The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Hour 1: "I Got Bieber Guarding Me"
Episode Date: August 7, 2024Jessica is fired up over HER Chicago Bears being featured on Hard Knocks and shares the best parts of Episode 1 including a new look for Matt Eberflus, the Alan Parsons Project, and two goats making a...n appearance. Then, Stugotz calls for Nick Saban to coach in the NFL, and Dan, Jess, Stu, and the rest of the crew discuss the pressure Bears Rookie QB Caleb Williams is facing. Plus, when exactly are the Olympic events happening? Also, Gordon Hayward is here for exclusive exit interview after his retirement from the NBA, but will he stick around after Billy says it was a "piece of sh** move" for him not to come to Miami? Hayward chats with the crew about his new production company, how close he was to joining the Heat in 2017, his tennis skills, Indiana high school basketball, his 2020 mustache, and to tell an incredible story about Ron Artest. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This is the Don LeBattor Show with the StuGuts Podcast. elevator show with this two guys podcast
You know that is that's like Hannibal Lecter or something. Yeah. All right. Let me try it again
That's Hannibal Lecter outer yes, that's supposed to be a sprinkler. Oh, I hear it now.
I miss sprinklers.
What happened to sprinklers?
What do you mean what happened to them?
I feel like he used to drive down the street
and see sprinklers on all over the place, right?
And then we had like water crises,
and then you couldn't like have your sprinklers on
at certain times.
And I think people just went away from having sprinklers.
I still see sprinklers.
Really?
Yeah. I don't.
You don't see them anymore?
Huh.
I see them every morning.
I don't understand what it is that you are doing.
Where do you see them?
You live in an apartment.
Everywhere, just wetting their apartments.
No, Miami Beach, all over Miami Beach in the morning.
They water the grass out there.
Why were you doing a sprinkler sound?
Hard Knocks is back.
Oh, wow.
Oh, yeah.
Long one week break for Hard Knocks?
Again, why are you doing a sprinkler sound?
Because back in my day, Dan, they used to always open Hard Knocks with a nice like black
and then it would fade to color sprinkler going off in a field on a practice field. They go f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t-f-t- And that was how they would open hard knocks it felt like every year But now they do they do it differently and what they did with the Bears first episode of hard knocks last night was
outstanding hard knocks
Because it's our team
Or one of them really but that's okay. I'll pretend it is we're gonna keep that bit going because the Bears might actually be good this year
Well, no, but it is your team because this year they're doing a whole division, right?
Well, yeah. There's an AFC North Hard Knocks too. We're getting Hard Knocks out right now,
and so far so good. So they open Hard Knocks and they did a nice montage. First it was like
Caleb Bloom's getting drafted first overall in draft night. So it opened with the phone call of
him and Matt Eberfluss at the NFL draft. And then they did this whole montage of bears going down
the Chicago River.
Have you guys ever been to Chicago
and done the architectural river tour?
Oh, it's the greatest thing.
You have to do it at some point in your life.
You go down the river and then they're like,
to your left is this building, to your right is this building.
This is the Chicago Opera House.
This is the Madison Street Bridge.
And you go down and so they did that with the bears
and all the old bears were on the buildings and stuff and then they went into like an
Alan Parsons project intro for Caleb Williams with the old Chicago Bears do
do do do do do do and the whole thing with the Caleb Williams then he came out
and it was amazing it was so good. Hard Knocks is great for wrapping all of the
packaging that you love in I mean NFL Films is so pioneering in making all of
this stuff into acrobatics and ballet and art, but Hard Knocks, the Giants was focused mostly
on the executives, right? I did see that Eberfluss got a makeover, right? He's coming into this
season as an entirely different human being.
Well, you're skipping ahead to the goods now, Dan. So yes, Giants offseason hard knocks was just
about like from the end of the season through the draft and free agency and everything until
like the training camp starts basically. So it was like a lot of Joe Shane on a computer.
That was basically four weeks of that. We saw it actually wasn't bad. I would say if you're a Giants fan
or just vaguely interested in football
and you want something to watch during the summer,
not a bad show.
I was pleasantly surprised by it.
Yes, Billy.
Well, so I have a question,
because I'm confused and I feel like other people
might be confused too.
So there was the off-season Hard Knocks,
which was the Giants.
Then this is like the regular,
what we normally get Hard Knocks.
This is the Bears.
And then there's in-season hard knocks,
and then that's gonna be the AFC North.
Yes. Okay, great.
No, my confusion was is that I thought that
we were now going on to like the AFC North.
You thought this was AFC North.
No, no, no. AFC North is in-season.
That'll come. Got it.
So this is just the Bears, and so,
I think the biggest lesson from the first episode
of the Bears hards is that all you
need to do as a person who is maybe slightly on a warmer seat is to get an
all-new makeover and pretend like nothing that happened in the past
actually happened you're starting over you've got a beard now I've heard that
Eberfluss bought a Dyson hairdryer to get volume in his hair he's got longer
hair now and they talked about his whole makeover and how he's dressing differently
and he's just a different guy now.
He's really got this new look and it works.
It works, the guy looks great.
Kind of like Dan, got the new makeover,
got the hair going, got the beard a little bit.
I like that.
Kind of like me.
Started wearing over shirts too.
Good look for you.
You started dressing like Jeremy
The Bears were truly terrible
last year and
Now they have wrapped up a whole lot of hope in we're gonna be
exciting offensively and
I don't know where it is that you guys are with hard knocks
because I don't need more hard knocks the novelty of it is lost for me the
access even though it's more access than the average access I didn't want to
watch a bunch of Giants executives executive thing okay okay question for
the room pop quiz two goats in this first episode of Hard Knocks,
if you can name one of the two goats,
I'll give you like five dollars or something.
Well, what do you mean?
Two goats.
Two goats.
Two of the greatest of all time were in this episode
of Hard Knocks. Simone Biles.
