got to be to snap that ball?
Know where you got to go, make calls for the quarterback, Know where the linebackers are.
I know where the mic is at all time.
Get your other lineman.
You're in control.
You're the second quarterback on the field.
You know, after the quarterback.
You're making sure the guy knows where to go, where to tackles, where to go, all the right calls, making sure everyone lines up properly.
Oh yeah, Joels, don't forget your dudes, because this segment is presented by dude wipes.
You try this one, hey, I'll try and guess who definitely needs a dude wipe before every game.
Obviously Jason Kelcey, because he has to keep his bomb nice and clean for the quarterback to get understand there so he can hike the ball.
So we know that for a fact that he has a clean bomb, yes, yes, and he's got to use dude wipes.
Speaker 3I mean he has to.
Speaker 4And he's like watching him play, I've never seen so many centers pool then I've seen Jason Kelce Like I just always remember, you see Jason Kelce Pool go down, make an athletic play in the second level, blocking linebackers that are faster than him, blocking corners, safeties that are faster than him, and he.
Speaker 3Always hit his target.
Speaker 4It felt like like he made those those plays, go those quarterback runs, the running game, like for for Philly, they've been just he's a dynamic player and you're talking about a dynamic player.
Speaker 2He sure is, and you're talking about the way he pulls on how much they use them, you know, in that in that you know rem of being a player, you know as a polling center.
Well, what I recognize is obviously is athleticism.
You got to have athleticism to do that.
But also I recognize how he goes upon blocking the defender, blocking the defensive end to kick him out, how he gets up to the next level to block a linebacker.
What he does is is kind of like teach tape.
In the NFL.
You know, coaches probably use his highlight film to teach the guys that are coming up out of college and how to block properly.
How he just runs his feet through the block.
It's kind of like he's going up to tackle someone with no fear.
How do you knock someone off their feet that's carrying the ball.
Well, you got to run through that tackle because if you kind of stop and you know, throw your shoulder into it, hey, you're going to bounce right off.
While Jason Kelsey runs up to the linebacker defensive and he runs through it, there's zero hesitation.
And I was watching that just now on his highlight film of all his you know, of all his superior blocks, and you just like, it looks like he's making a tackle with no fear.
And that's why he dominates fools because he didn't have that fear and he always ran through.
And that's how I was taught actually as a rookie when I had coach Brian Farrens.
You know he's now Iowa obviously the son of the head coach Farrens, you know who's the head coach at Iowa.
And they only know how to run the ball.
Like they don't only know how to run the ball, but they specialized in the run game.
And Brian Ferns always said, run through it.
Never stop your feet and then you can tell that Jason Kelsey does that as well as a blocker.
Speaker 3I still can't believe he was a six round draft pick.
Speaker 2I mean, is he the greatest six round draft pick of all time?
Speaker 3I don't?
Speaker 2All right, let me rephrase that.
Is he the great?
Okay?
I know we got our guy Tom?
Is he better than Tom?
Though?
Speaker 5He?
Speaker 2I mean he's better.
He's got a better bum than Tom because he's always.
Speaker 3A better man bun.
Yeah, I remember used to have the man bun.
He's got a better, better facial features as well.
Man.
Speaker 2Yeah, Tom wishes he had that beard and stash that he's.
Speaker 3Very manly bro.
Yeah he is.
He's a very masculine man.
Let me rephrase that.
Speaker 2But is he the best six round offensive lineman of all time?
And we're talking tackles, guards and centers?
Speaker 3Who else there's you know?
Speaker 4Is he the best sixth rounder that's not a quarterback named Tom Brady?
Speaker 5He?
Speaker 3I mean he could be.
I mean Antonio Brown was a sixth rounder.
Role Davis was freaking I mean a Dahlias Thomas.
Oh, this is tough.
Speaker 2I'm gonna say, I'm gonna probably say he's up there.
He's up there, no doubt, because how how can you even grade like who's a better player overall and who had a better career when you're a lineman compared to like a skill guy.
Speaker 3That's really really tough.
Speaker 2So I would say he's the best sixth round lineman of all times?
Speaker 3Is that accurate?
I mean, he's up there.
I don't know.
Speaker 4I don't want to get caught into the like, well this guy was a sixth he is you know, he's gonna be a lot fitter.
Speaker 3To get caught up in it.
That's why I'm asking.
Speaker 4You he's the best six round lineman.
Yeah, I got all the time.
Yes, Hey there's this one guy that we just don't know of.
Speaker 2Joe's that it was really good too in the eighties.
Speaker 3Well, that's a very big argument out there, all right.
Speaker 4His scouting report, he was undersized, that's what they said.
That's why he didn't go.
He ran four nine to eight or four nine to three.
Get a insane ten yard split shuttle.
The twenty yard shuttle was great.
His very he was explosive.
He just wasn't how tall is he six one six two?
He's a center.
Speaker 2Yeah, they're saying he's undersized, but I don't really, you know, think that he is.
I kind of got to argue versus that, because maybe in his career more leverage.
You get more leverage when you're lowered to the ground, and he's a center as well.
Speaker 3His pad levels through the roof.
Speaker 2As long as compact, you know, that weight still being that height only, then he's fine.
And I believe that's why he was such a great player because of that.
I mean, I hated blacking guys that were six two six one because they always got under my paths.
I couldn't.
I had the disadvantage because I was too tall, and then they always pushed me backwards.
But UH like his like just the way he compacts his body and can just fly up underneath the paths of a of a taller guy, a bigger defensive alignment.
I feel like he used it to his advantage.
And he's so smart that he found a way to use his size to his advantage as well.
Speaker 3I remember one of the Super bowls I met missus Kelsey.
Speaker 2Really what super Bowl was this?
Speaker 4The Kelsey Bowl?
When they played each other?
Okay, and uh who was she rooting for?
Well, she had the split Jersey.
Speaker 2Yeah, but she had to be rooting for one of them, Like at least one or two percent more?
Did you get out of her?
Speaker 3I couldn't get any out of her.
I just thought you had the magic touch to you.
Speaker 4Didn't have that magic have no game, but uh, I was asking her.
I was like, man, it's crazy.
She birthed these two insane players that are going to be playing against each other on the grandest stage and it's been.
It was really fun to watch her get her pub during that whole Kelsey Bowl.
And like these Kelsey guys, man, they're they're they're really athletic.
If you watch them like you can't it's crazy that one's an offensive lineman.
One is a tight end that's like smooth and rhythmatic.
Speaker 2But if you look at it, they're in sync with how their bodies work and how their athletic abilities are.
It's just one has a different intangibles in size difference than the other one.
But the way they dance, like you saw Jason dancing in the end zone for some celebrations, he can move those hips.
Speaker 3They both have loose hips.
Yeah, rhythm.
