It was serendipity that old-school listener and realtor Greg Szczepaniak chose to join the Maryland Crab Cake Tour at Costas Inn to discuss South Baltimore Little League baseball mojo while sitting in with longtime Terps basketball assistant coach Bino Ranson, who Nestor coached as an 11-year old basketball prodigy in a Rosedale rec league in 1989.
Nestor Aparicio, Bino Ranson, and Greg Szczepaniak discuss the importance of youth sports in Baltimore. Bino highlights the growth of South Baltimore Little League, which has over 600 baseball and softball players. Greg emphasizes the leagueโs affordable fees and comprehensive skills training. Nestor recalls coaching Bino and other kids, stressing the value of community sports. They also touch on the challenges of modern youth sports, including the high costs and lack of inclusive opportunities. Greg provides insights into the current real estate market, noting low inventory due to low interest rates and high demand from millennials and investors.
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
Baltimore sports, Maryland basketball, Bino Ranson, coaching career, college athletics, player development, NIL (Name, Image, Likeness), recruiting, player relationships, coaching strategies, Maryland Terps, basketball team, player motivation, college sports landscape, player compensation.
SPEAKERS
Speaker 1, Bino Ranson, Speaker 2, Nestor Aparicio
Speaker 1 00:00
Welcome home. We are W, N, S, T. Am 1570 tasks of Baltimore. We are Baltimore positive. I want to stand because Iโm at Costas. Hey, whatโs going on? See, Iโm at Dundalk. Man, I run into all the beavers. People are here. Everybodyโs here. I all pop in my system here. But much love to the beavers family of Dundalk. Weโre Costas. Itโs all brought to you by our friends at the Maryland crab cake tour. And binos got me all discombobulated because I donโt even have my scratch off tickets ready to go here, but I do have some Roz is gonna give me some fresh Back to the Future scratch offs, but I have a handful of the magic eight ball, and we are Costas. Today is Mr. Costas, his birthday or and weโre honoring him. I have all of these beautiful tributes. Iโm staring at him. Donโt make me cry. If you make you can make me cry just because you You made me cry when you were little. I got a very special guest out here lay and I itโs been a long time coming to have you on when you were Mr. Biggie pants at the Terps and all that, you would come out and do my charity events and whatnot. But Iโve known this young itโs, itโs great that youโre shorter than me, because youโre not really shorter than me. Real Life slouching. I met be, no, what year was it? Be No, Iโm talking like Iโm your coach. 8889 8889 I met be no in a gym. On, on in Rosedale. We were at the golden ring Junior High. How old were you when I met you? I was like 13. You werenโt 1314,
Bino Ranson 01:40
No, you were younger than that. Well, like 1112 1112 something like that. Yeah, 1112
Speaker 1 01:45
so we had a house league, a basketball and I donโt know where Michael fountain is. Michael fountain was one of my best friends at the time. We had a we had a party house up on Kane Street, Kenny, and we used to party up there with the girls the beavers of the young lady just left here. Her sisters were always at my house, so we had some refreshments at the house. You know, girls were there, whatnot. Now was so I was 21 at the time, 1989 and Mike fountain said to me, Hey, man, weโre gonna code this a pretty good fountain too. Hey, man, weโre gonna coach a team, man, weโre gonna coach a basketball team. I got my I need some help. You could be my assistant coach. And Iโm like, fountain. I got a job at the paper. Iโm chasing rock stars. Iโm doing high school sports. I win this league Saturday morning, dude, I donโt get up till Saturday afternoon. What do you mean Saturday morning? By
02:45
the way, I thought you was the head coach, but go
Speaker 1 02:47
ahead, fountain was the head coach. I was the assistant. I was just the assistant, believe me. And it was at eight oโclock in the morning every Saturday morning. And the first week, we went over to pick up kids. So thereโs 3040, kids in the league, and we got to pick teams, and thereโs like six teams in the league, or whatever it was, and we watched them all shoot. So now weโre all like scouts. You know what itโs like to be a scout? A little bit? Yeah, I bet you do. So Bino spent his whole life scouting, and I had to scout that day, and we got the first pick in the draft. So you made the first pick and then you didnโt pick again to like the 12th pick, right? Because there were six teams in the league, right? You went up and back. We took Beano with the first pick in the draft, because this kid was ambidextrous. He was amphibious. He could go left, the right, the right, the left. No conscience at all. I mean, you thought George Gervin shot the ball. You should have seen 11 year old being a ransom. So we drafted him. He was our star player. And many years later, so that was 1989 probably about 2000 in 1234, you showed up in the living room on my radio station, and you were with, were you with Keith booth? No, you were with from Towson. You were with Lee. You were
Bino Ranson 04:12
Kirk Lee, Kirk Lee. And also Kevin Norris, who actually he coached at University of Maryland this year, and he actually went on, went up to Villanova with so
Speaker 1 04:23
he was in my in the radio station that day, too. Alright. So 2122 years ago, something like that. It was Kirk was running the center down it, and in what became the Carmelo Anthony center, he was running that down the Under Armor center. So Beano was the only kid I ever coached in my life, and you became a coach. You have made me cry over that, over these years when Iโve watched you, I have a story about you, dude that you donโt even know, but you how many years you coach at Maryland with uturg 11.
