GenX Classic Sports

Episode 11: ESPN LIED about Bo Jackson!: Part 2.

Shon Enis Season 1 Episode 11

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Today we’re diving into the legendary career of Bo Jackson—the man who redefined what it means to be a multi-sport athlete. From his jaw-dropping highlights with the Kansas City Royals in Major League Baseball to his unforgettable moments as an NFL star with the Los Angeles Raiders, Bo Jackson's professional journey is a story of pure athletic dominance. Known for his 'Bo Knows' campaign and iconic status in sports history, we'll explore how Bo became a cultural phenomenon and one of the greatest athletes of all time. Whether you’re a fan of Bo Jackson’s baseball career, his NFL highlights, or just curious about this living legend, this episode is for you. Tune in now to learn why Bo Jackson remains a sports icon decades after his prime!"

Credits:
Haylee Wolf: narration.
Mason Enis: theme music.

Copyright @ PineStreetProductions 2024. Any illegal reproduction of this content will result in immediate legal action.

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[Music] welcome sports fans to Gen X classic


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athletes from our generation this is Gen X classic sports sports talk for Gen xers by gen xers hello everyone and


welcome back to part two of our greatest athletes Series this one is about the


one and only Bo Jackson joining me are Mark and Casey two of the founding


fathers of the Gen X classic Sports podcast so let's rejoin the discussion about the great the one the only the


rare unicorn himself Mr Bo Jackson so


then he gets drafted in the fourth round by Kansas City Royals in the baseball


draft now remember he got drafted in the second round out of high school he's he's fallen two


rounds okay so he's given up money is what I'm getting at there's a big


difference in bonus and so forth so because of the Tampa Bay thing he


doesn't want to honor the Tampa Bay contract and he does sign with the Royals and he is assigned to double a


Memphis um immediately now I don't know where I saw it and I didn't write it


down but somewhere I read he still had um a pretty good uh signing bonus I just


don't remember the the number but it it wasn't I don't even know if it was a million dollars but it was something decent but still he gave up money but he


goes to dou a Memphis okay so that's his rookie year more or less he goes to double a Memphis so that's 86 all


right in 87 um and he got called up in ' 86 but


in ' 87 he played his first full Major League season so he's a year removed from college football so in 1987 his


first year with the Royals he gets Rookie of the Year so he's okay at baseball right he's pretty good at


it did y'all see the stat line I put on there how many home runs he hit as a rookie by the way you got to put this in


1987 or 86 and seven numbers when 30 home runs was a lot for a season veteran


30 was a lot and and he hit how many his rookie


year I think he hit 22 or three in 116 games or something


now I noticed that his average dipped in the pros from college he's he he batted


235 but you know that's a natural assumption isn't it to make that he


seeing better pitching and he wasn't a full-time baseball player anyway he's kind of playing when he could in college


so I it doesn't surprise me that his his numbers on average dropped but that


doesn't mean his power did you know so 22 home runs at at that level pretty


good I think yeah I'd like to know what his slugging percentage was yeah and of


course I didn't I didn't look that up but um the next the next little odity on


there about major that his rookie year was that he hit four home runs in consecutive at bats yeah and that's a


major league tie tied a Major League record Casey do you remember his early


years in baseball with the Kansas City Royals at all do you remember anything about that remember the the highlights


the remember the allstar game didn't he lead off the 19 yeah y lead off for the


home run that I think I think that's where most of the country finally realized oh he's not this isn't a hobby


for him this guy knows what he's doing that 89 All-Star game was huge I mean I remember watching that you know like it


was yesterday that was my senior year of high school and here he was starting at center field and lead off and for the


American League and and um and in the bottom of the first he leads off his


part of the inning with a home run so dudes dude's got a flare for the


dramatic for sure right I remember I remember him breaking


bats like like toothpicks just snapping bats over his


thighs yeah that that's that's what I remember case he is he


also him over his head yeah That's How Strong he was wooden bats yeah that was


impressive he he would snap them he'd snap him on his thigh and on his


helmet I think we all remember yeah the the catch on the wall running


up the wall and making the catch yeah for sure that made ESPN


highlights um when he he left cleat marks you know 90% up that wall when he


ran that horseshoe shape up the wall and turned and came back down it and hopped off of it like it was nothing you know