Speaker 2I mean their parents, the Mama Kelsey got to have some loose hips out there, because how do they have loose hips and they lift and all that stuff and they're strong.
Usually your hips tighten up, but they can move.
Speaker 4I would say, Mama Kelsey and Mama Gronker are up there and mount rushmore of moms for NFL guys, multiple NFL guys.
Speaker 2I would say so too, Probably the Matthews.
Speaker 3There's a Matthew's mom in there.
McCarty's, the McCarty moms.
I mean, there's a bunch of the Harball moms.
Speaker 2Ah, the Harball moms.
Speaker 3They just poop out football players.
Yes man.
Speaker 4He also I mean he's part of one of the most dominating plays in recent history with the Tush push, and I firmly believed it was because of his get off and his push and his pad level and how he got down.
I mean, they were able to transition with Jurgensen and and still have that success, but it hasn't been as of late.
The same success rate is when Jason Kelsey was there.
Speaker 3No doubt about that.
Speaker 2And what really stands out to me is just how smart of a player you know he was and still is.
I mean, look where he has gone from putting.
We talked about an offensive lineman on the map now and that's not because of just the way that he played, you know, it's because of his post career as well.
Speaker 3You know, he's on during his career, during his career.
Speaker 2Definitely, and now he's a center stage of a big Monday night football games breaking down the game of football.
You know, you just can't do that, you know, because you just played.
It's got to have the smartness and awareness, and that's what he had throughout his whole career.
Hosting a podcast.
They got one of the greatest podcasts, actually probably the greatest sports podcast of all time, and he's the anchor of it.
He's the one who's firing off questions, hyping you up.
When I was on it, it was kind of the first time I had a conversation with Jason.
I was literally like, man, Travis's brother.
I mean, that's how I kind of looked at him at the moment.
I don't call him Travis's brother anymore because.
Speaker 3You're tight end.
Speaker 2He's gone, yeah, exactly, but he's gone.
The respect factor is way higher than that.
Now it's Jason now.
And I was literally like I got off I was like, yo, Jason Kelsey brings that heat, y'all.
Like he's got he's got good tangibles of being on the podcast and firing out questions that need to be fired out for the way that he wants an answer to.
So you see why you know he's so successful as well.
Speaker 4Deep down, I think that lineman could be the most intelligent guys on the on the team, other than maybe the quarterback, but maybe even in that category.
We've always had, like some of the smartest guys that we played with, Rowe's offensive lineman guys because they got to handle so much adversity.
They you know, the techniquesists communication with each other like they're and they're always in their own little bubble and they they all like have like interesting hobbies and I'm sure he has interesting hobbies.
Speaker 2And they're all and they're all I feel like all linemen, they're kind of all quiet.
Offensive linemen are more quiet.
But if you get under their skin and tick them off, watch out, you better start running full speed the other way because if they get ahold of you, oh you're done for Yeah.
Speaker 3I mean, he's on everything.
Speaker 4When he came out of what was he the genie on the Super Bowl parade was the genie outfit.
That's when I first like got a look of him and like knew who he was.
And you know, he was balling before that, but that's when his personality like was just starting to get across America.
I guess he seems like a great hang And I mean I did the New Heights podcast too and it and it felt like he was a great hang him in and Travis it was.
It's been very fun, released a freaking Christmas album and I think he got bought a lot.
Like he's very entrepreneur, very smart, very very baller, Like he's a baller on the field.
Speaker 3Yes he is.
Speaker 4He and the o' lineman released a Christmas album.
The Philly Specials, Jordan Mulatta, Lane Johnson all involved released albums three years in a row and they even collapse with Stevie Nicks on a song.
Raised four point five million dollars for local Philly charities with the album sales.
Speaker 2What a stud definitely a star.
What do you think you know?
Is this cleanest moment in his career?
I would say that's probably one of them because this segment is brought to you by Dude Wipes, So you gotta stay clean when you got dude wipes involved.
So you would you say this is one of Jason Kelsey's cleanest moments.
Speaker 4Definitely probably raising four point five million dollars through Christmas album.
Speaker 3Well for the kids of Philly.
Let's hear it real quick, Christmas.
Speaker 5Dreamer.
Speaker 3Look at Alatta.
Oh shit, he could sing.
Speaker 2This is getting me into the holiday spirit.
They can all sing, Jules.
This is making me like, I want to start a band.
Brother.
We just we just like to bad.
We don't got voices like that like that.
Speaker 3That was impressive.
Speaker 2Man.
That was the first time I've heard that.
I was I would do that everye I would drop an album every year.
Actually, if I could sing, I drop an album every every month.
But I can't sing, so I ain't typing album.
Well, that was his cleanest moment off the field.
What would you say is cleanest moment on the field is Jules.
Speaker 3It's got to be.
Speaker 4I mean, I just always see him pulling and blowing up dudes.
Is Jason Kelcey first ballot Hall of Fame?
Speaker 2I mean, I think he's a Hall of Famer.
I mean, you're talking about one of the greatest centers of all time.
How can he not be a Hall of Famer.
Speaker 3In our era.
Speaker 4I would say it was him and Alex Mack.
Yes, that were like two dudes that you knew about.
Yes, Alex Mack with the flexibility, but it was both because of how athletic they were.
They could always get to the second level and they're all smart guys.
So I I think he's first ballot.
I mean, he invented a play that you can't not talk about in the history of the game, him and.
Speaker 3His comrades, the tush push.
Speaker 4He's got it's gonna This's gonna be an this thing next year.
Speaker 2He's a Hall of Famer.
Speaker 3He's a Hall of Famer.
Speaker 2I mean, I don't know how how it works, So I don't know how to decide if your first ballot or what.
Speaker 3Well, he's a Hall of Famers.
What do you think he and Travis were like growing up?
Speaker 2Oh, maniacs.
I would say it's kind of probably like my brothers and I like just sports all over the place, all our friends over backyard baseball, backyard football, shooting hoops, you know in the front yard as well in the driveway, and and then just yelling at Mamma Kelsey, like Mama, when's dinner done.
Speaker 3Now in a fight, the Kelsey's the Gronks.
Speaker 2Oh, that's a great question.
Uh, but I think it's the Gronks because there's five of us and only two of them, So advantage Gronks.
Speaker 3What if they said you could only you could only bring in one What do you mean you can only bring in one of the other Gronks to do tag team duos?
Speaker 2Oh, I would bring in Papa Gronk.
Back in the day, he used to just brawl every night in the bars.
Speaker 3Yep, back in that hey day when you were allowed.
Speaker 4I can only imagine.
All right, let's see what kind of dude Jason Kelsey is.
Boy, Well, you know, he's got the athleticism of a stud.
You know, you wouldn't call him a freak.
At least the scouts wouldn't coming out for the Joseph.
Speaker 2He was like, you know, extremely jacked and like had a six pack.
That would be freaky.
Speaker 3He's got that.
