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On this episode of the Bob Ryan & Jeff Goodman NBA Podcast, Bob tells us about his deep friendship with Dave Cowens, and what made Big Red so unique and special. Plus, why Paul Westphal had to be traded for Charlie Scott. All that, and much more! 00:00 - Intro 00:30 - Bob Ryan on the beat in the 70's 03:30 - Racial tension in Boston 06:00 - Prizepicks 07:20 - Lasting perception of Boston 10:10 - Paul Westphal/Charlie Scott trade 14:40 - Gametime 16:22 - Paul Silas trade & Dave Cowens The Bob Ryan and Jeff Goodman Podcast is presented by: Prize Picks! Get in on the excitement with PrizePicks, America's No. 1 Fantasy Sports App, where you can turn your hoops knowledge into serious cash. Download the app today and use code CLNS to get $50 when you play $5! PrizePicks, run your game! Go to https://PrizePicks.com/CLNS Gametime! Take the guesswork out of buying NBA tickets with Gametime. Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code CLNS for $20 off your first purchase. Download Gametime today. What time is it? Gametime! Terms apply. Go to https://gametime.co ! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today's Field Day : Sports News Segment, featuring Katie & Dad! Recorded 8.27.24, : “Players I Saw” - Dad Themed BASEBALL Greenville SC 1958 Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford,Robin Roberts, Richie Ashburn Atlanta Braves Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Roberto Clemente, Pete Rose, Johnny Bench 1984 Mets vs Cubs Dwight Gooden,Darrel Strawberry,Rick Sutcliffe Yankee Stadium July 1994 Mariners vs Yankees Ken Griffey Jr, Randy Johnson, Bernie Williams, Paul O'Neil , Wade Boggs, Jim Abbott COLLEGE FOOTBALL Hugh Green Pitt 1977 Gator Bowl Jerry Butler 1978 Gator Bowl Art Schlicher Ohio State 1978 Gator Bowl Dwight Clark Clemson 1978 Gator Bowl Perry Tuttle 1979 Peach Bowl William Perry 1982 Orange Bowl Mike Rozier/Roger Craig Nebraska William Dean Perry 1986 Gator Bowl George Roger's, Doug Flutie, Herschel Walker, Cam Newton, Joe Namath, Ken Staber, Johnny Musso PRO FOOTBALL Billy Cannon Houston Oilers 1961 Greenville George Blanda NY Titans 1961 Greenville COLLEGE BASKETBALL David Thompson, Art Herman, Chris Paul, Charlie Scott, Tom Burleson, Danny Ferry, James Worthy, Grant Hill, JJ Redick, Tim Duncan, Christian Larttner, Len Bias, John Lucas, Len Elmore ,Tom McMillen, Mitch Kupchalk, Michael Jordan, Phil Ford, Mike Gminski ACC Tournament 1973 - 2002 Dell Curry/Tyrone Bogues 1988 Hornets November 4 & Larry Nance and Tree Rollins Cavaliers GOLF Tiger Woods 2003 Masters Jack Nicklaus 2003 Masters Tom Waston Lee Trevino Payne Stewart NBA All Star Game Feb —10, 1991 Charlotte Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Charles Barkley, Patrick Ewing, Kevin McHale, David Robinson, Johnny Stockton Charlotte Hornets 1988-2002 Charlotte Bobcats 2004-2014 Charlotte Hornets 2014-Present Thank You For Listening! #fielddaywithkatieblack
After growing up in Harlem and playing at legendary courts like Rucker, Charlie Scott was a 2x All America at UNC, a 2x All ABA with Virginia, and a 3x All Star with Phoenix. In 1976 his Celtics team beat the Suns in 6 games for the NBA title, and in the deciding game he led the way with 25 points and 11 rebounds. We cover Earl 'the Goat' Manigault, Larry Brown, Dean Smith, Red Auerbach, JoJo White, Paul Silas, Dr J, George McGinnis, and many more. Great stories from a legend. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The incredible husband-wife team Scott MacDonald and Patti Kurtz reveal MY FRIEND CHARLIE, A Children and Dog Lovers book, in a storytelling interview that will make you smile, laugh and sigh. About Scott and Patti: Scott has a bachelor's from Indiana University and a master's from the University of North Carolina. He is the CEO of Multiple real estate companies and focuses on corporate turnarounds. Second career - author of 5 books, including first children's Book - My Friend Charlie. Patti Kurtz, Scott's wife. She has a bachelor's degree from Indiana University and a master's in education from UC San Diego. I am a faculty member at Cal State San Marcus. Career in education: Patti taught second grade in Oceanside, CA, served in administrative capacities in the Oceanside School District, was Principal of Santa Margarita Elementary School in Oceanside, and was a consultant to a charter school in San Diego. Scott is the author/writer, and Patti is the educator with experience teaching children. Visit https://authorscottmacdonald.com/
Charlie Scott is joined by Phoebe Ellis, the remarkable Rising Star of 2023 from the Women in Finance Awards and Client Relationship Manager at First Wealth, graces our podcast with her vibrant journey from the world of PE and art to the financial sector. Her path, influenced by personal connections and a drive for inclusivity, echoes throughout our discussion, offering a fresh perspective on finding one's niche in the often-intimidating world of finance. At First Wealth, Phoebe's story unfolds within a firm that prides itself on being a B Corp, valuing impact on society and the environment as much as client satisfaction.Navigating the financial industry is no small feat, yet Phoebe does so with grace, balancing client engagement and advisor support within First Wealth's unique 'pod' system. Her candid sharing of the challenges and triumphs of pursuing professional qualifications, like the CII Level 4 Diploma in Regulated Financial Planning, underscores the importance of resilience in personal growth. Her position as a B Corp leader further illuminates how non-traditional roles within finance can spearhead positive change, proving that every team member can have a profound influence on a company's ethos and action.This episode takes a sharp turn into the significance of diversity and inclusive financial education, both of which are transforming the finance landscape. As Phoebe discusses initiatives like Thrive, co-founded by Robert Kaplan, it becomes clear that democratizing financial advice is not just a dream but an actionable goal. The platform's mission to break cycles of financial illiteracy is a testament to the evolving face of finance—one that embraces different backgrounds and strives for an inclusive future. Whether you're in the financial sector or simply curious about the people that shape it, Phoebe's insights offer a compelling narrative on the power of inclusion and education.Begin your financial planning career journey todayWhether you are looking to become a paraplanner, administrator, mortgage and protection adviser or financial planner, the Financial Planner Life Academy is for you. With limited entry-level job roles, giving yourself the best financial planning career education, will not only kick start your financial planning journey with relevant qualifications and skills, but it'll also help you achieve success much faster.&nbsBe sure to follow financial planner life on YouTube for extra content about a career within Financial Planning HIT THAT SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! If you're looking to start your career in Financial Planning, check out the Financial Planner Life Academy hereCheck out the 2023 Financial planning Salary Guide here. Reach out to Sam@financialplannerlife.com in regards to sponsorship, partnerships, videography or career development.
Today, we shine a light on a critically undervalued yet pivotal element shaping success or failure in business: the business model. With a strategic model, even startups wielding groundbreaking innovations can offer inexpensive solutions while remaining profitable, ultimately evolving into household names. Like our featured brand, MyGuardianDoc, a swiftly expanding virtual health program providing comprehensive medical care for families.Wondering how they achieved this? Joining us to dissect this remarkable achievement are John Korangy, Founder of MyGuardianDoc's parent company, CareClix, and Mr. Charlie Scott, CEO of MyGuardianDoc. Tune in as they unveil the distinctive business model ensuring their profitability. Plus, gain invaluable insights and actionable strategies for revolutionizing product delivery without breaking the bank.In this episode of the Harvest Growth Podcast, we delve into:The significance of fostering an innovative business model in a cutthroat marketTactics for swiftly cultivating brand recognition and engagementThe necessity of defining your business's purpose and mission during the early stagesTools for crafting and delivering top-tier solutions at an affordable rateAnd much more!Bid farewell to second-guessing and uncertainty about your own health. If you're grappling with health symptoms and wishing for dependable medical guidance from specialists, head to www.myguardian.doc for round-the-clock assistance. Access the resources referenced by our guests in today's episode here: ResourcesDr. Deming: The American Who Taught the Japanese About Quality by Rafael Aguayo. Learn MoreBuilt to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies by Jim Collins and Jerry I. Porras. Learn MoreThink and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill Learn MoreTo be a guest on our next podcast, contact us today!Do you have a brand that you'd like to launch or grow? Do you want help from a partner that has successfully launched hundreds of brands totaling over $2 billion in revenues? Visit HarvestGrowth.com and set up a free consultation with us today!
Julie Flynn is a powerhouse of financial planning knowledge and passion! Charlie Scott is joined this week with Julie Flynn, Director of Bree Wealth and Tax Management Ltd. And wow – what an episode. These two dive into what makes a brilliant podcast, representation within financial planning, how Julie went self-employed at a critical point in her life and so much more. Julie is an open book, she delves into her own, personal experiences as a woman within a male-dominated profession, as well as her passion for delivering financial education. Her passion truly comes alive in this episode. It will leave you motivated and eager to step outside of your own comfort zone. A brilliant episode for anyone who is looking to begin their journey into the financial planning profession, likewise, for those seasoned professionals looking for inspiration for their next step. This is our final episode of 2023! So a very Merry Christmas / Happy Holidays to all our listeners. We know you'll enjoy this one! Time Stamps00:00:00 | Intro 00:02:09 | Julie's career journey 00:04:37 | Employed to self employed 00:07:07 | The niche 00:11:47 | Barriers and hurdles 00:17:17 | How financial planning has changed 00:19:24 | Experiences of women in financial planning 00:22:20 | Inclusion, diversity and unconscious bias 00:28:01 | Financial education 00:29:39 | Podcasting 00:33:40 | Coaching qualifications 00:38:31 | Transparency of fees 00:45:10 | Tips for the next generation of financial planners Be sure to follow financial planner life on YouTube for extra content about a career within Financial Planning HIT THAT SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! Below are some excellent links from our sponsor Recruit UK for any aspiring or experienced financial planners looking for new job opportunities or looking to get ahead in their career. If you're looking to start your career in Financial Planning, check out the Financial Planner Life Academy hereExperienced and searching for a new role within the financial planning profession? Click here for a free career consultation.Check out the 2023 Financial planning Salary Guide here. If you would like to discuss partnering with The Financial Planner Life for jobs, advertising, marketing or academies please reach out to sam@financialplannerlife.com or call 07854778712.