that's still one of the craziest things I've ever seen on a ball field and we lost Casey again but we're


going to keep going uh Mark in 89 when he he was actually when he let off the


All-Star Game bottom of the First with that home run he was the MVP uh


um he was named the MVP of that game so I I'm going to bring this up


later so I just want Casey he was MVP in the 89 All-Star game when he hit the Home Run and played center field I ju I


bring that up because um I'm going to do some statistical stuff later that I


looked up about the odds of high school players making it to the pros and so forth and and you'll find out how much


of a unicorn he is and how big of a crime it was for dude to be


you know 72 on that list all right so 89 was probably his best season he hit 256


with 32 home runs and 105 RB back then people if anybody young is ever going to


hear this they're going to say that's pretty terrible numbers no it's not not for 1989 it's not you're you're still


look you haven't had I mean guys just didn't even hit 40 home runs then really


so 32 is obviously a lot and 100 100 RBI is a


lot um he was a career 250 batter uh which


isn't bad uh for a power hitter he hit 141 home runs had 415 RB uh in 1990 I


think was his best batting average the following year he had batted 272 with h 28 home runs that's a that's


a man for 1990 that's a heck of a year and his slugging percentage was 523


I'm looking at Stats now for that year okay okay home base percentage was


346 well according to Money Ball that's what they that's that's all that matters right right he gets home Bas a lot of


home runs had decent batting average home base percentage was up there slugging percentage was out of the world


I'd say he had a really good batting average for a quote power hitter yeah I mean 272 yeah and two you know I remember


people like Jack Clark hitting 210 and hitting 30 home runs and everybody loved it you know it the note on that part


that was most interesting to me was that he only averaged 88 baseball games a year of course we kind of understand


that once you talk about his NFL stuff but I don't know big muscle guy like that maybe he was hurt a lot too maybe


he pulled a lot of hammies and I don't know but 8 what kind of steals did he have in the


majors you know I really didn't look that up uh well or it didn't jump out at me if I did I don't I don't know I I


mean Mark or somebody can maybe look it up in a minute if they got a computer in front of them I don't know I don't remember that being since he was a power


hitter I'm gonna guess that they didn't steal him a lot because they didn't want him breaking a wrist sliding into second


or something would be my guess I mean could he have been a base hell of a a base stealer obviously


because I don't know how anybody in Major League Baseball would be faster he had 82 in his career yeah so


no I mean he didn't yeah they did I'm sure that's what it was they didn't run him because


they didn't want him to get hurt okay so and to wrap up his baseball


kind of I will say that after the the the hip injury that he's for he he got


the 1993 comeback Player of the Year in Major League Baseball cuz he come back


he came back and over and played well enough with a artificial hip that he


made comeback player of the year I thought that was pretty impressive yeah and I I don't really remember that


I don't remember him coming back after after that injury I didn't know he played baseball to be honest yeah


that I I did because he had a noticeable LM I mean they used to joke about how


limping he was still the fastest guy in Major League Baseball pretty much cuz even with that pronounced and noticeable


limp he could still fly down the first Baseline you now I don't know how much it slowed him down but you could see


that he was limping okay so let's jump to the NFL because that's what a lot of people are going to know about Bo


Jackson so Bo Jackson told the Bucks don't draft me in 1986 they did it anyway so he just didn't play for them


and when that happened and by the the way that was the number one pick in the draft fresh off of a Heisman Trophy and


when that happens and they don't play for you for a year you lose their rights so by sitting in or sitting out


the Bucks had no claim over him so he went back into the draft pool now even


though he did that nobody would touch him because he was playing Major League Baseball um here it is I found the


number when he got drafted by the Royals in the fourth he signed for three years


and a a a million dollars for three years so he had a $300,000 and some change contract for


signing in the fourth round that was just his first contract now when the


bucks when the Bucks drafted him and he turned them down that would have been


that that was more or less slotted the year before and the year after for a 7.6 million doll contract for five


years so he turned down 7.6 million to earn 1 million that's how bad they made


him mad seems to be a trait with him you


know you kind of make him mad he makes you pay for it but yep so since they lost their rights


to him after the draft and he's playing baseball I think the NFL mostly forgot about the guy but in the seventh round


in 1987 the Raiders picked him up and by the way if you're going to pick a team


that would do something like this you'd probably pick the Raiders wouldn't you right that's right that's that's what I


