This is The Rich Eisen Show. The Elena Falcon Select, Michael Penix Jr. Live from The Rich Eisen Show studio in Los Angeles. What has Raheem Morris told you about Michael Penix's role?
The message to me was just, you know, nothing changes for you, just go to work and do your job. Earlier on the show, host of The Pat McAfee Show, Pat McAfee, Apple TV MLS analyst, Sasha Kleschin, host of The Dan Levitard Show with Stu Gotz, Dan Levitard. Coming up, Super Bowl Champion quarterback, Drew Litzel. And now it's Rich Eisen. Man, what a show we've been having.
We're on one right now. You know what I should say? I should say that every show, because if I don't say that every show, maybe we're not having a great show. Maybe somebody thinks the show's bad because you didn't say it. That's true.
The best thing about us though is it's about us. Tell Tupo, when he's on, he's on. How's it going?
He'll get handled when he gets handled. Oh, good. Very good. I love him. I love that drop. That's my favorite drop.
Is that right? That's your new favorite drop? Every day I switch. I switch up. Oh, you switch. I switch up. It's like Mickey Mantle of drops.
Switch it and go for both sides. Very good. Great show so far. We simulcast with Pat McAfee. That was awesome. That was so cool.
That's got to be like once a month, something like that. I don't know. It was fun. It worked out well.
Technically, the technological aspect of it. It was funny. Pat, at one point during the end, he goes, he didn't know how it was going to work. We tried it out. I mean, before we left for... Yeah, we tested it.
We were completely blind, flying into it. I mean, you know. You don't know. You don't know. Because I'm here.
You have no idea. Listen, for you? I can screw stuff up in two seconds. So we did that hour one. Hour number two, we just said goodbye to Dan Leberthardt as well. Did he reference our simulcast by saying, thanks for having me on the program? I believe so. I heard that.
Picked up on that. If you missed it, don't you dare worry. We re-air on the Rich Eisen Show channel. We got our own fast channel, people. We're live right now on the Roku Sports Channel, where we have a couple of re-airs on that as well. We're on the air every single day after Good Morning Football. Over time. I always loved listening to Dan Patrick do that in his highlights. Over time. So, long story short, we've had a fun show.
844-204-rich-number. Drew Bledsoe is going to be joining us shortly. I like that you agree with it. You're excited. Bledsoe is your guy, right? I do know who it was, Drew Bledsoe.
It was great. When I moved to Maine that year, he was the starting quarterback. That was the year they got drafted. Ninety-four? Ninety-three.
Ninety-three, okay. And we had some fun times watching him slinging around. I mean, Ben Coats.
Ben winter coats. Troy Brown in the early days. You know, I'll ask him his first conversation with Parcells because you never know.
Willie McGinnis will tell you he had no idea that the Patriots were going to draft him. None. Zero. That he never spoke to him at the combine. Yeah. Never spoke to him. So, yeah, it is crazy.
That's crazy. And so, Drew Bledsoe. We'll ask him about Drake May.
Any advice for him and things of that nature? 844-204 Rich. Number to dial. Ricardo in San Francisco is here on the Rich Isaac show. What's up, Ricardo? Hey, Rich. First-time caller. Great to be on the program. Where you been?
Ricardo, honestly. When first-time caller always appreciate first-time calls. Where you been? We've been around for a while.
You got it. So, I'm a lifelong Dolphins fan. I actually grew up in Montreal watching Jets games. I became a Dolphins fan.
But anyways. So, you became a Dolphins fan through watching Jets games in Canada. Is that what I understand? Did I just hear that? Exactly. Because it was the Plattsburg, New York affiliate and they showed all the Jets and Giants games.
Yeah, and you were smart enough to like the Dolphins. I have to say. Very good. Okay. So, what's on your mind? All the great, missed all the great Super Bowl teams kind of became a fan probably 40-something years ago.
Okay. Le Batard, that comparison with Purdy. Hey, put Tyreek and Jalen Waddle on the 49ers and believe me, Purdy passes for 5,000 hertz.
Probably 35 plus. I don't think he was saying, you know, I think Dan was saying if you took Purdy's and Tua's numbers and removed the names and the jerseys, the laundry as Seinfeld would call it from the equation, would you think both guys are elite top five quarterbacks? And so he was actually equating their numbers, I think, but equating the two of them, comparing the two of them as being denigrated by many because of for whatever reason that they're products of the sum of their parts or in my estimation, just the way that they're born into National Football League fandom consciousness. You know, Purdy was the last pick in the draft. He had to be the last pick. You know, he can't be an elite quarterback if you're passed up 354 times. You know what I mean? So, including by the team that drafted you. I think that's what he meant.
So, a couple of points about Tua. Basically, you know the expression liquid courage. I think he's got contract courage.
Now he's got the FU money. He can say whatever he wants. I'm sure a lot of coaches are going to be listening to that and wondering, like, what's his deal? Would I really want a guy like that on my team if he's going to rat me out somewhere down the line?
