Share This Episode
JR Sports Brief JR Logo

JR SportBrief Hour 3

JR Sports Brief / JR
The Truth Network Radio
February 14, 2024 9:44 pm

JR SportBrief Hour 3

JR Sports Brief / JR

On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 1665 podcast archives available on-demand.

Broadcaster's Links

Keep up-to-date with this broadcaster on social media and their website.


February 14, 2024 9:44 pm

Top 6 sports dynasties l #1 reveal l Calls on the best dynasties

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
JR Sports Brief
JR
JR Sports Brief
JR
JR Sports Brief
JR
JR Sports Brief
JR

When the whole family comes together to watch the game, nobody wants to miss a second of the action to run to the grocery store. With Instacart, you can get all your weekly groceries in as fast as an hour.

Less time shopping means more game time. Let's go. Visit Instacart.com to get free delivery on your first three orders. Offer valid for a limited time, $10 minimum per order. Additional terms apply.

A peanut butter M&M's production. In a world where Super Bowl winners get the world's admiration and a fancy ring, but the runners-up get nothing, one retired cop returns. That's one retired quarterback. Read the script.

Oh, sorry. One retired quarterback returns to claim what's his. Um, that's claim a ring with diamonds made from M&M's peanut butter, but you're on a roll. The Ring of Comfort, coming soon to a Super Bowl new you.

It is. The JR Sportbree Show here with you on CBS Sports Radio. I'm coming to you live from Atlanta, Georgia. Super producer and host, Ryan Hickey.

He's coming to us live from New York City, holding it down on the boards. Thank you for tuning in. Appreciate you being locked in. I get started every single weekday at 6 p.m. Eastern, 3 Pacific. You can always listen to the show on the free Odyssey app, your local CBS Sports Radio affiliate, Sirius XM Channel 158.

And for everybody who has a smart speaker, you should be smart enough to just ask that speaker to play CBS Sports Radio. I'm going to be hanging out with you for the next two hours. Two hours in the books. Two more to go. Thank you so much.

Thank you so much. The former NFL executive, the man used to run the Buffalo Bills, Doug Whaley for coming through to talk some NFL with us. And much love. Much love goes out to Kansas City, Missouri. I'm sure by now you've heard about the terrible news following their championship parade, where unfortunately one person was deceased, shot. We have 20 plus people injured following their parade. It's just also that that 20 includes multiple children with gunshot wounds. And so much love goes out to everyone in Kansas City. The Kansas City Chiefs sent out a statement showing love and support to the city, reaffirming to everyone that no members of the Kansas City Chiefs were among those injured at any level.

It's not to say that anyone on the Chiefs that their lives are more valuable than anyone else's, but they did go ahead and share that news. So if anything else should break the rest of the evening, we will most certainly go ahead and fill you in. If you want to talk to me, it's real simple. The number here every single day, afternoon, evening is eight five five two one two four CBS. That's eight five five two one two four CBS. You can also find me. I am online. I am everywhere at J.R. Sportbrie, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, X, all of that good stuff.

Not a difficult person to find. We've we've had an eventful day, most certainly a painful day following the Chiefs parade. But there are a couple of other topics that we have been able to hit on and discuss with Doug Whaley. We went through some of the quarterback situations and scenarios. What happens when Brock Purdy gets paid if he has success?

You know what takes place? Who can potentially kind of elevate in the AFC to compete with the Kansas City Chiefs? He said, listen, it might be Harbaugh and Herbert with the Chargers. We talked about the Pittsburgh Steelers and what they might do at quarterback.

And this is this is a big one. Doug Whaley said, yeah, I don't know what the Buffalo Bills can do to get over the Patrick Mahomes Chiefs hump. Doug basically said this is like playing in the the Jordan era. Everybody who was in the Michael Jordan era, you fell flat. I mean, God bless you on one of my favorite basketball players of all time, especially given his skill, his athleticism, everything that he did. It seems like Michael Jordan said, I'm not playing. And I came said, I got me two rings. But everybody outside of that, whether you happen to be my main man, Gary Payton or Karl Malone or Charles Barkley. Or Shaq earlier on at that point, and I came took one from him, too. It was tough.

It was tough. Glide the Glide. Yeah, Michael Jordan put the stop on a lot of titles. Reggie Miller, dare I say, Hickey, I'm going to name that that Patrick guy out of New York. What's his last name? Ewing. Yeah. There's a long list, long list of people that that Michael Jordan ends and crew.

