DubA169 wrote:
and Tony kornheiser said that it would be great if lebron went to the clippers and it would be even better than him going to new york. really? like reeeally now? i'm done watching ESPN for the next month. worse than fox news
In 2008, when Tony Kornheiser was a Monday Night Football commentatorfor ESPN, Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers once sat downwith him for a pre-game production meeting.
It would be an extreme understatement to say that Rodgers came away unimpressed.
In an interview with ESPN Radio in Milwaukee, Rodgers went off onKornheiser and said he was embarrassingly unprepared for his job.
"You know who was better than Tony Kornheiser? Dennis Miller was tentimes better," Rodgers said, via SportsRadioInterviews.com. "DennisMiller was a great comedian, but one of the worst Monday Night Footballguys ever. And he was ten times better than Tony Kornheiser. His stuffwas actually funny. Tony wasn't funny at all. He did absolutely noresearch. We'd sit in those production meetings and he would addabsolutely nothing to the conversation. I'd be like, 'What are we doinghere? This is stupid.'"
Rodgers praised Monday Night Football play-by-play man Mike Tirico ascoming into production meetings thoroughly prepared. Kornheiser? Not somuch.
"You get in there with Tony and he's asking you all these dumbquestions that have no application to the game you are playing oranything you are doing," Rodgers said. "He's terrible. . . . I don'tthink he's funny. I don't think he's insightful. I don't think knows,really, anything about sports."
Most football fans regard Ron Jaworski as one of the top analysts inthe business, but Rodgers isn't particularly thrilled with Jaworski,either.
"I like him, but, when I was coming out, he did the worst segment inthe history of TV about me talking about my fundamentals," Rodgers saidof Jaworski. "It was not even close to anywhere near my fundamentals.The first time I met him, someone introduced me to him and I said,'Yeah I know him. He's the guy who ripped me before the draft.' Therest of the night he told me how great I was. I was like, 'I know yoursong and dance.' And now he loves me."
The whole interview, in which Rodgers criticized other ESPN employeesand took a shot at the Detroit Lions, is well worth listening to.Rodgers comes across as an entertaining and engaging player who's notafraid to speak his mind. When he retires, he'd be perfect for theMonday Night Football booth. Or as co-host of Pardon the Interruption.