POPULARITY
Coach Ashli Sutton | Callaway High School Girls BasketballWelcome to Discipleship Hoops, where faith meets the game.In this episode, we sit down with Coach Ashli Sutton, Head Girls Basketball Coach at Callaway High School, to hear her powerful story of leadership, legacy, and impact. From her days as a standout player to her journey as a coach and mentor, Coach Sutton opens up about what drives her, how she builds character through basketball, and what it means to develop the next generation of young women both on and off the court.
Introducing Coach Sutton On this podcast episode, I am so excited to formally introduce Coach Wade Sutton. If you're a Power Trades University member, you may have already seen Coach Sutton answering questions in the forums and on our Monday night Group Coaching sessions. We wanted to take some time to share how Coach Sutton […] The post EP 131: Leveling Up The Stock Market Industry: Introducing Coach Sutton appeared first on The Brown Report - Stock Report.
In this episode, we talked with Women's Volleyball Head Coach, Donika Sutton;Donika Sutton is currently the head coach for the Tennessee State University women's volleyball team. She was named to the position in January 2020, becoming the 11th head coach in program history.Prior to joining TSU, Sutton served as the head coach at Eastern Kentucky University for two seasons. During her time there, she led the Colonels to their first Ohio Valley Conference Tournament appearance in five years.Coach Sutton led the Tigers to an Ohio Valley Conference Volleyball Championship for the season 22-23 … first time since 2007, which gave Tennessee State an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.Sutton has also worked as an assistant coach at several other universities, including the University of Alabama at Birmingham, the University of Alabama, and the University of Texas at San Antonio.As a player, Sutton was a standout setter at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, where she earned All-Conference USA honors and was named the team's MVP in 2007 and 2008. She went on to play professionally overseas in Spain and Puerto Rico.Sutton holds a bachelor's degree in communication studies from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and a master's degree in sports administration from the University of Alabama.-------------------------------------ALL LINKS TO SHOW:Play College Sports with the iSportsRecruiting App download it now:Apple Stote
Coach Sutton shares about being with K-State for his first yr and Coach Tang's first year as head coach. Coach Sutton shares how K-State got to the East Regional Final.
In this episode of Linch with Leader, Mike welcomes back former college basketball coach and current ESPN & SEC basketball analyst, Jimmy Dykes. In this episode, Coach Dykes offers up his assessment of what makes a truly great coach, how a coach can structure his life with balance for the long haul, and how Biblical principles all come into play every day in the life of a coach.Jimmy Dykes first joined ESPN at the start of the 1995-96 men's college basketball season as a game and studio analyst and is now in his 22nd season with the company, after serving as the women's head basketball coach at the University of Arkansas from 2014-2017. He led the Razorbacks to one NCAA tournament appearance and finished with an overall record of 43-49.Prior to his career with ESPN, Dykes played three years at the University of Arkansas, playing for the legendary coach Eddie Sutton. After his playing career ended, he went on to be a graduate assistant for Coach Sutton. Dykes' coaching career includes assistant coaching stints from Sacramento State, Appalachian State, Arkansas-Little Rock, and Oklahoma State. He then spent three years as an NBA scout prior to joining ESPN in the mid-90s. He is the author of the challenging book, The Film Doesn't Lie which is certain to provoke readers to take an honest, in-depth look at their own life and to live with genuine passion and bold determination. Dykes is also a highly sought after motivational speaker for companies, organizations, sports teams, and faith-based groups across the country, challenging audiences to a higher level of accountability and tenacious faith.Coach Dykes and his family still make their home in Arkansas.
In this episode of Linch with Leader, Mike welcomes back former college basketball coach and current ESPN & SEC basketball analyst, Jimmy Dykes. In this episode, Coach Dykes offers up his assessment of what makes a truly great coach, how a coach can structure his life with balance for the long haul, and how Biblical principles all come into play every day in the life of a coach.Jimmy Dykes first joined ESPN at the start of the 1995-96 men's college basketball season as a game and studio analyst and is now in his 22nd season with the company, after serving as the women's head basketball coach at the University of Arkansas from 2014-2017. He led the Razorbacks to one NCAA tournament appearance and finished with an overall record of 43-49.Prior to his career with ESPN, Dykes played three years at the University of Arkansas, playing for the legendary coach Eddie Sutton. After his playing career ended, he went on to be a graduate assistant for Coach Sutton. Dykes' coaching career includes assistant coaching stints from Sacramento State, Appalachian State, Arkansas-Little Rock, and Oklahoma State. He then spent three years as an NBA scout prior to joining ESPN in the mid-90s. He is the author of the challenging book, The Film Doesn't Lie which is certain to provoke readers to take an honest, in-depth look at their own life and to live with genuine passion and bold determination. Dykes is also a highly sought after motivational speaker for companies, organizations, sports teams, and faith-based groups across the country, challenging audiences to a higher level of accountability and tenacious faith.Coach Dykes and his family still make their home in Arkansas.