Michael Jordan. Bingo.
What, really?
Yes, because her husband is a safety for the Bears,
and he was going, he was packing his bags
For the Paris Olympics and they let him have a few days off of camp
I'll get it from the fine bucket right now
That was that was a hint on who the second goat is by the way. That was kind of amazing though
The idea that the Bears did let him leave camp to go do that. That is not a normal thing that football people do,
even if your wife is Simone Biles.
It works when you're like the third or fourth string D.D.
Yeah.
Right, I mean, it's K.
Simone Biles.
Works when you can get Simone Biles.
Caleb Williams is probably not taking time off the camp.
You can't do it.
It works when you can get her on the show.
Caleb Williams needs the reps. This guy doesn't?
You know who says that in the episode?
The other goat.
You know who the other goat is?
Finebam. You're very close.
Who?
Nick Saban! Oh wow!
What is he doing there?
He was Eberfluss's former coach at Toledo.
Eberfluss does look more like a coach.
I would not rule out
Nick Saban coaching again in the NFL. Everyone's talking
about Belichick and maybe he goes to Philadelphia. Maybe he
goes here. Maybe he goes there. I'm telling you, the one thing
Nick Saban hasn't done throughout his coaching career
is had success at the professional level and I would
not be surprised if the right situation popped up a good
roster a super bowl ready roster pops up if nicks a bit takes that job you lost
your mind but louis do me a favor please act what what can our video crew do to
isolate the stew gots hot take hand because you would have gotten full
sausage fingers are thrown in your face there becauseugats if you did not notice what just happened
we were talking about hard knocks we're talking about jessica's team we're
talking about
uh... things that jessica was interested in and you opened up the
portal to him giving an opinion on nick saban and he snuck in there with just
unbelievable vigor it was like it was like seeing, it was like seeing,
going back to our honeymoon,
the original Stugatz 20 years ago, eyes light up,
I can give an opinion on a college coach
never having done it in the pros.
In a negligee.
Can I give you some insight into why this happened?
It's cause I will not indulge this on God Bless Football
because he's tried this a number of times.
You're right.
He was disastrous in the NFL
the last time that he was there.
He's now retired and people are considering him
the greatest coach of all time.
If not one of, if not the greatest coach of all time.
If he goes to the NFL, all he's gonna do is mess that up.
There's no way that he can build on his resume
by going to the NFL. It makes no sense that he can build on his resume by going to the NFL.
It makes no sense.
Cause he can just jump from one team to another.
He can do this thing.
He can be savior Nick Saban, come in and talk to people
and he will retire, well he's retired already,
but he will live the rest of his life
as one of the greatest coaches of all time.
Why would he mess that up?
You think Nick Saban is happy that he's one of the greatest
coaches of all time and you know why he's called one of the greatest coaches of all time and not the
greatest coach of all time
is because of bill belichick
and it's saving goes any goes to the nfl
that he has success he was a super bowl
with a team that's ready right now
he becomes
without any sort of discussion
the greatest head coach in the history of football with one Super Bowl
one Billy why not take the chance because even if he goes there it fails right no one's going to
walk away and say oh Nick Saban not a great coach they're never going to say that about him he's
always going to be one of the greatest coaches of all time this is a chance to be the greatest coach
of all time so what team is that is that? Chicago, Dallas, Philadelphia. Chicago's
Super Bowl ready. Buffalo. They're
a Nick Saban away from winning the
Super Bowl. I will tell you this,
the Bears Caleb Williams, he has
more pressure on him than any
rookie quarterback in the history
of the NFL. I'm telling you that
right now. That team was built to
win this season or next season.
Caleb Williams, if he's good, I
said this on God Bless Football
last week and I'll say it again
right here
if kaleb williams is good the bears are making it to the survey of get better at
the hot take hand please you guys are all over the place you can't keep up
keep up with the master video i need you to speed up your ship and get better at
keeping up with the sausage fingers as they fly all over the place because he
is in his element right now being able to tell you what Nick Saban needs to do to make the giant leap from
among the best ever to best ever according to Stu Gotts who will then make a different
argument if Belichick returns. The whole thing also is so ironic if you watch the
episode and listen to what Nick Saban specifically is saying about how rookie quarterbacks get harmed
by like the media hype machine around them and how you like you
can't take too much stock into that sort of thing. And like you
just have to like go through it and do the reps and actually,
you know, go through the practices and not pay attention
to that sort of stuff, because that is the ultimate killer. And
so Stu gots is just like playing the hits right now.
I hope this is in the next episode of Hard Knocks.
They had Mina in there using her voice,
Pat McAfee's voice.
I need Stugats' voice in there.
That's a good idea.
Say things that will get you on Hard Knocks.
I love it.
Wanna try, Dan?
A lot has changed over the years, audience,
as you've been so kind in pointing out.
My shirt size has changed over the years.
Look, I started this show as a 19 year old boy
Now I'm a 38 year old dad
But along the way one staple of my life has been Miller Lite and those of you that have been listening to us know this
I've been a Miller Lite guy since day one. I have been pretty honest about that. So let's get down to the nitty-gritty
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Don Lebatard. Sports. Stugats. More sports. This is the Don Lebatar Show with the Stugats.
