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Al Michaels: ‘I Would End My Career if I Tried to Call Hockey Now’

“You stay in your lane. My lane is not hockey. My lane is watching hockey.”

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Last week’s NFL schedule release caught the attention of football fans and personnel everywhere and catalyzed even more excitement for the upcoming regular season. Amazon Prime Video is embarking on its second year as the exclusive home of Thursday Night Football, and its lead play-by-play announcer Al Michaels joined The Pat McAfee Show to share his thoughts on the property’s slate of games.

“We don’t know how the games are going to play out, but the matchups on paper look great,” Michaels said. “Look at those first three games. NBC or FOX or CBS, anybody would take those. Minnesota at Philadelphia, Giants at San Francisco, and then Detroit’s kind of the ‘it’ team this year at Green Bay. That’s a hell of a way to come out of the gate.”

McAfee mentioned to Michaels how last year’s schedule was particularly disappointing throughout the season. By contrast, this year’s schedule is indicative of an investment from the league to the property grow.

“No question,” Michaels replied. “Look at it this way, Pat…If you take a typical week in the NFL and let’s say that no team has a bye, so all 32 are going to play. So, you have 16 games on a given weekend. Three or four of them will be talked about the next day by everybody.”

The law of averages applies to Amazon Prime Video and the other NFL broadcast properties, and Michaels completely understands that all of the games throughout the season will not turn out as planned.

“We had some not very good luck last year with some of those games,” Michaels acknowledged, “but then as the season progressed and we went down the line [it got better].”

Throughout the NFL offseason, Michaels has had an avidity towards the NHL’s Stanley Cup Playoffs. On Thursday night, he was watching the four-overtime extravaganza – Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals between the Carolina Hurricanes and Florida Panthers. The game-winning goal was scored in the waning seconds of the fourth overtime period, but Michaels, who lives on the West Coast, was hoping for an eighth period of hockey so he could keep watching. Of course, Michaels called the iconic “Miracle on Ice” game last year, and while McAfee and his cast would love to see him commentate for hockey, he conveyed an inability to do it at a high level.”

“I did the game of games 43 years ago. That’s it,” Michaels said. “I would end my career by trying to do a hockey game right now – I couldn’t… You stay in your lane. My lane is not hockey. My lane is watching hockey.”

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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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Pablo Torre Explains Goals of Future Meadowlark Media Project

“I want to take the position of also being able to zoom way in and way out and engage with the news cycle, but not be beholden to it.”

Ricky Keeler

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While we know that Pablo Torre is going to have a new show with Meadowlark Media in the future, he hasn’t exactly been specific as to what it will be. We continue to look for bits and pieces from Torre about his show that will begin sometime before the NFL season begins. 

Torre was a guest on The Rights To Ricky Sanchez: The Sixers Podcast with Spike Eskin and Michael Levin (around the 22 minute mark) and he said that he is at Meadowlark to follow his curiosities and he thinks back to the story he wrote for ESPN The Magazine in 2015 about the 76ers and trust the process serves as a guide to him.

I have things I am obsessed with that I want to explain to people, and I believe there are stories in sports and in the national cultural conversation that either could use a little more smarts or a little more humor and I want to figure out how I can be the place where you find smart and funny when it comes to storytelling in sports in a narratively informed way. I’m being very vague about it, but the magazine sensibility of that process story is something that serves as a North Star in my brain.

“How do I tell a story that people from afar are maybe somewhat familiar with, but can get under the hood of to articulate and reveal and report some things that serve as something close to a definitive treatment to it?”

One thing that Torre thinks is a big opportunity in the media landscape is that there is an open lane to tell sports stories in the audio format. 

“There’s a lot of narrative series, some of which are excellent, but in terms of an always-on show where someone’s job is to follow a curiosity down the rabbit hole and/or tell a story/interviewing a person as a way of explaining something larger. I want to bring a viewpoint that because sports is so much about living or dying with these games as we have been, I want to take the position of also being able to zoom way in and way out and engage with the news cycle, but not be beholden to it.”

Torre isn’t going to be able to cover everything in sports, but he said that he wants to take a complicated story and make it simpler for the listeners.

“My goal is not that I’m going to cover everything, but I’m going to give you stories of a different genre, stories that explain and go deeper. I want to make this fun, but also premised on contextualizing complicated stories in a simpler way.”

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