Mitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot Scott open Episode 372 setting the stage for the 2026 Prediction Show while reacting to Team USA’s Olympic hockey gold and debating why the United States can compete in hockey but not soccer. Mitch checks in from Mariners spring training in Peoria, describing a genuine World Series vibe around the pitching staff — before admitting he needed a personal “attitude adjustment” on 22-year-old second baseman Cole Young. Mitch welcomes back Danny O’Neil, Jason Puckett, and Dave “Groz” Grosby for the 2026 Prediction Show, teasing last year’s misses...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Episode 371 opens with Mitch’s Saturday night unraveling after watching Song Sung Blue and realizing the Buddy Holly–impersonating character played by Michael Imperioli is allegedly his celebrity twin — a comparison he loudly rejects as it derails the entire movie. With Hotshot fanning the flames, the show pivots into the annual Prediction Show recap, replaying last year’s bold Seahawks takes — including a seven-win forecast and Mike Macdonald job jeopardy — before grading every prediction and crowning a 2025 champion. Mitch revisits last year’s Prediction Show,...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot Scott open Episode 370 trying to process the strange calm that followed the Seahawks’ 29–13 Super Bowl win, debating whether a championship can feel almost too controlled. The conversation reflects on Seattle’s sustained success over the past two decades, Sam Darnold’s improbable Super Bowl run, and why early power rankings already underrating the Seahawks feel laughably disconnected from reality. Ray Roberts joins Mitch Levy to explain why he never wavered in his Super Bowl prediction, breaking down how Seattle’s physical dominance, defensive...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot Scott open Super Bowl week pleading for the rarest gift in sports: a wire-to-wire Seahawks blowout with zero anxiety attached. Instead, they confront history, betting lines, and the uncomfortable reality that Seahawks–Patriots games almost never come easy, dissecting spreads, totals, MVP odds, and prop bets surrounding Sam Darnold, Kenneth Walker, and the Seattle defense. ESPN insiders Mike Reiss and Brady Henderson join Mitch to trace the improbable parallel journeys of the Patriots and Seahawks from offseason uncertainty to Super Bowl 60. Reiss details how...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot Scott react in real time to the Seahawks’ thrilling NFC Championship victory over the Rams and the surreal reality of Seattle heading to Super Bowl 60 as betting favorites. They reflect on preseason expectations, the emotional weight of surviving the Rams for a third time, and why this team feels like it’s peaking at exactly the right moment. The segment also veers into classic Mitch Unfiltered trivia, from Alberta, Canada connections to Michael J. Fox and iconic musicians, before setting the table for a Super Bowl-centric week ahead. Ray Roberts breaks...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot Scott reflect on the chaos and anticipation surrounding a third Seahawks–Rams matchup, debating momentum, matchup fatigue, and why this NFC Championship feels destined to be a coin flip despite Seattle’s recent dominance. But the segment segues into a January 19th birthday remembrances, including Jean Stapleton, Junior Seau, Walter Jones, and a celebration of Dolly Parton. Mitch and Hotshot Scott relive all three previous NFC Championship Games at Lumen Field, from the 2006 breakthrough to the Miracle in 2014, while setting the stage for a fourth rubber...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Danny open Episode 366 sparring over Seahawks fan anxiety during a supposedly “relaxing” Wild Card weekend, as Mitch openly roots for any path that avoids the Rams. They break down why the Seahawks’ fear factor is matchup-based rather than talent-based, react to the Rams’ narrow escape against Carolina, and land on the uncomfortable truth: there are no easy games left. Plus, a little spirited Seahawks trivia showdown celebrating Jaxon Smith-Njigba’s First Team All-Pro honor and revisiting the franchise’s all-time elite. The conversation pivots to the Damon...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot react to the Seahawks’ latest statement win and the stunning reality that a team widely projected to finish under .500 now sits two home wins away from the Super Bowl. They break down why this run feels different from past Seahawks contenders, examine the favorable NFC landscape, and agree there’s only one opponent that truly scares them: the Rams. Ray Roberts explains why the Seahawks’ ability to run between the tackles and control tempo was the true difference in their win over San Francisco, giving the offense “the remote control” of the game. He...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Mitch and Hotshot break down the massive Seahawks–49ers matchup, laying out the stark difference between winning the NFC’s top seed versus entering the playoffs as a road-bound wild card. They debate San Francisco’s battered defense, Seattle’s dominant defense, and whether Sam Darnold can rediscover the early-season form that once put him in MVP conversations—especially after scoring just 18 total first-half points over the last four games. Mitch floats a classic emotional hedge: bet the 49ers money-line so a Seahawks win feels priceless and a loss at least comes with...
info_outlineMitch Unfiltered
RUNDOWN Did you see Anthony Joshua knocking out Jake Paul in a Netflix spectacle that somehow guaranteed both fighters $92 million? While relieved to see Paul finally get hit for real, Mitch is stunned that global interest was strong enough to justify such an enormous payout for an eight-round exhibition. The segment becomes a blunt look at influencer economics, Netflix’s business model, and why modern fame—not boxing legitimacy—now drives sports entertainment. Hotshot relives an on-air argument about whether Andy Gibb was a Bee Gee, while Mitch tells the story of getting yanked...
info_outlineRUNDOWN
Did you see Anthony Joshua knocking out Jake Paul in a Netflix spectacle that somehow guaranteed both fighters $92 million? While relieved to see Paul finally get hit for real, Mitch is stunned that global interest was strong enough to justify such an enormous payout for an eight-round exhibition. The segment becomes a blunt look at influencer economics, Netflix’s business model, and why modern fame—not boxing legitimacy—now drives sports entertainment.