But that being said, I never thought I would say here today where Joe Shane looks like a genius for the contract he signed Daniel Jones to versus what Chris Greer committed to with Tua. But my prediction will not see a road playoff win for the next four years with dolphins. I don't see that happening. But you're saying you're a dolphin fan, huh?
Is that what you're saying? You're a dolphin? Okay.
Sir, I'm totally one and I'd love to see them win the Super Bowl. I don't see even a playoff win on the road with Tua. Okay, Carter.
I appreciate the two cents right there. It may not have to go on the road. Well, I mean, even Mahomes finally went on the road. Right.
I don't know, man. I think what Lebethard was saying was like, look, there's a general feeling that Purdy and Tua are products of great coaches, superstars around them at every single position. So basically all they're doing is just kind of put the ball here, run after catch.
I'd be interested to see those numbers. But that's what I felt like Dan was saying. Now, again, I know I said that they need home field advantage in order to more than any other team. I don't think that's right, because the other places, the entire AFC North plays outdoors and it's cold. The AFC West, they went to the one, two of the teams. It's pretty damn cold.
One is indoors, two are indoors, and two spots are pretty damn cold. The AFC South, you don't have to, I mean, Tennessee can get cold. Oh, yeah.
So my only point is that it's possible they might end up, what if they have to face the Chargers in the playoff game here in LA? That's why I said yes, sir. You're concerned about it? No, because it'll be 80% dolphin fans.
Well, is that I don't hold on a second inside. Let's see how the Los Angeles sports fan for the Chargers changes with Harbaugh here. And if he pluses them up and we'll see, we'll see, we will see. They start.
Yeah, I agree with that. We will see. Plus, the bottom line is the two of you don't have Chargers season tickets. You just tell your tickets for the Rams. I have been to a preseason game two years in a row. Nice.
Okay. I gave my ticket to more games than they have. You know what we need to do? We maybe need to do one day is put up the Rams home schedule, not their full schedule. And I'll do not the win loss game, but just like, yes, sell or go. We'll do a sell or go.
No, we don't have the graphic of just their home. Sell or go. Sell or go. I like this. And what you and I, you and I, TJ, they, they can only sit here and listen to the two of us spit ball. I like that.
Should I stay or should I go? Sell or go. And we'll project, sell or go, and we'll see by the end of the season if we were right. I'd, you know, how's that for an idea? You know, I love a price. Great. So let's get the Rams home schedule.
We have been let a stray run amok and flat out to see. I'm offended at this. By the way, I still love that sound. Like that was based on him reacting to the Knicks drafting Porzingis. Sorry, Rich.
You need to refer to him now as NBA champion Kristaps Porzingis. My bad. Oh, God. Oh, boy. Is that right?
God. My bad. Did you see Portnoy's response to Steve Kerr showing up at the DNC? Did it have to do with potato playing time? It basically said something.
Yeah, it had to do with potato playing time. It was funny. That was my response too.
It was funny. Uh, Steve in Melbourne, Florida. You're here in the Rich Island show. What's up, Steve? Hey, guys.
How you doing today? What's on your mind, Steve? Uh, I heard the discussion yesterday and I started thinking about the rookie class this year and it got me thinking and, uh, it has to do with the head coaches. I mean, you guys have been on talking about, hey, you know, offensive head coaches, usually history shows they have more success than everything.
And take JJ McCarthy out of it just because he's not playing this year because he got hurt. But out of the five remaining coaches, that's who I think is going to be really good this year. They're all defensive head coaches.
Flus, Quinn, Mayo, Morris. They're all defensive minded coaches. I know and I know I kind of slagged on defensive coaches and I'm not saying they can't win at all.
I'm not saying that. Uh, I'm, I'm just saying that if I owned an NFL team and I had to choose a head coach, I would really have to, I'd have to have my arm twisted to hire somebody who isn't directly involved hip to hip with the development of my quarterback. Now, can I, can I have somebody, can I have, you know, can I have somebody like Salah run the defense while Aaron Rodgers shows up to run the offense?
Yeah, I can do that. Well, even with the offensive minded head coach, Aaron Rodgers ain't going to listen. I missed that chapter of Ian O'Connor's book. But, but I'm, I'm just saying like history shows that like Pat Mahomes, there's no argument, best NFL quarterback in the league right now.
But would he be the same Pat Mahomes we all know and love without Andy Reid? Well, again, we, we can have these conversations too, you know, uh, and, and thanks, Steve. I appreciate the call. Thanks.
Thanks for the food for thought here. And again, I know what I say is totally nuts because, you know, I love Tomlin. Okay. Belicheck is known for defense and special teams and look what happened with Brady. Yeah, but it's not like they didn't meet or have meetings or, you know.
