The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - Local Hour: Blissful Ignorance
Episode Date: September 30, 2024Today's Cast: Dan, Stugotz, Billy, Roy, Mike, Lucy. Dan's phone froze with three seconds left in the Miami-Virginia Tech game and genuinely came into today having no idea what happened. That creates s...uspense at the beginning of the show as he tries to figure out what happened. We finally get to the answer, and Dan cannot believe how long people had to wait to figure out the result of that insane final play. After we fully react to all the madness from that game, we welcome on two members of the 1962 Mets, Jay Hook and Craig Anderson, to celebrate that they are no longer the worst team in Major League history after the White Sox broke their record for most losses in a season. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Shadow Show. Shadow Show. Shadow Show. Shadowin' it. I fear that I've made a couple of really terrible decisions. I see Billy Limp in here after
God Bless Football and he looks a little bit tired. Stugatz looks a little bit tired, but
I don't think either of them are as tired as I am. I have just come in, just landed
on a red eye from California. I don't think I will ever do that again
because I'm gonna struggle through
what it is that I'm doing today.
The red eye you're talking about.
That's correct.
I'm just really, I am hurting because
this is not the way to do today's show,
but there's another thing that I did
that I think might have been an error that
is also going to make today's show difficult to do because usually Monday's show, Football
Monday is super easy, super easy to do.
You come in here, everybody's got a lot to talk about, and you got all the college football
and you got all the pro football.
But I'm at a music festival and I am promising my wife at the music
festival on Friday that I'm going to be present during Pearl Jam. Right. I'm not
going to be distracted, I'm not going to be in my phone. In the moment. That's
correct. I'm gonna try to be there with her and the story that I have to tell you about what happened that made that difficult
makes me come in today in a way
that I am not properly prepared at all to do today's show.
And I don't know that I've ever been quite this ill prepared
to do a show in our 20 years doing this
where I just don't have enough information
about what has happened in sports,
even though I've tried to catch up,
tried to do research and whatnot,
but I cannot analyze football correctly today.
I'm going to need the help of the group
to walk me through some of the things
that happen in football because I was so actively
avoiding trying to watch football.
You made a promise to your wife.
Is she happy?
Yes, yes she's happy, but I'm not.
I'm not happy because something has been eating at me all weekend that I'm dying to know that
I do not know about football.
Can you guys just tell me without giving me any of the results,
what was the most interesting thing to happen over the last three days in all of
football? If you had to choose a, a single thing,
the most interesting thing to have happened was what?
Alabama, Georgia for me.
Coastline, that's one of the greatest games
I've ever seen.
Yes.
Okay, because I fear that what is going to happen today
might leave me embarrassed, okay?
You don't watch the Packers Vikings?
I caught that.
Jordan Love, 389 yards and a loss.
Wow. That was a big one, 389 yards and a loss. Wow.
That was a big one.
Career high, four touchdowns.
But the three INTs, a little worrisome.
Cost them.
Well, I saw a lot of people talking about Brian Flores,
that Brian Flores is now great again.
He's good.
He is good.
He's really good.
Sam Darnold's really good.
Patrick Mahomes had one of the worst sequences
you'd ever see out of a starting quarterback.
Four and a.
It was a disastrous sequence, more than that in a moment.
Oh, you don't know about that?
I don't know about the disaster.
Oh, oh, oh, oh.
I mean.
Wow.
You could hypothetically put out a scenario
and say like, this is about as bad as a play could go.
And I don't think you'd come up with what actually happened
It's questionable decision-making. I'd rather watch Pearl Jam than Patrick Mahomes
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I have something shocking, Dan.
I don't mean to cut you off before you've even started.
That happened to me yesterday that I didn't realize happened.
And I think it happened to me on more than one occasion.
I got up and I paused Red Zone and then I came back and I unpaused Red Zone and I didn't realize
until like 4 30 that I was watching Red Zone 30 minutes behind everyone else.
So I'm having actual conversations with people about things that happened half an hour before
and they thought that I was crazy and then I got to a point where
I actually apologized to someone and I was like, oh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize, I thought
it was three 30, not four 15. I'm so behind on what's happening right now.
Okay. This is funny. That's happened to me before.
But here's the thing. I, once I realized I didn't even correct it, I'm like, we're committed.
Like we're going to ride this out because what difference does it make?
In my world right now, this is where we are on Red Zone
and I don't have to catch up to everyone else
so that I can just enjoy Red Zone at my pace.
There is something though about keeping up with things
in the modern age that when you fall 30 minutes behind,
you feel like you're forever behind on very few things
do we watch this way, that you have to watch it live
so that you can interact with your community of people
as it's happening, which brings me to why it is
that I'm ill-prepared for today's show, Stugatz,
because I'm not 30 minutes behind.