scottwildcat and Chauncey Boscoe sit down and zoom with 2 of the greats on this K-State Men's Basketball Staff: Chief of Staff Coach Marco Borne and Director of Strategies Coach Kevin SuttonSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
scottwildcat and Chauncey Boscoe sit down and zoom with 2 of the greats on this K-State Men's Basketball Staff: Chief of Staff Coach Marco Borne and Director of Strategies Coach Kevin SuttonSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Sam Brooks sits down with Dr. Michael Torrence, President of Motlow State Community College. They discuss his family and how sports are intertwined within his family, how he first got into playing competitive basketball at a young age, as well as what his first day of practice in the 10th grade was like under Coach Sutton. Listen to the latest Local Matters Podcast… Presented by Office Mart.
Sam Brooks sits down with Dr. Michael Torrence, President of Motlow State Community College. They discuss his family and how sports are intertwined within his family, how he first got into playing competitive basketball at a young age, as well as what his first day of practice in the 10th grade was like under Coach Sutton. Listen to the latest Local Matters Podcast… Presented by Office Mart. News Talk 94.1 · Presented By Office Mart
This week TJ and Sam have an in-depth discussion on coaching with Kevin Sutton from Florida Gulf Coast. Coach Sutton has 36 years experience of coaching at the high school and collegiate level both as a a head and assistant coach and in this episode he shares his wisdom about how to learn from the best, holistically develop players and grow in your leadership as a coach.
This week on Inside the Headset, we are featuring University of San Diego's Offensive Coordinator and Running Backs Coach Tyler Sutton. Coach Sutton highlights his early coaching experience as a graduate assistant, shares advice on how to become an effective coordinator, and explains his philosophy for coaching running backs. Tyler Sutton enters his ninth season as an assistant coach with San Diego in 2021 and his second as the offensive coordinator. Sutton has risen through San Diego's coaching ranks over the last eight seasons after joining the Toreros in 2013 as a volunteer offensive assistant before being promoted to assistant coach for the 2014 season. He started coaching the running backs before taking on the special teams coordinator role in 2018. He also served as the team's recruiting coordinator during his tenure. In his time with USD, Sutton has been a part of six consecutive seasons of nine or more wins, seven conference championships, five FCS Playoffs appearances, and two FCS playoff wins. Prior to coaching in San Diego, Sutton spent the 2011 and 2012 seasons as a graduate assistant coach at his alma mater, University of Redlands. He served as the Bulldogs' defensive line coach and added special teams coordinator responsibilities for the 2012 season. Sutton began his coaching career at Granite Hills High School in San Diego County. Coach Sutton played football at The University of Redlands where he spent four seasons and received All-Conference honors his senior year. [1:03] Start of Interview [1:57] Personal start into coaching [4:13] Lessons learned working as a graduate assistant [6:10] Interviewing for coaching jobs [7:44] Coaching players that you played with [9:06] Becoming an effective coordinator [11:17] Getting players to "buy in" [12:50] Running Back coaching Philosophy
Coach Sutton is a JMU alum and we talk High School and College Hoops plus his involvement with TEAM USA.
