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Chaos erupts in San Antonio after Knicks championship win with police using smoke bombs

Flagrant · Trump Declares War on World Cup · July 9, 2026
Chaos erupts in San Antonio after Knicks championship win with police using smoke bombs
Flagrant
Flagrant
Trump Declares War on World Cup
"We turn around the corner. Second we turn around the corner. Uh, police smoke bombs. People start swinging on the police. The police are also Spurs fans. Like the police are are throwing smoke bombs and shooting RUBBER BULLETS BACK. LIKE YO, WE'RE UPSET TOO. WHY ARE YOU FIGHTING US? IT IS A WAR scene outside Waterburg."
After the New York Knicks won the championship in San Antonio, violence broke out in downtown with hundreds of people fighting, police deploying smoke bombs and rubber bullets, and visiting Knicks fans being attacked and having jerseys forcibly removed. The hosts describe a chaotic scene that resembled a war zone.

About this episode

Hosts Andrew Schulz, Akaash Singh, Mark Gagnon, and Alex Media dissect the 2026 FIFA World Cup in America alongside the New York Knicks' championship run, producing a wide-ranging conversation that touches sports, culture, politics, and social issues. The episode centers on two major storylines: allegations of FIFA corruption favoring Argentina and Lionel Messi, and a chaotic night in San Antonio where the hosts witnessed violence erupt after the Knicks' championship victory. Schulz and the crew attended games in San Antonio between a Moroccan wedding celebration, describing police deploying smoke bombs and rubber bullets as hundreds of angry Spurs fans fought in the streets. The group debates whether expanded World Cup formats benefit entertainment, discusses Brazil's decline linked to religious conversion from Catholicism to evangelical Protestantism, and examines cultural differences in how nations celebrate soccer. They criticize penalty shootouts as playoff tiebreakers and propose rule changes including time-adjusted red card suspensions. The conversation veers into comparisons of national genetics and athleticism, the superiority of American desserts and condiments, European lack of air conditioning, and historical gender segregation in Australian bars. Schulz shares emotional moments from Knicks playoff games and criticizes a $200 ayahuasca ceremony Alex plans to attend in New Jersey, with comedian Neil Brennan calling in to warn the price is suspiciously low. Throughout, the hosts celebrate America's advantages while noting how the World Cup allowed international visitors to see past anti-American propaganda.

Key takeaways

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