Speaker
Gabe York
Appearances over time
1 episodes
Episodes
1Podcasts
Quotes & moments
Gabe York shot 40% from three-point range on 11 attempts per game in the G League last season, yet remained unsigned by an NBA team.
Gabe York recorded a 43-inch vertical jump at the University of Arizona, and still measured a 40-inch vertical at age 30.
Slam Magazine ranked Gabe York's high school mixtape in the top 10 of all time, and Ball Is Life named him top 3 in high school dunks.
Gabe York averaged 16-17 points per game overseas for 2-3 consecutive seasons with zero NBA invites; switching to the G League yielded two two-way contracts and summer league invites.
Gabe York is entering his 9th professional season at age 30, having never received a guaranteed NBA roster spot despite consistent elite G League performance.
The OC's first season had 27 episodes. By the time Adam Brody became a phenomenon as Seth Cohen, he was already locked into Season 2 with no window to leverage his fame in film. A TV calendar mismatch, not a talent gap, cost him his shot at movie stardom.
Heat culture isn't mystical — Miami finds players who fell through the cracks, who carry chips on their shoulders and refuse to waste an opportunity. Bill Simmons argues this formula should be obvious to every GM, yet most teams still chase projects and upside over proven hunger.
Running backs went on a collective pity party this offseason, but the market is speaking clearly. Damien Harris signed for $2M, Pacheco won a Super Bowl on a 7th-round deal, and no salary-cap-smart team is paying $30M for a running back. The position is devalued and the CBA won't fix it.
The US women's team lost to Sweden on penalties, scoreless in their last two games. Bill Simmons argues the warning signs were everywhere — aging stars, wrong lineup choices, a coach who won't be seen again — and only Carli Lloyd was brave enough to say it out loud.
Jaylen Brown's $304 million extension is simultaneously the only logical move and a potential franchise-killer. The Celtics are title favorites with their Brown-Tatum core intact, but if Brown decides Boston isn't where he wants to be, the salary makes a fair trade nearly impossible.
Jets fans — historically the most miserable in football — have gone full Super Bowl believers after landing Aaron Rodgers. Bill Simmons pumps the brakes: Rodgers was bad last year, the offensive line is terrible, the schedule is brutal, and the Hard Knocks curse is real.
While everyone obsesses over the Jets and Lions, Bill Simmons identifies the Browns as the real sleeper: talented roster top to bottom, a winnable division, Burrow already hurt, and Deshaun Watson as a massive X factor who was once a top-5 QB.
The Pac-12 conference is falling apart, Stanford has no home, and there is no governing body with the authority or will to impose order. Bill Simmons has been calling for a sports czar for 20 years — the college sports implosion is Exhibit A for why one is desperately needed.
ESPN had 100 million cable subscribers at peak. Now they're at 76 million and falling, with ESPN+ at a stunning 5.5 million standalone users. Bill Simmons breaks down how the network that once outbid everyone for everything is now cutting talent and scrambling for a new business model.
G-League guard Gabe York has been one of the best offensive players in the league, shoots 40% from three, and has a 40-inch vertical at age 30 — and he still has no NBA offers. His story is the rawest account of what it means to fight for a dream that keeps slipping just out of reach.
Gabe York averaged 16-17 points overseas for three consecutive seasons and never got a training camp call. He joined the G League and landed two two-way contracts and summer league invites. The message is clear: if you want the NBA, stay where they can see you.
Gabe York's path to the NBA was derailed partly by an agent who was also a family friend — one who had big-name clients and allegedly went months without returning calls from interested teams. It's a cautionary tale about loyalty in a business that can't afford sentiment.
Bill Simmons' daughter Zoe watched The OC for the first time at 18 and immediately preferred it to every current teen drama. Her diagnosis: modern TV tries too hard, shoves in too many characters and plotlines, and forgets to make you actually care about anyone.
Adam Brody and Rachel Bilson, who played Seth and Summer, were dating in real life during production — and it shows. Zoe Simmons argues that modern TV's lack of genuine character chemistry is one of its biggest failures, and The OC's secret weapon was something you simply can't manufacture.
Take away the 13-0 Thailand thrashing and Alex Morgan scored 2 goals in 17 World Cup games. Yet she played 95 minutes in the Sweden match. Bill Simmons draws a direct line from that refusal to confront declining performance to the team's shocking early exit.
Analysis
What they talk about
- Sports 100%
Connections
Shows they appear on and people they share episodes with. Drag to explore.