Come on now. It's not just Michael Jordan. I know. You know, Hickey, isn't it interesting how it's always Michael Jordan most times and not always the Chicago Bulls? Maybe that's why Scottie Pippen is so angry all the time.

Can't blame him. You're right. We don't talk about the Bulls dynasty.

We talk about the Jordan dynasty, the Jordan era. Right. And I was I was going to say something offensive.

Is it offensive? You can't say panties in a bunch no more, right? Oh, is that that phrase is no longer. Yeah, because panties in a bunch means that it's isn't it equates to a woman being upset. Right. I guess you could infer that.

I guess you're right. Only women do our panty. Well, I guess there are some men that wear panties.

It's 2024. People could do anything. That's true. You're underwear in a bunch.

Is that, you know, gender neutral? Well, that's why I said what I said. I was I said Scottie Pippen is so upset. Right. What in my head, what I stopped myself from saying was this is maybe this is why Scottie Pippen has his panties in a bunch.

But then J.R. is going to get canceled. And so that's why I didn't equate it directly to Scottie. But I let everybody know that I was thinking it. You see. Which is definitely different. Yeah, it's definitely different. Just just wanted to share my thoughts without tying them up directly.

You can send your emails to me anyway. Speaking of that Michael Jordan era, we know that the Kansas City Chiefs are are developing their own dynasty. They are in the midst of a dynasty.

Right. We don't know where it's going to end. It's there's a good chance that maybe it continues on. Are they going to three P be the first NFL team to do so for a Super Bowl? We don't know. It's going to be tough.

But that's not to say that Patrick Holmes doesn't pick up another one in the next. I don't know, year or two. So having said that, based on what we experienced on Sunday and and all this dynasty talk, tonight's top six list of what I do every single Wednesday, we're going to talk dynasties. And yes, I know this folks.

It is impossible to fit. Six dynasties across the sports world onto one list. I have to take a look at at individual sports. I had to pick out dynasties that I think would would kind of fit or be most superior. And so, yeah, I give you a heads up now. There's there's no there's no Steelers on this list. Sorry, there's no there's no Raiders on this list because pretty much with six spots, they could, quote unquote, only be one.

And we know that there are multiple dynasties. This is the best of the best of the best of the best. It's the J.R. sport we show you on CBS Sports Radio.

I'm not going to waste any more time. It's time for a top six list. Some of the biggest dynasties, some of the greatest dynasties that we have seen in the world of sports.

Let's go. Six, five, four, three, two, one. It's time to get J.R.'s latest top six list only on the J.R. sport brief. It is the J.R. sport we show here with you on CBS Sports Radio. We're talking dynasties.

We're talking teams that dominated in a certain amount of time and had their foot on people's necks every damn year. Racking them up like nobody's business. And so let's not waste any time. Let's get going with the list and find out who this number is. Number six.

At number six, let's get this out the way. I'm thinking college. I'm thinking basketball.

I am thinking the 60s. I am thinking UCLA. We talked about Deshaun Foster yesterday trying to pick up another championship for the football program. They haven't won since 1954. Well, damn it, UCLA. They got 11 count, 11 of these championships, 1964 rolling down to 75. They picked up another one in the 90s. But we know the 60s and 70s is where it's at, where John Wooden won 10 championships in 27 years. He did have some dude named Lou Alcindor.

And a matter of fact, let's take a listen to ESPNU. You hear Lou Alcindor, who is now Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and you'll also hear John Wooden talk about execution in the UCLA way. For him, it was not necessarily wins and losses, but how he affected young men's lives. Success is a result of satisfaction from knowing you made the effort to do the best of what you're capable of.

I like success. Thank you, John Wooden. God bless him. And how can I forget old broken down body, broke foot Bill Walton?

I can't. Nice guy, Bill Walton is. Real nice guy. Hickey, have you ever met Bill Walton?

No, never the pleasure. Listen, he's a nice guy. He can talk, OK? Just like he talks on television, Bill Walton can talk. We'd still be doing this list of Bill. Well, we'd be doing this list for three years if Bill Walton was here.

But anyway, UCLA, I got them number six, top six dynasties in sports, had to get a college team on the list. Let's move on to the next number. Number five. At number five, we're going from the hardwood. We're going to the ice. Growing up in New York City, you know what I always heard? Rangers, this range is that range is this and range is that.

But growing up was the Islanders. It was Mike Bossie. It's his rookie of the year. Who's his at this MVP?