I can't believe the amount of pressure that Caleb Williams is under and I would not want
to work under the conditions, no matter how talented i were uh... i don't uh...
i'm not tough enough in any way to be an athlete
to have to do all the learning that that position requires and then have to
be ready for the speed of the pro game
uh... it's just not a job i would want to because
we have uh... now fast-forwarded uh... it super interesting to me, Stu, we just talked about
Deion Sanders. The way that we're doing this to what are still kids, even though they look
like they're in adult bodies, where in college football we're just making it big business
and we're dispensing with any of the nonsense that involves the illusion of these kids having
to be students because it's the big business
of football you gotta get in there and if you're not good enough fast enough
get the hell out you lose your scholarship you lose your education you
lose your opportunity get out we don't want anymore
to now
have caleb williams be a player
was great last year
but was crying on the sidelines when they would lose game because so far uh...
what you have with lincoln riley in u s c is a failure in a season of great
expectations
now the expectations get even bigger than that
hey kid go to chicago which really cares about football and bail everyone out
because they've been bad for years they haven't mattered for years they haven't
had a quarterback the best they got
is jay cutler
that's a best ever rex grossman's the one who took him to the super bowl no
one has ever had
in chicago
these kinds of expectations at that position and i just wouldn't want that
on someone who's not fully formed as an adult
if he's crying on the sidelines of games last year,
because everything up there is really hard.
Yeah, I think that he is like a fully formed adult.
I wouldn't go that far.
Like he's obviously last season for USC was really upsetting
because he was putting up these crazy numbers on offense,
but then
their defense would give up so many points that they were in these like shootouts every
single week.
And so to go from like a play away from the playoff the year before to finishing the season
with six losses last year, I think you just saw how much he really, really cared about
that team and about making the playoffs finally.
And so it was just an incredibly disappointing season for the Trojans.
And so I actually don't like, I don't take anything negative away from that
like he cared a lot about winning with that team and it just obviously did not
work out for them but I will say one other thing and I'm wondering if you
guys noticed this I feel like the Hall of Fame game and the Hall of Fame
enshrinement this year way overshadowed by the Olympics I was looking through
the Hall of Fame in Chinese is that what we them? I like half of them I didn't
even realize we're getting enshrined this year. Like I was just locked in,
laser focused on the Olympics, and I found myself getting like really into
these like kind of non mainstream events like last night the 1500 meter run. Did
you guys watch this? Yeah the upset, the upset uh... it's they just read he hunted the the
the underdog who won from the united states i don't know his name
uh... jake hawker i believe chased everyone down uh... who ran out of gas
because
uh... the the uh... the shorter races are all fast twitch muscle fiber and the uh...
the longer races you better have stamina at the end because you will get hunted down by the femke bowls of the world. She's incredible by the way and I
think the 400 meter hurdle final is today I want to say but last night they
were replaying the 1500 meter which is like just under a mile so they're running
it in like three and a half minutes and they the NBC I love this because they
set up this huge showdown
between the runner from Great Britain and the runner from Norway,
who are both like prodigies in this event.
And they were like, this is ultimate competition.
Like, is the Norwegian guy going to defend his gold medal and like,
they've been going back and forth, like
johng at each other for years over who's better?
1500 meter runner and stuff like that.
And then like the last 100 meters, the American just comes out of nowhere up the side
and wins the gold medal and both of them lost the gold medal.
And it was like the Norwegian guy didn't even get
on the podium and another American who actually went
to Notre Dame year and Naguus, he won the bronze by like,
he was almost in silver.
So both of these guys were like this close away
from not even getting silver or gold.
The other guy didn't get anything.
It was freaking bananas.
To Stu got to this point, was that yesterday?
Was that today?
Was that in the morning?
Was that last night?
It was yesterday at like three o'clock
and then they replayed.
Do you watch, do you watch?
No, like in the afternoon.
It was like a main, one of the main events.
There's, there's games and matches and things
that happen to like four o'clock in the morning.
I don't even know what it is.
And then they play them tomorrow.
When I watched the Seaple chase,
I want to know I'm watching it for the first time.
That's all I'm saying.
I watched it last night.
The one who, the, the, the runner who won the gold medal four years watching it for the first time. That's all I'm saying. I watched it last night the one who the
The runner who won the gold medal four years ago was defending the gold medal. She had a big lead. She got caught
She didn't defend her gold medal. She won silver and someone new won gold Yeah, I'd like to know I was watching that for the first time
Well, you were because you didn't know what had happened to it already
But I'll give you a little like cheat sheets to that. I don't know what time you get home from work
Yeah, but what I've been doing, I get home in the afternoon, I turn on Gold
Zone and when you turn on Gold Zone after like 2 or 3 o'clock, you're getting sort of
the prime time events, like the stuff like USA Men's Basketball yesterday, which was
on in prime time in France, so it was 8 o'clock at night, which is I guess 2 o'clock here
or 3 o'clock here. So you're watching like the prime events in the afternoon live.
But then they curate the best events from the day
and replay them on NBC starting at eight o'clock
hosted by Mike Tirico.
And they'll add in like certain different elements
like this thing with the 1500 meter race.
They added this like package that they made
about these two runners like going at it
and like hating each other.
Even though they already knew like the American guy
was just gonna come out of nowhere.
So they had him and the other American, that one,
come in the studio and do an interview afterwards.
So it was great, honestly, I've been enjoying,
and I will watch things twice if they're good.
I don't give a shit.
So I watched that two times
and it was just as good the second time.
Regarding Femke Bolt, Stugatz,
I don't know if you have seen her,
but in the the relay she she just hunted down incredibly fast people from unfathomable
unfathomable distances, but I read that her time in the 400 hurdles would have qualified
for the 400 without hurdles that she's beating.
What?
Yeah, that I said.
What?
That I said earlier in these Olympics,
like it's just super rare when you see a Connor McDavid
or a Tyree Kill or a Simone Biles.
When you're watching the world's athletes
and one of them is so clearly better than everyone else doing it you don't see these
margins of
Somebody's on the ninth hurdle and she's finished the race like everybody else is at the ninth hurdle and she's she's done with the race
Already, you're not that much better ever than the rest of the world, but she is she's really good
But the American Sydney McLaughlin-Lavroni is the one
that is the favorite to win.
She won the gold in Tokyo.
And I think they're racing tonight,
or like today in the afternoon.
You think, that's my point.
You might be able to get, it's either tonight or tomorrow.
I'm not a hundred percent sure.
I didn't look at the schedule.
