Ashley Bowman

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Ashley Bowman

Ashley Bowman

@MrsABowman

Follower of Jesus. Wife to @JasonBowman. Momma of 2. Counselor, Life & Leadership Coach, Basketball Mom, Cheer/Track Mom

St. Louis, MO Katılım Kasım 2012
578 Takip Edilen228 Takipçiler
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Ben Houselog
Ben Houselog@benlikessport·
Something that won’t be talked about with this play is just how unselfish this was by Alex Karraban Potentially the last game of your college career, most guys chuck up a prayer. Instead he trusts the freshman with an open look Great teammate
Matt@sixringsofsteeI

I can’t believe this just happened

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Damin Altizer
Damin Altizer@DaminAltizer·
Nebraska putting 4 players on the court. Duke’s last 10 seconds up 2. Florida helping and giving up the 3. Just a reminder the next time you’re at a high school game: mental mistakes happen at EVERY level. And screaming at 15-18 year olds from the stands isn’t changing that.
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Ashley Bowman
Ashley Bowman@MrsABowman·
💯!! “Excellence does not mean control. It does not mean perfection. It means refusing to quit on yourself when the situation looks hopeless. It means trusting your preparation even when nothing is falling.”
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg

You’re never out until you’re out. Play the game in front of you. Not the game you wanted to happen. Not the game that just happened. Not the game you hoped would happen. But the game that is happening. It's a remarkable lesson for basketball, for all of sport, and really, for all of life. In the Elite 8 of the NCAA tournament, the UConn Huskies came out flat against the No. 1 seed Duke. The Huskies trailed by 15 at halftime. No. 1 seeds were 134-0 all time in the NCAA tournament when leading by 15 or more points at halftime. That’s across the entire NCAA tournament history. Every round. Every year. UConn had every reason to give up. But they simply refused. Most people check out when the odds turn against them. But UConn never stopped playing to win. Their big man Tarris Reed Jr. put the Huskies on his back. He played incredibly on both sides of the ball. The Huskies cut the lead to 13. Then to 11. Then to 7. Then to 5. And then, in the final seconds of the game, they cut the lead to two. Duke inbounded the ball, UConn pressured and forced a turnover. With less than a second on the clock, Braylon Mullins—who had shot 0 for 4 from three—put up a deep 3 from the logo, and nailed it. UConn 73. Duke 72. 134-1. After the game, UConn coach Dan Hurley said this about Mullins: "The courage. You have a young man, he's a rare human being. The toughness about him, to take the shot, on a tough shooting night, but he was due." It was an off night. And yet with everything on the line you have no choice but to pull the trigger. Shooters shoot. That's confidence in the process. March Madness is an ultimate test of emotional regulation. Over 3 weeks and 6 games, nothing ever goes to plan. You prepare. You practice. You visualize. Then stuff happens. The difference between those who collapse and those who rise? How they respond, especially when things don’t go their way. What's true in basketball is true in life. It's easy when everything is going your way. But things will go wrong. You'll fall behind. The score won't look good. Most people check out when the odds turn against them. UConn never stopped playing their hardest. Not when they were down 19. Not when they were 1 for 11 from three. Not when history said it was over. It’s called having a next play mentality: You can't control what already happened. You can't control the score. You can only control the next play. One stop. One bucket. One possession at a time. That's how you erase a historical deficit against the No. 1 team in the country. It's how you work through the biggest challenges in life too. Excellence does not mean control. It does not mean perfection. It means refusing to quit on yourself when the situation looks hopeless. It means trusting your preparation even when nothing is falling. It means playing the game in front of you. Not the game you wanted. Not the game you hoped for. The game that is happening. Stay in the arena. Play the next play.

