Charles Barkley rips Skip Bayless’ ‘asinine’ Tom Brady-Bill Belichick take

Charles Barkley’s opinion of Skip Bayless still hasn’t changed — and the latest development in their feud involved Barkley blasting the “Undisputed” host’s “asinine” take about Tom Brady, Bill Belichick and the Patriots dynasty.

During a segment on Friday’s edition of “The Dan Patrick Show,” Barkley brought up a comment from Bayless where he allegedly said, “Bill only won championships because of Tom Brady.”

It’s unclear when Bayless made the comment that Barkley referenced, but he recently labeled Belichick — who parted ways with the Patriots following the 2023 season and hasn’t landed a job for the 2024 season — as a “glorified defensive coordinator” during a Jan. 25 segment with Keyshawn Johnson and Michael Irvin, according to Awful Announcing.


Charles Barkley blasted Skip Bayless for an “asinine” take about Tom Brady and Bill Belichick. Screengrab via YouTube/Dan Patrick Show

The Brady-Belichick debate has emerged as the ultimate question about the era in New England that featured six Super Bowl titles, given that Brady left and won another with the Buccaneers while Belichick compiled a 29-39 record, including a wild-card loss after the future Hall of Famer left for Tampa.

Barkley told Patrick that he didn’t think the criticism aimed at Belichick “ain’t right,” since Brady didn’t coach the Patriots’ defense or special teams.

He added that Andy Reid, who recently won his third title since taking over as the Chiefs’ coach, has become “a great coach,” but Barkley questioned how many championships the 65-year-old would’ve won without Patrick Mahomes — who recently won his latest Super Bowl MVP award — at quarterback.

“When you get on television, our job is to be fair and objective,” Barkley said. “And we got some clowns on television now who are like, ‘Belichick is overrated.’ Dude went to nine Super Bowls. There’s nobody who went to nine Super Bowls who’s overrated.”

Patrick, at one point during Barkley’s answer, asked why the NBA Hall of Famer still watches shows such as “Undisputed,” and Barkley claimed that he doesn’t — and that people just send him clips of the “hot takes.”

Barkley’s hatred of Bayless has been well-documented.

Charles Barkley On The Dan Patrick Show Full Interview | 2/16/24

He called him a “punk-a–” in 2021, someone who “cherry-picks the guys he likes and the guys he don’t like.”

Barkley has poked fun at Bayless multiple times on the “NBA on TNT” set, including once in 2022 when Barkley and Shaquille O’Neal mocked a debate that escalated between Bayless and former “Undisputed” co-host Shannon Sharpe.

Then, Bayless responded in July by calling Barkley a “clown” and saying on his podcast that he’d be his “dream debate partner” to replace Sharpe on “Undisputed” — since “all I’d have to do is let Charles go first and listen to him make a fool out of himself.”


Skip Bayless is pictured during Friday’s edition of “Undisputed.” Screengrab via X/@undisputed

And this time, during the interview with Patrick, Barkley used the phrase “hate him with every fiber” to describe his relationship — or lack thereof — with Bayless.

“Sometimes, he makes me want to gain weight back so I can hate him with even more weight,” Barkley told Patrick.

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Charles Barkley, Draymond Green in All-Star argument over Warriors

There is nothing not awkward about this exchange between Charles Barkley and Draymond Green.

The Warriors star got a tad defensive when the basketball Hall of Famer said that Golden State is “cooked” this season during the NBA All-Star broadcast. Green was serving as a sideline reporter and Barkley and the “Inside the NBA” crew were commentating on the festivities, which aired on TBS and TNT.

“I hate to say it, but the Golden State Warriors are cooked,” Barkley said.

“That’s crazy,” Green replied. “You said that last year, but we all know you don’t know what you’re talking about.”

When Barkley denied Green’s claim, the Warriors forward fired back: “You said it every year. You said it every year since I’ve been in the league.”


Warriors star Draymond Green interviews Jayson Tatum of Team Giannis during the 2023 NBA All-Star Game on Feb. 19, at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah.
NBAE via Getty Images

Barkley continued to disagree, saying, “That’s not true, but y’all are cooked now… y’all are done… I’m telling you, y’all are done.”

Green hit back with a jab about Barkley never winning a championship in his career.

“This is crazy… Are we?… That’s four ahead of you, boss,” Green said, referring to his number of championship rings.

Barkley apparently went on to say that Golden State’s younger core has yet to step up in a big way this season while the team’s stars are getting older — adding that All-Star point guard, Stephen Curry, is “starting to break down.” Curry has missed 20 of the Warriors’ 58 games this season and is currently out with a leg injury.


