Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 17 days 53 minutes
Joe & Michael take you through the highlights of the Schur Family Vacation. Listeners weigh in with their best questions on the fear of facing one Aaron Judge-sized Jose Altuve, Mike Trout and the age-old question of which clothing item is toughest to purchase: jeans or sunglasses?
Joe is joined by Jay Jaffe, author of "The Cooperstown Casebook: Who's in the Baseball Hall of Fame, Who Should Be In, and Who Should Pack Their Plaques" to discuss past and present baseball players that could or should be considered for the National Baseball Hall of Fame. Jaffe breaks down his "JAWS" system that's gained much notoriety and the two of them debate future candidates that could get into the Hall.
Joe and Michael correct errors, talk some All-Star Game, draft salty snacks and take on the biggest problem in America.
Joe and Michael take listener questions and discuss topics varying from the size difference between Aaron Judge and Jose Altuve to backyard fireworks to the proper way to argue against pies.
After technical difficulties, Michael and Joe finally get PosCast recorded, talk about the Scary Yankees and draft their favorite swings in baseball history.
Michael and Joe talk Derek Jeter, add a special new segment to the PosCast and draft sports rules.
With the Yankees absurdly hot start, Joe and Michael are forced to have an emergency Yankee Minute that lasts the whole show. Special guest Alan Sepinwall, TV critic galore for Uproxx and lifelong Yankee fan, comes along to gloat.
In a PosCast first, Joe and Michael welcome a guest -- NPR pop culture correspondent Linda Holmes -- and discuss important matters like the Yankees, the Backstreet Boys cruise and whether Obi Wan Kenobi burned Darth Vader. Also, they draft baseball teams for Linda to support.
Joe talks to "Smart Baseball" author Keith Law about smart baseball ... and dumb baseball ... when to bunt and when not to bunt ... Michael's distaste for pies ... and some game called Carcassonne.
Joe and Michael talk about the Sprint guy who used to say "Can you hear me now" at Verizon, baseball contracts and, mostly, Sergio Garcia's victory at The Masters.