#DIVEIN
Jan. 16, 2024

Jim Jensen: Crash

Jim Jensen: Crash

In 1981, the Miami Dolphins utilized an 11th round draft choice to select quarterback Jim Jensen out of Boston University. Jensen’s career as a signal caller was inauspicious at best, but he would quickly become one of the most versatile NFL players of his generation, contributing as a receiver, tight end, running back, full back, and special teams standout. A favorite of Don Shula and Dan Marino, Jensen solidified his place on the Dolphins 50th Season All-Time Team in 2015, and in the hearts of DolFans forever. Contributors to this episode include Sevach Melton and Dolphins Productions. Theme song created and performed by The Honorable SoLo D. The Fish Tank is Presented by iHeart Radio.

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Transcript
00:00:00 Speaker 1: You're now diving. I'm gonna have been that pich tank who sitting down with Seth Living Oh Jay, Well, and this is strictly for them true fans number one of course, y'all. This ain't the order neary sports talk that might have been that pitch tank. Welcome back to the fish tank right here on the Miami Dolphins Podcast Network, Seth Lovitt and the man with the best hands in the podcast business, O J McDuffie. Juice. This is a big one today. Oh man, you have no idea, man, this is our next guest. Bro is one of my favorites of all time, Big Seth, and I'm excited to have him all man, It's gonna be a funny for sure. Well, he's not just one of your favorites, he's an all time fan favorite. Jim crash Jensen dives into the fish tank. Crash, how you feeling, man, I'm feeling pretty good. Pretty good? How everybody? Hey looking good too? Mane Seth? You know me, I'm I'm fire up man. You know, but we would have played with you, man. I was gonna say that too. Man. If Crass and I were running a one by one with each other. Man you know, many big plays we could have made big sense. I mean, who's the ball gonna go to on third down? Though, Well, you know we're gonna sit, We're gonna get out there right in front, and Dan's gonna pick a guy and let it fly right. Crash that's right, Crash, get open. That's right. That's that's what he says that in the huddle. That was the play call. Well, you know, since we're talking about crash, crash, listen, let's just get right to that. How did Jim Jensen become crash? Oh? Just running down and kickoff and knocking people's helmets off. And actually there was one game where I ran down on a kickoff preseason game and both both of us hit each other. Well I hit him and both of our helmets went flying off, and we were watching film the next day. Don Struck said crash. So that's how I think. Other people say it was some other way, But so are there is it like one of those things where there's a lot of different stories about how it came to be. But you're if you say Strock, there's two stories. What's the other one. I think it's John Madden. I think Juice is gonna stick with the day with the Strock story. Oh that's pretty good. That's pretty good. Well, I'm glad we addressed that. But we're gonna dial it back here for a second, because I not only want to understand how you became crash, which we know now and again going with Don Strock, but you also became one of the most versatile players in NFL history. So let's go all the way back to Boston University. You become the starting quarterback your junior season and you lead the team to a seventeen to three and one mark over two seasons. Like I mean, have a hell of a career as a quarterback there. You're the team MVP, Y're an All conference performer. But we start to get a little glimpse of what is to become because like, you're in as a quarterback, but if you guys don't convert a third down and it's time to punt, you're putting another jersey on and you're the long snapper as well. I had to do that in one game against Louisville because our long snapper got hurt, so I had to put on a lineman's jersey and snap the ball and then That's how I got on the special teams. I was back up long snapper with the Dolphins, back up punter, played a lot of different positions, as you guys know, and it was fun. It kept it interesting and it kept me alert. At Boston University, we threw the ball maybe eleven twelve times a game, and most of our offense was tossed to the tailback and I would go lead block for the tailback. I love it. When I got to the Dolphins, I had to learn how to re defenses, which I never had to do in Boston, so it was pretty difficult. Coach Shula called me a lot of different names, so he didn't give you crowd. I got in that playbook so hard man. I had to know what the offense was doing, what the defense is doing, and it was really hard for me and Coach Shula. He did call me a lot of different names, and I was about to give it up. I called my dad. I said, Dad, I can't do this anymore. Coach is on me. He said, I'll just stick with it. You'll be all right. Then I did and it worked out pretty good. How far into your career was that like your rookie season that you called your dad or at what point? Yep. And I remember in the first practice, I was playing quarterback. I completed the pass, I went back behind the huddle. Next group was up and I got on a knee and Coach Shula gives me the thumbs up like this, and I said, well, thanks, Coach. He said, no, get the fuck up. That's really good. So let's go back. Let's go look