Jared Waters

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Jared Waters

Jared Waters

@KIhoops_JW

Founder of KI hoops: Player Development & Consulting / Worked with over 75 College&Pros / Teaching Greatness / Co-Host of @TheWalkOn_Pod

United States Katılım Şubat 2016
262 Takip Edilen275 Takipçiler
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Sleeper76ers
Sleeper76ers@sleeper76ers·
The Celtics with Adem Bona as the closest defender this series: ➡️ 12/38 FG (31.5%) ➡️ 7/22 3PT (31.8%) Sixers will need more of that to stay in the series. 😤
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Hoop Herald
Hoop Herald@TheHoopHerald·
“I feel like I give hope to everybody that is the same size as me… With hard work you can make it a long way, & I’m a prime example of that.” - Payton Pritchard (Via @JustinmTurpin 🎥)
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Clutch Numbers
Clutch Numbers@ClutchNumbers·
Players With The Best Defensive FG% So Far In The 2025-26 NBA Playoffs (Min. 30 Total DFGA): 1. Adem Bona — 31.6% 2. Rudy Gobert — 32.7% 3. Rui Hachimura — 34.0% 4. Scoot Henderson — 34.4% 5. Tobias Harris — 35.1% 6. Christian Braun — 35.5% 7. Marcus Smart — 36.6% 8. Jaxson Hayes — 36.7% 8. Jayson Tatum — 36.7% 10. Nikola Vucevic — 37.1%
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The Winning Difference
The Winning Difference@thewinningdiff1·
"We are not trying to repeat an outcome. We are trying to repeat a process." You don’t build dynasties by chasing results. You build them by mastering the habits that produce them. The scoreboard only reveals what the process already decided.
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The Players’ Tribune
The Players’ Tribune@PlayersTribune·
Keldon Johnson on embracing his role as the sixth man: “I remember a couple years ago, I had a hard conversation with Pop. One morning, we were getting ready to play Dallas, and he pulled me to the side and told me that he thought it would be best for the team if I started coming off the bench. I said, ‘Yeah, of course. Whatever’s best for the team, I’ll do it.’ And I truly meant that, too. But I’m also just human, man. And I was like 24 years old. If I said that I fully bought into this role from the jump, I’d be lying. I had averaged 22 points in the NBA. I’d won a gold medal with Team USA at the Olympics. So I just didn’t understand. I couldn’t wrap my head around it. And ultimately, I didn’t take it well. I sulked. I let the outside noise affect my play. I didn’t present the best version of myself as I was coming off the bench for the rest of that season. And I knew that I was much better than that. I’ve been reflecting on that part of my journey a lot lately, with the position we’re in right now. To backtrack a little bit…. When I was drafted in 2019, that was probably one of the most stressful nights of my life. I’d had a great year at Kentucky, and I thought I was going 9 or 10. In my mind, my floor was 15 to Detroit. The crazy thing is, I didn’t even work out for San Antonio. We talked a little bit on FaceTime, but I honestly didn’t think I’d still be on the board at 19 when the Spurs picked. Definitely not at 29, where I ended up going. I don’t know why I slipped so much, but thank God I did, because I landed at a proven organization with vets who could mold me. That situation could have gone one of two ways. Thankfully, it went the good way. Dejounte was young, too, but he knew the ropes better than me, and he made sure that I did everything the right way. I can’t thank him enough to this day for how much he’s helped my career. Same thing with DeMar DeRozan. Those guys really embraced me and took me under their wing as a young guy, and showed me how it was done. I feel like I had such a great group of vets, whether it was LaMarcus Aldridge, Patty Mills, Rudy Gay — all those guys went out their way to make sure I was solid. I feel like they knew how good I could be before I even knew how good I could be. They didn’t let me skip any steps, which was huge for my career early on. And yeah, fast-forward to summer 2024, and I got to thinking back on my first couple years here in San Antonio, and how I could get that spark back, get back to being me. That’s when I started to see the bigger picture. We had picks. There were all these signs that we were building something that was gonna be special, all these bright green flags. But there was this one red flag. Me. In that moment, I had to take a hard look in the mirror. And man, I just got embarrassed. I hated that feeling — the feeling that I had let my vets down, and especially let my younger teammates down. This organization believed in me since day one, when Pop and our GM at the time R.C. Buford took a leap of faith on a player who was sliding in the draft and didn’t even have a workout at their facility. They had a plan, and I was a big piece of that plan. I just needed to get out of my own way. Period. I knew that I could either be the person who tries to fight the change, who makes it about them and their ego, and tries to do everything their way (which never really works). Or, I could trust the process. And the Spurs never gave me a reason not to trust it. So I bought into my role, and I put my best foot forward each and every night. Whatever I had to do to be the best version of myself, I did it. And I feel like this season has been a testament to that. I’m just really at home here. I think that’s probably obvious, right? The cowboy hat isn’t a gimmick. San Antonio is all me. Being a country boy, that’s just a part of who I am. From Huntington Prep to Oak Hill Academy to Kentucky, I feel like I just carried that country boy vibe with me everywhere I went.” playerstribu.ne/KJ
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Jared Waters
Jared Waters@KIhoops_JW·
This applies to hoop game development 💯
Podcast Notes 🗒️@podcastnotes

