Trae Young ranks 3rd all-time in assists per game in NBA history, behind Magic Johnson (#1) and John Stockton (#2).
NBA Draft, Giannis To The Heat, Wyndham Clark, USMNT Team Captain Tim Ream + Mt Rushmore Of Hard To Spell Words
Wyndham Clark's ex-girlfriend cheated on him with Baker Mayfield — which is why he tweeted "I hate Baker Mayfield" in 2016, finally explained on air.
Pardon My Take
NBA Draft, Giannis To The Heat, Wyndham Clark, USMNT Team Captain Tim Ream + Mt Rushmore Of Hard To Spell Words
Wyndham Clark's ex-girlfriend cheated on him with Baker Mayfield — which is why he tweeted "I hate Baker Mayfield" in 2016, finally explained on air.
TL;DR
A packed episode covering the NBA Draft (AJ Dabanza #1, Trae Young's $212M Wizards deal defended fiercely by PFT), Giannis's trade to the Heat, and Ronaldo's two-goal World Cup debut vs. Uzbekistan [1] — PFT Commenter "PFT Commenter goes all-in defending the Washington Wizards' 4-year, $212 million signing of Trae Young, dismissing critics — including ESPN…" 03:16 . The Mount Rushmore of Hard-to-Spell Words is a chaotic, crowd-pleasing segment [2] — Big Cat "Dusty May won a national title at Michigan then immediately became head coach of the Dallas Mavericks — getting to coach Cooper Flagg. Big …" 1:11:40 . Wyndham Clark opens up about hostile Shinnecock fans, his dad's surprise appearance, and the Baker Mayfield tweet origin story [3] — Wyndham Clark "In 2016, Wyndham Clark tweeted 'I hate Baker Mayfield.' On this episode, he finally explained why: his girlfriend at the time cheated on hi…" 2:06:30 . USMNT captain Tim Ream explains Pochettino's "universal energy" culture and why he took the captaincy as a challenge, not a diss [4] — Wyndham Clark "Wyndham Clark's father had never seen him win a tournament — including the first US Open — until he took a surprise red-eye to Shinnecock f…" 1:56:54 . Best takeaway: back-to-back own goals forced by US press is potentially unprecedented in World Cup history.
A packed Pardon My Take covering the 2026 NBA Draft, Giannis's trade to the Miami Heat, Jaylen Brown's uncertain future, Ronaldo's World Cup return, Mt. Rushmore of Hard-to-Spell Words, Hot Seat/Cool Throne, Wyndham Clark fresh off his US Open win at Shinnecock, and USMNT captain Tim Ream on the World Cup and Pochettino's culture.
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The seismic NBA news is Giannis heading to Miami. Big Cat argues the Bucks waited a year too long, costing themselves a much better return — instead of a franchise-altering package, they got Tyler Herro as the headline piece [1] — Big Cat "Giannis traded to Heat for Tyler Herro: Giannis Antetokounmpo was traded from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Miami Heat, with Tyler Herro as th…" 14:03 . Kevin O'Connor's report via PFT that Jimmy Haslam chose Miami over Boston because he didn't want to risk another Giannis-style situation with Jaylen Brown adds a fascinating layer of owner psychology. For the Heat, Pat Riley's star-first playbook now has Giannis and Bam Adebayo as its pillars — terrifying defensively, but still very much a work in progress on offense. The Jaylen Brown situation is the bigger unresolved story: Hank insists the Celtics professional operation means Brown returns to practice no hard feelings if he isn't moved; Big Cat and PFT counter that once you've asked to leave, those reasons don't simply evaporate. Hank puts the odds of a Brown trade in the next two weeks at 35%, dropping off sharply after the NBA's 'hot zone' of free agency. A fun detour into who fared worst: Giannis's brother Thanasis left behind in Milwaukee, or Julius Randle moving to the Nets the year after the Knicks won the title.