We have placed Kevin Sutton on the throne as he joins us to share his life testimony of how he has navigated his career with servant leadership, humility and faith. At an early age Coach Sutton was destined to be a successful basketball coach, getting an early start as a student assistant and coaching high school along with being mentored legends such as George Raveling. He has spent time at Pitt, Georgetown, George Washington, James Madison and Old Dominion. Sutton also has more than 20 years of coaching experience at every level of basketball camps and clinics, including the Nike Hoops Jamboree, Nike All-American Camp, Michael Jordan Flight School and the LeBron James Skills Academy, among others. His list of accomplishments as a basketball coach go on and on however in this power conversation we uncover everything beyond that. In this conversation we explore the difficulties you have to endure in such a competitive profession and how to stay true to yourself and rooted in your values even if it means comprising what may seem like a better opportunity. In this conversation you will learn: How to stay resilient after being knocked down. The power of vulnerability and staying true to yourself. We know that in this profession or in any competitive environment ego can easily get you knocked off track. The importance of keeping faith first even when it is easy to get off track. Please write a review and let us know what you took away from this episode. We hope that the lessons in this conversation inspire you to continue on your journey to greatness. More on Kevin Sutton and how to connect: Rhode Island Coaching Profile: https://gorhody.com/sports/mens-basketball (https://gorhody.com/sports/mens-basketball) https://www.kevinsuttonbasketball.com (https://www.kevinsuttonbasketball.com) https://suttonslivingtrophies.com (https://suttonslivingtrophies.com)i Twitter & IG: @CoachSutton This podcast is hosted by: Aisha Foy and Nick Lagroone, just two driven young professionals thirsty for knowledge and wisdom. Follow us on Twitter and IG @_YourExcellence
In this episode of Linch with Leader, Mike sits down with former college basketball coach and current ESPN & SEC basketball analyst, Jimmy Dykes.Jimmy Dykes first joined ESPN at the start of the 1995-96 men's college basketball season as a game and studio analyst, and is entering his 20th season with the company, after serving as the women's head basketball coach at the University of Arkansas from 2014-2017. He led the Razorbacks to one NCAA tournament appearance and finished with an overall record of 43-49.Prior to his career with ESPN, Dykes played three years at the University of Arkansas, playing for the legendary coach Eddie Sutton. After his playing career ended, he went on to be a graduate assistant for Coach Sutton. Dykes' coaching career includes a number of assistant coaching stints from Sacramento State to Oklahoma State. He then spent three years as an NBA scout prior to joining ESPN in the mid 90s. He is the author of the challenging book, “The Film Doesn't Lie” which will challenge readers to look at their lives and see if their walk and talk match up. Every leader will be better for their time in this book! Dykes is also a highly sought after motivational speaker for companies, organizations, sports teams, and faith based groups across the country, challenging audiences to a higher level of accountability and tenacious faith.Coach Dykes and his family still make their home in Arkansas.
The "More Than Just A Recruiter" Interview Series: Ep. 9: Univ. of Rhode Island Assistant Coach Kevin Sutton The foundational pillars for The Brantley Method are Inspiration, Motivation and Education; the mission is to utilize stories as a vehicle to provide those pillars to the world in unique ways. As a black man, a father of young black men and a coach/mentor to young black men it is important to show them positive examples of the possibilities and potential for their futures if they only dare to dream. I recently wrote about the perceptions, misconceptions and successes of Black Coaches in NCAA Basketball and it inspired me to take it one step further and create the "More Than Just A Recruiter" Interview Series. https://www.thebrantleymethod.com/more-than-just-a-recruiter https://www.thebrantleymethod.com/more-than-just-a-recruiter-conference-championship-edition For our ninth episode, I sat down with University of Rhode Island Assistant Coach, Kevin Sutton. We discussed mentorship, his "Living Trophies" and those who have helped him along the way. Coach Sutton spoke about his time coaching at the Prep level and what it takes to create a winning program and MORE! It was great to be able to have this conversation with Coach Sutton and know it will positively impact the careers of young college coaches and potential college coaches. I'm looking forward to continuing to watch Coach Sutton shine and help others along his journey. #FreeGame #GoFURTHER
This week on the itsBIGGERthantheball pod we are honored to host veteran coach University of Rhode Island Assistant Kevin Sutton. Kevin Sutton enters his third season with Rhode Island in 2020-2021. Sutton came to Rhode Island after spending two seasons at Pitt. He has 13 seasons of coaching at the collegiate level, including stops at Georgetown, George Washington, James Madison and Old Dominion. A coaching veteran with 35 years of experience, Sutton has three different stints coaching for USA Basketball. He was an assistant coach for two years at the Hoop Festival for the East, helping the Junior Developmental Team (U16) win gold at the FIBA Americas Tournament in Argentina. Sutton also was the head coach for the Nike/USA Basketball Hoop Summit, which showcased the top 10 international players against the top 10 U.S. players. Coach Sutton discusses his vast coaching journey and his wildly impactful Living Trophies Masters Zoom Class. Follow Coach Sutton https://www.kevinsuttonbasketball.com/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLqNvyZOl_BY5uzqdAXZeBw https://twitter.com/CoachSutton https://www.instagram.com/livingtrophies/ Be sure to connect with Coach Adams & itsBIGGERthantheball www.itsbiggerthantheball.com coachka20@gmail.com Social Media https://facebook.com/itsbiggerthantheball https://instagram.com/coachka20 https://twitter.com/coachka20 https://youtube.com/itsbiggerthantheball