Here's this dude. Hey, here's this team that won four straight titles, four straight Stanley Cups, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983. You want to talk about a three P. The Islanders, the little engine that could on Long Island, New York, where a lot of people outside of, I guess, the metropolitan area aren't even familiar with outside of saying something about the Hamptons. The Islanders were getting a job done.

Take a listen to this. The Islanders dynasty. This is courtesy of the Hockey Hall of Fame. That goal vaulted the team to inconceivable success. Four consecutive Stanley Cups, tremendous personal achievements, all on a team that firmly established their place in hockey history and among the NHL's foremost dynasties. Man, four in a row? Damn. That's that's different. Shout out to the Islanders. I got them in number five on the list.

What's next? Number four and number four, I guess we'll stay in the New York metropolitan area because if you want to talk about dynasties, it's almost like, hey, which which one do you pick when it comes down to the New York Yankees? Multiple dynasties, multiple years, multiple decades. Not the 80s, though. The 80s sucked for the Yankees. Sorry, Don Mattingly. Anyway, by the time they finished up with the Don Mattingly years, the New York Yankees were able to go on a little bit of a run. George Steinbrenner got a little bit of a punishment, had to get out of the way.

They developed a farm system. They got some guy named Derek Jeter. They got another guy named Mariano Rivera. They got a guy named Bernie Williams. They got a guy named Jorge Posada.

They got a guy named Andy Pettit. And the next thing you know, boom, the Yankees, they didn't suck anymore. The Yankees won four World Series in five years between 96 and 2000. New York Yankees were whooping ass and taking names.

That's why there's so many damn spoiled Yankee fans running around today, because they remember this and they're still spoiled to get their act together. Hey, you might know this dude. Maybe you heard of him before. He's a winner. It's Derek Jeter on what made the 90s, early 2000 Yankees also good.

That's what he had to tell the Yes Network. It just sort of was contagious. That mentality, that that drive, the desire to win every single day. No one cared about personal statistics. They really didn't. Great thing for 98. Scott Brochas was the World Series MVP. It hit a big home run and then came up next time. Mr. T had him sacrifice bunt.

But no one had a problem with that because the bottom line was you're trying to win. Yes, Scott. Yes, Scott Brochas. Who talks about Scott Brochas? Hey, Hickey, name a random Yankee on one of them teams. Name one. Oh, Tino Martinez, right?

Who's there? Yeah, he was. See, I didn't even you don't even mention Tino Martinez when you talk about those dudes. Not not at the beginning, right? Not at the beginning.

How do you have so much? I guess George Steinbrenner had all the money. And you think the Dodgers are going to get on one of these? No. Right. They've lost too much already. Right. Four and five years.

I don't think so. Yeah, I'm with you. Lost too much. They said I mean, but the amount of money the Dodgers are spending this ridiculous.

Well, over a billion dollars just this offseason. Not bad. You think I could play for the Dodgers?

I want to help. You'll be set for life. That's for sure. Yeah, they're paying Shohei Ohtani over the course of what? 20 years or 20 years, right?

20 years. A lot of money coming in back pay. Ten year contract, basically nothing.

And then the rest of the money, 10 years deferred. Wow. You know, baseball's money is crooked. We got to talk about that one day, right? Did you imagine top six most leagues crooked money? Yeah.

Well, a FIFA would be number one. Oh, yeah. Maybe the Saudi.

Thanks. Saudis too. Yeah.

This is a good list here. Saudi leagues, Olympics, FIFA. Yeah. A lot of a lot of things having to do with international football. Anyway, congratulations to the Yankees.

Yes. One of the biggest dynasties that we've ever seen. And I would take the late 90s Yankees because they had to go through multiple rounds of playoffs.

If I got to take a look at, I don't know, the 40s, 50s, early 60s. It was like 16 teams, eight in the American League, eight in the National League. And then you basically, you know, won the league and went right to the World Series.

No rounds. Major League Baseball added the wild card, I think in like 95 or 96. So anyway, Yankees are number four on my list. Top six dynasties in sports. Where do we go next? Number three, we will go back to the ice and we will get out of the New York City metropolitan area. We ain't going to go that far, but we will go to Canada.

A straight shot up, actually. We're going to Montreal. We're going to talk about the Canadians, because how in the hell do you wake up in the 70s and win six? Count them, six Stanley Cups, 71, 73, 77, 76, 78, 79.

I didn't count an order. Sue me. Anyway, they knew the Montreal Canadians knew that you couldn't stop them. That no matter what your strategy was, what you thought, you wasn't going to go out there and do a damn thing. These are the Canadians talking about their dominance.

