INSTANT REACTION: Seahawks Dominate Patriots To Win The Super Bowl, Sam Darnold’s Incredible Career Arc
54 min
•Feb 9, 20262 months agoSummary
Colin Cowherd provides instant reaction to the Seattle Seahawks' dominant 29-13 Super Bowl victory over the New England Patriots, highlighting Sam Darnold's redemptive career arc, Kenneth Walker's MVP performance, and the stark contrast between young quarterback Drake May's overwhelm and veteran quarterback experience.
Insights
- Young quarterbacks in their first playoff runs face exponential difficulty against elite defenses; Drake May's inexperience was exposed by Seattle's defensive scheme and aggressive blitzing strategy
- Offensive line quality is the primary determinant of Super Bowl success—New England's weak left tackle negated their coaching and game plan regardless of Josh McDaniels' experience
- Sam Darnold's transformation from 'seeing ghosts' to Super Bowl champion demonstrates the malleability of young QBs (ages 25-27) under proper coaching and organizational infrastructure
- Organizational stability across coaching, GM, and personnel decisions creates sustainable winning cultures; Seattle's infrastructure mirrors successful models like Green Bay and Baltimore
- Team-friendly contract behavior in veteran players correlates with early-career adversity; players who experienced failure tend toward loyalty and lower salary demands
Trends
NFC quarterback tier is significantly weaker than AFC; Sam Darnold now ranks among top 5 NFC QBs despite being fourth-tier AFC optionDefensive coordinator-turned-head-coach success rates accelerating; Mike McDonald's rapid ascent from coordinator to elite HC reflects broader trendOffensive line investment becoming critical differentiator in playoff success; teams with weak tackles cannot compete regardless of QB talentYoung QB development timelines extending; Drake May's one season of high-level play insufficient for Super Bowl readiness versus Stafford's 15+ years experienceGM-coach collaboration models outperforming autocratic structures; collaborative leadership (Schneider-McDonald) beating top-down approaches (Belichick-era Patriots)Veteran QB premium in playoffs increasing; experience reading defenses and managing pressure becomes exponentially more valuable in elimination gamesSpecial teams excellence as championship differentiator; Jason Myers' perfect kicking and Seattle's special teams prevented close games from matteringSkill position value in draft strategy; Seattle's success with mid-round WR picks (DK Metcalf, Tyler Lockett) validates alternative to premium QB investment
Topics
Quarterback Development and Coaching ImpactOffensive Line Performance in Playoff FootballYoung Quarterback Readiness for High-Pressure GamesOrganizational Infrastructure and Sustained WinningDefensive Coordinator to Head Coach TransitionsGame Management vs. Playmaking in Super Bowl ContextIn-Pocket Movement and Pocket Awareness DevelopmentDraft Strategy and Skill Position ValuationCoaching Philosophy: Collaborative vs. Autocratic ModelsSpecial Teams Impact on Championship OutcomesVeteran Quarterback Experience PremiumRedemption Narratives in Professional SportsNFC vs. AFC Quarterback Talent DisparityContract Negotiation Patterns for Veteran PlayersDefensive Scheme Adaptation Against Young QBs
Companies
iHeartRadio
Podcast distribution platform hosting The Colin Cowherd Podcast and multiple other shows mentioned throughout
NBC Sports
Broadcast partner; Chris Collinsworth provided Super Bowl commentary and analysis referenced in discussion
Hard Rock Bet
Sports betting platform and official partner of Miami Heat and Orlando Magic; primary episode sponsor
Verizon
Telecommunications company offering mobile network services; featured in mid-roll advertisement segment
Z-Biotics
Probiotic supplement company offering pre-alcohol drink to mitigate hangover effects; featured sponsor
Louisiana Hot Sauce
Condiment brand; Kenneth Walker named Louisiana Hot Sauce Player of the Week for Super Bowl performance
People
Sam Darnold
Seattle Seahawks QB; central narrative focus on redemptive career arc from 'seeing ghosts' to Super Bowl champion
Kenneth Walker
Seattle Seahawks RB; Super Bowl MVP with 135 rushing yards; first RB MVP since Terrell Davis in 1998
Drake May
New England Patriots rookie QB; overwhelmed by Seattle defense; contrasted with veteran QB experience requirements
Mike McDonald
Seattle Seahawks head coach; praised as elite defensive mind and collaborative leader; could have won MVP
John Schneider
Seattle Seahawks GM; identified as Hall of Fame-caliber talent evaluator with consistent draft success
Kyle Shanahan
San Francisco 49ers HC; pregame analysis predicting Seattle would blow out New England if avoiding turnovers
Mike Vrabel
New England Patriots HC; aggressive first-half strategy indicated he knew team couldn't move ball effectively
Josh McDaniels
New England Patriots OC; experienced play-caller unable to overcome offensive line deficiencies
Matt Stafford
Los Angeles Rams QB; contrasted with Drake May regarding experience, pocket awareness, and veteran composure
Tom Brady
Referenced regarding sixth-round draft history and emotional connection to draft position; example of redemption
Patrick Mahomes
Kansas City Chiefs QB; identified as potentially greatest player of all time; AFC elite tier comparison
Josh Allen
Buffalo Bills QB; noted as most talented player of all time; missed opportunity to face weaker Patriots team
Lamar Jackson
Baltimore Ravens QB; identified as most unique player; compared to Steve Young's running ability
Joe Burrow
Cincinnati Bengals QB; described as stronger Montana when playing well; AFC elite tier comparison
Caleb Williams
Chicago Bears QB; identified as potentially top-2 NFC QB next year despite inconsistency and completion percentage
Jared Goff
Detroit Lions QB; noted as vulnerable to pressure in big games; NFC tier comparison to Darnold
Brock Purdy
San Francisco 49ers QB; example of limited QB succeeding under Kyle Shanahan's system and infrastructure
Brian Flores
NFL coach; discussed regarding job market decisions and career risk assessment with Minnesota Vikings
Kevin O'Connell
Minnesota Vikings HC; noted as having coaching power without GM oversight; potential instability concern
Raheem Morris
Atlanta Falcons HC; took job despite career trajectory concerns; example of risky coaching decision
Quotes
"Sam Darnold in the playoffs, five touchdowns, no picks, 700 total yards, 102 passer rating, and a Lombardi trophy. That is more Super Bowls than the four teams that let him go over the last 32 years."
Colin Cowherd
"When you have a bad offensive line and all these teams now in the playoffs have good front fours... if you have a bad offensive line in a game against a team with a good pass rush, it feels like you're not really trying."
Colin Cowherd
"The story arc for Sam Darnold is fascinating because he starts out as this wildly talented kid who's reckless. Then he becomes this kid that finally gets opportunities, can still be reckless, but you get all the upside. And now he proves he can be the world's best game manager."
Colin Cowherd
"Drake May doesn't know the what yet. He didn't really figure out Seattle until the very end... Matt Stafford knows the why every time he walks up to the line."