Have you made any?
But there is a schedule.
Yeah, have you made any effort to look up the schedule?
Cause it's there, you can find it very easily online
I turn on my TV. I hit channel 6 and that's it. I mean, that's the effort I make it. He goes to iTunes
Oh my god on channel 6 the other night one of the reporters they sent them to Paris and they went to that store that has
Like 150 different types of butter. Have you guys heard of this place?
It's in France
They have like 150 different types of butter and you can go there if you're A tourist and they'll buy whatever butter you want and they'll vacuum seal it. You can bring it home. It's crazy
Wow, there's so many different types of 150 types of butter like like different animal flavors like everything. It's too much
I mean the excitement and Jessica's voice at the idea of having a hundred and fifty choices for butter
You can hear you can hear her mouth watering.
Is it all butters or margarine?
Like what's the deal?
No, it's butters.
They're all butter.
Apparently it's illegal to sell butter in France
that's under 82% milk fat or something like that.
So their butter's like super creamy.
We have an entire state dedicated to making dairy products
and yet I don't think Wisconsin has a single store
that sells 150 different types of butter. They need to get on that. Circling back around
Stugat's on hard knocks I am not intending to infantilize Caleb Williams.
I simply don't think of any rookie entering sports to be a fully formed
adult because I believe that people who get that far,
top 1% of the top 1%,
kinda have to be lopsided all of their life
in order, obsessive compulsive, to be that good.
You can't do it without caring in a way that's unreasonable
and all sorts of other things are gonna fall
by the wayside that you're gonna learn later in life.
So I did not mean to suggest
that Caleb Williams is any kind of weak.
I just don't think of rookies ever as
adults thrown into a piranha, you know, a piranha pool.
I think of rookies as still being kids even though they're of age to be adult.
He's 22 years old and so I would say that he's a kid. He's a kid. He's a young adult, okay?
And so I agree with you because when you graduate college, you're 22 years old and so I would say that he's a kid. He's a kid. He's a young adult. Okay. And so I agree with you because when
you graduate college, you're 22 years old, you don't have this
type of pressure on you. At least not right away.
Eventually, you'll have some pressure in life, but you won't
have it the second you graduate or the second you leave the
university that you decided to attend. The reason he has so
much pressure is combination of market.
It's a, it's a fan base that is starving for a quarterback and the team is ready. Now they were seven and 10 a year ago. The defense is good.
They have good wide receivers.
They picked up Keenan Allen and their coach has a beard now. I mean,
they are built to win now.
You're absolutely right about that. I think you're right, Dan.
Like he's very young and young people will make mistakes,
especially when they have a huge spotlight on them.
I just think that a lot of people took that crying thing
as something that was a mistake that he made,
that something that we should make fun of him for
was a knock on him.
And I think that that's where I was kind of disagreeing,
where I was like, I don't see that as him being,
him making a mistake.
I see that as him caring a lot about his football team.
But there's a ton of pressure on a 22 year old because of that place,
that organization, that team and that fan base.
He went to Chicago and Chicago was built to win.
They needed a quarterback.
They drafted him to be that quarterback.
This isn't going to Carolina where if you're bad,
we'll make fun of you a little bit and that's about it.
You know, you don't have to hear about it every day.
This is different. It's Chicago. It's the Bears.
I will say of crying in general,
because I know in male worlds,
that tends to be something that is viewed as a weakness.
And I will tell you,
as someone who has been repressed all his life,
that I've done more crying in the last five years that has been healing because I'm not like stuffing it all down, that when I
saw Caleb Williams crying on the sidelines, I didn't see it as a weakness.
I saw, oh, he cares that much and caring that much.
If you fail with pressure, we'll ravage your youth. Like this is going to chew kids up. The way
that we're doing it in college football, the way that we're covering high school football,
and you have to be really strong to be in the position of Caleb Williams. But when failure
arrives is when I worry about just ruining people like that because they're not given the three years Aaron Rogers
was given to sort of figure out how fast
all that shit moves out there.
I don't want to be that guy, but $25 million signing bonus,
he's fine.
Stu, guys, women's 400 meter hurdle today, 1525.
Wow.
What does that mean?
325.
It's meters, 1525 meters? No, that's the time. What does that mean? 325. Oh, it's a meters, 15, 25 meters?
No, that's the time.
What time is that?
Exactly.
325.
What world?
How many hurdles?
325.
Oh, okay.
15, you go to 12, and then you, yeah.
Then you add three.
Sorry.
Put it on the poll please, Juju.
Does the person who begins a thought with,
I don't wanna be that guy, immediately become that guy? Well, I don't want to be that guy I'm telling you I didn't want to be that guy
but 25 you had the choice did you see the reaction to that sign when he
announced did you see the reaction everybody had his team into this signing
bonus that's crazy you you did want to be that guy because no one stopped you
no you could have no one could have stopped yourself no one made you be that guy
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Don libertar. We are crazed right now.
You are pathetic.
She's a liar. I'm not saying this act over there.
Just has been right the entire time about the Miami heat and a mean here is
getting buried by heat nation. He's been telling you, he's been keeping it real.
You're pricing Struz, he was 0 for 9!
Struz keeps shooting!
What does that mean, what are we doing?
When Struz goes to the cup, he's looking to lay it up.
Stugatz.
Bam can be Bam in DC, I am done with him.
And Kyle Lowry's one of the worst post-season players
in the history of the NBA.
This is the Don LeBattar Show with the StuGats.
Look at this guy.
He was going to make us so happy in 2017.
We had a banner outside of the arena.
He was going to play in Miami.
We all were ready for him.
And instead, he betrayed us.
And we're happy for him, though.
No, not so much.
Like respectfully, piece of shit move, Gordon.
Oh, whoa, that's not how you start.
Welcome, thank you for everything you've done.
But come on, what were you doing down here
up here in Miami?
That's not what you do, Billy.
