Big 12 Pro Day Standouts + Deion and Shedeur Sanders Join the Show

Published Mar 20, 2025, 10:01 PM

On the latest episode of Move the Sticks, Daniel Jeremiah, Bucky Brooks, and Rhett Lewis check in from Ford Center at the Star in Dallas for the Big 12 Pro Day, breaking down the standout draft prospects who caught their attention. Later, they’re joined by Colorado head coach Deion Sanders and his son, Shedeur Sanders, one of the top quarterback prospects in the 2025 NFL Draft, to discuss his development, preparation, and future in the league.

Move the Sticks is a part of the NFL Podcasts Network.

And now Move the Sticks with Daniel Jeremiah and Bucky Brooks.

What's up, everybody?

Welcome to Move the Sticks, DJ, Bucky and Rhett with you. We are at the Big Twelve Pro Days. A couple of days here watching all the top players from the Big Twelve go.

Through their workouts.

Covered it on NFL Network and that's going to be what the podcast is today is going to be running back some of the interviews we did. Really two big ones which are in the same family. She Door Sanders along with the coach Prime Dion Sanders are gonna join so we have a chance to roll those interviews back. Buck as we're recording this right now, is down in the field grabbing some other interviews for television.

RTT. How you doing, man? Yeah?

Good? Fired up? Man? It was good.

Did you get a chance to spend some time, you know with Prime right and you know, talk to him a little bit. We had some fun with him. Talk to him about the the old tea step, do not te step in front of Coach Prime if you are a defensive back going through some of these drills.

Also get a chance to talk to him about, you.

Know, the narrative or as he called it lies surrounding his son Shador Sanders, and some of the interviews that happened at the Combine, So you hear all that coming up. But first let's kick off a little hot or Not brought to you buying with Zombie hot Cloud storage, as we get a look at some of the players we saw today and really over the course of the week here at the Big twelve Pro Day, a couple of days' worth of workouts and look we saw some speed, you know, and that's that's always hot when it comes to NFL talent evaluation.

But DJ, what sticks out to you overall about the event?

Yeah, it was a great event. I mean, we justed to see how long it continues to exist. Really, I'm curious that people like it. Do the teams like it, the schools like it, do the scouts like it? It is convenient, you know, to have everybody under one roof here and to watch these guys go through the paces. But to me, the thing about when you get events like this or the Combine or All Star Games where we have a bunch of different schools represented, you do get a glimpse of what the strengths and weaknesses are of the class and I think the running back group is very strong. Here saw some good backs. DJ Giddens going to the workout. We saw Oli Gordon had a nice workout catching the ball out of Oklahoma State. So a couple of those running backs did a nice job. Tight end group overall in the draft is pretty deep. Jalen Conyers look good run around here from Texas Tech. So those two positions stood out. And then I'm always looking for guys that I can kind of pull out of the pile, guys who maybe aren't on the radar, non combine players who pops A couple guys from Baylor led by Monterey Baldwin, I would say, jumped on the radar. Monterrey balder in four three two, little undersize wide receiver with a ton of juice.

Yeah, and that was fun to watch, right because that peaks our interest, catches our eyes.

Certainly.

Garman Randolph from Baylor on Day one as part of the D line group, you know, big, kind of kind of tweeter d n D Tana Cole type of body, but ran four to seven, which.

You'd love to see.

So there's definitely some good performances out there from the athletic testing saw guys run around real well. Stoveball from Arizona State stood out to me in that group, and then you had Brendan Presley from Oklahoma State. Look, he's got the production. Three hundred and fifteen receptions over the course of his career. They relied on him in pressure situations. I was actually I was talking to Mike Mike Gundy about it, their head coach. He's like, look, you may not wow you with his size and his speed, but the production right the pressure situations, third down, fourth down type of throws, you got to have it at the stick, so you got to have it in the red zone.

They went Presley's way, but he came out here and ran four four six.