Well, I understand that. And plus you, I just need to know that my head coach has a full on plugged in 100% relationship with the quarterback. And usually it would be helpful that they're, that's their, if you will, side of the ball of their expertise. Yeah, I would only hire enough. But, but, but again, you know, Belicheck clearly knows offense pretty damn well. And, but towards once Brady was gone, I mean, and, and then McDaniel. So if you are, if you have somebody who's really talented at the offensive coordinator, that's, that's the reason why I would have an issue with hiring a defensive minded head coach is because if you have the right assistant to foster your young quarterback, that person is most likely going to leave, right? That person might get a new head coaching job. That's the issue.
Once McDaniel's left, what happened with Mac Jones? I know we could cherry pick other instances where that doesn't happen. Sure. But McDaniel, McDaniel's was also a terrible head coach. Yeah.
So, you know, those duties would spread out over the CEO position. You can't really hone in like you were as just a coordinator. Again, which is why, you know, I, I said something that makes it a very cookie cutter conversation when clearly it's not, clearly it's not. And if you do have a defensive minded head coach, you know, you got to throw your arm around the kid, man. This is a conversation that's born out of the whole Flores Tua situation. And not everyone's like that either. Yeah.
I wonder if it has to do with just the age of these kids now coming up and how they grew up. And it wasn't in your face coaching your whole life. But you can't just say that about Tua. There was Nick Saban was his college coach.
Come on. But clearly he needed hugs the whole time. But his college career, you would label Tua's college career, aside from the one throw, a disappointment, wouldn't you? Um, I would say it took a while for him to get a shot. And, um, I mean, I, I think he had a pretty damn good career there outside of his getting injured. I mean, listen, he was supposed to win multiple Heisman trophies. The number of evaluators were talking about how special and insanely talented he was. I lost track, which is why when you from that chair the year before the draft, where he was drafted, and you were saying there were mock drafts saying Joe Burrow was going to be the first.
And that was before Joe got, I think, 40 of his last 60 touchdown passes in. Yeah. I'm like, really?
That's nuts. Because all I was hearing is Tua was going number one overall, and it wound up being Burrow. But all the expectations, all the thoughts, and that's why a lot of people think he's not the right guy. He didn't win a Heisman trophy. Right.
These are all the reasons why everyone's like, good luck paying him 55 million. Let's take a break. Drew Bledsoe will join us next right here on the Rich Eisen Show. His thoughts on Drake May and his development plan in New England. And maybe we'll talk about the roast too. Thanks for joining us, and we'll see you next time.
The Rich Eisen Show is sponsored by Grainger. Does this sound familiar? You're a maintenance specialist, and you've been squaring off with a leaky radiator at your facility for hours.
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It is for four different things here. 22 Jump Street, CSI Miami Caged, CSI Miami Deep Freeze, Leatherheads, and That's My Boy. So Sandler heads you got cut out of. Yes, because George Clooney and Mike, sorry, Grant Heslov, Mike's his brother. And so they asked me to do a voiceover and then I wound up sounding too contemporary. Anyway, these are all people from Switzerland who have viewed these.
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Call clickgrainger.com or just stop by. He's a Patriot Hall of Famer and he was a Hall of Fame roaster and the roast of Tom Brady back here on the Rich Eisen Show drew blood. So how are you, Drew? I'm doing great, Rich. It's good to catch up with you. It was, I didn't see you the night of the roast. You know, we were in the same building and I'm wondering how many people stop you for that over the last few months, Drew? You know, it's pretty interesting. That thing became a much bigger phenomenon than I think anybody had anticipated.
You know, just random people that maybe didn't even know who I was before. All of a sudden, you ride by a bicycle. Hey, great job on the road.
It's like, all right, thanks, man. So it was a bit of a phenomenon and I'm glad I didn't fall flat on my face. You definitely didn't do that, man.
You definitely didn't. Who did you workshop your lines with? Yes, they had some riders that helped work with us. You know, and so, you know, I threw a bunch of material at them and they kind of helped me as much as anything to help organize everything and put it in the right sequence, which was really helpful. The one thing they did that I really appreciate, I didn't know if it was appropriate to throw in stuff about our wine business. The riders were the ones that came up with those bits and I was like, oh, cool.
Well, I guess it's cool to promote our biz up there. So that was great. And then I got some good run-throughs with my wife and my kids because they were very nervous. They were pretty concerned that I was going to embarrass them. You know, all they hear from me are bad dad jokes and inappropriate comments at inappropriate times. So they were worried about me.
So they maybe run through the material with them a few times. Wait a minute. How old are your kids?
26 down to 21. Okay. Okay.
All right. Because normally you're putting the kids to bed for the Brady roast. The kids need to be in a different, forget about bed, they need to be in a different area code for the Brady roast. Yeah, my niece, who I think is 13, watched it live with my wife and my sister-in-law. And my sister-in-law was really funny.
She said, Molly, why are you laughing? You don't know what that means. She goes, mom, I have a phone. I know what that means. You know, you can't shield them too much, I guess.