You lie and you say you're happy for him.
What an amateur, that is not how you start
a piece of shit move, Billy?
I didn't say he was a piece of shit.
I just said it was a piece of shit move.
Yeah, yeah.
After 14 seasons with the best haircut in the NBA,
playing for the Jazz, the Celtics, the Hornets,
the Thunder, not the Heat, he is here
for an exclusive exit interview because he's retired.
His production company, Whiskey Creek,
has a movie coming out on September 27th.
It's called Notice to Quit, and Gordon Hayward is with us and while we kid, Gordon, we did
want you down here in Miami. We were very excited about that so thank you for
joining us. How close were you to coming here? Can you take us through sort of
what the process was that broke our hearts down here? Yeah, you know, thanks
thanks for having me on guys.
That was a super tough decision.
You know, I basically visited three teams.
I started with Miami, then did Boston,
then finished with Utah, meeting with all those teams.
And I remember vividly telling my agent after each meeting,
I started with Miami and I'm like, I wanna go to Miami. We don't even need to do the other meetings like Miami's the place I want to be
you know and he kind of was like well we got to hear everyone out. The Heat have always been a
first-class organization so I was really really close to signing there. I feel like Spolsa is one
of the best coaches in the league and obviously Pat Riley is legendary in his own his own right
and I was very close.
You know, also my wife, my brother-in-law lives in Miami.
My wife would have loved living there
and then the beach and everything,
but I ultimately decided to go to Boston.
Well, take us through how your mind changed
after each meeting.
What was happening?
Because the heat brought you Riley, Spoh, Zo,
Juwan Howard, Yudonis, like they put on a full court press.
They did, yeah.
You got all the inside information, huh?
I mean, they really wanted you here.
That's how they do it.
In fact, you kind of represent when they started swinging
and missing on the big names they were going after,
because they know how to do that.
They're very good at luring people.
So what changed over the process?
They got LeBron.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I, you know, it was reuniting with Brad.
I mean, Brad was the one that sold it.
You know, it's hard to compete with, you know,
somebody that I played under at Butler and had a huge,
he had a huge impact on my life, you know,
not just as a player, but also a person.
So, you know, it was, that was kind of the key thing was being able to go play for him again.
Stugats, do you remember that time? The excitement in Miami, it was July 4th weekend. It was
Gordon Hayward mania down here. People were going insane and then there was no way to
lose him. The Godfather made a speech,
like I don't, did Riley throw his rings on the table?
Did he do the move?
Classic move.
Did he do the move to you that he did in 2010
to get LeBron?
Yeah, he did all the moves.
It was, it was nothing again,
nothing that he did it all right.
Like I said, I was ready to join after that meeting.
It was three, it would have been three great choices,
honestly, with either of those teams.
The person to blame is the agent here, Dan,
because he was ready to sign with Miami.
The agent insisted that he go to Boston.
I mean, if you're looking for someone to blame,
blame that.
Yeah, blame Mark, blame Mark Bartlett.
Yeah, that's why they exist, to absorb the blame
on behalf of their prodigious talents.
You were also a tennis prodigy, so how close,
like explain to me how your life would have been different
or how good you were at tennis if you had chosen
that as the obsession instead of basketball.
Yeah, you know, I think the tennis thing
might have been a little overstated,
but I was definitely better at tennis in high school
than I was basketball.
It's not saying too much, I'm from Indianapolis, so central indy tennis isn't necessarily the best in the country. But yeah, I mean,
my height would have definitely helped me out, you know, playing like a guy like John Isner.
I served in volleyball, had a big serve. Still, I'm getting more into tennis, you know, now.
But, you know, I love basketball more. Basketball was my love.
Hoosiers. Have you guys seen the movie Hoosiers? Like, you know, high. But, you know, I love basketball more. Basketball was my love. You know, Hoosiers, have you seen
have you guys seen the movie Hoosiers?
Like, you know, high school basketball
in Indiana is like everything.
So that I and thankfully I grew to I was
I was only five eleven as a freshman in high school.
So I'm sitting there thinking to myself,
if I want to play a sport in college,
you know, basketball might not be the route.
My parents are both five ten, you know, like five 10 white guy here.
I don't know if, if basketball is going to be the ticket, but you know,
thankfully I grew and you know, and then my, my game kind of took off, but
certainly was thinking about hanging it up for tennis.
You weren't very good at basketball in high school.
Who is that?
Who led to introduce us to who the dog is?
What, uh, what are the details of the dog?
Yeah, sorry about that. That is a, our Knight He's an all-black German Shepherd. So somebody must not be taking care of him right now. Oh
Somebody in the house is in trouble. Who's who's who's
Blame everyone who's responsibility is night. You weren't that good at basketball though. Like what were your dreams in high school?
What were your dreams? You didn't think you could be an NBA player yet?
I just was a late bloomer.
You know, I was like, wasn't very recruited.
Like I actually only had offers from Butler and IUPUI
had a really late offer from Purdue.
So, you know, those are,
it's not like I was getting recruited everywhere.
You know, we won state in high school.
I had another player on my team. One of my good friends who played at Miami of Ohio.
So we won the high school championship.
But, you know, like I said, I wasn't on any, I wasn't ranked like a five star recruit or anything.
I wasn't, didn't go to any of those camps that everyone else goes to.
So I'm just a late bloomer.
At the risk of upsetting you, this is not the intention to upset you because of the of the way billy started but i just want to play
the call of what would have been different and how much haunting there is
because you're playing against duke and that you were going to have words about
to be done gordon hayward can knock off do does the late bloomer let's play that
call here. Let's say we're pulling it down, getting around Zubak at
midcourt launches the shot.
Is the king of the dance 2010.
I should have gone in. It wouldn't.
You thought it was going in?
You thought it was going in? Did you think it was?
You know what? I didn't think that one was going in.