I'm three days behind.
And I feel lost at sea, like totally untethered
from things.
So this is what happened to me on Friday night.
Valerie doesn't like football.
She doesn't like that every time she's walking
past the television, somebody is on the floor
or being taken off the field
and then they just move on to the next thing
and she just doesn't like the violence of it.
But she also doesn't understand why it is
when we have to go somewhere and it's the two minute warning
and I'm like, just hold on a second, hon.
I will get out the door in a second.
And those two minutes are football minutes. take a long time they're not actually two
minutes right they're actually like 25 minutes in in real time it's not quite
that much but it could be but so this is what I promised her okay because the
last few years have been difficult for a number of different reasons. I have promised her that as soon as this Pearl Jam concert
starts that I am at, that I will get out of my phone, okay?
And I'm watching on my phone.
I'm not watching television.
I'm watching the University of Miami Virginia Tech game
on the Gamecast, okay?
So all I've got, I don't have video, I just have a screen, what are you making faces about?
How's that even possible?
What do you mean?
Like how can't you, how can you only watch it on Gamecast
but you can't watch it on your phone?
I was not watching on the ESPN app,
I was not watching video, I was just watching the computer.
He could have watched it on his phone, Billy,
he doesn't know how to.
A little sports infidelity here,
it's not cheating if, you know, it's over the shirt. He could have watched it on his phone, Billy. He doesn't know how to. A little sports infidelity here. It's not cheating if it's over the shirt.
Just watching dots.
Yeah, and I'm not watching the game.
I'm just watching the game.
No, she knew.
She knew I'm in my phone, okay?
The concert's about to start in 12 minutes, okay?
And my phone is on, there are 18 seconds left in the game.
So I'm turning to my wife and I'm saying,
this is gonna take not very long.
This is gonna take a couple of minutes,
but it's 18 seconds, Virginia Tech
doesn't have any timeouts, okay?
Right.
And what ends up happening now is my phone freezes at three seconds with
Virginia Tech on the 30 yard line of the University of Miami. And this three seconds, I'm looking
at my phone, it takes all 12 minutes. And now Pearl Jam is on the stage and I'm looking at my phone, it takes all 12 minutes.
And now Pearl Jam is on the stage
and I'm looking at my phone and I'm like,
is it because there are so many people here?
Is my internet access screwed up?
It's just stuck at three seconds.
And I'm like, honey, this is not gonna last
very much longer, this is not gonna take 12 minutes.
And now Eddie Vedder's on stage, and it's still
stuck at three seconds.
And as I'm looking at the phone, the texts
start coming in from my friends that are just saying, holy shit,
I can't believe this, and WTF.
And now I put the phone in my pocket,
because Pearl Jam has started.
And I sit here now with you,
not knowing the result of the game.
Really?
Because-
Good for you, man.
You made a promise, you stuck to it.
How is Pearl Jam?
Great.
They start on time, I would imagine, right?
Right on time.
Right at 6.04, whatever time they're supposed to start,
they start and then boom, off to dinner.
You would have been okay with a late start though
I mean, that's what you wanted. Yes, if we're being honest
Yes, yes rock stars mature to the point that they're like, you know, we're not gonna keep you waiting two hours
We got to go cuz like I have to pee in my diaper or whatever and they're like we got to start right on time
Is it like 70 like what point do you stop being divas?
You're like, let's just get in there cash cash a check, get out. Eddie Vedder's 62, I think.
He's a young 62, though.
Ah, the opposite.
Billy, but at music festivals,
you almost have to run on time.
You can't be that late to it.
Unless you're Liam Gallagher,
who showed up like 45 minutes late,
did two songs, and told me to go f*** myself.
Personally?
Just like the royal we.
In general.
Sting is 72 years old, and he was great. Unbelievably great. Personally? Just like the royal we. Ah. In general.
Sting is 72 years old and he was great. Unbelievably great.
Don't stand so close to him though, you know what I mean?
So, I tried all weekend.
Hey man!
Gave it to yourself?
You gave it to yourself?
What?
You can't give your,
Just there, I found it.
You can't do that!
It was worthy though.
My god, you're annoying with every breath you take
Do you know how hard it was
to avoid
Knowing all weekend the result of the University of Miami Virginia Tech game because I need you guys to explain it to me.
I have no idea what happened at the end of the game.
I have been sitting for three days on the curiosity of,
I'm judging from Mike's general temperament
that this ended up being a good result for UM,
because I don't suspect that he would look the way
that he did this morning if what I thought happened happened
because I assumed putting the phone in my pocket,
I really did assume, oh my God, a disaster has happened.
Mario Cristobal happened.
Virginia Tech at the end of the game went all the way
down the field and 30 yards out with three seconds left,
they somehow won the game.
