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Nick Kyrgios will make a long-awaited return to Grand Slam tennis on Monday – and he says an elusive win will silence his critics for good. Find out more about The Front podcast here. You can read about this story and more on The Australian's website or on The Australian’s app. This episode of The Front is presented and produced by Kristen Amiet, and edited by Josh Burton. Our regular host is Claire Harvey and original music is composed by Jasper Leak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Cracked Racquets Editor-in-Chief Alex Gruskin offers his thoughts on a busy Championship Saturday in the Pro Tennis World. He recaps Finals from Adelaide, Hobart, and Auckland, then previews Day 1 of the 2025 Australian Open. Don't forget to give a 5 star review on your favorite podcast app! In addition, add your twitter/instagram handle to the review for a chance to win some FREE CR gear!! Episode Bookmarks: WTA Adelaide - 3:41 ATP Adelaide - 11:17 WTA Hobart - 19:47 ATP Auckland - 24:52 #AusOpen Day 1 Preview - 28:32 Tennis Channel Podcast Network Visit https://www.tennis.com/pro-game/podcasts/ to stay current on the latest tennis news and trends and enjoy in-depth analysis and dynamic debates. Find Cracked Racquets Website: https://www.crackedracquets.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/crackedracquets Twitter: https://twitter.com/crackedracquets Facebook: https://Facebook.com/crackedracquets YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/crackedracquets Email Newsletter: https://crackedracquets.substack.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A rain-soaked and miserable day session turned into an electric and thrilling night session at Roland Garros, meaning that Catherine, David and Matt were buzzing when recording the pod in the media centre at 1am. There's chat about Holger Rune surviving a fifth set tiebreak against Flavio Cobolli, aggro involving Denis Shapovalov and Frances Tiafoe, a Djokovician performance from Novak Djokovic, shock defeats for Danielle Collins and Jelena Ostapenko, a press conference no show from Elena Rybakina, a stirring comeback from Bianca Andreescu, and the tournament's decision to ban alcohol from the stands. OUR LINKS:Join The Barge!Become a Friend of the Tennis Podcast to also help us to produce the show year-round, receive exclusive access to bonus podcasts throughout 2024, including Tennis Re-Lived and Grand Slam review shows, read Hannah's Column and watch monthly live shows on YouTube. Hannah's latest column about Rafael Nadal at Roland Garros is available for Friends - https://bit.ly/HannahOnRafaSign up to receive our Newsletter (daily at Slams and weekly the rest of the year, featuring Matt's Stat, mascot photos, predictions, and more)Follow us on TwitterFollow us on Instagram (@thetennispodcast)Subscribe to our YouTube channel.Check out our ShopRead our New York Times profile Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Podcast Overview: Paul & Will discuss the accessibility of music and creative learning through technology, the challenges of building a successful career in the music industry, the importance of creating unique and inspiring music, and the impact of technology and AI onthe future of music. Paul shares insights into his own career, including the significance of his track 'For An Angel' and his approach to live performances. They discuss the blurred lines between techno and trance and Paul emphasizes the importance of focusing on the music itself rather than labels or trends. They touch on the challenges of running a record label and the changing landscape of the music industry with the rise of digital platforms. Paul shares his thoughts on social media, the future of music, and the importance of connecting with the audience. Who Is Paul Van Dyk: PvD is credited as one of the hardest working artists in electronic music, with sold-out tours that cross each continent, headline spots at every major festival, and a hugely successful recording career. With over 3 million albums sold worldwide, van Dyk travels around the world over 16 times each year to sold out performances internationally. On New Years Eve 2008/2009 Paul played Barra Beach to over 1 million people in Rio de Janero giving testament to his incredible popularity the world over. In 2008 Paul expanded into creating music for video games and movie soundtracks. His work with EA Games has resulted in mulitple releases featuring his music on Mirror's Edge and Grand Slam Tennis out in 2009. Paul has also lent his talents to remixing Batman's "Dark Knight Theme" written by Hanz Zimmer. But Paul is no stranger to high profile remixes, he has put his unique twist on Depeche Mode´s "Martyr", Justin Timberlake´s "What Goes Around" and Britney Spears "Gimme More" just to name a few. His original album In Between released in 2007 and featured collaborations with David Byrne and Jessica Sutta of the