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@kln01

Katılım Nisan 2009
440 Takip Edilen52 Takipçiler
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Alexa Philippou
Alexa Philippou@alexaphilippou·
The difference between the last CBA and the new one: The rookie salary for last year’s No. 1 WNBA draft pick, Paige Bueckers, was $78,831. The rookie salary for this year’s No. 1 pick, Azzi Fudd, is $500,000. The average first-year salary for first-round picks last year was about $75,000. The average first-year salary for first-round picks this year is $386,000.
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Marian Basketball
Marian Basketball@MHSCrusaderGBB·
Senior Szn for Emelia Daubendiek 11.3 PPG- 48% FG 4.5 RPG 32% from 3 All Metro Honorable Mention All Class Nebraska Honorable Mention @HardrockerWBB is getting a great player ‼️ @EmeliaDaubendi1
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Dustin Wright
Dustin Wright@CoachWright333·
Track & field is one of the last places in a school where the football captain, the valedictorian, the band kid, the wrestler, and the quiet kid who never thought he belonged can all wear the same jersey. Track does not care what a kid’s last name is, how much money he has, what side of town he lives on, or how popular he is. Out here, none of that matters. Somewhere between the workouts, the bus rides, and the meets, kids who might never have spoken to each other start to build real respect. It is hard not to respect somebody when you have seen what they are willing to push through and how much they are willing to give. That is a big reason track & field will always mean more to me than just times, marks, and points.
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Marian Basketball
Marian Basketball@MHSCrusaderGBB·
Congrats to our 2 seniors for being honored with the NCPA Academic All-State Award.
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Greg Berge
Greg Berge@GregBerge·
Overprotected kids become unprepared adults. Dawn Staley nailed it.🔥 You can’t shelter your child from every hard moment and then expect them to handle adversity when it counts. Hard is the lesson. Watch. Share. Bookmark.
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The Winning Difference
The Winning Difference@thewinningdiff1·
“When you allow your children to grow up it’s a direct, direct reflection of your parenting. If you hover over them all the time and they can’t work through problems, they’re going to have some issues. You’ve got to let them work through problems because they’re working through the things you’ve instilled in them,” Dawn Staley Let them learn.
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Dr. Jack_JL Sports
Dr. Jack_JL Sports@DrJack_jlsports·
If you are a HS basketball player watching the tournament and think just playing AAU and doing skill work for the next 5 months without touching a weight 2-3 x a week is going to prepare you for this level of physicality, good luck!
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𝐶𝑜𝑎𝑐ℎ 𝑇𝑜𝑛𝑦
𝐶𝑜𝑎𝑐ℎ 𝑇𝑜𝑛𝑦@CoachTonyAustin·
As a college coach I truly feel bad for athletes trying to find their way through the recruiting process. You get pressure from college coaches after visits, parents, travel ball coaches. My best piece of advice is to do what you feel is best for you and your future. You got this. When you find your home you will know it. Go with your heart!
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David Sharp
David Sharp@D4Sharp·
Unfortunately there are too many toxic parents in team sports. Good read ⬇️.
Greg Berge@GregBerge

The Parent Poison… Most parents want the best for their kids. But sometimes, without realizing it, they slowly poison the very team their child is part of. It rarely starts with something dramatic. It starts small. A comment in the car ride home. “Why didn’t the coach play you more?” A comparison. “You’re better than that kid.” A quiet complaint at the dinner table. “That coach doesn’t know what he’s doing.” Kids hear everything. And when they hear it, something changes. Doubt creeps in. Blame grows. Trust fades. The mindset shifts from team first to me first. What begins in the living room eventually shows up in the locker room. You see it in body language. You hear it in conversations. You feel it in the culture. Instead of unity, there are whispers. Instead of accountability, there are excuses. Instead of growth, there is resentment. Great teams cannot survive that environment. Because the best teams are built on three things: Trust. Sacrifice. Shared purpose. When players start believing the problem is everyone else, those things disappear. Parents play a powerful role in a team’s culture whether they realize it or not. The healthiest teams have parents who: Support the program. Encourage resilience. Teach their kids to handle adversity. They remind their children: Work harder. Be a great teammate. Control what you can control. They don’t feed excuses. They build character. And here’s the truth most people miss: A parent’s influence extends far beyond their own child. It affects the locker room. It affects the culture. It affects the entire team. Great teams require unity, not whispers of criticism. So the challenge for parents is simple. Be the adult in the room. Guard your words. Model respect. Support the team. Because what starts at home always finds its way onto the court, the field, or the locker room. And the best parents don’t poison the culture. They protect it.

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k.@kln01·
@DadofPicks Watch and LISTEN to the Marian Kearney game.
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Joe Pick
Joe Pick@DadofPicks·
Disappointed in Kearney’s head coach. Video shows his asst coach said something & smugly smiles. But to phrase it as “staring the whole game” and “we knew it was going to be like this,” frames it being a victim, after they instigated. 1955 vibes after a “white out.”
Darren Winberg@DarrenWinbergTV

"This was such a good basketball game, its very very unfortunate that they chose to handle it that way. Explanation from Kearney head coach Drew Danielson on the altercation that happened after the game. #nebpreps

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Greg Berge
Greg Berge@GregBerge·
Underrated coaching truth: The best coaches aren’t obsessed with talent. They’re obsessed with effort. With attitude. With toughness. That’s what wins when it gets hard.
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