 guess what? It's another Don segment. We're doing the list, Mike. I don't care if you don't like it. The Daily Don. I'll fight to the death for this list. It's The Daily Don show. He makes lists. Take it away. All right. Today, the top five players to play for multiple New York teams. Now, before you get freaked out, the one caveat I will throw out there, guys, and I think this is fair. They had to contribute in both places. Like example, Duke Snyder played for the Dodgers and the Mets. He played a handful of games for the Mets. Yogi Berra, a handful of games for the Mets. Willie Mays, 135 games for the Mets. I'm not talking that. I'm talking about a guy that played for multiple New York teams and had a pretty significant contribution to both. This is easy. All right. Michael, let me get rolling here. I don't often have a lot to offer. Okay. True. Let's start out with Daryl Strawberry. Daryl Strawberry does make the list. Now, I have him at number three, and here's why. Eight years with the Mets. We know all the things he accomplished there. Rookie of the year, seven-time All-Star, part of the 86 World Series. Now, Michael could probably give a better example than I can because I watched it a little bit from afar. Five seasons with the Yankees, in which he averaged only 46 games a year. But Michael, his contributions, leadership, three championship teams in that span in 96, 98 and 99. He had a major contribution, maybe not necessarily in statistics and games played, but he really put his fingerprints on those three championships in the five years he's there with the Yankees. I have it at number three. How about Gooden? Yeah, Doc Gooden, I actually have it at number two. Now, we know what he did with the Mets, but with the Yankees, Michael, again, who's only 10 games above 500 at 24 and 14, but Michael, he pitched a no-hitter. Which he had never done with the Mets, and it was just another player that pitched for the Mets, whether it be Nolan Ryan, Tom Siever, that goes ahead and pitches his no-hitter after he left the Mets. Now, the Mets have never had a no-hitter, right? Well, they have, and you don't count it. Not if there was replay. Johann Santana, but there wasn't, so it's a no-hitter. I can't believe he decided to go down that road, but they have, but so I got Doc Gooden there. How about a man known as Casey Stengel? Oh, look at you. Now, Casey Stengel, Peter may not even realize this, is contributed to every team ever in New York, right? Managed the Yankees and the Mets, played for the Dodgers and the Giants, but he's not on the list. He's not on the list. You can argue he's number one on the list. How about, he didn't do that much for the Giants, but was on the Giants, Don Maynard? No, because he got cut by the Giants. I know. He really played. Yeah, but he wore a uniform. I understand that, so you completely ignored the beginning of the five when I said he had to make a contribution to both teams. All right, how about Sal Magley? No. How about, I don't know if you'd say that he played well or had a case of a kid? No, it was only one year with the Knicks, but it played well. I thought about it. I thought it was some Pat Lafontaine scored 23 goals with the Rangers, but it was only one year, so I didn't, I didn't count Pat Lafontaine either or Willie Mays for that matter. Again, it's just 135 games went to a World Series with the Mets, but nope, not the top five. Didn't Kenyon Martin play for the Knicks? I believe he should be there. I got one. No. Here we go. Yes. I got one, I think. Could be number one, too. Okay. David Cohnay. Yeah, David Cohn's number one. Yeah, really is. There you go. Let me just throw a war at you, okay? He spent seven, he spent seven years with the Mets, six with the Yankees, so it's pretty evenly distributed. Split. Beautiful. And of course, he won 20 games with the Yankees, pitched a perfect game with the Yankees, and we know what he accomplished with the Mets. His Met War for his career was 19.4. His career war with the Yankees was 20.3. That's a pretty even split in years in contributions, so I've got David Cohnay number one. So what do we have left? So good number two, straw three. You need four and five. One of these guys, again, it's more of an even split. He wasn't a Hall of Famer by any stretch, but he had an even split with the two teams. And the other one is a Hall of Famer, and it had equal years played for two different teams. Now it's just players, so I can't say parcels, right? Yeah, I can't say parcels. No, okay. These are players. I'm just impressed that all we've done over the years, Peter was able to come back with Casey Stengel. He didn't make the list. That was his low point, and now it's his high point. He was a part of every single team in the city and didn't make the list. He once lifted his cap when he was at the Brooklyn Dodgers, Peter, and a bird flew out. He had a bird under his cap. That's why they didn't think he'd be a good manager, because he was kind of a clown as a player. Did you say there's a bird loose? What happened? I'll kill that bird. I was in the booth in 1928, and I said, there's a bird loose. There's a bird now. Loose. There's a bird loose in the mall at Abbotsfield. Were there malls in 1928? That's right. Are these baseball players or? I'm going to tell you. One baseball. No more baseball. No more hockey. No hockey. One football. One basketball. One football. Let's go to the basketball here. It's going to be an old school, I believe it's Michael. Is there an old school net turn, Nick, we're forgetting? Peter's onto something. He's sniffing. I'm feeling old school here. I'm feeling Dr. Jay Day's. I feel like we got to go back. He's getting warm. I got one. Yes. Michael Ray Richardson. No. Close. The net's in the nicks. He did. Dad, he did. There's a lot of players that played for both teams. We could be here all day with players that played for multiple teams, not in the top five. But you're right there. You're right there. You just don't think of a very much as a net. You mostly think of him as a Nick, but it was actually an even split. Four years in New York, four years in New Jersey. And you're telling me what I think. Hold on. And I said there was one football? Yes. How about Pepper Johnson? No, not enough with the Jets. No Leonard Marshall either. Not enough with the Jets. But there's a guy. A guy. That's close. Could it be? I'm looking something up. I don't care if it's in or out. A net and a Nick. He also played for other teams. But Nick fans love him. Bernard King. That's right. Four years with the Nick's average 26.5 points per game. Four years with the Nets. Remember he started with the Nets for the first three years and then played his final year in New Jersey. Average 20.2 per game in his four years with New Jersey. But our King number five. Yeah, there it is. 1977. How about how about Jumbo Elliott? That's right. Jumbo Elliott. Wow. Look at us. Eight years with my giants. Want to Super Bowl the Giants in 1990. Six years with the Jets and was on the team that went to the championship game in 1998. But pretty fair split between the Jets and the Giants and contributed greatly to both. So Bernard King number five. Jumbo Elliott number four. Straw number three. Doc number two. And David Cohn number one. Today was a beautiful rate on that. Beautiful list today. Right. We named a lot of people. I could have been on the list. Do you think any of the people that were mentioned belonged on the list? Since you made players and Joe Tory to. But it was just it was. If you want manager because he was there if you go manager. He's number one. Number one. Although he didn't do much. How strong I feel about how strongly I feel about him. Well you've gone to school on Casey. That's right. Casey Casey would not be number one because as much as I think he helped sell tickets in flushing. Not not not a lot of wins there. Yeah. But he built the foundation. He got people to get go there and so they can they could build at their own pace. Oh I just would be there player and manager. Yeah. That could be another list. Although we're kind of giving Yogi Yogi play for the Mets and the Yankees and that is the Mets and the Yankees. Yes. No he's he's done. Coming up.