Sidney Moncrief was an NBA superstar with the Milwaukee Bucks, earning countless awards and accomplishments, including the ultimate honor of being selected into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame. Sidney's successes are not limited to the court, as he's also emerged as a leader in business, coaching, writing, and consulting. In our conversation in the SGG podcast, we discussed: 1. What he learned from his high school coach, the legendary Oliver Elders: “He placed a very high emphasis on being a quality person. That superseded anything you did on the court… He made us realize that life was much more than just basketball.” 2. “We knew he cared about us as people.” 3. “Your impact lasts beyond those three or four years that you have with those players. It's going to stay with them for a lifetime. If you instill just selfishness and you caring about being a winning coach without caring about them academically or as people, that's what they're going to spill out for the rest of their life. If you show them love, you show them compassion, you show them that accountability matters, that being a good teammate matters, being a good person matters, character matters, that's what they're going to show for the rest of their lives.” 4. The critical time that Coach Eddie Sutton offered compliments to Sidney and his teammates – an occasion that built their confidence and spurred them on to the Final Four the next season. 5. The importance of Coach Sutton's assistant coaches giving him advice to instill confidence in his players… and Coach Sutton's willingness to listen to them. 6. What it felt like to get “called to the coach's office.” 7. “Greatness was not even part of our mindset. He interjected that greatness theory.” 8. The importance of timing in coaches' conversations with their teams. 9. His wake-up call to the physicality of the NBA – and how Coach Don Nelson guided him to playing defense at the highest level. 10. The thing that really makes you a great coach: Maintaining high expectations of players. 11. “Players today need to know why they're doing certain things.” 12. The influence of his upbringing on his development as a tenacious competitor. 13. The importance of having experienced players as models for younger ones to learn from. 14. Discipline as an everyday part of life. 15. His new book. 16. Exercise, rest, rejuvenation, and personal care: “There's only so much film you should be watching…The players don't get the best you when you're constantly watching film and are constantly stressed out.” 17. Knowing and respecting the different motivations that players bring to the table. 18. What he means by “tenacity” in his new book. “Pace, aggressiveness, focus, determination…” 19. “Love what you do and do what you love…and change the world!”
Past guest on the TBL Podcast Coach Kevin Sutton of the University of Rhode Island basketball program (TBL 024: Pro vs. Professional) hosts a weekly Master Zoom Class he calls "Living Trophies." These virtual sessions are attended by 25-50 sports coaches, administrators, and leaders across the country. In this particular class, TBL Coaching Founder Ben Rogers was asked to present. According to Coach Sutton, “Living Trophies are those people who allow you to impact their lives. They listen and learn, then they apply that knowledge as they live out their best lives. Living Trophies become positive members of their communities. They give back to others and start to impact lives of those they come in contact with. Some will do this on a small scale, and others on a large scale. It can be anything from showing sincere interest to those they meet, to creating foundations to reach large numbers of people in need. Living Trophies are individuals for whom you have impacted in a positive way, and they in turn become a person that impacts others.” **Ben's presentation begins at the 2:10 mark of this episode.**
Kevin Sutton shares his journey from being a student and player to coach, but always remaining a student of the game! Coach Sutton built Montverde Academy into a national powerhouse that produced numerous college and professional basketball players. Coach Sutton comes from a basketball family and speaks candidly about both his playing and coaching career. Coach Sutton talks about attending Falls Church HS and transferring to Flint Hill before earning a full athletic scholarship to James Madison University. Before his playing days were over he had begun coaching the Flint Hill teams in their out of season leagues. Kevin was mentored by his HS coach Stu Vetter and coached under him as well as other influential coaches including Jeff Capel (JMU & ODU), John Thompson III (Georgetown), Mike Lonergan (George Washington), Kevin Stallings (Pittsburgh) and now David Cox (Rhode Island). He has spent three different stints with USA Basketball and continues to impact lives on and off the court.
When asked what he brings to the table as a coach, 33-year coaching veteran and current University of Rhode Island assistant basketball coach Kevin Sutton describes himself as a "high-level professional." With an impressive overall coaching record of 475-115 dating back to the late '80s, Coach Sutton has coached over 150 college scholarship recipients and 8 players that have gone on to play in the NBA. Despite his impressive track record as a coach, the end result does not excite Coach Sutton. The creator of the phrase "Living Trophies" (see TBL 022), Coach Sutton believes that while a championship trophy sits on a shelf and collects dust, creating living trophies out of his student-athletes and what they do beyond the game is what truly matters. According to the experienced coach who doubles as a family man with a wife and four children, going "Pro" is just a job while becoming a "Professional" is a career.