thought about now the thing about the Raiders and and regardless of what you think


about whether it worked or not one of Al Davis's absolute beliefs was that you needed to be fast that was something


that he brought in with his Philosophy from coaching he believed in speed so I


mean that had to appeal to him at least


so they drafted him in the seventh round the Raiders he set he set out a year football they pick him up in the seventh


round and the reason that he agreed to go to them is


what and I don't know how much money they paid him in the seventh round it probably was a minimum contract but so


why did he why did he sign with the Raiders oh because uh I don't know


because they told him he could play baseball absolutely Al Davis told Mark that he


could play baseball he could they would figure yeah they Al Davis said we'll figure out how to make it work if you


have to miss work for us we'll we'll we'll work with you on it so now he's got his chance so think about this um


when this is happening Dion Sanders is still in college right so if you if you're our


age 1987 comes around and and you re you realize


that a dude is about to play Major League Baseball and in the NFL and who had ever seen


that right I mean yeah maybe in the TW 20s and 30s or whatever but in the 80s


and 70s and so forth I mean mind blown this was this was not normal whatsoever


so Al Davis drafts him and the next note under that is what I found the most


interesting out of all of that was that his position they listed him at


as a Raider initially was what fullback oh fullback yeah yeah and why


was that Marcus Valen we all know how these ball players


get possessive about their their um their place on the organizational history so here's Marcus


Allen uh best running back they've probably ever had and now they draft the young kid and so to ease things smooth


things over with om Marcus they list B as a fullback was was was he winding down his career at that point kind of


yeah more or less because you know he ended up with the Chiefs in the early 90s whenever that was and so I I


wouldn't say he was in his prime for sure because you know an NFL running back career is about four years anyway


so he was definitely had reached the peak and was probably on his way down but but he was


still a quality running back I'd say but um all right


so this is where business picks up in the sports world because now people are really


noticing that Bo Jackson's doing some special stuff because in 1987 he joined the Raiders in week eight and back then


I think it was already it was still a 16-week schedule wasn't it Mark already


a 16we season probably seems like stall back played like a 12 or 14 and then they bumped it up to 16 they did the 14


and 16 I'm thinking 16 yeah so so now this


is something y'all both know and um it's in the notes but this is one of the most famous incidents if not the most famous


thing that Bo Jackson ever did in week 12 as a rookie Monday Night Football


what did Bo Jackson do that's probably on YouTube eight million


times he by the way it involves another Gen X guy that we'll talk about eventually I promise


oh I got you what he do M night he he Tred B another gen he that


yeah Casey I don't know if you remember that but that's the year that the BOS was in year one or two I don't know for


the Seahawks I can't remember exactly when he got drafted but they were both


about the same age and on Monday Night Football B ran him over on the what mark one y one or


two yard line and yeah you've seen it Casey yeah so I was watching when that


happened I I love you know I love making it sound like it was some miraculous thing but yeah I was watching when that


happened but yeah I was he ran Bosworth completely over yeah I mean it was it


was wonderful and there was no social media well yeah and that's what I was going to say there was no social media


at the time but just going to school and talking to people what was the sentiment around the nation you think on how many


people were happy with that happening just yeah people hated the B didn't they


didn't they Mark yeah yeah I mean he was in today's world he would be he wouldn't


be that bad he wouldn't be as no not at all yeah but but back then he was you


know he was a Showboat he was blow hard he was a trash talker


and yeah and going we'll do an episode on him for sure cuz I mean he was here's


who I compare him to he was and I read his life story and it's pretty interesting and obviously he's kind of


made amends as a grown man since then because he knows sort of he crossed some


lines but um I would say that BOS was similar to Madonna in this and in this


way Madonna was so scandalous in 1985 and she wouldn't even I mean it it


wouldn't make a mark anywhere now the stuff that she did back then it'd be nothing now and BOS was the same way the


way most most NFL and and college players act now goes right back the the


anything they do that's sort of flamboyant or whatever to draw attention to themselves he's one of the guys that


pioneered that and it was so scandalous uh when he did it you know he was outside of the traditional