Speaker 4But he's got that that that belly, that that strong belly.
He's got that strong belly.
Though you could tell he's got some dog.
He's got some dogging him for sure.
Speaker 2Definitely, he's relentless.
Just a lot of you know, motivation as well.
They brings to the table.
Speaker 3He's got them all.
He does, he really.
Speaker 2But besides, well, in that category of being a freak, you gotta like look like a freak.
Arms just so jacked having a six packs.
So I would say he's freaking in some ways, but not the freak that we're talking about, Like how we categorize what being a freak is?
Speaker 3On three, what do you think?
One two, three whiz?
Speaker 2Oh, well, that's kind of like the same thing, Jules.
I mean, you gotta be a whiz to be a dude's dude.
Well, not necessarily, but he is a whiz.
Come on now, Like I said, you gotta get all the linemen correct.
Speaker 3But on three one two, three, dude dude.
Speaker 4You know, I think he's a dude's dude because he always you were saying it before we got on the camera.
He always has positive energy whenever he's leading.
You know, you could tell in the locker room he got along with everyone.
You know, he brings the joy of the game in the locker room.
When he dressed up like the genie and all the miked up stuff, he just seemed like he got along with everyone in there.
He was a glue guy for that team.
Speaker 2Yep.
And it wasn't just like positivity that he was trying to bring to the table.
You could tell.
It was just so natural for genuine and it was genuine.
It was just natural for him to dress up like the genie.
You know, it's just natural for him to do stunts and gimmicks and it's not like their gimmicks, just to do them like their gimmicks because it's like you could tell he has passion behind it and it brings the happiness to the people around him.
So that's just being a dude's dude and sacrifice, he's not even really sacrificing because you could tell he's loving what he's doing and you got to appreciate that and the stuff when he does lead and he does have that positive juice, like it's real knowledge as well that he's bringing to the table.
Speaker 3He's one of a kind.
Speaker 2He is.
Speaker 4Well, that was the dude segment presented by Dude Wipes Best Clean Pants Down.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
Let's get on to our next dude.
Speaker 2Oh this is interesting.
What's a I gotta say about it?
See way I has to say about dude number two.
All right, Helen from Aliquippa, Pennsylvania.
This Hall of Fame cornerback starred for the pitt Panthers before dominating the NFL for eleven seasons.
Speaker 3Oh I know someone else.
Speaker 2I've played in the NFL for eleven seasons.
Oh myself, Jules, Yeah, you played twelve.
You're above us.
He was a four time first team All Pro, seven time Pro Bowler, and Super Bowl champ.
He was known for his physicality, football IQ and elite preparation.
Throughout his career, he was known for putting the NFL's best receivers on In Ireland, Let's get on Darrell Revis Island, ladies and gentlemen, jewles.
What's the first thing you think of when you hear the name Darrell Revis?
Speaker 3The best?
Speaker 4He's the best man on man corner that I that I played against, Like where you could say, you have this guy all games, go cover him.
Speaker 2That's a great point because a lot of great cornerbacks right now they still don't, you know, go across the field with the number one wide receiver.
I mean they're great, great cornerbacks, and then they just stay on one side of the field, maybe go into the slot a little bit when the number one goes in the slap, but you don't see any corner do it the way that Reeves did.
Like if the number one guy would motion across the field, well guess what, Durrell Reeves is motioning across the field and runn across the field as well.
He is the first one to truly be able to do that at you know, at an efficient level throughout the whole entire game as well.
Speaker 4You know, And I don't like saying that, like it's one guy that helps bring us over the top for us to go out and win Super Bowls.
But he was a huge reason for our defense when they brought him over to our defense.
Our defense, him and Browner and all the additions along with.
Speaker 3Mccordy and high and Jamie.
Speaker 4But like when he came, our defense became a completely different defense because they could scheme up and do all these different things and just say, hey, Durell, you have that guy and then we're gonna do all this other stuff.
Or when we put him on the two and then we double the one, like you know what I mean, it was just like a completely different defense.
Speaker 2And I mean, he's he's a defensive Cornity's best friend.
I mean, it makes scheming that much easier because it's not like, all right, we got this type of talent with Drell, we're going to use them in this situation and then we're gonna have the guys work around him and you know, and and fit in and you know, crossover here.
No, it's dra Reeves has this guy man the man the whole entire game.
It's as easy as that.
Speaker 4And and also that one thing that came in my head was how smart he was, because I remember we used to you know, we'd do our two minute drills after like we when we practiced.
When I got to practice against Durell, it made me a way better player.
And I would always ask him if he, you know, may have covered me, or if I got him, why did I get you?
Speaker 3Why did you cover me?
Speaker 4And he, you know, he would go like he would say, dude, it's it's third and seven and you guys ran this concept like five times last week.
Like he had like photographic memory of like situational football, which you always hear, you know, when you watch highlights of him.
Man, he was covering the route for that guy.
Well, he would actually cover the route for the guy because he knew situationally, how the offense was playing conceptually.
Like that's how smart he was.
He was always on balance.
He was five eleven, one hundred and ninety eight pounds, so he wasn't like a tall, tall corner, but he was kind of like a tweener guy where he had really long arms, but he had shorter legs, so he was always on balance.
You never saw Darrell Reeves off balance.
And he had such a strong offhand or he had strong hands, so he had like long guy arms, good bump and run, a good stab.
Yes, he had a great stab.
He had those like big, big guy arms, but he had like still kind of like quick balance, he kind of legs because he was only five eleven, Like, he was really strong every time at the line of scrimmage, and he was patient.
He was always very patient at the line of scrimmagery.
He'd let you do all your bullshit and he would just sit there and wait and step when you stepped there, and then he would put his hand on you.
Like he was just he was technically sound always even when he was older, like and he lost his speed, he could still be productive because he was so smart.
Speaker 2Incredible football IQ.
He was physical, competitive, great practice habits as well, good size for a corner.
He's not always great, yes, not always great.
What do you mean not not great?
Priva?
Speaker 3I would say at if you were out, if you were to get Reeve on the route, he would like, all right, I got him, Like he would let you win the route.
Speaker 2I would say early on in his career he had to have great path.
Yeah, that's how you become a smart player.
You got to see every situation.
And how you see every situation as a player is through practice as well, not just games.
And then also he's got great vision though visional insane.
Speaker 3He lived in the film room.
Speaker 2And what what you were talking about is like how you just do all your pity pattering, you're jabbing and all that, and he just stays still and patient.
Like that's when you know that's a great defensive player in front of you.
You're like, you're trying to make all your moves and they're just not falling for it.
Like you can't get open versus those guys because they only react when they truly need to react, you know, in that coverage situation.
So and that's what Dara Reeves did like you can be running out of them and he's so patient and still and only flinch when he needs a flinch to cover you, you know.
