 Now, with the firing of Cliff Kingsbury yesterday, there are now one, two, three, four, five available head coaching jobs across the league. And I believe we got a couple more to add to the list once the playoffs are done. Oh, yes, I do. Now, University of Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh, he's just like, you know what? I'm gonna just put some drama in here and mix it in because he reportedly interviewed virtually for the Broncos gig on Monday. So we know the Broncos have requests out to Sean Payton, Dan Quinn, Demico Reigns, and Raheem Morris, which is interesting. And then you got the Panthers, they're interviewing former Colts head coach, Frank Reich, and that would be a cute storyline there that's a homecoming for him. He was the first quarterback to ever start a game for that organization. But then you have this thing where it's like, oh, you want a route for Reich, but Steve Wilkes, he needs to get that job, in my opinion. I think Darius Butler will agree with me as he joins us shortly. And I think it would be really nice to see Tepper come out, Tepper who was missing from action to wrap up the regular season, rip up that interim tag, light up, match to that and get rid of it, and let Wilkes, as his players are saying, we think he deserves a shot to lead this team, but we'll see Tepper, not a settler, not someone who wants to settle. If, literally, if Sean Payton wasn't with the Saints and didn't get traded, that's where I would put Sean Payton because I think Tepper is the kind of guy who's like, here's the checkbook. How many zeros do you need to be here? And I think that's very important to Sean Payton and that he could break the book, the bank for him. If it wasn't an inner division thing, I could see that being a fit. And it's all really where Sean Payton gonna go is Jim Harbaugh, the second most likely candidate to land wherever he wants. Does he want that Bronco's job? Lots of questions in the air. We will keep you updated with anything else that might happen this morning, but we do wanna talk about that job in the desert for a second. Let's bring in Matt Hamilton here. Hamilton who owns a home, because he's an idiot. Anybody's a homeowner. I don't know what anybody's thinking out there. It's really hard work. It really is. There's constantly something going wrong and it's a lot of fun. Like, is anybody out there, like anybody heard of a condo, an apartment, having someone to call maintenance people to take care of things for like, when you have a home, it is a terrifying venture. I love how you are figuring this out right now before our eyes. It's fun to watch. You're growing up. We're trying to find gas lines and then there's furnaces and then there's humidifiers, the furnaces that can flood your house. I've learned more about home ownership and it's just not suitable for me. I need a door person and I need someone else to be, like obviously if you could just absolve me of any accountability, that is the sort of world I wanna live in. That says a lot. I'm not even gonna go there. You said everything there is to say. I don't think you're surprised about that. All right, but let's, on the matter of accountability, let's venture into this world. Remember the store venture? Anybody have those in Chicago? They used to be a store called Venture. It was kind of like a Kmart. It was like a black and white stripe. Anyone? Has anyone out there ever heard of the store venture? Hit me up. Oh, come on. Harlem Irving Plaza in Chicago. That's where they had it at the hip. Okay. Loopy I am this morning, but we have to talk about this. Cliff Kingsbury, Kyler Murray, Steve Keim, Michael Bidwill conversation. Listen, I was in Rwanda I told you I go on to visit the gorillas and I'm put into a group. I told this story on McAfee. I'm put into a group and there's 500 people there on any given day and they put them into groups of which family are you going to see of these silverback gorillas? And I, you know, I have my shades on, I got my hat on, I'm whatever. And I sit in my group and there's probably like eight of us and I hear, okay. And I go, what? And it's Michael Bidwill. And I go, wait, what? And there's, you know, how do I kismetly get put into this group? And there was so much excitement and hope for the season with this Arizona team cause there's so much talent on this squad, Hamilton. And then this year happens and now Steve Keim has walked away a longtime friend of Bidwill that cannot be easy that it's got to be hard. And Cliff Kingsbury who he minted to get paid up the wazoo till 2027. It's unbelievable. And I don't know, I would love to know what is the moment Bidwill this year was like, you know what? We're going to cut ties with them. What was the one failing moment that existed this year that didn't exist last year? So let's talk about it. Your thoughts on the attractiveness of the job. Is it more attractive because you have a probable quarterback under contract for the next six years, one that has the talent to do it? Or is it scary you because you have a quarterback who's the third highest paid in the NFL already? Has a bunch of question marks about him. And now has a torn ACL he's coming off of. Yeah, I think it was clear. I don't know if there was one specific moment but all the issues that we saw them last year carried over to this season. There was a clear disconnect between Cliff and Kyler. And, you know, we don't know enough to say whose fault it is or place blame or anything like that. But the organization, they clearly backed Kyler Murray last off season. I