Norm so most people hated him that's the point and B trucked him and people loved


it I mean if there had been social media that would have been on Twitter 40 million times by the next morning you


know and people would have been loving it so that was Bose's that was Bose's


coming out party in the NFL he had 221 yards rushing sharing a back field with


Marcus Allen that night two TDS and for good measur he threw in another touchdown uh


receiving at the time that was a Monday Night Football record I don't know if it still is but 221 yards rushing and in


eight games that season he averaged 6.8 yards a carry so isn't that kind of what


Derrik Henry's doing right now isn't he averaging six and a half or something right now in the


NFL I mean I haven't looked lately but I thought I heard somebody say that on the radio I I think you're


right and either way that's a phenomenal number six and a half


I mean as Cowboys fans we know that if the opponent averages six and a half yards a carry against you you're not


going to win ever so um so it's impressive for dude to be a rookie and


run six point eight yards a carry so of course it was probably an advantage for


eight he didn't go to training camp and he had eight weeks to re uh eight weeks of baseball thrown in there and then he


just shows up more fresh and injuryf free than probably anybody on the on the


team so it kind of makes sense I watched I watched a clip today thinking of uh just to kind


of I mean I don't know I unless you're watching a documentary or something you don't see that kind of stuff much today


and so there was some old film on Twitter or something I for about a two-


minute clip and it was a game uh Raiders were playing Denver and he was just


running over guys I mean just it was incredible it's like a it's like a like


a big kid on a on a peeee team he he's must C TV back then I I mean you


couldn't take your eyes off of him because when people say this it kind of makes me mad because it's not it's it's


overused but he could score anytime he touched the ball you don't say that about a ton of guys right I mean it


didn't matter where he got the ball the thing that made him so good was


I mean you saw uh guys run over guys back then


um right right but but the his combination of speed he could run over


you he could run through you or he just run by you or go yeah or uh Juke somebody and go around them and go yeah


right what I was trying to think about was was like Earl Campbell I mean he ran over people but he wasn't gonna outrun


anybody he wasn't going to outrun anybody but right and Hershel Walker was going to


outrun everybody right and he and he was going to truck some people but Bo was like


Hershel Walker with two more notches you know two more two more notches of speed


and power it's incredible must see TV man when he plays


so yeah Casey it's it his highlights are luckily on YouTube and you just I mean I


can watch his baseball even his defensive highlights in baseball I watch them all day and and just when he


trucked people in football it was hilarious so all of that being said is basically a part-time NFL or he made the


Pro Bowl in 1990 um he played Major League Baseball


every season that he played in the NFL for a career he had 5.4 yards of


carry and he averaged nine yards of reception which is a lot for running back yeah especially back then


absolutely yeah because you're I mean uh I guess I should historically say for everybody but since we and our audience


are old it goes without saying that he played in the era of a fullback and two tight ends a ton of times on a ton of


plays on the field so right it's not like it's not like uh these high school offenses where they have five receivers


on the field and everybody runs a go route and then the the running back runs a wheel and everybody's got their back


turned and he catches it for 20 yards no it it wasn't that kind of deal at all he


he'd be a good good fantasy fantasy football league player right now for you


oh my God yeah he'd be a keeper for sure so now we come to the the hip injury so


I was watching when this happened and I remember being just like that didn't look too bad surely he'll be all right I


mean you know it's not a big deal he'll come back uh and by the way for just a kid that loves the Cowboys to be


watching in the Raiders game and thinking oh no bo got hurt I mean that tells you how good he was right there cuz right you know I was all in on Bo


man I just love watching him so with the he's played in the playoffs against the Bengals in 91 and they tackle him and


there's footage of it out there and it dislocated his hip just a absolute


freakish I don't even think I've ever heard of that happening otherwise in the NFL I'm sure it has but I don't remember


it and so as soon as he dislocates that hip apparently what happened was he set it


back in place or something himself okay and what the doctors later


thought happened was when he crammed his own ball back into the


socket there was veins and things in the way that that in surgery they would have moved them out of the way there were


muscle and veins and nerves in the way and he forced it back in there because he's strong enough to Splinter a bat


with his bare hands he forced back in there well what that did was put pressure on those vessels and muscles


and nerves and for whatever reason they didn't go in surgically know that was going on and fix it and that actually C


caused all that tissue to die in that socket right and that was that was that


was part of the reason it didn't recover like it should have right I think it


actually the it cut off the blood supply to his to the fall in his H that's what


I yeah reading about yeah yeah and it was I read it was because they forced it


back in there without doing it surgically I don't know if that's true but that's just something you know