Speaker 4But you can't just be patient at the line of scrimmage, like some guys try to be patient and you run by him, you know what I mean, You still.
Speaker 2Got to be No, no, no, he was patient, but.
Speaker 4You couldn't run by him because he was always on balance.
He was never off balance.
And that's like, that's how you get open at releasing guys or at tops or routes.
You get on their toes, you balance them out like he just he was a force man.
He's definitely I think a mount Rushmore of corner.
Speaker 2Oh, there's no doubt he's a mount Rushmore, you know, off the corner back position.
Who are the other ones?
You got daru Reeves?
Who else would you say with with be on it?
Speaker 4You know, Ty Corners ties in there, in there, you got up there, you go, Ty Law No physicality and how he played, yes, uh no, there's a bunch.
Speaker 2Of guys in the past, and that will just put the fourth for for the you know, the viewers to argue, who's.
Speaker 3The fourth on the mount Rushmore.
Yeah, they're definitely gonna kill us say like that, Oh, you guys just picked a guy that was your franchise because he's like the most popular guys.
Speaker 4Go watch You're gonna say, yeah, ain't no corner like Daryl Green.
I used to love Darryl Green with the formerly Redskins now commanders man Charles Woodson's up there.
I mean sea would but he played everything too.
Speaker 2Made me a better as well, because when I was coming off with my injury, I was coming off my knee surgery and we brought him into the organization.
So uh, like he would shadow me because I was trying to come back and he wanted a little extra work, and he wanted an extra work like oh right, you know, he doesn't see a guy at six six two sixty all the time.
So, uh, every single day in training camp, he would come down and I'd be doing one on one by myself just to get me back, you know, into the rhythm of practice because I didn't really practice that training camp because like I said, I was coming off of a knee surgery that when I blew out my knee that year and I was only like eight months at the time.
So we would go one on one and he would shadow me, you know, every single day throughout training camp, and you know, I take credit that hopefully I made him a better player because of it.
It wasn't like I was full full speed.
Yeah I was eighty ninety percent, but like just to have a guy like throughout reeves being able to shadow me and help build my confidence back up.
Man, he was a tremendous teammate for that as well.
Like it was like, all right, you got to go cover Gronk.
He's doing one on ones over there.
He'd never come plain, and he always came over and we made each other better players.
You know.
Speaker 3He was a quieter dude.
Speaker 4Yeah, but when he spoke, you listened because you know, I'm kind of convinced he may have been a computer just because he probably wanted to see your body movement so he could take a picture of it in his mind.
For guys like that he could just like terminate or put in his mindset.
All right, this guy semi like, well, not like Gronk, but body type of Gronk.
Let me see how he released boom bing.
Speaker 2Bang boom bang bang ping pong.
That's Gronk.
Oh got his movements down.
I can cover him.
Speaker 4But I mean I I when when you played, like I remember when he was a jet you hated him, but like you said, when he came over, I tried to use him as much as I could because he was such a tool of how smart he was and like practice just all he's seen so many guys because he always played against the one, you know what I mean, So he wanted to You wanted to know what Revis thought when you were practiced against him, because he was the guy that knew, and he was the guy that had the reps, and he was the guy that was literally people were drawing islands like this is Revis.
I like He's an island.
That's crazy.
And it's one thing that hits me is how crazy the University of pitt they got some amazing alumni.
They got Dan Marino, Larry Fitzgeraldshawn McCoy, Aaron Donald, Aaron Donald, Tony Doris set and then and.
Speaker 2Then you're talking about the University of pat Joees.
Remember I went to high school my senior year in Pittsburgh Woodland Hills, and those guys you just named also were products.
Most of those guys were products of Western Pennsylvania.
Football as well.
I'm telling you Western Pennsylvania.
I said this before, he is one of the most low key best high school football out there in the country.
It ranks with you know, I'm talking Florida teams, Florida community It ranks to you know, the Texas high school programs that you see, California programs you see in Ohio is low key as well.
We were just speaking about Kelsey and how he's from Cleveland, Ohio.
They got great football as well.
That's that's mean and green and and gritty and grit and get put your hand down in the dirt and get dirty with it.
But uh, you got uh what Eliquippa that's like one of the rivals for Woolen Hills.
You got Aaron Donald who went to penn penn is like five minutes from Woodland Hills.
You got Dan Marino who went to Central Catholic that was one of our rivals as well.
Speaker 4When I was I love Haliquippa, he's from there.
Joe Montana, Johnny United is Joe Namath.
Speaker 2I mean, you got Leshan McCoy's he's not Weshing, Pennsylvania, but he's still Pennsylvania football.
He was like Central Pennsylvania.
I mean, it's unbelievable, just the product and the Curtis Martin and the dudes that Pennsylvania football producers, high school and Hall of famers all over the place.
Speaker 4Now we talk about, you know, and that's one of the arguments in the locker room all the time.
Speaker 3You know, like when when you're with.
Speaker 4All the guys, Oh, California guys think California's got the best.
Louisa guys think Louisiana, the Texas, the Florida's, the Pittsburgh's, the Ohio's.
You know, those are always such fun.
But like when you look at.
Speaker 2Their those are always fun debates.
Those I'm telling you, I think Western Pennsylvania may be number one, a low key number one.
Hey, at one point when I was in the NFL, we had eleven guys from my just just from my high school in the NFL.
Once.
Speaker 3It was the most out of any high school in the nation.
Speaker 2Wow.
Speaker 3Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2Wow.
Speaker 3Geez is right.
And here's the thing.
Speaker 2Another thing about Darrell Reeves, because like no one ever thinks about this situation, you got to think about it too, because it's a situation I could never see you doing as well, this guy was a Patriots rival like on the New York Jets.
This kind of just shows what the Jets organization is, is that he was the face of the organization, you know, and as a player like that, you usually never want to jump ship and end up at your rival, like it just would feel weird.
Well obviously it didn't feel weird while he had the little state in Tampa first, which kind of broken up, which will probably helped for his decision to come to New England, like, oh, you know, I'm a Jet, but like I was just in Tampa, so they kind of forgot about it.
But just shows to sit like where the organization's at, where he was totally fine to be like, all right, it's time to go back in that division where I was a superstar and had revis Island going, you know for myself, and I'm gonna go with with the New England Patriots and try to win a Super Bowl now, Like we would have never ever thought that in my life.
Like when I went down to Tampa Bay, I was like, I will never go to a rival of the New Patriots.
And that's why I was so satisfied going to Tampa because I was like Hey, No one's arrival to Tampa Bay.
Speaker 4At this time, Yo, Reeve was almost one of the first guys that started hitting off with those short contracts where he would hit you for a couple two years and then he would leave.
Speaker 3HEDI smart man.
He made me.
He was funny man.
You gotta love that.
Speaker 2He was the first to show that he's simple.
Yeah, it's he's the first represent players to show, hey, this is how it's done.