I have a phone. That's funny. Oh my gosh. It just, I'll be honest with you, Drew, you know, not to get too deep, but screw it. I felt like I was watching, you know, with you and Brady and you and Belichick and Gronk and Belichick and Edelman and Belichick and the two of them with Brady and Randy Moss in there as well. I kind of felt like I was watching a Patriots therapy session where it was a safe space, a safe space. And you got, you got some stuff off your chest and a bunch of people got some stuff off their chest that night.
Yeah. You know, I think that's accurate. You know, I think there, there was some catharsis to it, I guess it would be the right way to, to put it where, you know, I just have always felt like, you know, if you can get to a point where you can laugh about something, then it's a very healing thing. You know, so I got to take some digs at Tommy and some digs at Belichick and, and, you know, so I think there was, there, there, there, there was, if you're going to psychoanalyze it, you know, there was some healing that happened during that because we got to laugh at each other a little bit.
Then, you know, I think that's a good thing. And taking it one step further, I think it made the Brady Patriots induction night in Gillette completely free of any awkwardness. It was, it was completely free because of the roast got it all out of the way and nobody's sitting there going, oh, Belichick's back. There's Kraft.
He's in Gillette or everybody's together again. It was basically about, you know, the red jacket that night. You know what I mean? Yeah. No, I think that's right. I hadn't really thought about that piece of it, Rich. But, but yeah, because of the because we'd had a good laugh then when they did the induction that there wasn't the awkwardness that that might've been present you know, for that that special night for Tom you know, in New England. So I think you're right. I think it did. You know, look, the other thing that I really appreciated about the roast that we're going to do, we're going to go a little deeper on that.
Sure. You know, it was so cool because there was no backlash for any of this stuff. Nobody got canceled coming out of it. And it was, it was like, oh, okay. It's, it's okay to laugh about stuff again. You know, and I think that that's an important thing.
You know, we, we got into this, this rut for a while where if anybody said something that wasn't totally PC, then they were canceled. And, you know, look, forever, you know, I really have felt, and it was true in an NFL locker room and it's true in life. I think, you know, if you get to a point where you can laugh at the hard stuff, you know, that's a really healing thing. And people understand that, Hey, you know, it's okay to laugh about the hard stuff. And you know, I think we kind of kind of got back to that.
So I think it was actually kind of a culturally important show, you know, in some ways, because we're like, okay, yeah, it's okay to laugh at this stuff. Even if it's, even if it is pretty serious and sometimes I'm totally with you, absolutely with you, Drew Bledsoe here on the Rich Eisen show, hitting the way back machine even further. First time you ever had a conversation with Bill Parcells.
When was that true? First time I ever had a conversation with Bill Parcells was at the scouting combine in Indianapolis. I was, I was actually, I was still 20. I think when I met him, because I turned 21 at the scouting combine, me and Alex Van Pelt, now the OC for the Patriots, spent my 21st birthday at Hooters in Indianapolis, just for the wings, of course. The first time I met Parcells, I was still 20 years old and I went up to meet with him in his hotel room, like one-on-one, right? So it was kind of like you're, you know, a little bit like you're going to meet the Godfather, you know, and it's just two of us talking one-on-one.
Here's, you know, big Jersey Bill and I'm this small town kid from Walla Walla, Washington. I got to sit down with him and, you know, try to be impressive so that he'll take me with the first overall pick. It was a pretty intimidating moment for sure. And I don't recall exactly what we talked about. I think we talked, you know, a little life, a little bit about other stuff that I was into and, you know, and I apparently I did okay in the interview because he's still picking me with the first pick. What's your favorite Parcells story, Drew?
Oh, man. Well, he was, you know, he was a really funny guy as long as he wasn't talking to you. But I just remember, you know, my rookie year, he was such a pain in the ass because he would stand, you know, during team drills, he would stand right behind the offense, like right by my setup point, and I would drop back and he would stand behind me and go, throw it, throw it, throw it, throw it. And so it's like somebody yelling at you in the middle of your golf swing. You know, you're trying to, you know, trying to do this thing and he's yelling at you the whole time. And so, you know, whether it was intentional or not, it made game days a lot easier because he had to be at least 35 yards away from me.
You know, so I look forward to game days mostly because I didn't have to deal with him when I was in the middle of the play. I'm sure he was screaming that on the sideline, though. I'm sure he was screaming the same thing. Of course, but he was all the way over there.
I could just pretend like I didn't hear him. And then, of course, the Super Bowl that you played in, it was the general sense I just remembered, I was on SportsCenter at the time covering this whole thing, that he was gone. There was no question he was gone. Did you know that, the Super Bowl that you played? Yeah, you know, that was the one thing that was disappointing about that situation, Rich, was that we were, you know, we were the underdogs. We were not supposed to be there. You know, the story should have been about this amazing run that we made to get to the Super Bowl, instead the storyline the whole week that we all had to answer for was whether or not Parcells was going to the Jets, which was not a very closely kept secret, certainly back then.
