Generations (Talking 'bout My Sports...)
Generations Talkin' My Sports | S4 E27 | "Collapse or Comeback? The Greatest Blown Leads in Sports History" England had Argentina on the ropes. The Spurs were up 29 at halftime. The Bills led 28-3. Greg Norman had a six-stroke Masters lead. So what happened? In Season 4, Episode 27, Jonathan, Steve, and Mark debate one of sports' greatest questions: when a team blows a massive lead, is it a collapse, a comeback — or both? The Cases: ⚽ England-Argentina, World Cup — Steve was at a bar watching Messi dismantle England's prevent defense for 30 straight minutes. Was Southgate's decision to go defensive with 30 minutes left the worst coaching decision in World Cup history? Jonathan says England had fast players on the bench. Steve says they never used them. Mark says going into prevent that early is automatically a collapse — no debate. 🥊 Billy Conn vs. Joe Louis, 1941 — Up big on points through 12 rounds, one light heavyweight away from the biggest upset in boxing history. All he had to do was dance. He chose to slug it out with the heavyweight champion of the world. Joe Louis knocked him out in the 13th. "He can run, but he can't hide." 🏀 Spurs up 29 at halftime — NBA Finals — Steve says slow it down, work the clock, deny threes. Mark says you can't change an entire game plan at halftime when you got there by playing your way. Jonathan pulls the data: teams down 20 going into the fourth quarter in NBA playoff history are 3 and 747. The Knicks being one of those three makes it personal. 🏀 Trail Blazers-Lakers, 2000 Game 7 — Up 71-58 in the fourth quarter, 13 straight misses, Shaq and Kobe's partnership nearly dissolved. Collapse or comeback? The guys actually agree — mostly. 🏈 Music City Miracle & the Frank Reich Bills comeback — Was it the greatest collapse or the greatest comeback in NFL history? Steve says contain. Mark says the offense had the advantage no matter what. Jonathan brings up Jeff Fisher as an early analytics disruptor before anyone knew what that meant. ⛳ Greg Norman, 1996 Masters — Up six strokes. Shot a 78. Steve has thoughts about the man behind LIV Golf and couldn't be happier it happened to him. 🏀 Knicks heartbreaks — Reggie Miller's 8 points in 18.7 seconds in 1995. The Halliburton shot in 2024. Mark on watching it all happen again after years of not caring enough to be crushed. Also: the NBA's proposed one free throw rule, whether a four-point line makes sense, and Steve's firm belief that NBA players are fundamentally uncoachable. The internet is asked to weigh in. 🎧 New episodes every Saturday | ▶️ Full video on YouTube the following Saturday #GenerationsTalkingMySports #WorldCup #NBAFinals #NYKnicks #SportsDebate #SportsPodcast
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