Spork: The Sports What If Podcast

Spork Podcast

Each week hosts Andy and Drew dive into the great "What If's" of the sports world, exploring each fork in the road at the biggest moments of sports.

  1. Jun 9

    Spork Ep. 59: The Unstoppable Ascent – What If Derrick Rose Never Got Hurt?

    It is the most heartbreaking "what if" of the 21st-century NBA. In 2011, Derrick Rose was on top of the world—becoming the youngest MVP in league history, restoring the roar to the Chicago Bulls, and standing as the ultimate athletic threat to LeBron James’s Eastern Conference crown. Then came April 28, 2012. A routine jump-stop in Game 1 against the 76ers, a pop in his left knee, and the trajectory of NBA history shifted forever. In this episode of Spork, we delete that fateful injury and the brutal meniscus tears that followed. We examine how a completely healthy D-Rose would have forced the league to evolve around him, how the Bulls would have built their roster to support him, and how a prime Rose changes the championship calculus of the 2010s. In this episode, we break down:The Evolution of Sports Medicine: We look at how Rose's career fell into a transitional medical era. We contrast his heavy, concrete landing mechanics with today's hyper-advanced biomechanical training and load management, analyzing how modern preventative sports science could have completely altered his durability.The Rise of the Hometown Hero: We revisit the sheer force of nature that was the Tom Thibodeau-era Bulls. With a healthy Rose anchoring the offense alongside defensive anchors Joakim Noah and Luol Deng, we map out their year-over-year trajectory as an elite, perennial 60-win powerhouse.The 2014 Free Agency Blockbuster: The ultimate ripple effect. In real life, Carmelo Anthony was inches away from choosing the Bulls in 2014 before front-office tension and Rose's health instability drove him back to New York. We explore a world where a healthy, MVP-caliber Rose easily recruits prime Melo to the Windy City, creating one of the most lethal inside-out scoring punches in basketball history.Stealing from the Heatles: We don't just hand the Bulls a decade of championships, but we look realistically at the Eastern Conference landscape. We debate exactly how a healthy Rose—and later, a surging Jimmy Butler and Carmelo Anthony—would have snatched two championships away from LeBron James, Dwyane Wade, and the Miami Heat empire. As always, send any questions, thoughts, comments, corrections to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com

    45 min
  2. Jun 2

    Spork Ep. 58: The OKC Dynasty That Never Was: What If the Thunder Kept James Harden?

    It is the ultimate "what if" of the modern NBA era. In the summer of 2012, the Oklahoma City Thunder reached the NBA Finals with a roster anchored by three future MVPs all aged 23 or younger: Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, and James Harden. Just months later, over a contract discrepancy of a meager $4.5 million and the terrifying specter of newly implemented progressive luxury tax penalties, the front office traded James Harden to the Houston Rockets. The dynasty was dismantled before it ever truly began. In this episode of Spork, we unpack the economics, the negotiations, and the brutal injury luck that followed the trade. We separate lazy hindsight from the realities of the 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) to answer whether this historic trio could have successfully coexisted through their physical primes—and how many trophies they left on the table. In this episode, we discuss:The Infamous One-Hour Ultimatum: We discuss the frantic final hours of the contract negotiations, where the Thunder issued a strict, sudden ultimatum to Harden that pushed him out the door. The 2016 Cap Spike Illusion: We break down the absolute tragedy of the Thunder’s risk aversion. If ownership had simply absorbed the luxury tax hits for three seasons, the historic 2016 salary cap explosion would have completely bailed them out, making it effortless to retain all three superstars in their primes. The Injury Redundancy: How keeping Harden would have fundamentally saved the Thunder from the devastating injury cascade of 2013–2015. We look at how Harden could have stepped up during Westbrook’s 2013 meniscus tear or Durant’s 2015 foot fracture to keep Oklahoma City's title windows wide open. The Championship Ceiling: We ground our projection in reality. Rather than assuming an unrealistic 8-to-10-year run of dominance, we map out why they likely nab at least two championships away from the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs machine between 2013 and 2014. The Business of Basketball: We discuss what impact this hard dose of shrewd dealmaking had the future of the young stars, potentially driving their decisions later in their careers. As always, send any questions/comments/conerns/thoughts to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com.

    34 min
  3. May 26

    Spork Ep. 57: The Ultimate Rental – What If the Cubs Never Traded for Aroldis Chapman?