Mascot Jazz Bear of the Utah Jazz delivers donuts to celebrate Charles Barkley’s birthday during the 2023 NBA All-Star Game on Feb. 19 at the Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah.
NBAE via Getty Images

Charles Barkley celebrates his birthday during the 2023 NBA All-Star game at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah, Feb. 19, 2023.
AFP via Getty Images

Green didn’t like that comment.

“He’s starting to break down? He got hit in the knee and hurt his knee!” Green said. “He didn’t just get hurt. He also got his arm snatched back, they’re contact injuries. Thank God he don’t look like you in Houston.”

The tense exchange occurred when Barkley rehashed a comment made by Grizzlies star Ja Morant during a sideline interview with Green.

At one point in the All-Star game, Green asked Morant if he was still not worried about any teams in the Western Conference following the NBA trade deadline on Feb. 9. The Nets traded Kevin Durant to the Suns on the night before the 3 p.m. deadline.


Reggie Miller and Draymond Green smile during the broadcast of NBA All-Star Saturday Night as part of 2023 NBA All Star Weekend on Feb. 18 in Salt Lake City, Utah.
NBAE via Getty Images

“Definitely you got to look at Phoenix now with adding KD,” Morant said. “Obviously, we can’t shy away from y’all [the Warriors]. Everybody knows y’all are always in contention… still Boston, man.

“But yeah, I’m still fine in the west.”

The defending champion Warriors are sitting in the ninth spot in the Western Conference with a 29-29 record.

Golden State defeated the Celtics in six games in the 2022 NBA Finals, which secured their fourth championship in eight seasons.

Green signed a multi-year contract with Turner in January 2022 and is expected to join the “Inside the NBA” team whenever his playing career concludes.

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What TNT’s posturing means for NBA’s future on TV

Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav made some noise last week by intimating that Turner Sports might not do a new agreement when its deal with the NBA ends in three years.

This caused my phone to buzz as sports media folks wondered whether, after four decades, Turner and the NBA could be headed toward a breakup.

What Zaslav said:

From The Wall Street Journal’s Joe Flint:

Sports is hard.” — Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav on rising costs and ratings challenges. Sports once “lifted all the boats.” Says we have favorable deal(s) on March Madness, NHL and baseball playoffs. On NBA he says, “We don’t have to have NBA.”

It has to be a deal for the future, it can’t be a deal for the past.” — Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav on next NBA rights deal.

Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav
Getty Images

What he previously said: During a WBD earnings call on Nov. 3, Zaslav spoke about the NBA, and this was a part of it:

“We love the NBA. But we’re going to be disciplined. In the end, if there’s an NBA deal, it’s going to be a deal that’s very attractive for us and very attractive for Adam [Silver, NBA commissioner]. But we have a lot of tools in that we have a lot of sports assets that no one else has. We got a global sports business that nobody else has. And we have a platform, a high-quality platform like HBO Max that could generate 30 million people watching within a short period of time for a great piece of content. Imagine what that could do with sport. And we’ve had very good luck with sport in Europe. So I think it’s an opportunity. We like the NBA, but we’re going to be disciplined. I’m hopeful that we can do something very creative.”

What he’s done: TNT signed Charles Barkley to a 10-year deal that immediately raised his salary significantly from $10 million per year. TNT also signed the rest of the iconic “Inside The NBA” crew to extensions. This was an indication of TNT’s plans and how much the network wanted to keep the NBA. The language in the Barkley deal, I’ve been told, calls for his contract to be revisited if TNT loses NBA rights, though it is not immediately clear what that would entail.

What Zaslav’s comments mean: They mean something, not everything. I would hone in on these two quotes for real guidance.

“It has to be a deal for the future, it can’t be a deal for the past,” Zaslav said.

Charles Barkley and Co. recently signed contract extensions with Turner Sports.
NBAE via Getty Images

This suggests Zaslav would like the NBA to help drive HBO Max subscriptions while likely trying to keep Turner’s revenue stream. This is what ESPN is doing in every new deal, securing rights for all of its platforms.

The future for global companies such as WBD is to try to sell subscriptions globally, which might be what Zaslav is partly thinking when he talks about Turner’s future relationship with the NBA.

ESPN/Disney, Amazon, Apple and other companies likely will be interested in the same concept. It will cost a lot, and, ultimately, I think the NBA will have more than just two distribution partners. The current partners could slim down their number of cable games. For TNT, think maybe just Thursdays, but not Tuesdays.

There is also the matter of the new in-season tournament that the NBA hopes becomes a thing.