The Financial Planner Life hosts Sam Oakes, Elena Stephenson and Charlie Scott were recently invited to speak at The Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment (CISI) Changefest event, to talk all things careers in Financial Planning. This was a chance for us to champion the profession of Financial Planning, raise awareness of the abundance of opportunity out there for those entering the industry, as well as offering expertise on securing a position in a firm. We covered:- Roles within Financial Planning- Salaries, qualifications and relevant skills- Financial Planning as a career choice- Opportunities for future Financial Planners- Diversifying the profession- The value Financial Planning offers to clients- Niching to suit your interests- Financial Planning Academies- Alternative routes into the professionWe also answered some great questions from the audience of aspiring professionals exploring their future career prospects. We thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity to speak at Changefest, who knows, we might even see some of those in attendance on the podcast one day!Begin your financial planning career journey todayWhether you are looking to become a paraplanner, administrator, mortgage and protection adviser or financial planner, the Financial Planner Life Academy is for you. With limited entry-level job roles, giving yourself the best financial planning career education, will not only kick start your financial planning journey with relevant qualifications and skills, but it'll also help you achieve success much faster.&nbsBe sure to follow financial planner life on YouTube for extra content about a career within Financial Planning HIT THAT SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! Below are some excellent links from our sponsor Recruit UK for any aspiring or experienced financial planners looking for new job opportunities or looking to get ahead in their career. If you're looking to start your career in Financial Planning, check out the Financial Planner Life Academy hereExperienced and searching for a new role within the financial planning profession? Click here for a free career consultation.Check out the 2023 Financial planning Salary Guide here. If you would like to discuss partnering with The Financial Planner Life for jobs, advertising, marketing or academies please reach out to sam@financialplannerlife.com or call 07854778712.
[00:00:00] David Chadwick: He really wasn't the kind of coach trying to give pre-game speeches to excite us and get us more enthused about playing. I think he believed that games were not just won in a locker room. I think he would believe that you play as you practice. And he believed that games were won in practices. And he believed playing time was earned during the practices and he would watch how we practiced. And if we did practice well, we would get to play. ++++++++++++++++++++++ [00:00:30] Tommy Thomas: Our guest today is David Chadwick, the pastor of Moments of Hope Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. David graduated from the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, where he played basketball under the legendary coach Dean Smith and was a member of an NCAA Final Four Team. He has a graduate degree in counseling from the University of Florida and two degrees from Columbia Theological Seminary. David's also a radio host and the author of several books. Let's join the conversation. Before we dive too deep into your professional career, let's go back to your childhood. What was it like growing up in the Chadwick household? [00:01:11] David Chadwick: My dad was a pastor. He passed away about 15 years ago and I was raised in a preacher's kids home. Dad started out in the Moravian church centered in Winston Salem, North Carolina, largely. And then in 1953, he decided to become the senior pastor of a Presbyterian church at that point, a PCUS church in Charlotte, North Carolina. I lived my very formative years here in Charlotte from 1953 to 1963. And it was very much a big part of my life. Much of my faith was embedded within me during those years. Then we moved to Kansas City, Kansas, where we lived, and Dad had a church in Kansas City, Missouri. He felt like he'd done all he could do with the church in Charlotte. And so wanted a new challenge and went out there. And then my mom developed a strange allergy to cold and it came out of nowhere and Kansas City can be quite cold during the wintertime. And it threatened to close her breathing capacities and her voice. And we had to quickly alter what God's plans were for Dad's life. Let me restate that Tommy. We had to seek God with some new ideas for our lives at that point. And strangely, by God's providence, Dad got a call to a church in Orlando, Florida. We went there for my junior and senior years. Having to move into my junior year in high school was not fun. But it put me back on the East Coast and looking back now I can see how those were the years my basketball gifts really began to develop and of course, when I graduated from high school, I signed to play basketball at the University of North Carolina with Coach Dean Smith. That's a brief history of my background. [00:02:57] Tommy Thomas: What do you think is the greatest gift your parents gave you? [00:03:01] David Chadwick: Their own faith. I think faith is much more caught than taught. Though they did teach faith, they lived faith, and I saw in the different trials and vicissitudes that we would face in life that Mom and Dad really did lean on the Lord and not on their own understanding, and so I wanted who they were more than what they said. And I think that's the greatest gift they gave me. They modeled their faith. [00:03:28] Tommy Thomas: What did you want to be when you grew up? [00:03:32] David Chadwick: Not a pastor. I can tell you that. I saw my dad and all that he had to go through in pastoring, so I ran as far away from that as I possibly could. I think not knowing any better, because I grew to be six feet, eight inches tall and had some basketball acumen, I dreamed, like every kid that I could play in the NBA one day, so I put most of my energies early on into just developing my basketball prowess. Also, in North Carolina, I really loved communicating and talking, so I looked at the possibility of broadcasting as a career as well. When I graduated from North Carolina in my senior year, I had some success. So a team in Europe recruited me and I went and played in the European Professional Leagues for three years and then came back and I wasn't sure exactly what I was supposed to do at that point in my life either and that's when I contacted John Lotz, who was the assistant coach at North Carolina when I played and had become the head coach at the University of Florida and again I came out of Orlando, Florida so I had a lot of connections throughout the state and so John offered me the possibility of becoming a graduate assistant with him. And I did so for two years, earned a graduate degree in counseling before the Lord finally backed me into the corner and the Hound of Heaven pursued me and said, this is what I've called you to do, to proclaim my gospel in the local church. And I went into seminary in 1976. [00:05:00] Tommy Thomas: Obviously, you had the makings of a great basketball player. What were your parent's thoughts and how did they nurture, I assume it was nurture, it could have been discouragement. How did they fit into that? [00:05:12] David Chadwick: They allowed all three of us, my sister and my brother to pursue our own giftedness. My brother and I had tremendous musical giftedness, mostly inherited from my dad. My dad had a chance to go on Broadway at one point while he was a minister. And he turned it down because he knew his calling was to the church. But my sister pursued her gifts and, I just got really tall and always loved sports. And pretty soon on, it became apparent that I was going to be really tall, and I had some giftedness in basketball. So they allowed me to pursue that and go after it with every ounce of my being, and they came to all of my games, and I think they just wanted me to pursue my gifts, and they encouraged me. [00:05:54] Tommy Thomas: What's your earliest memory of organized sports? [00:05:58] David Chadwick: That would be when we moved to Kansas City. I was walking down the hall to Shrewsbury, who had an independent middle school basketball team that he coached and played in different Y leagues and those kinds of things. And he evidently found out my name and my telephone number and called my mom. And said, I saw your son walking down the hallways of middle school and he's pretty tall. And my mom, she didn't really understand sports a whole lot, but she knew I was pretty tall. And he said I have a basketball team. Would your son be interested? And my mom said I'll have to leave that to him and his dad. And of course, Dad said, if that's what you want to pursue, son. And so I tried out. I wasn't really good. I was so skinny during those early days that there was a joke that if I turned sideways and stuck out my tongue, I'd look like a zipper. I just didn't have beefiness at all to me, but I did love the game and I was tall, and Charlie Shrewsbury saw something in me. So, for those two years that I was in Kansas City under him, I played on his teams and then I actually made the JV team my 10th grade year in high school and played partially from time to time on the varsity, but mostly JV. And then between my sophomore and junior years when we moved to Orlando, something just happened. I put on some weight, all the athleticism began to come together, and I went from a JV player in my 10th-grade year to first-team All-State my junior year. Mom and Dad encouraged me to continue to pursue all of that. [00:07:33] Tommy Thomas: So, what do you remember about Charlie's input? What do you think is the greatest thing you learned from him about life and leadership? [00:07:40] David Chadwick: That fundamentals in the game of basketball are absolutely key if you're going to be successful. You better learn how to just do the basics: pass, shoot, rebound, block out. All of those are just basic things that you've got to do. And he instilled those fundamentals within me, which carry over to life. There are certain fundamentals of life that you just have to have down, like loving God with all your heart, soul, mind, and might, and loving your neighbors, and yourself, those basic principles that God teaches. And if you don't get those down, you're just not going to be successful. I went to North Carolina, and I was not a great athlete by any means. I had some height and I had fundamental skills. I was a perfect Dean Smith kind of player. I went to North Carolina, and I was not a great athlete by any means. I had some height and I had fundamental skills. I was a perfect Dean Smith kind of player. And so without Charlie's input in teaching me those fundamentals, I would have never been successful. ++++++++++++++++++ [00:08:35] Tommy Thomas: At what point in your basketball life under Coach Smith did you realize he was teaching you something other than basketball? [00:08:44] David Chadwick: You probably, Tommy, realized that more after you leave, having played for him more than you do at the moment. But after you leave, you realize that he continued to place in you those fundamentals of how to play the game and also how to operate as a team. And I probably learned more about leadership playing under Dean Smith than any other person ever taught me. And I think as you graduate and then look back you realize, my goodness, he was not only teaching you truths about how to play the game of basketball well, but he was also teaching you truths about how to live life well. And again, that became clearer after you left. [00:09:30] Tommy Thomas: Some people don't put Christianity and competition in the same sentence, but obviously you've lived that life, Coach Smith lived that life. How does a Christian reconcile competition and desire to win against his or her faith? [00:09:47] David Chadwick: All I can do is share my own pilgrimage in that area, and that is, if you look at competition as a measuring stick for you becoming better as a person. And in life in general ways, I think it's okay. If you look at the competition, though, to win, then it can become a personal ambition, which allows you to feel superior to another person. And that's not good. That's pride. That's what allowed the devil to become the devil. And he wanted Jesus' position, and he did everything he could to subvert the power of God so that he could have what he wanted. So it's a delicate balance for sure. But if you have to win to be better than someone, you're in danger. But if you use competition simply to measure how better you're becoming, I think that's a good thing. [00:10:43] Tommy Thomas: It's often said that a game is won or lost in the locker room before the start of the game. Do you remember any pre-game talks from Coach Smith or anybody else that that impacted the team? [00:10:55] David Chadwick: He really wasn't the kind of coach trying to give pre-game speeches to excite us and get us more enthused about playing. I think he believed that games were not just won in a locker room. I think he would believe that you play as you practice. And he believed that games were won in practices. He believed playing time was earned during the practices and he would watch how we practiced. And if we did practice well, we would get to play. I don't remember Coach Smith really giving us the pep talks before the games. I believe he was preparing us well and in that preparation, he believed that if we did what he said we needed to do, we would probably win the game. [00:11:42] Tommy Thomas: I read a quote recently. It says you won't rise to the occasion. You will sink to your level of preparedness. [00:11:47] David