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The World Cup segment opens with a basic geography question — 'Is Uzbekistan a real country?' — before Zach reports Portugal's 2-0 win over them, with Ronaldo scoring a brace and proclaiming he's back. The crew is skeptical: Messi already has 5 goals in the tournament, and Uzbekistan's players may literally have day jobs as plumbers [1] — Zach "Ronaldo scored 2 goals vs. Uzbekistan: Cristiano Ronaldo scored two goals for Portugal against Uzbekistan in the 2026 World Cup group stage…" 31:21 . At 41, scoring in a 6th World Cup is objectively remarkable, but the opponent context limits the 'I'm back' credibility. The bigger story is England drawing 0-0 with Ghana after Harry Kane missed a point-blank chance from 7-8 yards out. A Ghanaian witch doctor had publicly claimed to curse Kane, and it appeared to work — the same man previously cursed Ronaldo. PFT makes an immediate case for hiring him for the USMNT knockout rounds. [2] — PFT Commenter "A Ghanaian witch doctor put a curse on Harry Kane ahead of England's 0-0 draw with Ghana — and Kane missed a sitter from 7-8 yards out. The…" 35:30 African soccer federations, PFT notes, actually have rules against witch doctor use — making this man a renegade operator who appears to be getting results.
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Sponsored by Microsoft 365 Copilot, the Mount Rushmore segment turns into a legitimately funny exploration of English's spelling inconsistencies. PFT leads with restaurant — a word he estimates he gets right exactly 50% of the time after 36 years of trying — then adds separate, definitely, and misspell (pointing out it has two S's). Big Cat and Max take February (always drop the R), Wednesday, rhythm ('the H just doesn't exist in my brain'), and exercise — where Max insists there should be a Z and Big Cat throws in a phantom C after the X, making them both wrong in different ways [1] — Big Cat "The crew picks their Mount Rushmore of words that trip up even everyday spellers. PFT goes with restaurant, separate, definitely, and missp…" 38:22 . Hank and Zach contribute pseudonym and xylophone before escalating to conscious and quesadilla. Honorable mentions become their own comedy bit: rotisserie, prosciutto, necessary, leprechaun, connoisseur, and diarrhea all get nominated. Zach's revelation that he mostly relies on the squiggly autocorrect line rather than actually knowing how to spell anything prompts genuine disbelief. The whole segment closes with a kumbaya — which, naturally, several people then spell wrong on the spot.
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Hot Seat/Cool Throne covers a wide range of sports news. Hank puts anti-international soccer fans on the hot seat, pointing out that the World Cup's success has Robert Kraft lobbying for a Patriots game in Scotland. His Cool Throne is the 2016 Cavaliers' 10-year anniversary content — admitting as a non-LeBron fan that it's been fun to follow. PFT's Hot Seat is Geno Smith, following police arriving at his home after an alleged incident involving his girlfriend and child. PFT's Cool Throne is Kyle Pitts signing a 3-year extension with the Atlanta Falcons, plus the newly announced PGA Tour restructuring involving a Champions Tour, Challengers Tour, and eventual match play format at the season's end. Big Cat's Hot Seats are Brendan Sorsby (who has nowhere to go after the NFL declined to hold a supplemental draft) and Kent State football for losing a recruit literally named Kenston Staton — to Toledo. Big Cat's Cool Throne is college basketball, as Dusty May's departure to the Dallas Mavericks removes one of the best coaches from the conference [1] — Big Cat "Dusty May: FAU to Michigan national title to Mavs HC: Dusty May went from FAU head coach to winning a national title at Michigan to becomin…" 1:12:17 .
