PBD Podcast - Trevor Bauer On Sex Assault Allegations, MLB Suspension & Return to Baseball | PBD Podcast | Ep 360
Episode Date: February 1, 2024Patrick Bet-David and Tom Ellsworth speak with former Major League Baseball pitcher Trevor Bauer. Trevor Andrew Bauer is an American professional baseball pitcher who is a free agent. He has played i...n Major League Baseball for the Arizona Diamondbacks, Cleveland Indians, Cincinnati Reds and Los Angeles Dodgers and in Nippon Professional Baseball for the Yokohama DeNA BayStars. Follow Trevor on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3vXRJ8x Follow Trevor on X: https://bit.ly/4bhaJyW Subscribe to Trevor's YouTube Channel: https://bit.ly/47XdhPU Visit TrevorBauer.com: https://bit.ly/48SSleb Connect one-on-one with the right expert to get the answers you need with Minnect: https://bit.ly/3MC9IXE Connect with Patrick Bet-David on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3OoiGIC Connect with Tom Ellsworth on Minnect: https://bit.ly/3UgJjmR Connect with Vincent Oshana on Minnect: https://bit.ly/47TFCXq Connect with Adam Sosnick on Minnect: https://bit.ly/42mnnc4 Purchase a “Future Looks Bright” Purple & Gold signature hat and t-shirt, and receive one additional “Future Looks Bright” hat for free (red, white, black & camo). Use promo code “pbdpodcast” at checkout: https://bit.ly/3Sgbrnf Get a free "Future Looks Bright" Hat & T-Shirt: Purchase two "Future Looks Bright" Hats and one "Future Looks Bright" T-Shirt & use the promo code "pbdpodcast2024" at checkout! Purchase Patrick's new book "Choose Your Enemies Wisely": https://bit.ly/41bTtGD Register to win a Valuetainment Boss Set (valued at over $350): https://bit.ly/41PrSLW Get best-in-class business advice with Bet-David Consulting: https://bit.ly/40oUafz Visit VT.com for the latest news and insights from the world of politics, business and entertainment: https://bit.ly/472R3Mz Visit Valuetainment University for the best courses online for entrepreneurs: https://bit.ly/47gKVA0 Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! SUBSCRIBE TO: @VALUETAINMENT @vtsoscast @ValuetainmentComedy @bizdocpodcast @theunusualsuspectspodcast Want to be clear on your next 5 business moves? https://bit.ly/3Qzrj3m Join the channel to get exclusive access to perks: https://bit.ly/3Q9rSQL Download the podcasts on all your favorite platforms https://bit.ly/3sFAW4N Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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I Giving values contagious, this world of entrepreneurs, we get no value to hate it. I ain't runnin', homie, look what I become.
I'm the under one.
So today's guest is a Major League Baseball player,
and a guy I've been following and speaking to for a while.
He was probably one of the most exciting players
that entered into the Major Leagues,
but I wanna properly introduce him to you in a way to see how you would feel about this. So imagine you're in
high school and you have a 4.8 GPA. Okay, let's just assume you got a 4.8 GPA and because of your
grades you can go to UCLA early to pitch and to go to school you're 17 years old. You go to UCLA,
you do your thing, you're coming out in the draft, you can go second,
you ask the mariners for 20 million, they say no, you go to the Diamondbacks for 7.3
million, you get pick number three.
You come into the major leagues right off the bat, you're doing your thing, you're trying
to figure yourself out, you're young, you're a little bit of a rebel, you're in the new
era social media content creation, maybe you're a bit of a troll. So think about
like a younger, you know, you know, Conor McGregor coming into the UFC where Dana White knows how
to use him, right? And what does Conor do? He draws all these eyeballs, making one of the greatest
fights of all time with him in Mayweather, and he's making 100 million, I believe Mayweather made
300 million dollars. So but there's still some challenges and you know of course when
you're a little bit trollish and you're a little bit of a rebel maybe you know
you're in the playoffs ALCS maybe in game one you're messing around with your
what do you call it the drone and you're trying to fix it and and you're playing
for this team called the Indians and you cut your pinky of your pitching arm,
right? And it's so bad that you're playing a game, game two of the ALCS. You can hide your blood
on your Navy blue jersey, but you can't on your white pants. And no matter how much you try to,
there's literally videos of the blood dripping to the point where the skipper on the other side
had to come in and go to the ump and say, Hey man, you know, we can't have blood. Look what's going on over there. So they come,
they take them out and coach is upset. It's like, what are you doing? It's a big moment.
Sure. Okay. Then, you know, frustration throws the pitch to the center of field. Coach comes
out. What the F are you doing? I'm so sorry. It gets taken out, gets traded, eventually
goes to a team. He has a good season and I think he gets number three,
four, number six for Cy Young. He thought he could have won it. I think this is
since then. I don't know where you were at, but you thought you were gonna win it.
You were number six. Then he goes and gets the biggest contract in the history.
By the way, at this time he's won the Cy Young. I think he ends up winning the Cy
Young with the Dodgers. He calls it the Mickey Mouse Award. So I think it was a
short season that we had with COVID, all the stuff that it the Mickey Mouse Award. So I think it was a short season that we had
with COVID, all this stuff that's going on.
But again, I want you to think about this.
All this stuff is going on.
You know, he gets a contract, biggest in the history
of Major League Baseball at the time.
It's a three-year contract for $102 million.
Okay, three years, $102 million.
You get a contract like that in 2020.
He's 33 years old right now, which means 2020, he's late 20 he's 33 years old right now which means 2020 he's late 20s 29 years old you're on top
of the world you just got a nine-figure check okay and of course you're having
some fun and by the way I'll put a little bit of Elon Musk in him as well
because one time he said for 69 days straight he wants to give money to a
charity of the fans choosing and in how much money he gives to the money to a charity of the fans choosing. And in how much money he gives to the charity
on a daily basis, $420.69 for 69 days straight.
And on the 69 day, he chose to give $69,420.69
to a charity of his choosing.
So yes, he is a troll, that's a bit of a musk,
that's a bit of a counter.
But again, if you know how to use a creative talent like this
who's a troll and it's upsetting and closes one eye
when he's pitching a ball and strikes the guy out
and screaming, is on the highlight, we all follow it,
gets millions of views, we can't wait to see
the next time they play, it's drawing an audience
that the MLB doesn't yet have, it's getting exciting, right?
And then all of a sudden, so again, at this point,
you're on top of the world.
Wherever you go to, they know who you are.
They're talking about you every day.
On the news, you're being written about,
you're on the papers.
You can't keep track of all the magazines,
sports magazines that are writing about you.
Oh, you know you were quoted over here?
Oh, you know you were over here?
No shit, I can't track it anymore.
You're at this point.
Then all of a sudden, you get a lot of attention.
Of course, a lot of girls are interested in you.
You're a good looking guy, tall course a lot of girls are interested in you go looking guy tall
Knows how to play loud vocal, you know has strong opinions is a troll also on Twitter
He had plans of one point getting to a million followers and Twitter in no time
I mean this is the kind of a guy that's competitive, right? So this girl is
Attracted to him a girl named Lindsay Hill she comes in
Asks him there's texts and
all this stuff that we'll talk about, there's a video, we'll show some of the texts, and
they start hanging out, and you know, then a few months later, she comes out and accuses
him of sexual assault.
So now keep in mind, you're a major league baseball player, you're playing for the Dodgers,
a city like LA, girls are throwing their everything at you, right?
Then he's like, what are we talking about here?
The MLB jumps to conclusion.
You know how many games they suspended for?
I want you to think about this.
They suspended for 320 for games, ends up being 194 games.
Two years later, Lindsey was lying,
texts were shown, videos were shown, calls were shown,
and even the court said if we had this earlier two years
before, this would have never happened,
nothing would have happened with this person.
You know how much money Lindsey got?
Three hundred thousand dollars.
You know from who?
From an insurance company, not from Trevor Bauer.
The reason why this is very important
and why I wanted to have this conversation with Trevor
is because there's a lot of other people in sports
who have gone through this.
And you just played in Japan, in Japan,
his spin rate and his velocity rate
was very comparable to the best season that he had
when he was crushing it in Major League Baseball.
So it's not like, well, he can't pitch anymore.
Why not?
No, he can't throw in and I can't do this anymore.
And it's at a point right now where he could probably play
in the big leagues for another seven years, but one girl cost
him a few hundred million dollars and some of his best
pitch in years of his life and fans lost that.
So with that being said, I wanted to properly introduce
Trevor before we get into the story.
Trevor, it's great to have you on the podcast.
Yeah, it's great to be here.
I watch you guys all the time.
So happy to be on set and just watching on YouTube.
Well, we watched you for a long time,
and Tom, one day we were having dinner,
and his family, they're big Dodger fans.
Tom was a season ticket holder,
I don't know, two decades, three decades,
you sat right next to, who's the big interviewer?
Larry King.
Larry King, and right behind the pitch.
So he would follow, and you were the family's favorite pitcher is where you were at and
then one day he's like yeah you know there was this pitcher named Trevor Barra
I said I think Trevor DM'd me. Trevor DM'd me? Yeah and I'm like Instagram oh shit we
did and I'm like oh do you we had this conversation together and it led to a
phone call and all this stuff so I wanted to have Tom here because Tom's got a
different perspective with baseball and he is a guy that's you know
When he comes onto history what's happened with sports he knows a lot about us. I wanted him to be here as well
So how are you doing right now? How are you feeling right now? I'm good good?
It's been a rough couple years. Yeah worse, but I
Think I've managed to get through it well enough and focused on the future
That's that's kind of been the saving grace just trying to look towards the future and figure out what I can do to make the future better
than than the past. So yeah, doing pretty good right now. So what's the level of
optimism of you know, getting everything scored away with Lindsey where
the market now knows what happened there for you to be able to go back on the
mound and start pitching again? I don't know. I'm hopeful, of course. I'm not the most optimistic person in general. I try to be a little bit more
realistic
just in everything so I realize that there's a lot of
You know a lot of potential issues that a team would have in signing me publicly. I like public relations wise
Pitching wise like I'm still one of the best guys in the world.
I know I can go out there and perform at a top level.
I played in Japan last year.
I set a new all-time velocity record through harder than I ever have in my life.
My average velocity was second highest in my career in a year.
I had a really good year.
I developed a new pitch.
My arsenal is better than it ever has been.
So I have no doubts on the field that I'm able to perform and compete.
I'm just looking for an opportunity.
So that's kind of where it's at.
I'm hopeful, but not sure.
We'll see how it plays out.
We saw the videos when you were in Japan.
You were welcome.
They loved you.
Yeah, it seemed like it was like a solid reception.
What was your experience playing in Japan?
Man, Japan was awesome.
I could I could talk this entire podcast about Japan.
The Bay Stars organization, so the team I played for there was the Yokohama Bay Stars,
and they were extremely welcoming.
I've actually known a couple of people in their front office for a couple
years now through going to Japan and trying to make content and help grow
baseball in Japan and all that.
But that was great.
They were super welcoming.
The fan base was super welcoming for people who haven't seen games in Japan.
You can imagine like a European soccer game with the crowd
chanting and there's band playing the entire time
and flags and all sorts of stuff sold out every single game.
So for the people in the states, if you haven't been to a game
over there, it's well worth it if you get the chance.
They care a lot about baseball as a culture.
Everyone loves it.
It's like the number one sport there, which is really cool to be a part of.
Talent is very good.
I think the talent is better than most people give it credit for.
It kind of gets the reputation of being like a less than MLB league.
And that was not my experience at all.
I think that's not, you know, that's when you look at the WBC and the results of
the five WBCs, Japan's won three of them. So level competition is very high. Different,
of course, a lot of cultural differences in how the game is played and what's important,
how the coaches interact with players. There's only 12 teams, there's 30 in the MLB. So there's
a lot less data. Also, it's not really controlled by a central operating body.