I mean that is plenty good enough, you know, to get it done at the receiver spot in the league. And I think he's going to have some people that kind of go back and watch some of that, and I think, you know, he was getting some some of the coaches that are here in attendance running some of these drills. We're spending some time and talking with him there. So I thought that was that was kind of interesting to see on that front.

If we're talking hot or not, I would go hot on those ones, I would go hot.

And so with that, that was this week's Hot or Not, brought to you by with Sabi Hot Cloud Storage, store more and do more with your data.

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Let's uh, let's get to a couple of these interviews here. This is pulled right off of our television conversations uh. First of all with Dion Sanders, head coach for the Colorado Buffaloes, followed by our conversation with his son, Shodoor Sanders, one of the top quarterback prospects in this year's draft.

Bucky Brooks down on the field, and so is coach Prime with US head coach at Colorado coach Big hello from us up here in the booth. Ret and DJ appreciate you stopping by. And uh boy, a man known for being one of the fastest ever play in the NFL. I'm sure you still get some entertainment out of watching these guys run the forty, don't you.

I love it. It's exciting. I love it. But the nervousness, I don't. I never understood how someone gets nervous to do what you've been gifted to do. How you get nervous to run. Come on, man, and right now we're a gunshot right now.

What will we do? We gonna run, thank you, no hesitation, we gonna run.

Hey coach.

First of all, I'm gonna push Rhett, and then you get two parts to Hey coach, how proud are you of your kids? Man, getting a chance to see not only your sons, but your your guys from Colorado out here competing.

Truly proud?

I mean my son Bucky, who does all of the AUDIHI and the video the stuff. He's right down from me. But to see Lejimmy, lejohnte Uh, to see all our guys will, to see all the chanor shallows here. I saw Big Chadozi yesterday and some of the other guys is unbelievab. Bj Green did the doghole thing run. I absolutely love it, man. It's it's like a proud father seeing your kids, you know, graduate, so to speak.

Prome, I got to say this, and I don't even know Redd and DJ don't notice, but I feel like your ascension to being a college coach came from these conversations that we used to have in the call Sunday nights, and you were coaching high school then, and you kind of let the word out, like Buck, I want to go coach college. Why did you not only feel like you could coach at the collegiate level, but not that you can succeed at.

The coat Well, first of all, when you're playing NFL at a certain level, I think the coordinators come to you for understanding and wisdom on what you should do to approach the opposing team. And I was one of those guys that I remember Ray Rose, what you're gonna do?

What you want to do?

Gap, I said, give me that, y'all deal with the rest. I mean, it was like in Max Zimmery, some of the wonderful coordinators that I played for. It was phenomenal. Then getting into youth ball, it was a straight procession. High school ball didn't start saying, you know what, I'm a chill. Then the opportunity came and I had to jump into opportunity. Unfortunately, my kids wanted.

To come with that. Lo It's been great. We had some good conversations we did.

I mean, I just remember coming in sometimes sometimes as you would saying, sometimes I get the bear.

Sometimes the bear would get you.

And so to think about the growth that you've kind of made as a head coach, going from Jackson State and then Colorado, having some would say a tough season at Colorado was bouncing back.

What has been the key to the.

Turnarounds consistency, wisdom and understanding the plan is the plan and do not dd eight from the plan or the standard. We always knew we're gonna win. It's just gonna be a matter of time. I'm a darned winner. Man, I'm gonna win. It's just a matter of time to do so and to reveal that to everyone. And you got to get the players. You got to get the players. You got to get the dogs that's able to produce what you see in your mind.

You know so, and think about the players.

Most coaches who start and build a team, they always talk about the quarterback. You've had to obviously the luxury of coaching your son. What makes you there so special? Shador is a winner. Shadoor is very intelligent, very understanding. Like when we used to travel when they were kids, going through the airport and we in the Admirals Club or whatever.

