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JP Rock and Matt Biermann
Streaming live Saturdays on 590 AM and across podcast platforms.
The football season is flying by, already into Week 3.
Seniors are reminded not to rush past the moment—enjoy it while preparing for college.
Early commitments help players focus on their final high school season.
Matt shared his grind: coaching youth flag football, running training programs, and middle school coaching responsibilities.
Football really is a year-round commitment for players, coaches, and trainers.
Discussion about kids battling illness (COVID/flu going around local schools).
Competing while sick drains athletes quickly, raising concerns about game-day timing if illness hits.
JP and Matt noted that coaches and players often "push through" because football rarely pauses.
Missouri's comeback win was a highlight.
Bo Pribula impressed with his fast-paced, urgent QB style, winning over doubters.
Contrast drawn with Sam Horn's unfortunate injury, which may derail his football future but leaves him with a baseball path.
Coaching staff gave Horn opportunities out of fairness, but the QB battle leaned Bo's way from the start.
Mizzou thrives when building around local players like Jamal Roberts, Brett Norfleet, Kevin Coleman, and Luther Burden.
Hosts stressed "locking down the borders" on Missouri talent to elevate the program—similar to Gary Pinkel's era with Blaine Gabbert, Sheldon Richardson, and Aldon Smith.
Many St. Louis–area players are excelling nationally (Jeremiah McClellan, Jeremiah Love, Aeneas Williams, Frederick Moore).
Per capita, the region produces as many NFL players as larger football markets.
Big recruiting weekend at Mizzou; several high-profile players attended.
Discussion of Ridge James (legacy connections but still a business decision in today's NIL world).
Recruiting is now approached as a business transaction, not just loyalty.
Hosts critiqued the narrative of "saving college sports."
They argued schools profited for decades without paying athletes and are now resisting NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) changes.
Concerns raised over NCAA pushing for antitrust exemptions, collective bargaining limits, and uniform NIL rules to regain control.
Emphasis: college sports are big business—universities need to adapt like any other industry, not resist change.
For Athletes: Don't rush your high school years—focus on both performance and academics.
For Parents & Coaches: Stay realistic about recruiting—injuries and business realities shift paths quickly.
For Programs: Local recruiting is key; Mizzou succeeds when keeping in-state stars.
For Fans: College athletics is a business; NIL is here to stay, and adaptation is essential.
By Football 360 Show5
33 ratings
JP Rock and Matt Biermann
Streaming live Saturdays on 590 AM and across podcast platforms.
The football season is flying by, already into Week 3.
Seniors are reminded not to rush past the moment—enjoy it while preparing for college.
Early commitments help players focus on their final high school season.
Matt shared his grind: coaching youth flag football, running training programs, and middle school coaching responsibilities.
Football really is a year-round commitment for players, coaches, and trainers.
Discussion about kids battling illness (COVID/flu going around local schools).
Competing while sick drains athletes quickly, raising concerns about game-day timing if illness hits.
JP and Matt noted that coaches and players often "push through" because football rarely pauses.
Missouri's comeback win was a highlight.
Bo Pribula impressed with his fast-paced, urgent QB style, winning over doubters.
Contrast drawn with Sam Horn's unfortunate injury, which may derail his football future but leaves him with a baseball path.
Coaching staff gave Horn opportunities out of fairness, but the QB battle leaned Bo's way from the start.
Mizzou thrives when building around local players like Jamal Roberts, Brett Norfleet, Kevin Coleman, and Luther Burden.
Hosts stressed "locking down the borders" on Missouri talent to elevate the program—similar to Gary Pinkel's era with Blaine Gabbert, Sheldon Richardson, and Aldon Smith.
Many St. Louis–area players are excelling nationally (Jeremiah McClellan, Jeremiah Love, Aeneas Williams, Frederick Moore).
Per capita, the region produces as many NFL players as larger football markets.
Big recruiting weekend at Mizzou; several high-profile players attended.
Discussion of Ridge James (legacy connections but still a business decision in today's NIL world).
Recruiting is now approached as a business transaction, not just loyalty.
Hosts critiqued the narrative of "saving college sports."
They argued schools profited for decades without paying athletes and are now resisting NIL (Name, Image, Likeness) changes.
Concerns raised over NCAA pushing for antitrust exemptions, collective bargaining limits, and uniform NIL rules to regain control.
Emphasis: college sports are big business—universities need to adapt like any other industry, not resist change.
For Athletes: Don't rush your high school years—focus on both performance and academics.
For Parents & Coaches: Stay realistic about recruiting—injuries and business realities shift paths quickly.
For Programs: Local recruiting is key; Mizzou succeeds when keeping in-state stars.
For Fans: College athletics is a business; NIL is here to stay, and adaptation is essential.

8,205 Listeners