Netflix co-founder and former CEO @marcrandolph says hard work is a myth. Yes, sometimes you have to grind. But 99% of the time it changes nothing. He uses 2 dead-simple examples to prove it: 1. Sprinting in a triathlon (you can't sprint the whole race) 2. Running through airports to catch flights (the plane left anyway) "You don't lose the deal at 2 o'clock that morning because you didn't check the fonts. You lost it four weeks ago when you didn't have the fundamentals right." His answer: stop grinding on the wrong things. Wisely choose your focal points and you make 99% of the difference without the extra hours.

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Greg Berge
Greg Berge@GregBerge·
You don't remember the teacher who gave you the easy A. You remember the one who wouldn't let you quit. Dan Hurley just described every great coach. Discipline. Accountability. Commitment. And a bond with players that the cameras never capture.🔥
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Josh Chambers
Josh Chambers@JoshChambers·
Loved this answer from Iowa Coach Ben McCollum: 👨‍🍳 Preparation is an Identity, Not an Event 😳 The Moment Exposes, It Doesn’t Create 📈Consistency Compounds Into Confidence If your team only locks in when it “matters,” you’ve already lost. The standard HAS to exist before the spotlight!
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Brett Usher
Brett Usher@UsherNBA·
Jared McCain 5/9 from three in 17 minutes
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Dejounte Murray
Dejounte Murray@DejounteMurray·
I Found My MF JOY 🤩 Again. 🙏🏽😤😈 And We Stepping On Any And Everything In The Way!!! 💯 #LikeThat🤯 #DM5🖤 They Not Suppose To Like You On The Wood!!!! 🤷🏽‍♂️
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Scott Dochterman
Scott Dochterman@ScottDochterman·
Iowa's Ben McCollum brought up the enemy of great is good in his postgame news conference. Interesting comments. "People sit in mediocrity for a long time because they start to fall in love with really good. I probably had that happen to me when I was in, like, my seventh or eighth year. We went to three straight Sweet 16s and lost by one, two points. ... I always thought we were really good and close. Then I realized that was the biggest issue that we had, was the fact that we were settling for really good." "Trying to go from really good to being great is something that is really hard to do, and our kids need to understand really good is not acceptable. It's actually worse than being bad."
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Steph Curry Muse
Steph Curry Muse@StephMuse_·
2016 Steph Curry is the greatest player we’ve ever seen.
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OKC THUNDER
OKC THUNDER@okcthunder·
Jared McCain was hustling ALL OVER the court 🙂‍↕️
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Hoop Herald
Hoop Herald@TheHoopHerald·
Devin Booker speaks on what it took to get where he is “Up early before school training, after school training…Sacrificing being a regular kid…if I could do it over would do it a million times” Love this
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Jared Waters@KIhoops_JW·
This applies to basketball as well
Brad Sparling@playgolfcollege