Colin Cowherd
"Seattle just is a high-functioning, high-level American team sports organization now. It also proves the NFC West has three of the top five coaches in the NFL."
Colin Cowherd
Full Transcript
This is an iHeart Podcast. Guaranteed human. This is Special Agent Regal, Special Agent Bradley Hall. In 2018, the FBI took down a ring of spies working for China's Ministry of State Security, one of the most mysterious intelligence agencies in the world. The Sixth Bureau Podcast is a story of the inner workings of the MSS and how one man's ambition and mistakes opened its vault of secrets. Listen to The Sixth Bureau on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast. This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpright became the victim of a random crime. The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything. I was a monster. Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Listen to Adventures of Curiosity Cove every Monday from the Black Effect Podcast Network on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. What if mind control is real? If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have? Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car? When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious. Mind Games, a new podcast exploring NLP, a.k.a. neurolinguistic programming. Is it a self-help miracle, a shady hypnosis scam, or both? Listen to Mind Games on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The Volume. Kenneth Walker is the Louisiana Hot Sauce Player of the Week. 135 rushing yards. Seattle, 29-13. Walker, the first running back to be named MVP since Terrell Davis in 1998. How great is that? The original Louisiana Hot Sauce, the perfect balance of peppers and vinegars and salt. Put it on wings and tacos and burgers. Hit any tailgate food. The original Louisiana Hot Sauce. That's Louisiana Hot Bayou Some. All right. This is an emotional one for me, John. This is an emotional one. I was sitting there with my guys all night. We were just cracking jokes about, am I going to lose it? Am I going to start crying? 29-13 Sam Darnold. Darnold didn't make any mistakes. Walker ate up the clock and got the yards. Myers with the field goals and the scoring. I thought New England could move the ball a little bit through the air. I didn't know if they'd run the ball. Are you surprised it was one of the real blowouts in Super Bowl 25-year recent history? I think when you have a bad offensive line and all these teams now in the playoffs have good front fours. We've seen New England play Houston. They were barely winning that game if it wasn't for C.J. Stroud. Last week, it was hard to tell because of the blizzard or two weeks ago. Seattle just manhandled their front. And if you have a bad offensive line in a game against a team with a good pass rush, it feels like you're not really trying. It's like watching a baseball team that strikes out 15 times in a game. It's like they're trying. They're just not making any contact. You got no chance. I mean, they had no – because here's the thing with Seattle. You're not going to run for 100-plus yards on them, so you have to throw. And they have a left tackle who I think when the dust settles, probably going to end up playing guard. That's what we thought. So it's like you put them out there, and they're just getting pressure. And then McDonald, who, let's face it, is kind of like an offensive wizard, just happens to be on the defensive side of the ball. I thought three quarters through the game, you could give him the MVP. Has a coach and a play caller ever won the MVP? Could have given it to Mike McDonald. I thought Kyle Shanahan, coaches twice said things in this game. Kyle Shanahan in the pregame show said, if Sam Darnold and Seattle don't turn it over, they have a chance to blow New England out. And you don't hear coaches say that about other operations. I mean, Kyle knows. He's seen the film. Kyle's like, they have a chance to blow him out. Meaning Kyle and McVay and those guys, they thought the Super Bowl was the NFC Championship. And then Mike Vrabel at half when they asked him. I know Mike well enough. You've seen Mike enough. Mike Vrabel knew at halftime, John. I don't know if you remember the interview. Yeah. But they were asking him, and he was just like, listen, you know, it was almost kind of acknowledging. That's why they were so damn aggressive in the first quarter. They needed Sam. They were trying to speed Sam up. They needed Sam to make a big mistake. I think Vrabel knew they were going to struggle to move the football. He went hyper aggressive on the early blitzing and coverages. And to the point you're like, man, if Seattle hits on one of these, what they were trying to do is speed up Sam. That's when Sam can get reckless. But the story arc for Sam Darnold is fascinating because Johnny starts out as this wildly talented kid who's reckless. Then he becomes this kid that finally gets opportunities, can still be reckless, but you get all the upside. And now he proves against the Rams and against the Patriots, he can be the world's best game manager. Not make mistakes, throw it away, hit on a couple of big throws, use his legs once or twice. He was basically asked the last two weeks, especially in this one, just don't make a big mistake. Don't make a big mistake. You've talked about this two weeks ago. He doesn't make – he takes sacks. There was one here with about two minutes left in the game. He just sat down. He's like, he wouldn't have done that five years ago. He would have tried to make something out of it. And so it's like the story arc is complete. When you get the right coaching, young people, once you're 35 as a quarterback, you are what you are. But for a young quarterback, 25, 26, 27, like those are the years you're malleable. You can be taught stuff. and between Sam's upside and now his ability to not, I mean, he did against the Rams, but like not get regularly reckless. He feels like a top 10 quarterback to me. Yeah. I mean, doesn't it show you too that, you know, I saw McCaffrey on your show and I think we forget because that Carolina is so forgettable. He's like, you know, the most probably powerful thing that Sam brought to the table was his attitude. You know, he, you've never heard a bad word uttered about him and he has seen some dark times in his career, you know, and he kept a positive attitude and he kind of just kept his head down, was a good guy and just kept swinging. And then the dam really broke last year. And this situation, I mean, Minnesota's defense was good. It's not this. I mean, he's on a team. I don't know all their contract status, but pretty sure a lot of these guys are coming back. Seattle's not going anywhere. Their coach is a star. They are going to have to replace the offensive coordinator, but I would be stunned, wouldn't you, if they don't keep this same offense implemented, this Kubiak-Shanahan, which his skill set fits perfectly, and now if he's going to be a good decision maker, he went through that little midseason spell where he's turning the ball over. I feel like he hasn't turned the ball over in a long time. You go back to that Rams Thursday night game, he's kind of played flawlessly at the highest level of being a game manager. You know, the problem for Alex Smith as a game manager or some of those type guys, Jimmy Garoppolo, they didn't have the skill set. That's right. He missed Shahid on the deep ball. His skill set, his arm strength, Fred Warner said it on the pregame. He's like, this guy can rip it. Even Kyle Shanahan said on the pregame, we got too much credit. We just put him in a situation. He had the skill set. We just kind of built up his confidence, but he took it and ran with it. And props to him. What a cool, what an awesome, genuine story. We don't get enough of those anymore. Sam Darnold in the playoffs, five touchdowns, no picks, 700 total yards, 102 passer rating, and a Lombardi trophy. That is more Super Bowls than the four teams that let him go over the last 32 years. You know, and like I get San Francisco. They had Brock Purdy. They weren't paying him anything. They wanted to keep him. He just got $10 million from Minnesota, and they couldn't pay a backup $10 million. What are you going to do? No, it's – I mean, a lot of people have said, you know, Colin, you – I mean, it was 19-0 at one point in this game when he had A.J. Barner, and I'm thinking – because I thought it would be low