Okay, so are you at the point where you wanna be informed
of what happened? I do wanna know what happened, but are you at the point where you want to be informed of what happened?
I do want to know what happened, but can you imagine my frustration over the course?
Can you imagine?
You must have felt so lonely.
Can you imagine me?
Jesus!
No, that's good.
He had a better one.
We're overriding.
You had better jokes that were fed to you and you went with the bad one.
Could he have used a message in a bottle?
No. That's still not it. I you and you went with the bad one. Could have used a message in a bottle. No.
That's still not it.
I think he's afraid of the other one.
He is.
He is.
And that's a layered joke, too.
Terrified of it.
No, just come on.
Just do it now.
Do the joke that we were feeding you.
Just do it now.
So you came to the SuSu Studio with no information?
And then the joke is, no, it's Phil Collins.
Idiot.
And then we just keep it moving. Right. Well, not every little thing you do is magic, Stu, it's Phil Collins. You idiot. And then we just keep it moving.
Right.
Well, not every little thing you do is magic, Stugance.
That's right.
But so lonely was good.
I mean, it was deserving.
No, it was not.
Mike said so himself.
No.
It was fine.
Sting was exceptional, by the way.
Oh, yeah?
Well, I'm just floored that at 72 he could be that good.
I saw him play a show once with Shaggy.
They had a collaborative album. And it was was actually pretty good album for what it was and it was a fun show
Mr. Love a little you know he's a veteran he served in the
Gulf War Shaggy did
Desert Storm veteran put it on the pole and his voice is not like that in real life
Put it on the pole juju did you know that Shaggy was a veteran
who served in the Gulf War?
So tell me what happened,
because I was expecting you guys to tell me
that the University of Miami football game
was more interesting than Alabama-Georgia.
That was an all-time game.
We have the video here,
but the long and short of it is Virginia Tech
attempted a Hail Mary, was incomplete,
game over, Meyer wins. Let's move on. Well, that's not, Virginia Tech attempted a Hail Mary, was incomplete, game over, Michael Witz.
Let's move on.
But that's not, it's not a Hail Mary from the 30 yard line.
It was a Hail Mary.
It was a Hail Mary, as you can see here,
it goes into the end zone incomplete, no issues were had.
And Miami pulls out a dub, it was fine.
Nothing really to write home about.
Interception maybe. We've seen this end to a game countless times, fine. Nothing really to write home about. Interception maybe.
We've seen this end to a game countless times,
a ball gets thrown into the end zone
and it's incomplete on a Hail Mary attempt
and you give credit to Virginia Tech.
They play like their season was on the line.
It was a hard fought victory for Miami.
Oh, Virginia Tech celebrating, what?
Why did it take, how long did all of this take?
Did it take the 12 minutes that I was waiting for?
So everyone's just sitting around waiting for review?
Was there an announcement?
Somebody just came out and said,
okay, game over, that's an incomplete pattern?
So we're showing video right now.
You're seeing a lot of things.
You're seeing a lot of bodies.
The one thing that you're not seeing on this video
is a Virginia Tech player come up with a ball
and say, I have it.
However, shortly thereafter, officials throw their hands up and call Virginia Tech touchdown.
The call on the field was a Virginia Tech touchdown.
Ridiculous.
They called Virginia Tech touchdown on the field.
So, yeah, everyone's shitting bricks.
And we go to the replay, and it's a massive humanity.
Honestly, it's probably over thought.
There's three guys fighting over a bouncing ball. All three guys are mass of humanity. Honestly, it's probably over thought.
There's three guys fighting over a bouncing ball.
All three guys are out of bounds.
This is not a play.
There is a brief moment if you take a still
where it looks like a Virginia Tech player
has the ball in his hands,
but the ball comes loose and it touches
an out of bounds player,
thus making it an out of bounds play.
The ball is dead.
It's pretty simple, really, when you think about it.
It was a loose ball touched by a player out of bounds, that's
incomplete. But everyone had problems and notice like the main argument from a lot
of folks isn't he caught the ball. It's there's not enough there to overturn the
call on the field which is you know a standard inside the ACC that is
questionable at best. But yeah Virginia Tech, I. That was a difficult loss and a difficult call
to not go your way.
That's a call that hasn't gone Miami's way in the past.
Last year specifically with the Georgia Tech game
where the call in the field was fumble
even though everyone saw Don Cheney's elbow down
and it still stayed a fumble.
Oh no, we're going back two years?
No, no, no, that was last year.
That wasn't a fumble either?
The Don Cheney one against Georgia Tech where Mario didn't kneel. Yeah, no, we're going back two years? No, no, that was last year. That wasn't a fumble either? The Don Cheney one against Georgia Tech
where Mario didn't kneel.
Yeah, no, I mean it was very clearly not a fumble, but.
Careful, we're sliding out of your back to work character.