Each team is kind of individual.
I saw a really interesting graph one time, actually.
Kind of like revenues in 1970,
NPV in Japan actually generated more revenue than MLB.
And since then, MLB is like skyrocketed
and NPV has stayed flat.
And the reason for that is the 12 teams there are competing
And here MLB is like a collective
You know MLB owns all the all the rights to the TV they can sell it as a as a package so the national TV deals are there
They can drive ticket prices. They you know, it's one central thing where in Japan it's 12 teams competing for the fans attention
So there's no national TV deals. They all have their local TV deals. It's all based thing, where in Japan, it's 12 teams competing for the fans' attention. So there's no national TV deals.
They all have their local TV deals.
It's all based, revenue's all based on in-person attendance.
So they actually have to make the fan experience really good.
So ticket prices are down, entertainment's up.
Like, the Bay Stars would launch fireworks after every single game.
So it became a thing to like, stay after the game and enjoy it.
They'd have like, pop stars come in and do concerts after a baseball game
to try to drive fan engagement.
So it was it was really fun. The people in Japan like outside of baseball just the people on the streets are so
polite at least you know my experience.
So polite and welcoming. I had people coming up to me
you know, I walked to the train station like 20 minute walk.
If less than 10 people came up and like,
shook my hand and wanted a picture,
wanted to say hi or something, it was a slow day.
So, but they did it in a very respectful way.
You were time select is where you were.
You got a taste of that on what it was like there.
Yeah, it was cool.
The whole experience was awesome.
Fantastic.
Well, you know, when I was following the story closely, we've
reacted to it many times with, you know, what was going on with it with Lindsay
Hill. And we've seen her in interviews. I think she did a couple of interviews
where she was called out and it's like, ah, shit. If you feel that way, if you only
knew me, if you gave me a chance to get to know me, like, no, we got to know you and we learned a lot about you.
What was revealed from the Lindsay Hill case that originally the way MLB immediately jumped on?
It's like, no, you can't do this.
This is not fair.
You know, that $324 million, 324 games, and then boom,
now it's $193, whatever the number number was to where it's at today
What did MLB learn to realize this guy's innocent? You didn't do any of it and then did they reach out apologize has there been any conversations there about them wanting to
Speak with you about potentially what your career is gonna look like in the future
Maybe we need you to go through XYZ therapy and meet with this has that conversation taken place
That conversation hasn't taken place.
I have spoken to the commissioner and deputy commissioner.
Face to face.
Face to face.
I had a 20 minute conversation with Rob and I basically I wanted to just
apologize for the things that I've said about him in the past
and just clear the air.
Didn't get the sense that there is any, you know, malice or anything like that.
It was a pleasant conversation.
Mostly, I mean, we talked a little bit about the state of baseball.
I'm growing and stuff like that.
So trying to, like, I want to be a positive for the game.
You know, I want to grow it.
Baseball's given me a lot.
Um, despite the last couple of years, it's like, I'm still in a fantastic
position in life and, um, you know, time with my family and, uh, confidence as a
person, there's outside of the money and the fame and all that stuff.
Um, there's other like key lessons money and the fame and all that stuff,
there's other key lessons that I've learned through baseball
that I want the next generation to be able to experience.
And so I think a lot of my efforts to be positive
for the game have been different
than what the game has traditionally been.
And I think it's caused a lot of rifts but it all comes from a place of
trying to connect with the younger fan base and get people interested in
baseball. I'd love to work with the league. We talked about that a
little bit. I apologize for the things that I've said and the way that I've
gone about things. Looking back now, I'm 33 now, looking back at some
of the things I did when I was 20 and coming up in the league, I'm just very embarrassed about them.
But I think that's a natural thing, like you grow.
Hopefully you learn from your mistakes and you do better year after year.
You know, even back to my time when I was with the Diamondbacks when I first signed,
like, I look back at some of the things I did now, I'm like, wow, I was so immature back
then.
But back then, I'm a 20-year-old, just got drafted in the first round, I think I have
everything figured out and, you know, I ruined a lot of relationships or at least
got off to a bad start and a lot of relationships there that I would like to repair. So that's
kind of the tone of the conversation. That's what I'm trying to do. I want to be a positive, really.
And in baseball, is it kind of like this? Manfred is
like the president of the United States, you got 50 governors,
the governor's got to decide what they get to do. And it's
left to the states to make the decision. Is it a similar way
where hey, I'm the commissioner, you know, if these guys want to
hire you, it's on them. But I don't have a problem if they
hire you. Is that the kind of approach? Okay, the way it works
is the owners actually elect the commissioner. So the
commissioner works for the owners actually elect the commissioner. So the commissioner works for the owners,
for the collective group.
He's in charge of overseeing the game
and making, at the end of the day,
making their investment in a baseball team profitable
and making it a good investment, growing the league,
growing revenues, stuff like that.
So did he say, hey, if the guys want to sign you, great,
but he didn't give an endorsement either.
He didn't give a nod to say, hey guys, yeah,
he's good. If you guys want to work with them, was there an element of an endorsement where
it's, it's not, it's not his, yeah, if a team wants to sign a player, they go sign, they
go sign the player. It's not really his, his area.
Have you had any kind of a, have you pitched for anybody? Have you gone? Have they taken
a look at you as any team? No, no one's looked at you yet.
No, I don't think the performance is the, is the factor. I mean, I pitched in Japan last year. We just saw
Yamamoto sign with the Dodgers. They scout him in Japan. They know each team knows kind of like how
they view Japanese or like performance in Japanese league, how it'll translate. They look at the
stuff metrics of velocity, spin rates, the strikeout numbers, the pitch movements, all that.
And they make the decision.
And I don't think anyone out there has any question
that I'm still one of the most elite guys out there.
It's a little different than other free agencies
because the talent is not the question
and the money is not the question.
I'm willing to play for the league minimum with incentives.
I just want an opportunity to go out there and pitch to prove that I'm still one of the best guys. I realize that there's risk in signing me for the league minimum with incentives. I just want an opportunity to go out there and pitch
to prove that I'm still one of the best guys.
I realize that there's risk in signing me
for the other side.
I want it to be a good deal.
I don't want one side to get screwed.
And so I want to pitch for the league minimum with incentives.
So if I pitch like the best guy in the world,
then I can earn money like that.
And if I don't, then there's no risk for the team.
So it's really not a question of talent or
money. It's a question of optics I think and that's the that's the battle we're
fighting. What do you think their risk is? If you're major like if we were you're
in a negotiation situation right you have to always put yourself in the other
person's shoes to say okay this is what they want this is what they fear what do
you think is their concern and what can you as
a player do or agree to in the contract to get them to not worry about that one or two
or three things?
Yeah, so I think the first part identifying the risks is a little bit easier than the
solutions. Identifying risks, you have optics publicly, so fan-based stuff. I'm perceived
to be a certain way.
You sign me, it's like, oh, well,
you don't care about women or you don't value,
how do I explain this to my kids?
There's those types of questions with the fan base.
There's internal stuff, I'm sure there's,
these organizations are massive,
so you have a lot of different people
that feel a lot of different ways,
so you have risk of internal culture disruption
with the front office and the support staff.
I don't think anyone really questions the clubhouse stuff.
I'm fine in the clubhouse.
I have a good reputation behind closed doors
in the clubhouse publicly.
It's a little bit different.
But so there's those risks and then there's sponsors.
Do people drop sponsorships?
There's a financial component to it as well.
I think the upside is there.
You spend a league minimum that you have to spend anyway
and you potentially get someone that pitches
at a $40 million a year level.
But those are some of the concerns that I've identified.
How I go about solving those.
I personally don't think that it's more than a three
or four day story when it, if someone signs me,
I think it goes away, I think I handle it,
and then it's just about baseball.
I could be very wrong on that, that's just my personal opinion.
So I don't know how to solve that one.
I'm happy to have any conversations
and work with the team in any way,
whether it's having conversations with the local media, the national media, if that's
something that they want me to, you know, being involved in the community. I like being involved
in the community. That's something I'm very passionate about anyway, connecting with youth,
all those different things. I'm happy to have those conversations. Ultimately, like I said earlier,
I want it to be a partnership and I want to do well for the team that signs me and I want them to do well for me and so both parties are
happy.
So I'm willing to address any concern that they have.
I just don't know how to do that ahead of time.
If I go do a bunch of media and address stuff, then it's like, all right, well, now you're
in the media a lot with this as kind of surrounding this topic.
Maybe the team just wants me to not
be in the media and play baseball. I'm fine with that. Maybe a team wants me to address
it, but different teams feel different ways. So it's hard to have one solution that like
satisfies the whole of the 30 teams. Ultimately, I just looking for, you know, to sit down
with someone and like have a conversation and like prove
Be given the chance to prove that I can be a positive and that I can grow the fan base
I can connect with the local community. I can pitch well in the field. I can help the players in the clubhouse become better pitchers
Help the team win, you know bring playoffs and World Series to the to the city. I think there's a lot of positives
I know I can deliver on those things.
I just need to be given the opportunity.
So do you think with any of these teams, like, is there any teams you wouldn't play for?
Or you'd play for anybody that give you an opportunity today?
No, I play for anyone.
I don't have like you mentioned earlier, I'm kind of a troll.
Like I've trolled a lot and it's and it's all trying to drive fan engagement.
I have no problems with any of the teams. I'd play for the Dodgers again. I'd play for the
Astros. It doesn't matter to me. You just want to get back into it and play. I want to play. I've
spent 30 years of my life developing a skill set that's like top 15 in the world. I'd like to be
able to use it because I love playing. I love competing and I feel like I have a lot
left to give. And your preparation, the way you would go about preparing, it was
very different and weird and controversial and nobody understood it
and even in what which team was it you were playing for that even the
pitchers were coming to you to learn from the data on how to improve their
games like you were helping other pitches around you on how to become a better picture.
So, but, but let me do this.
For some of the audience that doesn't know the whole story, okay, they don't know what
really happened with Lindsay Hill.
You made a video, okay, and the video was the whole story with what took place and the
texts were out and you kind of negotiated where you could talk about it for the rest
of your career, because that was obviously very important.
You even sued her, you came back and sued her.
Can you walk the audience through
maybe the process of what happened, events?
Here's what happened first, one day I'm doing this,
we met here, here's what took place,
and this happened, whatever information you can give
on a process for the audience that doesn't know,
and then we can go into some of the other topics.
Yeah, high level, she reached out to me on Instagram.
We started talking on Instagram.
Eventually, she came over to my house one night.
So she lived in San Diego.
I was in Pasadena and she drove up to Pasadena,
had a nice night together,
decided to meet up three weeks later about,
she came back, had a great night.
She left, no problems.
And then a couple of days later,
I'm getting texts about I'm in the hospital and what's
going on.
And she started accusing me of things that did not happen.
Eventually she filed a domestic violence restraining order basically saying she was scared or in
danger.
That's a public filing.
So her written version of events went public.
The media picked up on it.
I was put on administrative leave by MLB,
not allowed to pitch.
There was, I didn't have any chance at that point
to defend myself.
We went to family court, I think six weeks or so later. We had four days there where a
judge heard her side of the story. I didn't testify. There was an open investigation,
so my lawyers advised me not to say anything. And so the judge heard her side of why she needed
a protective order and then denied it, which for those who don't know,
that's like the lowest standard
in all the entire justice system,
the lowest standard of proof.
And the judge threw it out and said
that she had misled the court,
materially misled the court,
and that there was no wrongdoing on my part.
Then, I think that was in August. I could have the month wrong. It's
a long time ago now. But there's an open investigation. Obviously, the allegations against me were
very serious. And as they were, they should be investigated to the fullest extent. So,
as the Pasadena Police Department, and I think other, I don't know exactly what all other
entities were involved, but as they investigated,
I was still on administrative leave.