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Wyndham Clark comes on the show in excellent spirits, opening up grape (wine) with the crew to celebrate his second US Open. The interview quickly turns to the elephant in the room: the Shinnecock Sunday gallery, which cheered when his ball found bunkers, chanted he would choke, and yelled that nobody liked him. Clark walks through how he processed this — staying emotionless, not reacting, holding back the urge to gesture at the crowd when he drained key putts — while acknowledging that missing a lead that large would have been one of his biggest regrets [1] — Wyndham Clark "Wyndham Clark played the final round of the 2026 US Open against a gallery that cheered every time his ball found a bunker and chanted that…" 2:03:30 . His father's surprise Father's Day appearance is a genuine highlight: his dad had never seen him win in person, including his first US Open, and took a red-eye once Clark's 6-shot lead gave him enough confidence. The crew asks about strategy — Clark confirms he wasn't protecting his lead but was chasing specific target scores to put the tournament out of reach. His putter was his salvation: critical par saves on 5-12 footers kept the momentum from ever truly turning. [2] — Wyndham Clark "Wyndham Clark: US Open win at age ~30 in Dad's first attended win: Wyndham Clark's father had never seen him win a tournament in person unt…" 1:56:57
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Tim Ream is thoughtful, measured, and quietly charismatic. He confirms the USMNT's aggressive, front-foot pressing style is entirely deliberate — the two consecutive own goals forced in the first two matches may be a World Cup first [1] — Tim Ream "USMNT captain Tim Ream confirmed the team's aggressive front-foot pressing style generated back-to-back own goals in consecutive World Cup …" 1:54:36 — and that training sessions are sometimes harder than games. He traces the team's vibe shift to last summer's Gold Cup, where the Pochettino cohort truly gelled. On the captaincy: he received a public statement from Pochettino that the armband doesn't guarantee him starts, which Big Cat reads as a diss — Ream correctly identifies it as a challenge, marking exactly why he's the captain [2] — Tim Ream "Tim Ream: Only 2nd home World Cup US captain: Tim Ream is only the second captain in US Men's National Team history to lead the squad in a …" 2:06:04 . The bowl of lemons on Pochettino's desk, his belief in projecting universal positive energy, and his individual connection with every player and staff member are all confirmed as real features of the coaching environment, not PR spin. Ream makes history tangible: he's the second home World Cup captain in US history, and this group keeps finding ways to make unprecedented moments — including his own yellow card reversal via mistaken identity [3] — Tim Ream "Tim Ream successfully argued his way out of a yellow card during the USMNT's World Cup match after a referee mistakenly attributed a foul t…" 2:09:44 . He calmly dismisses Tim Howard's 'you can't win the World Cup' commentary, saying the players don't need outside validation. The camp environment is essentially a dream sleepover — guys watching games together, having coffee by the water, almost buying a golf cart.
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PFT reads a Fruit of the Loom ad that frames buying new underwear as a simple, affordable upgrade. The Guys on Chicks segment produces several entertaining exchanges: a woman asks when it's acceptable to let yourself go after losing weight for a wedding — Big Cat suggests the real hack is being fat on your wedding day and losing weight after, so the photos look better over time. Another listener asks about the double standard on fart humor — PFT affirms the male instinct while noting even women don't find other women's farts funny. A shoe collection closet dispute between independent-wealth spouses ends in a proposed game of horse (one wearing preserved sneakers, one in heels). The final question — flowers equivalent for men — produces agreement that homemade chocolate chip cookies beat a blowjob on the 'thoughtfulness' metric, while PFT controversially argues hats are an underrated gift, prompting near-unanimous eye-rolling. The episode closes with birthday shoutouts to Messi, JJ Redick, Mo'Ne Davis, and others.
- Wiz Derangement Syndrome
- PFT Commenter's coined phrase for critics who reflexively dismiss anything positive about the Washington Wizards; used to mock those calling Trae Young's contract the worst in the NBA.
- Front foot
- Soccer tactical term for playing aggressively with offensive pressure; Tim Ream used it to describe the USMNT's style of immediately attacking opponents from kick-off.
- Counter-pressing
- A defensive-offensive tactic where a team immediately tries to win the ball back after losing possession, typically by swarming the opponent in their own half.
- Relegation zone
- In soccer or sports league structures, the lowest-ranked positions that result in demotion to a lower division; PFT used this in the context of new NBA lottery rules.
- Brace
- A soccer term for scoring two goals in a single match; used when discussing Ronaldo's and Haaland's performances in the 2026 World Cup.
- Jumper (golf)
- A shot from long rough where the grass reduces spin and the ball 'jumps' off the club face farther than expected; Wyndham Clark referenced it describing his lie on hole 16.
- Fescue
- A type of long, wispy rough grass common on links-style golf courses like Shinnecock Hills; notorious for difficult lies.
- Korn Ferry Tour
- The developmental tour that serves as the primary feeder into the PGA Tour, where players can earn their PGA Tour card through performance.
- Challengers Tour
- A new mid-tier PGA Tour division discussed in the restructuring plan, sitting between the Korn Ferry Tour and the main PGA Tour for players ranked roughly 80–200.