No, we're going back to work though.
College game day is going to Berkeley,
and Miami Hurricanes are gonna be featured
on the college game day game of the week
for 10.30 p.m. Eastern Start, we're back to work.
I'm looking at the replay here
and I also don't see enough evidence
to overturn that call.
I'm just, I don't know if they had other angles.
They did not, it took about 50 minutes.
You watch the exact same two angles over and over again
and then you saw that they showed the ACC replay
headquarters.
It's a ragtag bunch up there, man.
It's El Riveron.
Yeah, El Riveron's out of it.
Two people in there.
And then you could see them scrambling, like, oh my gosh,
what do we do here?
They call over a manager who comes in out of nowhere.
And they're just, the longer it took, the more you realize,
yeah, ACC is going to make sure their ACC
team remains undefeated here, and they're looking
for anything they can find here,
because it took forever to come with that decision.
Again, a totally ridiculous notion
as Miami was undefeated last year
when the Georgia Tech shit went all sideways.
Look, if you wanna argue there isn't enough
to overturn the call in the field,
which was an absurd call. You can watch that a million times.
The one thing that you don't see in any of those replays
is a Virginia Tech player catching the ball.
That's the one thing that you don't see.
So it just flatly wasn't a catch,
but everyone just applies a standard of,
but they called it incorrectly on the field,
so I guess you have to keep it.
He didn't catch the ball.
The ball was bouncing everywhere,
and it was being touched by guys that are out of
Bounce. It's a dead ball game over. I understand why you're burned by that, especially if you're Virginia Tech who played their tails off.
That is every bit the team that they were supposed to be this season.
They dominated Miami's offensive line, which is a little nicked up, but still dominated them.
They were the better team on the night.
But you know when in previous years a loss is years, the loss is fine Miami in that spot.
And Miami was able to survive it.
And you get all the benefits of losing a game
without actually having the loss to your record
and you keep this thing going.
That ball was moving the entire time.
To me, it looked like the referees were just guessing
a nice situation.
No, but the problem is the call on the field.
I mean, it is.
Whether Mike wants to acknowledge it or not,
the call on the field was a touchdown. it is. Whether Mike wants to acknowledge it or not, the call on the field was a touchdown,
and you need to reverse that is ridiculous.
Yeah, I understand.
Well, I don't think it's ridiculous,
because again, we watched replay, we didn't see a catch.
I think you're right.
The issue was a call on the field.
Honestly, the short here is Miami almost got screwed
by a terrible call on the field.
In fact, at the end of that play,
a Miami player comes up with the ball and is running off.
Like, you have more evidence that a Miami player
caught that ball than a Virginia Tech player caught that ball.
But then college game day the next day,
they do like this whole Zupruder film on it.
And Kirk Herbstreet isolates a holding call
from like the third quarter and saying,
look, they got hoes on this.
By the way, they called holding on the wrong player.
If you watch that same video that Kirk Herbstreet's saying,
that's not a hold, look at the other player.
They just misidentified the player.
But look, there were bad calls that entire game.
It's a second holder, you're saying.
There were bad calls that entire game.
Miami had a terrible holding call on a play
that would have made that game 21-7,
and we're off and running.
And Virginia Tech is dead there.
They get a pick on the very next play,
and Miami's in a dog fight the rest of the way.
Probably not the right school to say dog fight with.
My working theory on this, Dan, since you didn't see it,
was the officials were like, oh, I don't know what happened.
We'll just call it a touchdown, and then they'll review it,
and then we'll figure out what happened afterwards.
And they were hoping there'd be clearer video
that there wasn't. That sounds like it makes sense to me based on what it is that you guys are showing me here because my I'm having an
instantaneous reaction to this
That is 100% what happened and there's a lot of bad faith the debaters out there that are saying like Sugats
But that was a call on the field, they just, let's just say something
and take this to replay so we can get something
a little bit more definitive.
Now, it's a tough play, it's a massive humanity out there,
but the one thing that you very clearly don't see
in this video is a Virginia Tech player catching that ball,
securing it all the way down and scoring a touchdown.
It's just not something that you see.
Everybody fighting for that ball is out of bounds.
If one of those players touches it while they're out of bounds,
the ball is out of bounds.
It's a dead play.
The majority of the bodies are out there.
You got like an ankle and two knees that are in bounds.
It was absurd.
Terrible call.
If it was a Keynes player, you'd see the catch.
I mean.
That's fair.
You figure out a way to see the catch.
I think I've been fair guys like I
Being fair here right cry cause Virginia tech that game he did that was a terrible field goal
What you get a chance to put up points you put up points? Yeah, what are we getting cute for all said mm-hmm?