So I wasn't able to play for the remainder
of the 2021 season that lasted into spring training time,
where I was on administrative leave in 2022.
They eventually decided not to press any charges.
So I was never arrested never charged with anything
And then I was after that suspended by MOB for originally two years. So by the time we went through the process of appeal
In December I believe of 2020
2022
The suspension was reduced to
194 games which is the number of games that I'd
missed.
And then I was cleared to play immediately.
I still had a one year left on my Dodger contract.
So in January of 20, 23, they released me, um, from that.
And then I went and played in Japan in 2023.
Um, and now we're here.
So that's like high level sequence of events.
Now, Tex came out about her rap.
Can you prepare that video?
Maybe the first 90 seconds will be good
for the audience to see.
I think this is you actually showing the Tex,
just play it from the beginning, go for it.
Next victim, star pitcher for the Dodgers.
A Tex Lindsay Hill sent to a friend
before she ever even met me.
What should I steal?
She asked another in reference to visiting my house
for the first time.
The answer, take his money. So how might that work? I'm going to his another, in reference to visiting my house for the first time. The answer?
Take his money.
So how might that work?
I'm going to his house Wednesday, she said.
I already have my hooks in.
You know how I roll.
Then, after the first time we met, net worth is 51 mil, she said.
Bitch, you better secure the bag, was the response.
But how was she gonna do that?
Need daddy to choke me out, she said, being an absolute whore to try to get in on his 51
million.
Read another text.
Then, after the second time we met, former Padres pitcher Jacob Nix told her,
you gotta get this bag.
I'll give you 50,000, Lindsay replied.
Her AA sponsor asked her at one point,
do you feel a tiny bit guilty?
Not really, if you replied.
Since then, her legal team has approached me multiple times
about coming to a financial settlement.
But as I have done since day one, I refuse to pay her even a single cent.
In August of 2021, Lindsay Hill's claims were heard in court,
and during those legal proceedings, critical information was deliberately and
unlawfully concealed from me and my legal team. Information like this video, which was
taken by Lindsay Hill herself, the morning after she claimed she was brutally attacked,
emotionally traumatized and desperate to get away from me. And now we have the metadata,
so there can be no dispute. It was taken mere minutes before she left my house on the morning
of May 16th, 2021, without my knowledge or consent. Of course. In it, you can see her
lying in bed next to me while I'm sleeping, smirking at the camera without a care in the
world, or any marks on her face. I think it paints a pretty clear picture of what actually
happened the evening of May 15th and why the video was originally concealed from us.
After hearing the evidence available to her, Judge Diana Goldsaltman found that Lindsay
Hill had misled the court. She found her claims to be materially misleading. She denied her
request for a domestic violence restraining order, and she found that no sexual assault
or non-consensual conduct took place. Now, some of you might not know about restraining
order hearings. I know I didn't, but I've since learned that it's extremely rare for
a restraining order to be denied because the standard of proof that you need to obtain
one is extremely low. So you can make of proof that you need to obtain one is extremely low
So you can make of that what you will the fact is I was never arrested
I was never charged with a crime and I won the only legal proceeding that took place without my side of the story even being heard
And most importantly as I've said from day one. I never sexually assaulted Lindsay Hill or anyone else for that matter
So I sued her which prompted her to counter sue me quite frankly regardless of the outcome in court
I've paid significantly more in legal fees
than Lindsay Hill could ever pay me in her entire life.
And I knew that would be the case going in.
But the lawsuit was never about the money for me.
It was the only way for me to obtain
critical information to clear my name.
The discovery process in that lawsuit recently concluded,
at which point Lindsay Hill's legal team
again came to us with another proposal to resolve the case.
This time, however, they weren't seeking any money for me.
Having received much of the information
that had been hidden from us, a small portion of which
I've referenced here, I was willing to agree
to the terms proposed.
Both parties would drop their respective lawsuits,
and neither of us would pay either side any money.
I also retained my right to speak publicly about the case,
something I have not been at liberty to do since June of 2021.
So as of today, all lawsuits have been settled.
Now over the last two years, I've been forced to defend my integrity and my reputation in
a very public setting, but hopefully this is the last time I have to do so, as I prefer
to just remain focused on doing my job, winning baseball games and entertaining fans around
the world.
So today, I'm happy to be moving on with my life.
How much did it cost you if you were to put a number to it last however long it's been?
Renewal and contract, additional things you could do, maybe a World Series win, maybe
two.
During that time you were on a team that had a lot of legs to do a lot of things.
What do you think it cost you?
Are you talking future earnings potential as well?
Give me all of it, yeah.
During that time and future earnings potential as well? Give me all of it, yeah. During that time and future earnings?
It's, during that time it's mid, let's see, mid eight figures between legal costs, suspension,
you know, off field stuff, endorsements, all that.
Lifetime earnings probably 350 is conservative. I was making
42.5 million a year. At that point, I was 30. So if I decline linearly from 30 to 40
and end up at 40, making 20 million, which would be well below what guys like Scherzer
and Verlander are making at 40. Let's just say I declined linearly
then I would have averaged 31 or 30 million 750 for 10 years so that'd be
300 million plus the you know and you were innocent so 350 million dollars to
400 million dollars and you were innocent yeah okay so you know the one
thing I think about myself is I have two Yeah. Okay. So, you know, the one thing I think
about myself is I have two ways I process this, but I, you know, I want to kind of see
where you take this. On one end, you know, Dana White knew how to use Connor. Okay. Connor
came in, you used to do your arms like this when you would go and then who's the guy you
pitched with your eyes struck him out and then he had a home run and he did this to you
and he, by the way, that's freaking awesome, right?
That makes me want to watch Sports Center at night.
That's the whole point.
So I learned from Connor,
like in order to sell a UFC fight,
you have to have a reason for people to want to watch.
So you have to have a storyline going into that match.
That's right.
So there's no storylines in baseball anymore.
It used to be, you know, you have Yankees, Red Sox,
and there's this big rivalry, then free agency came around
and players move around so much that the players don't.
Pride is gone. Right.
So there's no storylines in baseball during the regular season.
So you need storylines.
You need people to like antagonize.
You need people to fight back.
So Tatees, I, you know, did something in spring training
where I pitched with one eye closed,
struck out one of the Padres hitters, it was fun,
made for good social clips, a lot of engagement.
And then he ended up hitting a home run off me
and celebrated with his dugout by putting one hand over his eye.
That's great, it went viral, it was everywhere.
Baseball was talked about on live,
like on national TV for three days because of it.
I don't care that I'm on the quote like, quote unquote, losing end of that.
It's good for baseball.
I'm gonna be on the winning end sometimes and losing end.
But you need storylines.
You need social media clips that connect with youth.
Like when Steph Curry hits a three in an all-star game,
like it's meaningless game,
but it's trending on Twitter and X and everywhere.
It's everywhere.
Mike Trout, one of the best baseball players,
not the best baseball player of all time, makes an insane catch, robs a home run, like you can't find it on social
media. Like you got to connect with the youth where the youth are, and that was the whole point
of all that. And so, you know, I don't need to go out of my way to like antagonize people or whatever,
it's an entertainment sport. Like I'm trying to entertain people. It's funny, I wrote that one
word here. I said the one thing, because when when you I put a tweet out the other day about the
fact that NFL is destroying what he called it NBA and George Carl responded.
And it was upset at what I said about the NBA because I feel the Browns
destroyed the game, my opinion again.
And specifically with the eyeballs were the most viewed playoff game of all time.
I think it was game six of Utah Jazz against, you know,
Chicago Bulls got 38 million views or 36 million views and ever since then we've hit 30, I
think once or twice, everything's in the 13s and the 12s and the 14 and 18 number. It's
dropped right and MLB as somebody who loves baseball, I'm a diehard baseball. I grew up
just following stats of baseball because baseball offered me more stats than any other sport
And I like numbers. I'm a numbers guy, right?
But if I was DMLB, which I'm not but if I'm a CMO or president or commissioner of MLB
Here's what I'd be thinking about. You know what case study I'd be paying attention to today one case study if I'm DMLB
how much
eyeballs and market has
Taylor Swift brought to the NFL?
Think about that.
How much?
You know, if I'm a betting man,
the record, do you know what the record is
for the most people watching the Super Bowl?
I think it's 114.4 million.
Can you type in most viewed Super Bowl of all time?
I wanna say it's 114.4 million.
US audience.
US audience, and I think it's 2015 or 2014 what year is it?
Hundred twenty fifteen there you go I got it right so hundred fourteen point four
million twenty fifteen Super Bowl right is the most viewed Super Bowl of all
time. I'm willing to bet this Super Bowl could get
close to one thirty. That's how crazy the Super Bowl, I think, is gonna get, right?
Depending on how they measure it and what it's gonna be like.
Of course, a lot of people are gonna go to parties,
so you're not gonna be using multiple devices.
But I think it's gonna get to the 120 to 130 mark,
and I think it's gonna break the record.
Why?
Because the NFL got a chance to get into a market
that were not in before, right?
They brought eyeballs they couldn't bring in before.
So with baseball, you know, what's baseball gonna do
to get eyeballs that they wouldn't bring in before?
Let's take a few case studies
of what players changed a sport, right?
Tiger Woods, what audience did he bring?
Non-whites.
It wasn't just blacks, it's non-whites.
If you were not white, you were following Tiger.
You gotta be, you telling me a black kid is going
around beating every, yes, frickin underdog.
I'm all in with this guy.
Let's see what he's gonna do.
And pa, pa, pa, pa, pa.
Wow, sick, insane.
So golf goes to, everybody's wearing Tiger shoes,
Tiger shoes.
And a 10 year younger audience.
It immediately jumps out.
I know, game changer, right?
Okay, so you go, what did Connor do to UFC? and a 10 year younger audience. It immediately jumps down. I know, game changer, right?
Okay, so you go, what did Conor do to UFC?
Change the game, Conor did to UFC, right?
Brought all these eyeballs and you knew it up.
Yeah, no question about it.
As an entrepreneur of a Fortune 500 company,
who brought eyeballs to capitalism?
Elon Musk, why?
He's a troll, he would have fun, he was different.
He would be selling his Tesla for how much?
$69,000 out of all the prices you can sell Tesla for you mean to tell me when I sell for $69,000
Yes, he would do everything with 420 and 69 and he was again toying with everybody, right?
So it brought eyeballs you need
Agitation you need to agitate the enemy that brings brings, you know, a level of me being interested
in, well, you know, the other day, did you see who was the one that got punched in the face? The
Toronto guy, uh, uh, Batista got punched in the face by the second baseman or, and then you're
like, wait, what? What's the next time they're playing? Whether you like it or not, you're following
this, right? So suddenly Maguire did this to baseball in 98 saved again
I think you had an element of that and you have an element of when I say had I mean that's when we saw it right
Where you were making people who are like who is this guy?
Who is this guy wants to be a youtuber? He wants to be an influencer, but he's a baseball guy
And he's got this stick that he's going like this with what the hell is wrong with this guy?
He's interesting. Why is he pitching it from the center field,
from the left field to the right field?
The coaches are upset at him.
You're gonna throw out your elbow.
That's the fastest way to do this.
Why does he have to have a running start
to pitch to catch her?
All of these things you did, that was weird.
Do you think there was an element of you being
a little too controversial for baseball that
people don't know how to handle you? Yeah, for sure. I think I have a lot of thoughts on that.
One, I didn't go about it in the perfect way. It's one thing to do like YouTube and be out there
social media-wise and I antagonize people obviously in my organizations too.
I was very bullheaded on like,
I know what I'm talking about.
And I was right on a lot of things.
I was also wrong on a lot of things
and a little bit more humility
would have done well behind the scenes.