- Supplemental draft
- An additional NFL draft held after the regular draft for players who became eligible after the original draft, which the NFL declined to hold for Brendan Sorsby.
- Nom de guerre
- French phrase meaning 'war name'; a pseudonym or alias used in combat or, more loosely, any assumed name — PFT used it when discussing pseudonyms.
- Hooked on Phonics
- A well-known educational reading program for children that teaches spelling and reading through phonetic sounds; Zach invoked it to explain why spelling-by-sound fails in English.
- VAR
- Video Assistant Referee — a technology system in soccer used to review referee decisions (goals, red cards, penalties) using video footage.
- Golden Boot
- The award given to the top scorer at a FIFA World Cup; mentioned in context of the race between Messi, Ronaldo, Mbappé, and Haaland.
- Prosciutto
- An Italian dry-cured ham, typically sliced thin; featured in the Mount Rushmore honorable mentions as a notoriously hard-to-spell food word.
- Prerogative
- A right or privilege exclusive to a particular person or group; PFT flagged it as possibly the hardest English word to spell correctly on the first attempt.
- Connoisseur
- An expert judge in matters of taste, especially in art, food, or wine; cited as an honorable mention in the Mount Rushmore of hard-to-spell words.
- Bottling
- British soccer slang for catastrophically failing to win from a winning position; used when Harry Kane missed a sitter against Ghana in the 2026 World Cup.
Chapter 1 · 00:00
NBA Draft & Giannis Trade
The seismic NBA news is Giannis heading to Miami. Big Cat argues the Bucks waited a year too long, costing themselves a much better return — instead of a franchise-altering package, they got Tyler Herro as the headline piece [1] — Big Cat "Giannis traded to Heat for Tyler Herro: Giannis Antetokounmpo was traded from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Miami Heat, with Tyler Herro as th…" 14:03 . Kevin O'Connor's report via PFT that Jimmy Haslam chose Miami over Boston because he didn't want to risk another Giannis-style situation with Jaylen Brown adds a fascinating layer of owner psychology. For the Heat, Pat Riley's star-first playbook now has Giannis and Bam Adebayo as its pillars — terrifying defensively, but still very much a work in progress on offense. The Jaylen Brown situation is the bigger unresolved story: Hank insists the Celtics professional operation means Brown returns to practice no hard feelings if he isn't moved; Big Cat and PFT counter that once you've asked to leave, those reasons don't simply evaporate. Hank puts the odds of a Brown trade in the next two weeks at 35%, dropping off sharply after the NBA's 'hot zone' of free agency. A fun detour into who fared worst: Giannis's brother Thanasis left behind in Milwaukee, or Julius Randle moving to the Nets the year after the Knicks won the title.
Claims made here
Trae Young averaged 26 points, 5 rebounds, and 11 assists with 60% field goal percentage last season.
Jimmy Haslam chose the Miami Heat deal over the Celtics deal for Giannis because he didn't want to risk Jaylen Brown wanting out of Milwaukee after just getting done with the Giannis situation.
PFT Commenter goes all-in defending the Washington Wizards' 4-year, $212 million signing of Trae Young, dismissing critics — including ESPN's Brian Windhorst — as suffering from 'Wiz Derangement Syndrome.' He cites Trae's historic assist numbers (3rd all-time, behind only Magic and Stockton) and argues the Bradley Beal comparison is wrong because that deal had a no-trade clause.
The Washington Wizards signed Trae Young to a 4-year, $212 million contract, drawing instant criticism as one of the worst deals in the NBA.
PFT argued Trae Young ranks 3rd all-time in assists per game in NBA history, behind Magic Johnson and John Stockton.
Giannis Antetokounmpo is heading to Miami, and Big Cat argues the Bucks waited a year too long — costing them a better return. The Heat get Giannis and Bam together, a terrifying defensive front court, but an open question of who shoots the ball. Jimmy Haslam's reported reasoning for rejecting Jaylen Brown — not wanting another Giannis situation — adds a fascinating layer.
Giannis Antetokounmpo was traded from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Miami Heat, with Tyler Herro as the centerpiece of the return package.