back a little bit. You know, after those two years of record setting years at BU, you get invited to the Senior Bowl and one of the wide receivers you have on the squad is this skinny kid out of Dartmouth named David Shula. And from what we understand, big save. I mean, there was a play during the game between you and David that really got you noticed by the Miami Dolphins. You remember that Senior Bowl. Yeah, yeah, I told you that story. We did a little research. We can't reveal our sources now. Yeah. It was in the Senior Bowls practice and I threw the ball to Dave and it was a little too high and he went off for it, and I think it was aj junr came and hit him as he was in the air, and as soon as David went down, I saw Don Shure right on the sideline. I said, there's no way the Dolphins are drafted me, No way, and his kid blasted. I'm sorry, I said, you got his kid blasted. Yeah, you might think that across that team off. Oh, I love this. Actually it was actually Bill Arnsbarger that came up to Boston University worked me out, which was kind of weird because he was a defensive coordinator, right, and I guess he's the one that told coach Schule to draft me. So I got drafted in the eleventh round. They drafted another quarterback in the fourth round, Brad Right from New Mexico. So I didn't think I'd ever be able to make the team, and I just asked coach if I could play goal one receiver. That was the first time I asked him if I could play goal on receiver. So Dan would throw the fades and usually it was pretty successful, kind of like Aronde Gatson. Right, yeah, right, So before we get to that point, so again going back, eleventh round draft choice, which is again crazy, right, seven rounds, Now, there were twelve rounds at that point in time. You get drafted in the eleventh round, and you walk into a quarterback room and so there's David Woodley, who had just had a pretty impressive rookie season, and Don Strock like, what was it like? I'm assuming at that point you're trying to make the team as a quarterback? Right? We also had Brad Wright in there, who was the fourth fourth round draft pick, and we had guy Benjamin. So there were five quarterbacks and they were only keeping three of them. So yeah, yeah, it was pretty crazy. I was surprised I made the team, right, But you did, right? So you made it. And so then you're in there and you're watching Woodley kind of he's learning as he goes. He's only in his second year. Obviously, don Strock we know. I mean he was probably a coach in the locker room in a lot of ways. So what was that like for you? And then at what point you said that you asked to play goal line receiver? At what point did you start to assume other duties? When did special teams come into play for a guy who's in the quarterback room. Well, when I thought that I wasn't going to make it as a quarterback, I asked the coach if I could play other positions. I asked him if I could run down on kickoffs. So I actually never missed a kickoff, never missed a kickoff return, never miss a punt, never missed a punt return. And because I could play it was different positions, it was easier for Coach Shule to keep a player who could play five or six different positions other than keeping five or six players that played web position. So so you're saying sorry about that, Jim. So you're saying that you never missed a kickoff, never missed any of those returns from your rookie year. I never missed the practice. Wow, it's mesially his practices crash. His practice were no joke, right, you know the only practice I missed was when I was holding out for more money. And I'm sure he loved that. I'm sure Coach really was excited about those holdouts. No, you know that's we're joking a lot about coaching being impressed by what you were doing. But the truth is you became one of his favorite players of all time, and at least it seemed that way from from our perspective. You know, how would you describe your relationship with coach? And? Uh, you know, I know, you have a couple more funny stories about him. How would you how would you describe your relationship with coach? He actually became my mentor, you know, like my second father, because after the first year, you know, he started like it be a little bit more. He didn't have to give the thumbs up anymore because I never thumbs up. We had a great relationship and I missed the guy, and uh he's uh. He was the best coach ever in the league ever in my opinion. But I got a chance that I was blessed to play with so many great players. Marino would Lee, Tony Nathan All, the lineman, Dwight Stevenson, John Geesler, Ed Newman. On the defense, you had the Blues Brothers killer Bees, Yeah, the Bruise Brothers, right, yeah, they called they were the killer Bees, but Glenn Jordan Bees as well. So I was I was really blessed to have so much talent around me. You know, yeah, well you did, and you were you obviously added to that. But you know, those first three years, I didn't realize that you covered every kick. I was wondering how that transition happened from special teams to you know, but it sounds like the entire time, you're a third string quarterback, but you're also a key special teams performer. But then in nineteen eighty the Dolphins, as we know, famously draft this cocky quarterback out of pit, Danny Marino. And I read that. You were sitting there and you're