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Toucher & Rich Trivia: Adolfo vs. Wallach

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BOSTON (CBS) –  98.5 The Sports Hub’s Jon Wallach is so good at the clarinet, that Fred Toucher offered up his coworker to Boston College to play “Take Me Out To The Ballgame” for the seventh inning stretch of this Saturday’s baseball game against Notre Dame.

The only problem is that Wallach doesn’t want to do it, and things actually got pretty testy in studio this week when the topic was brought up.

Fred offered Wallach a way out Thursday morning: all Wallach had to do was beat Adolfo in a round of Toucher & Rich Trivia, to see who has more knowledge about Boston’s popular morning show.

If Wallach loses, he must play “Take Me Out To The Ballgame” during the seventh inning stretch of the Boston College baseball game on Saturday. If he wins, Fred won’t ask him to do anything clarinet-related for a full calendar year.

Here are the questions:

1. How many children does Mike Lockhart have and what are their genders?

2. What Atlanta radio station did Rich and Fred both work at?

3. Who said the famous line “Hey guys hey”?

4. Name the band Rich was in that toured with Vince Neil.

5. At what age did Fred lose his virginity?

6. What town did Dan O’Brien grow up in?

7. What month and year did T&R start on The Sports Hub?

8. Who was the first of the four major sports teams in Boston to win a championship in the Sports Hub era?

9. What name does Mike Lockhart have tattooed on his forearm?

10. Why did Sports Illustrated write about Fred?

Listen below for the answers and play along to test your T&R knowledge!


Toucher & Rich: Health Code Violation Roulette

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BOSTON (CBS) – A new article in the Boston Globe that published the city’s health code violations has ruined some of Rich Shertenlieb’s favorite restaurants, now that he knows how filthy some of them are.

(You can search them here, at your own risk of course)

On 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Toucher & Rich show Wednesday morning, the guys decided to play a little game.

They took 10 calls from listeners, who revealed their least favorite member of the popular morning show, and the loser had to eat a meal from Boston’s most health-violated restaurant.

It was a neck-and-neck race between Adolfo and Jon Wallach, but in the end it was Adolfo that garnered the most votes.

Listen below to hear the segment:

Later in the show, Adolfo had to make good on the bet and eat the violated chicken meal — unless Jon Wallach threw him a life preserver.

Fred and Rich’s conscience started to get the best of them, and they would have felt really guilty if they made Adolfo eat that chicken and possibly get sick, so they offered him a way out.

Rich proposed that Wallach sing and do a karaoke version of “The Curly Shuffle,” and if he was willing to do that for his coworker then they would left Adolfo off the hook.

Wallach, given his musical background and being the stand-up guy that he is, saved Adolfo with his sweet rendition of “The Curly Shuffle.”

Watch the video below:

Red Sox Report Card From Jon Wallach

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BOSTON (CBS) — Two months of the season are in the books, and the Red Sox are in the basement of the AL East.

The Sox, after going 10-19 in the month of May, find themselves in dead last in their division, and they own the second-worst record in the American League and the fifth-worst record in all of baseball.

And when the Sox lost in painful fashion Sunday afternoon in Texas, 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Jon Wallach was clearly fed up.

So on Monday morning, on the first of June, Toucher & Rich asked Wallach to give out grades on Red Sox players for the first two months of action. It’s not a comprehensive, complete grading system, but the message is pretty clear.

Suffice it to say, the team GPA is not very impressive.

DH – David Ortiz
Grade: C-/D+

“He’s hitting occasionally, but he’s hitting under .230. I think the C-/D+ is being generous. Big Papi has not had a good year.”

LF – Hanley Ramirez
Grade: C+

“He had a tremendous April. His fielding had been god-awful. Average that out, it’s a C. I’ll give him props for hitting 10 home runs in April.”

2B – Dustin Pedroia
Grade: C+/B-

“He probably has been the most consistent player offensively from beginning to now. I sure wish he’d get angry.”

1B – Mike Napoli
Grade: D

“Napoli, except for one hot streak, has been awful.”

3B – Pablo Sandoval
Grade: C-/D+

“He won’t hit right-handed. He’s being paid $95 million and all of a sudden can’t field a baseball. Horrible signing.”

