In Episode 8 of Allegedly Sports, M|M and Tom Schneider break down Super Bowl fallout, the early NFL offseason, and one of the most honest quarterback conversations you’ll hear all year.
The episode opens with a Super Bowl recap — why the game felt flat, what Seattle did better, and why one loss doesn’t erase a strong Patriots season. The conversation dives into Drake Maye’s late-season play, experience vs. expectations, and why defensive performances often get ignored when offenses struggle.
From there, M|M and Tom shift to NFL offseason chaos: franchise tags, massive cap hits, and how teams actually recover from quarterback contract mistakes. The heart of the episode is a deep discussion on QB “retreads” — evaluating players like Sam Darnold, Baker Mayfield, Mac Jones, Kyler Murray, Justin Fields, and more through the lens of opportunity, coaching, and pressure rather than media narratives.
The episode closes with thoughts on the NBA All-Star Game, why competitiveness finally returned, and what the dunk contest is missing without real stars.
Real debate. Real context. No hot takes.
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⏱️ Timestamps
00:00 – Intro & possible show name change
01:00 – Super Bowl recap: why the game disappointed
03:40 – Patriots offense vs. defensive effort
05:00 – Drake Maye’s late-season regression
06:40 – NFL franchise tags & cap fallout
08:30 – Recovering from bad QB contracts
10:30 – QB “retreads” and second chances
13:30 – How many QBs are truly franchise players?
18:30 – Kyler Murray, Mac Jones & opportunity vs. talent
22:00 – NFL copycat league discussion
24:00 – NBA All-Star Game competitiveness
26:00 – Dunk contest decline & star power
29:00 – Final thoughts