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Nesta semana, vamos até o México para conversar com Gustavo Leal, ex-auxiliar de André Jardine e atual treinador do Atlético San Luís. Líder da Liga MX até o momento deste episódio, falamos sobre seu projeto como treinador, relações humanas, a diferença auxiliar para treinador com o elenco, o modelo posicional, o jogo único de Fernando Diniz, nível do campeonato mexicano e muito mais. DICAS FUTEBOLEIRAS • A Revista Panenka e sua entrevista com Monchi; https://www.panenka.org/miradas/entrevistas/monchi-soy-un-politico-frustrado/ • Na HBO, a série "Lakers: hora de vencer"; https://play.hbomax.com/page/urn:hbo:page:GYbDO6QFHOsPCwgEAAAMR:type:series • Na Editora Grande Área, o livro "Marcelo Bielsa: a virtude da loucura"; https://editoragrandearea.com.br/marcelo-bielsa • O livro "Os números do jogo", de David Sally; https://www.amazon.com.br/Os-n%C3%BAmeros-jogo-David-Sally/dp/8565530396 • O livro "O ego é seu inimigo: como dominar seu pior adversário", de Ryan Holiday; https://www.amazon.com.br/ego-seu-inimigo-dominar-advers%C3%A1rio/dp/8551002422 CONHEÇA OS CURSOS • Quer se tornar um analista tático? https://footure.com.br/footure-lab/ SOBRE O FOOTURE • Acesse o Site: https://footure.com.br/ • Footure Club: https://footure.com.br/footure-club/ • Loja Futeboleira: http://footure.com.br/loja • Cursos de Análise Tática: https://footure.com.br/footure-lab/ #LigaMX #SanLuis #GustavoLeal
https://youtu.be/jHGFlyHnhFQ Acting against our better judgment is a bit of a puzzle: if we know what's “best,” & nothing is preventing us, why don't we do it? Who is it that's doing the controlling (or being controlled) in “self-control?” THUNK Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/THUNKShow - Links for the Curious - First Person Plural (Bloom, 2008) - https://pdodds.w3.uvm.edu/files/papers/others/everything/bloom2008a.pdf A Multiple Self Theory of the Mind - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.2466/02.09.28.CP.1.5 A Dual-Self Model of Impulse Control (Fudenberg & Levine, 2006) - https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/document?repid=rep1&type=pdf&doi=9f0ba1f9eef4ff2493ccbd0a50f8af7635d4f6b7 From dual processes to multiple selves: Implications for economic behavior (Alós-Ferrer & Strack, 2014) - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0167487013001517 I, Too, Sail Past - Odysseus and the Logic of Self-Control (Sally, 2000) - https://www.researchgate.net/profile/David-Sally/publication/4775007_I_Too_Sail_Past_Odysseus_and_the_Logic_of_Self-Control/links/5dee77dc4585159aa470e787/I-Too-Sail-Past-Odysseus-and-the-Logic-of-Self-Control.pdf Reflection and Reasoning in Moral Judgment - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/j.1551-6709.2011.01210.x Emotions and Decision Making (Lerner et al, 2014) - https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/jenniferlerner/files/annual_review_manuscript_june_16_final.final_.pdf Fluctuating capacity and advance decision-making in Bipolar Affective Disorder — Self-binding directives and self-determination (Gergel & Owen, 2015) - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160252715000680 The Stanford Marshmallow Prison Experiment - https://hotelconcierge.tumblr.com/post/113360634364/the-stanford-marshmallow-prison-experiment Embodied Akrasia: James On Motivation And Weakness Of Will - https://www.jstor.org/stable/26493690 Discourse on the Passions (Hume) - https://davidhume.org/texts/p/full Weakness of Will (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) - https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/weakness-will/
“What happened before the sun rose in the east this morning and looked in at the windows of a white cottage can be judged at this writing only by the marks of bloodshed.” --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/theaxemurderdiaries/support
Do you feel like you always get the fuzzy end of the lollipop? Do you wish you had some tools in your belt to help when negotiations in you life come up? One Step Ahead by David Sally may hold the answers you are looking for. A challenge and dense yet illuminating read! David Sally writes of many different stories, research and examples to help show the most effective ways of negotiating. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/recapbookchat/message