Also, not enough is being said about how bad those polos are that hokey is horrific
I don't know how they approved it
Terrible mascot to begin with but the fact that they have a little cartoon
turkey head on their little polos, horrific. You're dressed for failure.
You're not dressing for success there, Dan. Help me understand what the general
reaction was when people started fighting about this, because what you're
getting from me is a three day old take that is
Totally fresh because I'm witnessing this for the first time, you know, I went to the University of Miami
You know, I want the University of Miami to be good
but if you call that a touchdown and
All I'm seeing again again in the replay is sort of like maybe he landed on his ass with the ball.
I don't know, but you called it a touchdown
and then you go to the replay
and the replay doesn't show me something
that indicates, well, you've disproven that it's a touchdown
even as what you say is true,
which is that everyone is out of bounds.
I can't believe-
Well, that's kind of a big one there, Dan, though.
Like, you're saying that, two sides out of your mouth right now.
You're saying I don't see anything,
but I see everybody out of bounds.
Everybody's out of bounds, but his ass is still in bounds,
and his ass landed first, and his ass may have landed
with the ball, and the referee did call it in.
No, see, right there, 43 is landing.
He has more possession of the ball
when they're falling down. He falls down out of bounds the ball is dead I understand this was a
debate this was a hot topic and very clearly people wanted Miami to lose that
game and everybody applies a standard of though all the call on the field it was
a bad call on the field that they didn't call until like 20 seconds after that
sequence but it was the call on the field Dan is right it was the call on the
field there might have been a bad call on the field but it was the call on the
field right so what happens when there's a bad call on the field so you got say
go to replay and they find out proof to find out what the right call should be
here and they made the right call you can you can look you can talk to me till
you're blue in the face it wasn't a catch why everybody I've had three days
and ward this looks good no Mike word play up there's your phone not working for that he needs to. No Mike, I mean that's it. Did you see the Cam Ward play?
Yeah, but your phone not working for that day.
He needs to knock it off with the turnovers.
Hold on.
You didn't see the Cam Ward play?
No.
Oh.
On a third and three, he has a wide open Isaiah Horton
and he sails the ball over his head.
Mm-hmm.
Not that one.
The very next play, Xavier Reshrepo falls down in his route.
No, not that one either.
That was a fourth down. I think your season's on the line here. Reshrepo falls down in his route. Not that one either. That was a fourth down.
Your season's on the line here. Reshrepo catches the ball while he that's somebody catching while on his ass. Not that play. And then he has caught Miami's offensive line. They go up against the
nation's leading sack getter. The backup left tackle you know has some poor moments but they
get pressure. This is more pressure than Kim Wardis faces his entire time in Miami by a long shot.
And they get home on the quarterback.
Quarterback makes a Patrick Mahomes type flip play.
Just great instincts, flips it over to his tight end,
Riley Williams, who catches the ball
and then runs 35 yards after breaking an initial tackle.
It was a massive play.
The Restrepo play and the Williams play in particular
were magical plays. It was a, we should say this,po play and the Williams play in particular were magical plays.
It was a, we should say this,
because I could feel my blood boiling in ways
that it hasn't all season long.
This game was incredible.
Start to finish, it was a standalone game.
Everybody was into it,
and that's why everybody has opinions about it,
because this game delivered.
You had Patrick Mahomes tweeting about the game.
It was a fantastic game.
A terrible game to watch on Gamecast, I imagine.
Not great.
I do want to understand a little bit better though
because you can imagine my confusion
the way that I experienced this.
Please tell me how much time elapsed
between a stadium full of people seeing,
like, because, yes, this is the part
that I want to examine because.
It's the only part you care about, really.
Well, we've gotten into the minutia of.
Yes.
Something that people have been arguing about,
I'm sure, for three days,
and I've avoided somehow all the arguments.
It's been blissful, actually.
It was a blissful tranquility
to be away from the internet in this way and to only be watching
Little splatters of football here and there where I knew that game wasn't going to be talked about
So I can tune in to Packers
Packers Vikings for a little bit here
I was a good one and feel pretty good about the fact that the UM result isn't going to be on the screen so that
I can come in here confused and
you guys could explain it to me. I really want to understand if you guys have ever seen, because this
part's being ignored it seems like to me, have you guys ever seen what it seems like you're describing me without talking about it, which is,
touchdown on the field?
Everyone is standing around in a stadium saying,
Mario, you stink, fire Mario,
you're clearly better than this team.
No, no, they, in the stadium,
seemed to be completely unaware
that any of this was going on,
because they were doing like the light show, whatever.
They were celebrating as though the game was over.
Like they had won.
They were following the players, yes.
Yeah, they didn't even know that Virginia Tech
had been given a touchdown as a result of that.
We didn't notice that at first
because it took quite some time for the officials
to throw their arms up there.