So I don't wanna try to absolve myself
of all responsibility here.
But I think that baseball is a very traditional
game. It's got a very old, much older audience than a lot of other sports and
I think more than any other sport the fan base wants baseball to stay pure to like baseball and what they grew up with and all that and
The landscape is changing. I think that you need to have more entertainment in baseball You need and to have entertainment, you have to have those things that are different.
They're quirky.
You have to have storylines, friction.
You need those things to get talked about.
So I'm willing to do that.
I've never much cared if people like or dislike me.
That's a whole other story about my childhood.
I was willing to play that part and willing to do that.
I viewed it as good for the game.
I think a lot of people viewed it as disruptive.
It caused a lot of attention,
which is what it was designed to do,
but that is viewed sometimes as a negative,
like, oh, it's all about you,
or you're in the media so much,
everyone else in the clubhouse is getting asked about you
and the things that you do.
And so it's very centered. I got the impression from a couple teams you're in the media so much, everyone else in the clubhouse is getting asked about you and the things that you do.
And so it's very centered.
I got the impression from a couple teams over the years that they viewed it as a negative,
all the eyeballs that I would bring to my social channels and to the vlog on YouTube
and Twitter profiles that they viewed as a negative because there was so much media
attention on one player, it wasn't on the team.
But that's what sells. People wear LeBron jerseys they don't wear
generic like Laker jerseys anymore it's people are fans of players they follow
their favorite player where they go all of that I'm okay with the only thing
have a problem with as an owner if I was an owner that you were playing for my
team and you're messing around with a drone before the ALCS I would lose my
mind I swear to God I would be like,
what is wrong with this guy? We're about to win a, we have a shot. Those are the kind of things,
like in the army, you sign a contract, you're in the army. Guess what? We're going to go party on
the weekend. All right, don't just, don't be stupid. We're going to go do our thing. But if you harm
your body, that's government property. What are you doing? Harming the body, you're hurting us,
right? So that was the part where the creativity and all of that stuff, fine, antagonizing, fine, calling out your own team
you're playing for. It's just a code. You just don't do that. And you try to do it in the most subtle
way possible, like Michael used to do it. And Michael was very classy when he would call out his
own team, he would say, yeah, these guys have put a great team together. But the players come here
to watch the put the fans coming to watch the players
playing, not the GM and the management.
That was his way of saying what he did.
But the injury stuff, you know, that's, that's, uh, that's when it's affecting
the team. Those things are things that bother me more that I would be concerned
about. Then you going out there and doing what you're doing.
You know what I'm saying?
I think that comes with maturity. Anyways, there's a difference between being, you know, this there and doing what you're doing. You know what I'm saying? I think that comes with maturity anyways. There's a difference between being
you know, this phase. You're a young 33. You just turned 33 last week or 10 days, January
18th I think, right? 17th. You just turned. So it's not like you were 33 and a half going
on 34. You're a fresh 33, right? Yeah. So you know, you still got a run rate, but going with this theme of marketing, branding,
all of that stuff, do you think sometimes
the first person that does it gets destroyed, ousted,
then they come back and say,
listen, some of the stuff Trevor was doing was kind of cool.
And you know what, maybe if the next guy,
we gotta be able to handle this next guy in a better way.
Let's make sure we coach him that when a girl DMs you and they want to come over
and all this stuff, why don't you take a page out of some of Derek Jeter's playbook
where, you know, they got to sign a NDA and have lawyers protecting it because you're officially
a target. Like, did you have that as well when girls were coming over your room or no?
You know what I'm talking about where here's a signed a contract.
It's interesting.
It's like
It's today's society. It's almost if you have someone signed an NDA you're like, oh well
Why would you have him sign an NDA if you're not doing anything and if that comes out then I'm just like
You're almost guilty before just because you had an NDA you got to protect yourself
I've known players though that have faced that yeah that
It got you know kept from the public eye
But they had you know that's part of the threat like oh you have me sign this NDA if this goes public
You're gonna be looked at as doing something wrong. You don't want that pay me some money
Like that's very common in athletics. So even just an NDA like what's the penalty for breaking it?
A lot of these girls don't have nearly the money that it costs
The you know if that goes public, the girl doesn't have the amount
of money that would cost the athlete, right?
The athletes are making so much money.
Of course.
So it's like there's no penalty to them in a way.
But you can't tell me other players in NBA,
they ran through girls, right?
And what happened?
You don't see it like you see, Michael doesn't have
a lot of stuff that came back with that.
And we know Michael had a lot of fun, right?
You got magic. Are you kidding me? Like magic? He said himself, you know, in one of the interviews
He says I had I don't know what the number was. He said I had 14 girls at the same time one time
Okay, and he said I ran through a thousand probably and the number he gave I believe was a thousand
Nothing came back. So maybe that's in the 80s, and it's a different era
we're talking about, where it's not when the Me Too movement
became hot.
But today, if I'm your lawyer, if I'm your manager,
you know, we're getting the, you know, the movie
that George Clooney did with Catherine Zitter-Jones.
You ever seen that movie where they're trying
to get a prenuptial show and at the end he's like
I love you so yeah that's the one what is it called Rob you got that up real quickly
in intolerant what is it called intolerable cruelty oh it's done by Brian Grazer I just
saw him last week at the polo lounge so intolerable cruelty and the whole concept is about what? The Macy prenup that you can't
break the Macy prenup. Listen, you're a guy, you're young, what are you gonna do?
You're gonna go not having sex for 10 years and you play baseball like is
Yankee's gonna say hey you're signing a contract but guess what for the next 10
years you can't get together with a girl. Your temper is probably gonna be
worse on the locker room. We need you to have some fun on privately as well right?
But for me,
I would probably go one, protect myself. If I'm a manager of yours or a lawyer of yours,
dude, I'm finding out exactly the right way to write the contract agreement to make sure
nothing can happen to you. Even to the point of, hi, my name is Trevor. What's your name?
Jackie.
Jackie, how do we meet?
Such and such.
Who DMed who?
I DMed you.
Can you please show proof that you DM me?
Boom.
And we're going to have some fun right now.
Yes, yes.
You were not forced to be here.
No, I chose to be here.
Can you please, ba-ba-ba-ba-ba.
Great.
This goes in the file, okay?
And then your lawyer or whatever saves that file today's era
Yeah, if you don't protect yourself in some creative ways and by the way, I'm not a lawyer
So I'm not saying that's what I would be doing
But to me when you're coming up was there talks on the inside where the next Trevor Bowers
That's gonna come up look don't do this don't do this don't do this have this lawyer do this before you do this
Talk to this player. They used to be here. Hey, Johnny, can you coach such and such
to make sure he's a good looking guy? He's going to go through a lot of this. What can he do to
protect himself against girls that are going to want to use me to against him? Talk to my lawyer.
Does that take place behind closed doors or no? I'm not having those conversations. I think it's
an important one to have. I think the social media landscape really blowing up over the last 10 years
has created a lot of opportunities for things like this to happen and it's probably moved
a lot faster than the industry is ready for and able to kind of compensate for.
I think those discussions need to be had.
It's very hard to figure out a solution though.
There's a lot of ways around things.
Even if you have all of the text messages, like I have all the text messages, even if you have video like the morning after and there's no marks on
growth.
But no, they said if they had the video earlier, it wouldn't have gone, right?
They did say that one clip, if they had it immediately, it wouldn't have gone this far.
So that would have helped.
Yeah.
So I think the, you know, keeping all the documentation is very important.
And if you can find some way to,
I don't know, get consent to video the thing or audio
or some record of what actually happened would be important.
That's, it's double edged short on that front.
But I agree with you,
you have to have something that's gonna protect you.
Unfortunate part is like the actual implementation of it and how you do that.
And then the athlete's willingness to actually do it every single time.
Like it's, it's a lot.
Like there's solutions that need to be discovered there.
But when I joined the army, the first thing my, uh, uh, map station, then you go to your
unit, they said, Hey, 15 will get you 20.
That was the biggest line in the army.
15 will get you 20. What is 15 will get you 20? You're 19 years old. You hook up with someone's
15 year old daughter, you're gonna get 20 years. What you're saying Sarge?
You ID everybody. You want me to ID a girl? Yep, even if they look 24, you ID them.
So whenever we would go where was point of something happening, you'd have to say,
can I see your ID? You're stupid. No, can I see your ID?
Are you serious?
Yes.
You want me to say, you want me to say, yeah.
23 years old.
OK, cool, let's go.
Versus it was, oh, can't, right?
So even military would prep soldiers
to set them up for success, not set them up for failure.
I don't know if in orientation they
talked about this kind of stuff.
I would assume they do.
I've never had a conversation like that.
You mean to tell me nobody in major leagues any of the teams you were part of talked about
how to handle girls that come up to you in DMU?
I've never had it.
They may talk to other players.
I've never had it.
You know, that's consistent with things that I've read and heard, that there are more
counselors that are in college football right now that talk about clique chasers, frat parties,
and things like this to be careful with
in the age of social media than there are
in Major League Baseball.
I've heard that the NBA, which dates back to Sean Kemp,
actually has some level of counseling that they do,
especially financial counseling,
because there's a guy named Truck,
who took a lot of money from a lot of NBA players,
excuse me, and NFL players.
So there's like this financial and other things
that are coming in certain sports.
But I've heard that, majorly baseball,
hey, you're number seven.
You report to the Oklahoma City Little Ducks
in four months.
Congratulations, come, and if you're a first rounder,
come to the podium, put on the hat,
and now we won't see you for three years until you come up.
There's a lot of conversations that happen
around how to handle media in interviews.
We'll go through media training and okay when they ask this question, how do you deflect?
You're watching them interviews of football players, basketball players, here's some things
that they did well, here's some things that they did wrong.
Here's how to say words without saying anything at all and just pass the interview and not
make any controversy.
We have a lot of those types of conversations.
We have Major League Baseball has the domestic violence trainings that every player goes
through every spring training. If a girl is too drunk and can't consent, then that would
be sexual assault, training of that type of thing. But there's never been a discussion,
at least that I've had, on, okay, you could face this type of situation. Here's something that you can do as a single guy
with millions of dollars, like ahead of meeting up
with a girl, like here's best practices on blah, blah, blah,
blah, it's kind of been a hands-off,
like your personal life is your personal life.
I mean, but I don't know where I stand on that
because like your personal life should be like your thing, you should have some sort of training, but it's also that because your personal life should be your thing.
You should have some sort of training, but I feel like there should be a separation between
your job, you come to work, and then what you are doing on the side.
Of course there's a separation, but I have to prepare you for success, not for failure.
So if I'm running a team, we're having that conversation very, very early.
And you know, I'm having it from the skipper.
I'm having it from the captain.
I'm having it from the senior guy on the team.
I'm having it from the GM.
I'm having it as the older brother coming in.
There's got to be like Antoine Walker.
One time in Chicago, we're having a cigar with them.
And Antoine Walker, career earnings. Can you with them. An Antoine Walker career earnings.
Can you type up what Antoine Walker's career earnings are?
Just type in Antoine Walker career earnings.
I think he made $113 million, $114 million,
$108 million.
Okay, so he made good amount of money.
Got nothing.
What happened?
He says one time I was hanging out with Michael
and Michael's playing $100,000 hands
or whatever the number was. So there I thought I could play and Michael's playing $100,000 hands or whatever the number was
So there I thought I could play a hundred million dollar a hundred thousand all hands shit
I realized I can't play a hundred thousand all our hands. I'm not at Michael's level of money, right?