RF – Shane Victorino
Grade: G
“He’s been horrible. Not an F — G. Victorino’s a $13 million ball player that can’t play more than five games in a row, replaced by a $72 million ball player that’s not ready to play right field in Rusney Castillo.”

SS – Xander Bogaerts
Grade: C
“Xander’s not been bad. He’s not been great, but he’s not been bad.”

CF – Mookie Betts
Grade: C
“I see the future. I think he’s going to be good. … Betts is a guy who will show better. But for now, he gets a C like everybody else.”

SP – Clay Buchholz
Grade: F
“I hate Clay Buchholz. F.”

SP – Rick Porcello:
Grade: F

SP – Joe Kelly
Grade: F
“F-minus!”

SP – Wade Miley
Grade: F
“Screw him and his hair! F!”

SP – Steven Wright
Grade: C/C-

“He’s a knuckleballer. He’s going to go 12-12 his entire career.”

Manager – John Farrell
“John Farrell has done everything possible to try to shake this team up. He’s sat players down, he’s changed the top five in the order seven or eight times in the last two weeks, he’s hit every button and thrown every lever and has gotten nothing out of his team. Part of being a manager, in my opinion, is to be able to get more out of your team. And he certainly has enough talent on that roster to be better than seven games under .500.”

Listen to all of Wallach’s comments below:

Toucher & Rich: Wallach Performs ‘The Monster Mash’ With Celtics Dancers In Studio

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BOSTON (CBS) – The Boston Celtics dance team is holding preliminary auditions next Saturday, so today in studio Fred Toucher, Rich Shertenlieb and Jon Wallach were joined by dancers Victoria and Ashley.

Fred opens the interview talking about his former girlfriend, who was a cheerleader for the Atlanta Falcons. Toucher & Rich also had the gals settle a debate from earlier in the show about men and chest hair.

But before they left, Fred and Rich had a little surprise for Jon Wallach (don’t they always?).

Jon Wallach, who’s been on somewhat of a greatest hits tour recently with his clarinet rendition of a baseball classic and a cover of “The Curly Shuffle,” showed off his musical talents once again by singing a Halloween favorite.

Why Halloween, you ask? The NBA season kicks off around that time, and Rich wants to give the Celtics something they can use on the Jumbotron to pump up the crowd — another “Gino Time” if you will.

Jon Wallach, with the Celtics dancers behind him giving it their all, serenaded the Boston airwaves with “The Monster Mash.”

Is there anything Wallach can’t do?

The Wallach Head Invades NFL Headquarters, Photobombs ESPN’s Live Shot

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BOSTON (CBS) –  A swarm of media members descended upon 345 Park Avenue in Manhattan on Tuesday for the Tom Brady appeal hearing at NFL headquarters.

During the Toucher & Rich show yesterday, after watching the insane amount of coverage the event was receiving on ESPN and the NFL Network, Fred and Rich realized they missed out on a golden opportunity for the Wallach Head to make an appearance and invade every network’s live shot.

(Photo by 98.5 The Sports Hub)

(Photo by 98.5 The Sports Hub)

But as usual, loyal fans of the show came up with a solution.

A few listeners sent T&R a Boston-to-NYC bus schedule, and Rich soon realized that the Wallach Head could make it in time for the nightly news if Adolfo left immediately after the show. So Fred and Rich armed Adolfo with some cash, a bus ticket and the Wallach Head, and the race was on at that point.

Adolfo braved the elements of a long bus ride, a crazy cab driver inside a taxi with no air conditioning, and was able to crash the ESPN live shot.

Watch the video:

Some photos:


 

Listen below to hear Adolfo tell the story of his trip down there:

Jon Keller: Boston 2024 Olympic Bid Improved, But Financial Risk Still A Concern For Taxpayers

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A day after a revamped pitch was made for the Boston 2024 Olympics, WBZ-TV’s Jon Keller spoke with Jon Wallach and Dan Roche (filling in on the Toucher & Rich Show) about the potential for the Olympics coming to Boston.

“I am not against the Boston Olympics. I am highly skeptical of that and any other grandiose, massive urban redevelopment scheme, as someone who commuted through the Big Dig for 14 years of my life. I do confess to that,” Keller said. “The good news about the new revised bid is it shows that Boston 2024 has been paying attention to at least some of its critics.”