Bino Ranson 04:58
You. You did 11 years. I did 10. One with Gary Williams. So Gary brought you in. Gary bought me in. He hired me from Xavier. And then turgen retained me when he came from Texas, A and
Speaker 1 05:13
M, all right, so you did 11 years with the Terps. I donโt think I ever had you on the show during that period of time. I would call you, you came and I did celebrity things for my wife. We did things for LLS. I remember seeing you at Bruce Chris one night with some people and all of that. But hereโs my Beano coaching story where you, like, got me, you got me right, because I donโt really know you as a man other than on TV, and weโve known each other all these live. You know, our lives have unfolded the way we have. And Iโm so proud of you. I canโt begin to tell you how proud of you I am. So Luke and I are covering the combine in Indianapolis. This was the year you had. Suleiman, you guys were really good. Solomon, What year was this? 1617? Somewhere in there,
Bino Ranson 06:01
something like that sweet 16 that year, Romelo trimbo, she sulaman, diamond stone. Diamond stone was on that team, correct? Yeah. Robert Carter, Rashad pack, I think was on that team. We were loaded. JAKE LAYMAN,
Speaker 1 06:19
Jake Layman, okay, another MBA or so. So we were loaded on that in that season. You played a big game at Purdue. You played it Mackie, and we just happened to be freezing our asses off out in Indianapolis on that trip. And it we looked at the schedules like Maryland at Purdue was the weekend. It was a Saturday of the combine. We went in a little early. Made a little thing, and on that Saturday, we got in the car, we drove up to Purdue and we went to Mackey. And what a biblical me, what a religion thatโs like a Lambo field kind of place to see a game, right? So I went in there, and that place is on fire with the with the Boilermakers, and theyโre yelling, you suck to Indiana, and Indiana even there, yeah. So we went in for that game, and I got there super early. I was still a media member then. So was Luke was two, and we had press passes, and we got there super early, and we went into the John Mackey room in the John Mackey center, in the John Mackey VIP area and the John Mackey lounge. And Dicky V was in there, baby. Dicky V was there that day. You they were like, in the top 10. You might have been like 17, and they were like, maybe five or six or so. There was two top 20 ranked teams about to get at it at Mackey. And for whatever reason, the media Lounge is right by your locker room there. Itโs like a down because itโs such an old circle building. You know, itโs very itโs not like a new building. And I saw you in the faces of all of your players. You circled them up, and I was 10 feet away, and you had you all looked spiffy. You look like an official. You look like youโve been coaching 11 years in Big 10 basketball. And, man, you gathered those guys and you got them. What? Do you call that? That you do. You remember what you did that day? What is that? Itโs like a circle. And it was like you were the leader and dude, you were 11 years old again for me, man, you made me. I came back to my seat. Looks like, are you all right? Iโm like, I just had a moment. Beto just lost his mind in front of diamond stone. Yeah.