So what happened to him? He lost everything who signed him Morgan Stanley Dean Wooder signed them
What did they do with Antoine Walker with Morgan's? I think Morgan Stanley signed him
Can you tap it on to a walk of Morgan Stanley Dean Wooder Morgan Stanley signed them and him and Morgan Stanley signed him. Can you tap it? Antoine Walker, Morgan Stanley, Dean Wooder, Morgan Stanley signed them and him and Morgan Stanley worked together
to talk to players that were coming to the league on how to manage their
finances. Okay and what to do with mistakes to make and don't do this and
don't do that and be careful. Yeah right there. Morgan Stanley Global Sports
Entertainment teams that would former professional athletes, Antoine Walker
being one of them Bart Scott
Brings a real life lessons of athletes so then athletes are like say some managers are gonna come and do this the other day
Matt rife the comedian, you know Matt right guys. That's going viral. He says he got a phone call
From Dave Chappelle. He says I was about to
He saved me
He saved me $750,000 because I had a lawyer that I was paying 5% on every deal I was doing and Chappelle told me, no, talk to this guy, he'll do it for $5,000, it's not a big deal.
He said, Chappelle saved me $750,000 just by telling me, right there, just by telling me how long is this clip, Rob?
49 seconds.
Yeah, can you just play?
Dave Chappelle, what's the best piece of advice he's given you?
He saved me three quarters of a million dollars on a lawyer.
They wanted us to go with this 5% lawyer,
which would have been three quarters of a million dollars
for a certain deal.
And he was like, no, I've got a guy who would do it hourly.
Cost me a couple grand.
He saved $750,000.
So, you know, Chappelle's playing a role of a mentor. I
think baseball's got to also be talking to each other and kind of, and maybe they are,
and I'm not speculating, I don't know, you're telling me they don't do it. But I think that
would be the one thing I would do as an owner, because it's a new target. DM is a new target,
you're a new target, they're coming after you. But I still want to be able to use your antics.
You know what I'm saying?
As long as we create a certain set of criteria to say,
I don't care if you create content,
here's a couple things.
Don't leak secret stuff that we're doing internally,
because if the skipper can't trust you,
then he's not going to share everything
that they're doing strategically,
because you're talking too much.
Don't disrespect management and the team,
and don't hurt yourself. As long As long as you don't, you follow those three basic criteria.
It's okay, go to create controversy, talk about others and do that kind of stuff. And
maybe even, you know, I don't know if baseball, I think baseball is filled with a lot of conservatives
and politically that may be vote for Trump, but I don't know if many of them are vocal
about it. Okay. So there's a, there's a baseball probably has more conservatives than any other of the NFL
and NBA. It has more, but they're low key about it. They're quiet about it.
Some of them are the biggest superstars face of the league,
but no one knows about it. They keep it to themselves.
Maybe that's because they don't want to lose the,
lose the opposition of audience or some like that. Okay. Totally.
I don't have a problem with that, but I'm somebody that would say that,
but those will be my criterias when I'm paying somebody $100-some
million over a three-year period, $40 million a year, I've got to protect my investment.
Yeah, no doubt.
And you know, it's interesting, there's, I don't use the word hypocrisy, but baseball has been very
slow and they always give themselves the excuse, oh, it's colorful characters, right? You've probably
heard it described as that. It's like a code word in baseball. I don't know if the players of your generation remember
anything about Bill Vec, the owner of the White Sox. I've read any of the history. Bill Vec had
disco demolition light where everyone brought an album, it was disco music, to a double header.
And at the break between the double header, they were going to take all these albums and blow them up
in center field until the bands got a little ripped because as a doubleheader and apparently was
warm and beer is flowing and Budweiser and baseball go back many generations and Disco
Demolition Night became a disaster as the albums were thrown on the field and the second half of the doubleheader was canceled that was not a
player emotional event 98 sends to
With a death disco record discounted admission for teenagers this is July 12 1979
discounted mission for teenagers you were trying to get the kids to come in with their mom and dad and so we call bill
Vec, you know and have you ever seen the pictures of the Chicago White
Sox that were in softball shorts?
Like the old, yeah, they were light blue.
Guess what?
That was an owner and we were free.
And what was he trying to do?
He was trying to bring younger people to the ballpark.
Just go dumb, there they are.
There's Mark, is that the bird?
Mark Fidrich?
Looks like him, yeah.
Probably somebody who was experimenting
as you were with finger position and things like that and trying to do it. So baseball
needs to look back and see that in its heritage there have been people that have tried to
bring more people to ballpark, tried to bring a little controversy. Now Disco Demylisten
Light wasn't supposed to end with a forfeiture and a cancellation of the second game, which
made the bullpen happy because they're all coming out.
Oh man, I got to throw again. Yeah. Every series here.
And Bill Beck and he tried to bring so much to it.
And so baseballs had its colorful characters,
but they sent tents to Hand Wave Pat and just let them go away as colorful
characters. But they were trying to bring more to the game,
bring an excitement to the game.
And I give credit to Reggie Jackson.
There was a film I saw,
Reggie Jackson turns this guy after a game.
Can you not interrupt me here?
I'm doing an interview and you need to not interrupt me.
Can you just go do that over there?
And it was still rolling and he was here at the camera.
And he said, listen, I gotta talk this up.
I'm talking to good Christian families
and what other kids come in here.
I'm speaking love over here, leave me be.
So he understood what he was trying to do there,
and there was nothing salacious
in that particular moment, Reggie Jackson,
but he knew that what was his job?
He was Mr. October, he was a candy bar,
his job was bring more in.
And by the way, he was a controversial, like a little bit of a troll himself.
He and Billy Martin got into each other's drill.
I love it though. That's baseball. That's what you want to go to the next game to see what's
going on. But we call it a colorful character and we get back to calming down and now we worry about
let's make the base bigger so we can have a tenth of a second more steals. Let's put a pitch clock so that we can get into an entertainment
length. It's what they're looking at as movies. We got to stay under two and a half hours.
This has got to be, look at an NBA game, two hours, 15 minutes. We got to get this into
movie length. We got to get this. So they're worried about those things. That's why the
pitch clock is here. That's why only too many mound visits.
That's why the bases are bigger.
And we've done these things to do that.
So, and I feel like baseball's attacking some of the issues,
but they're not like releasing people to be people
and to be personalities because it brings people in.
Not in such a way that would offend somebody
or somebody saying something awful.
But I think baseball needs to know that in its heritage there were people that were trying
to do it and they just let them go away and get back to calm old baseball.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think the MLB has done a decent job of trying some new initiatives.
Trying to shorten the game to appeal to more people.
They've tried to bring in some social influencers in different markets.
You mentioned earlier building a bridge
to a different market with the Super Bowl and Taylor Swift.
Baseball's trying to do that with some of their content.
I forget what it's called, the MLB Creator Program,
or so I'm probably getting the name wrong.
But they're trying some things, and that's a positive.
I think the biggest thing you can do is create storylines.
You have to have storylines. People will tune in to watch a story. They'll tune in to watch
two guys fight that they really trust and believe hate each other. It doesn't matter if they actually
hate each other or not, but if the audience thinks that they do, they'll tune in to watch.
People will watch a three-hour baseball game. If they think Red Sox Yankees there might be a brawl.
I really want to see this matchup of the starting pitcher and I want to see Clemens face Piazza
and after the World Series and the bat issue and I want to see those things.
I want to see Ruegnat or Dorre and Baptista. When is the next time those two teams are going to play?
What's going to happen? People tune in and watch the entire game if there's enough of a storyline there. So that's what I was trying to, you know, last time I was playing, that's what I was
trying to do is create some micro storylines like leading into my start.
I only pitch every fifth or sixth day, so I can't do it every single game, but like
leading into my start, what's the storyline going into it?
Is there rivalry with another team?
Is it a rivalry with their player?
Is it something that I'm gonna, you know, can I do this thing during a game?
Like those types of things need to happen more. And I think that that's
one thing that's like really missing is how do you train players to develop those story
lines while at the same time avoiding the controversial stuff that's going to be seen
as like a negative for the league. Do they want athletes creating content or no? Is it
a environment where it's like, Hey, we do want, like, you know, Dreymon's right
now doing a podcast or, you know, you got a couple of players that in the NBA are doing
a podcast, even Parsons, right?
From what do you call it?
Cowboys.
What's his name?
Michael Parsons.
He's fricking awesome.
By the way, what a great communicated guy.
And a sack machine.
He's a great player and a communicator and a personality.
But I think he is even a better, like, I don't know if I can say that because he's that good of a player,
but he's a ridiculous personality, right?
So what is it doing? Oh, so you said this and here's what we're gonna do.
You think I'm gonna do this?
You want to say something? Wait till you see what happens when we face each other.
I can't wait for the game. Yeah, I can't wait for the game. I'm like, hell, yeah.
Let's see what's gonna happen with the game, right happen with the game. I want to see that matchup.
So I think there's an element that, you know,
and by the way, it's a little risky,
because Dremon could say anything, right?
Because he's a little risky as well.
Like, Dremon is a good example to use.
The other day, he hit Anthony Davis in the face,
and he's like, no, I didn't.
He hit him in the face.
It was a, you know, he hit him not intentionally.
He was trying to get the ball, but it still hit Davis
in the face.
And, but there's eyeball still that's coming with that.
Like for me, if I watch highlights of baseball,
you kind of mentioned a few of them, or basketball.
I like to watch a little bit of, you know,
Wallace Ronartes, okay, back in the days.
If you know which one I'm talking about, the Detroit,
you know, I want to watch, you know, Charles Barkley picking up Shaq. I want to watch Larry
Bird being held back like this by Moses Malone while Julius Irving is going like this. I want to
watch, you know, Shaq against the, who was the Detroit Pistons player that he hidden the faces,
rookie season. I want to see crazy stuff like that.
You know, like right now, the NBA doesn't play defense. Everybody's average and 140 points a
game. No one gives a shit about that kind of a game. There is no feistiness. Everybody's friends.
I don't care to watch it. There is no body that's facing somebody that they have any kind of a,
you know, we want to beat those guys. Even last week with Stephen A he says the sport is missing the antagonism, the agitation.
That's what made it exciting. It doesn't have any of that right now. Matter of fact, they've made
it softer and softer and softer and softer. The smallest thing you look away to give you a technical
foul. It's the softest league right now with referees. We got in the NBA and NFL is having some record breaking numbers right
now. Some of it could be Taylor Swift. Some of it is the fact that competition is just
really, really good and Mahomes is an exciting guy to watch and do what he's doing. But to
me with the MLB, I wonder if they were to bring a social media strategist,
you know, somebody from the industry that knows what,
like the CMO from, I don't know, Snapchat, TikTok,
Facebook, YouTube, take whoever, whichever one of these guys
that knows what they're doing, bring them in.
And then say, and then bring a Gartner in,
or a consulting firm, you know,
somebody that knows the data and YouTube and content
and bring
a McKinsey and bring a BCG in, right? And say, hey, what do you think about and you
don't even tell the players about it? What do you think about us doing this? Is this
a good strategy or not? If we go bring guys like Bauer that are bringing this attention,
what markets are we not in that we can bring in, spend four or $5 million on consulting
firms and maybe they're already doing this, spend four or five million dollars on consulting firms And maybe they're already doing this spend four or five million dollars on consulting firms and bring these CMOs from these big firms to
Do partnerships with and tell them hey if you do this will do this for you
You can broker a deal for them and then they could come back and say if you did get into this audience
Your viewership could go from Rob. Can you pull up the NFL viewership against all the other teams that I ask you to pull up?
So here's the numbers that's NFL all the other teams that I ask you to pull up?
So here's the numbers.
That's NFL to the left.
Killin' everybody at 947.
You know, number of viewers per year is what we're talking about.
And then you got MLB.
And by the way, NFL plays 17 games.
MLB plays, I think, 162.
NBA is 82.
And then NHL, I think, is also 82.
I don't know exactly how many games NHL plays.
But 16 games is getting that.
What can we do with MLB to take that 329 to 500?
What can we take it to take you to 600?
So watch this now, watch this now.