    It is the most stressful, high-stakes rental in modern baseball history. In July 2016, the Chicago Cubs traded away top prospect Gleyber Torres to the New York Yankees for three months of a triple-digit fastball. Aroldis Chapman blew saves, threw his arm out, and gave up one of the most famous home runs in World Series history to Rajai Davis—but ultimately, the Cubs won Game 7 and broke a 108-year curse. Was it worth it? Absolutely. In this episode of Spork, we pull the thread on the 2016 trade deadline. We break down the sheer desperation of a historic franchise on the brink of a championship and explore how the entire landscape of Major League Baseball alters if Chicago decides the asking price for the Cuban Missile is just too high. In this episode, we discuss:The Verdict on the Rental: Why flags fly forever. Even though Chapman went straight back to the Yankees in free agency that winter, we debate why this remains a definitive "yes" for Chicago—because without his high-wire act, they don't break the curse.Could the Cubs Have Won Without Him? We look at the 2016 Cubs bullpen depth chart. We break down why the answer is a resounding no, and how Game 5, Game 6, and Game 7 look vastly different without Chapman anchoring the back end.The Alternate Destinations: If the Cubs pass, where does Chapman go? We look at the major 2016 contenders who were aggressively hunting bullpen help—the Nationals, the Dodgers, and the Cleveland Indians themselves.The Cleveland Bombshell: What happens if Cleveland swings the trade to pair Chapman with Andrew Miller? We explore how that single move likely flips the entire 2016 World Series on its head.The New York Perspective: Why this historic "what if" has surprisingly zero negative impact on the Bronx. The Yankees successfully jumpstarted their rebuild with Gleyber Torres and still got Chapman back in the Bronx by December anyway. As always, send any questions/comments/concerns/feedback to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com

    40 min
  4. May 19

    Spork Ep. 56: The Bambino: What if the Red Sox Never Sold Babe Ruth?

    It is the transaction that birthed a curse and forged sports' most infamous empire. In the winter of 1919, Red Sox owner Harry Frazee sold Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees for $100,000 to fund his theatrical productions. The rest was history: New York became the "Evil Empire," and Boston began an 86-year championship drought. In this episode of Spork, we reverse the most famous transaction in baseball history. We dive into the financial and ownership desperation that led to the trade and explore a world where the Sultan of Swat plays out his career in a Red Sox uniform. In this episode, we break down:The Theater vs. The Diamond: We look at the true motivations of Harry Frazee and whether any timeline existed where he kept his generational star in Boston.The Bambino's Solo Dominance: Why we project Babe Ruth to maintain his individual, historic statistical dominance at Fenway Park—shattering home run records just the same—but why team success might have eluded the Red Sox anyway due to systemic organizational mismanagement.The Ghost of Yankee Stadium: Without the House that Ruth Built, do the Yankees ever become the premier franchise in American sports? If New York misses out on the 1920s boom, do they become the franchise that relocates to the West Coast in the 1950s instead of the Dodgers or Giants?Lifting the Curse Early: Without the psychic weight of the "Curse of the Bambino," do the powerhouse Red Sox teams of the 1940s and 1970s break through for a World Series title decades before 2004? As always, send any questions, comments, concerns, or thoughts to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com.

    41 min
  5. May 5

    Spork Ep. 55: The Great Divorce: What If Shaq and Kobe Stayed Together?

    It is the greatest "divorce" in sports history. In 2004, the Lakers chose Kobe Bryant, and Shaquille O’Neal took his talents (and his hardware) to Miami. But what if the alpha and the omega of the Staples Center had actually sat down, set their egos aside, and decided to ride it out until the Big Aristotle finally hung up his size 22 sneakers in 2011? In this episode of Spork, we aren’t doing the "lazy" math. While many fans claim they would have won 8 or 10 rings, we’re keeping it grounded in reality. We explore a timeline where the duo stays together, but age, chemistry, and the rise of the Spurs and Celtics Big 3 still play their parts. In this episode, we break down:The "Peace Treaty" of 2004: How Phil Jackson (or Jerry Buss) could have brokered a truce that kept Shaq in Purple and Gold.The Ring Count: Why we believe they only add one or two more trophies (2006? 2009?) rather than a decade of dominance. We look at the physical decline of Shaq and how a ball-dominant Kobe would have had to carry the load earlier than expected.The Roster Ripple Effect: If Shaq stays, does Pau Gasol ever become a Laker? How do the Lakers build a bench around two massive max contracts as the league shifts toward the "Big 3" era in Boston and Miami?Shaq’s Sunset Years: What does "Laker Legend Shaq" look like in 2010 and 2011? Does he accept a role as a high-level veteran presence, or does the friction reignite as he moves into the "Cleveland/Boston" phase of his career while still in Hollywood?The GOAT Debate: How does a 5-ring Kobe and a 5-ring Shaq change their respective standings against MJ and Kareem? As always, send any questions/comments/concerns to us at thesporkpodcast@gmail.com.

    31 min
  6. Apr 28

    Spork Ep. 54: The NIL "What If" Part II: The Impact on College Basketball Icons

    What if Zion Williamson could have signed a shoe deal before ever stepping onto an NBA floor? What if JJ Redick and Tyler Hansbrough—the ultimate "love them or hate them" college icons—could have cashed in on their notoriety for four straight years? In this episode of the Spork Podcast, we’re trading scholarships for six-figure checks as we reimagine the last 20 years of college basketball through the lens of Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL). From the one-and-done phenoms who would have broken the internet to the four-year legends who might have become wealthier than some NBA vets before graduation, we’re breaking down the theoretical market value of the hardwood’s biggest stars. In this episode, we discuss:The Social Media King: Zion Williamson at Duke was a one-man economy. We speculate on the "Zion Effect" and how his NIL valuation might have actually rivaled his rookie NBA contract.The Polarization Profits: JJ Redick (Duke) and Tyler Hansbrough (UNC). Two players who stayed for four years and defined the most heated rivalry in sports—how much would brands pay to lean into the "villain" or "hero" archetypes?The Cult Legends: Jimmer Fredette and "Jimmer-Mania." We explore how a small-school star at BYU could have built a mid-major empire that would make modern NIL collectives blush.The One-and-Done Giants: Kevin Durant, John Wall, and Anthony Davis. Would life-changing NIL money have convinced any of these "sure-fire" No. 1 picks to stay for a sophomore season and a second run at a title?The Women's Game Revolution: We touch on the massive potential impact on icons like Maya Moore or Candace Parker. In a world where women's college stars often have higher visibility than their pro counterparts, would NIL have accelerated the boom of the women's game by a decade? As always, send any questions/comments/concerns to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com.

    29 min
  7. Apr 21

    Spork Ep. 53: The NIL "What If" Part I: The Impact on College Football Icons

    What if the most electric players in college football history didn’t have to wait for the NFL to get paid? In this episode of the Spork Podcast, we’re tearing up the history books and dropping the legends of the last 20 years into the modern Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) landscape. From Reggie Bush to "Johnny Football," we break down the theoretical market value of the superstars who defined their eras and speculate how life-changing money might have altered their careers, their schools, and the record books. In this episode, we discuss:The Heisman Architects: Would Reggie Bush have ever left USC early if he were a multi-millionaire in Los Angeles? How much would Tim Tebow’s "Missionary Brand" have been worth to Gator Nation?The Chaos Agents: We explore the absolute madness of Johnny Manziel with a legal bank account in College Station and the massive local endorsements Lamar Jackson would have locked down in Louisville.The Physical Freaks: From Jadeveon Clowney’s "Hit Heard 'Round the World" to Leonard Fournette and Adrian Peterson, we discuss how much "insurance" NIL money would have provided for the most dominant backs and defenders to ever lace them up.The Modern Blueprints: How Ndumokong Suh’s defensive dominance and Trevor Lawrence’s "Day 1" superstar status at Clemson serve as the ultimate "what if" for defensive and quarterback market ceilings. As always, send any questions/comments/corrections to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com

    36 min
  8. Apr 14

    Spork Ep. 52: What If SGA Stayed with the Clippers?

    In this episode, we dissect the seismic 2019 trade that sent Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to Oklahoma City for Paul George—a move that was essentially a "two-for-one" to secure Kawhi Leonard. We look back at the actual results (the "35% Rule") and then dive deep into the multiverse. What if Kawhi had chosen the rising star over the established veteran? We explore the legacy of the Klaw, the trajectory of SGA, and where the NBA landscape would have shifted if PG-13 had landed elsewhere. Key Discussion PointsThe Reality Check: A post-mortem on the Clippers' "213" era. We discuss the staggering statistic that Kawhi and PG only appeared in 35% of games together during their tenure, and how that availability (or lack thereof) defined their championship window.The Toronto Pivot: If Kawhi doesn't win that magical 2019 title in Toronto, does he still demand the George trade? We weigh the likelihood of him staying in the 6ix vs. joining LeBron and AD for a Lakers superteam or choosing the Clippers as a solo act.The PG Multiverse: If Kawhi tells the Clippers, "I want SGA," where does Paul George go? We rank the potential fits:Lakers: The ultimate hometown "I'm coming home" narrative.Miami: The Heat Culture fit that almost happened.Dallas/Boston: The missing pieces for Luka or the Jays.The Ascension of Shai: How does SGA’s development change next to Kawhi? Does he become a "Robbin" to Kawhi's "Batman," or does the torch get passed faster due to Kawhi's injuries? We debate: if they win, is it Shai’s team or Kawhi’s legacy?The "Three-Peat" Legacy: If Kawhi wins a third title with a third franchise (Spurs, Raptors, Clippers/SGA), where does he land on the all-time list? Is he the ultimate "Mercenary for Hire" or a top-10 lock? As always, please send any questions/comments/corrections to thesporkpodcast@gmail.com.

    38 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Each week hosts Andy and Drew dive into the great "What If's" of the sports world, exploring each fork in the road at the biggest moments of sports.

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