sounds iable to me another interesting fact about this


and this is from an interview from him he says and a doctor backed it up um the


fact that he was so strong that's the only reason reason he dislocated his H


because oh another guy being tackled in the way


would tackle he would have just went down but because his legs were so strong


it basically his leg pulled his hip out of socket while he was still trying to run got I he had so much forward


momentum right and power that they pulled him this way he was going that


way and something had to and it end up being the hip right oh my god when you say it like that that just that actually


sounds sad you know that any other dude would have just dropped and that would have been the end


of the play right right but it was just you know because he was such so frequently strong in his legs that it


actually pulled it out it wasn't a tackle it was his leg muscles in yeah


pulling his hip out that's what I'm trying to say makes sense so what what


cold blooded about is that the Royals cut him they didn't even mess with him at all that next year they just went


they just cut him and I don't know medically what people were saying I'm sure it was a everyday update but they


cut him and dealing with his hip he he missed all of 91 and 92 now if if I'm


not mistaken ultimately he ended up with a new hip at least part of his hip was artificial I don't know if it was the


ball or the socket or both and he came back with a limp and played for the white socks as usually played DH his


Outfield days were over he played DH right played with the white socks in 93


there's footage of him limping around um and in 93 he won the comeback player of the year which is actually an


astronomical achievement considering what he went through physically and he played 93 for them and


won that award and they didn't renew his contract so he went to Anaheim and played one more year in 94 and he and


then he retired so he didn't play anymore after that but there is definitely footage of


him limping around in the white socks uh pinst stripes and by the way back then he was back playing with Frank Thomas if


I'm oh yeah I'm sure that's true I didn't think about that which yeah Frank did play for alurn I looked that up


earlier okay that's what I thought they were and I guess they overlapped at least a year there yeah I think so maybe


a year I don't think they played you know long as teammates but okay they


were both Al guys so all of that to say and I didn't


I mean I didn't do a good job of explaining it but all of that to say the guy was an absolute freak and um he had


a major impact on pop culture as well I'm I put pop culture notes in here because that's part of what we do sports


are part of Pop Culture the the bow NOS Nike campaign was huge I had some Nike


he he what what kind of shoes specifically was was he selling for Nike do y'all


remember yes yes remember the commercials it was him playing different sports but not even playing it was weird


stuff like riding a bike right yeah I was gonna say what's the time frame and I think the commercials were in black


and white it's like bon no cycling bon no tennis and they were he's usually wearing his


trainers yeah doing all the stuff you don't associate him with I mean he basically became a brand himself and I


don't remember anyone else doing that before him yeah other other than a guy named


Michael Jordan they overlapped I mean Jordan came into the nuh NBA in 85 and he got


Nike so he got Nike uh bumped up to the big leagues


because Adidas and Converse were the big shoes he bumped them up and they dovetailed the Jordan phenomenon right


in there with Bo they were okay they were absolute contemporaries and built Nike into what Nike became because they


had two different Avenues to approach it from you got the basketball and then Bo almost covered everything else by being


a two sport guy so it was actually it was brilliant they were in commercials


together I think correct yeah they were in something else together too that I'm about to mention


so okay well I'll go ahead and mention that because the next one is really important to us so Bo was in a it wasn't


his they didn't use their voices but I do remember this Bo and Michael Jordan


and Wayne Gretzky played superhero athletes in a Saturday morning cartoon


called Pro stars and it was Bo and Wayne and


Michael Jordan running around the the country being awesome for kids basically


teach teaching them how to play ball and being like superheroes they didn't voice the characters but they used their names


so Bo had his on Saturday morning Saturday morning


cartoon and then here's the big one I'm I'm winding down I promise here's a big


one his nickname to some people oh I'm I need to was techmo Bow techmo


Bow by Gamers Gamers gave him that nickname because his skills as a running


back in techmoo and we play techmo bowl like they're like it like they were


never going to make video games ever again when we were right back back then the three of us plus a couple of other


people together and right if you called the wrong play and on defense and Bo got


the ball he was gonna score because he was so fast he was Unstoppable you


always tried to get yep you always tried to get the team BS on and what I


remember was uh I don't know what they called it but his ability to shake tacklers off like they just bounced off