So you have, like the entire game,
it's a great rivalry by the way,
shame on the ACC for saying that
this wasn't a protected rivalry, they corrected that.
These teams play annually.
The entire game, Dan, they're going back and
forth doing the Cam Ward mocking celebration to us.
So the Miami player runs out of that mass of humanity with the ball.
The light show starts going and you breathe a deep sigh of relief.
I look at Cynthia, my wife next to me, she's like, I think he caught that.
I'm like, how can you say anything there?
And then, shortly thereafter, the call on the field is,
touchdown, arms go up, and the sideline
for Virginia Tech erupts.
Now, whenever there's a controversial play,
I always look to the sideline and the opposing coaches
to see what they're being told in their headsets
to see if there's a reason for conviction on the sideline.
Tell you brother, that sideline was confident.
They thought they had it.
And then as time goes on, you have, in the stadium,
to us it seems pretty obvious because we don't have
the commentators telling us what's happening there.
But apparently on the national broadcast,
Andre Ware was like, you can't overturn the call
on the field, there's nothing here to overturn
the call on the field, which is pretty here to overturn the call on the field,
which is pretty much, even Stu Gott's,
the standard that everybody is upholding here,
which is not that it was a catch,
it's just you can't overturn the call on the field.
But take me through, just real quick,
and I'll leave this alone after this.
Take me through whether a game has ever ended this way
with a stadium full of people watching in terms of a delay
between the game's over, I don't know who's caught it, he caught it, there was a signal
of a touchdown and then how much time is going by before they say never mind, incomplete.
So you have people what's standing around for 15 minutes?
It was like an hour.
It was a very long review.
That was, took forever.
It was in eternity. So wait a minute, you're telling me that this ended, so what, took forever. It was in eternity.
So wait a minute, you're telling me that this ended,
so when I put my phone in my pocket
to be present with my wife, you're telling me
what I've missed is a game that has ended
in a way that no game has ever ended
that we've ever watched in the era of instant replay.
That's what you guys are just blowing past?
That what I put in my back pocket is an ending
like none other in the history of sports
There was a band on the field at one time. I mean remember that one
There was a band on the field and there was and the University of Miami also lost the national championship with fireworks in the sky
Because a call overturned it but it wasn't 20 minutes
It wasn't 20 minutes with a stadium full of people just waiting around for a touchdown
That wasn't a touchdown to be called an incompletion.
Guarantee you Pearl Jam had a concert the same day as the band on the field.
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Don LeBretard.
We didn't get to your guys' against the spread.
You're right, you're right, you're right.
I don't have it against the spread.
Oh, well.
Because I wasn't prepared for this segment. You need an Ian in your right. I don't have it against the spread Because I wasn't prepared for this segment
You need an Ian in your life
You have actively played defense against me today in a way that has rarely been this undercutting
Stugats!
Defense wins championships, baby
That's show business
This is the Don LeBattar Show with the Stugats This segment has a great deal of potential, potential to be exceptional or potential to
be a total catastrophe.
Yes.
But if it is, Dan, that's on us.
It is not on the guest.
That is correct.
It will be on me and you.
That is correct.
And Billy, because Billy is delighted right now,
sitting in that seat of everything that's happening.
The segment has a great deal of potential,
potential to be exceptional or potential
to be a total catastrophe.
Yes.
It sounds like it.
But if it is, then it's worth it.
Yeah, it sounds like it.
Yeah.
It's a turn that down.
It looks like we need to turn that down.
So this is the segment that we're trying to do.
Billy is in charge, and he's smiling a great deal
because this is what he wants to happen.
And I don't know why he wants this to happen,
but Jay Hook and Craig Anderson are with us
and they're here to celebrate.
They are of the nine living members
of the 1962 New York Mets.
They're the only two who played the entire season,
the only guys who were there to lose
all 120 games.
And this is a big time for them because the White Sox are now in our most historic sport,
officially worse than the 1962 Mets were.
They used to be the worst team in baseball history by record.
But I don't think Craig Anderson
has used Zoom before and he's joining us through Zoom and through the phone of
one of our producers. Jay Hook for some reason is a Zoom veteran. Oh yeah. Like he
knows exactly what he's doing right now. He is polished and ready to go. Look, he
has got he has got a visual aid for us of a Mets cap, so we will say hello, gentlemen, to both of you, Craig and Jay, and congratulations.
We are very happy for you. Did you spend the entire weekend, Jay, buoyant and effervescent, because finally your names can leave the record book?
There is a worse baseball team in baseball history than the 1962 Mets.
Well I did watch the White Sox and the Tigers play. I live on a farm in northern Michigan and
we so we weren't down at the games but that's the only station I can really get on our TV is the
Chicago White Sox I mean the Detroit Tigers games. So fortunately the White Sox, I mean, the Detroit Tigers games. So fortunately, the White Sox played three in Detroit,
and won a couple but they lost one which put them at 121, which
was one better than the 120 that we had. And I have to tell you
the Detroit Tigers lost 119 in 2003. So there's a 119, there's a 120, and there's a 121 now.