Episode Notes Our Patreon Transcript (95-ish percent accurate!) SUMMARY KEYWORDS feels, painting, piece, david, sally, acrylic, paintwork, shapely, blue stripe, lime green, salle, present, image, top, takata, lollipop, front, untitled, meme, encountering David Salle is a postmodernist who's probably closer to a pop artist than anything else. He tweeted a image of a new painting he did called Untitled. it's 2022. And it's flashe, acrylic and pencil on paper, which has been mounted to aluminum. But it also fully feels like David Sally has embraced meme culture. Because the image is of a shapely young woman looking back at a well built young gentleman. She's in this beautiful green dress, he's in a lime green tank top and looks like black jeans. But in between them is something interesting. It is a globule, the only way I can really put it, you can see the letters S E. And this sort of Pac Man like symbol, it kind of looks like you might want you might see on a lollipop, but it is 100% between them. But then again, there's more to the painting. There's this blue stripe of acrylic that goes across the top, and it actually passes in front of between the two of them, it looks like but in front of the man's head, and you see the back of his head. And it's he's got black hair, but there's this sort of like baldy spot, and you can see the blue through it. It's as if he's not really there. But he's there. Cuz she's looking at him. In the same way that we're looking at him. Only she's looking at the front part. The whole idea here seems to be a separation between two people who are looking at each other, but forced to look through a lens of a third thing that is present in the painting that we're not given much of. And it might be that those two are the only two who actually have anything of an idea of what this piece is between them. It doesn't seem to be created by them, it seems to be them encountering it, almost like a fence that they're looking over. It's a fascinating piece and it has this feeling of the classic you know, he's looking at this girl who's walking by and his girlfriend looks exasperated at him for looking at her. Could well be but the whole thing feels as if it is a reference outside of itself, which is David Sally's real leisure domain, but honestly, it just feels as if he is leaning into the present. And the piece, you know the paintwork kind of feels like a Teppei Takata there's just this sense of paint to it. Something I don't usually sort of ascribe to David Salle works Find out more at https://three-minute-modernist.pinecast.co
Join Erik and Tage this week as they are joined by Tim Foster from Celebrations Magazine and David Sally from The Supreme Resort podcast as they discuss what they would change being the head of Disney, their favorite overlooked experience, favorite World Showcase pavilion, and best rides at night. Support the podcast by going to https://www.thehubcrawl.com/support. Question 1: If you were suddenly the head of Disney, what is one thing that you would do with the company, and what is one thing that you would change about the company? (For the do question, it would be something that you want the company to do, whether it be build a new park, make a certain movie, etc. For changing, this would be to have them do something like close an attraction, sell off a piece of the company, etc.) Question 2: What is your favorite “overlooked” attraction or experience? Question 3: Based entirely off theming, (not food or attractions) what is your favorite World Showcase pavilion? Question 4: What attraction is signifcantly more enjoyable for you to ride at night? Bonus (for Patreon supporters only): You're stuck in a hurricane in a Walt Disney World Resort hotel. Which is your ideal place to hunker down and why?
Join us for another hope filled message from LIFE To find out more about LIFE, visit lifeau.org
The difference between an average career change and a successful career change often lies in the negotiation. David Sally is an author and award-winning teacher of negotiations with years of business experience. He shares what really makes someone a great negotiator - and it's not what you think it is. To binge-listen to more career happiness success stories, find all the podcasts at https://happentoyourcareer.com/podcast Want to know high-performers discover their ideal career and find meaningful, well-paid work without starting over https://www.happentoyourcareer.com/career-change-advice-guide-backed-by-research/ Email Scott@happentoyourcareer.com
Link to match highlights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=et53oCo5OZ4 Tottenham Hotspur have historically struggled against most top 6 teams, but with Jose Mourinho at the helm he’s turning them from a bunch of nice guys to… as they humbled Manchester United. On this episode we knee jerk react to the result and look for heads to roll. In the midst of that some tactical analysis breaks out regarding the match and a goal (37’ Son). It was a fun one.Enjoy! PS On the regain statistic it is not super relevant given the date the book was published, but I used it to counter my argument for a bit more balance. Also I was being hyperbolic with regards to the level of competition in the early 2000s. Matchday revenue is about 25% so not as important as sponsorship deals but important.Sources:Chris Anderson and David Sally, ‘The Numbers Game’ (2011) p.170Time stamps:00:00:09 – 00:01:56 – Intro00:01:29 – 00:01:56 – Call to Action00:01:58 – 00:00:00 – Thoughts on the Game00:02:21 – 00:13:31 – Let’s Knee Jerk React To this Result00:13:31 – 00:17:08 – Candid Talk About Money00:17:08 – 00:21:22 – Ole Gunnar Solskjaer, the Nice Guy00:21:22 – 00:29:39 – Transfer Talk and Unrealistic Expectations00:29:41 – 00:35:20 – Manchester United Tactics00:35:22 – 00:44:45 – Tottenham Hotspur Tactics00:44:47 – 00:52:05 – Goal (‘37)00:52:07 – 00:52:35 – Outro Socials: Follow us on Twitter for notifications and updates when a new podcast has gone live.Please subscribe to us on YouTube, give the video a thumbs up…& hit the bell icon to get notifications.Similarly, please give us a like & follow on FacebookIf you want to support us financially please have a look at our Patreon page for continued support and Paypal for one off donations.Finally, we are available on all podcast platforms (e.g. Spotify, iTunes, TuneIn, etc.). Please review us wherever you listen as it goes a long way Podcast Website: http://www.buzzsprout.com/791540Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2tfSSZ0YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9yPApx0K8N5w0JTogrQwCAFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/Over-the-Bar-Pod-107922444086809/?view_public_for=107922444086809Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/overthebarPayPal: www.paypal.me/overthebarTwitter: @OvertheBarPodSupport the show (http://patreon.com/overthebar)
If you’ve ever had a casual poker night with your friends you’ve probably learned that there are two types of players to watch out for; the ones who know what they’re doing and, surprisingly, the ones who have absolutely no clue. After all, you can’t bluff someone who doesn’t know the rules. In any interaction with an opponent it is important that you don’t over complicate your strategy. As our next guest says you need only be one step ahead. David Sally is a Behavioural Game Theorist and Author of One Step Ahead: Mastering the Art and Science of Negotiation.
This week we interview behavioral economist David Sally about his new book One Step Ahead which lays bare the fundamentals of negotiation.
Today's guest is football analytics guru Chris Anderson. Anderson is the co-founder of Anderson Sally, a football intelligence consulting firm, which helps clubs connect the dots between sport, strategy, and performance. When he's not consulting football clubs, he is a political scientist and visiting fellow at the London School of Economics. In 2013, along with David Sally, he wrote the Numbers Game which is one of the most influential books on football analytics. The Times even hailed it as “the book that could change the game forever”. In 2015, he was the managing director at Coventry City but due to circumstances with his time there he could not discuss that in this episode. However, we do talk about: Anderson's rise from goalkeeper to professor to football writer, the real lessons of Moneyball and if football clubs can operate in that way, differences in fan culture between the US & the UK in regards to statistics and Opta's expected goal model. The professor in him is never far from the surface and really shines through when he calls for transparency and peer review in Opta's expected goal model. We look at the micro and the macro of statistical analysis in this far-ranging interview. Relive the data revolution in football through the eyes of one of its pioneers. Timeline: 3:50 His playing career 8:55 The importance of goalkeeper distribution 15:15 Player to academic to author 24:55 How the Numbers Game changed his life 30:05 Why football is behind in the data analytics revolution 34:23 Fan culture and data in the UK 44:57 Data in the mainstream broadcast media 53:16 What do teams ask him? 55:17 The real lessons of Moneyball 1:01:13 The Brentford case-study 1:08:12 His #1 stat
This week on the podcast Marcus and I discuss The Numbers game by Chris Anderson and David Sally. we touch on the value of stats, Long balls vs Quality possession, Luck and Skill in football, Apocryphal story about Andros Townsend, Team sky & Marginal gains. email us at oneupfront4231@gmail.com twitter and facebook @oneupfront4231
We wouldn't dream of leaving you hanging during the holidays, so ETR set about creating four shows to get everyone through the end of 2014. Dec. 22: Referees (PRO's GM Peter Walton and Chris Penso) Dec. 25: Americans Abroad (Alejandro Bedoya, Herediano owner David Patey, Kabul Premier League vet Nicholas Pugliese) Dec. 29: Expansion (Atlanta MLS president Darren Eales, LAFC president and co-owner Tom Penn) Jan. 1: ETR Book Club (The Numbers Game with author David Sally)In this episode, the guys revive the ETR Book Club by reviewing The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Soccer Is Wrong by Chris Anderson and David Sally. Sally joins to talk about the thought process behind the book, the progress in the field since and where advanced statistics in soccer go from here. Meanwhile, Opta analyst Devin Pleuler and the Armchair Analyst Matt Doyle fill in for Simon for a roundtable on the state of stats in soccer. Finally, the guys dip into the mailbag to see what the listeners thought of the book. Tweet or email with your suggestion for our next ETR Book Club! Email us at ExtraTime@MLSsoccer.com or tweet us at @ExtraTimeRadio. And make sure you check out our West Coast brethren at March to the Match every Wednesday!