Somebody who's watching this, who's a player,
let's just say some players are watching this.
What happens if MLB is at 500 million?
You know what that means if it's at 500 million?
Contracts.
That means contracts go up 25%.
It's a revenue share percentage on total revenue. That's right. Revenue up, we all win.
30% contract goes up. That means if you're making 40 a year now you mean I'm gonna get paid 55 a year.
You saw what Otani got paid, the 2 million over 10 years and then 68 million the other,
but it's really a 10 over 700 over 10, right? 70 million a year type of contract you got.
Beautiful. What if we can take that to a hundred million a year what if we get the
first billion dollar contract so players ought to be excited about others that can bring
different unique eyeballs to dude and I totally get you got to do it in a way where you don't
use your existing audience like we can't just go bring you know half naked girls and hey
here's what we're gonna do but the family people left oh shit that didn't work out because the
hot dogs you went out with your son yeah that was a terrible idea I also
understand that that optics but I think there's strategy on getting a guy like
you that entice a guy like me to be like what's he gonna say today what's he gonna
do today I'm curious yeah people were following yeah for sure I think the
landscape of baseball is a little bit difficult because you travel so much, you play every single day.
So the time when it's best to produce content is when you're the busiest. In the off-season, people don't care as much about content unless you start back-logging to release in the middle of the season.
So what you have to do is you have to find a way to make those storylines easy for players. You have to find a way to make the distribution of that,
the filming, the creation of it easy for players.
But you have to find a way to make it entertaining
at the same time.
And that's the bridge that they're trying to cross right now.
A lot of players in season don't want to do the extra interview.
They don't want to do an hour shoot in the morning
because they're sleeping in, trying to recover, you know, shoot in the morning because
they're sleeping in trying to recover trying to get ready for the game. NBA
you have a lot more time in between games to be able to do that. You have a
practice two or three days in a row than a game. You have an afternoon to be able
to do some stuff. NFL you have some time to be able to do stuff. You've seen I
think the Chiefs this year there's been a lot of off field point a lot of stuff
there's more time. Baseball is tough because pictures could do it because
you're doing pictures absolutely, but not the hitters. Yeah,
that's a good point. I can see that. But still, you know,
there's ways to do it. There's ways to do it. And if I was
able to like even look at what Pat McAfee does, right, he
brings the existing players in and Aaron Rogers comes in, or
he's just gonna come back and play this season. And what's
gonna happen? Oh my God, what's gonna is Aaron gonna come back for the Jets?
It's gonna be the fastest recovery all time.
There's an element of that that's bringing in,
you know, a certain set of eyeballs,
because what you also don't wanna do,
I also don't wanna change you.
I don't know if that makes sense,
like I don't want McAfee to change.
You know, who's the other kicker in football
that's got the sick physique?
Weatherford, who is a, he looks like he's a bodybuilder.
Yeah, I've had conversations with him.
He's like Greg Zerlein.
No, I'm talking about Weatherford.
Now I'm talking Steve Weatherford.
I said this last time correctly.
That Weatherford right there, Steve Weatherford.
Okay, the guy was a chisel.
If you go to his Instagram account right now,
you won't even believe what the guy looks like.
It doesn't make any sense what he looks like.
Yeah, go to his Instagram account.
This is a human specimen who this guy's,
and by the way, when you see him face to face,
okay, go on, yeah, he's talking about
how Weatherford tackled him right there.
That's a human specimen.
This guy was a kicker, okay? Now he's a content creator. You can them, right there. That's a human specimen. This guy was a kicker, okay?
Now he's a content creator.
You can stop it right there.
The guy's got a stretching routine
that he teaches that's phenomenal.
I don't wanna change you.
By the way, I don't care if you're a Republican.
Cause if I knew how to use you, that you're a Republican,
and then there's something else coming up,
then this other guy else coming up and this
other guy is a Obama or this, there's a wait.
That's a storyline.
Are you kidding me?
That's what Colby's brought to MMA.
He's really leaned into that.
Of course.
And there's tons of eyeballs.
He goes in there and fights someone and there's resolution to that, right?
But it's just the storyline of it.
You connect with a completely,
you connect with like a full half of your demographic
where other guys might connect with the full half
of the other half of the demographic.
So now all of a sudden they're like,
hey, Donald Trump shows up to a game.
What do you mean Donald Trump showed up?
Yeah, he showed up to a game.
And then, okay, so now the other side,
then Joe Biden shows up to a game.
And then well, Barack Obama now shows up to a game.
And then Abou shows up to a game.
Now it's like, oh wow, who's going to show up to the next game?
I think there's an element of that
where you can bring an audience that there's
a lot of conservative families that love baseball.
I would say the biggest conservative fan base of any sport
is probably baseball, more than NFL and more than NBA.
So how do you tap into that and tap into it in a way
where you're not where you know you're
not offending and you're allowing and then the commissioner has to come out
and say look I don't mean to say anything that's gonna offend anybody.
Republicans love baseball, Democrats love baseball, Trump fans love baseball,
Obama fans love baseball, we have Cubans who come from a communist nation,
communists loves baseball, Socialists love baseball.
Baseball doesn't care about your politics.
Baseball is the most unique game in the world because it's fun.
It's spiritual. It's this. But we welcome whites, blacks.
We're the most diverse sport out of all of them.
I would be selling that. I would be selling the fact that I,
by the way, I think baseball is the most diverse
nationality league. But do you know who talks about that? I've never heard about that. I
don't hear that being sold.
There's at any given time in a clubhouse, you might be sitting next to people from six
to 10 different countries.
Sick. I love it.
Yeah. Australia, Germany, Japan, Korea, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Dominican. I just Brazil, you just keep going down the list.
There's, I mean,
Ken Lee was from Curacao.
Those people could spell it or point where it was on a map.
Exactly. Yeah. I mean, but you'll have all those players sitting next to each other in
a clubhouse, getting along, fighting for a World Series, a common goal, coming together,
bridging all the different cultures and the communication gaps and everything, finding
ways to communicate. I was with Jose Ramirez in Cleveland and he's one of my favorite
teammates I've ever had. We couldn't speak very well. He learned more English as time went along,
but we couldn't communicate very well. But we found ways of like, you know, body language and
stuff like that. And we'd actually like talk to each other in that way all the time. He's one of
my favorite guys. You, you have those moments.
I think that's important thing to show, but people don't get to see those things
because there's no, there's no documentation of it.
You know, the show hard knocks.
Um, imagine the New York Yankees have a hard knocks type show that goes all season.
Like what is, what does that bring?
What kind of fan engagement does that bring to that organization now you you produce it in house
You don't show the technical stuff, you know the the scouting the exact numbers, but you show the players
What are they coming to the stadium wearing? What are they doing off the field? What are those interactions in the clubhouse film it?
Have your PR people, have your media people
screen everything, and then cut the players in
on the performance of it.
Find a distribution network, a Netflix, put it on YouTube,
whatever the distribution strategy is.
Cut the players in on it.
The more that they're involved, the better the show does,
the more money they get paid, and run it at even or a loss
as a marketing thing.
You're gonna go spend a bunch of marketing on Yankees, does, the more money they get paid and run it at even our loss as a marketing thing.
You're going to go spend a bunch of marketing on Yankees, whatever the team is every year
anyway.
What kind of fan engagement?
You've been doing the YouTube game for long enough.
You can see the type, the number of views that you generate.
You can see the number of views that guys like MrBeast are generating and the enterprise
value that that creates.
MrBeast advertisement is more lucrative,
more valuable than a Super Bowl ad, and he's putting a video up every single week, like
what are every two weeks or whatever it is? Like what is the value that could be had there
by delivering that type of content, something that's so unique that no one else is doing
to an audience? Like I don't know what the numbers would be, but the impact on the game
would be astronomical. If you could see what Aaron Judge was doing week in, week out, preparing for this upcoming game. If you could
see the unfiltered conversations, clean whatever you want to, however you want to structure your
brand, that's fine. But some of the unfiltered conversations in the clubhouse, I had a conversation
with Mookie Betts when I was in LA. I love Mookie. He's one of my favorite guys. Great player, great teammate. Love him.
We got an argument one day over who would win if the pitchers had to hit and play defense
and the position players had to pitch. Like who would win? And we went on, we had everyone
in the clubhouse. We had the manager, we had everyone that was walking in and I had just
set my vlog camera up there and And it was a one angle,
you couldn't see half the people on the screen,
but it was one of the most engaging moments of my vlog
because people were like, oh, this is what goes on
in a clubhouse, these are the types of conversations
that people have in the clubhouse, can you imagine?
Being able to see that week in, week out, day in, day out,
what kind of fan engagement and value that would bring
have been incredible.
Where is that?
By the way, it shows up amazingly when you have 13 inning games and you run through,
right before you came to the Dodgers, Russell Martin pitched a complete half inning.
And he's the catcher, Pat.
We were out of everything.
We're like in the 14th inning, there's nobody left.
There's like two starters left. We're not going to use them. We can't get them stretched out
because we need them tomorrow and the next day. And so Russell Martin comes in and pitches
a half inning. Yeah. That's crazy. Like what did Russell
Martin think going into that moment? How did he prepare for it?
It was on Sports Center and it was ahead of Web Gems. Yeah.
Everybody was like,
I love WebGems. Russell Martin, if you don't know 55, 55 is coming into pitch. That doesn't happen in
LA. Yeah. The only time he comes to the mound is when he walks to it. Yeah. On the plate. Yeah. Well,
there's a storyline there, right? Like, where's the follow-up to it? Like, I want to know what he
was thinking. Hey, when you like, you break down break down this, you catch, you'd call pitches.
Like, why did you throw this?
Like break, like there's, there's a lot of things that you can play off that with.
That would make it very easy for him to produce content.
If the next day he comes in and the team's like, Hey, 15 minutes, I need to
just walk me through this, cut up some social clips, put it out there.
Like, where is that?
And Adrian Gazal was pointing at him and going, you, and you can see him.
He was saying you, and when he walked up to the the place I would be so interested in that listen look at it
I for F1 drive to survive so so drive to survive blew F1 up how much how many millions of dollars
Has that single show created for F1 in the American market and it doesn't cover the races
It covers the conflict and the personality they hardly show the races
And then you build superstars people didn't know and conflict and the personality. They hardly show the races.
And then you build superstars.
People didn't know, and people in the States didn't know who Daniel Ricardo was.
Now they love him. People didn't know Gunther Steiner.
Now they love him.
Like Gunther Steiner was like one of the Haas's biggest stars, bringing in sponsorships,
millions of dollars of sponsorships because he was a drive to survive star.
Like what kind of value does that create for an organization?
You build one superstar, like look at Otani.
Like the Dodgers just paid $700 million to acquire Otani.
That was not a, oh, he's just worth this, we'll pay it and we'll take a loss.
That's a calculated decision.
They assessed that number and said over the lifetime of this contract in the Asian market in
US market and Jersey sales in media and stuff like that. We're gonna make more than this 700 million dollars
We're gonna have our margins. We're gonna be able that's a business decision
So if one player now, what Tony's a freak he's a superstar probably the most talented guy
ever to play the game in the history of it
like if one guy can bring in over $700 million,
what is the value of building a superstar?
Look at what Connor McGregor did.
Look at what Michael Jordan did.
Look at Tom Brady.
Like, what is the value of Tom Brady to the NFL over 20 years?
What is the superstar creating machine?
What's the engine that's going on in MLB? UFC is like the gold over 20 years. What is the superstar creating machine? What's the engine that's
going on in MLB? UFC is like the gold standard of this. They create new superstars all the time.