scoring, and I thought New England – I thought the first half looked like I thought the game would look – that's what I thought the game would look like, the first half. But I thought New England would move the ball enough, John, that their defense wouldn't get tired. I felt in the second half, in that third quarter, you could feel New England's defense didn't tackle as well. Darnold had like an extra second, an extra beat to throw. It's like, OK, that's your, you know, I mean, at one point you had like seven completions, Drake May, late in the game. Like they just until he hit those back to back ones, the Mac Holland. So I thought Chris Collins said something at the start of the second half. And again, you're working for NBC. You don't want to say this out loud. But Chris Collins, to his credit, just said, Drake May is not ready. He's just not there. He's not. And think about this. Matt Stafford against the Seahawks, the last time they played in Seattle, 374 yards, three touchdowns, over 20 completions. And that's the difference. But this is what I talked about between Matt Stafford and Drake May. one, Stafford knows the why every time he walks up to the line. Drake May doesn't know the what yet. He didn't really figure out Seattle until the very end. But a lot of that was Seattle was in a more prevent defense. They weren't as aggressive. Collinsworth said this. They were getting pressure with four. So I think New England, you and I had said this, New England's the strange team. I'm not sure if this has ever happened before they got to a Super Bowl, John. I still think they're in a rebuild. I mean, I think their offensive line, they need another tight end, another receiver. I think they need two more offensive linemen. I think Will Campbell gets moved inside. They draft a left tackle. I think New England's still in a rebuild offensively. Yeah, New England's going to be fine. Think about, you know that first series of the game for Seattle on offense? It felt like Sam Darnold could have thrown a couple picks. They were kind of squatting on some of the out routes. And it was like, whoa, is this going to be? And it felt like he wasn't quite comfortable. Well, what does he have going for him? You know, eight years of experience. He's seen the lows. Pretty unfaced. Got better as the game went on. You use the Drake May thing. He was completely rattled. And this is a defense and a defensive coordinator that can really rattle you. Use the Stafford example. I think Brady talked about this in his 40s. Like, the game's never been easier. I've never been smarter. I've never – there's nothing I haven't seen. Peyton Manning won a Super Bowl he couldn't throw. Drake – what is Drake May – he's had one season of playing high-level football. He played at North Carolina, and his rookie year was – I mean, they were awful, right? They drafted fourth. This is the first time he's played in games that has mattered. It does feel a little bit like some historic quarterbacks that it's like this was his first kind of, I would say, playing in the big leagues, and it went really well. They made it to the freaking Super Bowl, and he was completely overwhelmed. Because Josh has proven, like, do I think Josh had a bad game plan? I mean, Josh has coached enough Super Bowls. I mean, they've lost Super Bowls where Brady threw 500 yards right against the Eagles. So I think this was a quarterback being a little over an offensive line. If you can't block people, whether it's a regular season game, whether it's a Super Bowl, whether it's a playoff game, you're in major trouble. They couldn't block Houston. It just happened C.J. Stroud played like me or you. You know, if he's – Shanahan said this. He said there were two Super Bowl defenses, and the Niners played Houston. They could win the Super Bowl as long as the special teams and offense just didn't screw it up. Seattle and Houston. Well, the offense for Houston screwed it up. You know, Seattle, their special teams. Has Myers missed a kick this year? I mean, I feel like every game I watch, he's splitting the uprights. Their special teams is just fantastic. They didn't even need it tonight. And defensively, you're playing a young quarterback. That was a mismatch of personnel versus a young quarterback in an offensive line that just isn't Super Bowl caliber. Yeah. I don't know how many people are taping this, by the way. I was going to show a show of hands to people taping it. I thought, for me, I loved the first half. Like, you're taping this, right? And we have, like, four other people taping this right now. Is that what we have? Yes. I was thinking about that. I thought that my wife said at halftime, she goes, this game is boring. And I'm like, no, this game is exactly what this game has to be for New England to win. People may have thought it's boring, but I'm like, New England was not going to drop 20. If I told you the score right now, 29-13, you know who won the game. There was only one way, and I think Collinsworth said it before, for New England to win, Drake may have to play really well. Sam Darnold just had to avoid turnovers. Drake may have to make six or eight great throws in this game to win. Darnold just didn't need to pick six. And that was the difference going into the game. Now, again, I thought it was really going to be played within the 30s, and it was for the first half. But, I mean, they held it in the first half. JSN had one catch for four yards. I will say this. Great players play great in big games. Kenneth Walker, amazing. Darnold, very solid. Weatherspoon was amazing. Christian Gonzalez for New England kept that thing from being a blowout in the first half. Like, he was sensational. But when you watch Seattle, like I was thinking about during this game, I'm like, New England will be fine. I mean, Darnold's got two more years on this deal. Very young. I mean, Leonard Williams is one of the expensive older guys. They have a first, second, third, I think a couple of six. I was thinking about, John, what do they draft? They'd probably draft a receiver. Skill guys. I would guess. I mean, they've got three backs, two they like. They both kind of get banged up. Seattle's in that weird space, John. I don't think they have a need. I think they need another receiver, you know, office of JSN. I don't know if they'd waste another, not waste, but use another first round pick on a receiver. They did with JSN. But it's very rare when you see a team and they don't have a lot of free agents. They're really young. I mean, this is what Green Bay has been for the last three years. but Green Bay had to go and make a trade for Micah Parsons. Seattle just went and found Demarcus Lawrence. I'm not sure what Seattle's hole is. Tell me another team in the league. The Rams are the second best team. We don't love their special teams or their corners. I'm not sure what Seattle needs in the first three picks. What do they need? Yeah, to me, I think you just keep doubling down on the defensive line. Lawrence and Leonard Williams are older players. They're not cheap. so I think you can never have enough defensive linemen. I mean, think about their secondary, Colin. It's all, even Worry and Witherspoon are young players and kind of the heartbeat of the operation. Pretty sure Ernest Jones is under contract. How about John Snyder when he made the Russell Wilson trade and Denver bottomed out and they got the fifth overall pick? Not that he wasn't a high-level prospect, but it was like, damn, he's going to take Witherspoon fifth overall? I mean, what did he look like? Ronnie Lott tonight? I mean, the guy coming off the edge, his closing speed. I mean, he was fantastic. You can go skill guys, but look at Schneider's history as a GM. Skill guys. DK Metcalf, second round. Where was Lockett drafted? Middle of the draft. Back when they got Marshawn Lynch, they got him for a fourth-round pick. They have found value on offense historically with skill players. So, I mean, they have nailed premium positions. The guard this year, defensive lineman in the past, you know, powerful secondary players they've drafted high. Eamon Warriors second pick Witherspoon was a fifth overall pick So if I a Seattle fan I have so much faith in the operation Do you know what I was thinking You know, he kind of cut his teeth with the Green Bay Packers. When you can maintain winning with different coaches and different quarterbacks, you are, they're kind of like the Coastal Packers. You know, the Ravens have