Chadwick: That's really good. He used to always say too, practice doesn't make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect. And so how you practiced well and prepared yourself well would be the greatest indicator for success on the floor. [00:12:07] Tommy Thomas: What did you learn from Coach Smith about mentoring? [00:12:12] David Chadwick: You're preparing the next generation with how you yourself are living. And you could look at his own coaching and see how he prepared other coaches to be successful, obviously, even now, long after he's passed away and gone to be with the Lord. You can see, for example, the number of coaches who came from his coaching tree. From Larry Brown to Doug Moe to Eddie Fogler to Roy Williams to the fact that Hubert Davis played under him in the late 1980s and is now coaching North Carolina. I think Coach Smith purposefully, and maybe even not so purposefully mentored other people to be great coaches. And I think his coaching tree probably goes into the dozens of men who went into coaching, and then you think about the numbers of lives of those young men affected by Coach Smith's philosophies. It would go into the thousands. ++++++++++++++++++++ [00:13:12] Tommy Thomas: No matter how hard and dedicated you are to do something; failure is always an option. How did y'all view that? You went into every game knowing you might not win. Coach Smith lived by the principle of making failure your friend. By that I mean that he felt like failure wasn't a failure if you learn from it, and you get up and then move forward with what you've learned. [00:13:24] David Chadwick: I think Coach Smith lived by the principle of making failure your friend. By that I mean that he felt like failure wasn't a failure if you learn from it, and you get up and then move forward with what you've learned. And he knew that better than anybody. When he was hired in 1962, to be the head coach at North Carolina, he was coming out of Frank McGuire's scandal-ridden NCAA sanctions. And the Chancellor basically told Coach Smith, I don't care whether you win or lose, just run a clean program. He had a great team eventually, but what people don't realize is in those early years, he was not that successful, and at one point, I think it was during the 1964 season, two years into his coaching tenure, he was hung in effigy, not once, but twice, by the student body, and he had lost a game in Durham against Duke that he was supposed to win, and he came back and there he was, his face and body hung in effigy at Woolen Gymnasium where they played those games then, and then he lost another game against, I think, Wake Forest that he was supposed to win, and the same thing happened twice, and Jimmy Smithwick, who was a player on that team then told me that Coach Smith got on the bus, and he said to the team, gentlemen your character is what you think of yourself. Your reputation is what other people think of you. Emphasize character. And it's so interesting that he told the team to learn from their failures but use those failures to get better and better. And then as he began to get better and better players over the next couple of years in recruiting, he built great teams there. But he always felt like you can't control your reputation. You can't control what other people think of you. You can control your character. Make sure that's always in place. And that'll be the basis of really being a good player that produces good teams. [00:15:31] Tommy Thomas: I purchased your book It's How You Play The Game - The Leadership Principles of Dean Smith. It's just a great read and I had circled some things in it. You write that Coach Smith thought of himself as a benevolent dictator. How did that play out? [00:15:46] David Chadwick: He had a great relationship with Bill Guthridge, who was his assistant coach for 36 years and Coach Guthridge was a great basketball mind and a really good human being. I think it was Leonard Bernstein who once said the most difficult position to play in the orchestra, was a second fiddle. And Bill Guthridge played second fiddle to Coach Smith for 36 years and did so well, but there was never any question, Tommy, about who ran that program. It was Coach Smith's program, and he oversaw it. Now he got plenty of input from Coach Guthridge and when Eddie Fogler was his assistant, Roy Williams was his assistant, and others, he would get their input, but it was his decision and he ran the program the way he wanted to run it and you know what, as that benevolent dictator he had as his highest concern us as his players. But he also had a great concern to run his program well and to win games because, you know what, you don't remain a head coach for all of his years unless you win games too. [00:16:52] Tommy Thomas: You write that the concept of team may be Coach Smith's greatest contribution to basketball leadership in society. Can you unpack that a little bit? [00:17:02] David Chadwick: There were several principles that I took away from him and have tried to live by in my life. One of them would be the team is more important than the individual. The other would be to always care for the individual. And then thirdly, your personal character is very important for success. I alluded to that earlier, but that one idea of the team being more important than the individual would be one of Coach Smith's, if not his greatest contribution to basketball and to my life. You just can't succeed unless you have other people on board with you. You've got to work with them in order for success to occur. Coach Smith just had this amazing ability to take high school superstars and bring them together in an environment where we each accepted our roles, our place on the bus, to use Jim Collins's word, and then to have a successful team come out of that. And we all were willing to sacrifice our own personal accolades for the sake of the team and if you didn't believe that you wouldn't last a month playing under Coach Smith, he just wouldn't put up with people who didn't buy that mantra. [00:18:14] Tommy Thomas: I guess I didn't watch a lot of basketball when Michael Jordan played basketball, but he was obviously great there. But how did that work when you got somebody at that level? And there might have been other people who were just as good as Michael Jordan. How do you mold that kind of person into a team? [00:18:32] David Chadwick: I obviously didn't play with Michael Jordan, but I played with Charlie Scott, who in the late 1960s was the Michael Jordan of that day. Charlie was the first black recruit to the University of North Carolina's basketball program, and he was just a great player. And yet, Charlie submitted his talents for the sake of the team. And I think Coach Smith just made that team mantra so important that even the greatest of players felt like at the end of the day, it was better for them to win for their larger success in life to occur than it would be for them to have personal accolades. And Tommy, Coach Smith did things behind the scenes that developed that team idea. And it's still being done today, years after his own death and years after I played. For example, when you score a basket, you have to point to the person who gave you the pass. That was Coach Smith's way of making sure that the person who sacrificed the basketball so somebody else could score and get all the accolades and the headlines got notoriety so that everybody in the stands and everybody watching on TV would see the person who scores pointing to the person who gave the pass. And, that was his way of thanking others who made you successful. And if you didn't do that, you would not only be taken out of the game, but the next day, the whole team would have to run. He would punish the whole team if somebody didn't point to the person who gave them the pass in the game the night before. So he just developed this team idea, this team atmosphere with things like that. Another example would be if you dove on the floor for a loose ball, sacrificing your body for the sake of one possession, which could very well determine a win or not. The person who dove on the floor has to run and help them up. And if in watching the game films the next day Coach Smith notices that doesn't occur he's taken out of the game and also the whole team has to run. So you just see, he developed little small innuendos of developing that team that even the greatest of players, the Michael Jordans, the Charlie Scots, or whoever would submit themselves to again, for the sake of the team. [00:20:44] Tommy Thomas: You have a quote in your book that says one characteristic of every leader who took his company from good to great was humility. How did that play out? [00:20:57] David Chadwick: Oh, my. With Coach Smith, so many different ways. A couple of ways just in what I just shared with you, and that is people on the team making sure that others get accolades, get the finger pointed at them, the thanking for the pass. But other ways, Coach Smith would always believe that teams win games, players win games, and coaches lose them. And he would never throw a player under the bus. Even if that player made the dumbest decision to lose a game, he would never throw that player under the bus. And that was one of his mantras to the press he would use all the time. Players win games, coaches lose them, and Tommy, I was a part of one of Carolina's most disappointing losses ever. We played South Carolina when they were still in the ACC Tournament Championship game, and there was a jump ball at the end of the game that somehow went to the South Carolina player who laid it in at the buzzer, and we lost the game. And I was in the game at the time, and I wondered, was I in the wrong place? Did I cost Carolina that game? A couple of decades later, when Coach Smith was coaching, I went to Chapel Hill and was visiting with him. And I just said to him, Coach, I've always wondered, was I the reason we lost that game? And I just wondered, was I not in the right place? And he looked at me. Tommy, 20 years after I played, he said, David, he said, coaches lose games, players win them. If you weren't in the right place, which I'm not sure you weren't, but he said, that's my fault. And I take responsibility for it. Then he wouldn't talk about it anymore to make my soul soothed a bit and make sure I didn't feel like I'd lost that game. ++++++++++++++++ [00:22:38] Tommy Thomas: In your book, you write about Coach Smith's relationship with other coaches, Bobby Knight, and people that he coached against. On the one hand, they were fierce competitors, on the other hand, they were great friends. What lessons do you take away from that? [00:22:55] David Chadwick: I think Coach Smith saw competition as healthy and valuable. Again, as we talked about earlier, it helps show you where you are as a team and as an individual. Are you growing, getting better, etc. But he never looked at opposite coaches as enemies. He just didn't. And Bobby Knight and Dean Smith could not have been more unalike. I think it was Bobby Knight who said to me when I interviewed him for the book that I wrote he said, Dean Smith's the master of the four corners offense. I'm the master of the four-letter word. Tommy, I played for Coach Smith for four years, obviously, and knew him as a friend for years thereafter. I never once, and you can talk to any former player and ask them this question. Never once heard Coach Smith curse. Never once. He just didn't do it. He always told us you can think of a better word. Don't show people how stupid you really are. You can think of a better word and Bobby Knight knew that, but it didn't stop him from swearing like a sailor. But Coach Smith and Bobby Knight were very close friends. They had personalities so different, but they were very close friends, with great respect for each other. So I think it shows that you can be in an industry and you can have competitors, but they don't have to be your enemies. And indeed, if you look at them as good competitors, they only allow you to measure yourself to see how good you really are. [00:24:13] Tommy Thomas: One day, sooner or later each of us is going to meet our maker. And I'm just wondering, what did you learn about death and dying from Coach Smith? [00:24:22] David Chadwick: He had a real faith, and I outlined it in the book that I wrote, and I don't think it was as avert or evangelical faith as some would have wanted him to have, but he gave millions of dollars to the poor and needy. I know that for a fact. I know he deeply cared for his players. Some people don't know this, but after he died, we all got a letter from his estate manager, and we all got a check from his estate for $200, with a personal letter sent to all of us, the 200 plus lettermen who played for him, that basically said, take out your wife or your special person on me to dinner. And that's just the kind of person that he was. He realized that life was about giving, not getting. Life was about caring, not always wanting yourself to be the center of attention. And we talked a lot about this life, and he realized, you came into this world with nothing, you're going to leave with nothing. He had very committed Christian Baptist parents from Kansas. They instilled faith in him. I didn't see him much right before he died. He was in a cognitive dissonance state. He just couldn't think clearly. But the times that we would talk about faith, I got no impression from him that he feared death. And that he believed that he would meet his maker with his sins forgiven, but also a litany of good deeds that he did to serve our Lord. If you know your Bible, you're judged to be forgiven first of all, and then you go before the seat of the Lord. Get your reward of works, your good works that you've done because you love him. And I think Coach Smith got some really nice crowns for all of his good work. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ [00:26:11] Tommy Thomas: Next week, we will continue this conversation with David Chadwick. He returned to the United States after three years of playing professional basketball in Europe, he had to decide what he was going to do when he grew up. After much soul searching, he surrendered to God's call upon his life to be a pastor. He served the local church as pastor for the last 40 years. Next week, we will see how he applied the life and leadership lessons that he learned from team sports and in particular from Coach Smith in the context of pastoring in the local church. ++++++++++++++++++++++++ Links and Resources JobfitMatters Website Next Gen Nonprofit Leadership with Tommy Thomas Moments of Hope Church Books by David Chadwick: Moving Beyond Anxiety: 12 Practical Strategies to Renew Your Mind Hearing the Voice of God: He Knows You, He Loves You, He's Always with You It's How You Play the Game: The 12 Leadership Principles of Dean Smith Eight Great Ways to Honor Your Wife Connect tthomas@jobfitmatters.com Follow Tommy on LinkedIn