The Fellas talk about Notre Dame, Coach Sutton, Juzang/Saar, & Dugg we lose Dugg because of Fortnite.
James Dickey, Former Arkansas Asst. Coach to the late Eddie Sutton, joined The Morning Rush to discuss Coach Sutton and legacy on college basketball. Check out our conversation here!
With 36 years of Division 1 coaching experience, Coach Eddie Sutton became the first coach to take four schools to The NCAA tournament. He is one of only eight major college men’s basketball coaches to have more than 800 (804) career wins. Coach Sutton played basketball at Oklahoma State University under the legendary coach Henry Iba. In 1959 he became head coach at Tulsa Central High School. His college coaching career began in 1967 when he founded the men’s basketball program at the College of Southern Idaho. He moved on to Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska where he made his first coaching appearance in the NCAA tournament in 1974. He made his next NCAA appearance with the University of Arkansas in 1978 while compiling a record of 260-75 in 11 seasons. He coached the University of Kentucky Wildcats for four years, leading them to the Elite Eight of the 1986 NCAA tournament.Coach Sutton returned to Oklahoma State University in 1990 and in his 17 years in Stillwater the Cowboys reached the post season 14 times including 13 NCAA tournament bids and two Final Four appearances. Eddie is the second-winningest coach in OSU school history, behind only his mentor, Henry Iba and is a four-time national Coach of the year. Coach Eddie Sutton was inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame on November 20, 2011.The full interview with transcript and notes can be found here: https://www.voicesofoklahoma.com/interview/sutton-eddie/
In this episode, Darrell Walker starts off discussing the season that was and the postseason that wasn't. He talks about if he approaches the Arkansas State rivalry game any differently than any other game and how the team has Unfinished Business from last year, which is the focus for the 2020-21 season. Walker also discusses how Little Rock is his dream job, his thoughts on The Last Dance and being with Eddie Sutton when it was announced Coach Sutton was being inducted to the Hall of Fame.
In this episode, Darrell Walker starts off discussing the season that was and the postseason that wasn’t. He talks about if he approaches the Arkansas State rivalry game any differently than any other game and how the team has Unfinished Business from last year, which is the focus for the 2020-21 season. Walker also discusses how Little Rock is his dream job, his thoughts on The Last Dance and being with Eddie Sutton when it was announced Coach Sutton was being inducted to the Hall of Fame.
Coach Sutton talks to us about how to connect more closely with players. Self reflection and Vulnerability. https://www.kevinsuttonbasketball.com
Sidney Moncrief joins The Morning Rush to talk about coach Sutton in the HOF by Hit That Line
The Monsters visit with the creators of the new documentary "Eddie" that details the life of Coach Sutton.
Jeff speaks with Coach Kevin Sutton an Assistant Coach for the men's basketball team at the University of Rhode Island. Coach Sutton speaks about this basketball career and how he got into coaching. His amazing resume of coaching great players over time and how he choose to join the coaching staff at URI.
Jeff speaks with Coach Kevin Sutton an Assistant Coach for the men's basketball team at the University of Rhode Island. Coach Sutton speaks about this basketball career and how he got into coaching. His amazing resume of coaching great players over time and how he choose to join the coaching staff at URI.
Coach Sutton talks to us about teaching leadership and "followership". Being versatile and how to view those that we impact as Living Trophies.