Keller noted that some venues have been changed, and “it shows that they’ve been paying attention at these community meetings.”

While the event planning seems to have improved, Keller remains skeptical about the dollars and cents of the proposal.

“Boston 2024 is in hot water with the USOC and the International Olympic Committee, precisely because a lot of what they put forward in their initial bid that got them designated as the potential U.S. bidder turned out to be bogus. They said that there was widespread public support for this — oops, that turned out to be false. They said that this was going to be a walkable, compact games. Well, it no longer is. … Good luck trying to walk to New Bedford for the sailing. I hope you bring plenty of bottled water.”

“In fairness to Steve Pagliuca, who’s a man of integrity, and John Fish, the original driving force behind this, these are not crooks. I mean, some of the social media portrayal of these people has been over the top. And Pagliuca came right up to the edge of candor yesterday in their roll-out of the new plan when he said that ultimately voters are going to have to decide how much risk they want to shoulder.”

Keller noted that “people would love to have the Olympics here if there were no major financial risk to the taxpayer, and there’s no way they’re ever going to be able to make that claim.”

Roche, Keller’s colleague at WBZ-TV, asked Keller what he would need in order to lend support to the idea of Boston 2024.

“An iron-clad guarantee that the taxpayers and the city and the state won’t get saddled with horrendous, crushing debt,” Keller responded. “Look, we’re still digging out from the debt and the wasteful spending that accompanied the Big Dig. Remember, they said that was going to cost about $2 billion. With interest payments on the debt, the projection is it’s going to wind up costing about $27 billion. We can’t afford that again, or anything like that. So if you take that off the table, if the International Olympic Committee were to do what they did in L.A. for the 1984 games and say, ‘OK, you’re not on the hook for cost overruns. We’ll pay for it,’ then bring on the Games. Absolutely.”

Listen to the full discussion below:

Toucher & Rich Draft: Worst Acting Performance By An Athlete

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BOSTON (CBS) — The Toucher & Rich Draft returned on Friday, with Rich Shertenlieb, Dan Roche and Jon Wallach competing in a new category: Worst acting performance by an athlete.

It’s a tough category, only because there are so many options to choose from.

But the guys could only pick three, so here’s how the draft went.

Roche

1. Shaquille O’Neal, “Kazaam”
2. Mike Ditka, “Kicking And Screaming”
3. Lawrence Taylor, “The Waterboy”

Rich

1. Dennis Rodman, “Double Team”
2. Wilt Chamberlain, “Conan The Destroyer”
3. Brandon Meriweather, “Ghetto Celebs”

Wallach

1. Brett Favre, “There’s Something About Mary”
2. Dan Marino, “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective”
3. Patrick Ewing, Charles Barkley, Muggsy Bogues, Larry Johnson and Shawn Bradley, “Space Jam”

Listen to the full segment below!

Toucher & Rich: What Do Red Sox Do Now?

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BOSTON (CBS) — The Red Sox lost. Again. That makes it seven straight, and they’re now 11 games out of first place in the American League East.

Optimism existed as recently as two weeks ago, but that has been obliterated.

With that in mind, Fred Toucher and Jon Wallach debated what the Red Sox can do and should do before the July 31 trading deadline.

Given that the Sox aren’t overloaded with highly desirable assets, Wallach suggested trading Junichi Tazawa.

“He’s 29 years old, he has one arbitration year left, maybe you get something for him,” Wallach said.

“I wouldn’t move Tazawa. He’s arguably your best pitcher,” Fred said. “Ideally, you would like to at least compete for a wild card next season, so I would keep Tazawa.”

Fred and Wallach agreed that there’s no chance that the Red Sox could get anything at all in return for Mike Napoli or Justin Masterson, and that the Red Sox would be better off with anybody else taking the roster spots of those two players.

Still, the Sox don’t have many moves to make.