This week on the Financial Planner Life Podcast we have a special feature episode on all things sustainability in the world of Financial Services! We revisit some expert guests, in conversation with our very own Charlie Scott, discussing the past, present and future of the topic of sustainability in the context of Financial Planning. Some of the episodes featured and topics discussed include: Ep.95 with Tom Jaffrey – Changes in attitude toward sustainability between generations. Ep.88 with Rebecca Kowalski – How client conversations have shifted toward climate change over time. Ep.118 with Jai Street – Having the right mindset within your business to have a positive impact. Ep.90 with Charlotte O'Leary – Investing for the future generation. Ep.120 with Seb Elwell – The climate crisis is everyone's responsibility This episode is a great way to take a look at how the Financial Planning Profession is helping change the world for the better, and how the future of the industry will be heavily driven by sustainability. As our very own Charlie Scott once said: “If you want to make a change in this world, go to where the money is and start there. That way you'll have maximum impact from the outset.” 00:00:00 | Intro00:01:43 | Tom Jaffrey00:04:48 | Rebecca Kowalski00:09:53 | Jai Street00:15:10 | Charlotte O'Leary00:21:08 | Seb Elwell00:26:27 | Final thoughtsBe sure to follow financial planner life on YouTube for extra content about a career within Financial Planning HIT THAT SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! Below are some excellent links from our sponsor Recruit UK for any aspiring or experienced financial planners looking for new job opportunities or looking to get ahead in their career. Experienced and searching for a new role within the financial planning profession? Click here for a free career consultation.Check out the 2023 Financial planning Salary Guide here. If you would like to discuss partnering with The Financial Planner Life for jobs, advertising, marketing or academies please reach out to sam@financialplannerlife.com or call 07854778712.
Fourth generation farmer Charlie Scott was always going to return to the land but it's fair to say he didn't dream about quail farming as a boy. A combination of luck, nous, trial, error and endless hard work led to him developing a successful business around his own breed of quail. As he comes towards the end of his farming journey, Charlie looks back on a business that's driven him hard and brought him enormous satisfaction. http://www.redgatefarm.com.au Follow The Producers on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/producerspodcast/ Host Dani Valent https://www.instagram.com/danivalent Host Anthony Huckstep https://www.instagram.com/huckstergram/ Executive Producer Rob Locke https://www.instagram.com/foodwinedine/ LISTEN TO OUR OTHER FOOD PODCASTS https://linktr.ee/DeepintheWeedsNetwork The Producers is a food podcast telling the stories of producers, farmers, growers and makers.. A Deep in the Weeds Production An Australian Food Podcast from the Deep in the Weeds Network.
Fourth generation farmer Charlie Scott was always going to return to the land but it's fair to say he didn't dream about quail farming as a boy. A combination of luck, nous, trial, error and endless hard work led to him developing a successful business around his own breed of quail. As he comes towards the end of his farming journey, Charlie looks back on a business that's driven him hard and brought him enormous satisfaction. http://www.redgatefarm.com.au Follow The Producers on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/producerspodcast/ Host Dani Valent https://www.instagram.com/danivalent Host Anthony Huckstep https://www.instagram.com/huckstergram/ Executive Producer Rob Locke https://www.instagram.com/foodwinedine/ LISTEN TO OUR OTHER FOOD PODCASTS https://linktr.ee/DeepintheWeedsNetwork The Producers is a food podcast telling the stories of producers, farmers, growers and makers.. A Deep in the Weeds Production An Australian Food Podcast from the Deep in the Weeds Network.
Fourth generation farmer Charlie Scott was always going to return to the land but it's fair to say he didn't dream about quail farming as a boy. A combination of luck, nous, trial, error and endless hard work led to him developing a successful business around his own breed of quail. As he comes towards the end of his farming journey, Charlie looks back on a business that's driven him hard and brought him enormous satisfaction. http://www.redgatefarm.com.au Follow The Producers on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/producerspodcast/ Host Dani Valent https://www.instagram.com/danivalent Host Anthony Huckstep https://www.instagram.com/huckstergram/ Executive Producer Rob Locke https://www.instagram.com/foodwinedine/ LISTEN TO OUR OTHER FOOD PODCASTS https://linktr.ee/DeepintheWeedsNetwork The Producers is a food podcast telling the stories of producers, farmers, growers and makers.. A Deep in the Weeds Production An Australian Food Podcast from the Deep in the Weeds Network.
Join us for an EPIC interview with NBA legends James Worthy, Michael Cooper, and Cedric Maxwell! You won't want to miss these never-before-heard stories from their days in the league! From growing up in North Carolina to the heated rivalry between the Lakers and the Celtics, we've got it all covered! Plus, enjoy our exclusive FanDuel offer at https://FanDuel.com/Boston for $200 in bonus bets! #JamesWorthy #MichaelCooper #CedricMaxwell #Lakers #Celtics #NBA #NBALegends #Basketball #Rivalry #UntoldStories —
Hoop du Jour highlights NBA Hall of Fame sports writer Peter Vecsey's opinions, insights and quips about the game's illustrious past and provides exclusive in-depth conversations with some of the most legendary names in basketball history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Shannon Scott of the Cairns Taipans talks about his father, NBA legend Charlie Scott, growing up in a household surrounded by basketball royalty, and what the identity of this Taipans team is.
Charlie Scott, this week's star of the “Sports Legends of the Carolinas” series, was the first Black basketball player on scholarship at the University of North Carolina. In many ways, he was the Tar Heels' version of baseball player Jackie Robinson, dealing with the racism inherent in that time period while gracefully excelling in his sport. In Part 2 of our conversation, Scott looks back at the historic Black power salute by American sprinters at the 1968 Olympic Games; why he thinks the ‘80s were the true golden age of the NBA; and the most important lesson legendary UNC coach Dean Smith ever taught him. Sports Legends of the Carolinas is hosted by Scott Fowler. It's produced by Jeff Siner and Kata Stevens. McClatchy's director of audio is Davin Coburn. For lots more on the show, visit https://www.charlotteobserver.com/sportslegends . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Charlie Scott, this week's star of the “Sports Legends of the Carolinas” series, was the first Black basketball player on scholarship at the University of North Carolina. In many ways, he was the Tar Heels' version of baseball player Jackie Robinson, dealing with the racism inherent in that time period while gracefully excelling in his sport. The way Scott handled himself during those turbulent times so impressed then-UNC student Roy Williams that, when he and his wife later had their only son, they named him "Scott." An All-American at UNC in 1969 and 1970, Charlie Scott won a gold medal in the 1968 Olympics, an NBA championship with the Boston Celtics in 1976, and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2018. In Part 1 of our conversation, he discusses his path from New York to Chapel Hill; dealing with abusive fans at away games; and how success on the court translated to acceptance off of it. In Part 2 of our conversation, Scott looks back at the historic Black power salute by American sprinters at the '68 Olympic Games, why he thinks the ‘80s were the true golden age of the NBA, and the most important lesson legendary UNC coach Dean Smith ever taught him. For that, subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts. Sports Legends of the Carolinas is hosted by Scott Fowler. It's produced by Jeff Siner and Kata Stevens. McClatchy's director of audio is Davin Coburn. For lots more on the show, visit https://www.charlotteobserver.com/sportslegends . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Larry Bluestein has Charlie Scott the Head Coach of Life Christian from Virginia
What an honor this is! We have one of the greatest players in ACC history and one of the best players to ever wear a UNC jersey on the podcast today. Larry Miller joins us to share his basketball experiences from one of the more fascinating eras of hoops. You will see his number 44 hanging in the rafters. Larry Miller is known as the recruit who helped spark the North Carolina program playing for legendary Coach Dean Smith during his early years of coaching. Miller earned ACC Men's Basketball Player of the Year TWICE both in 1966 and 1967. He was named to the ACC 50th Anniversary Men's Basketball Team being recognized as one of the fifty greatest players to ever play in the ACC. Miller went on to get drafted by the Philadelphia 76ers, but chose to play in the ABA over the NBA. Miller set and forever holds the ABA record of 67 points in a single game. Miller shares great stories about growing up in PA, choosing UNC, Dean Smith, Charlie Scott, Billy Cunningham, Lew Alcindor, Wes Unseld, Wilt Chamberlain, the ABA, his funeral, acting, his book, and MUCH more!This was an honor to have the opportunity to learn from one of the all-time greats and we can't thank Larry enough for his time. Those who had the chance to watch Miller play know how unique of a player he was. What you hear in this episode is a very small sample size of what you will learn about in his book titled “Larry Miller Time.” Be sure to check out and support his book to learn more about Larry Miller and his incredible stories about his journey in both basketball and life.Thank you Larry Miller!You can find his book on Amazon, Kindle or local bookstore for purchase. Link to purchase on amazon posted below.https://www.amazon.com/Larry-Miller-Time-Sparked-Dynasty-ebook/dp/B08CY1NHKNYou can find this episode on Apple, Spotify or any source for podcasts.Follow us on social media for news, updates and highlight reels!Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/notin.myhouse.79Instagram- @Not_in_my_house_podcastTwitter - @NOTINMYHOUSEpc
This week we have a new podcast host! Charlie Scott is joining the team and today she is speaking with Yan Swiderski, Executive Trustee & Co Founder of the Global Returns Project. We all understand that wealth management needs to adapt to the climate and nature crisis. Sustainable investing has offered a powerful first step in that process.Now it's time for a true breakthrough. Symbiotic Wealth Management means allocating a small amount, alongside your normal investments, to the Global Returns Fund and their carefully selected portfolio partners - six not-for-profits tackling the climate and nature crisis.Through these Regenerative Investments, it helps support three key environmental issues: 1. Climate change2. Life on land 3. Our oceans This is the future of Wealth Management – a conscious decision to act for the environment.The economy and the environment working in true power together – protecting one another's investments. For more information on the Global Returns Project, you can visit their website: https://globalreturnsproject.earthWe cover:• Yan's career journey• How the Global Returns Fund was created• Who the portfolio partners in the Global Returns Fund are• How the Global Returns Fund can help businesses reach net zero • A deep dive into Symbiotic Wealth Management• The future of the Global Returns Project Be sure to follow financial planner life on YouTube for extra content about a career within financial Planning HIT THAT SUBSCRIBE BUTTON! Below are some excellent links from our sponsor Recruit UK for any aspiring or experienced financial planners looking for new job opportunities or looking to get ahead in their career. Financial Planner Life Academies - Where we bring together the leading financial planning academies and entry-level opportunities to kick start your financial planning career. Learn more here. Experienced and searching for a new role within the financial planning profession? Click here for a free career consultation.Check out the 2022 Financial planning Salary Guide here. If you would like to discuss partnering with The Financial Planner Life for jobs, advertising, marketing or academies please reach out to sam@financialplannerlife.com or call 07854778712.