I can't imagine what it would be like today with all of the different outlets that are out there today. But I just remember that being disappointing. It was like, why can't we talk about the fact that this team that was not supposed to even make the playoffs is in the Super Bowl? You know, why can't we talk about that, you know, rather than talking about where our coach is going to be next year?
So that part kind of sucked. And then, of course, I had to deal with Reggie White on Super Bowl Sunday, and that part sucked all too. Love you, Reggie. But it was not enjoyable to play against Reggie. Drew Bledsoe here on the Rich Eisen Show, and we'll talk about NFL kickoff in a moment.
You mentioned Alex van Pelt moments ago. You go way back with the current OC in New England, and it's just a whole new day. First of all, the fact that the guy who is coordinating the offense actually has a title, you know, right?
And that's it for starters. But we all know that it's a whole new situation there. And he has to call Drake May a mold of clay is quite, you know, an image. But that said, this is a huge moment, certainly when Mac Jones, as the narrative goes, didn't have over the last couple of years the best setup. Do you think Alex van Pelt is a good setup for Gerard Mayo with Drake May?
Clearly the future. Drew? Yeah, you know, I really think I've liked what the Patriots have done. Start with Gerard. I think he's a really special dude and is going to be a great coach. I got to spend a bunch of time with him. We went on a trip together.
Mr. Kraft took us to Israel and both Gerard and I were on that trip. I got to spend a week with him. You know, he's almost like a Bond villain. You know, he's an NFL linebacker.
So he's got that physique. But in high school, he was a white hat hacker. So he would go. He was a computer nerd. So he'd go break into companies and then he would tell him how he broke in so they could go fix their problem. So you take an NFL linebacker body and you've got a computer nerd brain.
You know, he's sort of like a superhero or Bond villain kind of dude. And he's a great guy. The players all love him.
So you start there. And then Alex understands coaching quarterbacks in a way that I think you can only understand if you played the position. And Alex, you know, I make fun of him all the time. And I tell his guys whenever I'm in one of their meetings, you need to listen to this guy because here's this six foot fat dude that doesn't throw it very hard. That played for 11 seasons in the NFL. He obviously didn't do it based on his physical tools.
He did it with his brain. And I think Alex is also really good at understanding, you know, how to set quarterbacks up for success. You know, meaning, you know, you don't just have your offense and that quarterback has to fit the mold.
You take the quarterback that you have and then you build the offense to suit him. And I know that Alex will do a great job of that. I don't think we still know who's going to be under center first game, whether it's going to be Jacoby or whether it's going to be Drake.
But I think that, you know, Alex is going to give Drake May his best chance for success, whether that's immediately or whether that's in the future. Well, what is your opinion on throwing somebody in the deep end of the pool right away? I mean, at Cincinnati, that is not that's not for the faint of heart.
What do you know? That's not an easy way to start. You know, it's just it's such an individual decision, right? You know, it's about looking at your guy and is he ready to do that yet?
Some guys are and some guys need some time. And then you also have to look at your team. You know, is your team in a place that sets this quarterback up for success as a young guy? You know, for me, I felt like I was ready. And obviously, Parcells felt like I was ready. So I started the first game, you know, we had to go play at the Bills, which at that time that was a very daunting task because they had just come off their third of four straight Super Bowls. You know, so I remember being terrified, you know, seeing Bruce Smith come out of the tunnel as I was warming up like, man, I don't belong here. I just watched that guy playing the Super Bowl from my dorm room, you know, about like four, five months ago. But I felt like I was ready for it.
And so it's a highly personal thing. And I know that, again, you know, back to Alex, I know that I know that Alex will make the best decision both for Drake and for the team, you know, going into that game. And if if he feels like Drake is ready and gives the team the best chance to win and also can set him up for success in the future, then he'll then he'll be under center for that first game.
If he's not ready and the team's not ready around him to give him some chance of success, you know, then they'll let him sit and let the veteran play. Yeah. Marshall Falk once told me a story, Drew, of going to Rich Stadium in western New York and standing on the sideline. I think it was a cult. He was with the Colts at the time and standing on the sideline. And just noticing the the sort of curvature of the of the field, like it was it was kind of, you know, bubbled up right. And and watching the heat rise off of the turf and then out of the tunnel, all greased up was Bruce Smith. And he just felt his stomach drop, just watching him through the, you know, the heat rays coming off of the turf there. Oh, dude, it was terrifying.
You know, I'm standing there. I see Bruce Bruce come down out of the out of the tunnel and not just not just Bruce, but you got Darryl Talley, you got Cornelius Bennett, you know, Jim Kelly, one of my heroes comes running out and he was at least nice enough to come over and pat me on the butt and say, good luck, Brooke. I was like, oh, thank you, Mr. Kelly.