Global superstars such as Stephen Curry put the NBA in a good position to negotiate its next set of rights deals, which begin with the 2025-26 season.
Getty Images

Turner will be very active in retaining NBA rights, but there are no guarantees, especially as Zaslav emphasizes profit as opposed to just growth.

Cut & spend: One final point. WBD is in the midst of layoffs, which started with 70 behind-the-scenes employees who worked on sports. There is a feeling the company may be cutting before doing some more big spending.

Quick Clicks

The World Cup started poorly for Fox Sports, which isn’t entirely the network’s fault because it didn’t have anything to do with the bribery that led Qatar, a country that demeans the rights of women and gay people, to be the host. Still, though, it wasn’t great. With the World Cup moved from the summer to the winter and the NFL king in the U.S., the opening game aired on FS1, not Fox, which diminished its importance. FS1 is a network that routinely doesn’t send announcers to other games, which tells you how much it values production and says a lot about how much we should value the network. John Strong, Stuart Holden and Jenny Taft were on hand for Ecuador’s 2-0 victory over Qatar, but there was no post-game show. When the Qatar supporters section was shown, there were no women in sight. Fox Sports chose to ignore this while the network runs ads about how Qatar is so great. Again, some of this is due to circumstances that Fox did not create, but it just feels smaller than it should. And, even for those who love soccer and are used to it being run poorly, it is ugly that a country that disdains equal rights is the host. Fox probably needs to address it a little, if not a lot.

Notice something missing from this photo?
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LeBron James’ alternate broadcast of Amazon’s “Thursday Night Football” was pretty good. As with most of these secondary listens, it is not perfect if you are really into the game. James was mostly joined by non-football players — Dez Bryant and Jalen Ramsey were the exceptions. The key to this version of “The Shop” was Jamie Foxx. This is kind of self-explanatory — he’s Jamie Foxx. He’s very funny, so that added a lot. Ramsey gave the show a viral moment by saying James will be accused on Twitter of lying. It was good because, with everyone in person, it gave the feel of hanging out with LeBron and friends for a game. It didn’t give you the same level of expertise as the Manningcast, but it did enough that it may be worth checking out again when TNF has a bad game in Raiders-Rams on Dec. 8. … Among the layoffs from WBD was Turner Sports PR man Jay Moskowitz. Moskowitz is a thorough, hard worker.

Will Apple and MLS grow the game?

The pricing for streaming all MLS games on Apple TV+ next season was released last week, and it immediately raised eyebrows around the entire sports media stratosphere.

The numbers: Let’s go through it, citing the company’s “Apple Newsroom” press release:

Starting February 1, fans can subscribe to MLS Season Pass on the Apple TV app for $14.99 per month during the season or $99 per season, and Apple TV+ subscribers can sign up at a special price of $12.99 per month and $79 per season.

Gareth Bale (center) celebrates with Los Angeles FC teammates during their win in the 2022 MLS Cup.
USA TODAY Sports

Golazo!: I think most people have a fundamental misunderstanding of subscriptions, and I think Apple does not.

Apple says these games will be available on billions of devices around the world. So when I predictably conducted a very unscientific poll, the idea that people won’t subscribe “won.” Among the first 5,000 who responded, only 4.6 percent said they would subscribe.

But this is what is misunderstood about subscription businesses: You don’t need everyone. You really don’t need most. And what you want to do is get as much money as possible from your diehard fans who are willing to pay the most. So let’s do some simple math. Let’s use the results of our unscientific poll (which admittedly has a bias toward engaged American sports fans), round up to 5 percent and say Apple has a billion devices out there. That would be 50 million subscribers. (Easy math, because I was a journalism major.)

There is no way they are getting 50 million subs! You are correct. No chance.

However, I’m using that outlandish number to show how Apple could recoup the $250 million per year the company is paying MLS for the rights (MLS is covering the production costs, so the league probably nets more like $200M, give or take).

MLS commissioner Don Garber
USA TODAY Sports

If we use the easy math (again) of $100 per subscriber, Apple/MLS only needs 2.5 million subscribers to get to $250 million per season. I’m not saying they will hit that benchmark, but we are talking about the ability to reach the entire world with no blackouts. We shall see if they can.

In understanding subscription economics, and factoring in that soccer is the world game and Apple says there are more than a billion people who actively use an iPhone, it is conceivable that Apple can reach .25 percent of those users to subscribe to MLS.

So as a business proposition for Apple, it may make some sense. Heck, I get a monthly bill from Apple for $1 for storage for my kids’ phones that I’m not positive they use. You almost think they may be able to reach .25 percent of Apple devices by mistake.