proven they can win with different coaches and different GMs and different quarterbacks. Philly has proven that over the years now, different coaches, different personnel people. Seattle just is a high-functioning, high-level American team sports organization now. It also proves. Seattle, you can argue, has three of the top five coaches. Not Seattle. The NFC West has three of the top five coaches in the NFL. I mean, I think— If we were at a draft from scratch, I think all three guys are going in the top five, right? Especially if you factor in age. Oh, if you factor in age, you may get the top three. They might go one, two, three. For sure. And I think that's what, you know, listen, I grew up around the Niners. Bill Walsh, Shanahan, Holmgren, they all came from that world. There's something pretty special about a genius defensive guy. And historically, Bill has been known as the greatest one. But he was just, he was easy to hate. He's just so angry and such a curmudgeon. This guy seems pretty likable. You know, he kind of feels like his classic 38, 39-year-old millennial, just kind of a good guy, just easygoing. Like, I've never heard anyone say a bad word about, like, the way he treats people. Just, they seem like they got a pretty good thing going with Mike McDonald right now, Colin. Today's show brought to you by our presenting sponsor, Hard Rock Bet, Florida's best sports book. I know it's tough with no football, but like the song says, I will survive. Hard Rock Bet, always something to bet every single night. Hoops, hockey, so much more. 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Get a better deal and start saving. Based on root metrics, best overall mobile network performance, U.S. second half 2025. All rights reserved must provide recent consumer mobile bill in the name of the person redeeming the deal. Additional terms, conditions, and restrictions apply. What if mind control is real? If you could control the behavior of anybody around you, what kind of life would you have? Can you hypnotically persuade someone to buy a car? When you look at your car, you're going to become overwhelmed with such good feelings. Can you hypnotize someone into sleeping with you? I gave her some suggestions to be sexually aroused. Can you get someone to join your cult? NLP was used on me to access my subconscious. NLP, aka Neuro Linguistic Programming, is a blend of hypnosis, linguistics, and psychology. Fans say it's like finally getting a user manual for your brain. It's about engineering consciousness. Mind Games is the story of NLP, its crazy cast of disciples, and the fake doctor who invented it at a new age commune and sold it to guys in suits. He stood trial for murder and got acquitted, the biggest mind game of all, NLP might actually work. This is wild. Listen to Mind Games on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. In 2023, a story gripped the UK, evoking horror and disbelief. The nurse who should have been in charge of caring for tiny babies is now the most prolific child killer in modern British history. everyone thought they knew how it ended. A verdict, a villain, a nurse named Lucy Letby. Lucy Letby has been found guilty. But what if we didn't get the whole story? The moment you look at the whole picture, the case collapses. I'm Amanda Knox, and in the new podcast, Doubt, the case of Lucy Letby, we follow the evidence and hear from the people that lived it to ask what really happened when the world decided who Lucy Letby was. No voicing of any skepticism or doubt. It'll cause so much harm at every single level if the British establishment of this is wrong. Listen to Doubt, The Case of Lucy Letby on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. China's Ministry of State Security is one of the most mysterious and powerful spy agencies in the world. But in 2017, the FBI got inside. This is Special Agent Regal, Special Agent Bradley Hall. This MSS officer has no idea the U.S. government is on to him. But the FBI has his chats, texts, emails, even his personal diary. Hear how they got it on the Sixth Bureau podcast. I now have several terabytes of an MSS officer, no doubt, no question, of his life. And that's a unicorn. No one had ever seen anything like that. It was unbelievable. This is a story of the inner workings of the MSS and how one man's ambition and mistakes opened its vault of secrets. Listen to The Sixth Bureau on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast. This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpright became the victim of a random crime. He pulls the gun, tells me to lie down on the ground. He identified Jermaine Hudson as the perpetrator. Jermaine was sentenced to 99 years. I'm like, Lord, this can't be real. I thought it was a mistaken identity. The best lie is partial truth. For 22 years, only two people knew the truth. Until a confession changed everything. I was a monster. Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. On June 11th, 1998, a deputy from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department went missing. It's an all-out manhunt for John Audier. Every search and rescue team in L.A. County has been called in to help. Within days, tips started flooding into the sheriff's department. The ruler around the drug scene was that a deputy was taken care of. Is this the story of a man who just got lost in the desert? Or of a cover-up inside the nation's largest sheriff's department? A homicide captain saying, detective, do not find out if this guy's guilty or innocent. Who does that? Valley of Shadows, a new series from Pushkin Industries about crime and corruption in California's high desert. Do you have any advice for us while looking into this disappearance? I wouldn't do it alone. Listen to Valley of Shadows on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. No, I mean, I have a couple of people really close to John Snyder, and I've texted John a few times. You know, you've interviewed John. John is a really big believer. They were talking tonight about what John drafts, John Snyder, the Seahawks GM. And he said, like, when you get a coach, it's a marriage. Somebody's got to share the same vision, the same values. So much in the NFL is collaboration. Bill Belichick's kind of way of doing it wasn't collaborative. That was not his generation. Belichick, he doesn't work that way. Nick Saban in college, it wasn't much about collaboration, although Nick was better than Bill. This modern era, players make more money. Players have some power, not NBA level or baseball. But I also think the reality is people are bigger and faster and stronger. Like football is a sport with a regulated level of violence, like hockey. you when you play football john you're sacrificed you can get paralyzed you can get hurt seriously and so there's a humility built into the sport you can never get too cocky i don't care if you're the size of gronk if you're the you know if you're an athlete like christian gonzalez he gets banged up all the time there's something the reason it's so easy to accept sam darnold if you're a seattle Seahawk is everybody knows you could have been drafted to the Jets. You could have gone to the Saints. You could have gone to the Bengals. I always feel like in football, there's this understanding that a guy will make a mistake in a game and people will run over and put their arm around him in football. You don't see that necessarily in other sports that level. And I think a lot of it is football's hard, John. Football practice is hard. And that's what makes Sam Darnold's story so redemptive. And it's like he hit the bottom. I mean, your first team may go poorly. He hit the bottom. He was like, I see ghosts, like a meme. And I think Sam Darnold is one of, in my lifetime of football, is honestly one of the great quarterback stories ever of redemption, of what football is about. There's so many messages in Sam Darnold, Like, keep your head up. Life isn't linear. You're going to you're going to fail. It's how you react, not act. I just I know people will say this is a boring Super Bowl, but there's just not a lot of stories in the history of football better than Sam Darnold in terms of quarterbacks being buried. Bad organization. You know, it's I just I it's I just was so damn happy for him, I guess. yeah i mean just a very genuine moment i mean for a guy that he was a linebacker coming into college right he played linebacker and quarterback and i saw our guy uh ty dunn had a had