“Right now you just trot your kids out and see what they can do,” Fred said. “I don’t know why they haven’t, and I don’t know why Jackie Bradley Jr. is not getting a shot — at least to showcase him. He’s doing everything he can in Triple-A. I would bring him up, I would play everyone. You’re stuck with Sandoval, you’re stuck with Ramirez, you’ve got Pedroia and you’ve got Bogaerts and Betts, and then everything else is up for grabs. I’d play Swihart, I’d catch him as much as possible. I guess you could move your backup catcher … .”

Fred and Wallach then debated comments from Ben Cherington. The Red Sox GM said that the big picture view doesn’t change, despite the last-place team. Fred took issue with the suggestion, but Wallach said it’s all about appearances.

“Part of this is PR,” Wallach said. “If you’re stuck with that and you’re not going to make any moves, at least the illusion of you trying remains. For Cherington to say, ‘You know what, we’re going to bring up the kids, this is the third time in four years, the most expensive seats in baseball,’ it factors in here. There are a lot of people spending a lot of money to go to the ballpark, and if you’re telling them, ‘That’s it, we’re kicking this away for the third time in four years,’ that’s not good business.”

Listen to the full discussion below:


98 Mile: VOTE Jon Wallach Vs. Marc Bertrand

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BOSTON (CBS) — The final first-round rap battle took place Wednesday morning, and it was a doozy.

Morning headline man and reigning 98 Mile champion Jon Wallach squared off against midday host Marc Bertrand. And things, as always, got a little ugly.

This was perhaps the most-hyped battle of the first round, as Rich Shertenlieb heard both raps ahead of time and promised they were exceptional.

They did not disappoint.

Bertrand — a former headline man-turned-host — went hard after Wallach. “Been wasting most of your life reading off the Sports Hub headlines,” Bertrand rapped to Coolio’s “Gangsta’s Paradise.”

Wallach went with “The Humpty Dance” as his bed, shouting, “Are you aware your career is all because of me?” while also throwing in some UMass digs.

The winner of this match will join James Stewart, Rich Keefe and Fred Toucher in the second round.

We are unable to post the raps due to copyright restrictions, but if you heard them on T&R, vote below!

Thanks for voting! Toucher & Rich will reveal the winner on Thursday morning’s show at 7 a.m.!

98 Mile VOTE: Fred Toucher vs. Jon Wallach

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BOSTON (CBS) — The battle for the remaining spot in the finals took place Monday morning on Toucher & Rich, and it was a personal one.

Fred Toucher and Jon Wallach, two men who sit in the same room for four hours every single weekday morning, squared off in the second semifinal matchup of the contest. Wallach got here by beating Marc Bertrand, while Fred advanced out of the first round by beating Marshall Hook.

Rich Keefe defeated Jimmy Stewart in the other semifinal matchup, putting Keefer Madness in the finals.

In this matchup, Fred and Wallach didn’t hold back.

Fred Toucher (Original photo by Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images)

Fred Toucher (Original photo by Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images)

Fred went with the Beastie Boys’ “Root Down” as his backup track, while Wallach went with the Wrecks N Effect classic “Rump Shaker.”

Voting is closed!

Thanks for voting! Toucher & Rich will announce the winner on Tuesday’s show at 7 a.m.

Hurley: Roger Goodell Demonstrates Inability To Serve As Competent, Neutral Arbitrator

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BOSTON (CBS) — On the morning after the release of the transcript of Tom Brady’s appeal hearing, CBSBostonSports.com’s Michael Hurley joined the Toucher & Rich program to discuss the nitty-gritty of the proceedings.

Some key points.

On Roger Goodell’s abilities as arbitrator…

“If a judge were to assess the job that Roger Goodell did as an arbitrator, I think he would probably retire.”

“I’ve been tough on Goodell for the past few months … because he’s made some clearly bad decisions, he’s made some really unfair decisions, he’s been proven to be a liar by Judge Barbara Jones in the Ray Rice case. But reading the testimony, I think he’s actually not very smart. Every time he interrupted the testimony, he asked questions which were basically alerting the room that he was still there.

“For example:

BRADY: When I felt them that night, I liked them so we went with them.
COMMISSIONER GOODELL: ‘That night’ was what?
BRADY: The night of the game.
COMMISSIONER GOODELL: OK

“And then there was this:

REISNER: And do you know whether in the six months prior to January 19, 2015, you had ever communicated with John Jastremski by telephone?
BRADY: Yes.
REISNER: How many times?
BRADY: I think once or twice.
COMMISSIONER GOODELL: Just so I am clear, once or twice in the six months prior to the Championship Game?
BRADY: Yes.