Jaylen Brown was openly shopped in the Giannis sweepstakes but wasn't moved. Hank argues Brown will return to the Celtics professionally with no hard feelings because he's a competitor. Big Cat and PFT push back — once you've asked to leave, those reasons don't just evaporate. A 35% chance of trade in the next two weeks, per Hank, with the odds dropping after that hot zone.
Chapter 2 · 29:10
Ronaldo & World Cup Talk
The World Cup segment opens with a basic geography question — 'Is Uzbekistan a real country?' — before Zach reports Portugal's 2-0 win over them, with Ronaldo scoring a brace and proclaiming he's back. The crew is skeptical: Messi already has 5 goals in the tournament, and Uzbekistan's players may literally have day jobs as plumbers [1] — Zach "Ronaldo scored 2 goals vs. Uzbekistan: Cristiano Ronaldo scored two goals for Portugal against Uzbekistan in the 2026 World Cup group stage…" 31:21 . At 41, scoring in a 6th World Cup is objectively remarkable, but the opponent context limits the 'I'm back' credibility. The bigger story is England drawing 0-0 with Ghana after Harry Kane missed a point-blank chance from 7-8 yards out. A Ghanaian witch doctor had publicly claimed to curse Kane, and it appeared to work — the same man previously cursed Ronaldo. PFT makes an immediate case for hiring him for the USMNT knockout rounds. [2] — PFT Commenter "A Ghanaian witch doctor put a curse on Harry Kane ahead of England's 0-0 draw with Ghana — and Kane missed a sitter from 7-8 yards out. The…" 35:30 African soccer federations, PFT notes, actually have rules against witch doctor use — making this man a renegade operator who appears to be getting results.
Claims made here
The Ghanaian witch doctor previously cursed Ronaldo and it 'worked,' then cursed Harry Kane before England's 0-0 draw with Ghana, and African soccer federations have rules prohibiting witch doctor curses.
Ronaldo scored twice in Portugal's 2026 World Cup opener against Uzbekistan and proclaimed 'I'm back, I'm back.' The crew is skeptical — Messi already has 5 goals, and Uzbekistan players may literally be part-time plumbers. At 41, Ronaldo scoring in a 6th World Cup is remarkable, but the opponent context matters.
Cristiano Ronaldo scored two goals for Portugal against Uzbekistan in the 2026 World Cup group stage, prompting debate over his 'I'm back' declaration.
Lionel Messi scored two more goals to bring his 2026 World Cup tally to 5, leading the Golden Boot race over Ronaldo, Mbappé, and Haaland.
A Ghanaian witch doctor put a curse on Harry Kane ahead of England's 0-0 draw with Ghana — and Kane missed a sitter from 7-8 yards out. The same witch doctor previously cursed Ronaldo, which also 'worked.' PFT wants to hire him for the USMNT going forward. Bonus fact: African soccer federations actually have rules against witch doctor curses.
Chapter 3 · 38:02
Mt Rushmore of Hard to Spell Words
Sponsored by Microsoft 365 Copilot, the Mount Rushmore segment turns into a legitimately funny exploration of English's spelling inconsistencies. PFT leads with restaurant — a word he estimates he gets right exactly 50% of the time after 36 years of trying — then adds separate, definitely, and misspell (pointing out it has two S's). Big Cat and Max take February (always drop the R), Wednesday, rhythm ('the H just doesn't exist in my brain'), and exercise — where Max insists there should be a Z and Big Cat throws in a phantom C after the X, making them both wrong in different ways [1] — Big Cat "The crew picks their Mount Rushmore of words that trip up even everyday spellers. PFT goes with restaurant, separate, definitely, and missp…" 38:22 . Hank and Zach contribute pseudonym and xylophone before escalating to conscious and quesadilla. Honorable mentions become their own comedy bit: rotisserie, prosciutto, necessary, leprechaun, connoisseur, and diarrhea all get nominated. Zach's revelation that he mostly relies on the squiggly autocorrect line rather than actually knowing how to spell anything prompts genuine disbelief. The whole segment closes with a kumbaya — which, naturally, several people then spell wrong on the spot.
The crew picks their Mount Rushmore of words that trip up even everyday spellers. PFT goes with restaurant, separate, definitely, and misspell. Big Cat and Max take February, Wednesday, rhythm, and exercise (Max is convinced there should be a Z). Hank and Zach contribute pseudonym, xylophone, conscious, and quesadilla. Honorable mentions include necessary, rotisserie, prosciutto, and leprechaun.