If you're a player, don't let these organizations take advantage.
You know.
Well, he did get your money, and we appreciate that, you know, we really do.
Speaker 5Oh.
Speaker 4In two thousand and nine, he had six interceptions, a career high, including two in the playoffs, which they went to the AFC Championship, one of the best seasons by a cornerback in NFL history.
He held All Star receivers to an average of thirty yards per game.
He had a sit one handed interception against Vincent Jackson, and he did have a couple he covered Moss on the game Moss had the one handed catch on him.
Yes, Moss had that one handed catch, but Reeve was giving him fits all.
Speaker 3Game that game.
Yeah.
Speaker 2I think Reeve, like we saw the two greatest players, like scale players to ever go against each other.
I think there was a clip it was two thousand and nine, was it where Reeves had an interception on Moss, And it was one of the best plays I've seen a corner because he's first off, he's going versus Moss was bigger than him, has a longer arm reach as well, and he jumps up and high points the ball.
But then we gotta go back.
You gotta give credit to Moss twenty ten, my rookie year.
He comes back the next year and he has that one hand grab versus revis you know, in the end zone from that bomb from Brady.
I mean I was on the sideline on that play and I was like, damn, that was nice.
Like that's Randy Moss who just made that play, and it was on Durrell Reeves.
So each got each other and that was a heck of a battle because it's like a Hall of famer corner versus a Hall of Famer wide receiver.
Speaker 4Randy was still like Reeve was in his prime prime now he was still young playing prime like he was young, like Randy wasn't Like I would love to see that when Randy was like Minnesota, Randy, it would have.
Speaker 3Been a heck of a battle.
Speaker 2But that's why Randy Moss's one hand catch was even more impressive because it was like it was primary and it was it was his tat Randy Moss's talent.
Speaker 4Dude, he low key was a monster on Twitter early in the days.
He used to have some outrageous Twitter battles with like guys beef.
Speaker 3He's had wild beef on Twitter.
Speaker 4Actually, I'm coming to the Big Apple to give n why what They've never seen an escape inmate gone wild on Revis Island.
Revis's response to Ocho Cinco's try to cover me tweet, Good morning world, I just woke up from a crazy dream.
Ocho Cinco came on to Revis Island and disappeared.
Speaker 2I'm telling you, I don't think Revis ever lost a Twitter beef.
They're fun.
I mean, you only hear about him on Twitter is when there's a beef, and let me tell you, he dies.
Bring the heat to the table.
Hopefully he gets in the beef soon.
Speaker 4I know.
Speaker 2Yeah, but I think he's had a lot of beef on Twitter and a lot of like back and forth by I swear I'm pretty sure like Revis as all the beefs.
Speaker 3Look at the notable, like all the thirty five yards.
Speaker 4So in two thousand and nine, all these receivers had thirty five yard yards are less and these guys were good.
Speaker 3Andre Johnson he was in his prime.
Then Randy Moss in his prime last year.
Marquise Colston, Oh, I love Marquise t O twice, Tory holt oh, Steve Smith, Reggie Wayne, and Ocho Cinco.
Speaker 2Dang damn.
That is Revis Island for you right there, shit time.
And it was one cool thing when he got into the Hall of Fame in twenty twenty three.
He was the first ballot obviously, I mean, Revis Island one of the best corners, if not the best corner of all time.
What was really cool about it that his mom, Diana inducted him into a Hall of Fame.
That's awesome.
You know, that's special.
You know, you got to give credit to all the moms out there.
I mean, they got us to where we are.
They're the ones who brought us to all our practices growing up.
Make sure we were fast, scheduled everything, schedule all our appointments.
If we were sick to get as healthy.
Uh So, shout out to Revs' mom for the induction of drou Revis into the Hall of Fame.
Speaker 4What kind of dude is Darrel Revis?
Well, he's definitely a stud.
He's a freak.
Speaker 3He's a dog.
Dude's dude.
Speaker 4But I think one comes to my uh one two three whiz.
I mean he was so clutch all you got to say, hey, man, just just cover that guy.
And he would cover them all game because he knew the knowledge of the whole game play, knew the knowledge of the whole other team what they were doing.
Speaker 3He was just he was innovative man.
Speaker 2He was, and he was knowledgeable on the field and also kind of off the field with contracts as well.
He maximized his potential of earning, which is just amazing.
You got you gotta appreciate that because you see a lot of guys come into the NFL and they just get used and abuse and they don't get paid like they should and then boom they're thrown out.
Speaker 3So got a ball and paid.
Speaker 2Yes, So shout out to Dural for you know, hooking it up all right, Jules.
It's been a great high school football season.
So far this year, and you guys have sent us some amazing highlights and we have some more incredible plays to take a look at.
And we're going to be breaking down some highlights from around the world of high school football to showcase the next generation of stars with our friends at T Mobile and for Friday Night, five g Lights.
Speaker 4Let's get into it, all right, we gotta throw this one on.
Wow, look at him, go, you know who that is as Charles Woodson Junior right there?
Speaker 2It makes sense now.
Speaker 3He looks running it too.
He sure does.
Speaker 2Taking it to the house.
Speaker 3He looks like his pops out there.
Speaker 2And Charles Woodson Junior is a four star safety out of Lake Nona in Orlando.
And talking about high school football, Florida produces a lot of great talent and Florida has great high school football as well.
So we know Charles Woodson Junior is going for his top talent down there in Orlando.
And look at him, just go, man, he looks athletic.
I bet you he's smartest that because Charles Woodson's smart, smart, smart football player, and that's why he was a two way player and won the Heisman.
You gotta have the intellectual to be able to do that.
And just looking at Charles Woodson Junior, he kind of looks like he's just smart.
Speaker 3He looks smart, looks smooth.
Speaker 4He's got the same running gate as his dad, and it's gonna be insane when he signs with Ohio State.
Speaker 2I just think it's fair, you know, to have Charles Woodson Junior out there on the football field, like it's it's just unfair.
Great to have him as your teammate, but like you know you're going against him, You're like, do you just throw it in the bag, Like we don't have a shot at this game.
They got Charles Woodson Jr.
Speaker 3I mean, we got to see.
We're gonna see in the next few years how unfair it's gonna be.
Speaker 2And what kind of dude you think he is?
Speaker 4Well, he's probably like his dad, very wizardy.
He can play on all sides of the ball house to kick off right here.
He's probably playing dB at a high level, probably playing you know, I've seen some of the receiver highlights his dad.
Ah, he shows me the highlights at work at Fox, So it's awesome.
Speaker 2I would say he's a studge, he's any or he's.
Speaker 3A stud or he's a stud.
We'll leave it to the comment section.
Speaker 2We'll leave it to mister Woodson.
Speaker 3It's hop on the next one.
Let's see this next one.
