00:00And it really bothered me.
00:01And I know you respect the guy.
00:02We all respect the guy.
00:04Joe Girardi, who is not a hot take artist.
00:08He is not Sean Morash.
00:10Listen to Joe Girardi after David Bednar recorded the final out yesterday
00:16on a weak ground ball to Ryan McMahon.
00:19Take a listen to this.
00:20This seems to go on every single game.
00:22Yeah.
00:22That gets hits, big hits.
00:24Starting to remind me of 98 a little bit, Michael.
00:28That's a mouthful.
00:30That was a pretty good team with a pretty good ending.
00:33Thank you, Michael.
00:34By the way, Michael Kay, realest guy in the room.
00:36I am a damaged freak.
00:38Because you could hear in his voice.
00:39There was doubt.
00:41There was, ah, that's not okay.
00:42I don't want to co-sign this.
00:43But I don't want to dismiss Joe Girardi just saying that.
00:47So, ah, that was a lot of good things happening that year.
00:50I mean, the 90s.
00:51He basically dismissed it without dismissing it.
00:53He did what I did.
00:54Yes.
00:55And I think the reason he did it.
00:56And look, Joe Girardi played on the 1998 Yankees.
00:58I have respect for that.
00:59Like, he was in that room.
01:01So, I understand that he has an experience that none of us have.
01:04He was a part of the team.
01:05But the 1998 Yankees, that's the greatest baseball team of all time.
01:10And I think we can complement this Yankee team and talk about the mission they're on
01:14and the depth of their pitching and their bullpen and their offense.
01:17And we can pay them every compliment in the world.
01:20We can.
01:20And I don't have an issue with it.
01:21But don't we have to stop just a little bit short of comparing them to the greatest team
01:28of all time?
01:29I mean...
01:30And Sean does it.
01:31And now Girardi does it.
01:33And it's dry.
01:34It's blowing my brains up right now.
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