like, look, they're only gonna keep three quarterbacks. I'm done. You said, you almost had like a sick feeling in your stomach when you found out they drafted Marino. I did, and that's a natural thing because Dan was so great, But the special teams helped. And watching Tony Nathan play that third down full back position, I learned a lot from Tony Nathan, and I learned a lot from Joe Rose. I learned a lot from Bruce Hardy. I played tight end as well. So Dan Johnson was my roommate. And it was just a lot of hard work and a lot of studying, man, a lot of definitely a lot of studying. And you weren't the odd man out in eighty three, they actually, you know, Woodley was let go or was moved. And then so you're still the number three quarterback in Danny's rookie year, and then eighty four. You start as the third quarterback, but then they really start to work into the offense at that point. Is that when you asked coach, hey, can I start to play goal line receiver? Is that when that conversation took place? Or like when did the transfer that? Because when Dan first came man, I started the game. It was against the Redskins in Washington, right, and I actually had five catches as a wide receiver and two of them were touchdowns. It's a pretty good day feel then, like I don't know what happened, but like when we got to the playoffs, I didn't play at all, but I played the first game caught two touchdowns. But I'm not sure why coach Shula didn't let me play offense. Big question mark. That is a little strange. And you talk about coach Sula, I want to go back to something when Juice was talking about the Senior Bowl and that whole experience with David Sula in the past. David Shula becomes your position coach. Right, you moved from quarterback to you all positions, but but you were a pass catcher. He's the receivers coach. Was that a good thing? Was that a strange way good. Dave was a great guy, great coach, and he helped me a lot, and he forgive me for that pass. It worked out for both, you guys. He found his calling and coaching and you ended up with the Dolphins. Yeah. I was glad that he forgave me. But Dave was great. He was. I loved playing with him, and I loved his coaching style. And you know, we had a lot of great coaches too. Gary Stevens was offensive coordinator for a while, you know, throwing back names. Gosh Alvadatti was our defensive coach. You know, I was really really blessed to play twelve years, and there's only one thing I would change is winning one of those Super Bowls that we were in. You're not alone in that. I have two AFC Championship rings. Do you still have him? I still have him? Yeah? Yeah, sell them sometimes you give them away, you know, the family, all kinds of crazy stories. Some people don't want the championship ring. Some people, you know, Look, we're friends with Joe Rose. I think anything's for sale, you know, so, but so you never really know. But I was curious. Joe's still doing it. Oh yeah, still doing it. Yeah, still calling, he calls the games. He's doing his morning radio every day. I'm out Sefie, Yep, I'm still doing it. Seventeen. I think they're on seventeen seventeen together. Yeah, man, something like that. Oh wow. Just we gotta find out a way we can get on another cruise with the fans. Absolutely. I told you this hat was from two of the fans on on the cruise ship, Patsy and Kimberly. And hopefully they'll see the show so they could see that I still wear the hat. That picture with you and the dolphin, Oh my god, me kissing the dolphin or the one hugging me, I was scared as hell. Man, those things are hu monkeys. Bro, you were scared with dolphin, Damn right, I was. I'm afraid of the oostin man. I don't guess why I don't get in the Oshaan. Everything's too big in that thing. Bro. That's funny. So crass here you are, crash. You're thinking about you know, the addition of Dan Marino is probably going to be like, it's gonna cost your job, and you know, we know that offense itself. You talked about all the things you did on that offense, and the offense had no rhyme or reason. Right, It's like all memorization like eighty four, eighty five, eighty six, eighty seven, ninety two. I mean really, and if you played fullback tied end x Z, you have to just memorize what those guys did and stuff, right, yeah, And to help being a quarterback, you know right right, Well, my first year I had to learn everything, every position on offense and defense, so that helped a lot. But I remember we were in nineteen eighty seven. We were playing Buffalo and darynld Talley was responsible to cover me sometimes Shane Collin. I remember Darryl Tally came in and I had to check and go. If he blissed, I had to block him. And sometimes, you know, you cut him. Sometimes you fake like you're can cut up and stay up. But I cut him that time, and Darryl Tally started com playing and saying, crash, quit your cutting, quit your cutting. And I looked at they had Bruce Smith, they had Shane Colin, they had Darryl Tally and Cornelius Bennett, and I looked at each one of them. I'll cut you, I'll cut you I'll cut you. I heard Marino laughing his ass off behind it back in the huddle. Yeah, oh I love it. Let him know you you know how the adrenaline his juice. Oh yeah, oh yeah, No matter what I mean, I was. I was trying to cut everybody too, man. But because I was small though, you know, were you going to point it out and tell