Former North Carolina Guard Charlie Scott visits with the guys to talk about being North Carolina's 1st black basketball player. And Sticking with North Carolina, John Montgomery & Bubba Cuningham speak to the guys about honoring Woody Durham .
Charlie Scott comes to visit and we talk about some hot, hot flames & life back when we were in the 1800s. Spooky house dreams & angels warning us about douchebags. It's all here folks!
The second installment of real-life lady chats with Charlie Scott, getting into some of her browser history. Our conversations include, but are not limited to: Dark Theme vs Light Theme, The Bechdel Test, Tarot Reading Debrief, Default Settings, Pen Pals and Catfishing, We do talk a little bit about some mental health stuff, just a note if this is something sensitive for you to listen to. Browsers With Friends: Conversations from stalking my friend's browser history, with them, while they watch.Hosted by Kiwi, Jane Street, with Guests from all around. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Pretty much as close to a behind-the-scenes episode as I can muster. Why did I make this podcast and real-life lady chats with Charlie Scott. Our Pre Browse chat was too good not to share, we talk about a few things, from faking orgasms, imposter syndrome, silver linings, buying vibrators, pity party hats to being personally woke. This is part 1 of a 2 part conversation. Browsers With Friends: Conversations from stalking my friend's browser history, with them, while they watch.Hosted by Kiwi, Jane Street, with Guests from all around. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
3 dogrywki, niewyobrażalny buzzer-beater, szalony powrót kopciuszka, błędy sędziowskie, kibice zalewający parkiet Boston Garden i atakujący sędziego, trener zwycięzców kończący mecz w szpitalu i bohater z końca ławki rezerwowych. Czy można było zmieścić więcej dramaturgii w jednym meczu NBA? Nie bez powodu mecz numer 5 finałów NBA w 1976 roku przeszedł do historii jako najlepszy mecz jaki kiedykolwiek rozegrano. John Havlicek, Jo Jo White, Dave Cowens, Charlie Scott i Paul Silas po stronie Celtics zmierzyli się z Paulem Westphalem, Alvanem Adamsem, Garfieldem Heardem i resztą sensacyjnego składu Phoenix Suns. Rozmawiamy o nich i o wielu innych graczach i wydarzeniach tej epoki.Obejrzyj cały mecz na YouTube. Sprawdź też: instagram.com/gruba_lady_podcastKontakt: fat.lady.podcast@gmail.com***Intro: Utwór: Shake, Shake, Shake) Shake Your Booty (Single Version)Wykonawca: KC & The Sunshine BandAlbum: (Shake, Shake, Shake) Shake Your BootyAutorzy: Harry Wayne CaseyDostępny w YouTube na podstawie licencji udzielonej przezWMG (w imieniu wytwórni Rhino (Pure)); Sony ATV Publishing, BMI - Broadcast Music Inc., CMRRA, HAAWK Publishing, SOLAR Music Rights Management, UNIAO BRASILEIRA DE EDITORAS DE MUSICA - UBEM, LatinAutor - SonyATV, LatinAutorPerf i inne stowarzyszenia zajmujące się prawami do muzyki (11)
The guys celebrate the life of Basketball Hall of Famer Elgin Baylor who passed away at 86. Discussion on how Elgin handled Donald Sterling during his time as Clippers GM. Elgin was ahead of his time as a player. He was one of the first black executives and one of the first to speak out against Donald Sterling, before Sterling's racist video came out. Chat on Larry Brown talking about recruiting Charlie Scott, the first black player in the ACC for Dean Smith and the North Carolina Tar Heels. Also a chat on what Dean did to fight for racial equality. The guys discuss how its disgusting that the NCAA didn't take care of the women athletes during the tournament as they have the men.Mike Hill - Co-Host, Start Your Day w Sharon and Mike on BNCConsiders himself a broadcaster, because he is just into so many things. Talks about his military background and how it lead to his career in media. When people tell him to stick to sports, he hits back with 'I'm more than just sports'. Promotes his morning show 'Start Your Day w Sharon and Mike' on the Black News Channel. BNC started last year and was rebooted earlier this year. Working with Sharon Reed is working out very well and the channel is for all people to watch. BNC gives voices to people you otherwise wouldn't hear from as well as give those you want to hear from more time to be heard. The NCAA looks really bad how they treated the NCAA women athletes during the tournament. The women know that many folks have their back and wouldn't stand for the disparities. We saw the same thing with the WNBA & NBA bubbles. The women have been totally been disrespected. Loves that all the athletes have a platform. All athletes are Colin Kaepernick now. Remembers Elgin Baylor as one of the leagues first superstar. Mike would like to see more black executives. While Mike was working for the Clippers, Elgin always had a smile on his face. Talks about how he decompresses after a work day. Covering college basketball this past year has been great, especially with what they had to deal with this year.
Hall of Famer, Charlie Scott sits down with Center Court and talks about being the first black athlete at UNC and his experience of ’68 Olympics.
Thane Calder chats with travel guru Charlie Scott about the time he was left for dead on an island and how people who get their mojo from travel can achieve that while staying close to home.
Shammond Williams sits down with Charlie Scott to share his unbelievable story. Charlie was the first black scholarship athlete in Tar Heel history and is a Naismith Hall-of-Famer and Olympic Gold Medal winner. The two discuss his legacy, why he picked UNC, Dean Smith stories, playing days & lots more. This one was awesome. Subscribe NOW. Intro music: Cherry Metal by Arthur Vyncke | https://soundcloud.com/arthurvost Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US
It had been more than 50 years since they had walked off the basketball court as teammates, members of a squad that established Carolina as a perennial national title contender and started building Dean Smith’s legendary status as a coach. But it seemed as if it had been just last week listening to Jim Delany, retired commissioner of the Big 10 Conference; Eddie Fogler, longtime assistant to Smith and retired college head coach; and Charlie Scott, a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame who played professionally before a career in business. Chatting on Zoom with a fellow member of the class of 1970, GAA President Doug Dibbert, the Carolina memories flowed as smoothly as Delany and Fogler’s assists to Scott back in the day.
Charlie Scott is a giant in the industry, he's spent years as an owner of a home building company and one of the industry’s original customer satisfaction, consulting and referral sales generation firms. He's been inducted to the National Housing Quality Hall of Fame. He was generous enough to share his knowledge base with us, specifically on how to respond to customer satisfaction surveys and how they drive sales.
The NBA's conference finals are in full swing which gave us an idea: who were the best players to play for both Eastern Conference finalists (Miami Heat & Boston Celtics) and the best players to play for both Western Conference finalists (Los Angeles Lakers & Denver Nuggets). We'll discuss some of the most interesting trades between the franchises, notable playoff series histories and then our breakdown of our favorites to play for both franchises including Antonie Walker, Grant Long and Sherman Douglas for the Heat/Celtics and Nick Van Exel, Charlie Scott and Orlando Wooldridge of the Lakers/Nuggets. We'll also discuss the more famous players to play for both franchises with names like Shaquille O'Neal, Ray Allen, Gary Payton, JR Smith and many more.
Suns legends Dan Majerle, Shawn Marion and Charlie Scott join Lindsey Smith and Jon Bloom to talk Suns bubble play and favorite memories!
Showtime with Coop: James Worthy and special Guest Cedric Maxwell Powered by BetOnline.AG Coop is joined by Hall-of-Famer James Worthy about growing up in North Carolina and joining Showtime as the number one overall pick. Plus Coop reunites two bitter rivals in Worthy and former Boston Celtic Cedric Maxwell. Subscribe and give the podcast a rating! 2:01 How Coop saved James Worthy by feeding him early on in his career. 3:25 Where Worthy grew up in Gastonia, North Carolina, sports was very influential in children's lives. 6:19 Why does Worthy think he was able to make it to the NBA? 7:47 Why did Worthy pick UNC and what influenced him about Dean Smith? Worthy: "Coach Dean Smith had recruited and signed the first black player to the ACC and it was Charlie Scott. So I always was conscious of coach Smith and he almost lost his job because of that." 9:16 What did Coach Dean Smith instill in Worthy? 10:12 Where would James Worthy put himself on the all-time list of UNC Players? 11:49 What was Dean Smith like schematically when Worthy was at North Carolina? 12:46 What was Worthy's initial impressions of Michael Jordan at UNC? Worthy: "He utilized all his energy all the time and so once he learned how to let the game come to him a little bit.." 15:43 After he left UNC did he think he was going to play for the Lakers or someone else in the NBA? Worthy: "Ralph Sampson decided to stay at school at Virginia, now what a big mistake that was in my opinion." 18:24 What Worthy thought when he first got to the Lakers. 21:29 James Worthy on his relationship with Jerry West. Worthy: "He has the ability to see things that other people can't see. He sees the missing pieces." 24:51 Worthy's thoughts after breaking his leg during his rookie season in 1980. 26:09 Lighting round: One sentence each Kevin McHale James' Parents Domique Wilkins Magic Johnson Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Forum Club 31:30 Special Guest: Cedric Maxwell joins the show and James Worthy talks about when he handed Max the MVP trophy. 34:16 Cedric Maxwell and James Worthy go back to North Carolina where they both grew up. 38:30 Will James Worthy apologize to Max for pushing him from behind? 40:21 James Worthy and his relationship with Boston and Boston sports fans. 42:04 What really bothered Cedric Maxwell about the Lakers vs. Celtics rivalry. Maxwell: "Our blackness was challenged." 43:20 What James Worthy respected about Red Auerbach. 45:21 Did these guys on the Lakers and Celtics really hate each other? 49:35 How the Celtics made the Lakers a better team and helped them turn misery into championships. 50:50 Cedric Maxwell's story about playing against Kareem for the first time ever. Kareem was Max's favorite player of all time! Available for download on iTunes and Stitcher. Showtime with Coop is presented by BetOnline.AG. Go to BetOnine.ag and use promo code: CLNS50 to score your exclusive bonus.