You know, can I have your autograph after the game? But yeah, I mean, it was it was it was pretty terrifying. And then Bruce put he kind of he was the one that gave him gave me my welcome to the NFL hit. One of those today, he would have been fined and thrown out of the game and bail for him instead. Then it was just a legal hit where he put his helmet right between my shoulder blades and they had it in slow-mo. It was a good enough hit that I was the star of his Nike commercial the next year.
So, yeah, it was it was crazy stuff, man. So, you know, Drake's ready for that. Then they throw him in.
If he's not ready for that, then they don't do Bledsoe here on the Rich Eisen show. You got a question for him, TJ, before we get to his business? Yeah, just real quick. Hey, Drew, I can remember reading a story in Sports Illustrated about you.
First or second season in the league, and I want to make sure I have this right. Is it true that after you got your signing bonus and signed your contract, you and your little brother would drive around the different banks and check your ATM and just kind of marvel at how much money you had in there, you went from having like six dollars to a couple of commas in there? Is that how the story goes? Yeah, it's like that. Yeah, it was the same bank account that I had in college.
Right. Which, you know, you would call them and they would give you the automated. You know, your balance is negative 17 dollars. And then instead, you know, the first installment of my my signing bonus was like a million and something. And so I called my brother who was in, what, eighth grade or ninth grade at the time. And I told her, like, dude, you got to call this number and call it like your same automated voice that gave you the negative balance, that your balance is one million. And like, dude, that was that was it was the same thing.
I would have done the same exact thing. Then that's that's the one that you're you're just you're good people drew blood. So so what are you doing for NFL kickoff and Sunday ticket on YouTube TV? Yeah, you know, so FanDuel is the partnership. You know, I've stayed away from the gaming space. You know, Rich, I figure I'm already invested in one vice with our winery. So, you know, don't want to don't want to promote another vice. But but I do appreciate the fact that FanDuel is promoting responsible gaming. You know, this is supposed to be an entertainment thing.
It's not supposed to be something that you that you gambled money that matters. And so they're really embracing that. And that makes me feel comfortable about it. But their promo is really cool. All you got to do is go. You go place a five dollar bet and you get three free weeks of Sunday ticket on YouTube and YouTube TV. You know, I've been a fan of that move that the NFL made to go over there just simply because it's a great platform and it always works. You know, I don't mind paying for these streaming platforms, but I want it to work. And this one, that one seems to work really well.
So, yeah, pretty cool deal. You know, you got to place one bet and you get three free weeks of Sunday ticket. Well, I'm sure you know the joke, but I'll repeat it anyway. The one that I heard about how to make a small fortune in the wine business. You've heard that joke, Drew?
Start with a large fortune. Yeah, exactly. That's it.
That's the that's that's that's the that's the one. It only it only took us it only took us seven years to make our first dollar. So we're pretty proud of that. But now it's turned into a good business and we've got a great team. They're kicking butt for us year after year. And it's actually become a good business for us.
But but it certainly doesn't happen quickly. Pinos, what do we got? What do we got? You know, mostly Cabernet based on. But also we're also making some Pinot Noir in the Valley in Oregon. And then we've got we've got some Chardonnay, we've got some Syrah. We've got so we've got we've got a lot of different wines across the board.
But the business is based primarily on Cabernets and Pinot Noir. OK, well, I mean, what's the label's name, Drew? What is a doubleback? Doubleback is the the the the O.G.
That's that was the first one. And it's called Doubleback, not because we named it after Tom looking in the mirror, but but actually named that named that because I grew up in Walla Walla and I got to go play in the NFL for a bunch of years. And after I was done, doubled back and came back to my hometown. So the story is about returning home and building a building something cool in my little tiny hometown.
Bledsoe Wine Estates dot com for doubleback and everything else. Fantastic. I do like that. And I like the last minute dig at Brady.
You know, I kind of dig that, too. Drew, well, I got to keep throwing blows. You know, you can't just you can't just swing once. You got to keep swinging. I like it. You know, once you start roasting, you can't stop.
It is great to see you up there, man. And seriously, when you said, you know, it's you have to show that you can make fun of yourself, you know, for tone setters, for because that's what roasts are about. You have to set a tone. That's why Kevin Hart went hard the minute he started talking last night, because as a roast master, you got to get to go hard and let everybody on the stage fill in behind you. But the the cold open of the broadcast where Belichick is there benching you for Brady was really a tone setter, which is like, OK, everything is fair game tonight.
This is a third rail subject. Your game. Belichick's there. You're there.
He's there. Perfect tone setter, man. That was great. Yeah, that worked out good, man.
And then, you know, Kevin and then Jeff Ross, you know, I was kind of worried like, am I am I, you know, am I going am I going too hard on this stuff? And then they came out and they went so hard earlier. Like, oh, yeah, my stuff's totally PG compared to where they went. And so that made it more comfortable as well.
And then Nikki Glaser came out and the whole roof caved in pretty much so it's unbelievable. And she's such a sweetheart. You know, we spent some time at the after party and she's the nicest person. She introduced me to her boyfriend that she made that awful joke about. And I was like, dude, do you need a hug?