So you can see anybody could do it.
Well, you guys played only 160, right?
You were 40 and 120.
You feel like the White Sox cheated here to get the record.
They had an extra two games.
Right.
That's true, that's true.
When we had two rain outs, and Casey, I think, probably said,
I don't think we need to worry about making those two games up.
Now, Craig, can you hear us? Were you celebrating at all this weekend? Were you keeping track
of what it is that was happening this weekend?
Yes, I've been keeping track for about two weeks, yes.
And how have you felt as you've watched it? Did they did the White Sox scare you a little bit by winning three straight out of nowhere?
I
Think you're right about one thing. I thought I thought this was gonna be over sooner than it was
But yes
I'm very happy that the Mets fans are relieved of the record. And Jay, how were you rooting during these games you were watching?
Were you fixated and were you actively rooting for the White Sox to lose?
No, I was just watching.
You know, after 62 years of holding that record,
you know, it didn't make much difference.
And as Craig has said many times, and I've said many times,
we really didn't, I didn't feel we kept track of those
back then the way that you keep track of them now.
We knew we weren't a very good team,
but we, I don't think, you know,
the players and the fans, it was always that next game,
we're going to win.
And I think the players felt that way.
How about you, Craig? Was your opinion any different?
Were you rooting for the White Sox to lose?
I, like Jake said, we were losing games, but there wasn't anything about,
oh, the record, the record, the record. That didn't happen.
We were a first-year team, and we're doing the best we can didn't happen. We were a first year team. We were doing
the best we can. So we knew we were, we knew we were having a bad season, but they weren't
comparing us to anybody else at that time. So at the end of the season, I think they had a meeting
and decided that they're going to make ours the worst ever. And that's how it started. I think
we just were glad we've tried to do the best we could,
but when it was over, it was over,
and onward and upward to next season.
Now, Jay, in 1962, you were eight and 19,
while Craig was only three and 17.
So I'll ask you, Jay, who do you feel was more responsible
for the record of 120 losses?
I think probably everyone was. more responsible for the record of 120 losses.
I think probably everyone was.
We weren't hitting too well and the pitching was sporadic and the fielding wasn't too great
either.
So, it was the whole team effort I guess.
Jay, you're being too nice.
You're being a team player.
Say it was Craig.
I mean, come on.
We all know it was Craig. No, they're good teammates. They're good teammates. Craig may have been three and 17, but Craig,
you somehow won two of those games in the same day. Tell me about that day where you were three and 17,
but you won two of the games in the same day.
I just happened to be the right guy in the game at the right time.
There you go.
Two clutch hits in the ninth inning of both games.
And I had 58th in the ninth of each game, or at least I think that's what it was.
And then Gale Hodges hit a homer and Holby Landrys hit a homer in the bottom of the ninth.
And so there we were, off and running.
And our record got better right about that time, too
And we thought we were not gonna go into a tailspin like we did later
Seems like you guys are saying you got bad run support that year if I'm reading between the lines here
13 by one run
13 losses who said 13 losses by one run? Whose wife is that?
Must have been Craig's.
Finally, Judy.
Ah, Judy, bring her in.
Was Judy there for the ride in 1962?
Phrasing.
Dan.
Dan.
What?
I led the league in honor and runs being on my record. Dan What
Your teammates let you down
Now after you won those two games in the same day though Craig you went on to lose 19 straight decisions
I'll be it in a in a hitters park
straight decisions, albeit in a hitters park.
Those last two wins were the last wins of your career, correct?
That was the problem, it was unfair,
it was a hitters park, I mean.
We came close a few times, it just didn't work out.
I love how supportive Judy is in the background,
it's so good.
Jake, what do you remember about that season that you would
say was the most positive thing about that season? Well, in 2003, the Tigers were losing a lot of
games and the LA Times asked me to write an op-ed piece for their paper. And I wrote this article
piece for their paper. And I wrote this article. And the title of it was something like in baseball or life, there's a
new game tomorrow until the end of the season. And I've all of
these felt that that the players didn't lose, you know, hope of
winning. I really felt that they they came out every day.
And we may have lost the day before, but it was a new game.
And we had a chance to win it.
And I felt the attitude was that way with the players.
I thought that attitude.
The fans in New York were absolutely terrific.
And we had Casey Stengel as a manager.
And after every game and
when we were at the Polo grounds,
he would call there were probably 12
papers in New York and and
or something more or maybe or less.
But every every paper
had a sports writer
and he would call those sports
writers into his office.
He knew
they were the vehicle to reach the fans and he would tell them stories. He'd give them something
to drink and he'd tell them stories in the past. He'd tell them stories about the game, something
funny that may happen during the game or whatever. And when they left his office, they had their 12 inches of column filled.
They made their job probably a little more palatable.
That really was, I think,
very helpful for the team.
Whereas in 2003 with Alan Tramula's manager,
he'd been a really good player,
but he hadn't managed and that was
his only year of managing, I think. So, you know, it really probably affected his career. But Casey had
won, I think, 10 pennants or something with the Yankees, so nothing was going to, you know,
tear him down. He'd been successful. And the thing Craig and I have both talked about
is that there were so many players on that team
that this these losses didn't define their life. They went on to other things. Richie Ashburn
became a famous announcer in Philadelphia. Roger Craig became a pitching coach and then he managed,
I think one of the teams out in California and went had a pennant.
managed, I think one of the teams out in California and went, had a pennant.
Gil Hodges ended up managing the Mets when they won the pennant in 1969.
So there were a lot of players that went on. Craig went on to Lehigh, back where he graduated.
You know, I did a bunch of things after baseball and so it didn't define our life.
And I think that I was positive
Craig Jay told us before that he only gets the White Sox channel
So I'm wondering if you've been keeping up with the Mets they have a tiger's the Tigers channel. Yes
I'm sorry. Yeah, so I'm wondering if you if you're keeping up with the Mets
They have a twin bill against the Bravos today for the playoffs on the line you guys watching the Mets at all
Okay Craig that was for you. Did you hear his question? I playoffs on the line you guys watching the Mets at all?
Okay.
Craig that was for you did you hear his question?
I didn't uh no I didn't quite hear it.
He said that the Mets have a doubleheader today against the Braves.
A twin bill is what he said.
Thank you.
I appreciate the support.
Yes.
A twin bill they have today for a playoff spot are you going to be watching? Yes. Yes. A twin bill they have today for a playoff spotter. You're going to be watching.
Yes. Yes.
Can I add something to what Jay said?
Yes.
At the end of the year, like in the White Sox stands
and other losing team stands, empty seats here,
empty seats there.
When we had the end of our season,
we still had 12, 15, 20,000 people in the stands.
You tell them.
It was a big difference between the fans sticking with us
to the end until the season was over,
as opposed to what the White Sox fans,
you know, dropping them, you can tell.
And then I think that, I look back on that as our fans were fantastic
They held us they came out all season long laterlings
And I think Jay and I will both say that that had a lot to do with our sticking together as a team and doing
the best we could
Jay, what do you remember about the game? You never finished the game ended early, it was a tie because of curfew.
I don't remember that at all.
Really?
Really?
Alright, gentlemen, I don't know if you have champagne there, but we'd like to make a toast
from Jimmy Breslin.
I'm going to quote Jimmy Breslin here.
Let's make a toast here to celebrate the fact that the 62 Mets
are no longer the worst.
I'm gonna quote Jimmy Breslin,
the famous writer in New York, quote,
"'You see, the Mets are losers,
"'just like nearly everybody else in life.
"'This is a team for the cab driver who gets held up
"'and the guy who loses out on a promotion
"'because he didn't maneuver himself
"'to lunch with the boss enough.
"'It is the team for every guy who has to get out of bed
in the morning and go to work for short money
on a job he does not like.
And it is the team for every woman who looks up
10 years later and sees her husband eating dinner
in a t-shirt and wonders how the hell she ever let
this guy talk her into getting married.
The Yankees, who does well enough to root for them?
Lawrence Rockefeller, a toast to the 1962 Mets.
No longer the worst team ever.
Congratulations, gentlemen.
Way to go, guys.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Yes.
Wow.
That's very exciting.
Oh, good Lord, Craig.
You swigged that down.
Craig.
Oh my God, Craig.
Take it easy. an aggressive toast.
That's when Bill today.
An aggressive toast from Craig.
Thank you, gentlemen.
That was delightful.
We appreciate you.
Mike, thank you.
Thank you, guys.
Mike, getting Craig on the Zoom,
did it remind you of all the work during the pandemic
that you did with Bob Costas and Stephen A. Smith
and everyone else trying to get them on the Zoom?
Those meds were way better at that than Bob Costas.
Yeah.
After a giant football weekend, I really
love that we just did that right there.
That's important work.
That was really good.
I mean, come on.
What are you kidding me?
Like that team, that was a team for all time.
My parents, seven years later,
they won the World Series.
Seven years later because of what those guys built
in that city.
They laid the foundation.
They did lay the foundation.
For the 69 meds, huh?
You know what?
I need to take a break right now to gather myself.
Let's just take a break for a second.
And I'm lightheaded.
I'm so excited.
I can't believe how quickly Craig shoveled down that champagne. We're back after this.
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