Scott Stephens

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Scott Stephens

Scott Stephens

@forcemultiplier

Real Estate Developer and Investor partnering with Athletes, Entertainers, and Entrepreneurs. 5X Wins - Income, Depreciation, Equity, Appreciation, Leverage

Nashville Katılım Mart 2009
309 Takip Edilen418 Takipçiler
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Dov Kleiman
Dov Kleiman@NFL_DovKleiman·
𝗧𝗥𝗘𝗡𝗗𝗜𝗡𝗚: NFL legend Justin Tuck is now a Managing Director at Goldman Sachs after his 11-year football career. After the NFL, Tuck went back to school, earning an MBA from the prestigious Wharton School. Justin is a true inspiration and role model. (via @adamglyn)
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Kayleigh McEnany
Kayleigh McEnany@kayleighmcenany·
🚨 OLYMPIAN RYAN LOCHTE: "We started watching these people getting baptized, and something came into me, something so pure." "I'm going to start crying. It felt so real watching these people get baptized." "And I asked [my girlfriend], 'What is this?'" She said, "They're washing away their sins. They're getting a fresh start publicly." "And I was like, 'Honey, I want that.'" "And so, I got baptized. I washed away my sins, and trust me, I had a lot!" "... To put your life in front of God and give it to God has changed everything for me." "I'm finding who I am." "I am being a better father, a better person, and I just love the person that I've become now, and I owe it to God." @SatAmericaFNC @FoxNews ⬇️
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Market Bubble
Market Bubble@MarketBubble·
Tristan Thompson explains how he invested in Anthropic “It was a buddy of mine in Silicon Valley… just going to a couple of these dinners they were doing with the NBA, sitting there talking to these guys and really picking their brains” “They were telling me about the future of AI and technology… I was like hey man, I like what you’re talking about” “It was a bunch of SF guys and everyone kept telling me, so I was like alright man, here’s a check. I wanna get in the game” “From there they just opened up so much for me. I was able to get in early through SPVs and bring in my other buddies to make a bigger check”
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Goshawk Trades
Goshawk Trades@GoshawkTrades·
Ken Griffin on the single factor he looks for when hiring at Citadel: "show me an athlete who did well academically." "an athlete because they know what it takes to win and they've had to experience loss." talent is everywhere. what's rare is someone who knows how to lose, recover, and still perform at a high level. same thing separates profitable traders from everyone else.
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Scott Stephens
Scott Stephens@forcemultiplier·
The Real Finish Line
Jesse Fox@jesse_k_fox

To mom and dad: A moment captured at the 152nd Kentucky Derby, two brothers crossed the finish line side by side and reached out to hold hands. José Ortiz had just won riding Golden Tempo, beating his own brother Irad by a nose. That image says so much. What made it remarkable was where Golden Tempo had been for most of the race: dead last. So far back the announcers barely mentioned him. He's what they call a deep late closer, a horse that lingers, waits, and makes his move when it matters most. And sometimes, that's us. Sometimes we feel invisible. Like the race is already decided and no one even knows we're running. But we keep going anyway. And sometimes, in the end, we win. This was José's 12th Kentucky Derby. Eleven times before, he came up short. Then, finally, he didn't. The day also held a different kind of story. Just before the race, jockey Alex Achard was moments from living his Derby dream when his horse, Great White, reared and fell. After inspection, the horse was scratched. This was his first Derby and just like that, disaster, gone. No second chance in the moment. Just loss. That's life too. My mom and dad watched the Kentucky Derby together for 50 years. Then my dad passed. For nine years, she watched it alone. But yesterday, they held hands again as they watched the Derby together after 9 years of being apart. Two brothers at the finish line. A wife and her husband across the years. A jockey whose moment never came. A rider who waited twelve years for his. Different outcomes. Same truth. Life isn't just about winning the race. It's about enduring it, about pressing forward when you're invisible, getting back up after loss, and believing your moment can still come. And in the end, win or lose in this life, we reach for the people we love. That's the real finish line.

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Michael Warburton
Michael Warburton@For_Film_Fans·
In 2006 a high school English teacher asked students to write to a famous author & ask for advice. KURT VONNEGUT (who left us 19yrs ago today) was the only one to respond. His reply was a doozy.
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Dan Orlovsky
Dan Orlovsky@danorlovsky7·
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MLFootball
MLFootball@MLFootball·
POWERFUL: New York #Giants Pro Bowl quarterback Jameis Winston with a beautiful message about JESUS. “Jesus has won. He has risen. It’s already done.” “There’s something about that name, Jesus.” Winston is an inspiration to many. A powerful message. x.com/Fatslob1123/st…
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Scott Stephens@forcemultiplier·
Power in player led teams
Steve Magness@stevemagness