Bino Ranson 08:39
Well, what I would do is, you know, before every game, before they took the court, I like to round the guys up and just give them one last word of encouragement, to motivate them, to have them to go out there and just leave it out all on the court. So as a coach, you know, 30 if you got, if you plan 34 games, you have 34 different messages that youโre going to give them. So thatโs something Iโve always done, and thatโs what you witnessed. Well, I witnessed
Speaker 1 09:10
it. I did witness it. Beat a ransom. Is here. Iโve known him since he was a boy. He hates that. Heโs taller than me, but wanted to sit down. I think thereโs some old school thing, but I want to stand up. How are you and what are you now, I saw you opening day. I was with Brian COVID, and we took a picture together. And I said, Are you still at La Salle? Right, with no, where was it? Where were you? I was at DePaul. De Paul, thatโs what? Well, you were in Chicago, Illinois. Okay, so when did you leave DePaul? I get the Paul Xavier, the saga them all mixed up.
Bino Ranson 09:41
Spring 23 okay, spring of 23 the
Speaker 1 09:45
state of college athletics. Now I donโt understand. Okay, so I had Len Elmore on this week. I have Walt Williams on last week. I had Pat scary sitting and do the show with me. Couple days after they got a. Minute in their tournament. Very unfortunately, he did that Friday with me. That was really the tournament Friday, because they lost that game on Monday. And, you know, I sensing this. I, you know, Iโm COVID state sponsored, so Iโve, you know, I have Stu on, I have coach, Coach Woods on as well, on the ladies side. I donโt understand this. And you come from the old world in a big way, being a player, being a guy that was, you know, knowing players, and over Mount St Joe, your kids playing. Explain this to me like youโre the teacher and Iโm the student. Letโs, letโs change roles here be no
Bino Ranson 10:38
Well, itโs just a new landscape in terms of college athletics, and now kids are able to earn money off their name, Edmonton likeness. And thereโs a lot of money being thrown away around to these kids. And you know, rightfully so. I, you know, I believe kids should be paid, paid to play, and thatโs whatโs going on. And you know, you have revenue sharing from the television that thatโs going to come into play, that you have, like, something called a collective, where you have, like, the boosters, or people with us, friends of the program, they pitch in to a big collective to offset the number in terms of what players may ask for.
Speaker 1 11:31
I mean, predictive of this 15 years ago, when Gary hires you, Turgeon comes in and what it was then versus now. And you say I believe the kids should be paid the time. It always freaked me out. Was the first Thursday of March Madness where every bar is packed in America. Theyโre playing all day long. Everybodyโs got their brackets, everybodyโs gambling, do whatever theyโre doing, and everybodyโs making money, the broadcasters, the coach, everybodyโs making money, except the kids dribbling. I always found that to be wrong. Iโve always said itโs wrong. Iโve been on a year, 34 years, I think I figured out right around the point where you were at college, 2530 years ago, this was kind of a screwy system. The more that Gary Williams made, the kids werenโt making any and I watched it all change during my career, but I didnโt know it was gonna turn out like this, and I didnโt know what it was going to do to my interest level in it. And I donโt know why that is, because itโs pretty basic that people that are generating revenue in this country should be getting compensated for that, right? And I mean, back in your era, what year you graduate, you went up to New Hampshire. Somebody asked me when you went away COVID. Said, Where did he play ball? I said, he played up in New Hampshire. My wifeโs in New Hampshire right now, but you played at my wifeโs Alma Ma, Southern New Hampshire. Absolutely so in What years were those? I left there in 9999 All right, so this will give you an example of how screwed up college sports were, and I donโt need to tell you, because you went off to school and you recruited and brought kids in. I am, Iโve been Coppin State Sponsor for a long time. Were one of their flagships, but back in the late 90s, when fangs team won the 98 team, when Larry, you know, all those guys, he was gone by. He was in the NBA at that point, but when they won, I had them out to my studio. So you were same age as all those kids since 1998 in May, and I brought 15 kids into my little studio over it. We were at the Sheraton in towsons, before I own the station. This is Michael Hodie station, and Mama elardoโs was our pizza sponsor at the time. And they brought pizzas in, and we had pizza for all the kids. And thereโs no internet. Itโs 1998 my partner took pictures of me, of all of us in the studio, because Iโm proud I got the whole cop and team in the studio. Weโre making a big deal. Nasty Nestor, all that just 27 years ago, and Fang sees the pictures, and before on the way out, all the kids are leaving, fan grabs me, says, Hey, man, you canโt have them pictures with the pizza in it, man, because if the kids get caught eating pizza, thatโs free pizza. Man, thatโs against the rules, and thatโs not a good Fang, thatโs a fair. Fan Yeah. Fang, I get a little bit lower for Fang, yeah, but um, and Iโm like, Iโm 30 years old time Iโm, like, I just fed these starving, copping kids some pizza, and I broke rules, you know? I mean, like, literally, thatโs how crazy the old system was.