of him you remember that like and then he would outrun all of them so I


actually laughed about that out loud out of all the things I read about uh other


than other than him on purpose getting enough points to not have to run


distance in the the caflon was that he was called techmoo because I knew y'all would like


that that's a whole another episode yes heyy I remember playing people in techmo


and it's probably people on this call right now and before the game would ever start you would say okay nobody can pick


the Raiders you remember or nobody you know you would always nobody can pick the


Raiders I'll play you San Francisco against Chicago but nobody's getting the Raiders that that was like the UN you


couldn't have that edge and so you'd have to agree before you ever started these Grudge matches that who you cannot


have you know and so I just y'all know who I'm talk talking about there's somebody I know exactly


you're talking about exactly youd you'd have to say all right you're not getting Bo Jackson if we play I'll play you San


Fran versus you know whoever the same one that I probably used uh a certain kicker


to kick a 60 yard field goal and beat in a match one time it's also the same


person that I watched I watched you one night in a grudge match one of y'all had San Francisco I


don't know who but I saw you pick this guy's first six plays of the game exact


you know you know how if you called a defense exactly right it would shut him down you called This Guy's first three


and out two three and outs to start the game and he was just he was throwing stuff around


the controller around the mobile home we were in the mobile home and he was


throwing stuff around because you three he went three and out the first two times he got the ball all right so by


the way that'll be a topic too we're going to definitely talk about Gen X uh video game all right so let me finish up


Bo is not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame he didn't have the numbers to back that up although he was well on his way


and he's not in he's not in the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame so if anything splitting Sports I've heard


many many journalists say and write that if he played either sport for his whole career he'd be in that Hall of Fame


right or had he played both of them longer as he


10 or 12 years he'd be in one or the other if not both so I think both but


yeah so along with his 1985 Heisman which back then was a very prestigious


deal it's not so much anymore I will say this he's in the Royals Baseball Hall of Fame and and I


thought when I first heard that so what but they only have 30 players in their


Hall of Fame wow and so for a guy who was only there


five seasons that that's a pretty phenomenal um achievement really for to


be one of 30 so and he and he and George Brett uh


were teammates so he was you know on some he played with some quality guys


he's in the College Football Hall of Fame as of 1996 which he should be and


he won the Heisman Trophy in uh 1985 so


here's the big one though that statistically makes him a unicorn and this is absolutely all


you need to know about why he's why he's misnumbered on that list


of greatest athletes he is the only person whoever walked the planet Earth


to play in the Major League Baseball allstar game and the Pro


Bowl well there's nobody else that can say that and that so he's one of


[Laughter] one um I don't think Dion ever played in


a Major League Baseball allstar game so that would I mean Dion has him on a


couple other things we'll talk about yeah play he played in the World Series and an NFL game in the same


day yeah we're gonna talk we're gonna talk we're going to talk Dion um but


even with Dion's achievements he never played in the allstar and the Pro Bowl and that is


that makes B one of one I think I mean I I think that is astronomically


impossible odds to do that for a human being if you really think about [Laughter]


it yeah so that that's kind of my closing shot on Bo Jackson when you


think about how good do you have to be in high school to play college ball okay how good do you have to be in college to


play pro okay how good do you have to be as a Pro to be an Allstar okay now how


good do you have to be in two sports to be in their Allstar games and the answer


is well you have to be Bo Jackson good right so I feel like I talked too much


about stats but the the fact is by reputation alone anybody our


age knows Bo Jackson whether it's through techmobile baseball football or


Nike ads or whatever he is he's def itely a legend and he's definitely on in


my opinion way higher than the SE 72nd best athlete of the 20th century there's


he has to be in the top dozen if not the top


10 yeah that's that's what surprises me he's not at least in the top


15 I can see some of the people that they have ahead of them sure


but U just the fact how hard it is is to to make it to the NFL how hard it is to


make it to the major leagues and you're Allstar B pro bowl allar and you're that far down the list