This is courtesy of the NHL. If you are that other team, you've got to believe that there's a certain strategy that you can use that will win you the game. And you say to yourself, well, we can outscore these guys. No, you can't. Or we can out-defend them. No, you can't. Or we can out-muscle them and then we'll get them that way. No, you can't.

You play any game you want and we get an answer. Oh, wow. I like that aggression. It's almost like when we talked about Bill Russell last week and Bill Russell said, I'm going to block your shot and I'm going to talk crap to you. I'm going to scare you from coming back. I like the mental aspect.

I like the intimidation factor. Shout out to the Montreal Canadians. I got them at number three on my list. Top six dynasties in sports, picking up six Stanley Cup championships in the 70s.

That is bad ass. What's the next number? Number two.

Oh, we getting dicey now, right? The top six dynasties in sports. Who's at number two? It's the Chicago Bulls. Yep. You're like, see, I said the Chicago Bulls, Hickey. I didn't say Michael Jordan this time. There we go.

Credit to the whole team. Yeah. Scottie Pippen, his panties are unbunched at this point in time.

You know, maybe his panties are also unbunched knowing that. Wait a minute. Yeah. His ex-wife is no longer dating Michael Jordan's son.

But anyway, that's a separate conversation. Come on. We know the Chicago Bulls three peated twice. We know the Chicago Bulls once so damn much. Michael Jordan is like, I got the joy to do this.

I'm gonna go play baseball. And then he came back and then after he was back for a full season, they they started to win again, knocking off Seattle and then knocking off Carmelone twice, you know, kind of swiping Byron Russell away. And then Michael Jordan's like, I'm not doing this anymore. They broke the Bulls up. He's like, I'm not done. I'm gonna play for Washington.

You got the help on out of there. And yes, of course, this is all about Michael Jordan. But we know so many spectacular players on those Bulls teams. Nobody's given Luke Longley credit, right? Scotty Pippen was there. Horace Grant. Judd Bushler.

Luke Longley. They built Wellington. We can go on a list of other guys on the Chicago Bulls, but the three main ones, Michael Jordan, Scotty Pippen and later on, somebody who just grabbed 50 rebounds in two games with zero points and Dennis Rodman. And by the way, with all their winning, you would think that they, you know, they got along, right? They smoked cigars. They hung out.

They're like, yeah, we're winning in 72 games and all of this. Dennis Rodman was talking to Graham Bessinger. Dennis Rodman said, hey, we, me, Scotty and Michael Jordan, we never spoke. Listen to this. Your then teammate while you were with the Bulls, Scotty Pippen, was quoted as saying, I have not had a conversation with Dennis. I've never had a conversation with Dennis in my life.

So I don't think it's anything new. Why not speak to your teammates then? Well, I think it was important.

I thought it was important for me to go there and win. Me and Scotty and Michael never had a conversation in three years in Chicago. Only time we had a conversation was on the court.

That was it. Ain't nobody believes that. I said, well, I'm going to figure out a conversation with probably Judd Bussler, Randy Brown, Steve Kerr, you know, Luke Longley, other players. For me, Mike and Scotty, we never had conversations at all off the court. Yeah, well, they seem like they have so much in common, right? I mean, not even cigars. I know Michael smokes. I know Dennis smokes like. It makes sense.

Makes sense. Hey, Hickey, let's try to to not talk the next couple of days and see how the show sounds. Maybe we'll win a Marconi.

Maybe, yeah. Well, let's avoid all communication before, during and after the show. Good deal. Anyway, it's the JR Sport Show here with you on CBS Sports Radio talking about the top six dynasties in sports. We come back on the other side. I'm going to share with you Numero Uno.

It's the JR Sport Show CBS Sports Radio. Your fever is high and the pressure to log in at work is too. But when you finally decide to take care of you, there's Instacart. Just because that one perfect coworker of yours is attending all meetings, camera on while she's sneezing, coughing and aching doesn't mean you have to do the same. Take it from us. Trying to stay on top of things will only get you further behind.

Instead, get everything from tissues and teas to cough suppressants and comforting soups delivered through Instacart in as fast as 30 minutes. If anyone needs anything, they can just redirect their questions to that one perfect coworker of yours. A peanut butter M&M's production in a world where Super Bowl winners get the world's admiration and a fancy ring. But the runners up get nothing. One retired cop returns. That's one retired quarterback. Read the script.