Hotshot relives an on-air argument about whether Andy Gibb was a Bee Gee, while Mitch tells the story of getting yanked off a Syracuse DJ shift for interrupting a song to announce Andy Gibb’s death. They pivot to Thursday night’s Seahawks win over the Rams—Hotshot admits the overturned two-point conversion still feels “cheap,” and Mitch argues the lack of urgency proves Seattle believed the play was designed as a forward pass until it wasn’t. The segment ends with Mr. Playoffs logic: even if Seattle grabs the NFC’s top seed, the Rams likely become the dangerous 5-seed and could boomerang right back into Seattle’s divisional-round path.
Ray Roberts joins Mitch for an intense Upon Further Review debate, rejecting the idea that the Rams are clearly better and arguing the two teams are neck-and-neck, winning in different ways. He points to Seattle’s resilience, defensive toughness, and locker-room connectedness as unmeasurable traits that data and “eye tests” often miss, especially when a team keeps finding ways to win close games. The conversation drills into the overtime drive, the two-point conversion, Sam Darnold’s growth, and whether the real breakthrough may be Clint Kubiak learning how best to deploy his quarterback under pressure.
Henderson and Bevens dissect the Seahawks’ improbable comeback over the Rams, with both pointing to belief, crowd energy, and elite special teams as the real difference-makers in a game Seattle otherwise struggled to control. The conversation zeroes in on Sam Darnold’s fourth-quarter and overtime composure—ugly early, elite late—and whether that drive permanently shifts his ceiling against top competition. They also credit Sean McVay’s adjustments for the Rams’ offensive surge while arguing Seattle’s defense and special teams ultimately tilted the outcome.
Neuheisel reacts to the opening round of the College Football Playoff, arguing the Group of Five’s lack of competitiveness will force structural change, possibly toward a separate championship or play-in model. He weighs quarterback decisions in the NIL era—suggesting Oklahoma’s John Mateer should return to college for a more lucrative year—while breaking down Alabama’s escape, Miami’s survival, Oregon’s dominance, and Ole Miss’ surge behind Trinidad Chambliss. The segment closes with Michigan’s coaching uncertainty, Neuheisel’s skepticism about splash hires, and Taco Time honors for Reuben Bain and Chambliss after standout performances.
GUESTS
- Ray Roberts | Former Seahawks offensive lineman; Seahawks Radio Network analyst
- Brady Henderson | Seahawks Insider, ESPN
- Jacson Bevens | Writer, Cigar Thoughts
- Rick Neuheisel | CBS College Football Analyst, Former Head Coach & Rose Bowl Champion
TABLE OF CONTENTS
0:00 | Jake Paul gets flattened, Netflix cashes in, and Mitch can’t believe a YouTuber just made $92 million.
11:28 | BEAT THE BOYS - Register at MitchUnfiltered.com
16:10 | Bee Gees radio war leads into Seahawks–Rams controversy, “cheap” two-point chaos, and the nightmare math of a Rams playoff rematch.
39:24 | GUEST: Ray Roberts; Ray Roberts pushes back hard: Seahawks aren’t inferior to the Rams—they’re built differently and just as dangerous.
1:12:10 | GUEST: Seahawks No-Table; “Team of destiny” vibes, special-teams swings, and whether Sam Darnold unlocked the next level after Thursday’s chaos.
1:40:24 | GUEST: Rick Neuheisel; Playoff reality check, transfer-market chaos, and why college football’s structure is headed for another reset.
2:05:00 | Other Stuff Segment: UW football transfer portal departures (Adam Muhammad, Radlan Vines-Bright, Bryce Butler), NIL money gap between elite programs and UW, Flyers broadcaster hot-mic suspension, UW men’s basketball losing to Seattle University again, Terence Crawford retirement, UW men’s soccer national championship, Puka Nacua controversy and apology, Miles Jack arrest and welfare check incident, Johnny Manziel scratched from ESPN GameDay, Dick Van Dyke turning 100, Kristin Cabot Coldplay concert fallout and public statement, college football playoff GameDay guest switch, Seahawks playoff positioning and Rams avoidance scenarios RIPs: Greg Biffle, wife Christina Biffle, daughter Emma, son Ryder Dennis Dutton, son Jack Dutton, and Craig Wadsworth (private plane crash), Rob Reiner and wife Michelle Singer, Gil Gerard (Buck Rogers in the 25th Century), Anthony Geary (General Hospital’s Luke), Carl Carlton (“She’s a Bad Mama Jama”), Mike Campbell (former Mariners pitcher), Peter Green (Pulp Fiction, The Usual Suspects) Headlines: Trump wax statue removed from Texas museum after repeated punches, First female Viagra-style pill finally released after 30 years, Secretary of State Marco Rubio bans Calibri font at State Department, Woman charged for public sex act at a Winn-Dixie grocery store, Robocop statue installed in Detroit… then stolen.