Episodes

  • Knicks Take 2-0 Finals Lead: New York Is Two Wins From the Parade
    Jun 8 2026

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    The New York Knicks are two wins away from an NBA championship.

    Ian reacts to the Knicks stealing Games 1 and 2 of the NBA Finals in San Antonio, Jalen Brunson continuing to prove he is the best closer in basketball, Karl-Anthony Towns changing the series against Victor Wembanyama, Josh Hart doing all the dirty work, and why this Knicks team looks like the more grown, more battle-tested group through two games.

    Plus, Game 3 comes back to Madison Square Garden for the first NBA Finals game at MSG since 1999. The Garden is going to be chaos, the city is losing its mind, and the Spurs are desperate. But the job is not finished.

    The Knicks are up 2-0.

    The parade is two wins away.

    But man.

    It is right there.

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    31 mins
  • Knicks in Six: Why This Is the Team to Bring New York a Championship
    Jun 3 2026

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    The New York Knicks are four wins away from their first NBA championship since 1973, and Ian is not tiptoeing into the Finals preview.

    Knicks in six.

    In this episode of Rice on the Radio, Ian previews the Knicks vs. Spurs NBA Finals matchup, the 1999 rematch, and why this specific Knicks team feels built for the moment. Victor Wembanyama is already one of the scariest players the league has ever seen, but the Knicks have real answers: Jalen Brunson’s control, Karl-Anthony Towns’ spacing, OG Anunoby’s physicality, Josh Hart’s chaos, Mitchell Robinson’s rebounding, Landry Shamet’s shooting, and Mike Brown’s adjustments.

    This is not just about stopping Wemby. It is about making him work, making San Antonio’s young roster prove it, and taking advantage of Game 1 before the Spurs fully come down from their emotional Western Conference Finals win over Oklahoma City.

    The city is starving. This team has been doubted. The moment is here.

    Knicks in six.

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    28 mins
  • A.J. Brown to New England, Myles Garrett to L.A., and NFL Offseason Chaos
    Jun 2 2026

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    Episode 71 of Rice on the Radio lands on a perfect NFL chaos day.

    Ian breaks down A.J. Brown being traded to the New England Patriots, why Mike Vrabel and Drake Maye just became a much bigger problem in the AFC East, and why the Eagles’ return feels light even if Philadelphia needed a reset.

    Then it’s Myles Garrett to the Los Angeles Rams, a massive move from a team that keeps proving it can be aggressive without being reckless. The Rams are trying to win now with Matthew Stafford while still preparing for the future, and Garrett finally gets the kind of January stage his talent deserves.

    After that, the focus comes back to New York. Odell Beckham Jr. is back with the Giants, but this is not 2016. Ian talks through the nostalgia, the real expectations, Malik Nabers’ injury concern, and why Jaxson Dart’s Year 2 leap needs to come with patience, maturity, and fewer unnecessary hits.

    The episode closes with the Jets, where the bar is not “win the offseason.” It is proving Aaron Glenn, Frank Reich, Darren Mougey, Geno Smith, Garrett Wilson, Breece Hall, and Cade Klubnik are part of a real foundation instead of another one-year reset.

    NFL offseason chaos, New York football realism, and a reminder that sometimes the timing just needs one more day to cook.

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    33 mins
  • NY Baseball Check-In: Cole Returns. Mets Deadline Questions.
    May 29 2026

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    New York baseball is sitting in two completely different places.

    The Yankees just got Gerrit Cole back, and he looked a lot less like a pitcher easing his way back from Tommy John surgery and a lot more like the ace walking back into the room. Aaron Judge is in a rough stretch, but that feels more like normal baseball turbulence than real panic. Ben Rice keeps making the case that his bat is too valuable to mess with behind the plate, and the Rays are putting real pressure on the AL East race.

    Then there are the Mets.

    The record still gives just enough 2024 flashback hope to keep fans from fully letting go, but the roster construction, leadership questions, offensive inconsistency, and looming trade deadline decisions are getting harder to ignore. Should the Mets sell if they are still buried by the deadline? Who is actually part of the future? And how dangerous would it be to chase a big bat like Yordan Alvarez if it means taking on bad money with MLB’s next CBA fight and possible salary cap structure hanging over the sport?

    This episode is a New York baseball check-in built around one bigger idea: the cost of pretending.

    The Yankees look like a contender trying to finish the roster.
    The Mets look like an expensive team still trying to define one.

