TORONTO

Mayor Rob Ford is no fan of the ladies winning his football pool.

That was one of many revelations Ford made during a 24-minute interview Thursday with “The Sports Junkies” show on 106.7 The Fan — a Washington, D.C., radio station.

In what is supposed to become a weekly segment, Ford was asked if he gets upset when women win his football pool.

“Yeah, a lot of females up in Toronto, a lot of women up here, they win all the time,” Ford said.

One of the hosts told Ford: “Yeah, but they don’t know anything.”

“I know but they just look who’s the cutest guy … that’s how they pick them,” Ford said.

LISTEN TO THE AUDIO OF THE 106.7 THE FAN INTERVIEW WITH ROB FORD

The interview with the show covered a wide-range of topics including Ford’s ongoing crack cocaine scandal, the Washington Redskins’ name controversy and Obamacare.

In a boastful portion of the interview, Ford told the hosts he can’t wait for the October 2014 election and that he was confident he’ll be re-elected based on his record.

“I’m really humbled by all the support, I have a lot of supporters in Toronto,” he said.

During a rundown of his record for the hosts, Ford claimed, “I’ve got a subway built.” But he didn’t mention the city has yet to actually start building the Scarborough subway.

Ford — a former high school football coach — came out in favour of hard-hitting football despite the risk of concussions.

“Concussions are bad but they have been around for years and years and years,” he said.

The right-wing leader stressed he’s against publicly funded health care and in favour of a two-tier systems and voiced his opposition to U.S. President Barack Obama’s health-care policies.

“As a person, I like President Obama, I don’t like his politics,” Ford said.

Ford repeated his opposition — first raised on Wednesday — to renaming the Redskins. He argued if people had a problem with the name, they should have raised that when the team started.

“What are we going to call (the Cleveland Indians) next? The Cleveland Aboriginals?” Ford said.

He also invited the “Sports Junkies” up to Toronto and promised they could broadcast their show live out of the mayor’s office.

“I’ll treat you like a king,” Ford assured them.