• Does Talent Or Timing Win The NCAA Tournament?
    Mar 30 2026

    A 17-point lead should be safe. Unless it’s March, your inbound gets sticky, and one dribble turns into a trap, a steal, and a shot that flips a season.

    We’re back on Sports Live with Steven Justin and the Basketball Rabbi to unpack a weekend that felt like the NCAA tournament turned the chaos dial to max. We start with the big-picture March Madness takeaway: Arizona looks like a machine when the game runs, but Purdue showed how pace control can force even elite offenses to prove they can win in the half court. From there we hit the Big East energy around St. John’s, the coaching quirks that come with genius, and why “brand” still matters when the Garden gets loud.

    Then we slow everything down and go possession by possession through Duke vs UConn, including the late-game choices that decided it: why ball security beats hero moves, how a single dribble can erase your options, and why UConn’s best moments came from quick reads instead of panic shots. We also look ahead to the Final Four, the Illinois matchup, and why Michigan vs Arizona might be the toughest game left, mentally and physically.

    If you like college basketball analysis with real details and a few sharp detours into culture and stories, hit play. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: who’s cutting down the nets and what’s the one matchup you can’t stop thinking about?

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • NCAA March Madness Unleashed | Sports Talk Live! with Steve and Justin!
    Mar 24 2026

    We argue through Sweet 16 matchups, why certain teams look built for March, and how coaching plus late-game nerve changes everything. Then we pivot to how streaming, stadium costs, and new tech like the automated strike zone are reshaping the way fans experience sports and why it’s getting harder to just watch the game.

    • Illinois as a real Final Four pick and why the bracket path matters
    • Houston’s home-court edge and how “neutral” stops being neutral
    • Nebraska’s surprise run and the value of impact players who do not score
    • Iowa’s win over Florida as a tempo and coaching lesson
    • Transfer portal and NIL creating older rosters and fewer true Cinderella teams
    • St. John’s vs Duke hype and Rick Pitino’s late-game play call
    • Purdue’s role players peaking and why that changes their ceiling
    • Michigan vs Alabama plus Iowa State as a dangerous matchup
    • Streaming fragmentation across MLB and NFL and why fans hate it
    • Classic baseball broadcasts and what modern coverage lost
    • NFL ticket prices and the MetLife Stadium experience problem
    • Automated strike zone, challenges, and umpire ego
    • Yankees prospect development frustrations and “play them or trade them” logic

    Make sure you like and subscribe. Share friends.


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    1 hr and 18 mins
  • NCAA Bracket Live | Full Tournament Breakdown and Inside the American Basketball Hall of Fame
    Mar 18 2026

    Basketball isn’t only a list of champions. It’s a library of stories that too often get lost, misfiled, or never recorded at all. We sit down with Keith Spillett, a researcher for the American Basketball Hall of Fame and a writer at CollegeBasketballTimes.com, to talk about the side of basketball history most fans never hear.

    Keith explains how the American Basketball Hall of Fame differs from the Naismith Hall, why “story” is the first filter for induction, and what real research looks like when you’re chasing streetball legends and forgotten pioneers. We dig into this year’s class and the bigger impact behind the names, including sports marketing icon Sonny Vaccaro, women’s basketball standout Debbie Miller-Palmore, and early pro trailblazer Henry “Bucky” Lew. We also get into how class size and the board vote shape who gets their moment, plus details on the August 30 ceremony at Oakland University in Michigan.

    Then we flip the switch to NCAA bracketology and March Madness predictions: Duke’s thin rotation and brutal road, St. John’s surge, Michigan State’s toughness, Iowa State’s upside, and why certain mid-majors are built to ruin brackets. We close with the modern realities of college hoops, from NIL and the transfer portal to how the 24-hour news cycle changes coaching personalities.

    Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who lives for March Madness, and leave a review. What’s your Final Four right now?

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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • Team USA’s WBC Push, MLB’s Future, And Why Baseball Still Feels Like Home. NFL Update. F1 First Race.
    Mar 10 2026

    Spring brings back baseball’s magic as we weigh the World Baseball Classic’s electric energy against MLB’s timing, pitching health, and a looming labor cloud. We argue for better scheduling, smarter youth outreach, and honest marketing around stars like Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani.

    • WBC format, stakes, and timing tension
    • Team USA roster strength and pitching limits
    • National pride and unforgettable atmospheres
    • Pitcher health, workload, and injuries
    • Judge vs Ohtani and MLB marketing gaps
    • Labor worries and the sport’s global push
    • Youth engagement, affordability, and storytelling
    • Brief NFL free agency roundup and stadium gripes
    • Quick F1 hybrid-era tech and team power shifts

    Please like and subscribe
    We appreciate it
    We’re gonna have more and more guests as time goes on


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    1 hr and 27 mins
  • NFL Combine Takes with Former Badger Player Matt Bernstien and NFL Coach Jim Herrmann.
    Mar 3 2026

    Bright lights and 40 times tell one story; the hotel hallways, hospital shuttles, and midnight interviews tell another. We sat down with former Wisconsin fullback Matt Bernstein and longtime NFL coach Jim Herrmann to pull back the curtain on the NFL Combine and spotlight what really moves a prospect up or down a draft board.

    Matt shares the unvarnished player experience: rehabbing a sports hernia, getting yanked straight to MRIs, standing half-dressed on a stage while coaches read out every measurement, and then being red-flagged for dehydration before a rushed bench test. Through it all, he focused on the controllables—catch every pass, finish every rep, jog back to the line—and on telling the truth in interviews, even when he didn’t know the play a coach threw at him. He reflects on how today’s athletes navigate social media, NIL, and constant scrutiny, and why character and consistency matter more than ever.