    Topics include Gerrit Cole’s return, Aaron Judge’s slump, Ben Rice’s role, Anthony Volpe, the Rays’ pressure on the Yankees, Mets deadline questions, Carson Benge, AJ Ewing, Nolan McLean, Juan Soto, Carlos Mendoza, David Stearns, Steve Cohen, Yordan Alvarez, Tarik Skubal, the Astros as potential sellers, and MLB’s looming CBA/salary cap battle.

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    29 mins
  • The Knicks are back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999
    May 26 2026

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    The Knicks are back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999.

    Ian reacts to New York’s Eastern Conference Finals sweep over the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Game 4 blowout, and what this moment means for an entire generation of Knicks fans. From Jalen Brunson winning Eastern Conference Finals MVP with his father Rick Brunson standing behind him, to the Knicks clearing the bench with 7:47 left in a closeout game, this wasn’t just a win. It was a full-circle New York sports moment.

    The Knicks didn’t sneak into the Finals. They swept Cleveland out of the building.

    Episode 69 covers:

    • Knicks 130, Cavaliers 93
    • New York’s first NBA Finals appearance since 1999
    • Jalen Brunson’s ECF MVP moment
    • Rick and Jalen Brunson’s full-circle Knicks story
    • Mike Brown’s first-year Finals run
    • The Knicks winning every closeout game this postseason by 30+
    • Why this team feels real, not lucky

    The Knicks are four wins away from a championship.

    Follow along: @RiceontheRadio

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    26 mins
  • Why the Jets and Giants Feel Different Entering the 2026 NFL Season
    May 22 2026

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    New York football feels different heading into the 2026 NFL season, but now comes the real question: does different actually mean better?

    This episode looks at why the Jets and Giants both feel like they’re operating with more structure than usual. For the Giants, John Harbaugh changes the tone of the building, Joe Schoen gets a surprising extension, Malik Nabers’ injury status looms large, and the franchise is betting that stability can finally turn into results.

    For the Jets, Aaron Glenn and Darren Mougey appear to have a real plan in place. Breece Hall and Garrett Wilson sound bought in, Frank Reich gives the offense a more experienced voice, David Bailey brings new juice to the pass rush, and Cade Klubnik gives the quarterback room a developmental swing without forcing panic.

    Plus, quick thoughts on Aaron Rodgers’ final Steelers season, Joe Burrow’s Super Bowl expectations in Cincinnati, and a weekend watch board featuring Knicks-Cavs Game 3, Spurs-Thunder, Mets-Marlins, and Yankees-Rays.

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    27 mins
  • I Just Watched the Garden Come Back From the Dead
    May 20 2026

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    The Knicks were dead. The Garden was quiet. The Cavs had a 22-point fourth-quarter lead and looked like they were walking out of Madison Square Garden with Game 1.

    Then Jalen Brunson happened.

    In this episode, I react to one of the greatest Knicks games I’ve ever watched: New York’s insane 115-104 overtime comeback over Cleveland in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. We get into Brunson putting the team on his back, the Garden coming back to life, Landry Shamet’s huge fourth-quarter minutes, Cleveland’s collapse, and why this Knicks team feels absolutely unkillable.

    I also touch on what the Knicks need to clean up for Game 2, why their shooting rhythm is the biggest thing to watch, and take a quick trip around the NBA with Wemby’s monster Game 1 against OKC and Jason Kidd being out in Dallas.

    Some wins count once in the standings and forever in the fanbase. This was one of those.

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    26 mins
  • The Mets won the World Series
    May 20 2026

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    The Mets won the World Series.

    Not the real one. Relax.

    But after taking two out of three from the Yankees at Citi Field, Mets fans finally got the kind of Subway Series weekend they were starving for. Friday looked like more of the same after Cam Schlittler shoved and Clay Holmes went down with a fractured fibula. Then Saturday changed the tone when Luke Weaver escaped a bases-loaded, nobody-out jam against his former team. By Sunday, Tyrone Taylor was sending Citi Field into chaos with a game-tying three-run homer, and Carson Benge was walking it off in extra innings.

    This episode kicks off the new shorter format: one main story, one real conversation, and a tighter sports-radio feel.

    The Mets didn’t fix their whole season. The Yankees aren’t suddenly broken. But rivalry weekends are supposed to feel like something, and this one did.

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    22 mins