“One more:

COMMISSIONER GOODELL:  Did you guys go into the — did you ever walk through to observe the stadium on Saturday?
BRADY:  Yes.
COMMISSIONER GOODELL:  You did?
BRADY:  Yes.
COMMISSIONER GOODELL:  Yes?
BRADY: Yes.

“What?! What is happening?”

On Goodell repeating behavior from the Ray Rice ordeal…

“Goodell’s ruling to uphold his suspension, everyone sort of ate it up, and they talked about the cell phone destruction, but in that ruling, Goodell basically summarized Brady’s comments about his increased communications with John Jastremski after the championship game as, ‘Oh we were only talking about the footballs for the Super Bowl.’ That’s what Goodell wrote in his ruling, and yet, if you read the transcript, Brady talked at length, saying essentially, ‘Yes, we knew the allegations were out there, the reports were out there, I heard it on the radio, I talked to Jastremski immediately and we talked a lot about it.’

“He never denied that he talked to Jastremski about it, but Goodell painted it as this shady hiding of it. And that is a pattern for Goodell. When you say something behind closed doors, he’s going to mischaracterize it when he goes public with it, and I think that was probably the biggest takeaway — that he didn’t learn his lesson from the Ray Rice situation. He still mischaracterized behind-closed-doors, what he thought was going to be off-the-record conversations of the person he’s punishing. And I think if anything should be the big story, that should be it.”

On Ted Wells’ performance…

“For all that money Ted Wells made, he came up short in doing his job, and he can’t admit it. And when you read the testimony in the transcript, he still can’t admit it. He still relies on ‘the totality of the evidence.’ Even though the science has questions, even though everything has holes in it, he still relies on this ‘totality of evidence’ and that it was the ‘worst decision in 40 years’ for Brady to not give up his phone. You didn’t have access to his phone. You couldn’t have it.”

On why Jim McNally and John Jastremski weren’t called as witnesses…

“From reading that transcript, he was so well-coached for that cross. From the very first question, it was, ‘I believe that could be true,’ ‘I don’t recall,’ ‘I don’t remember.’ He was coached so well for what was basically a prosecution’s cross-examination, where he’s treated as if he’s a criminal. And Kessler did a good job getting him ready. I don’t know that he had enough time to get McNally and Jastremski ready, particularly because they’re not used to talking in such situations. Brady can handle the pressure a lot better. I would guess that the task would have been much too tall to get those guys ready for that type of environment.”

On Colts GM Ryan Grigson and others’ awareness of air pressure in January…

“The fact that Grigson storms into the press box on the night of the championship game and says, ‘We’re playing with small balls,’ … he doesn’t know that the Colts provide their own footballs and that the Patriots don’t touch them? So if you want to raise the conspiracy flag, that what was going on? The GM of the Colts, who alerted the league ahead of time that the Patriots might have some funny business with their footballs, doesn’t know that his footballs aren’t touched by those guys? And that they’re smaller?

“Everyone was so stupid about PSI. Have they never filled up a tire before? For Grigson to have no idea about anything, but people have such a hard time believing that Brady wasn’t some PSI expert up until this. They say, ‘Oh, how could Brady not know?‘ Well, Grigson thought the balls shrink and that the Patriots share footballs with them. So it’s a lot easier to believe that Brady didn’t know all of these things that we all now know.”

On how the transcript will impact the NFLPA’s case against the NFL…

“I would have to think a judge — especially one like this Richard Berman fellow who’s not taking much crap, he seems to be like, ‘You guys are all idiots.’ — to read this transcript and see the process … . The opening statements, it was like a trial. It was like, you go to criminal court and the attorney for the NFL, Daniel Nash, was arguing to Roger Goodell for Roger Goodell’s decision. He was saying, [essentially], Commissioner, I think you made the right decision in this, and this is why. Commissioner, you made this decision and it was based on this, and that’s excellent.

