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lil wham
@Wolverines0028
Anthony Edwards, Yankees, Michigan football and proud member of the haliban
Beigetreten Aralık 2017
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@VRev1961 @LethalNBA_ Downloading the app like breaks my phone 🤣
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@Wolverines0028 @LethalNBA_ bro use it now gang they have apps so even if u not online
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Sports fans don't agree on much anymore.
That said, everyone seems to agree about what happened in this video.
South Carolina fans get it.
UConn fans get it.
Everyone is in alignment.
South Carolina just ended UConn's undefeated season in the Final Four. 62-48. And then Geno Auriemma and Dawn Staley got into it at the handshake line.
Two coaches with a combined 15 national championships and nearly 2,000 career wins between them. Going at each other at the final buzzer because that is what happens when two people spend decades building something and refuse to hand it over.
Most businesses can't commit to a marketing channel for longer than a quarter. These two committed to one program for a combined 59 years.
Here is what makes this rivalry one of the most important stories in sports right now:
Geno Auriemma arrived at UConn in 1985. The program had never been to a Final Four. Four decades later he has 12 national championships, an 88% career winning percentage, and the most dominant dynasty in the history of college basketball regardless of gender.
He was offered NBA opportunities. He turned them down. He was the biggest name in women's basketball for two decades straight and never left for a bigger stage because the stage he was building at UConn became the biggest one there is.
UConn now recruits itself. The best high school players in the country already know the name before a coach ever picks up the phone. The program's brand does more work than any recruiting pitch ever could.
Dawn Staley arrived at South Carolina in 2008. The Gamecocks had zero national championships and had never been considered a destination program. Eighteen years later she has three national titles, over 500 wins at the school, and a program that just ended the number one overall seed's perfect season in front of a national audience.
She was a three-time Olympic gold medalist and one of the greatest point guards the sport has ever produced. She could have coached anywhere. She chose a program that nobody considered elite and built it into one.
South Carolina now recruits itself. The same way UConn's name does the work before Geno picks up the phone, Staley's program has built enough gravity that the best players come to her.
Two different starting points. Two different eras. Two completely different paths to dominance. One shared principle: stay in one place long enough for the program to compound.
Geno did not build 12 championships by job-hopping to the next school with better resources. He built them by staying at UConn for four decades and letting every recruiting class, every Final Four run, every championship add equity to the one program he committed to.
Staley did not build three championships by leaving South Carolina for a blue blood once the first title hit. She stayed. Every season added to the foundation. Every win made the next recruiting pitch easier. Every championship made the program more valuable than it was the year before.
That is compounding. And it only works if you stay.
This is exactly what is happening in search right now, and most businesses are still coaching a different school every season.
Most businesses treat their marketing the way a coach treats a stepping-stone job. They commit to a channel for a quarter, maybe two. They run a paid ad campaign: it ends, the budget depletes, they move on. They post on social media: 48 hours of reach, the algorithm buries it. They send an email blast: one open rate, one click-through, done. They book a PR placement: one news cycle, forgotten. They pay an influencer: one burst, the attention fades.
Every quarter is a fresh start at a new school. No program. No compounding. No equity carrying forward from the last season.
(If you want to see where your site stands across Google and AI search, start here:
seo-stuff.com/free-audit)
SEO and AI search visibility is the program.
You publish one genuinely authoritative piece of content. It ranks in Google. Then ChatGPT cites it. Then Perplexity references it. Then Google AI Overview pulls from it. Then AI Mode surfaces it. Then an AI agent retrieves it on behalf of a buyer who never even opened a browser.
One asset. Compounding across every surface. The same way Geno's first championship in 1995 made the next recruiting class easier, which made the 2000 title possible, which made the next decade of dominance inevitable.
When ChatGPT cites a source, it cites the most authoritative, most structured, most useful content it can find. When Google's AI Overview selects a page to reference, it selects based on content depth, trust signals and extractability. When Perplexity assembles an answer, it pulls from the sources that actually answer the question best.
No ad budget influences that. No social following affects it. No campaign calendar determines the outcome. The channel itself selects for the best answer.
Staley proved tonight that a program built from nothing can beat a program that has been dominant for four decades. South Carolina did not exist as a force 18 years ago. Now it just held UConn to their lowest-scoring game of the season and ended the best record in the country.
But she only got there because she stayed. She committed to one place, built depth year after year, and let the program compound until it was strong enough to beat anyone.
That is the gap SEO Stuff was built to close.
seo-stuff.com
Geno has 12 titles because he stayed four decades. Staley has three because she stayed 18 years. Neither one got there by switching programs every time a better offer came along. The program only compounds if you commit to it.
The question is whether your business is building a program or just running tryouts every quarter and wondering why nothing compounds.
SportsCenter@SportsCenter
Geno Auriemma exchanged words with Dawn Staley in the final seconds of South Carolina and UConn’s Final Four matchup.
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@Wolverines0028 @LethalNBA_ bruh you saw what they did with yaxel, and you seen what they did with pro pass shaq. theyre basically saying if you dont spend money on this game , fuck you. 10 dollars for shaq , is completely different than 100 for yaxel.
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@LethalNBA_ Been nms spent all year. Tier 1 season 2, 4 and 5. Really thinking about buying pro pass for the first time 🤣
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@migueljose_85 @nickythegood I responded a day late mate. My fault for being right
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@nickythegood Was I right or was I right? Zero memes on the DR cause we don’t give a fuck about them. Idiots 🤣🤣🤣🤣
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@Wolverines0028 @nickythegood This guy knows the DR will win so is already downplaying the US loss
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@migueljose_85 @nickythegood USA will win only cause Skenes is pitching. Team USA also doesn’t even care about the WBC either cause it’s pointless but they’ll lock in for DR and the championship and win it all. I’ll come back to this
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@MikeGrinnell_ Mexico has 13 players born in America on the team and Italy has 24 🤣
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@NBA2KMyTEAM If you accidentally quick sold one cuz u have that FA card am I screwed for this?
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New College Player Challenges are LIVE 🎓🏀
Add Solo Ball to your lineup and rep UConn in today’s challenge. Complete it to earn their 💎 Diamond that evolves into a 💫 Galaxy Opal.
Then, complete their 24-hour challenge to earn a Hall of Fame Badge and an Exchange Event Card. Stack them to exchange:
🔁 10 for a 💫 Galaxy Opal Alumni Pack
🔁 30 for a 🌌 Dark Matter Alumni Pack
New challenges drop daily through March 30 📅🔥

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