a q a with john schneider this week and the one thing john said is like we just looked at him like a football player former linebacker the toughness the humility like you would get in a guard right or a linebacker Because at any moment you get to, whenever you hear an old NBA or an NFL player telling a story, they always talk about the time so-and-so humbled them on the field, where they just got destroyed by a guy. Because at any moment, it's why, you know, you can't really tank in football. You want to half-ass a football game, you will get injured. And there was, listen, most guys in Sam Darnold's category, once they failed that much, let's face it, fail forever. or just become a backup and kind of become irrelevant. I mean, how many guys of his generation that just became backups? Mariota is a good example. Star college player. Heisman Trophy. I mean, it's part of the rise of the dominance of Oregon. He's been a locked backup now for what? Feels like a decade, you know? There's nothing wrong with that. You know, you look up, Mariota will have made $100 million. The rest of his life, he'll have played in the NFL. tell people for 14 years. I mean, Sam Darnold's a Super Bowl champion. And this wasn't, you know, we have the Dilfers and the Brad Johnsons. That was not the case with this. And even coming into this, when you have a year where you throw 35 touchdowns on a team that won 14 games, like that's honestly that momentum of last year, I think kind of validated the realness behind the player. Like this wasn't just a guy dinking it. This wasn't Jimmy Garoppolo. No. Even though he had moments where that's all they needed, just manage the game, don't turn the ball over, and he didn't. But yeah, I mean, it was a – what a cool story. I mean, you couldn't make it up. People wouldn't have believed you three or four years ago coming in that Sam Darnold's the star quarterback on a team that just won the Super Bowl. And I would imagine when we look at the odds, they're going to be near the top coming into 2026. I would think the Rams would be No. 1 and the Seahawks would be No. 1 or No. 2. I mean, Stafford and McVay have such power, and they're revered kind of in NFL circles. Stafford's going to get more money, so the Rams are going to have to hit on some draft picks, and they have two ones, and it's not a quarterback draft. So, I mean, the Rams are going to address corner, probably special teams. The thing you see, though, and the one thing that Sam has and that most quarterbacks have now, it is difficult, and I know Stafford has had an excellent NFC championship game. when you can't move at all in the way the game is played now, it becomes a challenge. I mean, how many plays tonight did Sam just maneuver just to keep a play alive, even in completions? Matt, who he once, I would call a great athlete, but he was a good member of Detroit. He could really move around. He is now Eli Manning or something from a movement standpoint. What I noticed about Stafford tonight, what I noticed about Darnold tonight, His in-pocket movement is better than Drake May's in-pocket movement. May beat Sam in a foot race now in terms of movement. Yeah, he would. But May drops back and he kind of stays where he's at because he doesn't have a feel for the pro pocket yet. Sam, multiple times tonight, moved within the pocket. That just comes from years of practice and game snaps. Darnold now, I mean, think about this. Darnold had multiple times in that first half. You're like, even Collinsworth said they should probably diagram runs for these quarterbacks. They can't move the ball. Darnold now doesn't really run. But, I mean, I've watched every Seahawks game. He'll take off about twice a game, May about six times a game. And a lot of that's because May can't read the defense like Darnold. He's just too young. And Seattle's got JSN, who's usually open. But I mean, a lot of Darnold's growth is he just hangs. He not only throws fewer picks, but he hangs in the pocket and moves better to buy time. That was always Brady's strength, is side-to-side movement. Darnold does that very well now. Part of the seeing ghosts, I think a lot of people thought, is just that he didn't know where to look, that he would see things that weren't actually there. It's also when you're getting hit a lot, you start freaking out and seeing things that aren't there, so you run into sacks. and tonight you saw that with Drake May. He was not very comfortable in the first half. Yeah. And that led to very, very inaccurate throws. The Collinsworth a couple times like, that's kind of a layup throw in the NFL he's got to make. Yeah. And I think once you start hitting a quarterback on top of clearly Mike's moving people around on the back end, he had no clue what was going on, which is very understandable. This guy didn't train with Nick Saban in college. Guy played at North Carolina. I mean, a lot of these quarterbacks, Part of the reason that drives me nuts about C.J. Stroud is like, you come from Ohio State. Like, you've played in some bright lights games. Like, I understand the NFL is a different level, but you just need to calm down a little bit. Drake just—North Carolina, Boston College is not preparing you for these NFL playoff games. There was a point where he had May had eight drives eight punts and seven completions And I bet you my guess is Mike Vrabel if he has a moment with him John if Mike Vrabel has 15 seconds with Drake May that nobody hears he going to put his arm around him and said, kid, you probably played the best defense in this league and certainly the best team in the last eight to 10 years in the NFL. I mean, I would argue you could say, oh, Philadelphia, Jalen Hurts is not right now as consistent in the pocket as Sam Darnold. He's not. He struggles to see over the field. Sam throws over the middle of the field a lot. And I think I can see Vrabel just saying, kid, yeah, nobody was winning today. We could. I mean, I just think that, you know, the first thing you saw, and I think you saw the same thing first drive, you're like, oh, Will Campbell is a guard. He can't block. He's going to get eaten alive. Whereas you saw that versus Houston, but Houston's offense, they can't run the ball. They're not as consistent. So it's like very first drive, I'm like, OK, this is what I talked about last week on Fox. Like, this was my concern. Like, they they're not going to be able to run the ball that I knew. They're not all the numbers told you they wouldn't run the ball. I'm like, OK, three strap drop, get it out. And I'm like, oh, they they may not be able to do that much. One thing, too, is when you look at Will Campbell, his body doesn't exactly look like he's Lane Johnson or Trent Williams. and while he can work on that in the strength room over the course of the next couple years as a young player, Howard Mudd, the late great Howard Mudd, the offensive line coach, taught me something that I never forgot. He says functional strength. Like you can add 100 pounds to your squat or your bench. Your functional strength typically as a college player, definitely as like an early, maybe a rookie, doesn't. You don't look 10 years and a guy that was weak is now strong like Trent Williams. Your strength is kind of your strength. And you're watching him, you go, he's not powerful. And in three years, he's not going to just be stoning guys on the edge. And clearly the length. And you can't have the weakness at left tackle in this NFL. How many teams now, Colin, have multiple big-time pass rushers? Even if your best pass rushers are defensive tackles. Remember when Aaron Donald was kind of like, you know, they didn't have a great defensive line, but they had him. If you had a weak right tackle or left tackle, they would put them on the edge. so they will find your weakness and just expose it. These pass rushers move to right to left. They don't stay on a side. They will just attack him over and over, and they were, and then he starts bringing corner and safety blitzes the other side, and Drake May got all frazzled. Now, I'm not anti-Drake May at all. I think there are some parallels. Did you watch the Elway doc on Netflix? I haven't seen it yet. If you haven't, watch it. But in there is that game where they got blown out by the 49ers, like 55 to 10 in the Super Bowl. And John's like, looking back, we had no chance. They were way better. But he's like, I made it worse. I started freaking out and forcing things. And that's what it looked like