Like like that was and he's like, no, I actually helped write that joke. Like, OK, all right. You know, you're cool with it, I guess, but she's just an incredibly sweet person. But on stage, she is an absolute killer.
She was incredible. Drew, thanks for the time, man. Let's do this more often. Congrats on everything going on with your pal. Appreciate you, Rich. You got it.
That's the Patriots Hall of Famer Drew Bledsoe right here on The Rich Eisen Show. There he goes. There he goes. All right, let's take a break. There is breaking news out of Denver and also breaking news out of our control room. Oh, oh, oh, yeah.
What we discussed about maybe doing we're going to do next. Let's talk about sleep number, people. We all know in the NFL, there's no margin for error.
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Sleep number is the official sleep and wellness partner of the National Football League. See store for details. Let's talk about game time tickets, people. We've been talking about it actually for months here on The Rich Eisen Show and our Rich Eisen podcasts. But guess what? There's something new to tell you about game time. There's a new feature called game time picks that makes getting tickets to see your favorite teams play live even easier. Game time picks filters out the fluff to show you only incredible deals on great seats so you don't have to waste time searching through thousands of tickets. Yet another way that game time makes things easier for you when you're looking for tickets to anything in your area. With the new game time picks, it's curation easier to save more on sports, concerts, comedy, theater and more.
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Last minute tickets, lowest price guaranteed. A moment, if I may. Oh, the latest example of my wife being awesome. Well, Susie presented me with this T-shirt. I don't know where she got it, but it's a merchant versus Mayweather T-shirt. Yeah, we knew about it.
I was 50 years younger and I kick your ass. You knew about this? Yeah, she was texting us if we also wanted one. And I was like, all set. One for the studio is fine. When I when Jim was in the chair, she found that is fantastic. Yeah, this one's for the studio. I was like, one for the studio. Come on.
We're good. Look at this. You wouldn't want to wear this shirt?
No. What am I going to wear that for? I mean, she got one for the studio and one for me.
I will wear this around. There you go. I wish I was 50 years younger and I'd kick your ass. I mean, he most definitely would not at 50 years younger, but we don't know what type of merch you could have had back then.
But I know that I know Floyd, so I don't think that. What plays defense? Well, that's the object of the box. It's not to get it. I don't know where we put it. Where do we put it? On the couch. We'll hang it somewhere. We'll figure it out. There it is.
Mayweather versus merchant. It says Saturday, September 17th, 1961. I don't understand that. He would have been 50 years younger. Oh, I see. Fantastic.
They actually subtracted 50 years from the day he said it. Yeah. That's funny. Now I get it.
Get it live on pay-per-view. I love it. If they subtracted. So then I guess it was 2011 when he said it. That was after Floyd beat Victor Ortiz. Oh, that is fantastic.
If I was 50. And if you remember that. Genius, man. Ortiz turned his back on. Genius. Put his guard down.
Put his guard down and Floyd knocked him out. Protect yourself at all times, people. Nothing but love for Suzy Schuster. OK, so we're back here on the Rich Eisen Show. One big happy family back here together. What a show we have had. What a show.
Simulcasting with McAfee, chit-chatting with Leboutard, Drew Bledsoe. You never heard that joke before? How do you make a small fortune in the wine business? You started with a large fortune.
Years ago. And Rich, you know the question I asked Drew. Think about one day you're a college kid with negative $17 in your bank account. And then the next day, $1.5 million. That's it. Keep calling up.
I would call that thing 10 times an hour. All right, everybody. Here it comes. I see breaking news out of Denver. Bo Nix is the starting quarterback for the Denver Broncos.
It's bow time. I like it. Sean Payton named Bo Nix the starting quarterback on the count of three. Bo said it wasn't anything that anything that Jared or Zach Wilson didn't do.
It's just what this kid is doing. And listen, they drafted him 12th overall. How about that? So we will have three starting rookie quarterbacks in week number one. And Bo Nix and he's going to get his start in Seattle. How about that for week one?
Bo Nix in Seattle. That's where Denver starts the season. And then home for the Steelers. And then at the Bucks and at the Jets, three of his first four will be on the road. Home for the Raiders and Chargers after that.
That's your Broncos schedule. That's what Bo Nix will be doing. And it'll be Bo Nix in New Orleans for Sean Payton and his return to the Saints. I like it. It'll be the guy who, you know, I guess what he's got the anytime Sean Payton twitches in the in the direction of a quarterback.
It's all right. He's got very Drew Brees-like qualities. So there you go. So rookie quarterback Gardner Minshew.
And that's half of your AFC West, Mahomes and Herbert the other. And they hope that Nix can be that guy. We shall see. Now the Patriots are on the clock.
Is Drake May going to go? Because JJ McCarthy, as you know, is out. And Stewart's also on the clock now.