Chapter 4 · 59:36
Hot Seat/Cool Throne
Hot Seat/Cool Throne covers a wide range of sports news. Hank puts anti-international soccer fans on the hot seat, pointing out that the World Cup's success has Robert Kraft lobbying for a Patriots game in Scotland. His Cool Throne is the 2016 Cavaliers' 10-year anniversary content — admitting as a non-LeBron fan that it's been fun to follow. PFT's Hot Seat is Geno Smith, following police arriving at his home after an alleged incident involving his girlfriend and child. PFT's Cool Throne is Kyle Pitts signing a 3-year extension with the Atlanta Falcons, plus the newly announced PGA Tour restructuring involving a Champions Tour, Challengers Tour, and eventual match play format at the season's end. Big Cat's Hot Seats are Brendan Sorsby (who has nowhere to go after the NFL declined to hold a supplemental draft) and Kent State football for losing a recruit literally named Kenston Staton — to Toledo. Big Cat's Cool Throne is college basketball, as Dusty May's departure to the Dallas Mavericks removes one of the best coaches from the conference [1] — Big Cat "Dusty May: FAU to Michigan national title to Mavs HC: Dusty May went from FAU head coach to winning a national title at Michigan to becomin…" 1:12:17 .
Claims made here
Robert Kraft is lobbying the NFL to get a Patriots game played in Scotland, partly inspired by the World Cup's success in driving US engagement with international soccer.
Dusty May went from head coach at FAU three years ago to winning a national title at Michigan and is now the head coach of the Dallas Mavericks.
Mike Babcock, the new Edmonton Oilers head coach, was previously known for projecting players' iCloud photos onto a projector during team meetings, creating serious locker room culture concerns.
Floyd Mayweather has allegedly earned $1.2 billion throughout his career but reportedly spends approximately $3 million per month on recurring expenses including mortgages and car notes.
The revamped PGA Tour structure will limit the main tour to roughly 120 players, with a separate Challengers Tour for those ranked below that threshold.
Dusty May won a national title at Michigan then immediately became head coach of the Dallas Mavericks — getting to coach Cooper Flagg. Big Cat called it one of the fastest rises in coaching history, going from FAU to Michigan to the NBA in three years. The transfer portal frustrations he aired publicly? Big Cat argues that was just a cover — May always wanted the NBA.
Dusty May went from FAU head coach to winning a national title at Michigan to becoming the Dallas Mavericks head coach — one of the fastest rises in coaching history.
Floyd Mayweather allegedly wrote a bad $200,000 check to a jeweler on New Year's Eve 18 months ago and still hasn't paid. Zach reports Mayweather is now facing felony charges — despite allegedly earning $1.2 billion in his career. Online math puts his monthly burn rate at roughly $3 million in mortgages, car notes, and recurring expenses alone.
Zach cited that Floyd Mayweather has allegedly earned $1.2 billion throughout his career but is now facing felony charges over a $200K bad check to a jeweler.
Chapter 6 · 1:50:50
Tim Ream Interview
Tim Ream is thoughtful, measured, and quietly charismatic. He confirms the USMNT's aggressive, front-foot pressing style is entirely deliberate — the two consecutive own goals forced in the first two matches may be a World Cup first [1] — Tim Ream "USMNT captain Tim Ream confirmed the team's aggressive front-foot pressing style generated back-to-back own goals in consecutive World Cup …" 1:54:36 — and that training sessions are sometimes harder than games. He traces the team's vibe shift to last summer's Gold Cup, where the Pochettino cohort truly gelled. On the captaincy: he received a public statement from Pochettino that the armband doesn't guarantee him starts, which Big Cat reads as a diss — Ream correctly identifies it as a challenge, marking exactly why he's the captain [2] — Tim Ream "Tim Ream: Only 2nd home World Cup US captain: Tim Ream is only the second captain in US Men's National Team history to lead the squad in a …" 2:06:04 . The bowl of lemons on Pochettino's desk, his belief in projecting universal positive energy, and his individual connection with every player and staff member are all confirmed as real features of the coaching environment, not PR spin. Ream makes history tangible: he's the second home World Cup captain in US history, and this group keeps finding ways to make unprecedented moments — including his own yellow card reversal via mistaken identity [3] — Tim Ream "Tim Ream successfully argued his way out of a yellow card during the USMNT's World Cup match after a referee mistakenly attributed a foul t…" 2:09:44 . He calmly dismisses Tim Howard's 'you can't win the World Cup' commentary, saying the players don't need outside validation. The camp environment is essentially a dream sleepover — guys watching games together, having coffee by the water, almost buying a golf cart.