Bino Ranson 14:30
The old system people was getting pinged for the little things. I mean, the little things like, you know, you look at coach Wade, I mean, he got pinged say he was taking somebody to
Speaker 1 14:43
class, right, right? He was driving the kid to class, right, you know, or his assistants,
Bino Ranson 14:47
whatever. But you know, if you look at it, you know, when you sit in someoneโs living room, the thing that you talk about is that their their kids going to graduate. Youโre going to make sure they graduate. So taking a kid to class. Class. Youโre not giving them money, but youโre taking a class to get educated. And you would think that thatโs something that will be
Speaker 1 15:07
permissible, but thatโs not the same thing youโre selling anymore. Beano, right? I mean, when you go into kids now, itโs how much money, itโs a professional gig. What are you selling now? What do you what does your kids a good player, right? What is that opportunity going to look like for your son at Mount St? Joe, well,
Bino Ranson 15:27
obviously, you know, he loves, My son loves the game, so heโs going to look at number one, an opportunity to get on the floor and play, you know, because thatโs, thatโs why you play the game, so that you can play Um, now with this new landscape, you know, after you talk about the plan, the opportunity that youโre going to have, thatโs one conversation. Now the other conversation becomes what your in il look like? Do you guys, have n i L,
Speaker 1 16:01
well, this is where the landscape changes for a layman. I mean, thatโs all I am. I mean, I think Iโm an expert about certain things with sports this n, i L, world I am every day trying to understand the portal, the opportunity, what the old world look like, what the new world looks like. And then, to your point, like, how much money? But whereโs this money coming from? Boosters? Steve Bucha, he once said he would buy Maryland if he could have bought Maryland. Now, I think boosters can buy lots of things, but the Willard thing specifically in him going to Villanova, as has been explained to me, is, well, Marylandโs got to fund more sports. Villanova didnโt have to worry about a football team. Theyโre going to be able to put more money into a bat. So now you can have schools that are become specialty schools. And I donโt, I donโt know how that gets portrayed. For the highest paid state employee in Willards case, right? The Highest Paid man in the state leaves because the opportunity in Marylandโs not good enough, from a basketball standpoint, to do the things that you need to do to pay players. And then thereโs the whole portal part of every single year, everything that you did that day at Mackey to inspire those young people, itโs a whole different level of like, why theyโre there and what theyโre doing, because to say, Iโm gonna get you an education, you gotta youโre selling a different car right now, right?