“It was the most bizarre kangaroo court type of situation I have ever seen. And at one point, when Ted Wells was being interviewed, an NFL laywer (Nash) said, ‘I don’t think this is an appropriate line of questioning and we are now getting into privilege. And I have to say it also isn’t relevant to any issue in Mr. Brady’s appeal.’ And then Gregg Levy, the attorney for the NFL, comes in and says, ‘Sustained!’

“You’re not a judge. You’re just sitting there because Goodell doesn’t know the law and you’re making sure the proceedings go along. It’s an NFL lawyer sustaining an imaginary objection from another NFL lawyer.”

On the “independence” of the Wells report…

“Lorin Reisner’s name is on the front page [of the Wells report]. … I just can’t see a real judge looking at this and saying, ‘Yes, this was due process.’ Especially with Lorin Reisner being the first attorney the NFL called upon to run a cross examination … of the key witness. Of Tom Brady.”

On the impact of the transcript release…

“At a certain point, the NFL bears a responsibility [in what happened]. This release of these transcripts is the first that anyone can actually see that — outside of New England, where there have been people like me poring through it the whole time. I think it’s good that there’s more of me now out there. When the Deadspins of the world are picking up on it, it’s a sign of good progress.”

Listen to the full analysis below:

T&R Draft: Best Mob/Gangster Movie Of All Time

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BOSTON (CBS) — The T&R Draft returned on Thursday morning, with the topic this time being the greatest mob/gangster movie of all time.

The genesis for the topic came from the upcoming “Black Mass” film about Whitey Bulger starring Johnny Depp. An earlier discussion noted that hitmen movies count.

Fred was out, so Rich Keefe filled in. Dan O’Brien flipped the famous three-sided coin, and Jon Wallach won the first overall pick.

Here’s how the draft went.

Jon Wallach
1. Goodfellas
2. The Godfather, Part II
3. A Bronx Tale

Rich Keefe
1. The Godfather
2. Pulp Fiction
3. True Romance

Rich Shertenlieb
1. Reservoir Dogs
2. The Untouchables
3. City Of God

Who had the best draft? Vote below!

Listen to the full segment below:

Toucher & Rich: Race Horse or Bad Local Band?

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BOSTON (CBS) — We’re just days away from the Kentucky Derby, so in honor of all of the ridiculous horse names you’ll see this weekend, Toucher & Rich are asking the tough questions, like “Is this a Race Horse or Bad Local Band?”

Race Horse Or Bad Local Band: 2014 | 2015 | 2016 (Pt. 1)

Rich picked a new crop of bizarre names and once again, it was up to Fred Toucher and Jon Wallach to figure out whether he was referring to a race horse or a brutal local band.

Here are Thursday’s names:

  1. Danzing Candy
  2. Peter Alsop
  3. T.E.C.H.

Listen below, and make your own guesses:

LeBron James Basically Bashes Kevin Love While Trying To Praise Kevin Love

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BOSTON (CBS) — After winning the NBA Finals, LeBron James didn’t cover himself in glory with the way he spoke mostly about himself in the minutes and hours that came after the championship.

A few days later at the Cavaliers championship parade, LeBron tried to speak well of his teammates, and specifically Kevin Love. But he took a rather interesting route in getting there.

Toucher & Rich played the audio on Thursday.

“I heard a lot of ‘Thank You LeBrons” today, and you know, ‘Thanks for coming home and keeping your promise,'” LeBron relayed to the million or so fans in downtown Cleveland. “But I really, you guys really should be thanking all the guys up here, to be honest. I’m just one man, I’m one man with a plan, with a drive, with determination.”

Here, Fred Toucher pointed out that LeBron didn’t have to talk himself up to the crowd.

“You’re in front of like a million people who are applauding you,” Fred noted.

Back to LeBron:

“Big Kev. Kevin Love. Um, wow. What y’all saying back there? Kevin Love? Kev, when I knew we had the opportunity to get you two years ago, I didn’t second-guess it. I think you knew how I felt. I told you the [2012] Olympics that in order for us to win a gold medal, you had to be our anchor on the interior, and you looked at me like, ‘Man, you don’t know me, shut the [expletive] up.’ And for the last two years, you kind of looked at me like that a few times as well. But this guy is so misunderstood. Everybody says, ‘Well he’s not a team player. He doesn’t do what it takes.'”