Claims made here
The USMNT forced back-to-back own goals in their first two 2026 World Cup group stage matches, which Tim Ream believes may be unprecedented in World Cup history.
Wyndham Clark's father had never attended a tournament where Clark won, including Clark's first US Open victory.
Wyndham Clark started trying to qualify for the US Open at age 14 and didn't make his first US Open until approximately age 26 or 27.
Wyndham Clark's 2016 tweet 'I hate Baker Mayfield' was because his girlfriend at the time cheated on him with Baker Mayfield.
The crowd noise at the USMNT's match in Seattle registered 3.3 on the earthquake scale.
USMNT captain Tim Ream confirmed the team's aggressive front-foot pressing style generated back-to-back own goals in consecutive World Cup matches — something he believes may never have happened before in World Cup history. It's not an accident: the coaching staff specifically emphasizes starting games fast and putting maximum pressure on opponents from the opening whistle.
Tim Ream confirmed the USMNT forced two own goals in their first two World Cup group stage matches — a feat possibly unprecedented in World Cup history.
Wyndham Clark's father had never seen him win a tournament — including the first US Open — until he took a surprise red-eye to Shinnecock for the 2026 final round. Clark was completely shocked when he saw him after winning. The fact it was Father's Day made the moment even more extraordinary.
Wyndham Clark's father had never seen him win a tournament in person until Clark's second US Open victory, which happened on Father's Day.
By winning the US Open, Wyndham Clark is exempt from qualifying for the US Open for the next 10 years — the same stretch until Shinnecock potentially hosts again.
Wyndham Clark played the final round of the 2026 US Open against a gallery that cheered every time his ball found a bunker and chanted that he was going to choke. His response: total silence, zero emotion — until a key 16th-hole putt. He wanted to point at the crowd but held back. Big Cat called it 'playing a Ryder Cup by yourself.'
Tim Ream is only the second captain in US Men's National Team history to lead the squad in a home World Cup.
In 2016, Wyndham Clark tweeted 'I hate Baker Mayfield.' On this episode, he finally explained why: his girlfriend at the time cheated on him with Mayfield. He's now a Baker fan and hopes they can have a 'bro moment' to bury the hatchet — ideally with a round of golf.
Wyndham Clark revealed his 2016 tweet 'I hate Baker Mayfield' was because his girlfriend at the time cheated on him with Mayfield.
Tim Ream successfully argued his way out of a yellow card during the USMNT's World Cup match after a referee mistakenly attributed a foul to him instead of a Paraguayan player named Almiron. Ream says it's the first time in World Cup history a yellow card was reversed for mistaken identity — just one more piece of history this group keeps making.
Tim Ream revealed that Pochettino keeps a bowl of lemons on his desk as a symbol of positive energy — and that the coach's entire philosophy is about individual connection and projecting good vibes. Ream says trainings are sometimes harder than games, players are genuinely calm and confident going into matches, and the vibe shift from four years ago to now is night and day.
Mauricio Pochettino keeps a bowl of lemons on his desk as part of his belief in projecting positive universal energy, which Tim Ream confirmed.
The crowd noise at the USMNT's game in Seattle reportedly registered 3.3 on the earthquake scale, reflecting the electric home-crowd atmosphere.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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Atlanta Hawks guard who signed a 4-year $212M deal with the Washington Wizards, called one of the worst contracts in the NBA by some analysts.
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Traded from the Milwaukee Bucks to the Miami Heat; his brother Thanasis was left behind on the Bucks roster.
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Boston Celtics star who was offered in the Giannis trade package but was not moved; his future with the team heavily debated.
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Scored two goals for Portugal against Uzbekistan in the 2026 World Cup group stage at age 41, declaring 'I'm back' — met with skepticism by the crew.