know they extended anybody, but once you give that contract out to the quarterback, to the player, that's the one that's hardest to get out of. And then when they removed that independent study clause, that was a clear indication that, hey, we're siding with Kyler Murray, he's our guy. And when you look at this as a potential coach, I think if you're an offensive minded head coach, you have to love the potential of Kyler Murray at 25 years old with the arm talent, with the mobility, with all the things he can do. He's a unicorn at the position. And I think you want that, you want your hands on that type of player and you think, hey, I can get this guy straight now and we could do some special things together. So that sounds like somebody with a healthy ego and it reminds me of Coach Sean Payton going and saying, James is my guy. Yeah. Coach Sean Payton said, you know what? Number one overall pick, he can throw for 5,000 yards and I bet you I can curtail those interceptions. Like he said, you fall in love with the talent and the potential of what you see in the quarterback and can you make him your franchise guy. And towards the end of James being healthy when he was on the field with Sean Payton calling the shots there, he looked better, didn't he? So like there is, there's an ego that it takes to say, oh, I can get the best out of Kyler. It was Cliff Kingsbury's problem. He couldn't, you know, he was a two player friendly coach. He had Patrick Mahomes in college. We're seeing those takes out of the woodwork. He couldn't win with Patrick Mahomes, blah, blah, blah, all of that. And you look at it objectively, there are concerns here. Kyler had his worst year objectively. Worst winning percentage, yards per game, worst passer rating of his career. When you bring up the concern of the ACL tear, long-term, you know, I asked you before the show, like who are quarterbacks that have come off an ACL tear they're defined, right? Like your first answer was Tom Brady. Well, obviously he plays a little bit differently than Tom Brady, but you know, or Joe Buro, but you look at it from the mobility standpoint with what we're seeing with medicine and everything going on today. You see what Saquan's doing this year, coming off an injury like that. We've seen runners in the past like Jamal Charles, Adrian Peterson, they bounce back immediately. So I'm not really worried about the ACL as much. I am worried about what you've heard all year and what we know, Hamilton, about Kyler Murray. Like I defended him a lot because I also fell in love with the talent. But he's out there and he's, you know, arguing with his best wide receiver who's got questions as well. But, Hammy, what do you make of that? Cause it's not just physical. It's not just what he can do on the field. It's can somebody get through to this quarterback? Can someone, you know, say to him, take my calls? And it becomes a question of, was the play calling awful? And so Kyler was like, I need to step up and do what I want to do. Or is Kyler just like, I'm awesome and I'm going to do what I want and you have to follow my lead out there. And I'm just going to free ball at the whole time. It's free ball appropriate, I'm sorry. I think freelance would be more appropriate, but no, I think you hit it right on the head. Continue. I think that's the biggest concern that any potential head coach has here is, and I think that's where you have to kind of, you have to kind of do your homework and talk to people in that organization and get a feel for what was going on with Kyler Murray and where that issue might lie. Because as we said, the town's tremendous, but there's clearly something that wasn't working there. And I think the removal of the independent study clause, I know you're so much backlash, you know, but you're handing over that type of money. He's the third highest paid quarterback in the NFL to put that in. If you do still have reservations, I think it was, you know, it was something if Kyler agreed to it, I think it was fair to put that in and to hold some type of accountability. And the fact that that was in there to begin with tells me that there were things that Kyler was not doing that the organization felt he needed to do. It's super sus. Who's going to find that attractive over a job that might not even be open yet, a team that's going to the playoffs and maybe one are done. I think there's two teams that I can think of right now that if they're one and done in the playoffs, wild card weekend, those head coaches might be moved because those teams are ready to go. And you know, you can say a coach and I'll name him even like a McCarthy or a Brandon Staley, like you got us here. You got us the playoffs with so much adversity, but if they're bounced in the first round, there has to be a thought of, yes, I love this person. I'm dating my senior year of college and they bring, they carry my books to my class and they did such a great job and they stuck with me when I was going through puberty and all of that, but when it comes to who I'm going to the prom with, if the hottest guy in school is going to ask me on the date, like I'm going to say, yes, like if the quarterback for the football team is going to come and say, like come to the prom. So if you have like a Sean Payton or Jim Harbaugh swoop in, that's a conversation that these front offices have to have, but it also comes with trading picks and it also comes with writing really hefty checks to those potential quarterback or potential coaches for those attractive quarterbacks that are in the playoffs.