Oh, sorry. One retired quarterback returns to claim what's his. Um, that's claim a ring with diamonds made from M&M's peanut butter.

But you're on a roll. The Ring of Comfort, coming soon to a Super Bowl near you. OK, picture this.

It's Friday afternoon when a thought hits you. I can spend another weekend doing the same old whatever, or I can hop into my all new Hyundai Santa Fe and hit the road with available H track all wheel drive and three row seating. My whole family can head deep into the wild, conquer the weekend in the all new Hyundai Santa Fe. Visit HyundaiUSA.com or call 562-314-4603 for more details. Hyundai.

There's joy in every journey. 2024 Santa Fe available early 2024. You're listening to the J.R. Sport Brief on CBS Sports Radio.

It's the J.R. Sport Brief show here with you on CBS Sports Radio. We're talking about some of the top dynasties that we've ever seen in the world of sports. I'm thinking all sports, thinking of the best of the best of the best of the best. I'm about to share with you who I have at number one. And number six, I have to start off at the college ranks, right?

I have to go to UCLA. The Bruins under John Wooden. Ten championships, 27 seasons.

The man got busy with Lou Alcindor and broke foot Bill Walton. You can't take away what they accomplished. And number five, I gave you the Islanders, four straight championships, a four peak from 1980 to 1983. And number four, I gave you the Yankees, the Yankees of the late 90s, early 2000s, four World Series titles in five years. It's why Yankee fans are spoiled as hell, especially now. That's all I used to is success from 25 years ago.

Damn it, it's about to be 30 years. Wow. And number three, I told you about the Montreal Canadiens six Stanley Cup championships from 1970 to 1979. And number two, I told you about the Chicago Bulls.

It's kind of crazy. We just played you a clip where Dennis Rodman said, yeah, we were winning and winning and winning. Me, Scottie Pippen and Michael Jordan, we never spoke unless we were on physically on the basketball court.

Never spoke. Wow. I guess that's just a lot of talent. And so where does that leave us when it comes down to the top six dynasties in sports? You can't fit everybody on the list. But this this is the big one.

Number one. It's the New England Patriots. Like that said, this is football, right? Somebody supposed to get hurt.

It's somebody. It even Tom Brady did get hurt and they kept on winning. The man had his leg blown out and they still won. They came back and won and won and won and won six Super Bowl titles pretty much over the last 20 years. We can go ahead and thank Mo Lewis for knocking the living hell out of Drew Bledsoe and ushering in the Tom Brady era.

Maybe Tom Brady would have never seen the light of day if Mo Lewis did not drive Drew Bledsoe into the turf. And the next thing you know, a Super Bowl. And then they won another one in 04 and then another one in 05, and they repeated the last team to do it since the Patriots, this squad has the most Super Bowl titles in the NFL. They are tied with those Steelers. And yes, sorry, I had to pick one team. It was going to be the Patriots for the length of their dominance. Eleven appearances in the Super Bowl. Six wins.

That's badass. Tom Brady says thank you, and then he went and got himself another one with the Buccaneers. And why do I have the Patriots, a football team here at number one? Because you're not supposed to win for this long.

And yet people have these conversations. Is it Belichick? Is it Brady? Who was more influential?

Who was more important to the dynasty? It's just a ridiculous question. I feel smart because Tom Brady, he agrees. Take a listen to what Tom Brady had to say. This is courtesy of the NFL.

I think for me, there's nobody I'd rather be associated with. I think it's always such a stupid conversation to say Brady versus Belichick, because in my mind, that's not what partnerships are about. Coach couldn't play quarterback and I couldn't coach. The best part about football is and the coach says a lot, do your job. And he asked me to play quarterback. He didn't ask me to coach. And, you know, I didn't want him playing quarterback. I just wanted him to coach. I'd seen him throw.

So he definitely wasn't playing quarterback. I love. Thank you.

Thank you. Tom Brady thinks all these conversations are stupid. And he's right, because everybody has a role and you got to know how to play it.

Sheesh. He did his job and Belichick did his and they both did an excellent partnership. Everybody knows the play is a more important partnership. I know that that was such a difficult concept to comprehend.

Anyway, the phone lines are open. It's eight, five, five, two, one, two, four, CBS, eight, five, five, two, one, two, four, CBS. Yeah, there are more than six dynasties that we've seen in the world of sports.

I considered all of them, but I took a look at the best of the best of the best of the best. We talk about Steelers. Yes.

