Everybody Has One Sports Podcast
The NBA Finals are set — Knicks vs. Spurs — and Jason and Lance have a question that's going to make everyone else think twice: Are we watching the start of a Wemby dynasty, or is this just another good team catching a favorable bracket? They break down the Western Conference Finals, where Chet Holmgren vanished against Victor Wembanyama, and debate whether it was the matchup, a mental block, or an Oklahoma City coaching staff that forgot how to run sets for their bigs. Jason's not letting the Thunder off the hook. Lance is pumping the brakes on the dynasty talk, and the conversation gets real about what it actually takes to build a Bill Russell-type run in a league where the salary cap and player movement make that nearly impossible. Then the show pivots to the NFL, where Myles Garrett just became a Los Angeles Ram — and Jason has a bone to pick with the entire league about how overvalued $40 million edge rushers have become. He makes the case that no team paying a pass rusher that kind of money has sniffed a Super Bowl recently, and Lance has to sit there and reckon with the receipts. They also break down AJ Brown landing in New England, what it means for Drake Maye, and whether the Patriots' receiver room just got better or just got complicated. Back in Detroit, the Lions are dealing with OTA injuries that could reshape the defensive backfield, and Jason's message is simple: they don't need to be elite — they need to be middle of the pack. The fellas run through the latest on Kerby Joseph, Brian Branch, and whether enough has been done to fix what broke last season. The NBA draft lottery gets its own segment because the league just changed the rules — no more back-to-back number one picks, no three straight top-five picks — and Jason is on one. If you take the randomness out of the lottery, is it even a lottery anymore? He says the NBA has some explaining to do, and Lance is right there with him. They close out with Jalen Duren's reported five-year, $220 million contract situation. Is it too much? Is it market rate? Jason breaks down why the structure probably makes it a four-year deal with a team option, bringing the real number closer to $44 million a year — and why that's actually reasonable for what Duren brings, even if he still needs to get more skilled. Lance wants to see him earn it first. This is Everybody Has One — no filter, no fluff, just two guys giving voice to what every sports fan is thinking.
23 episodios
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