Charlie Scott is a local blogger and lover of all things social media. Her brand is based in authenticity and her passion for helping others. In this episode, we talk to Charlie about her blog, Truthfully Charlie, how she creates meaningful partnerships with big brands, and why honesty is the best policy when it comes to growing an audience. You can follow Charlie on Instagram @TruthfullyCharlie and her brand new business @makingwavessocialmedia
In this week’s podcast, Taylor Vippolis has on Naismith Hall of Famer Charlie Scott, who was the first African-American scholarship athlete at UNC, to talk with the former star basketball player about his life and the adversity he faced on a daily basis throughout his time in Chapel Hill. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carolina basketball took a disappointing loss on Saturday...where do the Heels go from here (2:54)?Then, an incredible interview with Howard Lee on growing up as an African-American in the deep south, becoming mayor of Chapel Hill (and eventually a State Senator), his friendship with Coach Smith, Charlie Scott's impact on basketball and society and much, much more (20:08).Plus: Carolina made an assistant coaching change in football (1:21:32), Josh Pastner is Adam's boy (1:24:59) and the excitement for "Top Gun: Maverick" is growing (1:38:37)
Here is part one of my conversation with Charlie Scott! Charlie comes from Del Muerte, Arizona. They are a graduate of Brown University where they completed their Bachelor’s degree in Ethnic Studies and Sociology. At the time of the interview, they were in their final semester at the University of Rhode Island finishing their Master’s Program, and now preparing to attend the University of Denver in the fall for a doctoral program to study the link between higher education and settler colonialism. Charlie’s story truly reflects what it means to practice Navajo teachings in the 21st century, but they also amazingly articulate the beauty and challenges of being Navajo in the academy. Charlie provided me another set of questions to think about for my project. Charlie’s final point calls navajos to be aware of the chaos in their life, don’t leave it as it, engage in self-reflection to learn to be in balance with chaos. While navajo scholars may be away from the four sacred mountains, away from this space of hozho (peace, beauty, and order), they must go through the cycle of reflecting on their self to develop a relationship with the chaos and learn to be in hozho with chaos. Navajo scholars living working and studying beyond the four sacred mountains are never in a state of chaos. /// IG: @dineaesthetics /// Twitter: @GrandmaSaidNo /// Blog: http://dineaesthetics.com/ /// Additional Readings: (1) Brayboy, Bryan McKinley Jones, Amy J. Fann, Angelina E. Castagno, and Jessica A. Solyom. Postsecondary Education for American Indian and Alaska Natives: Higher Education for Nation Building and Self Determination: ASHE Higher Education Report 37: 5. John Wiley & Sons, 2012. (2) McNeley, James Kale. Holy wind in Navajo philosophy. University of Arizona Press, 1981. (3) Wilson, Shawn. "Research is ceremony: Indigenous research methods." (2008).
Here is part one of my conversation with Charlie Scott! Charlie comes from Del Muerte, Arizona. They are a graduate of Brown University where they completed their Bachelor’s degree in Ethnic Studies and Sociology. At the time of the interview, they were in their final semester at the University of Rhode Island finishing their Master’s Program, and now preparing to attend the University of Denver in the fall for a doctoral program to study the link between higher education and settler colonialism. Charlie’s story truly reflects what it means to practice Navajo teachings in the 21st century, but they also amazingly articulate the beauty and challenges of being Navajo in the academy. /// IG: @dineaesthetics /// Twitter: @GrandmaSaidNo /// Blog: http://dineaesthetics.com/ /// Additional Readings: (1) Basso, Keith H. Wisdom sits in places: Landscape and language among the Western Apache. UNM Press, 1996. (2) Iverson, Peter. Diné: A history of the Navajos. UNM Press, 2002. (3) Austin, Justice Raymond D. "Diné Sovereignty, a Legal and Traditional Analysis." Navajo Sovereignty: Understandings and Visions of the Diné People (2017) (4) Watts, Vanessa. "Indigenous place-thought & agency amongst humans and non-humans (First Woman and Sky Woman go on a European world tour!)." Re-visiones 7 (2017).
Natalie Sawyer and Gab Marcotti are joined by Oli Kay and Alan Smith after a big midweek in the Premier League. Manchester City played their game in hand at Old Trafford and ran out 2-0 winners in the Manchester derby. Was that their biggest hurdle to clear in the title race? Or will Burnley and their anti-football provide sterner opposition? Paul Pogba is named in the PFA Team of the Year which has incensed many. Do players take the nominations seriously enough or do they just look for different values? Arsenal suffer back to back defeats and continue to have problems in defence but do they have problems in attack on the horizon? And is the race for 4th place something to be excited about? Or is it the battle of mediocre teams in transition? Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Natalie Sawyer and Gab Marcotti are joined by Oli Kay and special guest, Belgian football journalist Kristof Terreur.Liverpool host Chelsea and the ghosts of their last title race with Manchester City and the damage that Blues did to them 5 years ago. How different is this Liverpool team? How much damage will Eden Hazard do to the Reds and will he be at Stamford Bridge next season?It was a bad week in the Champions League for the Manchester clubs? Despite the phenomenal efforts of Scott McTominay, United lose to Barcelona. Did Solskjaer get it wrong? And did United get it wrong in appointing him?And as we predicted on Monday, Pep Guardiola overthought things and tinkered in the defeat at Spurs. Time to ask why and to have that VAR debate again.Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The newest installment in our ongoing series on 50-point games takes us to the late 60s and early 70s, a transformative period in NBA history and for 50-point games. Wilt Chamberlain’s scoring fades away, Jerry West bows out and new stars like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Rick Barry emerge. A new upstart pro basketball league (ABA) joins the fray and their inclusion of a 3-point line makes 50-point games easier than ever. During this period, the 50+ point club becomes less exclusive. Up to this point (1949-66), we’ve only had 18 players with 50+ in a game (169 times—116 by Wilt Chamberlain). All of the previous 50+ scorers were eventual Hall of Famers with the lone exception of 5-time All-Star Rudy LaRusso. In this time period though, we’ll have 35 new members of the club with only 21 of them eventually making it to the Hall of Fame. Overall from 1967-1974, we’ll see 84 50-point games overall with Barry leading the charge at 17, Kareem chipping in eight and Wilt still putting up 7 including a heroic final 50+ point game. From 1967-74, 1.06% of games featured a 50+ point game. In this episode we’ll spotlight some of the new scorers to emerge in this era including Larry Jones, Willie Reed, Louie Dampier, Elvin Hayes, Darel Carrier, Connie Hawkins, Mel Daniels, Lou Hudson, Billy Cunningham, Spencer Haywood, Roger Brown, John Brisk, Joe Caldwell, Walt Wesley, Dave Bing, Stew Johnson, Dan Issel, Steve “Snapper” Jones, Charlie Scott, Pete Maravich, Chet Walker, Zelmo Beaty, Tiny Archibald, Willie Wise, Larry Miller, Julius “Dr. J” Erving, George McGinnis, Phil Chenier, Geoff Petrie and John Havlicek. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Auburn/Carolina preview, #StoryTime and David Chadwick joins the Pod to talk playing for Coach Smith, playing with Charlie Scott during a tumultuous social era and what happens, since he's the nicest person alive, when he actually gets angry
Premier League football is back, as are Gab Marcotti, Alyson Rudd, James Gheerbrant and Paul Joyce for The Game podcast. And the big breaking news on Thursday morning is that Manchester United appoint Ole Gunnar Solskjaer as their permanent manager on a 3 year contract as Ed Woodward votes for Sunday roast. Is he the right appointment? Is this the right time? Can he be his own man?Liverpool take on Tottenham on Sunday as the title race resumes. How will the Reds handle the pressure? And is Mo Salah about to burst back into form? Earlier that day, Cardiff host Chelsea. The panel tackle the issue of Cardiff’s dispute with Nantes and refusal to pay instalments of the transfer fee for the late Emiliano Sala. Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
With 4 English teams making it through to the last 8 of the Champions League, Gab Marcotti, Natalie Sawyer, James Gheerbrant and Oli Kay run the rule over the contenders for Europe’s top title. After Liverpool’s comfortable win in Munich, there’s praise for the maturity of the Reds as well as the Mane man who has kept them on track in the last few months. We can’t rule out Barca or Juve but could Man City become dependent on Phil Foden before they know it? We look ahead to a tantalising tie at Molineux as Manchester United come to town in the FA Cup quarter-finals. Can Wolves upset the big boys again and win their first FA Cup since 1960? And with Eric Dier tweeting out his view on the Brexit debate, we discuss the rarity that is footballers expressing a political opinion and the possible implications of that. Charlie Scott provides advice ahead of a depleted fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Following a monumental week in Europe, Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Henry Winter and Alan Smith to examine the fall-out from a shocking Tuesday and Wednesday.Manchester United overcome a two-goal deficit with the help of VAR on a famous night in Paris and are through to the last eight of the Champions League. There’s praise for Solskjaer, Smalling and Rashford (are English players good at penalties now?). But as for PSG, did they bottle it? Or are they the victims of karma?The holders Real Madrid were eliminated spectacularly by a young vibrant Ajax. Was Real’s downfall down to ageing and arrogance? Plus we discuss Gareth Bale’s struggles in front of the most demanding fans in the world.And in a landmark week for England’s women with victory in the SheBelieves Cup, Molly Hudson discusses the potential impact of Phil Neville’s first silverware as a manager in a World Cup year.Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After a full midweek fixture list, Gab Marcotti, Natalie Sawyer and Gary Jacob look ahead to a weekend packed full of derbies. Chelsea sweep aside Spurs despite the controversy surrounding the many statements of Kepa. Is Harry Kane’s frustration at Stamford Bridge, coupled with Mauricio Pochettino’s frustration at Turf Moor, indicative of a larger frustration? Arsenal are next in the North London derby. The Gunners are in form but is Unai Emery in emergency mode? Then follows the Merseyside derby on Sunday as we make the case for Alexander-Arnold and Robertson being the best pair of full-backs in the league. And how long do we give Marco Silva before we judge the job he’s doing at Everton? Brendan Rodgers leaves Celtic for Leicester but should he have been allowed to? Plus in a move we saw coming, Fulham part company with Claudio Ranieri, after he fails to make a good defence. Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Oli Kay, Bill Edgar and George Caulkin ahead of a huge weekend of football. Liverpool travel to Old Trafford to face bitter rivals Manchester United who are seeking to dent their title bid. But should Liverpool be worried about their fabled front three looking a bit off colour?Manchester City then look to retain the Carabao Cup against Chelsea and under-pressure Maurizio Sarri. Is a mid-season change of manager likely at Stamford Bridge? Or do Chelsea lack strong enough personalities in the dressing room to affect change? And while we want to like VAR, City’s game at Schalke in the Champions League made it difficult.Also George lifts the lid on Newcastle’s Spanish training camp and whether Almiron has lifted the mood amongst the Magpies. Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Natalie Sawyer and Gab Marcotti are joined by Henry Winter, Martyn Ziegler and Bill Edgar as the title race takes another twist. 