So there was a shot before that I took a fade away
over Zubeck, we were down and it back rimmed.
So from my vantage point, it looked like it was good.
The half court shot, I wasn't trying to bank.
So I thought that one was way off.
And then, you know, it kind of like banked.
And I think they did like a sports science on it.
It was like three inches to the left or right.
I needed to shoot it more.
So that one was really close, but I mean,
it's hard to hear that for sure.
Did it haunt you at all?
Like that specific shot, obviously losing a close game.
You're that close to winning the championship.
Everybody dreams of that stuff, but that particular shot
and Stugats's beloved game of inches,
does that stay with you for a couple of days?
Just the shot or a couple of you for a couple of days, just the shot or a couple
of years or a couple of decades?
It certainly stayed with me for a short period of time after it happened.
You know, you're thinking about what if, um, but to be honest, you know, then
it was, you have such a whirlwind of an experience of deciding to, you know,
leave college early and go to the draft.
And then once you decide to do that, it's like, you're like constantly trying to get ready for that next level.
So like, I, I haven't really even thought about it.
I haven't had too much time to reflect, you know, you're
always thinking about what's next in your career and trying
to get better and trying to do different things.
So, you know, now that I'm retired, I'll probably think
about it and you could actually, you guys just started off that
thinking, so maybe it's going to haunt me tonight.
Would you have stayed in Utah if you had known that Donovan Mitchell was going to
be that good, or did you have any idea that Donovan Mitchell was going to be that good?
No, I had no clue.
I mean, he's, you know, one of the best players in the NBA, especially at what
he's able to do and you never know.
So it's hard to play the what if game, you know, you can play that game too.
Like, you know, if I stay, do I get hurt?
I mean, me getting hurt in Boston
changed the course of my career.
And so I don't play the what if game.
I have no regrets of my career and the decisions that I've made.
I know it was one of the toughest decisions I've ever made,
as we just talked about.
Miami, Utah, Boston, all really good choices.
So it's hard to make that decision.
What do you regard as the most fun you've had playing basketball?
Like what is the period that you look at and say that was the best time, that felt like
the best time to be me.
That was the most fun.
It was least pressurized and more fun.
Yeah, high school basketball in Indiana, man.
I tell people this all the time.
You just take it for granted because you just don't know when you're doing you're doing it but being able to play with like your boys there's nothing more fun.
I feel like in whatever whatever sport you do or even whatever job you have if you're able to do
it with like your friends and like your best friends you know you're in school with them you're
going to class you're going to parties you're going to all this other stuff with with your
friends and you're also playing basketball and being being from Indiana, like I told you,
we had huge crowds, you know,
our gyms and high school gyms in Indiana are huge.
So playing in front of those crowds too
is something special.
So that was probably the most fun
that I ever had playing basketball.
Not to say that the other moments weren't fun,
but there's nothing like, you know, high school basketball.
That does seem crazy though,
because most people I would think would think of the NBA
hitting buzzer beaters in the pros.
Those crowds are also very big.
So what is the distinction that you're making
and looking back at it?
More carefree, because all of a sudden,
when you get to Boston, there's pressure
as soon as you arrive, because it's a different experience.
It's a business, I mean.
It is a business, and it's different in the I mean, it is a business and it's different
in the sense of, like I said,
you're playing with your friends,
you're going to class with these people,
you're hanging out when it's not basketball season.
Also all the students that are in the section,
you see them too and they're cheering you on,
you've got the cheerleaders,
the gyms are way more like in your face.
And so you kind of like know the region, the region
or like the players around you.
So you have these little rivalries and all this stuff.
And, you know, certainly, like I said, hitting the buzzer
reading the NBA too is amazing.
I mean, we won game seven in LA against the Clippers
and that was awesome.
You know, silencing the crowd is a feeling like no other.
But for me, that this high school basketball, I like, like
for years, here's a good example before you saw like we won, we won, I hit a last second
shot to win the state title. And the whole, our whole town was there. I grew up in a suburb
of Indy. So the whole town was there. They all like, we had a police escort back to our
home gym, the whole, the whole town goes to the gym. We have a pep session. I actually
turn it's my birthday
like when it strikes midnight. And so the whole crowd sings happy birthday to me. So it was like
special moments like that, that you can never really have in the NBA.
Can you take us through the early parts of your career and what some of the meanest things other players said in trash talk while playing against you,
sort of, you know, it's tough to start in the NBA. So when you have to earn your respect,
who are some of the legends that are trying to diminish you? And you're like,
I can't believe that person just said that to me. I just started out here. Yeah, there is the one that always sticks in my mind
is we were playing in the garden and KG was,
as everyone's already said,
I mean, he's a legendary trash talker
and he was guarding me and I got a switch
and I like tried to attack him
and I like couldn't go anywhere.
So then he kind of like starts clapping
and like getting like, you know, how he would get in his defensive stance. And I like backed it up and, you know,
went back at him and scored. And then I was kind of barking at him down the court. And
I think he respected me after that. Because before, you know, he's I, you know, I'm just
this little like white kid coming from suburban Indianapolis. Like there was a lot of trash talk that I probably can't repeat on here towards me.
But when I kind of like barked back at him,
he like respected that and it was good ever since then.
Oh, but I got to imagine you've got all the stories
about being underestimated as the white guy
who has to make his way in this world.
Like Nick Collison told us the story.
He runs out on the court and it's always like,
shooter, shooter, shooter.
He's like, I'm not a shooter.
I can't shoot.
I can't shoot.
Why are you saying that?
But you're fighting your way through an ecosystem
that offers all sorts of disrespect at the beginning
that you have to overcome.
Absolutely.
I always say, no matter what,
and even this happened throughout my career,
it's like, for whatever reason, and even this, this happened throughout my career.
It's like, for whatever reason, when you see the white guy guarding you, it's like, let's
ISO him and go at him.