You could base these calculations on a ratio of Apple TV+ subscribers instead. Apple doesn’t officially give out how many subscribers it has, but the internet has the figure at around 30 million (I don’t really trust the internet, but let’s stay that is right). If Apple got two percent of 30 million existing users to sign up, it would be just 600,000 for MLS.

MLS thinks the product will have reach because the league features players born in 82 different countries, 37 of whom are on World Cup rosters.

There’s buzz around Lionel Messi potentially playing in MLS at the end of his career.
AFP via Getty Images

And, here’s something we wrote previously: How about if MLS adds Lionel Messi? Could Messi pay for himself with digital subscription economics?

Yellow card: What I don’t understand is why MLS and Apple are giving away subscriptions to teams’ season ticket-holders. This is supposedly 300,000-400,000 freebies. These are MLS’ most loyal customers with money in their pockets.

If Apple and MLS release numbers one day, these people will be included as subscribers, but they aren’t paying. MLS and Apple are hoping to have these people evangelize the product. I’d let them do that — and take their money.

Yellow card II: Two of the most popular sports in the world are soccer and basketball. The NBA is by far the best pro basketball league in the world. MLS is not even close to the best soccer league. Many people around the world, including in the United States, have access to watch the Premier League, Champions League and every other soccer match they want. If the NBA were to try the MLS-Apple game plan, it might really work, though as stated above, I doubt it does a one-party, exclusive deal and probably would advise against that, at this point.

MLS has yet to announce deals with ESPN and Fox to continue to have games simulcast on broadcast and cable TV, though it still appears to be in the cards. I know the folks at the networks like MLS commissioner Don Garber, but I’m not sure why they would want to prop up MLS’ 10-year agreement with Apple.

An agreement, which, by the way, could wipe the networks’ businesses off the map if it really works. When it is all said and done, there will be plenty of free MLS games in front of the Apple paywall and some select games on ESPN, ESPN2, FS1, ABC and Fox.

NYCFC’s Alexander Callens defends Philadelphia Union midfielder Alejandro Bedoya during the MLS conference finals.
USA TODAY Sports

Yellow card III: I tend to doubt MLS will grow as a global league, though a move for a legend such as Messi prior to the 2026 World Cup in North America could add some juice. MLS, to the frustration of American soccer fans, has shown no real appetite yet to fight for talent with the big boys of soccer.

So this might work in terms of being a good money deal — no one was close to Apple’s $250M — but, at the same time, the growth that big American soccer fans want to see in the level of MLS doesn’t feel fully as if it’s on the horizon. Without that leap and with convenient access to better leagues already in place, does MLS grow?

Red card: MLS is making me, a huge soccer fan, decide: Do I need it or not? If it were part of a bigger service, incorporated into the price, such as in ESPN+’s deal with the NHL (out-of-market MLS games previously were included with ESPN+, but there were blackouts), the value proposition is with the overall content, not just a thumbs up or thumbs down on MLS.

The huge MLS fan is going to put his or her thumbs up. That’s why sports are so vital in the media landscape. We will pay for the games we love.

But if you are in charge of a growing league, do you want someone like me — who is already watching Premier League, Champions League and the World Cup — to decide whether I want to put my thumbs up for $14.99 per month? Not so sure about that.

Extra time: Though we did break the fact that Apple and MLS were getting together in this here newsletter in January, we also discussed MLB’s deal with the company. Here’s what is not totally clear: What is Apple’s strategy? My belief is they want the MLS format to become ubiquitous. The rights don’t come up for so many leagues for so long that it is kind of irrelevant to even consider. (This is also why the NBA is in prime position with its rights deals expiring soon.)

NBA commissioner Adam Silver
AFP via Getty Images

Could Apple replicate the MLS model with another sports property? Maybe, but my gut tells me the NBA — though I’m a bigger believer in subscription — doesn’t ultimately do a deal like this if Apple wants the rights to everything. (It actually is basically impossible in the relatively near term unless something changed with all the teams’ RSN deals.)

The one-stop shopping is smooth and easy, which is what Apple and Amazon do so well, making them transformative companies. However, the NBA is not going to give them everything. NBA commissioner Adam Silver may be watching, but he is going to want games to be on broadcast and probably cable TV to go along with the addition of streaming.

This MLS-Apple deal might be a transformative deal or it could really stall growth for the league. Apple basically owns the league for the next decade. Players even will wear Apple patches on sleeves. It was the only deal MLS really had — the money was not comparable in any other offer.

How this works might be more interesting (from a sports media perspective) than watching the Houston Dynamo vs. Real Salt Lake.

Programming note: There will be a podcast next week, but no newsletter the following Monday. Back on Dec. 5.



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