Bino Ranson 17:29
Yeah, for sure. Yeah, a different car is definitely being sold. And the money thatโs being tossed around, I mean, is pretty good. And in when you talk about getting an education, you were going to school to get an education so that when you finish school, you can, you know,
Speaker 1 17:50
stop playing ball. Story, if the state pays me more than university, yes, right? I mean, literally, yeah,
Bino Ranson 17:55
but so what Iโm saying is, you know, it used to be like you go to school, you play ball if you go to the NBA, yeah, if not, you got your education to fall back on. You could get a job paying, you know, a nice piece of change right out of college. But now, you know, you tell a freshman, freshman could make north of $200,000
18:20
a year,
Speaker 1 18:22
and to your point, our boy and he gets on the floor and plays the way you wanted to play, the way, and he plays at a level thatโs too good for Towson State, or too good for the next place, or even too good for Maryland and Villanova as more money, right? I mean, so itโs not even just mid major to, hey, I can step up my game and play at a different level of college basketball. The money will come in, the recruiter will come. Thereโll be a Beano there, to be there, to be a part of that,
Bino Ranson 18:52
right? Yeah, absolutely. You know, in this itโs just, itโs just wild, right? Now, Iโll just, Iโll just, Iโll just say that itโs wild, and it changes every day. Itโs like the stock market. It changes every day, especially in terms of recruiting. Today, you could be worth 150,000 tomorrow, you might be worth 275 itโs just that simple, holding
Speaker 1 19:17
out for the bigger, better deal. This is basically an open negotiation period right now with the portal, right we got hundreds of kids in the portal, 1000s of kids, 1000s of kids, 1000s okay, youโre looking for a gig to get back into this industry. If Iโm the new athletic director, Marilyn, I could conduct this interview with you. What? What do you bring into this, that that historically is different? Because Iโm wondering, if you donโt have a gig at this point, who are the people that have gigs, and how the gig has changed from three years ago to today, right? Like, just literally since the plague, right? Yeah, I just
Bino Ranson 19:57
think you know some, some. Four things still holds value, a lot of value, and thatโs relationships. Thatโs something thatโs going to stay around for a long, a long time. You still need relationships and recruiting. And same thing, you know, having somebody that can build, even if youโre going to build a team year to year, you still need guys. Thatโs that, that besides coach them, coaching,
Speaker 1 20:24
thatโs it. Keep going. I got crab cakes coming in for cost. Thank you. Good. Itโs a crab cake door. I mean, for crying out loud, you canโt have a crab cake door without crab cakes. Thank you. Thank you very much. Letโs do it. No,
Bino Ranson 20:34
Iโm just saying, like, just beside the coaching and recruiting. If you go to build a team from year to year, if you come to play for me, I need to be able to establish a great relationship with you, a great relationship. Whereas, though, even if youโre only there six months, yeah, even if youโre there six months, well, thatโs how youโre going to keep them there a year and six months, right? I mean, yeah, yeah. So you still, you know, thatโs, you know, to you ask the question, what would value that I that I can bring in this new world, besides coaching? Because, you know, obviously we all can coach, right? So I think it comes down to being able to maintain relationships with the players, establish relationship with the players. Try to get the most out of that player. You know that that thatโs still something
Nestor Aparicio 21:26
they want, something different now than they wanted five years ago.
21:29
Yeah, money, period, period.
Speaker 1 21:35
So once they have the money and theyโre on campus, then what makes them happy? Like in Maryland this year, five guys played the rest of the guys didnโt play right? Like, thereโs gonna be a little bit more of that, because if youโre paying guys you want, you know youโre gonna play them like mules, right? I mean, literally, it is a complete business transaction at that point. I just, I canโt imagine how much this changes the relationship that youโre talking about your strength, which is this bond thing, that, quite frankly, theyโre not looking for a husband. Theyโre looking for a date, right? Literally, theyโre not looking to be married to a university. Yeah, yeah. Theyโre not looking to be looking for a summer job. They Yeah. They looking to get paid, and at the end of the day, when the clock strike 12, you still want to win. So players, you know, the good ones, theyโre going to want to build relationships, theyโre going to want to get better as a player. So thatโs something else that I bring to the table in terms of player development, getting players better. Because, you know, thatโs what you want to do through, through the course of that six that six months, okay, you want to you want to get better