And so you got, you got to like, hope that you get to stop that first time or else they're
just going to keep going at you every single time.
And I definitely wasn't the worst defender on the team, but for whatever reason, you
know, checking the game and going at them, we're going right at them.
That's the game and going at them. We're going right at them.
That's the game plan. That's what you're saying.
The advanced scouting is just I saw the white guy.
I'm telling you, there's just some sort of stereotype.
It's like he was, eyes light up.
Um, I can tell you there's, I remember in this probably what
net didn't necessarily have to do with the fact that I was white, but maybe
it was like my face and hair and everything. But when we played the Lakers, I think it was preseason
one of the years and they had Ron Artest and I checked in the game
and he like looks at me and then looks back at Kobe and looks at me.
And he's like, hey, Kobe, he's like pointing at me like,
just throw me the ball in the post, man. Look who's guarding me.
I got Bieber guarding me.
Sure enough, you know, just posted me up on posted me on our test was really good and like had no
chance. I think I'll be out right back down. Like I got
Bieber. I got Bieber guarding me. Yeah, yeah. He's proud of
it too. Telling that story. I don't know. He's saying it
with a smile. I mean, what can you do?
It definitely, what am I going to do?
What am I going to do?
We're on our test.
You know what I mean?
Like I was definitely not trying to fix that guy.
You mentioned Kobe and I knew you drew some inspiration like many did from Kobe Bryant.
What kind of impact did he have for you on the court and off the court?
Yeah, I mean, Kobe was a mentor for me.
I don't know if you guys heard, I went on Paul George's podcast and told a bunch of
stories about him, but just having a chance to work out with him in the off season, having
him kind of in my phone for phone calls away, text messages away, emails, that meant the
world.
And I think everyone saw his work ethic and just his mentality and Inspired a lot of people and certainly inspired me as well
I did hear some of the stories you told with paul george
Uh, I believe derek fischer and rick fox have told us stories as teammates of his
Where he would detest you to the point that you'd have to be willing to fight him before you got his respect like
As as a teammate, uh, what do you regard as your best basketball war story? Does it involve Kobe or does it involve somebody else?
If you had to show off one of the stories from your war chest that you know always is
a hit at parties when people meet Gordon Hayward because they want to hear about some of the
stuff that happens inside that only you guys know about.
Well, my Kobe stories are probably my go-to, which I've told before, but there was,
I remember when I was in Utah, I had this marketing scheme. I play League of Legends. I was
talking to one of your guys, backstage guys about it, but I put out a tweet or an
Instagram or something about being the best.
Like I can beat anybody one on one in the NBA.
Like I can beat LeBron one on one, but I was like teasing saying like in League of Legends
and we happened to play them like a week afterwards.
And I got a text from somebody from Cleveland saying like dude, why'd you do that?
Like LeBron's talking about it. Like why would you like piss him off out of all people and
We go and play the game and I kind of went back and forth them and ended up hitting a game winner against them
At home in Utah and so that was like that was pretty cool pretty cool feeling as we speak here
Lori Markkinen has just signed a
cool feeling. As we speak here, Laurie Markkinen has just signed a 230 some odd million dollar contract with Utah. You were born too early, Gordon. You got plenty of money. But when when
you see some of what it is that's happening in the NBA financially right now, your thoughts are
generally what great time to be an NBA player for sure. You know, I was extremely blessed with the
time that I even came in with the contracts that I was able to get. So it's a good time to be an NBA player for sure. Um, you know, I was extremely blessed with the time that I even came in with
the contracts that I was able to get.
Um, so it's a good time to be, you know, an NBA fan, good time to be an NBA player.
Games definitely growing.
So happy for everybody that gets these types of contracts.
Laurie's a really good player.
Yes, he is.
We're going to put up a picture here of you, uh, in 2020, uh, this mustache and, uh,
Oh yeah. Yeah. You look like the original Celtic is what the tweet is.
Like the first one?
Yes, the very first one, the original one. You look like you were in a barbershop quartet as
well. What is happening here? I mean, it just, it looks so good. You seem delighted by that look.
What is happening here?
Oh, do you like that look? Oh, yeah. I mean, it's wonderful, but it's aggressively ironic, I'm assuming. You seem delighted by that look. What is happening here? You like, you like that look? Oh yeah. I mean, it's wonderful,
but it's aggressively ironic. I'm assuming you're doing this purpose
purposely to enrage the people who love you. Yeah.
So you know,
the interesting thing about that is for whatever reason, for whatever reason,
all like a bunch of guys are the ones that comment that they love it.
And all the women are like, you look so stupid. You look creepy.
I like my wife hates that they love it. And all the women are like, you look so stupid. You look creepy. I'll like my wife hates that.
She hated that.
And I really was doing it to annoy her because this was, this was in the bubble
that I had this, there was a bunch of people that just for whatever reason,
we're skipping barbers and stuff.
So, um, that was certainly a unique look.
I, that was one of my favorite looks.
What did your wife have to say about that?
She's like, I'm not kissing you with that, you know, like
They always say that they always say that then they come around Gordon
My wife says the same thing when I have rocked the mustache and all of a sudden two weeks later
She wants to give it guys. What do you know? Okay. Yeah. Yeah, they'll come around. Huh? It doesn't sound like she came around
It doesn't sound it. It sounds like yeah, I'm not rocking it anymore
Doesn't sound like your experience was the same as Tony's there.
I have not heard you talk and I don't wish to bring up a sore subject, but when you say
your career was altered by that injury in Boston, I really was heartbroken for you to
get five minutes into your career in Bostonoston and suffer that injury which just seemed
to horrific uh... and and i don't imagine i'd soft photo of alex smith the
other day in his leg i'd don't assume that your career was the same after that
because i don't assume your body works the same after that no matter the healing
properties of the youth uh... what can you tell us about that heartbreak because
to be betrayed by your body when your body has carried you to all sorts of confidence and it's just a random thing.