him no, not those guys I was not as was tougher than me. Man, I'll tell you that right now. Yeah. And so you know, speaking of Danny, you know, coming in his quarterback, that's when you started moving into these different positions. But hell, man, you became one of his favorite targets at one point. Man, fifty eight catches in ninety and eighty eight, sixty one and eighty nine. I mean, you're playing everything that we talked about. You and Dan had great chemistry. Man. How'd that develop as well? Well? You know, both for Pennsylvania. I feel that part was like each other. He was great. I used to watch Dan in slow motion when I was when he came in, and it was like regular speed, you know, and it was crazy. Uh. I remember when we had we had way in every Thursday and we used to go out to dt Riots after Wigham and I remember Dan telling me that he just signed his first million dollar contract, and I said, wow, that's amazing. But think about it nowadays, right, yeah, right, they make nowadays, right, Danny being the forty million club, right, and she got paid a lot more than a million. Yeah, he's making up for it now. He's making up for it now. You know, Ralph is out there hustling for him. He's helping to her, right, Yeah, yeah, he's here. He does his stuff with the team, he helps Tom Garfinkel, and then he's still out. There is no greater pitch man. I don't think there's a greater pitchman. Stop probably two months ago and I think he was in a bar and he was telling me how much fun he had playing with me. It was pretty cool. You know, they get that Saturday night they go, you know, as a group, they go to restaurants and you know before the games, you know, so Danny's always hanging with that crew, him and that more. I think Dupe goes every once in a while, and of course I think Tom Garfinkel and those guys go and have a nice meal. And you didn't get the invited. I never get the invite. Man, I didn't make it. I think you need to go to the next one if they want to really tell some stories. So I remember another time I had a press conference and I was talking to the media where we were getting ready to play the Jets, and I said, I hate everything about New York. And I shouldn't have said that. I meant to say, I hate everything about the New York Jets, right, I said I hate everything about New York. And I was in Shulo's office right after that. I bet you can imagine the one I was in there once crash. I was in his office once just after Yeah. Man, it was after a birthday party somebody on Thursday night, and uh, I knew the party was going on. It was down the grove and that Friday morning, I don't know how he found out, but that Friday morning he had me in his office, like, we got a big game on Sunday. You're out there partying all night, you know what I mean. I'm like, coach, I didn't know they were throwing this party. It was a surprise. I knew it wasn't It wasn't a surprise, sorry, coach. It wasn't a surprise. But man, that was the only time I vowed never to go back in there, bro, no matter what I was in there a couple of times. Just a couple, huh, just a couple. I love it. Oh, that is too good. Well, speaking of going out and speaking of being favorites, the two of you guys are all time fan favorites. And I think it's because both of you guys were known for enjoying South Florida to its fullest. Both of you guys were accessible to the fans. It wasn't like you were up on some pedestal. I mean, you both had similar reputations that way. And I have heard, and I kind of want to verify this story that there was one night that you were in an establishment in Fort Lauderdale and a disagreement happened. It took place, and it was a disagreement between you and these other two gentlemen. And it turns out these other two gentlemen were wrestling superstars, the Road Warriors. Is this a true story? Did you get into it with the Road Warriors at a Fort Lauderdale bar? I did? What happened? The Road Warriors were actually my roommate Dan Johnson's friends and you know, in a bar start drinking. They were draking, everybody was drinking, So you know, you learn after that to slow down out on your drinking. There was another story when I first got my Super Bowl ring. I was with Doug Better's Bomb Hour and I just got my Super Bowl ring and some guy was harassing us. And I don't know if I should tell people this, but I got your limitations over, bro, you can say whatever you want now. Well, anyway I got. I got a little pissed off, and I punched the guy and I said super Bowl seventeen right on his cheek and I had my ring off. Yeah right there. Oh, I love it. I love it. That's like they had that scene in night Spinter. They borrowed that from that story. Probably you guys remember Scott Sweety's of course, Yeah, I remember. We were out in San Diego and it was the day before practice, kind of like half speed and just a mental practice, of course, and Swede's around an eighteen yard square and before he got his head around, Marino hit him right in the helmet and the ball went flying up in the air, almost knocked him over. And Scott comes back to the huddle. He says, you got to admit it was right on the money. The whole huddle fell down on the ground. Marino called him seven up. Never will oh Man. Daddy had lots of lines. Huh. We just had Danny on the show and we talked about those lines. He was almost was he was kind of torn