a little bit with Drake. They're overwhelmed. And he kind of starts getting frazzled and forcing things. And it kind of got worse. Because beside the two passes to Mac Hollins, it was horrendous offensive football. It was really bad. He threw, obviously, a pick on a couple drives later. He could have easily thrown another pick on that jump ball into triple coverage, where even Collinsworth was like, God, it looked like they were fair catching the ball. I mean, it was just he's had an excellent season. I think we got the right guy, won the MVP. Like Stafford belonged as the MVP, especially when you factor in. Kenneth Walker won the MVP here, by the way. Oh, and he deserved it. I thought you could have given it to the kicker. Same. But you could have given it to Mike McDonald as well. Listen, Drake may, we might look back on a couple years, and he goes, Listen, it's the best thing that ever happened to me. A lot of great quarterbacks. Ask Peyton Manning. Got his ass kicked for years in the playoffs. Think about this. The Legion of Boom humiliated Peyton Manning in the Super Bowl, but they only had one sack in that game, if I recall. This team had seven sacks. Felt like 20. There's a difference between the pocket being muddy and the pocket being quicksand. Like there were times he was throwing the ball and it was like the difference between me and somebody sitting next to me in this chair. Yeah, I just don't think I mean. I don't think there's I mean, obviously, if you had a more veteran quarterback, but I said it this week, I said, just look at Matt Stafford. I mean, his family, the kids like he's an adult. You can't be president until you're 35. Like Matt Stafford has more fourth quarter comebacks in his career for wins than Drake May has starts. And there is something to be said. Like you saw in this game, Drake May got nervous. Matt Stafford doesn't get nervous. Like, again, when I said the MVP and I don't know if it was Mina Kimes or somebody was arguing and there's a lot of stats. It's like it's not about just stats. I mean, first of all, Drake May didn't have as many big plays, big throws, they call it, had more mistakes. But beyond that, when Drake May goes to the line of scrimmage, he's not all. How many times in this game did you see him audible out of plays? I don't recall one, not a single one. Whereas Stafford does it. I mean, when you're audibling out of a play, you're audibling out of a Sean McVay call. and he does it four or five times in games. So, I mean, what Drake May struggled with tonight, I don't think anybody, I don't care. I mean, Andrew Luck, I think, had nine different games with three picks. Andrew Luck, like, couldn't memorize a phone book in two afternoons. Drake May wasn't born, wasn't ready for this moment. That's why I kept saying Drake May was one in seven going into this game when he has to throw 35 or more. If New England couldn't run, like they had to play great defense and they did for a half they were really good for a half but he's just he's not ready for this moment I I thought watching as as their offense could just sputter series after the guy who's got to be sick to his stomach is Josh Allen and the bills and the reason they cried after that that Bronco game is I'm not saying they beat Seattle but you'd be hard-pressed if you're sitting with Josh Allen watching this game going that's the team that represent it's one thing when it was my homes right i mean kyle shanahan watching seattle win it he's like shit i mean we would have loved to run into this patriot team in one of these super bowls we're running to patrick mahomes and josh allen tonight had to be thinking there was a reason he was in tears because he knew he had to go through bo nicks and you know second year drake may whose team just the patriots team is going to be dramatically better in a couple years it's it's next year it's pretty crazy like last year when the commanders made the nfc championship and this Patriot team made the Super Bowl, typically teams that, I would say, knew into their rebuild from a talent standpoint and a roster construction do not make runs like that. And, God, they got exposed tonight. I mean, it's just – and it's not – you can't tell me it's the coaching. Vrabel's established as a great coach. Josh McDaniels coached a million of these games, and there's nothing they could do. Nothing. They had no – when you can't block, Bill Walsh could have been calling the plays. It would not have mattered. Well, the difference between Washington and New England is Kraft. We don't know if Josh Peters, is he the owner of Washington? He took over for Dan. Josh Harris. I'm sorry. He's more of a basketball guy. We don't know if he's going to be a great football owner. Robert Kraft is. Vrabel's a better coach than, I think, than Dan Quinn. Yes. And Drake May doesn't have a history of getting hurt. Jaden Daniels is a spindly guy. We both love him. We both said about Jaden Daniels, he is thin. Kind of a Teddy Bridgewater build where you like him, smart. A lot of things to like, but you're like, man, can that guy take, is that a 15-year starter in the league? So there's going to be no drop-off. They're going to be better. They draft well. They got the right ownership. Josh McDaniels. I mean, Cliff Kingsbury's already gone in Washington. Josh McDaniels is going to be there for 10 years. I thought there were some real telling signs early in this game. Vrabel was telling you by the early game plan. I mean, he was telling you how super aggressive they were. Like, they needed to take a lead. Like, he knew we can't play from behind. I mean, they were jumping routes in the first two series. Like, they were taking big—and their take was, I mean, we have to create something, guys. We can't play—once it was 19 to—even 19 to 7, 19-0, 19-7, you're like, I'm sitting there thinking, New England can't—they're going to need a blocked punt. That's literally what I kept thinking during the game was, New England's going to have to block a punt. You're not going to return a touchdown on a kickoff. You have to block a punt. They got kind of close to one. But I don't think New England's going anywhere. I think they'll be better next year. That's why for Josh Allen, Burrow, Lamar, and Mahomes, and Justin Herbert will have his tackles. This was the year to win in the AFC. This was it. Big time. And the AFC, though, even for the Patriots, is never going to be, not that it was easy for them by any means, but it'll be much more difficult from a quarterback standpoint. If you just look at the average the last five years, you're going through a lot more talented than the C.J. Strouds and the way it broke with them with Stidham, right? I mean, they got some pretty good – and listen, Herbert's going to have to answer some questions in the playoff games. We all know, like, he can't really prove much in the regular season anymore. He's going to be judged with Mike and Harbaugh in January. I'm not jumping ship. I'm not selling my stock. But, I mean, he's played three games and they've been pretty bad. What do we do with Sam Darnold now? Because I think you and I think the same thing. The roster's young. The GM's great. The coach is amazing. They don't have to move off anybody. J.S.N. is young. The Cooper Cup will be on the team. They'll probably draft another. Plus, they got that kid that got hurt earlier from Colorado State. The receiver is actually kind of an interesting player. Shorten, is that his name? Yeah. Yeah. So my take is, going into next season, tell me the quarterbacks that are definitively you would take tomorrow over Sam Darnold if you got a three-year contract. well i mean to me you don't even he doesn't really need to worry about the afc the mahomes the allens when you look at the nfc it's like i mean caleb makes some great plays in the fourth quarter but god he's throwing 50 completion percentage this is right look in the nfc right now you take him over goff because of his arm and the ability to move stafford's old pretty can be injury prone and small jordan love we like but he's not i mean that i think i feel about jordan love. There's a lot to like. Big moves, whip. Maybe it's a LeFleur thing, but he hasn't won enough big games. Caleb's great. Still a work in progress. I would argue, would I shock you next year? Baker came back to earth. Dak's older. If I said to you the two best quarterbacks in the NFC next year are Caleb Williams and Sam Narnold. Is that crazy? Yeah, I mean, the