If you go back to UFC five years ago, you have John Jones, you have Connor McGregor,
you have the Diaz brothers, you have a couple select superstars ronda ronda you have the ufc
today is bigger than it has ever been and those people aren't fighting how like
they've created new superstars they have a machine they have ufc embedded they
have contender series they have ultimate fighter they have this engine to build
superstars and to build valuable assets with their athletes can you do me
favor rap I wrote one word down and he said it earlier go on YouTube let's let's and to build valuable assets with their athletes. Can you do me a favor Rob?
I wrote one word down and he said it earlier,
go on YouTube, let's just check this out.
Go on YouTube and type in NFL, okay?
And zoom in a little bit so we can see it as well.
How many subscribers does NFL's YouTube channel have?
Let's write this down, 12 and a half, okay?
So NFL is at 12 and a half, go to MLB.
Five point something.
What is it?
MLB is, okay, 4.88.
Okay, go to MBA.
MBA is what?
21.3, dominating everybody.
Okay, go to NHL.
Two million, okay. Go to UFC. 17 and a half. Go to WWE. So if if I'm by the way, which sport is the fake is that of all the sports, right?
I mean, we all know.
I mean, hopefully we know at this point, you know, WWE is a lot of storyline.
You know, reality television.
Yeah.
But guess what?
I mean, there is a there's genius in the entertainment marketing aspect of it, creating
controversy. WWE was all about creating the next fight, the next matchup, the next villain, the next
enemy.
Who's the villain in Major League Baseball right now?
Who's the villain?
I was the biggest villain, I think, when I was playing.
By the way, can you tell me, greatest villain of Major League Baseball?
Who were the villains in Baseball?
Well, it depends on who you're a fan of. If
you're a Yankees fan prior it was a Red Sox player. Dude I think just put like the villain,
biggest villains baseball who? Bryce Harper? Okay guess what? I freaking love watching Bryce
Harper. Who else you got there as a villain? Bucky Effing Dent became a multi-generational
statement. The Boston Red Sox would and they would say the whole
thing up bucky effing dent he was such the villain because he hit the home run
on that it was a one-game playoff this season and so he became this multi
generational symbol of defeat okay so let's their villain let's see Roger
Clements totally get it he's a villain villain. Uh, a rod. Yes.
People love to hate him. Okay. But guess what? The guy hit 696 home runs,
98 home runs. Yeah. I think he was four short of 700. He always wanted to come back and do it bonds. Absolute villain. Rocker.
Yeah. Clearly remember him being a villain in the old Braves lineup.
Different reasons. Different reasons. Yeah. Sheffield villain.
I was going to say Joey Bell, Albert Bell,
villain. Can you go, is it show more? That's it. They got Chase Utley there? Yeah, you know, to me,
I think maybe that's why I would never be a commissioner major league baseball because if I was a
commissioner major league baseball, I would be front and center saying, look, I'm a little bit
concerned because obviously the tensions are very high with the next game that's coming up.
And this is a competitive sport.
These people have spent 30 years of their life working.
You don't know what's gonna happen.
It's exactly.
And then everybody has to tune in.
And then you even create like the,
but we are fully prepared for it on what's gonna happen.
And we've talked to both teams.
We're ready for all of it.
Both teams want this championship.
This is going to be a dog fight.
It's probably going to be one that's
going to be one of our most viewed.
Like, oh my god, what's going to happen?
And we understand we have talked to Trevor Bauer
about some of his antics.
And he is willing to listen to some of us.
But again, Trevor is Trevor.
We don't know what's going to happen when he goes to the mound.
And on the other side, they've been told if Trevor pitches,
you know, so we want to bring the tensions down.
We've talked to all the UMPs, but we're excited about this.
You know, the entire Major League Baseball is excited about this.
That's what it is.
You know, it's got to be a little bit of that.
And by the way, do kids watch UFC? Of course they do.
I don't even know who I'm facing in that scenario,
and I'm excited for the game.
Yeah, that's what I want.
I want to be like, OK, what the hell is this guy talking about?
And I know in most sports, commissioner's job
is not like Dana White's job.
Dana's a different kind of a commissioner.
Dana's a boss, right?
So you can't necessarily.
Most major league baseball commissioners are unknown.
The first time you ever heard the name Manfred is when what happened with Houston
Astros, you're like, wait, what's the commissioner's name?
Manfred is not going to do anything.
They're going to keep there and they're going to go through this.
Are you kidding me?
Who are getting boom?
And then now you know, in basketball, you always knew David
Stern because David Stern was kind of like Dana White.
Yeah.
Do those guys, if you look at, if you look at when NBA really took off, that's In basketball, you always know David Stern because David Stern was kind of like Dana White. Yeah. Those guys.
If you look at when NBA really took off,
that's when it was, that started the trajectory.
If you look at Dana White,
that's what USC is the fastest growing sport.
Yeah.
It's blowing up worldwide too.
Yeah.
Like you have to.
Every ethnicity likes it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You have to have tension storyline.
You have to lean into that. And then you have to deliver that content to people where they are now
Let me let me ask this
Any major
Superstars from MLB have they reached out to you? You don't need to give names
But are you in conversation with major superstars current and pre-retired?
Yeah, I've had a lot of conversation players coaches staff
GMs for like through this whole time like privately behind the scenes
It's been a very you know, it's been a very supportive
It's really helped me a lot to know that like people in the game that I've interacted with I've been in the clubhouse with that
I've played for that. I've been around like
Don't view me the way that the right the public views me. And so then the next
thing is because you told me about the Tom Glavin situation with Thomas like I
don't know if I'd want to play today with all the pressures of what's
going on you know the comments. He was very clear about that. Yeah. Yeah. So are
there who are the most vocal superstars that have defended you publicly. Mookie probably. Mookie. Yeah. Okay.
Um, because when I, when I think about the sport, the sport is filled with a lot of superstars that were redeemed themselves, right?
And they were forgiven.
Okay.
It's filled with it all over the place.
A rod is now maybe one of the best.
I actually like to hear a-Rod's analysis.
I think he's a very good teacher.
That transformation in the short of a time span
went from being hated by basically everyone in baseball.
And like three or four years later
was calling like playoff games
and pretty much universally enjoyed.
Trusted color man.
People are trusting the opinion and in social media.
Well A-Rod says this and he used to play
Yeah, I buy that. Yeah, I was like wow. Where's that? Where's where's the angst?
Yeah, he sued the league and then is now representing the league in like quick order and
The transformation has been incredible. He knows his stuff though. You like what is a generational talent? God like the amount of knowledge
Yeah, there's a lot of value there, right? I watch a rod given analysis. And I'm like, you know, here's what I used to do. I used to put my glove in the freezer and I used to do
this and this is that for this many years. This is what I always did. Why? Why? And let me tell you
why I would do it because it's kind of weird. And then I would put it down and I would have this be
on top of it. And then sometimes you got to choke the bad one at this, this, that when I'm facing
this person, this is the angle. He's what I do my foot when him in by the way
It's always great when it's him the couple clips with him and Pete Rose and think about the two guys that are talking about the
You know both of them have a lot of controversy
I think both of them belong in a hall of him if you ask me, but again, I'm not Cooper's down
So it's not my decision to make but look at them too right look at Michael
Jordan took a break came back. Okay? David Stern understood, because Stern, you know,
took care of that guy and he came back and, you know,
he brought a whole different lens to the league.
Look at Bonds, look at McGuire and Sosa,
what those guys did to the league.
Look at John Jones, Dana White, knowing the background
John Jones has, are you kidding me?
Lawrence Taylor, okay?
And think about NFL without an LT, right?
Kobe Bryant, there's so many of these guys
that we can talk about because,
and you know, DeSean Watson, you know,
even he went through some things that he went through.
Ray Lewis, I don't need to get into Ray Lewis antics
and what stories, if you follow the game,
you know what accusations were made of Ray Lewis
and then he changed himself and he's got a different life.
Mike Tyson is on that list, right?
We've had Mike on multiple times.
Dennis Rodman, you know, imagine the league
without a Dennis Rodman.
He was like one of the, oh, you never know
what he was gonna do.
It's like, you gotta open layup.
He starts, waits, waits for you to come score
because he was refusing to score any points that game.
He just wanted to get 28 rebounds on zero points because he wanted to say I can get 28 rebounds and zero points
Well, he's got a yellow hair and in the interview. He's wearing some weird things, but guess what you followed the game
What was going on the biggest factor is?
the the the game is
About redemption forgiveness and realizing
Everybody sends it in a different way.
If the superstars, like the reason why I asked
the question about superstars, I was in a former company.
And a couple of the guys screwed up,
and royally they screwed up.
Stupid screw up, right?
Worse than yours, because yours is not,
what you did wasn't illegal.
It's a choice that you and the girl made in the stunt,
but this was actually a screw up.
But they were good guys.
They just did something very stupid.
They deserved to get punished,
but not deserve to get thrown out
and losing their license for the rest of their lives.
So I went and I sat down and I said,
I talked to the individual first.
We had a one-on-one conversation. I said, you know what you did is stupid.
Yes. You know what you did is selfish. You know, you could have heard other people.
Yeah. I know. Do you fully get that? I totally get that. Okay.
I think you're a good guy. I think what you did is dumb.
And what are you willing to do? Improve and change in this area.
Okay. All right. And I feel like you're being real.
I went and I spoke on their behalf behind closed doors
to the league that I was a part of.
Insurance is a very regulated industry.
Financial industry is very regulated.
And these guys got second chances.
What happened afterwards?
They redeemed themselves.
Now, obviously you have guardrails
to make sure they can do like maybe you're double checking
their policies that are submitting that you don't do
like the other people and you're double checking
by calling clients and all this stuff, well guess what?
They ended up becoming great successful citizens, did very well, company grew, they
grew, everything could happen. I think, you know, the biggest onus here I would
put on superstars who have been through what you've been through. For some of
these superstars to come out and say, look guys, at least what I did was wrong and I broke the law. This guy didn't break the
law. He just did some stupid. You mean to tell me you weren't a superstar where isn't
there a reporter right now on Monday night football that there's videos of him saying
what kind of girls he liked back in the days? Collins Ward, whatever his name is, there's
video circulating of this guy back in the days when he was...
Oh yeah, Chris Collins Ward.
Yeah, Chris Collins Ward.
I believe it's Chris Collins Ward.
He was at University of Florida.
Yeah.
He came out, he was at the Cincinnati Bengals.
That's the interview all the way at the top.
You just pulled it up, right there.
Yeah, yeah.
See, look how young he is.
Yeah.
And it's...
I like girls that aren't too bright because you can trick them a little bit, okay?
He says that in an interview.
You know what he is right now?
He's a grown man right now, probably embarrassed
by saying some stupid like this that we've all said.
Some of us weren't famous.
We didn't say it on camera.
We said it off camera.
But the market's forgiven him, and he's one of the best guys
on doing Monday Night Football.
I think he does Monday Night or he does NFL.
He does one of the two, because Monday Night is Troy Eggman
and the other guy.
Again, I don't know what tonight he does,
but he's very, very good at what he does.
Chris Collins board, right?
X-Pyr.
Smart knows the game.
Said some crazy things when he was a kid,
79, 80 coming out of a top.
We can't assume.
Who doesn't?
Who doesn't?
So all I'm saying is these guys need to make the phone calls.
That's what I'm saying.
They gotta make the phone calls.
They gotta reach out.
Some of them have. Okay. Have they reached out to them? Not to you. To the league.
Okay. Got it. And if that's the case, then at that point, you know, some of the
teams and leagues have to make a decision. Is this like the first year where
it's like, hey guys, I'm here. I'm available
If you're interested or have they had a chance to sign you for a few months and nothing's happened yet?
Yeah, uh, I mean once the dodgers released me in early 2023 There was like a month but uh where I was a free agent could sign with anyone before I signed in japan
Um, but that was coming right off of the you know, the stooge and everything. I still had outstanding lawsuit and whatever
Now all that stuff's cleared.
So yeah, this has been the first like kind of free agency
after all the stuff.