    Coach Herrmann takes us inside 15 years of Combine scouting: what he looks for at the start line of the 40, how a single instruction reveals processing speed, and why he builds film sessions around a prospect’s worst plays to hear how they self-correct. He explains the chaos of “train-station” interviews, the value and limits of pro days, and the roster math teams ignore at their peril—positional value, second contracts, and whether you’ll pay to keep the player you draft. Along the way, we talk sleepers with heart, media mythmaking, and small edges that separate smart franchises, like the Steelers’ unusual measurements and relentless attention to detail.

    If you care about how teams truly evaluate talent—beyond viral clips and stopwatch whispers—this conversation gives you a grounded, inside view of the Combine’s pressure cooker and the traits that survive it. Enjoy the episode, share it with a football-obsessed friend, and leave a quick review with your biggest Combine surprise.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • From Olympic Ice To NFL Turmoil And Baseball Uncertainty
    Feb 24 2026

    Two overtime golds for Team USA set the tone—precision passing, fearless goaltending, and big-moment composure that makes you remember why sports hook us. From that high, we dive straight into the hard questions the industry keeps dodging: what happens when the scoreboard says “win,” but the business model pushes fans, players, and cities to the brink?

    We open with USA women’s and men’s hockey sealing gold in dramatic fashion, spotlighting goaltenders who changed outcomes and a not-quite-standard Olympic ice sheet that subtly shifted pace and spacing. Then the mood turns as we reflect on the tragic death of Rondale Moore at 25. We don’t speculate—we ask for better: proactive mental health outreach, easier access to counseling, and honest conversations about injuries, contracts, and identity when the uniform comes off. Caring for people has to be more than a PR line.

    From there, we put on the GM hat. Is a top-tier edge rusher a smarter cornerstone than a second-tier QB? We break down why the Jets might be better served taking the best football player at two, exploring trade-down scenarios, bridge quarterbacks, and the difference between drafting for headlines and drafting for January. Then it’s over to baseball’s uneasy spring: swollen contracts, $130 spring seats, shaky RSN math, and whispers of a long labor standoff. We challenge the logic of letting core talent walk while hoping new money fixes a culture problem. Projections are nice; bullpens and divisions are mean.

    Stadium politics pull the curtain back. PSLs, $75 parking, public money for eight to nine home dates—what’s the civic ROI? The Bears flirting with a cross-border move shows how fast tradition gets traded for tax certainty. The NFL hums on scarcity and revenue sharing, the NBA gambles fan goodwill on load management, and baseball risks another long walk back if it tests patience again. Through it all, hockey keeps modeling a stubborn, blue-collar compact with fans: effort, accountability, and identity that doesn’t melt under the lights.

    If you’re here for honest sports talk without the fluff—big wins, tough losses, real stakes—hit follow, share with a friend, and leave a review telling us which part of the modern sports machine you’d fix first.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • All-Star Frustrations, What Tanking, Unions, And Salary Caps Mean For The Games We Love
    Feb 17 2026

    Two truths can live side by side: we love sports for the human moments, and we get tired of the nonsense that smothers them. We open with heartfelt tributes to Jesse Jackson and Robert Duvall—one reshaped athlete power and dignity, the other captured the soul of competition on-screen—and use that lens to unpack why today’s games feel both electrifying and exasperating.

    From the NBA’s All-Star experiment to a culture of tanking and load management, we call out incentives that reward optics over effort and leave paying fans shortchanged. Then we shift to baseball’s fault lines: union turmoil, streaming fragmentation, and gambling money pushing a looming labor showdown. We wrestle with the big questions—salary cap or not, real revenue sharing, and how to stop hollowing out fundamentals by pushing veterans out of clubhouses. If a multi-year shutdown is on the table, what happens to talent pipelines and fan trust?

    Football fans get a full draft reality check. We break down when to take the franchise quarterback, when to trade down, and how ownership’s willingness to pay the second contract should shape the first pick. We size up the Jets and Giants through this lens, and talk culture fits like Rex Ryan’s intensity and why locker-room leadership still matters. College football’s transfer portal and NIL come into focus too—less chaos if you treat the portal like a scalpel, more identity if you evaluate with clear eyes.

    And then comes pure joy: Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing steals Daytona at the flag, a lightning-bolt reminder that preparation, grit, and a dash of chaos can still deliver a story you feel in your chest. With F1 testing underway and a new season building, we land on a hopeful note: align incentives with competition, respect bodies and fans, and keep room for humanity. That’s how sports earn back the trust they keep spending.

    If you enjoyed the show, tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—what would you fix first: caps, schedules, or draft rules?

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    1 hr and 13 mins
  • Sports Live! Steve & Justin React To the Super Bowl
    Feb 10 2026

    We break down a defense-first championship where Seattle’s patience and coaching discipline outlast New England’s stalled offense, and we unpack how the halftime show signals the NFL’s global push. We also share updates on our charity plunge, offseason plans, and upcoming guests.

    • defensive game control and low penalties
    • Seattle’s field goals over fourth-down aggression
    • Darnold’s mistake-free play and tight windows
    • New England’s pass protection collapse
    • Kenneth Walker III’s patient, explosive runs
    • special teams execution without errors
    • coaching choices, situational football, and adaptation
    • halftime show as signal of NFL global expansion
    • broadcast takeaways and ad hits and misses
    • athlete longevity, legacy, and knowing when to retire
    • offseason roadmap: draft, hockey, basketball, F1, and guests

    Please like and subscribe
    Donations will be accepted through this evening until 10 o'clock. Go to galottahouse.org and look for Justin Takes the Plunge


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    1 hr and 10 mins