Rich, Fred and Wallach all reacted at the same time.

Rich: “What??!! Why are you saying this??”
Wallach: “What the hell is wrong with you?”
Fred: “What are you doing? This is a celebration — what the hell is going on?”

“[Just say] ‘Thank you, city of Cleveland,'” Wallach said. “I mean really, this is not hard to do.”

“For someone who’s been avoiding media, and avoiding social media during all this time, he seems very informed of what everyone was saying,” Fred added.

LeBron continued about Love: “And you guys saw his struggles throughout the Finals.”

Wallach translated: “He really sucked for six games, but we were happy to have him here.”

More LeBron on Love: “Everything that happened from the concussion to sitting out, to him having his shooting struggles and things of that nature. Everybody was burying him alive throughout the Finals. And to be able to respond like he did in Game 7, that’s what real men do. They respond in the most adverse times. … Thank you, Kev.”

Fred noted that about four people out of a million in attendance clapped their hands at the end of that homage.

It was remarkable, and it was something that only Jonny Gomes and Jacksonville Lady could sum up on the radio.

Listen below:

Isaiah Thomas: Tom Brady Is ‘Coolest Dude I’ve Ever Met’

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BOSTON (CBS) — Isaiah Thomas took a giant step last season, becoming the offensive leader the Boston Celtics needed.

For the 2016-17 season, he wants to take that leadership even further. While no team captain has been officially named, it’s a role Thomas wants to fill whether he receives the title or not.

“I want to be [the guy],” Thomas told 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Jon Wallach at Celtics Media Day. “They haven’t named it, so no, I’m not the guy. To myself, I am the guy.”

His leadership was on full display over the offseason, as Thomas led the charge in Boston’s free agent pitch to Kevin Durant. While Durant ultimately joined the Golden State Warriors, it’s not something that bothers Thomas as much as some of his teammates.

“I didn’t care,” he said of Durant’s decision. “Once we go out there and play, that’s all out the window anyways.”

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was part of Boston’s pitch to Durant, giving Thomas a chance to get to know the four-time Super Bowl champ.

“Coolest dude I ever met. He is just so cool,” said Thomas. “I was expecting him to be different. A lot of great players are kind of (not very nice). He answered every question I had and was a fan of mine too. He was a great dude. I asked him about his eating ways, how he’s playing at such a high level at such an older age. He answered every question, had questions for us about basketball, how we go about our days on game day and how we scout other teams. I asked about when he hikes the ball, what are you looking at? He explained it and was very friendly.”

Thomas said you can’t tell just how down-to-earth Brady is from his interactions with the media and his fire on the football field.

“You only see little snippets of what he does. You can’t really define who he is by what you see on TV or in the media. He was super cool, and I didn’t think he was going to be like that,” said Thomas. “We text every few weeks — that’s crazy, right? He is someone I can reach out to about anything.”

Thomas led the way for a Boston team that won 48 games, averaging 22.2 points per contest, but admits that a second straight first-round exit from the playoffs is not a sign of progress. He and the rest of the team are determined to make those next steps forward this season.

“Here in Boston, that is no improvement. They’re used to championships and getting far in the playoffs, so that was no improvement at all,” he said of the first-round loss to the Atlanta Hawks. “To me, as an individual, we’re better than that.”

While the team just had their first practice on Tuesday, there has been a lot of talk about the postseason expectations with the team. Many pundits are expecting big things from the C’s, picking them to put up a fight with the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Eastern Conference crown.

“Why not? We showed we can compete against the best teams in the NBA and we can do that on a nightly basis,” Thomas said of those expectations. “We don’t want to put a ceiling on it, but we’re going to go control what we can control, give it our all every night and let the cards fall where they may.

“We’re ready. This is going to be a big year for us.”


WATCH: Jon Wallach Auditions For Boston Pops

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BOSTON (CBS) — On December 10, Toucher & Rich will take over Symphony Hall in Boston to read “‘Twas The Night Before Christmas” with the Boston Pops providing the soundtrack.