Relax and we were on the board.

Man, I was writing defenses up on the board and they were trying to figure out how to beat me, he and Shallow. So we've always been a football minded family and we always understood what was next. We always rose to the occasion, and we always exceeded ex dictation. And we can handle pressure. We applied pressure. We didn't receive pressure. We applied it. But that young man, I can't wait to see where he goes. I can't wait to see what he does. I know what he's going to do, and I can't wait to see he and Shallow at the next level.

Hey, coach Prime, you know we're talking about evaluating, you know guys, and you're talking about improvement and preparation, you know, over the course of a lifetime. But once they get to you at Colorado, you know, not only with yourself, but you've hired guys with big time NFL backgrounds, Right, Coach Sap, coach Fat, coach Shermer. How does that help in their development at the college level for moments like this today.

Well, first of all, I had to identify who I am as a coach, who I am as a person, who I am as a man, And I'm more attracted and I vibe more with professional coaches and professional players that have been there and done that. That's not saying nothing against collegiate coaches, because they are phenomenal and they have kicked our butts. But my consistency, my relationship, I'm very relational with those guys and understanding those guys that have matriculated from the professional level. That's what I want, That's what I look at to hire. That's what I want these guys to learn from. I want these guys to learn from people that have been there and done that. So when they're talking, they're talking with power and substance and stability and to know how and they know it. So when you talk Warren Staff talking about past Rush, Marshall Fall and all these guys that we have, I mean Pat and Rob and we got a whole Dern coaching summit right in the locker room, man, and I love it.

Coach you you talk about scouting and bucking and I talking about it all the time, and you're recruiting. It's it's a lot of similarities there. What have you learned from your time on this side of it, you know, the playing side, then the coaching side. That's helped you in the recruiting process of identifying the right here, you.

Got to understand who you are and what you want. We look for a smart, tough, past disciplined young man with character. I mean, education is very vital for me, but I don't want no dumb student. I don't want no dumb football player, because if you get a dumb students with a dumb football player, I don't want to want that. So we're looking for guys with a level of intelligence, not on on and off the field, the guys that want to work, the guys that that in love of the game, and I want to know their why. I want to what makes them go, what makes them get up in the morning, what motivates them when they don't feel like it. I need to identify that why. And once we come into a commonality. Everybody ain't built for us, and we ain't built for everybody. But the ones that are, I love them, but they know what they're signing up for. We practice in the morning, we work out butts off, we get off the field, we study a little more, then we go tackle those academics.

So, yeah, coaches, you know, it's obviously it's about the work, right, It's about the production that comes from that work.

And you've been through this process, right, the draft process.

Kind of gone through outlook gets changed a little bit, search changed a lot. Yeah, but you know seeing your son, you know Shador in particular, you know, go through it and you know, go through his time at the Combine and then you start to see some of the reports come out about the interviews and about you know, that was a lot. Yeah, So tell us a little bit about how you know, you've prepared you know, Shador to deal with that sort of thing as it follows him through.

You mean, their lives or what's just take one out of time. Let's just say anything always been built for this man. I mean we we we've done this. We got records, we got we got tape, we got factual evidence of doors ten and twelve years old. Tell me about this, Tell me about that. You know, how do you feel as a kid. We we practiced and we hurst this stuff. So he's well poised in front of the camera as you just saw, as the world have seen for a multitude of years. But the lies, that's gonna be that. But we're great with adversity. We've we've always been through adversity. We've always been challenged with adversity in the Nacy and and the Dowdy, and he is built for that. He's the most qualified young man that plays that position, that's built for that and to build and to be in front of the lights and to still continuously shine. We like to call that stuff out though I know who it is. You're gonna make me call him out?

You know what?

Team?

Yeah, Yo, we don't. We don't got to understand it, I.

Know, but don't make me pull behind the curtage to step in that thing. I'm kind of CAUs to be honest on the high road, but I don't know the address.