We talk about Warriors. Yes. We take a look at and I don't know, Braves and championships and eight. I mean, conference division.

Yeah. But I had to look at the best of the best of the best. Number six, I gave you UCLA and number five, I gave you the Islanders and number four, I gave you the Yankees, the ones in the late 90s. And number three, I gave you the Canadians. And number two, I gave you the Chicago Bulls. And number one, I gave you the New England Patriots.

The phone lines are open. If you have any thoughts, ideas on on a dynasty, plenty, I'll let you mention them. Eight, five, five, two, one, two, four, CBS is eight, five, five, two, one, two, four, CBS. And you know what? The team that is, let's just say, working on its current dynasty, the Chiefs. Travis Kelce had some words. He had some explaining. About that little bump. Well, that big bump that almost knocked over Andy Reid. We're going to hear from Travis Kelce.

I'll get to your calls. It's the JR Sport Reshow here on CBS Sports Radio. I'm Tony and this is the Tony Kornheiser show. Well, that makes it sound a bit more serious than it really is. So what exactly is the show about? It's been almost 30 years and I still don't know. Right now, we have some of the best voices in football come on to explain to us what we need to know in the college and pro world. And we get weekly picks from a monkey. Do you really need more than that? I might just tell you about my bunker game and the latest failed entry in my quest to find the best coffee ice cream.

No schmutz, please. Listen on the Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. Chris Chapman's hit podcast was canceled. As you know, my old show, The Chris Chapman Confrontation was the victim of a little thing called cancel culture.

But he's learned he's grown and he's ready to win back his audience. I'm back better than ever with the Chris Chapman Do-Over starring Ike Barenholtz. I have a new lady co-host on the pod. Lisa Gilroy. My mic is on. And Neil Casey is the professor. Greetings, my humans. The new hit improv comedy The Chris Chapman Do-Over.

An Odyssey and paper kite production. Listen on the free Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. You're listening to the J.R. Sport Brief on CBS Sports Radio. It's the J.R. Sport Brief show here on CBS Sports Radio, and I want you to thank O'Reilly Auto Parts for all of your car care needs.

Get guaranteed low prices and excellent customer service from the professional parts people at O'Reilly Auto Parts. It's another Wednesday. I delivered to you a new top six list. We talked about some of the top dynasties that we have ever seen or witnessed in the world of sports. And I had to go to the top of the top, the best of the best. And everybody can't fit in on a top six list.

And if you missed it, you can hit rewind on the free Odyssey app, get some details and also hear some audio related to the teams. At number six, I gave you UCLA, those basketball Bruins. At number five, I gave you the Islanders from the 80s.

I gave you the Yankees, the one from the late 90s, the Montreal Canadiens knocking off those six Stanley Cup championships in the 70s, the Chicago Bulls and the New England Patriots for what the hell they did basically over the past, well, not 20 years, but 20 years from four years ago. The phone lines are open to you. It's eight five five two one two four CBS. I want to pick up some of your calls and then I want to give you an update on what someone from the current Chiefs dynasty had to say about an incident that took place this past Sunday. Eight five five two one two four CBS. It's eight five five two one two four CBS. Ron is calling from Texas. You're on the JR Sport Reshow. Ron, please go ahead. Hey, thanks for taking my call.

Enjoy the show. But my question is that I'm not sure how you can do a dynasty list, and that includes the guy they named the Super Bowl trophy after Vince Lombardi's Packers of the 60s. I know they won the first two Super Bowls. I think they won four out of five championships. They got 13 overall, probably twice as many as any other team.

So I just feel like it's hard to believe you could leave them off your list. Well, when I think about a dynasty, I think about a team that that does it in a in a finite period of time. I don't I would not look at the Green Bay Packers and just go, oh, my God, they got more championships. Super Bowl and pre Super Bowl combined and go, well, that's the reason why they should be on the list. And Vince Lombardi having the trophy named after him, it says a whole hell of a lot more for their success in the 60s pre Super Bowl. And at the beginning of the Super Bowl than anything else. When I look at the New England Patriots and what they did over a 20 year span, I find that to be more impressive because it's one thing to whoop everybody's ass in the 60s.

It's another thing to stretch that out and dominate and whoop ass and be competitive for a championship over 20 years. That's how I looked at it, Ron. Nothing wrong. OK.