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Head coach of the USMNT; described as running extremely hard training sessions and believing in universal energy; keeps a bowl of lemons on his desk.
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Michigan basketball head coach who won the national title and then left to become head coach of the Dallas Mavericks, one of the fastest coaching rises discussed.
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Leading scorer in the 2026 World Cup with 5 goals heading into the third group stage match, ahead of Ronaldo, Mbappé, and Haaland in the Golden Boot race.
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Boxer facing felony charges for allegedly writing a bad $200K check to a jeweler 18 months ago, despite allegedly earning $1.2 billion in his career.
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NFL quarterback revealed to have been the reason for Wyndham Clark's 2016 'I hate Baker Mayfield' tweet — Clark's girlfriend at the time cheated on him with Mayfield.
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ESPN NBA insider cited as saying the Trae Young contract was 'instantaneously one of the worst contracts in the league,' prompting PFT to push back hard.
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Selected #1 overall in the 2026 NBA Draft by the Washington Wizards; praised by PFT as the right pick to pair with Trae Young.
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Scored two goals (a brace) in Norway's World Cup group stage match, with the crew noting he could have had four; mentioned in the Golden Boot race.
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England striker who missed a point-blank chance in a 0-0 draw with Ghana at the 2026 World Cup; a Ghanaian witch doctor claimed to have cursed him.
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Former USMNT goalkeeper who said on his podcast that the US team cannot win the 2026 World Cup, drawing pushback from Tim Ream and PFT Commenter.
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PFT Commenter's NBA team; central to the episode's opening segment following Trae Young's $212M signing and the AJ Dabanza #1 pick.
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Acquired Giannis Antetokounmpo from the Bucks to pair with Bam Adebayo; Pat Riley's star-first roster building strategy discussed.
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Offered Jaylen Brown in pursuit of Giannis but were rejected; now left with an uncertain roster and Brown potentially still wanting a trade.
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Hired Dusty May as head coach after he won the national title at Michigan; hold the 9th overall pick in the NBA Draft.
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Traded Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat, receiving Tyler Herro as the main piece; criticized for waiting too long to make the deal.
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Golf course on Long Island that hosted the 2026 US Open, where Wyndham Clark won his second US Open title amid a hostile gallery.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Trae Young ranks 3rd all-time in assists per game in NBA history, behind Magic Johnson (#1) and John Stockton (#2).
Trae Young averaged 26 points, 5 rebounds, and 11 assists with 60% field goal percentage last season.
Jimmy Haslam chose the Miami Heat deal over the Celtics deal for Giannis because he didn't want to risk Jaylen Brown wanting out of Milwaukee after just getting done with the Giannis situation.
The Ghanaian witch doctor previously cursed Ronaldo and it 'worked,' then cursed Harry Kane before England's 0-0 draw with Ghana, and African soccer federations have rules prohibiting witch doctor curses.
Wyndham Clark's father had never attended a tournament where Clark won, including Clark's first US Open victory.
Wyndham Clark started trying to qualify for the US Open at age 14 and didn't make his first US Open until approximately age 26 or 27.
The USMNT forced back-to-back own goals in their first two 2026 World Cup group stage matches, which Tim Ream believes may be unprecedented in World Cup history.
The crowd noise at the USMNT's match in Seattle registered 3.3 on the earthquake scale.
Wyndham Clark's 2016 tweet 'I hate Baker Mayfield' was because his girlfriend at the time cheated on him with Baker Mayfield.
Floyd Mayweather has allegedly earned $1.2 billion throughout his career but reportedly spends approximately $3 million per month on recurring expenses including mortgages and car notes.
Nearly two-thirds of Americans in a nationwide blind taste test prefer Pepsi Zero Sugar over other zero sugar colas.
Dusty May went from head coach at FAU three years ago to winning a national title at Michigan and is now the head coach of the Dallas Mavericks.
Robert Kraft is lobbying the NFL to get a Patriots game played in Scotland, partly inspired by the World Cup's success in driving US engagement with international soccer.
Mike Babcock, the new Edmonton Oilers head coach, was previously known for projecting players' iCloud photos onto a projector during team meetings, creating serious locker room culture concerns.