We will keep it on the high road and the way we're gonna stay on the high road. We're gonna talk about one of your other sons, be Travis Hunter. Yes, you were able to look do a great job of recruiting. You flipped him. He followed you to Jackson STATEE then he followed you to Colorado. Look, he's one of the best two way players that we've seen. The best, not one of the best, the best, the best that ever did it. Let's let's talk a little bit about him, Like what did you see in him and what he became.

Want, desire, willingness, to learn to listen and to work. And a guy that won't work is a guy that it won't work.

Say I'm gonna say that again. A guy that don't work, it won't work.

Travis Hunter loves the game. He's not in like with it. He's in love with the game. Don't really care necessities about who he is and the accolades that he possessed. This guy loves to play the game of football.

You know, and so much of the conversation is you.

You were one of the only ones to be able to do it full time in Dallas. You play cornerback and wide receiver. Travis and you have both talked about his ability to do it at the next level.

Why would he be able to do it? He don't know any other way. What else would he do?

Just sit there but decide the water cooler wide of offense out there getting they bus kicked and you got the best receiver probably on your team over there sitting down with the coach waiting on his turn to go back onto the field. That does not make sense to me, just because the person hadn't done this in the majority of the NFL. Don't tell you what, don't say what. Another man can't do. We hadn't seen some of the things Patrick Mahomes is doing. We hadn't seen some of the things some of these wonderful athletes are doing right now. Travis Hunter can do whatever he desires to do if given the opportunity, and it's going to take the right team to give him that opportunity.

Okay, now we're talking about opportunity.

This is opportunity for you to tell me about the next generation of players at Colorado. Amazon is outs And then actual assumption is that y'all gonna fall back to the pain.

Why be different from like a DJ the record keep playing baby, just because we changed the song. We gotta keep playing in the record. Let's keep playing. Let's keep playing.

We got some young men that can get They may not be sure Shiloh or Travis or any of the guys that played phenomenal for especially those receivers, but I think we're gonna have I don't think I know we're gonna have a better team. We won't have two players like that this year, but we will have a better team. We got some corners that can lock down. They should be ranked high in the draft going into next season. The linebackers I think are more agile and and we have more depth in the front offensive and defensive line. Marshall Falgus coaching the backs, so you gonna see a influx of talent there as well as well as the receivers. They may not be the four guys that are here, but we have some receivers that can go get it. And the kicking game is special. That's why they call it special teams cause.

You've always thought, You've always thought outside the box.

I love your idea about bringing somebody into Boulder to see a different group of guys for the spring.

Is that looking like that could actually happen? I'm praying so.

I mean, we have the best commission in the game, and I'm thinking it should happen.

Why not?

Why Now we got a lot of teams opting out and we don't do something to say of the spring game in college football is going to dissipate.

It's going to vanish.

We want to play in the spring, but we want something from it, Like I want to do what the pros do, and we emulated to imitate pros.

All right, let's have a joint practice.

The practice with you for three days then I want to play, and I want to give the fans a wonderful show, and we want to work it out and we want to get somebody. But I'm tired of my guys beating up on each other that don't make sense. I don't know if I'm garbage or now.

I could have a horrible team based on him going against the other guy he's going against. I don't know. I want to know where I am, where I stand, so I can make necessary changes in the portal.

Okay, coach, when you put out the bat signal, did you hear from some teams?

Yes?

Yes, Lord, And let me give much love and much respect to my dear friend and my brother friend Brown Syracuse.

I love him to life.

I'm praying that he's the guy that's gonna make that jump his university. We've already communicated Frying. I love you and I appreciate you. I'm praying that it happens. It's not going to just be about football. It's gonna be about financial literacy. It's gonna be about everything. It's gonna be about academics as well. We're gonna do a joint thing with both teams. If we could make this happen.

Now because you're so relational, like it's always been a thing for you, coaching transformational and you do so many things outside of talking ball.