7 days ago Liverpool missed the chance to go 7 points clear of Manchester City. Now the teams are separated by goal difference. Has Liverpool’s hiccup been coming? Will City’s experience prove telling? Or will Liverpool’s lack of games in comparison to City prove crucial? Plus can Maurizio Sarri inflict defeat on the champions for the second time this season? The Times report that Arsene Wenger could be back in football within a month. Will we see him return to club management or taking on an international role? And does the director of football role suit him at all? Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Natalie Sawyer and Gab Marcotti are joined by Henry Winter and Bill Edgar on a week that has everyone in the world of football talking.Arsenal take on Chelsea in a pivotal clash in the Champions League chase but it’s been a turbulent week off the pitch for the Gunners. It appears Ivan Gazidis has left Arsenal in a huge mess, as head of recruitment Sven Mislintat looks set to be the next man out the door.Did Arsenal gamble too much on Mkhitaryan and Mesut Ozil a year ago? And will we see Ozil in action this weekend? Does the World Cup winner respect Unai Emery’s credentials? Plus will Sarri get his way with the addition of Gonzalo Higuain at Stamford Bridge?Leeds manager Marcelo Bielsa admits that he has sent representatives undercover to watch every Championship team train this season. Is he to be admired or punished? And did the masses and the media get manipulated by Bielsa into discussing how meticulous he is instead of the morality of spying?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by James Gheerbrant and Oli Kay ahead of a big Premier League weekend and following a footballing week that provided plenty of talking points on and off the pitch.Tottenham host Manchester United on Sunday. With the Red Devils rampant under Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, the panel discuss how the Norwegian has built his team around Paul Pogba. And with a further delay on their new stadium, should Spurs be allowed to stay at Wembley for the rest of the season?A couple of Welshmen are on the move – Nathan Jones has left Luton to become the new Stoke manager. Is he the real deal and are we seeing a trend in clubs steering clear of the tried and tested names?Plus Aaron Ramsey moves closer to a summer move to Juventus, which the panel deem a gamble for the Old Lady. Are Arsenal counting the cost of their decision to spend big on Mesut Ozil’s new contract a year ago?Also up for discussion, the Carabao Cup semi-finals. Did VAR get it right at Wembley and was Manchester City’s 9-0 win over Burton an act of disrespect?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
After a Boxing Day full of goals and surprises, Natalie Sawyer is back alongside Alyson Rudd, Alan Smith and Paul Hirst to digest it all. Manchester City had lost 2 out of 61 Premier League games and have now lost 3 of their last 4 after defeat to Leicester at the King Power Stadium. Are they simply missing the fatherly Fernandinho? And with Liverpool now 7 points clear of the champions, are the Reds only set to improve under Jurgen Klopp? As for the Foxes, it’s been an incredible Christmas but does Claude Puel’s persona count against him? And does he have the power or is it the players? Burnley are battered on Boxing Day 5-1 by Everton. Have they lost sense of who they are and how do they turn things around? And is Sean Dyche’s job safe no matter what? Plus with Tottenham making it 11 goals in 2 games and with this season on course to be the highest scoring season in Premier League history, we ask whether the disparity between the haves and the have-nots is the contributing factor. And outside of Liverpool, is any team actually defending well? Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Natalie Sawyer and Gab Marcotti are joined by George Caulkin, Paul Joyce and Bill Edgar ahead of another seismic Saturday and Sunday in the Premier League.League leaders Liverpool host Manchester United at Anfield, with Jurgen Klopp’s men embracing control over chaos this season. Klopp appears to have cracked it when it comes to the goalkeeper, defence and attack. But will the rotation in midfield be what costs the Reds this season. And as Mourinho renews old rivalries on Merseyside, would Liverpool fans actually want him to leave Old Trafford?All four English clubs progressed to the last 16 of the Champions League but were we impressed by how they performed? And does their patchy form show what a struggle it is to juggle European football with chasing Manchester City this season?And as Newcastle head to Huddersfield in a relegation six-pointer on Saturday, George Caulkin talks to us about proposed takeovers, fan boycotts and why January will be so crucial to Rafa Benitez’s future.Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Paul Hirst and Bill Edgar to discuss the headlines in the world of football.Arsenal make it 20 games unbeaten as they draw 2-2 at Old Trafford. We discuss Manchester United’s tactical approach. They lump it and the panel don’t like it. Plus with the fourth most expensive signing in United ‘s history – Fred – yet again not even making the bench, does this demonstrate Mourinho’s lack of faith in their transfer policy?The big game of the Premier League weekend sees Chelsea host league leaders Manchester City. With Sergio Aguero injured and Gabriel Jesus having not scored a league goal for 4 months, will Pep Guardiola decide not to field a recognised striker at Stamford Bridge?And we examine the latest managerial addition to the Premier League – the new Southampton boss Ralph Hasenhüttl. Does he have the right group of players to carry out his intense pressing strategy? And will man-management issues from the past rear their head at St Mary’s?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Henry Winter and Gary Jacob ahead of a huge weekend of Premier League action.Tottenham have beaten Chelsea and Inter Milan this week and the panel praise Pochettino for not playing the percentages. Next up is the North London derby. The battle between Ozil and Eriksen could be crucial but how much longer will those players be at their respective clubs?Looking ahead to the Merseyside derby, and with Liverpool losing away in the Champions League again, do they lack a dominant figure in midfield? And can Sigurdsson seize control on Sunday for Everton? Plus it’s another week of Mourinho behaving erratically. No Pogba, Lukaku or Sanchez selected for the Champions League clash with Young Boys. Should United have done their research before signing Sanchez? Should Mourinho have been more careful in his reaction to Rashford? And is he fuelling the negativity around the club?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Premier League is back and so are Natalie Sawyer and Gab Marcotti, aided admirably by Bill Edgar and George Caulkin.It’s a big weekend at the bottom with Ranieri taking charge of Fulham for the first time against fellow strugglers Southampton. Can Claudio cook up some chemistry? What will he do with Seri and Sessegnon? And are we about to witness the end of Mark Hughes’s managerial career in the Premier League?We have witnessed the end of Martin O’Neill’s tenure as Republic of Ireland manager. Is it all about results for the Irish, or should they be looking to evolve in the world of football? Possibly with Stephen Kenny at the helm?Plus Paul Joyce joins us to discuss his article for The Times on the injury epidemic in the Premier League, specifically those suffered by players at top 6 clubs who featured heavily at the World Cup. In the hectic schedule, are managers and players short-sighted in their approach to rest and recuperation?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Jonathan Northcroft and James Gheerbrant ahead of another huge weekend of football.How will Liverpool, arguably with their most solid defensive structure since the days of Rafa Benitez, fare against Emery’s speedier, more dynamic Arsenal? And can these teams help us fall in love with the team goal again as opposed to the long-range screamer?Across North London, Mauricio Pochettino has spoken about his worst feeling at Tottenham since becoming manager. With the Real Madrid and Manchester United jobs potentially available in the summer, are we witnessing the end of Pochettino’s love affair with Daniel Levy?Plus with the pitch and the NFL branding playing a prominent role in the Spurs v Man City fixture, did the visuals at Wembley on Monday night damage the Premier League brand?Also on the agenda, the 48 team World Cup could be less than 4 years away. Does increasing the number of teams dilute the quality of the tournament? Or should football be a festival for all?Charlie Scott provides advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Matt Dickinson and James Gheerbrant as the Premier League returns from the international break with a vengeance. Unbeaten Chelsea host Manchester United as Jose Mourinho returns to Stamford Bridge. Are Sarri’s side title contenders? Does Paul Pogba need a less rigid attacking system? Plus Gab has serious sympathy for Mourinho when it comes to his latest punishment from the FA. It was a stunning week for England but will Ross Barkley and Harry Winks continue to get enough minutes at club level? And exactly how many minutes do they even need to be in the England squad? And with Tottenham facing a tough set of fixtures without Dele Alli and Jan Vertonghen – and with Mousa Dembele’s form seemingly nosediving – can Mauricio Pochettino add to his growing reputation in the next couple of months? Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer are joined by Alyson Rudd to discuss a big week in the Champions League, and a bigger weekend to come in the Premier League. Liverpool face Manchester City at Anfield as the Premier League’s top two title favourites go head to head. With the Reds losing in Naples, is it the wake-up call Jurgen Klopp needs for a reset on a midfield lacking in creativity? Henry Winter witnesses a Messi masterclass at Wembley, as Barcelona dismantle Tottenham. Messi may be one of the greatest of all time but does he benefit from a better supporting cast than legends of the past? And we ask what has happened to Spurs keeper Hugo Lloris? Is he still among the Premier League’s best shot stoppers? And is it right that he’s been out of the spotlight for so long after his drink-driving charges? Plus Natalie doesn’t want to talk about it – but there’s a managerial vacancy at Villa Park, brought about by bad results and cabbages.Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
It’s the story that keeps on giving. The bad blood between Paul Pogba and Jose Mourinho continues to boil at Manchester United. Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer discuss with James Gheerbrant and the man at the heart of the story, Paul Hirst.Was Mourinho’s training ground spat with Pogba pre-meditated to underline his authority not just to the squad but to the watching world? How embarrassing is this for the club to have this internal squabble played out in front of the cameras? Can Pogba ever mesh with Mourinho’s style of football? And who will leave United first?With Chelsea meeting Liverpool in the headline fixture in England this weekend, and with Eden Hazard knocking the Reds out of the Carabao Cup in midweek, we ask whether the Belgian really is the best player in the Premier League.Plus with the news that the FA are set to reward Gareth Southgate with an extended contract and a pay rise, the panel assess his value to England. And if he were on the market, which Premier League club would take him?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jason and Rich look at the greatest games for 2018 Naismith Basketball Hall of Famers Ray Allen, Maurice Cheeks, Jason Kidd, Steve Nash, Grant Hill and Charlie Scott. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer react to an eventful midweek in the Champions League as Tottenham taste their third defeat in a row. Are we right to question Mauricio Pochettino’s decisions or does he have too much credit in the bank? Manchester City suffer shock defeat at home to Lyon. Oliver Kay argues they are failing to hit the heights of this time last year. Should Bernardo Silva take centre stage? Liverpool dispose of PSG as Klopp overcomes Tuchel. But as James Gheerbrant suggests, are we predisposed to wanting PSG to fail due to a lack of goodwill towards them? Elsewhere, it’s a pain in the AARs for Cristiano Ronaldo. And Gazidis is a goner, in a high-profile exit from the Emirates. Has he let Stan Kroenke down?Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Charlie Scott, Ray Allen, Grant Hill, Maurice Cheeks, Steve Nash and Tina Thompson are among this year's inductees. Kevin Kugler has details.