Speaker 2Let's go, oh, look at that route, Oh the slant and go a little slow almost one hand or grab.
You're not hard of a route that is to run, especially at the high school level, like you got to be so athotic like to run at the high school level that smooth and Chris usually even when you're that good and you're a four star, five star player, that's still run a route that that that is that Chris, you know at that age is impressive.
Speaker 4Well, the real impressive thing is is when you he didn't get caught inside on the slint and ran through the contact of the player that was sitting at five six yards waiting for him.
So you really have to sell it, but you still have to get through it.
So that was really cool.
It's any anything that she's off with the one hen snag.
Everyone's one hen snagging this day.
Speaker 2It's one of the best one hand snags you'll see all year.
And Craig is a four star Georgia Commits, So shout out the Kirby smart.
This is a smart play to go out and get Craig dan Dridge out of Cambridge High School in al Felfa, al Falfarada, Georgia.
Alf Oh, let's go.
Oh we got another one from you know, Craig Dandridge.
You know, oh, another one.
I mean, we don't got to keep an eye on this guy, because i our eye is on this guy.
He's going to Georgia.
I'm sure we're gonna see more of that when he gets there.
Speaker 3This is him, same guy.
He is a dog.
Look at Oh, look at that.
That's a one hen snag.
That's a smart player right there.
Speaker 2That's when you know you know the game of football and you got a lot in your tool box.
Look at he looks like he's running your feet out.
He gives up, He pretends he gives up our route, and then the quarterback throws a back shoulder to him.
You gotta appreciate that the fake.
I'm running full speed to slow down give up on the play, but really, the ball's coming to you.
I've done that a couple of times in my career.
Speaker 4The Robbie g Yeah, that looks like one of your one hand snags across the middle.
How he put his hand up and got that thing, kept his feet in bounds.
Speaker 2Did he have two?
Sign him up for Sundays like this?
Speaker 4Sign him up for Sunday's back shoulder, give a little push.
Speaker 3No one saw.
I'm telling you, dude, that's one.
He got one.
That's college though.
Speaker 2I'm telling you right now, this guy's gonna go into Georgia and start as a true freshman.
You think, Yeah, he just looks like he has all the tangibles and he looks ready to go.
Speaker 3Well, I can't wait to see it.
Speaker 2Yeah, I'm calling it right now and t Mobiles.
Friday Night five G Lights just wrapped in another amazing season.
Thank you to every school that competed, posted and rallied your communities.
And the winner of this year is Friday Night five G Lights is Derek's High School and Derek's Arkansas Home of the Outlaws.
Over two thousand schools have entered and four hundred and fifty of them scored five thousand dollars and twenty five took home twenty five thousand dollars and now one school just made history.
And a huge thank you to all the high schools and communities that participated and rallied your town.
Your energy, pride and inspiring stories made this season unforgettable Forget and dude Jules.
I was thereon Derek's Arkansas.
When I went there for the PEP rally that they had, they were the winners.
They're the grand prize winners of one million dollars to transform their football stadium.
And it was one of the coolest things I've ever been a part of.
And I want to thank T Mobile for this wonderful campaign.
They brought in Bailey Zimmerman, a country artist who's on the up and up, a great singer, great performer.
The high school kids absolutely loved him.
They were going bonkers from them.
Like you know, people kind of go bonkers for me jewels, but I'm going to tell you this, they went way more bonkers for Bailey Zimmerman.
I wasn't the one performer.
I presented the check, you know, to the school.
As you can see right there, I have the one million dollar check with the CEO in my hand, and then the bottom left pitture there's Bailey Zimmerman and I'm He performed about five songs.
Man, it was just so cool to see that have our own private concert.
Speaker 3Wow.
Speaker 2In the gym at Derek's High School and all I'm talking not college kids soon to be college kids, the high school kids were going absolute bonkers.
Man, I can't wait for next year's te Mobile Friday Night five G Lights campaign.
Well, let's get back to some highlights now after you know, talking about Derek's High School as the winner of the Friday Night five G Lights.
Speaker 3So you got to keep your head on the swivel.
Speaker 2This is linebacker Mason Murphy out of booh Oh.
Speaker 3I told you keep your head on a swivel.
Speaker 2Mason Murphy out of Brentwood and Tennessee, laying the wood and forcing the thumbball jewels.
You can't have a better play than that, like a better feeling in your body and mind when you absolutely deck someone and you cause a fumble on the hit as well.
Speaker 4Man, well he's also pursuit the guy.
The guy's running supposed to be running that way.
What great effort to continue to chase and catch a guy sleeping, caught him sleeping, limb linebacker Mason, That.
Speaker 3That's a that's a Dorothy.
Speaker 2Mason Murphy is a dog with that type of effort and effort, and only only dogs just keep going and make that play at the end of the play.
Speaker 4Well, let's look at this one.
This is Michael Watkins junior out of Millbrook.
Speaker 3Oh juked him out of his pants.
Speaker 4Jockstrap left number night.
Oh his cup gibbs this weekend.
Oh my god, stop talk about stopping on a dime.
Speaker 2H oh, and that might warrant h haunting flat with that celebration especially got a flag in high school celebration.
High school.
But hey, when you get to the NFL, buddy, you can do silly things like that.
Speaker 3All right, let's look at one more of these highlights.
We got O line.
We gotta give a little O line line.
Speaker 2Kelsey Adams, Oh, before it even plays, I bet you he absolutely levels someone.
He's got he's got to just take someone.
If an on lineman's on here, he's just got a pancakes something.
Speaker 3Kelsey Adams.
Wait, I am totally wrong.
I am totally wrong.
Speaker 2Kelsey Adams is doing something I've never seen done before.
Let's see it.
You didn't see what he did?
Well, I mean the play was basically over and and Kelsey just look at he took oh, yeah, there you go, took the bar runner runner and he carried him fifteen yards.
Speaker 3He's not carrying the rock, he's carrying the guy.
Yeah, carrying the guy.
Speaker 2That's like, that's actually the definition of the tush push of like the realest, like most outrageous touch push you can see because he's toush pushing, carrying, pushing his own ball carrier, like fifteen yards down the field.
Speaker 4Look at this guy, six foot six, two hundred and ninety five pounds, will probably be two forty by the time he gets to Georgia, and he's committed to what's up with Georgia having all the goddamn guys.
Speaker 3Oh well, this guy's out of Georgia too.
Speaker 4We do have a lot of schools, but there's a few of these guys that are going.
Speaker 3A lot of these dogs are going.
Speaker 2I mean, it makes sense.
Speaker 3This guy's a dog.
Speaker 2You carry your ball carry across the field, you gotta go be a Georgia dog.
Speaker 4Well, that was a great season of Friday Night Lights.
Thank you to everyone who's sent in highlights.
Those are awesome.