Caleb thing, I mean, we got to, he makes some great plays. He makes some great winning plays, but I mean, And we've got to get more consistent. Yeah, he's a little uneven. Now, this is a huge offseason for him. I always bet on the coaching. So it's like, it's why Purdy's not going anywhere. He's got Kyle. It's why Caleb's not going anywhere. He's got Ben Johnson. It's why Sam's not going anywhere. He's got Mike in the infrastructure with John. So it obviously, Stafford's just established. He hasn't gone anywhere for a long time. Even Love. I mean, he's got to be a little more consistent. But he's been solid. I mean, they go to the playoffs every year. It's just the high end in the NFC is not the high end in the AFC. I mean, Josh Allen's probably the most talented player of all time. Mahomes might be the best player of all time. We'll see what it's said and done. Lamar Jackson is, I don't know, the most unique player I've ever seen. Like, the Steve Young I grew up on wasn't running like the guy in the late 80s, right? Lamar, the way he played now, can he maintain it? But Burrow, when he's on, looks like a stronger Montana. So, I mean, those guys are, I mean, these are all-time great talents. When you look at the NFC, there's a lot of like Dax and Goffs. And like, to me, that's what makes the NFC unique is you can watch Dak over the aggregate and he's fantastic. Then the playoffs, he has been atrocious, right? And Jared Goff, sometimes in these bigger games, if you can pressure him, he can't move. Purdy has had some big moments, but it's like, if, can he totally carry you with his team for a little down? Like he's got some limitations. Caleb, you're just not going to be able to consistently win thrown in the 50s. It's just going to be difficult. His completion percentage on the layups is going to have to go up. But he's got a knack. He's got kind of something special that it's hard to even describe. So I think the NFC, I'd expect the same teams to be back in the NFC. Like, who's going to be in the NFC playoffs next year? Seattle, the Rams, the Niners, the Packers. I mean, it's like, I don't expect probably the Eagles. I mean, I don't really expect much different. The bear, I mean, it'd be pretty shocking. Like, who's the Atlanta Falcons, the Cowboys? Like, I mean, what are we talking about? With the big game coming up, we're all about enjoying the moment without paying for it the next day. Whether I'm hosting friends, jamming, cheering from the couch, heading to a watch party, I want to be fully present and still feel good in the morning. For me, that means planning ahead, especially if I'm going to have a few drinks. My simple trick, start the night with Z-Biotics Pre-Alcohol. Z-Biotics Pre-Alcohol Probiotic Drink, the world's first genetically engineered probiotic. It was invented by PhD scientists to tackle rough mornings after drinking. Here's how it works. 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Do you have any advice for us while looking into this disappearance? I wouldn't do it alone. Listen to Valley of Shadows on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. going to become a thing every few years. You didn't feel like it used to be that impulsive. The other thing is, I think it's easier to predict. I mean, like I've done this like four years in a row where I take two teams and I said, yeah, they're going to be the two best, most improved teams. This year it was Seattle and New England, right? It's not that difficult. Like the New York Giants, for instance, are easily going to double their win total with John Harbaugh. And, you know, when they shore up the right tackle position, probably a tight end there, that's an easy one. The Raiders with Mendoza could be a double your win total team if Clint Kubiak is, you know, average to slightly better than average as a head coach and they can get their O-line healthy. It was all beat up last year. But it is there's not. I mean, the AFC will have the new playoff teams. Kansas City's probably finding their way back in. Baltimore, probably Pittsburgh out. Aaron's a year older. If Aaron comes back, it may be Will Howard. You can look at the AFC and go, okay, this, this, this. NFC, that's what I say about Sam Darnold. It's like, you could see, you could see like Stafford getting banged up. That's happened to him a lot in his career. You could see, you know, the Rams draft a tackle. He's not ready to quite play. One of their tackles gets hurt. Stafford gets banged up, maybe misses a few games. You could see San Francisco. Again, they're old, expensive. They have to hit on some draft picks. Seattle is one of the surefire teams to me in the league, unless the Clint Kubiak replacement whiffs totally, but they're going to get somebody out of that tree, somebody that brings the same offense. So there's very few guarantees in the league. I kind of feel like, strangely, two guys that we think, I mean, New England's going to be good. That's a guarantee. I think that's one of the safe guarantees. But I mean, I think the Bill, I think the Bill's going to be pretty good, too. I mean, they'll be fine. But we don't know if Joe Brady, you're probably right. But Seattle does feel a little bit like a, yeah, they're going to be back here a lot. Well, think about this. When Sam went to Seattle, if you would have said to most people that fall football, let's say he could have stayed in Minnesota. You'd be like, stay there. Better. Now looking back, the GM was just forced out. Clearly, they got some dysfunction internally. Flores wouldn't resign his contract until they got rid of the GM. him. Now the coach who has never won a playoff game pretty clearly has all the power, which you know, a lot of these personnel guys, that can be scary. Andy Reid went to Kansas City. He's like, I don't want to be the GM anymore. I don't want that job. So now you got Kevin O'Connell calling free agencies in a month. They don't have a GM. Who do you think's picking the players for free agency or any of their moves? The coach. You go to Seattle where I think we all thought highly of Mike McDonald. After this year, we go, geez, I mean, he's one of the best coaches in the league. He's one of the brightest young coaches I ever remember because, you know, he kind of, I don't want to say came out of nowhere because he's been in the Ravens tree, but defensive guys, it takes a little while for their hype to grow. In about a 24-month span, he went from like, this guy's a big-time defensive coordinator to this guy's one of the best head coaches in the league. And they have a GM. I Googled it. There have been two GMs before this that have won a Super Bowl with, or multiple Super Bowls, with different head coaches and different quarterbacks. That's Howie Roseman and Ozzie Newsom. Ozzie Newsom's already in the Hall of Fame as a player. He might as well be as a GM, too. He's a Hall of Famer. Howie Roseman, when the dust settles, is going to be a Hall of Famer, too. John Schneider's a Hall of Famer. Minnesota just had to run their GM out because he hit on two out of 28 draft picks. John Schneider hits on three draft picks every year with his eyes closed. So it's like they actually went to a place with just fantastic infrastructure that you would just bet on in the future where Minnesota, you go, So that's now a young coach would just – Kyle Shanahan and Sean McVay, they have powerful GMs, and like Les and John have a lot. They can calm their – who's telling Kevin and Brian Flores what to do right now? The answer is nobody. So in a weird way where it looked like, God, you'd want to stay in Minnesota, the best thing that ever happened to Sam was him getting out of there and going to this place that is now, like you said, has this runway and a place that just, like, he just kind of gets to have a home and create. Like, he's going to be their quarterback. I mean, what would you, minimum, five more years? Like, he's not going anywhere. You're talking about contract extension. Yeah, I mean, he broke into the league. He was 20, so he's 28 now. And you can just tell from his body, like, he stays in shape. He's also, Sam's also gotten much smarter. Like, he sits down. He doesn't take sacks. Sam's, I mean, and I think, I remember reading this. Once about autistic kids, there was an article and they were saying, you know, autistic kids sometimes have advantages because they know they're very good strategic people because they know they have to be to succeed. You have to be more