Right now.
Yeah.
Okay.
So it's fresh.
So something could happen.
And is there a set profile of a certain teams
that would be willing to take more of a risk
on a guy like you than others?
I'm not sure. I would like to think that, well, I know on the field I can help any team. I think
it makes a lot of sense for teams that are looking for starting pitching that are contending.
You can sign me for, you know, basically, you have to pay the league minimum to someone to fill
the roster spot anyway. League minimum plus incentives, you can get someone that could perform at a Cy Young level to bolster your team. I think that makes a lot of sense.
But again, I'm not in the position of an owner of a team. I've never been in
those positions, so I don't know all the things that have to be considered. But
yeah, I think a team like that, like a team like the Diamondbacks, let's say, I'm
just pulling a team out,
but went to the World Series last year,
have a good young team,
someone like the Orioles maybe,
good young team, need a starting pitcher,
need a veteran, need someone that's been
in the playoffs a lot, those types of things.
I think those are teams that would make sense to me.
But again, I don't care. I'll play for whatever team.
I just want an opportunity to go play and do what I love to do
and prove that I've been able to learn from past mistakes.
I think that's an important message to deliver to the youth too.
Everyone's going to mess up some more publicly than others,
but if you learn from your mistakes,
if you take accountability for where you went wrong and you can be better
You know what you just remind me of you just remind me of something
You know when
Some of the players or owners say things like I have I saw an interview
They did with a couple guys three weeks ago
I don't know who the two guys were but they did a very good job interviewing you they look like they were twins
Were they brothers were they related or no? They're just that WF and I don't know which one it was but they did a very good job interviewing you. They look like they were twins. Were they brothers? Were they related or no? They're just-
That WFAN?
I don't know which one it was,
but they did a very good job interviewing you.
And the question was, what the guy says,
I have a daughter, so does he.
Is that the same group?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I have a daughter, so does he.
So what do we do?
What do we explain to our daughters?
And what do we explain to this?
And Tom's got daughters, two of them.
I got two daughters and I got two boys.
So how dare you talk to somebody like that?
What kind of an example is he for men and da da da da da?
OK, so I don't know if, to the people who are the owners who
ask the question about daughters,
let's overcome that objection together.
Yesterday, we're having lunch with Will Gidera,
author of Unreasonable Hospitality, who you have to read this book but we're
having this conversation. Will's a freaking fantastic guy. He ran 11
Madison, number one restaurant in the world, stopped, great operator, sold it.
He no longer owns it and he no longer makes any decisions with
the restaurant, the menu changes. I want to make sure I explain that he hasn't
done that since he sold it which was a few years ago. So the new menu is not
his new menu, it's the new person's menu. I ask the question, what movie have you
ever watched back to back? Okay and they're like, what do you mean? Have you ever
watched the same movie back to back? What do you mean? You watch it for two hours
It finished it you watch it again. Okay
No, I've never done that. Okay
Eric says he watched John Wick back to back, but it's just kind of playing in the background while he's working, right?
I said the only movie I've watched back to back is a judge
With you ever seen the judge with Robert Downey Jr. and Robert DeVall?
No.
Dude, highly recommend you go watch it.
Buy yourself.
Nobody around, just sit there and watch them, even on the flight back, watch the movie.
I guarantee you're going to get emotional.
I guarantee you, you're going to get emotional.
Because the premise of the movie is that Robert DeVall is the father of Robert Downey Jr.
They're living in a small town, the father is the judge.
Okay.
And, you know, a kid in school,
his son does something real stupid, his son.
And he puts him in jail, I think.
Something like that, where he wasn't forgiven.
Well, he was very, very tough on his son,
Robert Downey Jr., who got into a car accident with his brother
that was supposed to go be a major league baseball player.
Pitcher gets injured and he finishes his brother's career.
He was that good of a pitcher, right?
You know, he was gonna make it to the next level.
It's just the best fight scenes with a father and a son.
And then the judge, Deval, with another kid who did some stupid, he decides to be lenient
with the second guy, because he thinks he feels guilty that he put his son in jail.
And to the second guy, what does he do?
He doesn't put him.
He releases him and gives him a little bit more freedom.
That guy ends up going and killing a couple people
and actually committing a crime, okay?
And then eventually, later on, the judge does something,
gets accused of driving and killing that guy
that got out of jail, okay?
Whether it's true or not, you have to watch the movie
to see what happens at the end.
And guess who ends up representing the father,
the son, Robert Downey Jr. And
they have this best scene, the best fights, he's like, why couldn't you just love me?
Do you know I finished number one in my class? Fuck you, dad. But like that, like it's awesome,
right? To the people who say I have a daughter, and how do I explain this to them, watch this movie because we've all been in one of the situations where we've
made a stupid decision or someone in our family has made a stupid decision and we
wish somebody would have grace with them. Whether it's our kid, whether it's us,
whether it's our parents, whether it's our siblings, and we know these people are good people, and sometimes we just deserve grace, right? So this whole concept about, well how do I
explain it to my daughter, you're assuming your daughter's gonna walk on
water for the rest of her life. You're assuming you walk on water, you're
assuming your kids walk on water, none of us do. At some point what our kids are
gonna want to see is the level of grace we're gonna have. And grace doesn't just Your kids walk on water, none of us do. At some point, what our kids are gonna wanna see
is the level of grace we're gonna have.
And grace doesn't just apply to kids that we have.
Grace applies to people we work with as well.
There's a lot of people that need a second chance
in their lives.
And I just feel a guy like you
who potentially could end up losing
$350 million plus if you never play ever again. I just feel a guy like you who potentially could end up losing 350 million dollars plus
if you never play ever again.
I think the league would miss out on having a guy like you play.
I think the fans would lose.
I think you would lose the opportunity of being a great testimony in the future for
other kids that are acting stupid for you to go and give them counsel and give them
feedback because someone has to have a big fall like yours to be able to
Have a better testimony because now you have a moral authority to influence younger guys that even they don't have yeah
Because they've not gone through what you've gone through yours was more public so you could come out and be like listen guys
Here's all I'll tell you watch out for this. Don't do this. You're gonna want to do this
Don't fall for this they're gonna say this don't fall for da da da da da
Focus on this da da da and it's like okay shit, who else is gonna be better than this guy?
This guy lost $100 million over three years.
He came back and played.
Yeah, he finished his career, won a World Series, won a Cy Young again and
redeemed himself and won a greatest stories of all time in the history of sports.
Awesome, but he's right.
I'm gonna listen to him.
That's the part for me where even who was the coach in NFL, that he would always give people second chances
and they won three Super Bowls.
And one of them was with Switzer,
but it was really his team.
Who was that?
Jimmy Johnson.
Where did Jimmy Johnson get into?
Hall of Fame.
You ever seen Jimmy Johnson get into the Hall of Fame
and is being surprised how he reacts?
I don't know if you saw that video or not.
Have you seen when Jimmy Johnson, they come up to him,
they said, you going into the Hall of Fame?
I don't know if we can play it
because the YouTube's not gonna let us play
because somebody else owns it
So don't don't show it in the screen, but they come up to Jimmy Johnson
And he has no clue it's in the middle of a show and they say Jimmy. I'm here to tell you you're inducted
You could put surprise you're inducted to the Hall of Fame. You should see how he cries
You should see how he cries you should see how he's loved. I think I've seen that video dude. It's awesome. Yeah, right?
This is it. It's right here. Don't play it in the back, but this is it
This is the clip and they're telling look at the he's shaking right?
He's shaking just focus on his body. Look at him. He doesn't even what is he thinking about right there all those years?
Jerry Jones firing Kim, you know, you didn't do it. You did this you look at this as pure
Celebrating it's pure joy. This man who's in his 60s is officially 14 years old for this 90 seconds
We all relate to this he made mistakes
He gave players in the NFL second chances. He gave NFL players that screwed up second chances
They love him like a father.
Look at Troy Yakeman. They love this man like a father, like a father. I think the MLB has a chance
to do that with you. And I hope they do. I hope they give you a second chance. I can't wait to be
at that game. If they give it to you, I can't wait to, you know, talk to you about it that night
when it happens.
I'm like, how you feeling, man?
What's the word?
What are you thinking about it?
I think it'll be a great example of a league
that can show redemption and a second chance
to other kids who have screwed up,
who are about to go pick up drugs and cocaine
and alcohol because they've given up on life.
I think the MLB can inspire that 14-year-old kid, that 16-year-old kid to say, continue
going on.
Larry Bird, his father shot himself because he owed so much money to the community.
He was a gambler and he was an alcoholic and his three brothers.
And Larry gave up on life and a guy gave him another chance to come back and do something.
He became one of the greatest players of all time.
It's an awesome story.
How many people relate to a guy like that
that could be a drug addict, drug dealer, ruin his life
because of his father committing suicide?
What a great story Larry Bird is to those people.
I think MLB has that chance.
And I hope, if they hear this message,
I hope they give you that shot
because I think it'll make for a great story. So yeah, I think so too. I hope so.
Any final thoughts, Tom, before we wrap up? Yeah, I think American needs to understand exactly what
you just said. I'm only the man I am and the dad I am because I've taken the mistakes I made in life
and I've turned that into a body of
knowledge called experience and I can bring that and bring that to my daughter with authenticity.
And I think authenticity is what American needs.
I think it would turn down some of the tension that we have overall.
But I think that is something that I think all sports fans remember and baseball is a
symbol of
redemption.
I can strike out three times, but they still want me in the bottom of the ninth inning because
I'm still capable.
And I think the sport of baseball just by its nature is redemption.
And I think we need to remember none of us are perfect and we're the people we are because
of what we do with our mistakes. And it's a symbol of the fabric of America. I think you summed it up perfectly. Yeah, I think baseball
Can use Trevor Bauer to make baseball better
That's a that's a goal of mine
I've always wanted to make the game better leave it in a better spot than I found it. I think I've
Accomplished a small part of that on the training side, but I have
I think I've accomplished a small part of that on the training side, but I have another,
you talk about decade runs, you know,
I have another decade run in me to help in a lot of other ways.
I love the opportunity to be able to do that.
Can't wait for that day.
I remember when we got the call when I was in Bermuda
and the, you know, a lawyer said,
Pat, you're officially minority under the Yankees.
It was a dream, I couldn't believe what happened. And my son son was what the only documentary Dylan ever cried in was the documentary of Yogi
Barra you ever watched it I
Had I had to go watch it again. I had to go watch it immediately
I'm like what happened to this documentary like what a freaking story
You know even Yogi's a story where they eventually had to make up him and Steinburner not coming back to the game
And but yeah, so if a guy like me can go from where I was at
and some of you don't know my background,
who I was, what I did to where I'm at right now,
that's why I love baseball.
Baseball's a spiritual game.
It's a very unique game, very, very unique game.
And I think baseball's got a big chance here
to do something big.
Anyways, Trevor, it's great to finally have this conversation
with you.
This was a blast.
I'm looking forward to see what happens there.
I hope the right people see what happens there. I hope
the right people see this content and they make the decision for themselves.
But the future looks bright regardless of what happens. Whether it's this or
something else, I'd love to see this be the part but I think you're gonna do fine
for the rest of your life. But I'd love, selfishly, I'd love to see you have a redemption story in playing
the major leagues.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me on.
Of course, if you also feel this way, you got guys in major league baseball or people
that are influencers, share this with them, go to a certain minute and say, watch it from
here to here or watch it from here to there.
And if you like to see making major leagues and you're like, I don't know anybody in baseball,
just share it with everybody.
Have them watch this story because it's a story of redemption.
A person that was accused for something he didn't do
and cost him the love of the game that he couldn't play
at the high level that he wanted to play.
And I don't think that's fair.
So I think he deserves a second chance.
God bless everybody. Take care. Bye-bye-bye.