Thank you, Ron, for calling from Texas. Cat got his tongue. Like you can't. I'm not taking away from what the Packers did. I said that there are so many dynasties, but I have to think and I was not around to sit down and watch Vince Lombardi and Bart Starr. But I think as an overall 20 years like that's that's a lot and football and NFL like let's let's let's really stop for a minute here. If Patrick Mahomes goes out over the next couple of seasons and says, oh, yeah, I already got three.

Let me just go ahead and pick up three more or two more. People are going to go, oh, yeah, that's that's absolutely amazing for what he did. But if he stretched it out over 20 years and went half of the damn time, that's that's impressive. That's ridiculous.

That I don't think anybody listening to the sound of my voice will witness that ever again in their lifetime. 8 5 5 2 1 2 for CBS. Alan is here from Toronto. You're on the JR sport show. Yeah.

Hi, JR. The 1983 finals to the islanders defeated the Edmonton Oilers, but Edmonton got even with them the very next year, too. They won. They beat the Islanders.

Islanders were seeking their fifths. And that was a completely dominant team. Look, they had Wayne Gretzky, Marc Messier, Gary Curry, Glenn Anderson, Kevin Lowe, Paul Coffey, Charlie Huddy. And look at the goaltending they had, too. They had Grant Fear, Andy Moog, Bill Ranford, you know, and that was a run and gun year at least. This team constantly scored over 400 goals a season. They were just completely dominant. And they won in 1990 without Gretzky.

They had the big trade effort. Gretzky was traded in 1988. And Marc Messier won his fifth cup and they had it without Gretzky. They had they won in 84-85, lost in 86 in a major upset to the Canadian. In 87-88, they won.

Oh, slow, Alan. In 89 to a Calgary Flames to a major upset, but this was a completely dominant team. They were even more dominant than the Islanders, even more. Yeah, well, Alan, I gave it to the Islanders for getting that that four in a row. And also, I would say being less talented than than the squad you just mentioned.

And as you were kind of running and really, really running, I appreciate it. Well, hold on, Alan. You can see that they're the greatest powerhouse teams ever. They won it. Kansas City is not a powerhouse. They won it. But a powerhouse team.

Well, Alan. Yeah. What the hell are you talking Kansas City, Kansas City? What? They didn't dominate.

They won by the skin of their teeth. Wait a minute. You're telling me the Kansas City. So wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.

You wait. So you went from talking about the Oilers and then you jumped right into the Kansas City. Yeah, but they weren't.

They didn't dominate, though. Wait, wait, hold on. No, no, let's do. Oh, my God. Hold on, Alan. Hold on. Oh, my God. Hickey.

Damn, brah. I'm like, can we do one thing at a time with Alan? He jumped straight from the Oilers and I'm trying to answer him about the Oilers and he went right into the Kansas City. He said, Chiefs. And I said, what are we talking about now? Alan's in the left lane.

The brakes have been cut off from the car and the foot is all the way down on the gas pedal. I know Alan is retired. God bless him.

He's still here. We're going to talk to Alan in a second. He does a lot of driving. You think Alan is one of those those dudes who goes like 90 in the left lane and then he kind of swerves in front of everybody towards the exit at the last second? Oh, yeah. Half mile for the exit. Now is a good time to go right on over three lanes of traffic. Hey, Alan.

37 years. Whoa. He didn't realize. Alan, you're on hold.

Nobody can hear you. I brought him back. He was. He's still like I said, no brakes.

Alan. Yeah, good. OK. Like I said, I was a cabbie for 37 years and we're always living in a fast lane. So that's why I sometimes I talk like I'm in a fast lane. OK, well, slow it slow.

Let's do one thing at a time. When it comes when it comes down to the Islanders and the Oilers, maybe I have a New York bias there likely. But I also looked at the four in a row. And I'm familiar, as you had mentioned, about them or not them, but Edmondson going to and then having a break and then to and then going ahead and picking up the one. And so I certainly understand Alan. And then you're also, as you mentioned, you're you're from Toronto. You ain't from Edmondson.

You're from Toronto, still Canada. I certainly understand. Now, your last point about the Kansas City Chiefs. You don't think these chiefs are a dynasty? No, because they weren't a powerhouse. I equate a powerhouse to a dynasty, a powerhouse. A dynasty is supposed to be a powerhouse, someone that wins decisively in the standings and in the playoffs. They win decisively. Kansas City has not won decisively this last year. He won by the scale of their.

It doesn't matter. They come back and win. They got a terminator of a quarterback. They won three championships in five years.