Why is that part of it important to yours area? Where we are?

Because relations right out of this we put this back down what we are are we buddies and it don't just it's not just about this game. We talked because we talk because we like this guys on the air. When I work with this wonderful network, NFL network, I still have those same relationships and our treasure relationships. It's not a guy that's hired to see you that some form of way that the relationship wasn't there and in existence, and that's why they got the job and that's why they're on the staff and that's why they're helping me reach our destination.

Okay, last thing for me, where's where's that destination where we're trying to go?

I mean what you mean, what's your door?

No?

No, no, talking about talking about Colorado where we're going to the tower, to the mountain top.

You see me looking up, looking up, don't you?

You see me looking up, don't you We're trying to win it all man, it's only one goal.

Tell us coming.

On Prime real real quick.

You know one thing we miss about having you, you know, an NFL network on our combine card.

You're gonna give anybody the tea step. We didn't get into the tea step at all.

Oh my god, he does stuff. You know, everybody got that one son that you have to pray about all the time. He is the one number one son.

You know, everybody got their son to keep you on your knees and praying that they grew up in the same house, but they're totally different.

He is the one. Want to thank you for just keeping it. I love my son. That's awesome.

That's awesome.

All right.

We asked the question about the tea steps. Oh yes, that's always the debate. Let me tell you something, okay, let me let me teach you real quick. Please, how stupid the T step is. I'm gonna teach you real now. You're gonna help me. Oh okay, okay, okay, okay. We're gonna walk backwards. Then we're gonna walk for it.

Let's walk backwards. Now, let's stop and walk for it. Why didn't you teach step? I mean, I mean, why didn't.

You tea stuff. Okay, let me show you how stupid that is. Look, I'm gonna walk backwards. Then I'm gonna walk for who does that? What fool does that? What idiot does that?

Hey?

If that's what about?

That's right, that's right.

If one of my players do that, I'm ripping his face mass off the rest of the game without a face.

How much time you spend with the DBS in practice?

I don't spend quite a bit because I gotta go everybody. Yeah, I gotta go, But but I'm over there first. That's the first drill, that's the first position group that I go to, and I'm able to grab the guys and put him out and you know, put my little flavor on him. But I may call him to the office later on.

And yeah, yeah, and you got to coach Matthew, Kevin Matthews there too. Come on that.

That's right, that's you know, that's twenty four years of experience there. You're gonna get checked. We're gonna have something to say, and we want you to get out of bed bumping and running. You gotta get out of bed bumping and run if you want to play, if you want to play, for see you gotta get out of the bed bumping and run.

No t steps steps all right, t steps you getting you getting.

I can't slap you because it's against rue, but I can trip your face mass on that.

That's right.

All right?

Hey, coach Prime, you're the best man.

Thanks gonna wear You said he's gonna You said he was going first, right, you tell us deep what you said, and you said Charlotte is gonna within him.

That's what you said. That's what Jo said, Team's go. That's what Joe said.

You talk about perfect parents draft.

I'm so tired of these monks. You got guys giving mock draft I ain't never heard of before. Somebody asked your ranked twenty if I wanted to rip the TV screen off?

Who is that guy?

Great question.

We're going to find that person right now and let them know. All right, coach try, thank you, Yes, I am here with you. Were saying, this is you're Sanders that just heard on the PA that you're not working out.

It was kind of I didn't expect to hear my name today. I didn't expect that.

Look, man, so much conversation about you. How's the pre draft process treating you?

It's cool. I'll say it's definitely a learning experience that a lot of things aren't in your control. And just getting the nods from Dad and just coach, family and friends and everybody you know that's supporting me and helping me through this process. It's extremely important and I'm thankful that I have those resources.

You know, and think about those those resources.

You talk about your dad, and your dad obviously has walked a great walk in the pros. What are some of the things that you've learned from him to kind of help you throughout this journey.