between being impressed with himself by those lines and a little bit embarrassed that he said some of those things. Yeah, it was funny though. It was real funny. So Cras we talked about, you know, you being drafted eleventh round. You famously wore number eleven for the Dolphins and apparently said you wanted to play eleven seasons, but you ended up playing into your twelfth season Dolphins a quarter. Yeah, eleven games, four games, four game. I gave you four games, so it gave me twelve. Yeah, they gave you twelve and a half. That's right. He was half considered a year. They made a big trade for Keith Jackson. Oh that's what okay. Coach Sure called me up. And I knew that they made the trade because it was on the news and Coach called me up. He said, Jim, I want you to come to the office. I said, Coach I'm not coming to the office. I know what you want. So he told me he had to let me go because they made a big free agency deal with Keith Jackson. And I remember standing on the picket line in nineteen eighty seven fighting for free agency. It was like the first victim of it. Wow yet crazy? How about that? How about that? That's right because Keith was the first NFL free agent. Yeah, and you're a casualty for something that you fought for standing on the picket line. How about that? Remember the replacements? Yeah? Absolutely absolutely? That was the year had no man. But you weren't finished though, Crash. I mean you, you weren't. Phintey said, oh, you didn't hang up your pass and your cleats and retire. Man. You actually ended up playing with the Miami Hooters as a player coach, right, And I think Don Strock was the head man and A. J. Dewey and Liff for Hobbley were on the on the staff. And I started off playing two way linebacker and receiver. And it's the first time I actually got hurt. So I asked h I said, Stroker, I don't want to play football anymore. He said, oh, Jim, just play quarterback, I said, okay, so I played quarterback, but that was worse than playing linebacker receiver because you have the defensive lineman. He tried to they had to play two ways, so that learned how to play offense. So I got hit more played quarterback than I did playing receiver. You would have been safe for a receiver. So so Stroker is the reason you went and played you weren't gonna play at all. Huh, Yeah, he's the reason. That's good stuff, man, that I went to a lot of those games. Crash you want a lot of those games. Yeah, we see you there. Yeah, well, you know, we didn't really know each other then. You know, at that point we didn't know each other. We really became Danny came to a lot of them too, because it was the Hooters. Yes, right, he was like part owner at that point. Wasn't there something that the Hooters maybe maybe not the team, but the Hooters around him him been champing legs. They were, They were real tight at that point. Yeah, it was fun a lot of fun. Yeah. But in those two seasons though, mean you obviously had a lot of fun. Thirty two hundred yards, fifty one touchdowns, eight them rushing even caught a touchdown as well. Man, he was doing the same thing for the Hooter squad that you were doing for the Dolphins. Yeah, it was definitely a different game. We got Duper to come out for right, right, I was duper in an Arena League game. He played like one game and he said this, I had enough of this. What was that like? Because you have these guys that are just still trying to live out their dreams, probably have other jobs right there. You know, Jay Feeley, the kicker, was on the show before he broke into the NFL. He was I think he was like an investment banker and he was kicking at night for the Florida Bobcats. What was that like for you? You had played twelve seasons in the National Football League at the highest level, catching passes from Dan Marino in his epic nineteen eighty four season, and you're with these other guys that are probably driving trucks and doing other things. I mean, that had to be kind of a wild experience. Well, now you have the UFL coming out, excuse guys opportunities to show themselves, and you know that's that's the rock owns owns it, right the rock, he's probably yeah, they put to Yeah, they XFL in USFL. I'm not even sure which ones w in the World Football League. In the XFL, so there's like eight teams, yeah, the top the top four, think of each of each league. You know, one thing the XFL did that I really liked was to kick off. They put the return team on the twenty and they put the kickoff team ten yards apart from the return team, and the kicker had to kick it within twenty to the goal. I right, And then as soon as the kicker or the receiver catches the ball, then the guys ten yards apart could go after each other. I mean a guy named Crash. Of course you're gonna like that rule like that. I feel like that rule was named for you. Now in the NFL, there's no returns. Can you imagine that? Imagine if that rule existed. I mean that that's part of how you made the team from what you're telling us. You know, you're a quarterback who made the team because you could run down and knock the shit out of somebody on special teams. And that doesn't even exist anymore, or it's been minimized. Yeah, it's minimized. We got one last thing. We're gonna let you go. I know you, I know you've got big plans the rest of today. I got one last thing for your crash. So we end every episode with our