Well, no, I'm talking about rookie quarterbacks. Michael Pennix Jr. isn't starting the rest of the preseason. He's not playing the rest of the preseason. So it's going to be Cousins. Kirk told us yesterday. It's going to be him. He's ready to go. Right.
And that's your, what do we call it? The Rattler six. Spencer Rattler was the seventh quarterback.
Eighteen years from now. Yeah, those six guys were taken. And then Spencer Rattler went in the fifth round.
No quarterbacks between the first dozen picks and the fifth round of the draft in Detroit. Unbelievable. Yeah. We'll never see that again, right?
Probably not. What if I told you six quarterbacks were taken? The Rattlers, should we call them the Rattler six? I do like that. I do think that's pretty funny.
That's a good fantasy. Coming up on Roku Sports, the Rattler six. Here's Sean Payton on the decision. I want to talk real quick about the quarterback position. You guys have been real patient. I understand, you know, and respect that process for you. And for us, we've had a process. So look, Bo Nix is going to be our starting quarterback.
I felt like, and I said this to you guys two weeks ago, you know, that room has been outstanding. You know, Stidham, certainly with his experience. And then, you know, being able to work with Zach Wilson, all three of those guys. We've got some tough decisions as we get into the roster. I don't want to get into all the other roster battles.
That's not for today. But Bo will start. Congrats to him, man. 61 career starts in college, Auburn and Oregon. And go figure that he's a week one starter as a rookie in the National Football League for Sean Payton and the Denver Broncos. Words that I don't think anybody would have said when Bo Nix was in Auburn, right? So it's amazing how things happen.
Congrats to him, man. Let's finish up this way. Chris Brockman keeps slagging on the Los Angeles sports fans that the Chargers aren't going to have fans there and whatever. And he's the one who sells his tickets for the Rams all the time.
I mean, unbelievable, right? That is a mischaracterization, but it fits your narrative, so I'm not going to push back. As long as you're pushing back on that, we have put together, thanks to Mike Hoskins, the Rams home schedule. I need music, please.
I need music, please. TJ, you and I will now play, not the win loss game, we will play the sell or go game for each of these guys. And you can't say anything. Okay.
Okay. TJ, home for San Francisco. I say Del Tufo goes, and I think they both go. I say, Rich, Niners fans, they're insane. They're crazy. They're close.
There's too much money to be made there. They're going to sell those. Oh, okay. Okay. Okay.
Next up, home for Green Bay. Oh, Del Tufo. They're selling. They're selling. Here's the deal. Mike is bad, and he sold the tickets, but regardless, he's going to sell them anyway.
Chris, no reason for him to go to that game. He's more cells. He's hold on a minute.
Let's just make it easy. He's going to the San Francisco game, and he is selling the rest. He is selling the rest. Del Tufo or me? You are. You are.
Let's make this easier. I say he goes to San Francisco, and then he sells the rest. Week three. The only question is, does he take Liz or Hoskins to the Buffalo game? Del Tufo?
Neither. Del Tufo, I think you go to San Francisco. And you sell, you definitely, I mean, you go to Buffalo, you're going to go to Buffalo, and then you sell the rest. You go into two games.
No. Which one to go to Thursday and Monday? You're going to a Thursday night game against Minnesota.
A hundred percent. Yeah, I can see Thursday. Because I can heckle my friend Carissa Thompson, who's set right in front of me.
And it's really the only day you can go. She won't hear a word you're saying. I gave tickets to people. She's got ears in, and there's thousands of people screaming at her. She won't hear a word you're saying. A hundred percent I will.
From your seats? Yeah, I'm going to get a pass for that game. I'm going to that game. Mike?
I already have someone I'm taking. So you're going to three of the games? Three of the games. Three. Okay.
Chris? Great question. It's hard. Are you even going to go to San Francisco?
Yes, because my mom is going to. Okay. And then you're selling the rest. You will see. You normally say to anybody when you go to a game, come say hi, I'll buy you a beer. You'll say go to the secondary ticket market. I'll say hello.
Here's the thing. I do go to the prime Sunday games are tough to go to. I go to the prime time games. You're going to go to the Monday night against Miami and Thursday and Thursday. Michael definitely go to Thursday. I think Chris Sunday against Philly.
Okay. Monday night, you got to kind of go to Monday night. I say he goes to one, sells the rest. I say the Del Tufo goes to two, sells the rest.
You say I say between the three of them, they go to three games total between the two of you. Former Navy SEAL Sean Ryan shares real stories from real people from all walks of life on the Sean Ryan show. Tucker Carlson. What is it that you think that people gravitate? I'm not self-aware. I refuse to be self-aware.
I don't even like mirrors at all, which you can probably tell from my appearance. I don't have a crazy high IQ or I really don't have that many skills. I would say my main skill is I believe my instincts. I don't hesitate to follow my instincts ever. The extent that I have, I've gotten in trouble. The Sean Ryan show on YouTube or wherever you listen.
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