Well, we always understood to block out the noise, even from Jackson State and Colorado. It's a lot of critics, it's a lot of hate, but we know what to do. We know how to handle that in every way, so we remain happy.

You know, and thinking about that, Like your journey is one that some would say it's unorthodox. You go to Jackson State for a couple of years, you guys kill it. You go to Colorado, you turn around that program. Just talk about the special qualities that you bring to a team in terms of helping a program turn around.

Well was another recipe of it. I was heavily involved in I was almost a GM for the for the both of the teams because I knew what pieces I wanted. And you know, when we got to Colorado, I already, i would say, was stable in the college in the college area to where I knew exactly what I want. It wasn't just coach saying these guys are gonna get. It was me actually going out there getting those guys knowing we're receiving, are gonna fit my eye, knowing, uh, everybody has to compliment each other, knowing, you know which O line guys we gotta get, we got to secure. So I was heavily involved in that process from transitioning from Jackson State to Colorado. So I kind of have like a different type of viewpoint. I wasn't just going out there just playing ball.

So what I hear you talk about is already stuff that they talked about in the pros.

A franchise quarterback.

Franchise quarterback has relationships, and those relationships lead to success. How do you build those bonds with your teammates.

I'll say it's easy because of course everybody is able to see, you know, what's going on from the outside. So then when you pick up that phone and call them like how I did with John Tate Western. You know that he was ready for it, you know, and then I just stayed on them, stay consistent talking to him and made sure it happened because I knew that was a guy that we needed on the team. And Will also, you know, Will was a work in progress. He he didn't come the first year, but the second year, you know, he came, and uh, he was happy about that decision.

You know.

One of the things that I think makes you really prepared to be a franchise quarterback is man You've been on the stage, bright lights forever.

That name carries a lot of weight and a lot of significance.

But there's also a lot of pressure that comes along with being a Sanders. How have you been able to navigate like the pressure and all the expectations that come along with being a Hall of Famer Sun.

I like the pressure that comes in everything. I'll say pressure is also a privileged So if you don't have pressure on you, then you know, I don't know what you're doing. So that's why I'm thankful, when I'm truly blessed that I am in a position in the situation that I'm in because I wouldn't want no other way.

You know, So putting on my scout hat.

One of the things that strikes me just how comfortable you are in your own skin, the way that you come in, wear to change hats and all that other stuff. So much of being successful is authentic, being authentic. How are you able to just be so confident in all environments when everyone is criticizing how you go about doing things, playing walking around, et cetera.

Cause you gonna be watching or you're gonna be talking about it. It's gonna be one to two. So I'd rather be the one, you know, getting talked about it in the one just watching it hating on another guy. So that's that's what I do. I got the most respect for everybody you know that that has had some type of success in their life, because I truly understand how hard it is. So I think people take that human factor out, how hard it is to get to that point, How hard it is for everybody out here to even be able to perform, to be able to even come here and work out in front of all these scouts and stuff like. It's extremely hard. So I never down talk, I never push down Nobody because I know how hard it is, you know, to perform.

You know, and thinking about like some of the special relationships that you've developed over the years Tom Brady being a guy that you can kind of lean on and talk to and maybe solicit some advits from.

When you've had those conversations, What has it been.

Like, Well, I would say when we spoke the most in depth, I'll say was early on in my college career. So a lot of things that he would speak on, would it, you know, registered to me till like now, So now you know, my plan for the next couple of weeks, in the next couple of months is go back and rewatch you know, all the footage that we talked about, and then you know, now register more and how you're saying turn your hips when you're throwing, create torque and all that stuff. Like a couple of years ago, I really didn't understand what that meant. But now it's like, okay, I truly understand that. So that that's what it is, is getting all the wisdom from everything that happened back then, rewatching things like I don't watch TV, I just watched old videos of myself.

So and thinking about on the field in the game.