Jayson takes you through the week that was for Oklahoma State Athletics, and discusses the snub of Eddie Sutton, by the Hall of Fame voters. For the sixth time, Coach Sutton is left on the outside of the hall and Jayson has a soap box to climb on. The Softball team picked up a sweep while the baseball team lost their first conference series on the year. All this and more! Music: "Again and Again," by Topo Azul Licensed through marmosetmusic.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/loyalandtrue/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/loyalandtrue/support
The coaching career path is often thought of as linear. You start out in one role, you move into another, and each serves as a stepping stone to the next, more advanced position. But University of Pittsburgh assistant basketball coach Kevin Sutton’s career path has not followed a linear path at all. I want to start the Beyond the Whistle podcast by having a conversation with Kevin about the way his career has unfolded and how it did so. His experience is full of life lessons and approaches to coaching that anyone interested in starting or advancing in a coaching career can learn from. I invite you to come meet my long-time friend, University of Pittsburgh Assistant Coach Kevin Sutton, on this episode. What it takes to successfully join a coaching staff that’s already established. Kevin Sutton has joined existing coaching staffs a handful of times as he’s journeyed the coaching career path. Those on the coaching staff already have a chemistry and team dynamic that the new coach has to learn, fit into, and enhance through his/her contributions. Kevin has done that beautifully every time he’s made that sort of move and on this episode of the podcast, I asked Kevin to explain how he was able to accomplish that. As always, Kevin was very generous to unpack the dynamics of what it’s like to step into that sort of situation and what he has learned that makes the transition smooth for everyone involved. What's the best approach for a college coach to evaluate high school players? There are many approaches to evaluating high school talent as a college basketball coach. And there are many missteps that can be made in the process that put a college in a bad place, simply because the recruiters evaluated the players based on limited or incomplete information. Coach Kevin Sutton says that it’s vital for college coaches to not only observe high school players in game situations but also in practice. In this conversation, Kevin explains what he looks for in each setting, why he’s evaluating the things he does, and the benefits that come from doing so. If you’re interested in what it takes to successfully evaluate high school talent for a college basketball team (or any sport for that matter) Kevin’s recruiting advice is like gold. How can you evaluate new opportunities you encounter on the coaching career path? Coach Sutton has changed positions many times in his career as a basketball coach - and he’s done so very successfully, seemingly making just the right moves at the right time. In this conversation I did my best to get inside Kevin’s mind, to understand his thought process on how to evaluate new career opportunities. If you want to know the key things a successful coach has considered with every career move, you’re going to need to listen to this episode. I promise it’s worth the time. Coach Kevin Sutton: "The assistant coach’s primary role is to make the head coach successful." Every coach is climbing the ladder, walking his/her own coaching career path. But those who are self-serving and only interested in their own advancement are missing what it means to be part of a team. They’re missing the opportunity to make themselves indispensable to their head coach in a way that will wind up advancing their own career in the end. Coach Sutton shares why it’s vitally important for every assistant coach to do the most they can to bring about the success of their head coach. It’s an insight that’s powerfully important for anyone climbing the coaching career ladder. Make sure you hear what Kevin’s got to say. Outline of This Episode [0:29] My introduction to this episode and my guest, Kevin Sutton. [3:48] How college coaching careers do NOT always follow a linear path. [7:30] The first 90 days on a new coaching staff. [10:48] Building a basketball program at the high school level. [13:09] The things Kevin learned as a high school coach that have helped him at the college level. [14:10] What Kevin looks for when evaluating high school talent. [17:43] Why evaluating players during practice is important. [19:43] How Kevin evaluates new career opportunities. [21:40] The assistant coach’s primary responsibility to the head coach. [23:10] People, events, and environments: Three impacts on success. [27:10] Books Kevin recommends. [29:30] How you can connect with Kevin. Resources & People Mentioned www.KevinSuttonBasketball.com www.KevinSuttonBasketball.wordpress.com - Kevin’s blog Kevin on Facebook Kevin on Twitter BOOK: One Word BOOK: How Full Is Your Bucket? BOOK: Think Better, Live Better
ORU Men's Basketball Coach Scott Sutton keynote from our monthly luncheon about the importance of building a good foundation for your team, surrounding yourself with loyal, positive and honest people that will help you achieve greatness. Scott stresses the importance of creating the right culture for your team and investing in your teammates. Coach Sutton has a record of 320 wins in 17 seasons at ORU, including 3 NCAA tournament appearances, and 8 total postseason appearances. He has also been four-time Coach of the Year, including three Summit League tournament championships and 5 Summit League regular season championships. He has also had two Associated Press All-Americans, Five Freshman All-Americans, and Four Summit League Players of the Year. To learn more about The Young Businessmen of Tulsa: Facebook: /YBTOklahoma Twitter: @ybTulsaOK LinkedIn: Young Businessmen of Tulsa Website: www.ybtok.com To connect with Evan Uyetake twitter: @utalkie instagram: @utalkie LinkedIn: /evanuyetake www.trostmarketing.com To learn more about The Young Businessmen of Tulsa: Facebook: /YBTOklahoma Twitter: @ybTulsaOK LinkedIn: Young Businessmen of Tulsa Website: www.ybtok.com To connect with Evan Uyetake twitter: @utalkie instagram: @utalkie LinkedIn: /evanuyetake www.trostmarketing.com