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Scott Zolak: Who At FOX Thinks Rob Gronkowski is Good?

“You’ve morphed into Lou Holtz!”

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Rob Gronkowski has been on a bigger stage since the NFL Playoffs started. FOX has put him on the FOX NFL Sunday set alongside its Hall of Fame crew of analysts. Scott Zolak of 98.5 The Sports Hub says it isn’t going well.

Zolak and Rob “Hardy” Poole broke down the former Patriot’s performance from halftime of Sunday’s NFC Championship game. Both immediately noticed how much trouble Gronk had pronouncing names and words as he tried to preview what he thought could be the keys to the day’s later game in Kansas City.

In trying to explain the prowess of the Cincinnati defense, Gronkowski pronounced Buffalo as “buffle” and “rattle Mahomes” as “rabble Me Homes”. That last one, Hardy says, made Gronk sound like a leprechaun.

“You’ve morphed into Lou Holtz!” Scott Zolak said listening back to the audio.

The entire Zolak and Bertrand crew remarked on how unnatural and uncomfortable Rob Gronkowski’s delivery is. That led Zolak to wonder why he is in the role in the first place.

“Who at FOX thinks this is good?”

While the show had plenty of laughs at Rob Gronkowski’s expense, Scott Zolak did stick up for him a little bit. He said he actually felt bad for Gronkowski because what some people online were using as evidence of his stupidity isn’t even what was actually happening.

“The sad part is people are ripping him saying he can’t read off a prompter,” Zolak said. “That’s not a prompter.”

He theorized that producers had worked with Rob Gronkowski to understand the window of time available. To Zolak, the mealy-mouthed delivery sounded like someone rushing through talking points they put together in their head.

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Will Boling: Frank Wycheck Was a Nashville Sports Radio Icon

Boling said Wycheck was instrumental in building the city’s fanbase both as a player and a broadcaster on 104.5 The Zone.

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A phot of Ramon Kayla and Will
(Photo: 104.5 The Zone)

Former NFL tight end and 104.5 The Zone host Frank Wycheck died unexpectedly Sunday at his home in Chattanooga. He was 52. His former station honored the longtime Tennessee Titan with a show dedicated to his honor, with Will Boling, Ramon Foster, and Kayla Anderson leading the tribute.

“This one is really tough,” Boling said to open Monday’s program on 104.5 The Zone. “We’re gonna have a show dedicated to Frank, towards his memory, and his legacy as not only a Tennessee Titan but an iconic voice and broadcasting in the city of Nashville,” Boling said as he introduced Monday’s show.

“In a time where sports and professional sports were just starting to catch on, and were starting to build the kind of loyalty and the kind of fandom that we all know now for the Tennessee Titans that you guys showcase every time you interact with us every day, Frank Wycheck was as instrumental towards that as anyone who’s ever worn a Tennessee Titans uniform. Not only for what he did in 11 years on the field but for what he did off the field as well as a broadcaster and as you heard on Titans radio.”

“It is definitely a deep loss here. The Titans radio crew will probably have something later tonight as we broadcast,” said Ramon Foster. “That group was very intimate with him. He was also on the team plane with them, with Titans radio, for years. And just that it’s a tragic event for sure, man. It definitely put a black cloud over the organization city and just fans of the Titans yesterday.”

“I can tell how much he was beloved in this area in the NFL, with the Titans family, just from hearing it from other people,” added Kayla Anderson. “I didn’t even have to be here to know that, so that just says something about who he was and how many lives he impacted.”

The program welcomed Wycheck’s contemporaries, colleagues, and former teammates to the show to remember the longtime player and host. Included on the guest list was Kevin Dyson, who caught Wycheck’s lateral and returned it for a touchdown during the famous “Music City Miracle” play during the 2000 AFC Wild Card Game against the Buffalo Bills.

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Rick DiPietro: Blindly Defending Your Position Has Become Part of Our Industry

“Everyone kind of has their take on something and then they spend the entire time, like, they wanna be right.”

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A photo of Rick DiPietro
(Photo: Phil Ellsworth / ESPN Images)

Having a take has always been a tent pole of the sports radio industry. However, 98.7 ESPN New York morning host Rick DiPietro doesn’t believe you should have to always stick to your original opinion.

While discussing the play of New York Jets quarterback Zach Wilson Monday morning, the DiPietro & Rothenberg host argued that it’s ok for sports hosts and analysts to change their opinion.

The duo pointed to comments from Rex Ryan about Wilson’s play improving each week, which the pair disagreed with.

“You should be thrilled,” Dave Rothenberg said of Ryan. “How can you possibly sit here and say that’s it now and the switch is flipped and away we go?”

“I’m surprised, though. And maybe it’s just the nature of this business now — not probably, it is — where everyone kind of has their take on something and then they spend the entire time, like, they wanna be right,” DiPietro said. “He’s gonna defend this thing to his death. He’s surprised people are blaming the quarterback. How are you surprised?”

Rick DiPietro concluded by noting that the New York market isn’t alone in expecting greatness from the position, pointing to Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts, who was booed by home fans last week while the club was 10-2 and played in the Super Bowl a season ago.

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Bob Costas: Despite My Baseball Knowledge, I’d Never Want to Run a Franchise

“…I always said, ‘I’m neither interested nor qualified, so forget it.’”

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Bob Costas
Courtesy: Mark J. Rebilas, USA TODAY Sports

The news of Shohei Ohtani agreeing to terms on a 10-year contract worth $700 million to play for the Los Angeles Dodgers sent the sports world into a frenzy on Saturday afternoon. Bob Costas is aware of the impact this signing – which keeps Ohtani in a major U.S. market – will have on the game of baseball.

Dan Patrick welcomed Costas onto his program on Monday morning to offer his perspectives on the record-breaking contract for the two-way superstar. Costas said that the Dodgers will be able to amortize the $700 million investment, a monetary figure that is a record for the most guaranteed earnings in a professional sports contract. Costas was asked the Angels lack of success and answered questions about the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum selection process as well. By the end of the interview, Patrick wondered whether or not Bob Costas had ever been asked to serve as the general manager of a baseball team.

“No, no, no, no,” Costas replied, “and neither was I ever broached despite all the talk about being Commissioner of baseball, and I always said, ‘I’m neither interested nor qualified, so forget it.’”

Patrick believes that Costas could have been a really good Commissioner had he landed the role. Conversely, Costas does not think himself to be qualified in that the role contains negotiations that require a certain kind of merit and temperament. Rob Manfred has served as the Commissioner of the league for the last nine seasons, and despite criticism from some fans, the game continues to prove a lucrative endeavor and attained bolstered attendance concurrent with rule changes meant to hasten play and augment offensive output last season.

“The analogy I always used was, ‘If you think a particular columnist is astute politically, that doesn’t necessarily mean you think he or she should run for president or be a Supreme Court justice,’” Bob Costas said. “Their role is to offer thoughts and people weigh it for whatever it’s worth. I was a commentator about baseball, not just calling games, but about the state of the game. I even wrote a book about it, and if people appreciated that, well that was my contribution.”

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