Speaker 2Yes, they really are, man and it's just the next generation and we just get to watch them and hopefully, you know, we're the first ones to say their names and be like, yeah, we already talked about them.
Now they're in the NFL.
We already knew about them plenty of years ago.
Speaker 4Yeah, these kids are definitely TikTok dancing right now.
Probably got millions of followersh shit, probably more followers than used with streams and stuff.
There we know, not.
Speaker 2A twitch or TikTok.
We can't even dance anymwel.
Speaker 3I just want to give up.
Speaker 2Big thanks to T Mobile for making it all possible and helping communities shine under the Friday night lights.
Speaker 3This season may be over, but the story isn't.
Kim.
Speaker 2I'm just sounding so inspirational here.
I'm loving I'm tuning my own horn.
So stay tuned for season three in twenty twenty six.
At the Friday Night five g lights dot com for more info and how you can get ahead of the game if you're a high school we'll.
Speaker 3Be right back after this quick break.
Let's get into the chillis Dude of the Week, brought to you by our favorite beer, Coors Light Light.
Speaker 4Get Coors Light delivered straight to your door.
Visit Coreslight dot com, slash dudes and celebrate responsibly.
Speaker 2Well hey, oh there's a beer for me to crack.
They're blue coll as the Rockies.
The mountains are nice and blue.
Right now, we're celebrating responsibly.
And this is the chillis Dude of the Week, brought to you by our favorite beer cores Light and now today we will be answering voicemails for the chill Dude of the Week.
So there's a lot of chill dudes this week, because there's gonna be a lot of chill questions from a lot of chill dudes.
So let's get into it.
Let's get our first question.
This is my favorite segment on this podcast, jewels.
Speaker 4Let's go and again that number is five six one, two zero three, five seven eight nine.
Speaker 3Let's get into it.
Speaker 5What's up, grown, what's up?
Speaker 2Jewels?
Speaker 5This is Matt Big Fans Glunk.
I was at your retirement game with the Patriots on November thirteenth, amazing time.
Of My question for the bolls of you is what is your either most funny or favorite Shane Faren moment?
And that's get them on the podcast.
Great podcast, best podcast out there.
Have a good rest of your day, guys.
Speaker 2Matt, Matt, You're all over the place, my man.
I love it like I'm at your retirement I was at your retirement game in the thirteenth I'm a big fan of you and jewels.
And then all of a sudden, you just yeah, you just turn.
You just make a U turn or just like oh you you go through a red light where you're not supposed to make the right hand turn on the red and you just do it.
And you held Mary and you ask a question about Shane Voorreen love it like I love it.
I mean, let me tell you, I got a Shane Vraine start.
Shane w Reen had like a broken hand or broken iron at the time, and I had a broken form or something.
Speaker 3We went to New York City.
We had a great night out.
Speaker 2This was during the off week during the season, and we stayed out basically all night long.
This is when we were maniac Jewels, so we can tell the story.
And we had a flight at six am in the morning, so we get back for a treatment.
Well, we went out to four am.
We looked at each other, said time to go to the airport, got to the airport super quick, sat down right before you go through tsa both of each other.
We fell asleep together, shoulder to shoulder with our heads touching each other all of a sudden to about five point fifteen our flights at six we get woken up by the police.
Hey, you guys can't be sleeping here.
And we looked at each other, You're like, what the heck where are we?
And we looked, We're like, it's only five fifteen am.
We got to get to our flight, and we made our flight, fell asleep on the whole entire flight, fell asleep on the car ride from Boston to ji Let's sum and then went into rehab and didn't miss a beat, didn't miss a beat.
That was us back in the day.
We didn't miss a beat.
Even though we were crazy maniacs.
We still got our work done and we still made it every single time on the right schedule.
Speaker 3That's what's up.
And that's my story with Shane Veren.
Speaker 2And it was a pleasure sleeping with him in public, on the public bench in the airport.
Speaker 4I love chanea Now.
I lived with Shane, Yeah, he lived in my house.
We lived together for I think a year and Shane and my boy Kirk came out, moved with moved out, and Shane every night would like order a Domino's pizza, like the thin crust.
He loved the thin crust or whatever.
And he would order dominoes all time.
And my boy Kirk comes up and he goes, man, this is what NFL players do.
They order pizza every night.
Yeah, but I just that's that's my Shane no story.
And he was in the Best Friend Smoothie.
I love SHANEO a lot of good times.
Speaker 2I love Shane child Zaveren.
And now what is he?
He's part of the Houston Tuxan's front office.
Is in front office.
Yeah, he's front office.
He's he's a jem.
He's a jay and he's gonna be You're gonna hear about him.
He's gonna be a star.
Yeah, he is a star.
Speaker 3All right, let's go here us Harold from Western Massachusetts.
Speaker 2Here.
Speaker 3I've heard you mentioned cream season a lot.
I was just wondering, are we in cream season yet?
Speaker 2Also, I've heard you mentioned buttering teams up.
Speaker 3And that's a breakdown what any of that means for us?
I mean, Harrow, this is definitely for Jewels.
Speaker 2Jewels is always talking about cream season, buttering teams up, and then they slip off the edge because they're so blotted up now jewels get into this.
Speaker 3What do you mean by all this?
The cream season is usually the week after Thanksgiving, and it's the group of teams that have the potential to win a super Bowl.
Speaker 4Because what does cream do.
It rises to the top.
When you milk a cow, you take the good stuff off the top, and that's what a cream team is.
Those are the guys that will go into the playoffs have a shot to win a super Bowl.
Now, a butter team are the two teams that are tell us about a butter team.
Well, they take the very top of the cream.
The very top of the cream is butter.
That's a butter team.
Dog is So those out of the cream teams, you get the two butter teams that represent the conferences in the Super Bowl.
So butter teams are super Bowl teams.
Cream teams are teams that have a shot most likely playoff teams, but teams that are having a shot in the playoffs to go to the super Bowl.
Speaker 2So I was totally wrong at the beginning Herold saying that butter teams get so buttered up that they slip off the addle because they're so slippery tippity top.
I apologize, And that's why Jules had to explain this segment.
Speaker 1When you get to the top of the Cream Season, rub I tell you right now, you take the top of that cream and you get the butter Teams.
Speaker 2Oh yeah, gave it to me.
Speaker 4And it was all inspired off of Macho Mainnity Savage because he did a bit where he took the cream out of his and I love I just love that persona.
So that's that's why I call it cream Season and Butter Teams.
Speaker 2Bubs.
Well, thank you for explaining.
I just learned something to the Jewels.
I like it to the man.
All right, Well we got a we got a text that came through inn our inbox.
Just now, this one's for me, just because you just took that one over and you did such a great job.
He was playing Cream and Butter Jewels.
But any plans for Gronk in the w W E Ring.
You know, that's a very interesting question because every time I did something with the ww he'd actually exploded tremendously.