I don't get it it's funny you bring that up because I'm going to close I'm going to close with this because I looked it


up the odds of a high school football player playing college ball are seven


7% okay the odds of a college football player playing pro football or


1.6% M okay so I couldn't even find these numbers I got my calculator out


and it hurt my head but so if you take every Pro Player and extrapolate out how


many of those there's been that have played in the Pro Bowl you know you you've got a number but then you have to


go back and look at the high school kids and say how many of them ended up being a pro bowler okay so that's a


astronomical number in itself but that's just the NFL so Bas


baseball high school players have a 5.6% rate of playing college ball that's


any NCAA classification 5.6 it and your odds actually go up if


you're in college your odds of getting drafted jump up to


10.5% but you know the numbers shrink but the opportunity grows basically right and so College to being drafted


your chances go up to 10% but because there's so many rounds in the draft your


odds of playing in the major leagues are only 5% okay right so to actually make it to


the major leagues so a high school baseball player correct and so a high school


baseball player has a 05% chance of ever being drafted and playing in the major


leagues basically now so take that 0.5 and take that 1.6 of or yeah 1.6 of that


other number and that's just becoming a pro now what are the odds that you would be a Allstar in both of those Sports and


it's you it's incalculable you couldn't come up with a number I mean you just I


mean yes statistically you could say there's this many players over this many years blah blah blah but um we're


nowhere near 1% chance to do that I mean he is he is a rare the Unicorn for Pro


Sports in my opinion now there are other guys that have played other two sports


obviously nobody ever played it at that you know they don't really play it at that level so we'll talk about Dion in


the next one and we'll talk about what he did that Bo didn't do but um even Dion didn't qualify as an All-Star in


both Sports so no I think that makes Bo between that


and his pop culture influence and so forth I may I think that makes that dude way higher than 72 I mean he was for


people our age we knew how much of a a bad human being he was yeah this sums it up I I just went


to the Kansas City Royals uh Twitter page X page when he was


inducted and this is how they led into it dual sport icon allar game MVP


superhuman living legend the end yeah I think that's the best way to say it living legend


um and you know what I've never heard of Bo being involved in a scandal other than the one that was put on him by


Tampa Bay Bucks you've never heard about Bo getting arrested and U just a stand apparently the thing I didn't mention is


he's on a ton of boards uh Board of Directors for a ton of Charities he raises a bunch of money for kids and for


various causes right just a standup guy and even in retirement you've never heard of him


you know getting in any trouble and people love the guy and I can't think of


anybody on planet Earth that was ever that big and that strong and that fast that's why I think he's one of the top


10 athletes that ever lived in any Century probably so and then he proved


it he's got the numbers to back it up honestly you know the only thing I'm sad about is that he didn't get to play like


10 full seasons in both Sports even if he did them both even if he played 100 baseball games and only eight football


games a year it would have been crazy to see what he could have done in about 10 years doing


that instead of just basically four four or five the shape he was in the natural


shape he was in he of course he's famous for saying I never worked out I don't he


just didn't work out he was naturally


and built that way so yeah if he hadn't had that freak injury how long would he have played and


what would he have done I don't know because you know even


as a yeah even as well yeah I mean even at his age now he's better than some of


them I can think of one team that could use him desperately right now um I wonder if that's if they held that


against against him on the the ranking because he didn't play could be you know I didn't look you're right Casey that's


a really good point I didn't think about but that that very likely could be yeah I mean I just know that when I was


little and really getting into football when it came to college ball Hershel Walker was the guy I knew he was the guy


he was in sports but then Bo came along and I'm not saying there's probably people that think Hershel was better but


man it's just like it's like Hershel was took it to a 10 but then Bo had 11 and


12 also it was as far as faster stronger more


power he just had a couple of more notches that nobody had ever had ever really seen you know and so just an


absolute free and I'm telling you since I played High School baseball I've always been fascinated with the arms


from these Short Stops and outfielders and so forth and dude you can go look at


the highlights he had as good of an arm from the Outfield as you'll ever see ever in the game of Base ball it's just


phenomenal how well he threw Runners out I mean I don't know if he was accurate but he had the power to do it for sure


so some of the prettiest plays you've ever seen were were him throwing people out at home or or whatever so yeah from


all right guys I'm gonna end the recording absolutely I'm gonna end the recording right here but hang on for


just a second all right so anyway we that's our two that's going to be two episodes on Bo guys and I really


appreciate y'all's time and I'm going to stop the recording right here thank you


for joining us on Gen X classic Sports where Nostalgia meets The Thrill of the game tune in next time for more


insightful discussions and memorable moments brought to you by Pine Street Productions until then stay passionate


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