two minute drill. Given the fact that you've played quarterback, tailback, full back, tight end and receiver, you know how to run a good two minute drill. So Mike's got behind the camera here, he's got the two minute clock up. We're gonna hit you with a couple of quick questions, just some fun stuff, and then we'll get you out of here. Sound good. Yeah, one thing, juice, did you guys ever do the one minute drill with no timeouts? Oh? Yes, absolutely, yeah. I want to show those big things. Man. That was That was great practice right there. It's so funny you say that, because when we had Danny on for the two minute drill, we asked him if he wanted time out and said, nah, I don't know, I don't need no timeouts. That's that's good. All right, let's get it, let's get it rolling, and started. Here we go, all right, crash, here we go. We read that your mother worked at a Motown record factory, and as a kid, you would throw Vinyl records around in the yard like frisbees. What is your favorite Motown song? And did you break that record? Oh my fav I don't know. I didn't listen to any of them. He was just breaking them in the yard. We had a whole closet full of them. I had two older brothers and we would just go after each other. Oh man, you wish you had some of those back now, I mean some of those, Yeah, I wish I had all of them. That that's a great, great story. Okay, you were selected as a member of the Miami Dolphins Top fifty team of all time and the Dolphins had this spectacular weekend to celebrate, you know, this special group of players. Who did you have the most fun with that weekend? Could it have been Dan Marino or was it my partner here o J McDuffie. I'd have to say juice man. You know, when I got that call from from that it's like I was in tears, you know, because I never thought that I would get selected as top fifty, because there were a lot of damn good players from the Dolphins through the years, and I was just like so humbled that I was selected to get on that team, and that was really cool. We had. We had a lot of let me show you something. Are you guys done with the too many? Okay, we'll call it time out, call the time. Yeah, I don't know if you can see it or not. Oh yeah, look at that? Can you see it or not? Oh? Yeah? Who put Joe? Look at that? Got the autograph? Oh that's great? That is That is dope. That is How cool is that? The names on that man number eleven out of two fifty. Look, there's glare, isn't there. I want to know how Joe Rose got on that poster, the first one. I think you right? All right, we're gonna we got two more questions, so the clock will be rolling again. All right, all right, crash. As Big seven said before, you played damn near every position in football. What is more difficult throwing a touchdown past catching a touchdown, past running for a touchdown, or covering a kickoff? Uh, let's see catching one. I mean the first that's another story. I didn't get to tell you time out another time out? You got it? Apparently we do. Yeah, this is not the one minute drill. It's the two minute drill. So you're good. We had a triple tight end on the goal line, and there was a little mix up with the who was where Bruce Hardy was supposed to line up and Joe Rose was supposed to line up. So we made the adjustment and I ran out in the flat and I caught my first touchdown ever. I come back to the sideline, I had the ball still, and Coach Sule says, don't you know what the fuck you're doing. I said, Coach, there was a mix up. We made the adjustment and I got the ball right here. Coach, it's a touchdown. Huh. He said, oh, f you he said that. He said, oh, fuck you. There you go. I saw Duke Berg Clayton right behind him and they both went whoop. It was both off because I said, oh, that was a crash. Had the response every time I hear these stores. When Shula comes walking over to talk to somebody on the sidelines, everybody else runs away. Joe Rose tells the story where he got chewed. He was sitting next to Nat and Jimmy on the bench and they were consoling him because he got chewed out for something, and Shula came back for more walked over to him on the bench and that and Jimmy got They both took off and did the same move, so that seems to be the smart move. All right, we got too funny? All right, last question. Here we go. The clock's gonna run. We're gonna score a touchdown here. The Miami Dolphins are famous for some great nicknames for their players. The current roster has the cheetah. We have the penguin, we have the astronaut. You played with super duper. We have Juice right here. What is the greatest nickname in team history and team history? Oh, that's a good question, I say, crash there. That's the two minute drill. I love it. Oh, man, I love it. Jim this was amazing. I appreciate you coming inside from the cold weather because it seems like you want to be out in the cold. I love it. Thank you so much, man, Thanks for diving in man. I love you, Bro, love you too. You're the best man. You're now diving into the tank. Just like Jew said. Thanks for diving into the fish tank. Presented by iHeartRadio. Be sure to follow us on whatever streaming platform you're using, and don't be afraid to rate the show or leave us a comment. We love your feedback, and remember you can find us as well as drive Time with Travis Wingfield and all of our international partners on Miami Dolphins dot com