Keith Lockhart, conductor of the Pops since 1995, joined T&R in studio on Tuesday, and the hosts had a special treat for the maestro. Jon Wallach gave up playing the clarinet after high school, but has graced 98.5 The Sports Hub listeners with his musical talents a few times in the past. On Tuesday, he auditioned for a place in the Boston Pops orchestra with his own rendition of “Jingle Bells.”

The audition went about as well as you’d expect. Watch the fun in the video above, and listen to Toucher & Rich’s full interview with Keith Lockhart in the podcast below:

Toucher & Rich Try To ‘Wake Up Wallach’

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BOSTON (CBS) — Jon Wallach is out west with the Celtics, getting ready to call Friday night’s Celtics-Lakers game on 98.5 The Sports Hub.

That means he’s three hours behind the rest of us, catching some Z’s while Toucher & Rich do their thing. But as we all know, the early bird catches the worm, so Toucher & Rich had some fun in trying to “Wake Up Wallach.”

T&R decided to give Wallach a little wake-up call, and what better way to wake everyone’s favorite eagle than with some friendly bird sounds. Check out the video above for their first attempt to “Wake Up Wallach,” with Wallach actually responding to them in the video below:


 

Why Did John Farrell Keep Injured Mookie Betts, Eduardo Nunez In Game?

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BOSTON (CBS) — Heading in to Monday night, the Boston Red Sox had just completed a 9-1 stretch which essentially sewed up a division win. Their magic number to win the AL East was just three with a week to play.

Yet when they took the field at Fenway Park on Monday, manager John Farrell seemed to be treating it like Game 7 of the World Series.

Fred Toucher and Jon Wallach took a look at two of Farrell’s curious decisions on Tuesday’s Toucher & Rich.

Eduardo Nunez Allowed To Finish At-Bat After Re-Injuring Knee

Eduardo Nunez played for the first time in more than two weeks, hitting a double in his first at-bat and scoring a run in the first inning. But in his second at-bat, he re-aggravated that knee injury while fouling off a ball.

Nunez was inexplicably allowed to finish his at-bat.

“He could literally not put weigh on his back foot. It’s a literal interpretation of what was going on,” Toucher said.

“Farrell runs out there, sees that his DH is in obvious pain, and then leaves him out there to swing again,” Wallach said. “And Nunez lines out to third base, and it’s a good thing he did. Because if he didn’t, him running to first, he would have collapsed before getting 10 feet out of the box.”

Farrell said after the game that there was no “added damage” to Nunez.

“How is he saying that there can be no added damage?” Toucher asked. “How the hell does he know that?”

Mookie Betts Allowed To Stay In Game With Wrist Injury

Mookie Betts is the Red Sox’ best hitter, yet the manager kept him in the game for multiple innings to play the field after he was in clear pain with his left wrist in the fifth inning. The pain was so bad that Betts said he lost feeling in his hand for multiple seconds.

“John Farrell talks to Mookie Betts, they have this discussion,” Wallach said, “and Farrell says, ‘I’m hot, baby! It worked so well the last time, I’m going to leave Betts in there — not to hit, mind you. But to field. We need Mookie Betts in right field … because of course we have no other outfielders on this team.’ Andrew Benintendi, by the way, is sitting on the bench not playing. ‘What I want to do is send probably my most valuable hitter at this point back out to field in right.’ And of course, what happens when you field? You never dive for a ball and roll [your wrist]. That never happens. … There are at least five or six different ways you can hurt your left hand if you’re fielding with the glove on your left hand.”

Wallach added: “It’s mystifiying that he let Nunez talk him into another swing. It’s even more mystifying that he put Betts [in the field]. You have so much in front of you. You sent your best player out there to field with a bad wrist, when you have other things to focus on. … The Betts thing is mystifying, leaving him out there for two more innings after it was obvious he was having problems with this left wrist, and then pinch-hitting for him when his time came around in the order again. What are you doing? What are you doing? Are you trying to get fired? Are you trying to leave after the season is over?”

Toucher added one more question: “What do they need Betts and Nunez for in the playoffs? It’s going to be a cakewalk. With that starting pitching? It’s going to be a cakewalk, baby.”

Listen to the full discussion above, which includes some questions about starting Drew Pomeranz in the first place on Monday.

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