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Ashley Bowman
Ashley Bowman@MrsABowman·
@BStulberg Loved this!!🙌 It also takes coaches and teammates believing in their players, even when things aren’t going their way. Love the part about excellence not meaning perfection!
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Brad Stulberg
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg·
You’re never out until you’re out. Play the game in front of you. Not the game you wanted to happen. Not the game that just happened. Not the game you hoped would happen. But the game that is happening. It's a remarkable lesson for basketball, for all of sport, and really, for all of life. In the Elite 8 of the NCAA tournament, the UConn Huskies came out flat against the No. 1 seed Duke. The Huskies trailed by 15 at halftime. No. 1 seeds were 134-0 all time in the NCAA tournament when leading by 15 or more points at halftime. That’s across the entire NCAA tournament history. Every round. Every year. UConn had every reason to give up. But they simply refused. Most people check out when the odds turn against them. But UConn never stopped playing to win. Their big man Tarris Reed Jr. put the Huskies on his back. He played incredibly on both sides of the ball. The Huskies cut the lead to 13. Then to 11. Then to 7. Then to 5. And then, in the final seconds of the game, they cut the lead to two. Duke inbounded the ball, UConn pressured and forced a turnover. With less than a second on the clock, Braylon Mullins—who had shot 0 for 4 from three—put up a deep 3 from the logo, and nailed it. UConn 73. Duke 72. 134-1. After the game, UConn coach Dan Hurley said this about Mullins: "The courage. You have a young man, he's a rare human being. The toughness about him, to take the shot, on a tough shooting night, but he was due." It was an off night. And yet with everything on the line you have no choice but to pull the trigger. Shooters shoot. That's confidence in the process. March Madness is an ultimate test of emotional regulation. Over 3 weeks and 6 games, nothing ever goes to plan. You prepare. You practice. You visualize. Then stuff happens. The difference between those who collapse and those who rise? How they respond, especially when things don’t go their way. What's true in basketball is true in life. It's easy when everything is going your way. But things will go wrong. You'll fall behind. The score won't look good. Most people check out when the odds turn against them. UConn never stopped playing their hardest. Not when they were down 19. Not when they were 1 for 11 from three. Not when history said it was over. It’s called having a next play mentality: You can't control what already happened. You can't control the score. You can only control the next play. One stop. One bucket. One possession at a time. That's how you erase a historical deficit against the No. 1 team in the country. It's how you work through the biggest challenges in life too. Excellence does not mean control. It does not mean perfection. It means refusing to quit on yourself when the situation looks hopeless. It means trusting your preparation even when nothing is falling. It means playing the game in front of you. Not the game you wanted. Not the game you hoped for. The game that is happening. Stay in the arena. Play the next play.
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FZW Activities
FZW Activities@fzwactivities·
Boys Track gets the W in the O'Fallon Quad today!! Girls take 2nd!! Great work Jags!! #greatdaytobeajaguar
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Jon Root
Jon Root@JonnyRoot_·
“First & foremost, I wanna give all glory to my Lord & Savior, Jesus Christ… We’re a group of guys built on John 15:13. We serve each other. We love each other. We’d die for each other.” - #12 High Point G Chase Johnston after upsetting #5 Wisconsin “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” John 15:13.
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Ashley Bowman
Ashley Bowman@MrsABowman·
@DelCurrent @830finestt This 💯! They should work together! I’m so tired of seeing public school coaches in our area and anyone for that matter saying negative things about club sports. I understand not every program is created equal, but it was huge for our son’s development!
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Del Current
Del Current@DelCurrent·
@830finestt More club kids you have on your HS team the better the results. The more club team kids who teach bball and accountability etc then even the better for the HS. You ain’t winning at the highest divisions anymore unless you club kids walking through that door. Goes for vball too
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EZ Garcia
EZ Garcia@830finestt·
In today’s high school basketball whether people want to admit it or not you have to have connections or affiliated with a club or clubs for aau! The team winning are tied to programs. Some coaches get to coach kids year round. This the reality of it. Got to connect HS/AAU
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Ashley Bowman
Ashley Bowman@MrsABowman·
Great night celebrating an amazing @fzwactivities cheer season! 📣 So proud of Avery, Winter Varsity Captain, and voted “Most Encouraging” by her teammates.💜 Highlight: Year one of competitive cheer → 2nd in state. 🙌 Grateful for her incredible coaches for building a program rooted in excellence, competitiveness, but most of all with a positive culture where every girl is encouraged and supported!💜🖤
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The Winning Difference
The Winning Difference@thewinningdiff1·
“Those people who can celebrate others’ success live a more stress free, less anxious life” Choose encouragement over comparison.   The strongest teams are built by people who clap for each other’s growth, not compete with each other’s shine.
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Kegan Schumann
Kegan Schumann@SchumannKegan·
Reality of college recruiting: D1: ~2% D2: ~2% NAIA: ~3% D3: ~3% Juco: ~7% It is a privilege to get the opportunity to play college sports at ANY level. Take your recruitment seriously.
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Sean Strickland
Sean Strickland@Coach__Strick·
Shoot, not just HS kids…get the whole family to go watch D3 basketball🏀 Most have NO freaking clue that D3 players are still HS all-state, all-conference, 1 + 2K scorers💯 And before people say anyone can get on D3 roster…you can get a uniform to sit on a D1/D2 bench too🤷🏼‍♂️
Kevin Driscoll@_KevinDriscoll

D3 Guys In The Portal Getting Recruited & Offered By MULTIPLE Mid Major D1's! High School Kids Who've Never Seen A D3 Game In Person Are Not Interested In Playing "Just D3"..... @D3Direct @d3hoops

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The Winning Difference
The Winning Difference@thewinningdiff1·
"Relationships determine destiny. Make sure you value yourself enough to surround yourself with people who are going to raise you up.  Because there are plenty of opportunities to hang out with people who aren't." The right people don’t just support you - they strengthen you.
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Anderson Men's Basketball
Anderson Men's Basketball@AURavensMBB·
HCAC tournament championship ‼️ we face off against Transylvania in the conference championship! 🆚: Transylvania ⏰: 6:00 PM 📍: Lexington, KY
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Ashley Bowman
Ashley Bowman@MrsABowman·
@VeraJoBustos 💯!! Personal take is that it also doesn’t win. Our son’s college coach is the most steady, emotionally regulated coach I know. They’ve won their conference every year with him as head.
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Coach VJ
Coach VJ@VeraJoBustos·
HOT TAKE: How is it that head coaches expect and demand toughness, mental strength, and resilience, yet they're the ones with the worst body language and emotional control on the court? "Attitude reflects leadership, captain."
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Killian Wright
Killian Wright@KillianMWright·
It is absolute nonsense that there are states yet to implement a shot clock in high school basketball. Looking at you, Missouri.
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