They just went back to back. They're going to be staring at a three p. And you're looking at what they, quote unquote, did not do. I think about a champion. It's like, I don't care how you got the job done. And I think in a lot of cases, if I want to look at a champ, a lot of it is is resiliency. Like, how do you bounce back from adversity? Like, think about it like boxing. I don't know a boxer, a championship boxer who's never faced adversity.

Yeah, you can certainly go, oh, well, this guy, he never got knocked down or he never did this. But I think a part of a champion is being able to face adversity and overcome it. And given their accomplishments, not what they did not do, I can't look at these chiefs now. And whether it's today or five years from now, where it's 10 years or 15 or 20 years where they could add more and not just go what they have currently already done. I would say they're a dynasty.

What are they supposed to do? Beat everybody 60 to nothing? So I guess powerhouses and dynasties are two different things.

That's all. Man, when I think about a powerhouse, I think about no damn power. Let's talk about dynasties. Where are the rings at?

The Kansas City Chiefs just won three in five years. And man, maybe they'd have more if, you know, I don't know, my home's had a line and if a borough didn't get the other one. So and thank you, Alan. Appreciate you. OK. Yeah, always great being on the line with you. Thank you very much for taking my calls.

Absolutely. Thank you, Alan, for calling from Toronto. Said he was a cab.

I heard that part, I think. So he was a cabbie for 37 years driving a fast lane. I thought cab drivers are supposed to be responsible. I wonder if if Alan, if he drove Uber, what his rating would be. Hickey, I need to ask somebody this.

Maybe I could find it on a forum somewhere. If you are crap Uber driver. And then we got Uber drivers listening to us right now. If you suck as a Uber driver, like what happens? Do they send you an email and just like say, hey, you can't drive for us?

Hit the bricks? Like what do you think happens? You've ever heard about this? I know about bad reviews. I don't know.

They may put a lock on your I think it's a lock on your account on the app. Yes. And then you can't take drivers. It's like one day one day you wake up and it's just like, hey, you got a lot of bad reviews. You suck.

You are making no more money for us. Go talk to Lyft. Get out of here. Yeah. It's like, hey, go try Lyft. I wonder if they share information. Maybe. No, maybe not. Yeah, I'm sure Uber probably wants the bad drivers to go to Lyft. Her business. Yeah, that's a that's a good point. If you suck over here, go try Lyft.

We don't we don't need you over here. I'm sure somebody is going to message me because you only hear about Uber drivers with high ratings. You never hear anybody running around talking about, hey, you know, my Uber driver rating is three point two.

It doesn't doesn't doesn't work that way. So J.R. Sportbree show here with you on CBS Sports Radio eight five five two one two four CBS as eight five five two one two four CBS. We're talking about some of the biggest, baddest dynasties that we've seen in the world of sports.

Can't cram everybody into a top six list. I'm going to get some more of your calls. And then on the other side, we'll hear from Travis Kelsey defending himself from some of his behavior on Sunday. It's the J.R. Sportbree show on CBS Sports Radio. And we got rumors. LeBron James rumors, Warriors rumors. There's a lot going on here on CBS Sports Radio.

So don't move. A peanut butter M&M's production in a world where Super Bowl winners get the world's admiration and a fancy ring. But the runners up get nothing. One retired cop. That's one retired quarterback. Read the script.

Oh, sorry. One retired quarterback returns to claim what's his. That's claim a ring with diamonds made from M&M's peanut butter.

But you're on a roll. The Ring of Comfort coming soon to a Super Bowl. OK, picture this.

It's Friday afternoon when a thought hits you. I can spend another weekend doing the same old whatever, or I can hop into my all new Hyundai Santa Fe and hit the road with available H track all wheel drive and three row seating. My whole family can head deep into the wild, conquer the weekend in the all new Hyundai Santa Fe. Visit Hyundai USA dot com or call five six two three one four four six zero three for more details. Hyundai. There's joy in every journey.

Twenty twenty four Santa Fe available early twenty twenty four. I'm Tony and this is the Tony Kornheiser show. Well, that makes it sound a bit more serious than it really is. So what exactly is the show about? It's been almost 30 years and I still don't know. Right now, we have some of the best voices in football come on to explain to us what we need to know in the college and pro world.

And we get weekly picks from a monkey. Do you really need more than that? I might just tell you about my bunker game and the latest failed entry in my quest to find the best coffee ice cream. No schmutz, please. Listen on the Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Whisper: medium.en / 2024-02-14 22:51:12 / 2024-02-14 23:09:09 / 18

Get The Truth Mobile App and Listen to your Favorite Station Anytime