BenchMarks

Empty The Bench Network

BenchMarks is an audio-first documentary series from the Empty the Bench Network, where the biggest moments in sports aren’t just remembered — they’re re-examined. Hosted by Callan McClurg and joined by voices from across the Empty the Bench Network, BenchMarks lives at the intersection of E60, 30 for 30, and Real Sports. Each episode digs deep into the controversial moments, polarizing figures, and defining games and plays that refuse to fade with time. These are the stories that sparked debate, shaped careers, altered leagues, and still echo through locker rooms, broadcasts, and barroom arguments years — sometimes decades — later. Through immersive storytelling, original reporting, archival sound, and thoughtful conversation, BenchMarks revisits the moments that history never settled. Not to sensationalize them, but to understand them — the context, the consequences, and why they continue to matter. This is sports history told with humanity, curiosity, and a willingness to ask the uncomfortable questions. If you believe the best sports stories don’t end at the final whistle, subscribe to BenchMarks wherever you get your podcasts and join us as we revisit the moments that defined the game — and the people inside it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episodes

  1. JAN 26

    BenchMarks: "Who do you think you are?! I Am!"

    For decades, bowling was the quintessential American Sunday afternoon sport—quiet, focused, and relentlessly polite. Then came Pete Weber. In this episode of BenchMarks, Nick Morgasen profiles the most electrifying, controversial, and polarizing figure the Professional Bowlers Association (PBA) has ever known. As the son of bowling legend Dick Weber, Pete was destined for the lanes, but he forged a legacy entirely his own: a dazzling career that includes 37 PBA Tour titles, a record five U.S. Open victories, and the distinction of being the only bowler to complete the "Triple Crown" twice. Yet, Pete Weber is perhaps best known for his sheer, unadulterated passion. Morgasen traces Weber's journey from a teenage phenomenon with a high-flying backswing to the perennial Hall of Famer whose fire burned so hot it often boiled over. We dissect the intense showmanship, the D-Generation X-inspired crotch chops, and the public outbursts that earned him the moniker "The Bad Boy of Bowling." Finally, we zoom in on the moment that cemented his pop-culture status: his triumphant, chaotic, and utterly nonsensical post-strike roar at the 2012 U.S. Open: "Who do you think you are? I am!" Discover the true context behind the quote, the heckler who inspired it, and how a botched line of trash talk created a legendary, generation-defining sports meme that put bowling back on the map. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    16 min
  2. JAN 12

    BenchMarks: Billion Dollar Lines

    The National Basketball Association’s relationship with China is a modern, billion-dollar balancing act, fraught with political tension and ethical conflict. On this episode of BenchMarks, Nick Morgasen dives deep into the complex, often contradictory, ties that bind the world's most globally successful sports league to the world's second-largest economy. We trace the history of the NBA's expansion into China, that all began with then commissioner Larry O'Brien and the Washington Bullets stepping foot in China inn 1979, that would be further spearheaded by the vision of former commissioner David Stern, which evolved into a multi-billion-dollar market fueled by broadcasting deals and the legacy of players like Yao Ming. The episode then unpacks the 2019 crisis, where a single, seven-word tweet from then-Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey expressing support for Hong Kong protesters triggered a diplomatic and financial firestorm that cost the league hundreds of millions of dollars. Billion Dollar Lines examines the difficult choices the league, its owners, and its socially conscious players face when American ideals of free speech clash with the commercial pressures and political realities of doing business with an authoritarian state. We explore the financial stakes, the human rights concern regarding regions like Xinjiang, and the lasting precedent the controversy set for American corporations navigating the global political stage. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    20 min

About

BenchMarks is an audio-first documentary series from the Empty the Bench Network, where the biggest moments in sports aren’t just remembered — they’re re-examined. Hosted by Callan McClurg and joined by voices from across the Empty the Bench Network, BenchMarks lives at the intersection of E60, 30 for 30, and Real Sports. Each episode digs deep into the controversial moments, polarizing figures, and defining games and plays that refuse to fade with time. These are the stories that sparked debate, shaped careers, altered leagues, and still echo through locker rooms, broadcasts, and barroom arguments years — sometimes decades — later. Through immersive storytelling, original reporting, archival sound, and thoughtful conversation, BenchMarks revisits the moments that history never settled. Not to sensationalize them, but to understand them — the context, the consequences, and why they continue to matter. This is sports history told with humanity, curiosity, and a willingness to ask the uncomfortable questions. If you believe the best sports stories don’t end at the final whistle, subscribe to BenchMarks wherever you get your podcasts and join us as we revisit the moments that defined the game — and the people inside it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.