22:37
every day. You want to be pushed down. But
Speaker 1 22:39
if you make him too good. Theyโre gonna go play for tech, right? Yeah, no. Well,
Bino Ranson 22:43
you know what? You know what? Thatโs the price of doing business. Thatโs the price of doing business. Thatโs, thatโs what the new landscape is. And so you gotta, you got, you gotta adapt. You gotta,
Nestor Aparicio 22:54
or you gotta pay that kid more money next year,
Bino Ranson 22:56
or you pay more money if you know, if, if you want a mistake,
Speaker 1 23:01
be no ransom is here, and so are our crab cakes. It is the Maryland crab cake tour. Itโs all brought to you by the Maryland lottery. Have the magic eight ball on what? What jersey number did you wear? 30. This is number 28 Iโm gonna have to get you a ticket number 30. I got number 30 right here. Iโm gonna get be no number 30. So you can be lucky here. Weโre at Costas. So we do this each and every week, next week, weโre going to be at Beaumont on Wednesday, or, excuse me, Thursday, weโre going to be at Beaumont. And then the following two Wednesdays, weโre going to be at Cooperโs pub north in Timonium. And Iโm hoping that Jessica long join me out there. Saw her there last week with her hubby and their dog. Also on the 30th, weโre going to be a Cocos pub. So the Maryland crab cakes were presented by the Maryland lottery crab cakes. For all that youโre youโre broiled, yeah? Why broiled? Not fried? Are you like healthy? Yeah. Try to be, you know, I thought you had Dundalk roots. You got done dog roots, right? So I am. You came in today with your partner here from Edmondson village, via McDonough. I didnโt go to McDonough. I went to Dundalk. All right. Never Patapsco. You know that this neighborhood, you sat here and you said something to me, like, I got relatives in terms of something like, Iโm like, I went to school with Winky, yeah, and so I mean same last name as you. And I guess it took me a while to put together. Now, how are you and ranzelis related? My my
24:21
father, his mama, sister, so which makes us first
Speaker 1 24:24
cousins. First cousins. Did you ever play any ball of Turners? Or
Bino Ranson 24:28
I didnโt spend too much time in terms you were Fontana, right?
Speaker 1 24:31
You donโt you Sedona. Okay, so you went to St Francis, correct? Yes. And then Southern New Hampshire, yes. And then I only knew of you at Xavier. Did you have a gig before Xavier?
Bino Ranson 24:46
I started Loyola with Patos, then I went to Marist with
Speaker 2 24:50
Jimmyโs. The one that gave you his first gig, Jimmy. Jimmy love him. Well, he would appreciate
Speaker 1 24:56
Costas is good Greek joint. Yeah, right, yeah. Taconus. Yeah. Well, so how did that happen? How did you meet Jimmy Pat SOS?
Bino Ranson 25:04
Well, you know, Juan Dixon is a coach family friend. And you know, Juan played down at Maryland, and you know, I was a big, always a big Terp fan. That
Speaker 1 25:14
was your era, right? Yes, one a little older than you, younger, younger than you. Okay,
Bino Ranson 25:18
so, you know, always go down to the Burling games. I worked in Merlin Gary Williams camp, and we just built, what, what I talked about before, a
Speaker 1 25:27
relationship, right on, right? I built a relationship with bass too. Yeah, we
Bino Ranson 25:31
built a relationship. And so, you know, he gave me opportunity to break into business at Loyola, to help him build a program in Baltimore. And,
Speaker 1 25:39
well, Jimmy, you did good. You giving this kid a chance? Yeah, thatโs what Iโm saying. He just lost his wife. My heart to Jimmy. I, you know, I saw him recently, and because the contractual obligations with the monumental Sports Network, heโs available to me, so I donโt have Jimmy on anymore. But the best, well, absolutely, I would eat your crab cake. Okay, Peter ran since here heโs getting get me Ed. You got more educating for me? Youโre gonna coach me up in the next segment. Yeah, Iโll bring that coach. Ranson, okay, I played the role of like, youโre the look, because youโre always a little boy to me. And now I know how it is when people are older than me and they treat me that way. Iโm like, Iโm 56 years old. Donโt treat me like that, dude. Iโve known you since you were 14, and Iโm like, I keep forgetting that, and I always think of them once. Somebodyโs paternal. Itโs weird, right? Iโm always the weird adult screaming at you being out past the damn ball. I said that a lot, didnโt I?
26:36
Yeah, well, you said shoot the ball too, so, you know? And
Speaker 1 26:39
he did. He filled it up. You still ambidextrous?
26:43
Yeah, I still go right. I still go left, yeah.