If all the world's population crowded together, where could we all fit? London? Texas? More or Less figures it out, and separates fact from fiction. And, as the soccer season returns, is it possible to measure the effectiveness of a team's manager? We hear from David Sally, author of The Numbers Game. This programme was first broadcast on the BBC World Service.
Two guys are watching Premier League highlights, when onto the TV screen comes Rory Delap, then with Stoke City, doing one of his renowned throw-ins from the touchline directly into the box. One guy, a native of the American Midwest who’d been raised on baseball, basketball, and hockey, is amazed by the throw and the havoc it creates in front of the opponent’s goal. “Why don’t other teams do that?” he asks. The other guy, who grew up with soccer in Germany, explains that Delap is an unusual player, having been trained as a javelin thrower. “But can’t teams train a guy to make throws like that?” asks the first guy. “It’s not what you do unless you have to,” answers the second guy, who had played semi-pro soccer in his younger days. “Well, why not? It seems to work for them.” The former footballer is stymied for an answer. All he can say is: “Because.” In most cases, a debate like this would have ended here, with the guy with superior sports credentials having the final word. But these guys were Ivy League professors, who do research in behavioral social sciences. Instead of accepting “because” as an explanation for soccer customs, they began to question the behavior of clubs, managers, and even players, and to research the real outcomes of their decisions. In their book The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Soccer Is Wrong (Penguin, 2013), these two guys, Chris Anderson and David Sally, offer the results of their investigations. Using the wealth of data that is now available about what happens on the field, and drawing from current theories in the social sciences, they undermine many of the conventions of on-field strategy and club management. Their book brings together colorful stories and telling statistics in an engaging and insightful dissection of contemporary soccer. You’ll be surprised to learn that much of what you knew about soccer is indeed wrong. And as Chris and Dave admit in the interview, so were they. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Two guys are watching Premier League highlights, when onto the TV screen comes Rory Delap, then with Stoke City, doing one of his renowned throw-ins from the touchline directly into the box. One guy, a native of the American Midwest who’d been raised on baseball, basketball, and hockey, is amazed by the throw and the havoc it creates in front of the opponent’s goal. “Why don’t other teams do that?” he asks. The other guy, who grew up with soccer in Germany, explains that Delap is an unusual player, having been trained as a javelin thrower. “But can’t teams train a guy to make throws like that?” asks the first guy. “It’s not what you do unless you have to,” answers the second guy, who had played semi-pro soccer in his younger days. “Well, why not? It seems to work for them.” The former footballer is stymied for an answer. All he can say is: “Because.” In most cases, a debate like this would have ended here, with the guy with superior sports credentials having the final word. But these guys were Ivy League professors, who do research in behavioral social sciences. Instead of accepting “because” as an explanation for soccer customs, they began to question the behavior of clubs, managers, and even players, and to research the real outcomes of their decisions. In their book The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Soccer Is Wrong (Penguin, 2013), these two guys, Chris Anderson and David Sally, offer the results of their investigations. Using the wealth of data that is now available about what happens on the field, and drawing from current theories in the social sciences, they undermine many of the conventions of on-field strategy and club management. Their book brings together colorful stories and telling statistics in an engaging and insightful dissection of contemporary soccer. You’ll be surprised to learn that much of what you knew about soccer is indeed wrong. And as Chris and Dave admit in the interview, so were they. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Two guys are watching Premier League highlights, when onto the TV screen comes Rory Delap, then with Stoke City, doing one of his renowned throw-ins from the touchline directly into the box. One guy, a native of the American Midwest who’d been raised on baseball, basketball, and hockey, is amazed... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices