The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - The Heavy Secrets of NFL Weight Loss
Episode Date: January 2, 2024They were raised to chug whipping cream and turn every meal into an all-you-can-eat buffet. But somehow, America’s most popular New Year’s resolution is most embodied by the extreme transformation... of none other than offensive linemen. In retirement, these pioneers of gluttony have reverse-engineered themselves physically but also evolved mentally. And as former 315-pounder Mike Golic Jr. peels away the layers beyond the six-pack, with reflections from former colleagues Joe Thomas and Nick Hardwick, he reveals that sustainable personal change goes way beyond the weight. (If you are having thoughts of suicide, you can call or text 988 to reach the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.) Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/hl8b1iYP5c8 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Torre finds out I am Pablo Torre and today we're gonna find out what this sound is
I have a vivid memory of walking into an urban outfitters looking up at one of the store employees him seeing me and just
Immediately shaking his head knowing going back to folding clothes right after this ad
You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
Ryan Cork says, happy new year.
Do you know I hate being told happy new year. It's one of my least favorite things to be told.
You're only allowed to say to me on the first Monday of the year.
It is the first Tuesday of the year.
It's January 2nd and you're already spoiling the entire Monday of the year. It is the first Tuesday of the year. It's January 2nd, and you're already spoiling
the entire premise of this episode.
I get annoyed, and the second's one thing,
it infuriates me.
If I hear you say to me on January 8th or January 10th,
which happens a lot, like January 15th rolls around,
you go to Target.
What's your way of feeling festive
about wanting to celebrate that it's a new opportunity
for all of us to reevaluate ourselves, to make resolutions,
to where are you, by the way?
Speaking of encountering you, you're not even here right now.
Yeah, I'm at the home of one of the only exclusive
parakeet 69 jersey, ZK, my house,
because you, Pablo Torrey, got me sick.
That's right, I'm at home.
That is slanderous.
I did not get you sick.
You can't prove that at least,
but you are in fact, for the podcast audience,
not watching on YouTube or the Drawing's Network,
you are in fact sitting in front of a parakeet
69 jersey on a hanger.
And an autographed he's on his Haslund jersey,
and I have multiple parakeet 69 jerseys
if you indeed would like one for your own home.
I would not. Okay, On the first episode of 2024, you are exactly the way you have been
for the last like 30 years of your life. Nothing about you has changed is what I'm at.
33 to be specific. Okay. So what I wanted to be specific about was what I'm excited about today on the show.
Because despite you, I wanted to celebrate the people
who actually in the world of sports
seem to be the best as a category, as a position,
as a tribe, as a fraternity,
at becoming a better improved version of themselves.
And I am talking, of course, about offensive linemen.
That was a deeply offensive intro
where you accused me of being the opposite of the best
and the opposite of somebody who wants to approve themselves.
But listen, all I'm saying is that you are no Alan Fanica.
Remember Alan Fanica?
Alan Fanica was the Steelers Pro Bowl Center.
And the Jets, that's right.
Yes, and the Jets played at around 316 pounds,
and now it looks like this.
Okay, this is a man who's lost what,
like 70 pounds thereabouts, and he's not alone.
It's remarkable.
Cortez, you've watched ESPN, and you've seen guys
where you're like, who the f*** is that guy,
and it turns out to be, you know, Jeff Saturday.
Oh yeah, Jeff Saturday is my classic example.
I mean, I growing up, I watched him be Peyton Manning Center
and he was just huge, he was a bowling ball
and to see him just look like an entirely different person.
He was the start for me of like, oh,
so when you stop playing football,
you might look like a whole different person.
Yes, 300 pounds as a cult. Now a fraction of that.
And again, it goes, go down the list.
I mean, Marshall Yanda with the Ravens,
he's a totally different dude now.
Played it 305 is now like, you know,
running races and sh**.
The Pouncy Brothers, those terrible twins,
they've essentially lost an entire Pouncy brother,
collectively.
Russell O'Coon.
I mean, this was the most famous one, most recent one, maybe.
He was 310 with the Seahawks with the Panthers,
went on this crazy fasting diet and changed himself,
and all of it reminds me that we just spent 2023 marveling.
Cortez, on this show and elsewhere about Ozempec,
about Wigovie, these pharmaceutical scientific solutions
to weight loss and the entire
time. The most popular New Year's resolution has been embodied, pun intended, by the bodies of
linemen. They have been on this in a way that makes me want to ask questions about their secrets,
their mysteries. How are they doing this? It's infuriating that the offensive line gets to be thick with two C's while they're playing and then the moment they stop playing,
they get to be like dad bod six pack whatever like no longer fat guy can't have both. Apparently,
they can. Yeah, they have cut out the what what what's that thing you eat? You love eating. They
can't eat the what's that thing I love eating? Crquetas? Croquetas, yes, they've cut out the cro...
I mean, I presume, but I don't know for sure.
And so I enlisted the help of a very special
publicatory finds out correspondent,
a member of this tribe that I am fascinated by
who will give us the secrets,
the untold secrets of how it is that all of these dudes
are somehow embodying the best version of all of us.
That is my nearest resolution.
I want to start with that.
That's not your new years resolution.
I just want to point out as someone who knows you well, I can spot your news resolution.
And what it is is that you're no longer wearing that silly blue cardigan that you wore 700
times.
And now you're wearing the Arthur outfits where you put your fist down and you look annoyed. And I just
want to say it is a great look for you. We look fantastic. It's an upgrade of what you
used to wear. Yeah. Yeah. This is not an interresolution. This is just another sweater I have.
It looks great. All of the I what's wrong with colors? What's wrong with colors and a wardrobe?
What's wrong with colors is you used to wear a green masters jacket. I'll give the producers
a photo. it was embarrassing,
it had like sparkles in it.
Okay, it did not have sparkles in it.
The sparkles were what people's eyes had in them
when they saw me, resplendent in my green jacket.
Let's start the show.
We need to get to the next segment. So my collection is here with me.
I'm thank you for being here in person.
No glad to be here.
I mean, congratulations to you.
I haven't seen you since
Pobletori finds out became the biggest sports podcast
in the world, even though,
that's right, do not fact check this.
Really sure if it's a sports podcast.
It's technically a sports podcast.
And this is technically an episode about sports.
What we're about to do here.
Yes.
But it is an episode, Mike, that I had at the,
near the top of my list, when I was like figuring out
what the f*** this show is gonna be.
And you were obviously gonna be the guest,
and I just want people to understand why.
Yeah.
So if you're not watching on YouTube
or the Japh King's network,
just know that my go-alogue junior is looking just great.
I'm trying, man, I wore the V-neck for you today,
just to really drive it home.
It is an intimidating angle. The, the, man, I wore the V-neck for you today, just to really drive it home. It is an intimidating angle.
The, the, I see it just, again, you gotta watch this,
but they're like the, the, the, the, the,
the whispers of, of chest hair peeking out,
like a, like a mere cat from your V.
Yeah, just every once in a while reminding you there
between the chest hair and the tattoos,
all poorly placed from the time in my life before
that we're gonna spend a lot of time talking about today,
they're good reminders, I like to leak out every once in a while,
even though I have this baby body now.
I feel like we're gonna talk about leakage at some point today.
But I wanna, I wanna actually talk about a photo
that it feels like you might have been mad
if someone had leaked it actually,
because it's the photo, you know the photo,
it's you, it's Tom Brady.
Oh yeah.
It's like the ideal male form.
There's never been a photo that is better at illustrating
almost like a before and after.
I was like two ends of a spectrum
if you don't mind me saying so.
Oh yeah, with 100% sincerity,
I learned from my doctor what triglycerides were after I check up around that time
and I saw the scales tip at 315 for me
for the first time in my life
and what you see in the photo is Tom Brady's palpable disgust
at just how I arrived at that point.
Yeah, just so many angles on Tom Brady
and just so many curves.
Oh, with you.
Voluptuous.
Truly soft dick, I believe they used to say.
In the 19th place.
It's giving a lot of old world wealth in that photo.
I want to establish though that your lineage here is,
I mean, you're not new to this.
You are genetically true to this.
Yeah, no, come from a large family.
So my father and both
of his older brothers all were collegiate football players at Notre Dame. My dad and my
uncle Bob both had, you know, my dad a nine year NFL career, my uncle Bob a 14 year NFL
career, both of them defensive linemen who worked their way from being linebackers in college
to defensive tackle
in my dad's case and to nose guard.
The final rung on the totem pole of large in the NFL was my uncle Bob down there in the
middle as he called it.
You're the fire hydrant at a dog show and he had the size of show for it, but you know,
they were 300 plus pounds.
My uncle Greg who was the college football player and offensive lineman was 6, 800 pounds.
My younger brother played tight ended Notre Dame.
So we're big people.
So just give me the mental image, paint the picture for me,
please, of like, you know, it was just the holidays.
Give me, give me the sense of what it's like
to be at the table as all of the,
as all of the goliques are assembled.
It's, um, have you ever, you know, in Game of Thrones, the Battle of the Bastard scene
where John Snow picks up the sword
and is looking at the oncoming horde?
That's what the plates on the table see,
as we approach there.
They're just drawing out in some attempt
to like, meagerly defend themselves
against this oncoming horde
of the hungriest people that you can possibly imagine,
who approach holiday meals with almost self-destruction in mind?
Like, I've always said,
if I don't feel like a rib is almost cracked
on the way out of Thanksgiving dinner,
I haven't done the job well enough.
I need to be a little bit miserable.
Yeah, you want your own structural integrity to be threatened.
Yes, we got to flush the pipes to see where the cracks are.
That's how I treat Thanksgiving and Christmas.
We've only got started with you vivid mental pictures.
But wait, so just to give people a picture of you now though,
now, okay, 315 was your peak, so we'll call it.
What are you waiting in at now?
I probably walk around on any given day between 255 and 260
when I'm feeling my best and when I've really been dialed in.
Which is incredible.
Just a matter of just the math, right?
Oh yeah, it's insane to look around
and do the math for me, for my dad,
for buddies of mine who I played with
and to kind of see what's possible.
But every once in a while,
like we all get caught up in trying
to be the best version of ourselves.
Every once in a while I have to be like, all right, well,
one of these pictures comes up like that used to be you
and now you are much less of that
and that's pretty cool thing.
Well, I wanna get to the question of identity
and who we really are as we go through this story,
but I just wanna establish sort of the metrics here,
the sort of the standards,
the expectations for what it means to be a lineman
in the NFL and offensive lineman
because right now the average weight is in fact, 315 pounds.
So that is average, right?
And in fact, the Elias Sports Bureau, cited by ESPN, looked into this whole thing and found
that it wasn't always this way.
So when we talk about, I mean, you, again, you have relatives who played dating back to these times,
but like in the 70s, the average weight
of starting offensive lineman was 254 pounds.
So you kind of have lived.
In your own just personal journey,
the reverse evolution of the offensive lineman
in the NFL.
I am, I'm a one man walking evolution poster
of girth throughout the ages.
Yes, so 60 pounds heavier for the average O'Lideman,
60 pounds lighter personally for you.
I now understand the true you come from.
I now understand that it's not always just genetics though.
Sure, well, I think, and that's the one thing
everyone kind of assumes because you're right,
you look at my lineage and you say surely you never had a problem being big enough.
And if you look at me, you know, I'm six, four wide shoulders at good frame is always
the way people in sports.
When you're identifying young talent, you always go, oh, like he's got a good frame.
You're looking at a house and you like, it's got good bones.
Yeah, or like, when you see a puppy with big paws, you're like, oh, he's going to grow
into those.
Like, you see a kid with size 14 shoes and big hands.
You're like, all right, we got another one there.
Let's get his hand in the dirt.
But it is, it's always interesting because yeah, you obviously, everyone who plays this
sport at a high enough level has a certain level of genetic components.
You walked out of the hospital with enough to be invited to the party, but then how long
you're going to stay and how many levels you're going to go through
are for a lot of guys going to be dependent on
what you're willing to build on top of that.
There are certainly guys that are just big by birth
that are always going to be bigger, faster, stronger,
and in the lineman community, there are plenty of those.
But then there are the rest of us
kind of in that middle ground.
I was like, all right, you're pretty big.
But what are you going to do to get to that next level
to make yourself the weapon you need to be to play this sport?
Right. So just again, for people who don't know the NFL
and it's logic, right?
Like you can start from like the biggest picture perspective,
which is that let's say the NFL wants offense.
So, okay, how do you get offense?
You need quarterbacks to have time to throw.
How do you have time to throw?
You need offensive linemen to protect him
and give him more time.
And how do you get more time?
Well, make those guys into the biggest walls, imaginable.
Yeah, I've always said if football is violent,
40 wizards, chest, then offensive linemen
are the girthiest pawns known to man.
And that's not to be demeaning to the position.
It's incredibly important.
And I wanna emphasize, when you're watching offensive
linemen in the NFL, you're truly seeing some of the best,
if not the best athletes overall on the field.
Yes.
Because what they're capable of doing at that size
is incomprehensible.
The first strength and conditioning book I ever had
was just BFS.
It was bigger faster, stronger.
That was my high school strength and conditioning book.
And that was the idea for so long is,
all right, in order to be able to do this job,
you got to put on enough armor to go out there
to both absorb and deliver contact
because your job up front is to make sure
your friends don't get hurt.
Like that's the way I always phrase it.
It's the most accountable position
and what I think is the most accountable sport
in North America because you have a group of people
whose only job is to make sure I am both physically capable
and mentally dialed in enough to make sure
that my incredibly valuable friend, the quarterback,
doesn't get hurt and ruin everybody's lives in the process.
So there's a physical price to pay for everything
that goes on, but it starts with your physical ability
to get that job done.
And we just don't think enough about the ponds.
Like, what are the, what are the girthiest ponds thinking?
And one of the things that I am thinking, as I hear you say, you use the terminology of
the NFL as being invited to the party, whether being a lineman who has to put on weight, right?
Whether that's actually a party, because from afar, it's like, wait a minute, you guys
just eat whatever you want.
Again, I just imagine, you know, there's a Homer Simpsonian aspect to just like stuffing
your, stuffing your face perpetually, but tell me what it's actually, like, what kind
of a party is it really?
I walked on to Notre Dame's campus at probably 275 pounds, and I knew that wasn't going
to be enough.
And so eating, in addition to all the working out you do,
all the time on the field, becomes a part of the job description.
I used to call lunch and dinner,
those were business meetings.
It was me and the food at a business meeting.
And we couldn't leave until the job was done.
I had to be clean plate club on every meal,
and you learn all of these tricks on how to do it.
We started off a lot more rudimentary when I got to college,
like the party when I first got there didn't have
as much of the nutritional insight
as we see in the world of sports.
Now where sports sciences become a part of this process
at a level we never could have seen in 2008, 2009, 2010.
But back then was, hey, I wanted to gain weight.
So my freshman year dorm room, and I remember,
I roomed with another athlete,
I roomed with a guy in the lacrosse team there
who slept across from me who would always laugh
because you looked over and on the wall taped to my bed
was a calendar that had my eating schedule on it.
Times when I was supposed to eat,
what I was supposed to eat at those meals,
and then underneath my bed was the tub of weight gainer
that you would see
it like a GNC or any of those stores, a loaf of bread and a jar of peanut butter. Because we're
all else stales and you got to get calories in late at night or early in the morning before you go
and do anything else. They're in nothing that's going to hit like a triple-decker PB sandwich.
And like people have the peanut butter and jelly conversation. I really grew to love peanut butter
sandwiches because it was just a means to an end at that point.
It was you're trying to get to the right number
at the end of your day to be in a positive,
you know, caloric intake.
It's an organizational discipline.
It's an ambition that turns the space under your bed into,
yeah, there's almost like an apocalypse bunker aspect
to this, like you're eating as if the world will end.
You're eating as if yes, your survival in this world depends on that.
Because to some extent it does.
Like if you're trying to get on the field,
if you're trying to impress relative to your other peers in that position,
once you're there, if you're trying to do the job itself,
like my last year at Notre Dame,
we were undefeated, we ended up playing Al Bam in the national title game.
I was a starter for the first time day one for the entire season, and I remember my offensive
line coach coming to me in the middle of October towards November, and my weighted dip down. I was like
285 on a good day at that point, and he's like, we need you to get that back up.
You're quite literally not,
you don't carry enough mass right now to do the job.
We're gonna need in November and beyond that.
One of the things we did that I wanted you to do was assign you
to go and reminisce with some of your colleagues.
What was it like in the NFL as per your reporting?
So the NFL is an even more disciplined
high stakes version of that because now obviously
it's changed in college, but in the NFL,
there's a lot of money riding on all this stuff.
There is certainly the money for the franchise,
the hopes and dreams for everybody there,
required by that, but also for you,
the personal gain, once you get to that level,
that's now attainable
for guys.
It's a winning lottery ticket if you play your cards right.
And so for a lot of guys, both that incentive of it, but also just self preservation day
to day for the same things I mentioned, you're going out there and doing battle with, I mean,
defensive lineman in the NFL are some of the biggest physical freaks planet earth has
to offer horrifying.
And as an offensive lineman, your job is to go backwards and do a bunch of very unnatural
things skillset wise to try and stop them.
And so you've got to be pretty big and strong and capable to do that, but you also then
have to maintain the speed along the way.
And so that's where some of the advancements in the way you go about putting that weight
on started to become so important.
So for people who aren't watching the NFL every Sunday,
Gojo, who are the people atop your metal stand of beef?
Would you like the dudes who even you marvel at
and say that, that is a big boy?
Oh yeah, I always say it's that nothing this big
should move this well brand of offensive linemen.
Guys like Mike McGlincheeee who plays for the Denver Broncos
now who was after me at Notre Dame who's like six eight three hundred and twenty five three hundred
thirty pounds. Daniel Fahlele the former Minnesota tackle who now plays for the Baltimore Ravens
who is listed at six eight three seventy nine to Juan Jones. Six eight three seventy nine
listed here according to three75, excuse me,
on his Wikipedia page, just these effortlessly large mountains of man.
So I should say, as somebody who weighs approximately 165,
and wears it well.
And you know, it's, well, my cholesterol levels may disagree.
Inside, it's rough.
But I want to get to the sets of, you're like cramming
peanut butter sandwiches late at night. This sounds kind of miserable on some level to
me. And I just want to know how much fun it actually was. Like, when did it really
start feeling like work, not just for you, but for people who go on to do this for years and years in the NFL.
Yeah, I think as you get a little bit older,
like you first get to college
and it's like anything else, excess is fun.
But after a while, you start to kind of feel
the cumulative effects of it on your body.
The jar of thumbs in a football locker room
is hallowed ground.
It's something that everybody knows the location of because that's kind of the battle
you're constantly fighting.
You know, I got to talk to Joe Thomas for this who, you know, accomplished the highest
goals that you could want to as an offensive lineman.
All right.
I think we're ready to roll here.
I'll count us in.
We'll get rockin' and rollin'.
Joe, appreciate it, man.
Cool.
Yeah, of course, no problem.
He's the pinnacle. He's what most people think is one of the consensus
best players of all time.
And for him, the journey of, all right, when is big, too big?
When do I need to dial it back?
What are the things where all the sudden,
the way I'm getting to this point to do the job,
starts to become a negative for the job
in a way that I have to address.
Once I got to about 3.23.25, that's kind of where I felt
like I was sort of top down.
And it was not not only the speed issue, but it was lumbar-ness.
Like, when you got this huge tire around your waist, it becomes a little bit harder to
get down to the positions that you want to.
When I was playing Prylasek sponsored the New York Giants Offensive Line after they won
the Super Bowl, and I was so upset about it because I was like, if anybody needs Prylasek,
it's me. I'm thinking this stuff like it's candy.
Like I'm eating it after Halloween,
like a 12 year old kid because I had stomach acid
in my throat from Harper and like 24-7.
I just thought it was normal.
All I knew is that I had to feel stuff.
Like I just pushed myself away from the Thanksgiving table
at all times.
And it actually gave me stress if there was any times where I didn't have that feeling
because I knew if I wasn't overly full and if I wasn't bloated that I was going to be
losing weight and that my coach was going to have my ass the next time we weighed in, probably
next time Monday.
Describe what just the regimen would be for Joe.
And I guess what I'm curious about too is not simply, okay, like what is breakfast, lunch, and dinner,
but also like what are the unseen consequences
of your breakfasts and your lunches
and your dinners being this extreme?
Well, I mean, you have like the very like funny base level
stuff of like you're just sweaty all the time.
You know, you're constantly having to shop
at a very different section
of the clothing store.
I have a vivid memory of walking into an urban outfitters,
looking up at one of the store employees,
him seeing me and just immediately shaking his head
and going back to folding clothes.
You've got that, but like,
your joints start to feel the effect of that after a while.
The heartburn that most guys carry,
usually borders on acid reflux is something
that some guys end, usually borders on acid reflux is something that some guys
end up, you know, diagnosibly so dealing with.
And just the cumulative effect of all of the blows and physical contact you're taking
as a player, then adding up because when you're done going out there and doing the job,
you're still carrying around that armor that you've put on this entire time.
And in some cases, more than your body naturally wants to carry.
That makes me concerned.
Like, the idea of maybe people were not meant to be this big.
Yeah, there's, I think, definitely a reality to that for some guys.
And I think like anything else,
it's kind of the cost-benefit analysis
that each of us can do.
If you've got the opportunity to go and do this for me,
I got my college education paid for.
I got to go and have these experiences playing a game
that I love, trying to mimic a man I revered
and my dad and do all these things, live out so many dreams
and have the opportunity to try it at the NFL level
that didn't work out, but for a lot of guys,
they can change their lives and their family's lives forever
by going out here and saying, all right, in the short term,
this is going to be potentially uncomfortable.
I'm not going to feel great.
I'm going to withstand all of the physical damage
that the sport comes.
And then I'm going to also all the physical damage that the sport comes, and then I'm going to also deal
with some of the discomfort in those other areas,
physically, joint lies, all the inflammation,
all the acid reflux that we talked about,
knowing that my end goal is something that feels worth it
when most guys do the math out.
Yeah, I do worry also about what your roommate's experience was.
Let me tell you what, the smells.
The smells of the things that go in because you learn along the way as an offensive lineman,
there are a lot of tricks if you're a guy that's trying to gain weight.
It's like something that Joe and I talked about was heavy whipping cream.
We would drink these basically milk fat malt shakes
that were like 10 ounces and there were a thousand calories.
And basically all of us was milk fat
and they added like chocolate malt powder
and like some extra sugar in there.
So there was like a 3,000 calories
that you'd just shoot like a shot in the bar
after you worked out.
And then of course, you know, you're eating cheese curds
and you're eating burgers and pizza late night and Cudoba and Chipotle and drinking plenty of beers. So there's a
lot of calories going in your system.
What that turns your body into is essentially just a mass production machine for sulfur.
So imagine a whole apartment that smells like sulfur on a good day just because of what's
coming out of your body.
Yeah. So sulfur, if in case you're not familiar with the smell is like, it's rotting eggs-ish.
Yeah, the more smelling farts on planet earth,
like let's just lay it all on the table.
I believe it's what people,
let's refer to as brimstone.
Yes, it was, there was no fire,
but plenty of brimstone in our apartment.
So we would come back and we would have like these big,
we called the All-American breakfast,
come back high-protein breakfast, bake, and eggs,
heavy whipping cream and shakes to finish it off,
all that stuff.
And then when we would get done,
you would sit around for a couple of hours
the digestive process would do its thing.
And all the sudden, whether it was noises
or the silent variety, which was, we know,
is always infinitely more dangerous.
Right, right, right.
I am imagining like a magic school bus episode
where someone goes inside of Mike Goliak's body
at Notre Dame and Miss Frizzle.
That's a, that's a, that's like a horror movie.
That's like the Willy Wonka tunnel,
but full of like dessert remnants
and at that point a fair amount of boost.
Yeah, it's so the club of people who,
who enjoyed,
or at the very least ate a lot of the whipping cream stuff.
You and Joe Thomas, what was your reaction
when you saw him looking like this?
Turn around, let's see the front.
Look at this, look at this.
Wow, you are lying.
That is abs, that is shoulders, that is arms,
that is everything trash.
Yo, that looks like a competitive bodybuilder.
That is amazing.
So for people who, again, aren't lodging
on YouTube or the Japanese network,
that was TMZ, reveling in how unbelievably hot Joe Thomas is now.
There are a lot of us that lose weight.
That is also a reminder that Joe Thomas is in,
they have to talk about the Hall of Fame. Like, there's the Hall of Fame and then there's
the inner room of the Hall of Fame.
Joe is inside the inner room, even in another room for the exclusive high end,
accomplished fat guys of all time that they are some of the greatest athletes on
earth. And when you just strip away a little bit of that outer layer,
that's what's underneath one of the greatest left tackles to ever play football.
But the reason I even had the idea to talk about all of this, to see under the hood of
all of this, to see under the bed of all of this is because I keep on seeing stories that
are like Joe Thomas.
It's remarkable, Mike, how often people in your cohort, your colleagues who played along
the offensive line show up looking like they are, you know, they are participants in a talk show makeover program.
For so many guys, there is that feeling as you get closer to the finish line of your career, whenever it is of, okay, I've been big for a long time.
And in the case of me and the group of lineman that had to work to get there, I had to make that an active decision every day.
I had to wake up with gaining weight on my mind.
It had to be a conscious effort 365 days a year
or I wasn't gonna be able to do it.
And there's a relief on the other side
when all of a sudden you don't have to live like that anymore.
And then the thought crosses your mind of,
oh my God, like maybe some of these things
that I've normalized for so long
about how my body feels, how it looks,
and the things associated with that.
Now that gets to change.
Now I do get to shop at Lulu Lemon
and buy stuff off the rack.
Now I might not look at a flight of stairs
and just look finally over at the elevator
to take to the second floor anymore.
Like, all of these things can potentially change
and there is a little bit of relief at the end.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Well, I come to you for the secrets of how to do this,
stuff, how to transform your body, because we,
I mean, this past year, 2023, has been the year of how to do this stuff, how to transform your body, because we, I mean, this past year, 2023
has been the year of weight loss drugs.
So, it's epic.
We go, we talk about this some on the show.
People are looking for a scientific solution
to a problem that now seems to be understood more scientifically.
But the offensive lineman of the NFL,
who show up as part of this reinvented tribe
of retired fat guys who are no longer that big.
Why?
What is the through line here?
Why can you people do this so effectively?
I always thought of as a hammer and a chisel,
meaning you do a little bit of work every day over time
and you can make something great.
And what that requires is discipline and comfort
with monotony.
It's all of the things that make you an offensive lineman
that are inherent to the psyche of the position
is again, you go backwards and you do
the most unnatural skill set in the sport
and try and block the best athletes on the planet.
And so to do that, you wrap the same things over
and over again every day.
And none of them are fun.
None of them are cute.
It's not like the stuff that you see DBs and wide receivers putting on Instagram
in the off season.
There's no online version of that that sells.
There's just the work.
There's just quite literally putting your hand in the dirt.
And this is what Joe Thomas had to say about that.
Typically, lineman, you see a lot of those guys, they go one way or the other, right?
If they're huge guys and they had to lose weight to play on the offensive line, which does
happen, but they kind of migrate that way, right?
Because that's just their genetics, right?
But a lot of guys, they end up do losing a lot of weight.
You mentioned Russell O'Koon, myself, Nick Hardwig is another guy that I think about
Alan Fanica, Rand Marathons, when he retired.
But that's because offensive lineman
are used to being in the weight room.
We're used to watching what we paying attention
to the food reading, whether it be guys like me
who was trying to gain that weight.
So understanding how that food handled in your body,
how your body treated the signals,
the medicine that you were giving it.
We love to work out.
Like that was like the brotherhood that we formed
in the weight room.
And so it was easy for us to transition.
Maybe it was different workouts than when you were planned,
but still it was part of your routine.
It was part of something that you love to do.
Whereas I never met a skill guy that liked to be in the weight room.
I never met a DB that you didn't have to chase his ass in the locker room
to get in there and to work out.
Because those guys hated it.
And they never watched what they eat because it didn't matter, right?
Mm-hmm.
These guys are running seven to nine miles of sprints every day in practice.
That's outrageous.
Like, no wonder they have torn hamstrings all the time.
This part of the mentality, the idea that if you understand the offensive lineman
as somebody who made himself into this, who had to be disciplined in his eating,
in his diet, in his scheduling, in the construction be disciplined in his eating and his diet and his scheduling in the construction
and renovation of his body.
You're saying that you called upon that offensive linemen in retirement call upon the same
wiring that they had sort of honed and perfected as a player to now do the exact opposite in
terms of summoning the discipline.
A hundred percent.
It is, it's the same level of discipline
and really a lot of the same tools
that you understand about diet
and the way that your body responds to things.
That was one of the fascinating parts
of talking to Nick Hardwick.
Okay, so you should know that Nick Hardwick
is a legendary figure in this world.
He played 11 years at center with the San Diego Chargers.
He was a pro-bola in 2006. He was playing at around
300 pounds listed at
305 I believe thereabouts and then he retired in 2014 and
Pretty probably he lost
85 pounds in four months
It was something he was so good at the losing of all of this, that Nick Hardwick then decided to devote his entire life to it.
He's become someone who trains others who helps them lose weight.
I tell all of my clients when they're getting in, I said, weight loss is a math equation
with a lifestyle problem.
So we, it's our job to figure out what we can do with our lifestyle and what you're willing
and able to do to fit that into the math equation.
Because we have to make the numbers work out.
When I started losing weight, I ate at the same times of day.
Like your body, it was eat every two, two and a half hours, you eat when the clock says
not when you're hungry, not when anything else matters like that.
You've got a certain breakdown of things that you want on your plate nutritionally, but
for me, it was all right.
The number one I was training to get ready for my pro day was 5,500 to 6,000 calories a day.
And so now I just took that number and I cut it in half, and it's comfortable at first
because you are eating until you feel sick more often than not when that's the case.
And so now on the other side, it's taking that same process and the level of what you're working out, you're still used to be in
in the weight room throwing around weight. You're used to doing the things that again,
the vast majority of the population has never been asked to do physically to push themselves
that hard for that long. So all these guys that are wired like that just take that system
that's already built into them.
And then they take it and just assign different number of values to it.
Yeah.
I am laughing at how little we appreciate the amount of weight room time that you guys put
in while also being like, you know, the pudgy joke of like, you know, you're a human wall,
you're a girthy pond.
Yeah. And that's why videos like what you saw there
with Joe Thomas or seeing Nick Harbwick now,
who's another guy, like an offensive lineman
that walks around with abs, that's what's underneath.
So many of these guys, like you don't get to the point
where you're squatting like some of these guys,
500 and 600 pounds and benching 400 to 500 pounds.
You've got a ton of muscle under there,
you just need a little bit of cushion on top
to be able to go out there and take the pounding
and do that over time.
And when you chipped that away,
I always said, cutting open an offensive lineman,
like if you were to cut the yolk up here on the shoulders.
To me, it's the part that former athletes are taking.
Y-O-K-E in this case.
Yes, yes, the Y-O-K-E there, not the Y-O-L-K,
that you're eating a lot of during that time,
that leads to the, I won't spell out cholesterol problems right now, but you get the brimstone.
Yeah.
Yes, the brimstone in there.
But yeah, if you cut into a yolk, seeing an offensive lineman, it's like the rings in
a tree, you can see the years where they put on the most weight and kind of go back and
diagram their entire existence.
When you talked to Nick Hardwick, who is now a guru of sorts, he seems to specialize, right?
In training, O-Lineman to lose weight as a specialty.
Well, he specialized in training people to lose weight
the same way an O-Lineman does,
those same principles that we talk about.
So he tried to transcribe all that stuff
to help people who never got to live what he did,
who never had the resources that he did
for how they can still replicate that process in their life.
But it's also, you know, the identity shift that comes with that too.
Going from football player to civilian and trying to find my purpose, trying to find a new
identity, trying to find what's going to get me out of bed in the morning and just
stoke my fire like football did. To be honest, I think that identity piece is
what most football players struggle with when they get out. It's finding who they are.
What was that like for Nick? It was a really emotional process for Nick. And he was really
candid when we talked to him.
One about his shift back to being a much smaller body, which is part of it,
but it's also kind of a proxy for your saying goodbye to this old version of yourself.
And for so many guys and for Nick in particular,
it was the classic case of how an athlete grapples with losing the part of them that's defined their life
for so long. And Nick was very candid about the dark places that that took him to when we talk to him.
What I realized two months into my retirement was I was miserable. And I actually like
told my wife. I said I came inside crying. It was a Saturday morning. And I said, baby, I'm
came inside crying, it was a Saturday morning, and I said, baby, I don't know what's going on with me.
And I'm going to give you all of our money
except a million dollars, and I'm gonna go to Nicaragua.
And I had no idea what I was saying at the time.
And I don't know why I chose Nicaragua.
I'd never been in Nicaragua,
but essentially it was my way of saying,
I'm gonna leave you with everything,
and then I'm gonna go to Nicaragua and kill myself. I had everything in my lifeagua, but essentially it was my way of saying, I'm going to leave you with everything and then I'm going to go to Nicaragua and kill myself.
I had everything in my life straight, right?
I had made a ton of money.
I had saved all of my money.
I had two beautiful boys that were three in one.
I had a wife who cared for me, regardless of what sport I played.
I had a career going.
I had everything you could ever want.
And here I am saying I'm gonna kill myself, right?
So what I realized after years,
it was that I was heartbroken.
I had never been heartbroken before.
I had never had my heart ripped out of my chest
and just put on the curb and stopped.
And that's what that feeling was.
That I had lost my teammates.
I wasn't really allowed to hang out with my best friends all day, every day anymore.
You know, I lost my purpose in the community, my identity.
I lost all those things.
So I realized that identity is just such a massive component to physical health.
It's a massive component to physical health, it's a massive component to mental health, and I don't really
know if you can separate those to the way that people like to separate them.
I think they go hand in hand.
I had never heard Nick talk in so stark terms like that about his own search for identity.
Yeah.
How did he go about trying to find it?
The things that he missed that you heard him talk about there was he had a community of people
that needed him and that he needed, right? You rely on each other for everything. The level of trust
that you've got with your teammates is really hard to replicate elsewhere. And he had a goal. He had
a purpose and he talked about that a lot every day. And what we realized with now the community that
he's built is that he's found a lot of those same things
in this next version of himself
because he's created this community of people
that he's got a purpose to them.
They need him and he needs them to help in the weight loss
journey for these people who are trying to transform themselves.
He's built a community out of people
who are trying to change their bodies for the better
with that purpose of living healthy lives now,
of being the best version of themselves,
of what it allows them in terms of being the best,
you know, spouse or partner,
or whatever they're trying to do outside of that.
And we realized that it's a lot of the same core things
in there, a community of people trying to change themselves
for a select purpose that they can all help each other
with along the way.
It had a lot of the same tenants of his life as a football player,
now as the leader of a different community.
I don't think it's surprising that he would share
such a thing with you as a member of this tribe as well.
How much pride do you take
when you see these stories of transformation
that seemingly annually come up now
with O-Lineman who have found a new version of themselves
that they seem really happy about.
Yeah, I think it's pride on a number of levels.
It's sort of as a sigh of relief
because you do worry about what everyone's going to do
with that next step of your life.
You live so much of your life, not as a football player,
not as an offensive lineman.
So there's that and then there's obviously
the health component of it too.
You know, long term being that big is not sustainable.
It's not good for everything inside you.
You can feel that.
So knowing that guys are also setting themselves up
to be here longer after the fact,
because we see far too many guys that you lose early
for any number of reason.
For me, very personally, I look at my dad
who, different position, different mindset,
a lot of those things, but my dad was a 300 pound defensive lineman
in the NFL for nine years,
when he finished, he ballooned up to like 320 pounds
and dealt with type two diabetes
that was exacerbated by that.
Oh Mike, I, your dad, I grew up watching him.
Yeah.
And his character, his sense of self was a guy
who would literally
be like stuffing donuts into his mouth
and it was amazing.
Come on, come on, everyone in here.
Here, here, here, follow Notre Dame.
Wake up the echoes.
That's right.
That's right.
That's the music.
Here we go.
You need to fight some.
He's got three left.
He's got two left, three left.
It was one of the best bits Mike and Mike had was my dad shoving multiple donuts in his mouth,
reading a sentence, and then opening up the caller line to see if people could guess what he was saying to win a prank reddable.
And again, very lucrative, like all these things, and it was who he was to an extent, but he had to learn like everybody else.
Alright, how much of that me can I take with me?
How do I balance that with a me that also wants to make sure
that physically I'm around here longer,
I'm healthier and I'm all these things.
And so watching my dad go through that now,
get down, my dad is probably 230 pounds at this point.
Man.
And knowing what it's done for him, health wise,
and just from someone who wants their dad around
as long as possible,
and who for the rest of these guys who lose weight,
want to know that they're gonna be able to give themselves
the best chance possible to be there with their families
and live the life beyond playing that they want,
there is something that you're very proud
to see this for everybody.
Yeah, and just the idea of,
I thought of myself as something
because I was incentivized to do it
because I was pressured because I was taught
because I wanted it, right?
I don't wanna take away agency from any of the people
in this story, right?
But the idea that now I'm gonna be something
that is trying to be the opposite.
And that, how do you reconcile who you really are
when you're sort of caught between
two extremes in a sense? Yeah, that was, that was also really interesting
talking to Nick and to Joe about was I always say like the, the Pope speaks so many languages
and I always want to know for people that are multilingual, what language do you dream
in? Because that feels like the one that's most who you are at your core. And so when
you're in a reform,
when you're an offensive lineman, you know,
how do you see yourself?
Who is the real you?
This version of me is who I was as a kid.
It's who I was until I was 18 and it was really only not me
when it was manufactured.
Right, when I was doing those things as far as, you know,
chugging the milk fat with melted chocolate,
syrup in it and eating crazy pizzas and ice cream
before bed.
Like, that me, that was huge.
Fat Joe as my kids call me.
I never really fully identified with that guy because I always just looked in the mirror
and I thought of myself.
I dreamed as a normal size 6, 6, you know, former professional athlete, I guess if there
is such a thing.
I think it's like anything else.
As you grow older, you learn which pieces you can take with you.
And you learn how to make sure they best serve the person
you want to be going forward.
We all want to grow and change.
You've just quite literally gotten to do it
for so much of your life that now you get to figure that out
both from a physical standpoint.
You know, what are the things I like to do work out wise?
When do I feel like my best?
Like I went through a stretch last year
where for six months I was like, I need to move away again. And How do I, when do I feel like my best? Like I went through a stretch last year
where for six months, I was like,
I need to move way again.
And so I went back and started lifting freeways
because I wanted to feel a little bit strong again.
I needed a taste of that because mentally
that put me in a place where I felt like my best self
a little bit.
So you figure out things like that that work for you
physically goes you go along,
that also hopefully give you the best mental byproduct possible
as you try and grapple with all these other things
that are more higher level existential conversations
we have about athletes taking that next step.
This is where I also established a part of your Bonafide
is on this topic or that I saw you recently tweet
about cookie dip.
Oh man, let me tell you, dipping cookies
into just mashed up version of more cookies
was actually absolutely the fattest.
Like even like people in my life,
and I am my father's son.
I have also made part of the living,
I'm the Duke's May O'Bull guy.
Cream filled cookies here.
You first.
Take a dip.
You first.
It's a really interesting grind of flavors.
That's up for me.
A pioneer of gluttony on the grandest stages,
the language you dream in when you're asleep is cookies.
100% with some donuts and heavy whipping cream
mixed in there as well.
Well, that's the thing at the end here
that I'm loving about is I'm so glad that you and your dad
and all of these guys have found like sustainable,
seemingly sustainable personal transformations
that I think go well beyond just simply losing the weight,
but it's about the discipline and the commitment
to change and become a better version of yourself.
And now you are stuck with the catch 22 of like,
oh wow, my dad is gonna be around
and he's really objectively hotter than me.
The Zaddi phenomenon was not something I was ready for.
Like my colleagues openly thirsting for my 60 year old father.
Yeah.
As he has shed weight and gained facial hair.
It looks so good.
And again, it's great, but it also like has turned around now
and every day where I feel like, oh,
maybe I won't go work out today.
I'm like, are you really gonna let your day where I feel like, oh, maybe I won't go work out today, I'm like,
are you really gonna let your dad be hotter than you for this much longer?
There's a photo of him where he was doing a panel discussion.
Yeah, it was with Stugat in New York.
Yes.
The photo of your dad, it looked like he was, like,
working on a vineyard, like, tanned, like a curlicue in his hair, just like oily in the best ways.
Oh yeah, he's slightly bronze,
he's looking at the tannins and the glass
and the sunlight as they glisten there,
grapes behind him in the distance.
Yeah, no, he's transformed into his own sports talk
version of the most interesting man in the world now
with this wonderful salt and pepper look.
So he has got both the hair that is both full, rich, dense, and now packed with grays, and
the body that is slim enough to fit in European cut clothing.
Yeah, God.
I didn't have the story of the Goliath family ending for now with European cut clothing,
but you guys are a remarkable species. It's truly aspirational.
I grew up, I grew up certainly trying to be like my dad
in a number of ways as a football player and as a man.
I never thought that in my mid 30s,
I would have to try and emulate his body type
in order to become more appealing to potential partners here.
That wasn't the card I had in the Bingo card.
I am so glad though it is the card you've played for me today.
Michael, like junior, thank you for doing this, man.
Happy New Year.
Happy New Year, Pablo. Okay, so as I hover over my keyboard here at the dawn of 2024, I'm finding out something
very important already.
In the same way that Pobletori finds out is not really a show about sports, it's hard
to break it to you.
Today's episode isn't really a show about weight loss.
I mean, it's technically that, obviously.
But at the beginning of the new year, I do find myself contemplating some sincere form
of lasting personal change.
And I just want to acknowledge here
that it can be really hard to change who we are.
Really hard.
I mean, listen to Nick Hardwick on this as he was explaining
to Mike Goleg Jr.
It's a question of our most fundamental identity sometimes.
It can be so hard to change ourselves.
But I guess the point of today's episode is just to remind us that we really can.
This has been Pablo Torre finds out a metal-like media production. Thank you for kicking off your new year with us, and I'll talk to you soon. you.