When I went into the Royal Rumble, like what was that, I don't know, twenty eighteen and I absolutely leveled Ginger Mahal, you know, I kicked him in the face twice and that was unscripted.
Speaker 3I just did that on the spot.
Speaker 2I was like, I gotta get some kicks in, like I always wanted to do that.
It was just so cool to be in the ring in front of fifty thousand fans and just kick him.
He was the world champion at the time, hit the heavyweight champion or what do they call it?
World champion.
He was the top dog.
He was he was the butter of the cream.
And then my friend Mojo O'Reilly came in scooped him.
I got out pinned him.
He won the Battle Royale or was it the Royal?
I think it was the Battle Royale, Andre the Giant Battle Royale.
I'm pretty sure Royal Rumbo and Battle Royale.
I always get confused.
I just love them both.
And uh, we got jack.
You were Yeah, I was jacked.
That was huge, dude.
So it always blows up every time I do stuff with the w w A and now I just have it and so on, and you know, a football career, it just felt like.
Speaker 4I to you did a WWE moves on the field against Buffalo.
Speaker 2I did when I elbow dropped Trade Davis White.
That WWE loved that one.
I'll WW fansay, I should have blamed the WW for being part of the w W.
That's why I dropped down.
But well, that was a subspension.
It wasn't just a fine and that's one was still a fine.
Finding a game, cheah it was.
That was like two hundred plus.
Yeah, it's okay.
It was the best money I ever spent a week off and then came back and dominated versus Steelers because I was fresh and I was trying to freaking preach for like three weeks.
I just need a week off.
I was saying it to everyone.
I was like, my body needs and what happened.
I got I got this.
It came back one hundred and sixty yards to the house.
Couldn't stop me.
Everything blocking great.
My preaching is just always so right.
But it's just hard to preach when you're not the coach.
Speaker 3So the plans are in the ring as of right now.
Speaker 2No, but I went on Stephanie McMahon's podcast, you know, when we were at a nax Fest, and she's kind of like egging me on to like get me back in the WW a little bit.
But I kind of pumped the brakes because I don't want to make any promises because there's nothing like there's something there if I wanted to go back, but I'm only really going to do that is if it's like I'm really, really really feeling it and just that opportunity just hasn't come.
You know.
Yeah, I haven't had that feeling.
So I'm a big WW fan.
But seeing me in the ring, you know, I would say, on a scale through one hundred percent, I would say it's like a it's like a ninety six point six nine percent that you won't see me back.
Well, so there's a chance, So what is it?
Ninety six?
I don't even that just flowed off.
I meant to say just ninety six percent, but then I had ninety six in it, and then I had to hit the point six to nine.
I like it.
So that's what could be there.
So that's that's what we gotta go to.
Speaker 3One of the three points.
We should just go.
Speaker 2While Jules I was I didn't actually go to last year's WrestleMania's in Vegas again and I'm hosting I'm the official after party of WrestleMania.
Speaker 3You gotta goan beaches that did.
Speaker 2Move from the super Bowl because it was just too much mayhem, and I couldn't handle it there anymore.
It was just too like, too much going on.
We moved it to WrestleMania Now it's official after party of WrestleMania, which was so perfect.
Speaker 3We gotta we gotta gotta go, We gotta go.
And then last one one more?
Speaker 5How about Justin Herber playing through that broken hand.
What's the craziest injury you guys played through?
A guy plays through?
Speaker 2Oh, I mean me, what injuries?
Haven't we played through?
Speaker 3Jewels?
Speaker 2You can go first in this one.
Speaker 4I mean it's playing through a broken hand.
I played through a broken hand, but I didn't play the whole game.
Speaker 2Yeah, but you're trying to catch him block like like Justin Herbert.
It was his left hand.
Yeah, yeah, he's still throwing with the right.
You're fine, Well, that's nothing in my book.
Speaker 4I broke my hand against Baltimore in that two minute drive before half in twenty twelve, and then I ended up catching a touchdown with it, but then they wouldn't let me back in after.
Speaker 3Because it was I couldn't move my like.
Speaker 4There's no way.
And then I played.
I broke my arm when Van der Bosch in that remember the snow game in was that or were you the Snow Game?
Speaker 3No, it was two retires TE Titans.
Speaker 2Oh yeah, you guys won, like Tom threw for like six touchdowns the first half.
Yeah, you guys won like sixty four nothing or sixty four.
Yeah.
Speaker 4When Tom was out of the game and it was me and Hoy, I broke my arm and I caught a ball with a broken arm, and I even came to me and he goes, I'm like, hi's my arm here?
Speaker 3He goes, what are you doing?
Get your ass back on the field.
Ain't going out.
Speaker 4And I was like, all right, So I go out and I catch a ball and i'd come back home like I've I don't know, something's wrong in my arm.
Speaker 3He goes, yeah, what was wrong?
I think I broke it.
He's like, get over there.
We'll get over here, he said, yelling at me.
So I went and caught a ball with the broken arm and.
Speaker 2Then I was out.
Speaker 3That's respect, brother, That is.
Speaker 4The hernias I had, hernias that I played through a whole year.
You played through a back your whole career?
Speaker 2Yeah, back, I mean, I would say the biggest you know, injury that like that where I had to perform at a high level.
Shows The last game I played for the Neilgan Patriots, and what was that Super Bowl fifty two, the one year MVP, what was it fifty two or fifty three?
Fifty three three?
Speaker 3It was?
Speaker 2I just get all the Super Bowls confused the same.
Yeah, I just say, I just know.
Speaker 3We're very blessed because we went to a lot.
Speaker 2I also had the team and where, what city it was in, and what stadium.
But uh, that one fifty three year MVP Super Bowl season and I took that quad contusion and now and then, like it was a quad contusion where a thousand milliars of blood got taken out by under the game with two minutes left, I couldn't move my leg anymore, like I maximize the amount of use I could get on it.
And then the last two minutes on the final drive, I was blocking with one leg and just kind of throwing my shoulder into like Aaron Donald and like their defensive ends.
Yeah, but it didn't look pretty, but it was a pretty job.
Speaker 3You made the play the game, bro, I did.
Speaker 2I made the play of the game with a quad contusion where I should where I thought my leg was broken them whole entire game.
Dude.
Speaker 3They did it right after the game, right it was?
Speaker 2It was.
I couldn't walk, I couldn't even sleep.
I got twenty minutes of sleep that night.
I couldn't walk for four weeks after that.
I couldn't even put pants on my quad.
Was that thick?
Speaker 3That's yeah, dude, those contusions are brutal.
Speaker 2I wish I could get a contusion like that to my third leg and make that thing grow, but it's always the two legs.
Speaker 3I don't want blood flow too.
And that was the Chillest Dude of the Week, presented by our favorite beer Cores Lege Coors Light delivered straight to your door.
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Speaker 2I are celebrated responsibly.
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