There there's been a conversation about your style of play, right, Everyone's talking about all the quarterback needs to be more athletic in those things.

But you're more of a throwback.

You play from the pocket, You live in the pocket, You play with touch, time and anticipation. Uh, why does your style work and why would it continue to work at the next level.

I mean it always worked in the league. Look at the history of the league. Now, everybody was you know, big time runners back then, back in the day. So you got the greatest quarterback ever time. Brady ain't run too much. So I feel like the best thing for me is to play from the pocket, and that's what I'm most comfortable in now. The difference is is I'm able to adjust to my team. So if I need to be if I need to you know, take different type of drops, if I need to be able to get a little bit more active, then then I'm able to do that and adjust my game. So that was a lot of what we did the first year, you know in Colorado, I had to adjust my game to get more success, you know, based off of what we had on the rust.

So understanding like the brand that you guys first created at Jackson State, but then a Colorado y'all always got everybody's best, right, And so as a quarterback, you're always the target.

You're always the one catching all the heat.

How do you handle not only those expectations, but the escalated temper to escalated performance and things that people come at you. How do you handle that and continue to stay within yourself?

Well? Been like that from day one, you know. So I don't expect no other way. I don't expect somebody to bring their big game to the game. So that's why I have to go to different heights when it comes to training, when it comes to prepare and just going about everything in life. Because the last name and what it means, it's a certain type of standard that you have to have. So we know, you know where to target where everybody's super bowl every time we step on the field. So I'm not one that you know, likes to get embarrassed.

So and thinking about this, one thing scouts love to do is we love to make comparisons. Right, We're trying to say, like this player is gonna play like this person at the next level. But when you see yourself, who are some of the quarterbacks that you emulate that you're padding in your game.

After that, you can see yourself being at the next level.

Yeah, it's not like you can say it's a comparison. Everybody's their own weigh in, their own forming their own shape. Not everybody had to deal with there's much pressure how to deal with growing up through all everything that went on. So if you put a lot of people in the situation, you know, wheels in, not everybody would be able to be the person I am today. So you know, you just got to see, you know, how everything pans out, and I know what it's going to be. So it's just time for you guys to see.

Okay, last question.

One thing that people get wrong about Shudur Sanders, like the misconception. What's one thing that we have it wrong when it comes to how we evaluate you, how we talk about you in those lives.

I don't know, because I mean truthfully, like the opinions don't matter to me. So you know, I live in my own space, in my own world. So when everybody's on the ouside saying I don't know what people get wrong or anything like that, you.

Know, that's it. I don't know, all right, well I know this.

I know some NFL teams gonna get it right when they call your name on draft weekend.

Well, there you have it. Hope you guys enjoyed those.

Rhett was great, great event, great opportunity to catch up with Coach Prime, great opportunity to catch up with Shador. I love the idea of scrimmaging another team in the spring. I think I hope that that ends up happening. I absolutely love that idea.

Yeah, it was a great question.

I'm glad you brought that up with Coach Prime and has been one of the you know, kind of trending hot topics in college football. So many teams are getting rid of spring games, but Coach Prime trying to go the opposite direction and turn it into something meaningful for his program and for his players, which we'd love to see certainly. And we appreciate the Big Twelve, appreciate Commissioner Brett you Ormark for putting this event together, for giving us the ability to come and cover it the way we did.

And we had.

Some great crew, great production staff, getting us caught up on all things that we needed to to bring you guys the best of this coverage. If you missed any of that, that'll be on NFL Network throughout and we'll be back with some more Pro Day coverage and some more Pro Day recaps right here on Move the Sticks next week, following cam Ward's Pro Day at Miami, which you can see live on NFL Network Monday, four thirty Eastern time, and I'm sure we'll be talking about that in the episodes to follow next week right here on Move the Stick.

So for Bucky

Brooks and Daniel Jeremia, I'm read Thois, we'll catch you right here on Move the Sticks next time