strategic when you're on the spectrum. And I don't remember where I read this. It was years and years ago. And I also think people who fail initially in their professional career, it really serves two things. One, you're so incredibly grateful. You're such a great teammate going forward. If you've been crapped on, if you've been in a bad environment, you're so appreciative of a good environment. So that's an advantage. When any time in life, professionally, your first two jobs are awful. I mean, you in radio, you're like one of the easiest guys ever. You got treated like crap in radio. I remember when I listened to your first tape and I'm like, why did they let him go? I don't understand it. But the reality is you're probably now more grateful because you had a bad situation. One thousand percent. And I think that's that's what ingratiates Sam is like Sam was always a humble guy. But when it goes sideways, you just have like there's there. It's the duality of life. You know, if something if you don't get this in your life, if you don't get that, if you have to deal with something there, there people usually like are more appreciative. They're more humble. They work harder. I mean, there's no question if you took the average trust fund kid and the average kid that worked up in a working class family and had to work in a farm, you know, the advantage to the latter is that his work ethic just may be so exemplary because he's always had to work. Like, he never had the fancy, cool stuff, right? Like the shoes and the cars. Like, so life is just about give and take and action and reaction. And I think, you know how Tom Brady still cries when he talks about being drafted in the sixth round? It won't matter what will happen to Sam Darnold. My guess is, John, he will always take reasonably team-friendly deals. He will always take them because he knows how bad it is when you don't have enough talent. And my thing is, I think Sam's going to look at this and go like, man, I got lucky. I could have gone to Carolina. Like, I think Sam looks at it and you could say, boy, I bet he wishes the Jets never happened. But in a way, he's going to be one of those guys that's going to be like, you know what? It's like Matt Stafford's taking some team friendly deals. Why? Because he was in Detroit, right? Like, you know, Aaron Rodgers, to his credit, took a team friendly deal, which is he deserves credit for that because in Green Bay, it never bottomed out. Like, it was always pretty good. So I think Darnold's career, I think going forward, he's always going to be a guy that's going to sign quick, team friendly, great teammate. He may have always been that because he's a great guy with a great family, but there are advantages sometimes to getting punched in the ribs early in your professional career, early in your life. It's harder to be introspective when life's pretty good. It's easy to look in the mirror when you're like, things aren't going great. Look at the Chiefs this offseason. For the first time, some of those guys are going to have to go, God, that sucked. It could be one of those, you look back in five years where Mahomes goes, it's the best thing that ever happened to us. We had to do some reevaluation. What do you reevaluate when you're making the Super Bowl every year, win or lose? So I think the other thing is a team-friendly deal in a couple years, Colin, could be like four years, $150 million. So it's like the boom of the NFL. When I hear about these coaching situations, well, this guy, everything that happened with the 10 coaches, only one black guy. Well, if I'm Brian Flores, I would rather make $6 million and work for Kevin O'Connell. I'm making more than Todd Munkin and the Arizona. I wouldn't take those jobs are terrible. I wouldn't touch those jobs with a 20 foot pole. If I'm Flores, unless the Steelers or the Ravens are hiring me, I'm not going to these other places. I get it. I've already had my career derailed and I'm being compensated to be the number two here, but I wouldn't. The Cardinals job, that's as bad. There are 15 college jobs that dwarf that. I mean, that's a terrible football. The Browns, like that is, all those guys are going to get fired in a couple of years. I bet my life on that. So I think when you look at the NFL, some of these situations, you know, it's just, it's pretty rare to win all the time. What was the last time? Has John Schneider ever lost to GM? Like their bad seasons have been like nine and seven. It just, they don't lose. So most of these teams never win. I would have told Robert Sala, I said, you better be pretty sure going to Tennessee. I mean, that is a place where you got a lot going for you. Your career is only going to go like this from the way people talk about you. You go to Tennessee, it could really derail you. Raheem Morris, who clearly had changed his career around, takes the Falcons job. Like, I don't know if the Falcons is a good job. I would argue that thing's not really going to work just because it's not a good place. The Giants do have the infrastructure. They've just been hiring the wrong people. So I think when you look at Sam Darnold, and you look at a lot of these guys, the story Schefter put out today. They want to get rid of Tua and Kyler. Well, both those two teams paid them top of the market. They weren't top of the market players. It's like John Morant. You're not going to be able to give those guys away. You're not going to be able to give either. Maybe Kyler, if they eat a bunch of money because he's got some physical, you know, he's got a big arm and he can run around a little bit. Tua, I don't think there's a team in the league that would touch him for the veteran minimum if he was cut, you know. So Miami, you overpay these wrong quarterbacks. We have a great lesson over the last five, six years. You go all in on the right guys, okay. But you go all in on the wrong guys, it's going to derail your franchise. I don't care who your coach is. Former NFL scout John Middlecoff, his podcast is three and out. The Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl champions, 29-13. Kenneth Walker is the MVP. Jason Myers, Super Bowl record. Sam Darnold, no turnovers, solid performance. I mean, his story arc is complete. He can game manage. He can get in a shootout. Do you think the Allen family just got an extra billion dollars selling it into a Super Bowl championship? Does that add a billion on it? Probably, honestly. What's your guess on the number right now? Eight. I might even go like eight and a half. I don't see how it goes for a number that doesn't blow people out of the water. Well, if you buy it for eight and you're worth $25 billion, you pay four and a half. You own 55%, 60%, but you get other investors. That's what you do. So that's what Mark Cuban did with the Mavs. You buy the majority share, but then you get Elon Musk with Twitter. He's using all sorts of money, right? So if somebody's worth $25 billion, they pay $4 billion cash and they own 51%, 52%. And then they get six other rich guys, but they have the final say. And $8 billion becomes pretty affordable in the oligarch world pretty quickly. John, I'm happy. I'm going to sleep well tonight. Yeah, I can imagine. All your Seattle friends, big moment for the Pacific Northwest. That was cool. I'm going to call my sister right now. All right, bud. See you. The Volume. This is Special Agent Regal, Special Agent Bradley Hall. In 2018, the FBI took down a ring of spies working for China's Ministry of State Security, one of the most mysterious intelligence agencies in the world. The Sixth Bureau podcast is a story of the inner workings of the MSS and how one man's ambition and mistakes opened its vault of secrets. Listen to The Sixth Bureau on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Nancy Glass, host of the Burden of Guilt Season 2 podcast. This is a story about a horrendous lie that destroyed two families. Late one night, Bobby Gumpright became the victim of a random crime. The perpetrator was sentenced to 99 years until a confession changed everything. I was a monster. Listen to Burden of Guilt Season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. On the Adventures of Curiosity Cove podcast, when peanut butter disappears from school, Ella, Scout, and Layla launch a full detective mission. Their search leads them back in time to meet a brilliant inventor whose curiosity changed the world. 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