I ran a poll asking what the most important factor in a junior golfer’s development is. I was shocked that everybody didn’t pick Parenting. Because after 25 years in competitive golf, having 3 kids of my own play D1 golf, coaching at Duke and Ohio State, and working with hundreds of junior golf families, here’s what I’ve observed, researched and learned: How you parent is the single biggest factor in your child’s junior golf success. Almost nobody shows parents how to do this well. I’m on a mission to change that. So, here are the 10 most important factors in elite golf parenting. From my chapter on Parenting in Becoming Elite: 1.Create a Safe Environment. Your home must be a safe harbor, not a pressure cooker. Your love is unconditional and separate from their golf score. Same affection after an 85 as after a 65. If your mood changes with their scorecard, you are creating a toxic environment that destroys their love for the game. And eventually your relationship. 2.The Car Ride Home. This is where most parents blow it. The car ride home is a sanctuary. A no golf talk zone. Enforce the 48 Hour Rule. Let them decompress, listen to music, stare out the window. The post round autopsy is one of the most damaging things a parent can do. 3.Body Language. Your kids are reading you on every single shot. Every. Single. Shot. A fist pump after a birdie tells them birdies are what matter. Slumped shoulders after a bogey tells them you’re disappointed. Your expression must be the same after a birdie as after a double bogey. Calm, positive, steady. You are the emotional thermostat. 4.Communication. The most important words when they come off the 18th green: I love to watch you play. Not “what did you shoot.” Not “what happened on 12.” After 48 hours, ask open ended questions. How do you feel about your round? What were you most proud of? What do you want to work on? You are a facilitator, not a judge. 5.Creating Ownership. A player led journey is sustainable. A parent led journey leads to burnout. If you are more invested than they are, that is a red flag. Motivation must come from within. Great parents ask questions instead of giving answers. The player who owns their development keeps improving long after the lessons end. 6. Giving them Freedom. Be a lighthouse, not a tugboat. At tournaments, stay at least 50 yards away. Do not walk the fairway with them or stand behind every green. Give them space to breathe and compete. Do not talk to them during the round unless they initiate. They are in their performance bubble. Do not burst it. 7.Allowing Them to Fail. Failure is not the enemy. It is a prerequisite to growth. Your child is more resilient than you think. They can handle failure and disappointment. They need you to believe in them and let them learn, not protect them from every setback. Removing the opportunity to fail is the real enemy. 8.Staying in Your Lane. You are the parent. Not the coach. Not the caddy. Not the swing analyst. These roles do not mix. Constantly offering swing advice creates a toxic triangle of confusion. Hire a professional. Trust them. Stay out of the way. Your job is love and support. Period. 9.Building an Identity Beyond Golf. If your child’s entire sense of self worth is tied to their golf score, you are setting them up for misery. They are a person who plays golf, not the other way around. Encourage other interests. Protect their social life. Let them go to school dances. Family vacations and time with siblings are sacred. A one dimensional identity is one of the three ingredients that causes burnout. 10.Playing the Long Game. This is a 10 year journey, not a 10 tournament sprint. You are not in a race to be the best 12 year old golfer. You are on a patient journey to see how good they can be at 18, at 22, and beyond. Slow down. The car rides, the early morning tee times, the post round ice cream. These are the moments you will remember. Savor them.

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Hoop Herald
Hoop Herald@TheHoopHerald·
Strong words from the greatest Shooter of All Time “Your state of mind is the main driving force behind your successes and failures” Thoughts have a frequency (Via @DanAbrahams77 🎥)
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Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness
Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness@coachajkings·
Kelvin Sampson shares why most coaches and leaders fail - and it's not what you think. "I think the coaches that fail at every level are the coaches that are passive-aggressive. Passive-aggressive coaches are usually afraid to hold kids accountable. They rationalize." They avoid the hard conversations. They let things slide and hope problems fix themselves. "If you're going to build a culture, the first thing you have to come to grips with is you're going to have confrontation. Because you want it done your way." Culture requires confrontation. Not conflict, but confrontation. There's a difference. "All the coaches that got fired, I'd always try to learn more from those guys than the other guys. 'Why are you guys getting fired? What is it you're not doing?'" The answer? They overlooked the little things. "Touching every line is a metaphor for life...Do you let that go? You start letting that go, then that kid may never touch the line." The little things become the big things. The details you ignore become the standards you accept. The best leaders are both warm and demanding. You know they care, but they also emphasize the little things. If you're afraid to confront, you're afraid to lead. (🎥 THSCA Basketball - CoachTube)
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
For quality of life, it is better to err on the side of being an optimist and wrong, rather than a pessimist and right
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