Arizona's was Down 7 to Purdue at halftime of the Elite Eight. Their first Final Four in 25 years slipping away. Coach Tommy Lloyd walks to the front of the locker room and says: "Guys, the coaching staff and I are going to leave right now. You guys figure this deal out." There wasn't some huge speech. He walked out. Every instinct in a coaches body says to give the movie style inspirational speech. Light a fire, demand more, sound like Al Pacino in Any Given Sunday... Lloyd did the opposite. He left 5 minutes on the clock and sent a key message to the players: This is your team. I trust you to lead it. The veteran players took charge. They'd been through the tournament losses before, helped with emotional regulation, and reiterated that they still had a shot. Freshman Koa Peat said afterward: "They told us to keep going. Can't get too high or too low. Just stay even-keeled." Arizona outscored Purdue 48-26 in the second half. They had zero turnovers and shot 51.6% from the field. Second half: Arizona outscored Purdue One. They put on a clinic. When asked why he did it, Lloyd said after the game: "The most powerful thing in a team sport is a player-led program. The coach, you have to help them navigate it, but when you can get the players to own these moments, you are just so much better." He said he'd done it four or five times this year and it worked every time. There's a mountain of science behind Lloyd's approach In 2003, researchers Mageau and Vallerand found autonomy-supportive coaching, giving athletes choice, acknowledging their perspective, and avoiding overt control, consistently produced more motivated, more resilient athletes. Controlling coaching did the reverse: higher burnout and lower resilience. This is at the heart of one of the most theories in psychology, Self-Determination Theory When people feel autonomy, competence, and relatedness, you get the highest quality motivation. When a coach trusts his team to figure it out and right the ship, he's handing them all three at once. It's the ultimate signal of trust when his team needed it the most. Lloyd built a culture where the players internalized the stuff that matters. A 2025 meta-analysis by Clare and colleagues looked at 50 studies and over 17,000 athletes. They found that team captains had nearly twice the effect on performance as coaches did. Coaches help set the culture and expectations. They guide good leaders, but the players look to who else is in the arena with them. We need peer pressure in the positive direction. Lloyd understood this. Too often, as coaches we think we need to "do something." That instinct pushes us to over control, to grip the wheel harder. When so often, what we need to do is trust that we've guided them the best we can, and show them the trust they deserve. Steve Kerr once did something similar with the Warriors, telling his team that he was sitting out and they were coaching the team for a game. Build the culture. Coach the team up, giving them the skills and ability. And then sometimes, you've just got to step back, tell them you believe in them, that it's there team. That ownership and self-belief is the fuel of the purest motivation. Sometimes, when we're struggling, we don't need all the answers. We just need to hear that we've already got the inside of us. And to give us that belief to go get it done...together. -Steve Research: Mageau & Vallerand (2003) "The coach–athlete relationship: a motivational model." Journal of Sports Sciences, 21(11), 883-904. -Clare, Hardy, Roberts, Tod, & Benson (2025) "Do Leaders Actually Influence Sports Performance? An Integrated Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses." Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 47(4), 205-222.

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Scott Stephens
Scott Stephens@forcemultiplier·
You are repsonible for instilling hope in others about who they can become!
Logan Simmons@CoachLSimmons

This one is so good!! Rise To The Standard! #RTTS Leaders have a responsibility to bring out the best in their people. They have a responsibility to call their people up and help them see, and the achieve, their full potential. People will rise to the expectations you set for them. They will rise to the standard that you set. The standard is bigger than any person and it doesn’t lower for any person. Help your people rise to it. It’s the whole Pygmalion Effect. High expectations cause high achievers. Set the bar high. Point out the potential in your people. Equip them with the confidence, belief and ability to achieve that potential. Then help them achieve that potential. That’s exactly what leadership is all about. It’s about calling people up and bringing others along with you. That’s a responsibility that cannot be taken lightly.

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SkinsHoops86
SkinsHoops86@SkinsHoops86·
Cool how Milan Momcilovic's dad encouraged him to work with a sports psychologist “You practice your shot so many times, & you sometimes get thoughts that creep in your head that maybe something’s wrong. If I say it before I’m shooting, it’s a way to not think about the shot.”
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Justin Williams@Williams_Justin

Iowa State’s Milan Momcilovic is the best 3-point shooter in college basketball. And he says one word before he shoots: “jellybean.” The story behind it, as the Cyclones try to advance to the Elite Eight tonight. Free to read via @TheAthletic. nytimes.com/athletic/71504…

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Scott Stephens
Scott Stephens@forcemultiplier·
“Power, success, happiness, as the world knows them, are his who will fight for them hard enough; but peace, love, joy, are only from God.” -The Magnificent Defeat
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