For two seasons now, I’ve shared a broadcast booth with Guy Haberman—a voice built for Saturdays and a friend built for life. This week on Y-Option, fueled by our founding sponsor 76 — keeping you on the GO-GO-GO so you never miss a beat, I sat down with Guy for one last conversation before his world changes forever. In a few weeks, he and his wife Alyssa will welcome their first child.
So before football, before anything else, we talked about that.
Our job as broadcasters is to notice—to study body language, tone, and timing. So I asked him what he’s noticed most about his wife through the journey to parenthood. What followed was a reflection on steadiness, partnership, and what happens when the people closest to you reveal their best traits in the hardest moments. It reminded me that even in a profession obsessed with highlights, the most meaningful growth often happens quietly—off-camera, between breaths, in the spaces life gives us before everything changes.
We also dove into the lessons learned from production meeting with head coaches, off-line chats on the sideline and the principles that are shared between a locker room and a living room.
Guy not only works Saturday’s in the fall but also Sunday’s as one of the radio voices for the San Francisco 49ers. And once his son arrives he will be back on the hardwood calling basketball games for Big Ten Network, Fox and NBC/Peacock.
When we talked about the craft of broadcasting, Guy described the last two seasons as an exercise in presence. Each week he focused on getting a little bit better—on one small thing—knowing this would be a shorter season before he turned his attention to fatherhood. That kind of intentional growth struck me. It’s easy to talk about chasing big dreams; it’s harder to live in the details of daily improvement. And as someone who studied film with him each week, he’s right and he lived with a growth mindset all summer and fall.
The theme that echoed throughout our time together was simple: the best performers—whether in football, broadcasting, or life—operate with clarity, humility, and consistency. They don’t get caught up in what’s next. They just keep showing up, refining their process, trusting the people around them, and letting time reveal the result. From Kyle Shanahan to Ryan Day to PJ Fleck and everyone in between—there is a red thread that ties success together.
This episode isn’t about highlights or hot takes—it’s about friendship, discipline, and the beauty of life’s little gifts. It’s about learning to Chase What Matters, on and off the field and if you get a little lucky, you’ll get a few great games along the way.
I’m off to Madison, Wisconsin this weekend for Washington, finally ranked and in the latest College Football Playoff rankings, as they visit Camp Randall for the first time in 57 years.
More on the CFP this weekend and as the old saying goes, "the games they remember are the ones in November.”
Much love and stay steady,
Yogi












