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Jared Carrabis: I Almost Joined the Marines Before Being Discovered By Barstool

“I knew that if I wasn’t going to follow through with my intended career path of being in sports media and covering baseball and the Red Sox, I at least want to do something my parents are proud of.”

Ricky Keeler

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In the sports media business or any business in general, the path to get to the ultimate destination can be completely different compared to another person. Sometimes, it is the decisions you end up not making that end up being the best ones. For Jared Carrabis, the host of the Baseball Is Dead podcast, fans can still listen to him based on a decision he didn’t make a decade ago.

Carrabis was a guest on the Rise and Schein podcast with Adam Schein this week and Schein asked him how he emerged onto the scene in the industry. He went on to talk about how in 2012, he was able to get paid to write about the Boston Red Sox for the first time, but there were things that got him to consider not doing it anymore.

“In 2012, that was the first year that I got paid to do what I do. I got paid to write for, there was a magazine that kind of adopted my blog and they paid me weekly to do it. 2012 was a horrendous season for the Boston Red Sox.

“I know it sounds dramatic, but I fell out of love with not baseball or the Red Sox, but wanting to do this for a living because it was so toxic, it was really bad. I butted heads with the people that adopted the blog because they were print and they were just ‘What is blogging?’ They were trying to give me writing assignments and I was like the whole point of blogging is I want to write about something, I write about it. It’s an elongated tweet in a way.”

The butting of heads made Carrabis consider going to join the Marines and it almost happened, but one person ended up causing him to reconsider.

“I was like, I’m going to join the Marines. I took the written test, I took the physical test. I knew that if I wasn’t going to follow through with my intended career path of being in sports media and covering baseball and the Red Sox, I at least want to do something my parents are proud of. That was the only other alternative for me.

“My mom ended up writing me this letter begging me not to go. I was going, that was it. I read the letter, reconsidered, and 2013 happens. The Red Sox won the World Series and it kind of reinvigorated me.”

Due to that decision, Carrabis ended up bringing the blog he had back, but he went in a different direction that allowed him to get noticed by Barstool Sports.

“The following year was when I relaunched my blog. Not only am I going to relaunch my blog, but I’m going to bring in a team of writers. I was kind of following other Red Sox fans on Twitter. If you are witty or funny or interesting on Twitter, you can blog because you can just expand on your tweets. I built on my team for 2014 and that’s when Barstool noticed me. It was kind of a weird path, but that’s how we got there.”

Carrabis has gone on to do work at other places such as 98.5 The Sports Hub, NBC Sports Boston, and now at NESN among other places. But, to think one decision almost cost baseball one of its most trending talents in multimedia, it’s safe to say listeners and readers are glad he decided to continue writing. 

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Pat McAfee Calls Roger Goodell ‘Bush League’ Over Touchback Proposal

“This is a bullshit commissioner move.”

Jordan Bondurant

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The NFL has adopted the NCAA rules for touchbacks and fair catches on kickoffs, and former NFL special teams legend Pat McAfee isn’t a fan in the slightest of the changes.

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell lobbied team owners this week to vote again on the rule changes, which would bring the ball on any fair catch or touchback on kicking plays out to the 25 yard line.

On his show Tuesday, McAfee called the efforts by Goodell “bush league.”

“Hey Rog, come on. You’re my commissioner. You’re our commissioner,” he said Tuesday on his YouTube show. “This is a bullshit commissioner move.”

Pat pointed out that for a good majority of the time, the new rule won’t have much of a bearing on games, as most kickoffs nowadays result in a touchback. But McAfee added that there’s a good chance this is going to come back to bite the league a little bit because it eliminates an element of strategy in the game.

“But at some game where it’s gonna be windy and cold, and games are gonna matter, this is gonna happen,” he said. “And everybody watching is gonna go, ‘This is the most bullshit thing I’ve ever seen in a professional football game.'”

Part of the rationale of the decision to make the rule change is to help prevent any future litigation from former players against the NFL for long-term effects of head injuries. McAfee said it was evident that was the main reason.

“It’s all just covering your ass for future problems,” he said. “I would like to see these stats that they keep saying are so prevalent and endearing to saving lives and brains that the kickoff and the punt are the only two that it happens.”

“We can’t just make the game so f–king fake and bullshit that it kind of disrepects the league as a whole,” McAfee added. “It’s always like a protect the shield thing.”

Pat went on to say that his success as a punter and kicker has contributed to the evolution of special teams play in the NFL. He really doesn’t like the fact that the changes ultimately makes special teams less valuable to the game.

“It’s a real f–king play, though,” he said. “And there’s real strategy and there’s real things to be gained from that.”

“You’re just taking away another chess move, and I don’t understand why you would want to dumb the game down,” McAfee added.

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Ian Rapoport: ‘I Would Be Surprised’ If a Thursday Night Game Gets Flexed

“I think basically is the kind of thing where, like, they want it available, but it’s only going to be used if they have literally no other choice.”

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Is all of the consternation and hand-wringing about flex scheduling much ado about nothing? Ian Rapoport was on with Pat McAfee Tuesday and said despite the NFL owners voting to bring flex scheduling to Thursday Night Football, it isn’t the weekly threat some are making it out to be.

“I would say this from what I know of this, I would still be surprised if any game was flexible,” the NFL Network insider said. “I would be surprised if any game was flexed because they don’t want to use it.”

Flex scheduling in Sunday Night Football is used to create the best matchups in the league’s marquee window. With the option coming to Mondays and Thursdays this season, Rapoport says the bar for justifying moving not just kickoff times, but days, is going to be high.

Thursday Night Football has the most restrictions. The league will have to announce any moves almost a month ahead of when the game actually kicks off. When McAfee pointed to the Pittsburgh Steelers’ visit to New England in Week 14 as a prime candidate to be flexed out of Thursday night, Rapoport outlined a very specific scenario where he could see it happening.

“It’s not going to be like, ‘Well, we have a little bit better game, so maybe we’ll do that,’” he said. “It’s going to be like, ‘Okay, we have Mason Rudolph starting versus Bailey Zappe. Like, no one will watch this. We have to move.’ That’s to me, that’s under the circumstances that you’d see a flex.”

Last season, the matchups for Thursday Night Football were especially bad in some weeks. Al Michaels even made reference to it on the air during games. Having flex scheduling could help to avoid that, but Rapoport says the option is about protecting Amazon in the event circumstances around a game change drastically, not simply placating critics.

“I think basically is the kind of thing where, like, they want it available, but it’s only going to be used if they have literally no other choice.”

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Hall of Fame Baseball Writer Rick Hummel Dies at Age 77

“Hummel is best known for his work covering the Cardinals for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.”

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Rick Hummel has passed away after a brief illness. The legendary baseball journalist was 77 years old.

Hummel is best known for his work covering the Cardinals for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. His death comes in the first season after announcing his retirement.

Covering the team was something of a dream come true for the St. Louis native. He reported on three World Series wins and seven National League pennants. He was recognized by the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006.

The 2022 season was Hummel’s last of a 51-year run covering the team for the Post-Dispatch. It wasn’t the end of his career though. He went to Jupiter, FL in February to cover spring training as a free lance writer for a number of different outlets.

Rick Hummel will certainly be missed by his friends and loved ones. He will also be missed by the Cardinals community, who already mourned the loss of Mike Shannon earlier this month.

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