The Premier League returns, as do Gab Marcotti and Natalie Sawyer in the company of Matt Hughes and Paul Hirst, to look ahead to what promises to be an intriguing weekend. Gary Neville has spoken exclusively to Matt Dickinson for The Times about his former club Manchester United, the need to back Jose Mourinho and a warning for Paul Pogba not to lose the dressing room over his future. The panel debate whether or not Pogba’s intentions are misunderstood.League leaders Liverpool prepare for Poch and a visit to Wembley to take on Tottenham. But as Neville suggests, would Klopp be better off ditching the Champions League in search of Premier League glory? We analyse (pointless) West Ham’s woes. Did they start with the summer transfer window? And where is their next win coming from? Plus the Roy Keane Republic of Ireland saga and Gab and Nat debunk some myths about the new St Mirren manager.Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Predicciones para la siguiente temporada y Clase 2018 del Salón de la Fama En vista de que la siguiente temporada de la NBA aún queda un poco retirada en el calendario, Evaristo Corona “Golfo” y Wookie Williams decidieron hacer una dinámica para contrarrestar las ansias por la espera de los próximos juegos que incluyen varios temas interesantes como: ¿quién será el MVP y el rookie de este año?, ¿LeBron podrá por fin vencer a los Warriors?, ¿qué jugador recibe bastante odio sin merecerlo?, ¿Rodman podría parar a LeBron?. Además, discuten sobre la próxima ceremonia de la Clase 2018 del Salón de la Fama que incluye a cuatro leyendas de la liga: Ray Allen, Grant Hill, Jason Kidd y Steve Nash, junto con Maurice Cheeks, Charlie Scott, las jugadoras Tina Thompson y Katie Smith, el entrenador Lefty Driesell y los ejecutivos Rod Thorn, Rick Welts y Ora Mae Washington; comparten opiniones sobre la más reciente campaña de Nike por su 30 aniversario con Kaepernick de la NFL y hablan sobre la conferencia de prensa sobre los NBA Mexico City Games en la cual se revelaron sus precios. Escucha el Episodio anterior “Gracias Manu Ginóbili” Puentes a otros sitios * Boom Shakalaka en Facebook * Clase 2018 del Salón de la Fama NBA * Revelan precios de NBA Mexico City Games 2018
Gab Marcotti, Alan Smith and George Caulkin tackle some of the tough issues in football this week, starting with the never-ending dispute between Newcastle fans and their owner, following some Wise words on Mike Ashley. What are fan expectations at football clubs and are they realistic? Matthew Syed is in the studio to discuss his article on Unai Emery and the challenge in inheriting an Arsenal infrastructure dominated by Arsene Wenger. And with several of England’s World Cup stars struggling for game time, we examine the ruthless nature of the Premier League, and ask why aren’t more young English players playing abroad? Charlie Scott and Paddy von Behr provide their advice ahead of the fantasy football weekend. For free Fantasy Premier League tips from The Sweeper, visit thetimes.co.uk/fantasyfootball See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week we cover confidence and self-worth in the workplace and wonder: Can we have it all? We answer listener questions about family planning and starting a business with no capital. Follow us @theCURVYcon on all social media platforms and send your questions for the show to us via instagram DM! And, don’t forget to leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts! Thanks for listening! This week’s episode music is “Power Glove” by Charlie Scott, and our theme music is “Suave Girls” by Def Manic and this episode was produced by Keisha “TK” Dutes.
NoWe look at some of the incredible stories of bidding wars between the ABA and NBA in the latest edition of Over and Back's Basketball Mysteries of the 1970s. This is part three of our discussion of the off-court battles between the ABA and NBA with Reinis Lacis of The Handle podcast (LamarMatic.com). We talk about Bob McAdoo signing a secret contract while still in college and an ABA owner and NBA owner secretly conspiring to sell and destroy it, the NBA raiding several ABA players during the season including Charlie Scott, how John Brisker’s move to the NBA forced a delay in the draft, why the ABA didn’t get much money from the multi-colored ball, wishy washy NBA commissioner Walter Kennedy vs. bold-thinking ABA commissioner Mike Storen, Wilt Chamberlain signing with the ABA, how the ABA tried to woo Bill Walton and give him his own franchise, the ABA’s plans to put more teams in the Northeast, Jim Chones becoming the only player to jump leagues without a lawsuit, and much more. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We look at the early days of Julius Erving’s ABA career in the latest episode of Over and Back’s Basketball Mysteries of the 1970s with basketball-history enthusiast Reinis Lacis @LamarMatic, host of The Handle podcast. We discuss how Julius Erving got his Dr. J nickname, playing college basketball largely in obscurity, developing his legend at New York’s Rucker Park, feeling the freedom to play above the rim the first time, how he mixed the creativity of the playground game with the discipline of the pro game, some of our favorite stories of his dunks, how the Virginia Squires discovered him and signed him out of college, how his early game relied mostly on rebound and how he developed his jump shot to become a complete player, sharing Afro tips with Darnell Hillman, getting fitted for suits with Clyde Frazier, Erving wowing everyone who first saw him in the ABA, the Squires losing ABA leading scorer Charlie Scott to the NBA just before the 1972 playoffs, Erving and the Squires battling Rick Barry and the New York Nets to a full seven games, Erving attempting to jump to the Atlanta Hawks in the NBA while the Milwaukee Bucks have his draft rights, playing one-on-one and developing chemistry with Pete Maravich, Erving eventually returning to the Squires for the 1973 season, being joined by future San Antonio Spurs legend George Gervin for 29 games and what a combination they could have been, how Erving eventually was traded from the Squires to the New York Nets, and how the Squires never recovered from losing their superstar. Original airdate: 9/6/16 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sportswriting legend Bob Ryan of the Boston Globe joins us to discuss the 1973-76 Boston Celtics in the sixth episode of the Over and Back Classic NBA podcast’s summer series — Basketball Mysteries of the 1970s. Jason Mann joins him to talk about the high and low points of a team that won two titles in three seasons and 68 games in 1973. Also discussed: how Red Auerbach was able to rebuild the Celtics after the Bill Russell era, the all-around brilliance of John Havlicek, drafting Jo Jo White and Dave Cowens, acquiring the rugged Paul Silas as a final piece, their playoff rivalry with the Knicks and their famous 7-game battle in 1973 (and Boston’s perspective on some questionable refereeing in that series), a controversial series win over Bob McAdoo’s Buffalo Braves, knocking off Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and the Bucks for a championship in 1974, running into Elvin Hayes and the Washington Bullets in 1975, what made Cowens so special as a player and his pride in being the center despite lack of size, Don Nelson’s integral role as an aging veteran, White’s sometimes contentious relationship with teammates, the Paul Westphal for Charlie Scott trade, how Don Cheney helped shore up the team’s defense, the team’s fast-breaking style, and of course their Finals victory over the Phoenix Suns in 1976, including the famous triple-overtime Game 5 with all kinds of twists and turns. Original airdate: 7/29/16 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Story Pirates are back in 2016 with “The Chris Allergic to Garbage Cans” by Charlie Scott.
Tonight we have a VERY special and touching show... Whitestone, Queens New York native Charlie Scott is coming through to share his motivating story of how he beat a drug addiction to not only save his life, but to be an inspiration to those who may also be going through the addicition and detox process. He has frequently performed at numerous venues in the New York City area. Charlie is currently touring local rehabilitation facilities, carrying a powerful message to the youth and other individuals in recovery. Tune in!!! You don't want to miss this!!! TOPIC OF THE NIGHT: If you were homeless for a day, what would be the one thing you could NOT live without? Would you like to sponsor an episode or be featured on Shay Star Radio??? Please send all inquiries to ShayStarRadio@gmail.com
This latest episode includes Conversations with Mike Lipkin, Carole Matthews, Charlie Scott, a learning forum segment with Dennis Campbell of Ambassatours, and much more.
I talk with hip hop artist Charlie Scott who shares his unique story of how he got involved with the world of hip hop. Charlie is honest and candid with his experience recovering from the abuse of painkillers, and how poetry and music have helped him in the recovery process. Check out Charlie’s new mix tape, Lyrical Therapy, his new single “Thank You” and other songs at SoundCloud.com/CharlieScottHipHop!