Nolan

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Nolan

Nolan

@Nolan_H

Avid Indoorsman

#YMM Katılım Ekim 2010
795 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
Nolan retweetledi
Clue Heywood
Clue Heywood@ClueHeywood·
“Pope Leo is WEAK on Crime” is a prime-era Dril tweet, let’s be real here
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
I hate everything about what Canada did in overtime.
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Arash Madani
Arash Madani@ArashMadani·
Scream it from the rooftops.
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg

Norway consistently wins the most medals at the Winter Olympic Games, with a population of just 5.6 million people. A big part of their success is how they treat youth sports—and it’s the opposite of what we do in the US. Here’s what we can learn from Norway: 1. Scorekeeping: In the US: Youth sports tend to be hyper competitive even at early ages. Leagues almost always keep score. In Norway: Scorekeeping isn’t even allowed until age 13. Removing winners and losers keeps the focus on the process not outcomes. It keeps kids engaged longer because it minimizes pressure (and tears) and maximizes fun, learning, and growth. The goal isn’t to win a third grade championship. It’s to love sport and keep playing. 2. Trophies: In the US: If you give everyone a trophy, you’re creating snowflakes who will never gain a competitive edge. In Norway: Whenever trophies are awarded, they are handed out to everyone. If getting a trophy makes young kids feel good, we should give them trophies. Maybe they’ll come back and play again next year!! As for the creation of snowflakes with no competitive edge—Norway’s athletes are tough as nails and all they do is win. 3. Prioritizing Fun: In the US: Far too often, the goal is to win. In Norway: The national philosophy is “joy of sport.” Youth sports in the US are driven by adults, ego, and money. Youth sports in Norway are driven by fun. Only half of kids in the US participate in sports. The number one reason they drop out: because they aren’t having fun anymore. In Norway, 93% of kids participate in youth sports. Fun is the foremost goal. 4. Playing Multiple Sports: In the US: There’s pressure to specialize early and play your best sport year round. In Norway: Try as many sports as you can before specializing as late as college. Norway encourages kids to try all types of sport. This reduces injury and burnout and increases all-around athleticism. It also helps promotes match quality, or finding the sport you are best suited for as your body develops, which is impossible if you commit to a single sport too early. 5. Affordability In the US: There is increasingly a pay-to-play model with high fees for leagues, equipment, and travel. This excludes many kids from playing. In Norway: It’s a national priority to keep youth sports affordable and therefore accessible for all. Kids aren’t priced out, which creates opportunities for everyone to participate (and develop into athletes), regardless of their parents’ income level. We could learn a lot from Norway: In the US, 70% of kids drop out of youth sports by age 13. This not only diminishes an elite-athlete pipeline, but it also destroys an opportunity for healthy habits and all the character lessons kids can learn from sport. In Norway, lifelong participation in sport is the norm. The goal isn’t to have the best 9U team. It’s to develop the best athletes. Those are two very different things. And Norway has the gold medals to prove it.

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Evan Cooke
Evan Cooke@evan_cooke·
That moment when the national broadcast ends, NBC hands off to its local affiliates, and King 5 descends into absolute ineptitude. I don’t know whether to laugh or cry
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
I didn’t understand a word of that, and it was still awesome
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Kathryn Mathias
Kathryn Mathias@KathrynMathias1·
You're right @dmacpher, this IS fun 🧐🤔
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Deep Thrill
Deep Thrill@DeeperThrill·
Collecting the best pro-Elon grok posts from the day in this thread:
Deep Thrill tweet mediaDeep Thrill tweet mediaDeep Thrill tweet mediaDeep Thrill tweet media
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
Rescind this. Lauer was an absolute beast tonight.
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
Fisher is dealing. Don’t pull him. For Lauer of all arms.
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
Why even think about pitching to him? So fucking dumb
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VisuallyBetter
VisuallyBetter@Isuckatpicking·
Edmonton needs to separate from Alberta. Using Dani math the province takes in all of this money from Edmonton each year but then spends more of it on Calgary and rural Alberta than Edmonton receives. That's money paid by the Edmonton Taxpayer. Stop Alberta Equalization theft.
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
@theleanover I remember seeing you at Sonic Boom and being like “I have to meet that dude, I love his Twitter”. You never know they’re the glory days when you’re living them my dude. But, we can only hope for a renaissance.
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Adam Wilson
Adam Wilson@theleanover·
you might not believe this now on this app but I used to be somebody
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Matthew Nichol
Matthew Nichol@MatthewNichol5·
RIP Lee Elia. You will always be remembered for your classic rant from April 29, 1983.
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
WTF Bouchard? That effort after the pinch was brutal. #LetsGoOilers
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Nolan
Nolan@Nolan_H·
It’s gotten to the point someone has to seriously stop Bennett from running around in their house. You gotta make him pay. #letsgooilers
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