Speaker 1 26:45
Are you right? Are you right? Yeah, right hand? Yep. You played a lot of left handed basketball, yeah? Well,
Bino Ranson 26:53
I had, you know, a lot of good righties. They love, they love to handle their left. They love the, you know, they love to set you up with the
Speaker 1 27:01
left I think the thing that made you even more dangerous as a young boy when I coached you was that I just asked you if youโre right handed or left hand, and I coached you, and I would have guessed you were left handed. Yeah, because when I see you, I remember where I coached you would come toward me with the ball and you were, you were dribbling left handed, which made you freaky, deaky, because kids didnโt, nobody handled the ball with their left hand, because nobody at 11 was left handed right. So it made you weird and way harder, I think, for a confused kid to defend, not at least what you were athletic. You drove the lane. You were fearless. You for turning out to be a coach, and I think you know this. You didnโt take well to coaching. Youโre aware of this right, right
Bino Ranson 27:50
then at that point, at that point, maybe I was, I was a little a little feisty and little
Nestor Aparicio 27:56
fired up, or
28:01
maybe you didnโt have good coaching. Coach. I love
Nestor Aparicio 28:03
this kid. How old are you now? 40?
28:07
Just turned 50.
28:09
Youโre 50. Yes,
Speaker 1 28:13
God, how you were 11 a minute ago? Yeah, well, and I was hung over eating McDonaldโs on the sideline trying to coach you, alright, yeah, mom, want you to get back into college basketball. Itโs where itโs working, yeah,
Bino Ranson 28:26
itโs where my heart, where my passion is. No, I never done Iโll get back. You know, itโs been a great two years to be out with my boys, my two boys, I got a Bradshaw. He goes to St Markโs BJ, goes to Mount St Joe, and they both doing great. Bradshaw, heโs gonna go to Gilman next year and play lacrosse in basketball, and BJ will finish up his senior year
Speaker 1 28:49
with the gales gals. They were purple. Look good over there. They were. You know what happens with the private schools? I say something nice about I never say nice about Calvert Hall. Letโs start with that, but, and that really pisses them off. But anytime I say that, then the Loyola people come in, the McDonough people get all met the gilmans, the St Paulโs, I get all of that over here. Itโs curly. Itโs all, you know. So somebody will come in here and theyโll give me a hard time. Iโm like. My side of town is Patapsco and spares point. Maybe Ken would, you know you have to use for them. But Iโm done, dog, yeah, but this whole private school thing, I you know, the Mount St Joe thing, you had your tentacles in there long before your kids went there, right? Yeah, you I was there the day. He calls me. Heโs like, hey, Nestor, youโre still in the media, right? Iโm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, hey, man, we were signing another Durham or sell. Thereโs a come over there tomorrow we can sign. And I went over. I couldnโt even get in. I was Iโve watched him do his signing from glass outside, really, because it was so mobbed inside the St. Joe, yeah, I drove over there, west, west side of Baltimore. Yep, I never way over. There they let me in. Yep, past my get my passport stamp when I cross in the west side of Baltimore, you know, but your East Side guy, then what are you doing sending kids over to West Side? Well,
Bino Ranson 30:11
it wasnโt me. It was, you know, Coach clash. He did a great job of recruiting them. So thatโs where he wanted to go. Not getting
Speaker 1 30:17
paid yet, right? Not yet, not yet. Weโll see. I hope heโs like a Steph Curry sugar daddy for you. Well, he
Bino Ranson 30:22
could, he could shoot he could shoot it. Now thatโs what I want, because he could shoot it. So weโll see you. Just got to keep getting better. You get you keep getting better.
Speaker 1 30:29
Coaching money account. Listen to him. Yeah, 50 years old. Beano rants, all right, weโre gonna get crab cake here before it gets 50 years old. Itโs all brought to by the Marilyn ladore Costas, I want to come back and be nos gonna interview me and gonna teach me a few things, because Iโve waited a long time to have him on. Iโm back for more. Weโre Costas. We are wnst am 15 70,000 Baltimore, stick with us, coaching us up. The student becomes the teacher, my man.