I don't know how someone endures something like that.
Yeah, that was tough.
Certainly a play that I did like once a game, me and Joe Ingles had a connection where he throw me an alley-oop and you know it was a play that I did for a long
time and it was just same type of play play and freak accident and stuff like that you know it
happens in basketball so you know no ill will towards anybody on on how it happened but yeah
I mean it was certainly tough I mean your your body has to change and try to adapt and you know
I can't say for certain but I've had had, I basically was like almost 100% healthy
through my first seven years with the Jazz
and in my career.
And then after that injury,
it seemed like I had another injury like every year since,
and a lot of them on that same side too.
So I mean, it's your body changes and tries to adapt.
And the doctors did a tremendous job
just getting me back out on the court
and able to run again. Cause in the moment it's's like I'm thinking to myself like am I going to be
able to run again like am I going to be able to play with my kids like what just because of my
ankle is just dangling like it's just it's just dangling there and uh you know I think just for
me to be able to get out on the court again was was triumph for me in and of itself um but just
had to put a lot of effort and work to try to just get back to where
I was when you watch Boston win the championship, are you happy for Boston?
Cause you know, some people there or do it does, is it bittersweet because you
also, you know, you had dreams of doing that there.
I think if you would have asked me like the year I left, I would have been like
pissed off about it, like rooting against them.
Um, but I, I, I still have so many good relationships in Boston
with the people that are there.
So I was rooting for him.
Joe Mazzullo was, was an assistant when I was there and he's, he's awesome.
We, me and him were really close.
Um, you know, JT and I also were really close.
And so a lot of those guys just just obviously Brad moving to be the GM.
You know, certainly I wish it would have happened when I was there.
We had the talent to make it happen when I was there.
But that's it's hard to win in the NBA and to get the right formula.
Like there's just little things that have to go your way.
And you know, I think they're going to be obviously favorites for years to come.
They just are there.
They get up there in that window right now where everything's lining up.
On the flip side, when you see the Heat win the Summer League Championship, you regret
not coming here because it's a more recent one.
I didn't even know the Heat won the SuperSport.
Yeah, right.
Oh, that is...
You're doing a...
Same here. A lot of stuff with your retirement.
It can be very difficult to find your way after making your identity for as long as
you have as an athlete.
It's a really hard thing, retirement.
You've got a production company, as I mentioned, Notice to Quit is the film.
It's from Whiskey Creek.
It's in theater September 27th.
What are you doing with both your production company and your retirement?
Yeah, you know, I've always been interested in movies
And so we're I'm looking forward to telling stories and making movies as you mentioned. We got this movie notice to quit coming out
starring Michael Zeig and case of Bella Suarez
Simon Hacker wrote and directed it. He actually was the guy who did my comeback
documentary for the Players Tribune. He's super talented. If you've ever seen Marvelous Mrs.
Maisel, the show Joel Maisel, that's Michael Zeek and he's the lead. He's amazing. And this film is
about kind of like it's about father daughter relationships, kind of like work balance relationships,
something that I completely understand and kind of figuring
out what's important in life and takes place set in New York
and in the summertime.
And so everyone's got to go out and see it.
Like you said, September 27th is when it comes out.
So I'm super proud of the movie and, you know,
everything that we were able to accomplish.
And so I'm looking forward to getting everyone a chance to see it.
Did you have work life balance as a player to be as good as you were,
tends to take an obsessive compulsiveness that doesn't allow for many other things?
You're exactly right. And I tried to do the best that I could. I think my wife is the real star,
as I think every athlete would tell you, with the family, with
kids, like she was unbelievable and allowing me to, you know, kind of do my thing.
But what I did was I, and I kind of learned this from Kobe a little bit, was I got my
work in super early.
So I was working out at 5 a.m. so I could be done at 9.
So then I could kind of have the rest of the day to hang with the family and be with them,
especially in the off season. And that's when you get the most time to kind of be with them.
During the season, you're all over the place. And mentally, too, you're so locked in. That's
what makes it tough. You're just constantly thinking about the game you just played,
thinking about the next game, you're traveling, all that stuff. So I am looking forward to being more around with my kids and being more
around with my family and getting a chance to do more with the movie.
You know, I'm going to go to Skywalker Ranch and do kind of some of the final
sound editing with Simon and so getting a chance to do those things.
I'm really looking forward to.
Notice to Quit, again, is the name of the movie from Whiskey Creek.
It's in theater September 27th.
His wife is the reason for all his success he thanked her with a mustache that she
doesn't want to be anywhere near. By annoying her. Yes that is correct. Gordon thank you for being on with us and no thank you for breaking our hearts in Miami on July 4th in 2017. I'm sorry that my producer started the interview by, you know, saying it was piece of shit
behavior.
Thank you guys.
Thanks for having me on.
Appreciate you.
See you later.
A lot has changed over the years, audience.
As you've been so kind in pointing out, my shirt size has changed over the years.
Look, I started this show as a 19-year-old boy, and now I'm a 38-year-old dad.
But along the way, one staple of my life has been Miller Lite.
And those of you that have been listening to us know this.
I've been a Miller Lite guy since day one.
I've been pretty honest about that.
So let's get down to the nitty gritty.
What is the best thing about the original Light Beer Miller Lite?
It sparked this debate way back in 1975, and we still haven't settled it.
For me, it's the undebatable quality.
It's great taste.
And it's less filling.
Whether you're out with your friends, at a game, at a bar, in the shower, Miller Lite
delivers Miller Time every time.
You don't have to choose what's best about Miller Lite.
It has great taste and is less filling.
Tastes like Miller Time.
To get Miller Lite delivered right to your door, visit MillerLite.com slash Dan, or you
can find it pretty much anywhere that sells beer.
Celebrate responsibly, Miller Brewing Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 96 calories per 12 ounces,
fewer cows and carbs than premium regular beer.