Pussycat Dolls as well as Rea Garvey of Reamon and Johnny McDaid of Vega 4.PvD received a Grammy nomination in 2005 for Best Dance/Electronic Album for his original album Reflections - this marked the first time NARAS recognized this category. His original productions from Reflections have been synced into major motion pictures such as Into the Blue, Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, television´s Entertainment Tonight and MTV´s Cribs, and international ad campaigns for Motorola, HBO, Land Rover, Ski Vail and most recently for Jeep. Paul van Dyk´s touring diary remains incredibly hectic with regular globetrotting stops at major venues across the globe from New York, London, Ibiza to India, China and Singapore. In the little time remaining between all the travel, Paul van Dyk resides in Berlin where he has his own radio show "Paul van Dyk´s VONYC Sessions" which airs weekly.Join for updates: https://laylo.com/willclarke⏲ Follow Will Clarke ⏱https://djwillclarke.com/https://open.spotify.com/artist/1OmOdgwIzub8DYPxQYbbbi?si=hEx8GCJAR3mhhhWd_iSuewhttps://www.instagram.com/djwillclarkehttps://www.facebook.com/willclarkedjhttps://twitter.com/djwillclarkehttps://www.tiktok.com/@djwillclarke Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Possibly the greatest DAY 5 of Grand Slam Tennis of all-time. Wally Masur and Chris Stubbs breakdown record breaking results, late night finishes, top seeds tumbling, and five set thrillers. Wow.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Roland-Garos 2023. Every Match. Ad-free. Four Courts in 4k UHD. Live & on Demand. The Home of Grand Slam Tennis, Stan Sport. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We are Back!! Yes, we really are, with our new Partner........Golden Age Of Tennis. For the returm, Keith is at Roland Garros chatting with fans, and trying to decide, who are the best fans in Grand Slam Tennis!! Yes, that old chestnut, but where better than to speak to the patriotic French on who knows tennis the tops!! Is it the fans at Wimbledon, US Open, Australian Open or at the world's Premier clay court tournament? A fun slant on the second Grand Slam in the Tennis Calendar. Sub
Es ist wieder so weit! Grand-Slam-Tennis in Paris, doch dieses Jahr ohne den Sandplatzkönig aus Spanien. Die Sandplatzgötter haben trotzdem Zeit freigeschaufelt und so diskutiert Christian Schwell mit Henrike und Tobi über die Fragen und Storys der kommenden zwei Wochen. Favoriten, Überraschungen und besondere Matches. Allez!
Es ist wieder so weit! Grand-Slam-Tennis in Paris, doch dieses Jahr ohne den Sandplatzkönig aus Spanien. Die Sandplatzgötter haben trotzdem Zeit freigeschaufelt und so diskutiert Christian Schwell mit Henrike und Tobi über die Fragen und Storys der kommenden zwei Wochen. Favoriten, Überraschungen und besondere Matches. Allez! Du möchtest deinen Podcast auch kostenlos hosten und damit Geld verdienen? Dann schaue auf www.kostenlos-hosten.de und informiere dich. Dort erhältst du alle Informationen zu unseren kostenlosen Podcast-Hosting-Angeboten. kostenlos-hosten.de ist ein Produkt der Podcastbude.Gern unterstützen wir dich bei deiner Podcast-Produktion.
It might not always seem so, but he really wants you to get the answers right. Maybe not all of them. But when you go to "Quiz Night" at Townline BBQ, or Trivia Brunch at Peconic Bay Brewery, Paul Johnson is trying NOT to stump you. It's actually not fun for him unless you get at least SOME of the answers. So you might not know who holds the record for most Grand Slam Tennis wins, but you might if the answer is either Serena or Venus. You see, a lot more goes into putting together a successful trivia night than just coming up with hard questions. And putting together a successful trivia night every week for almost ten years? Well, that takes more than just Google. Join me this week as the East End's trivia impresario tells his tricks of the trade, and what makes trivia night so damn much fun. Of course he dishes on some other subjects too, but by now I hope you've come to expect that..
Can you predict your recovery leveraging wearable & training data? Jeff Rothschild, Registered Dietitian to pro athletes, Grand Slam Tennis champions, and National and Olympic teams, opens up about his learnings from over 4000 days of tracking individuals' perception of well-being, diet, sleep, HRV, and training. Follow Jeff on Twitter or Instagram Check out Jeff's website Sign up for Erik's weekly newsletter - Adaptation Join the AIM7 Beta Community Quotable moments: 14:50 “The biggest roles in predicting recovery is how well you feel today, and way more than how much training you've done yesterday or this whole week, or how many carbohydrates you've had yesterday or this whole week.” ABOUT THE BLUEPRINT PODCAST: The BluePrint Podcast is for busy professionals and Household CEOs who care deeply about their families, career, and health. Host Dr. Erik Korem distills cutting edge-science, leadership, and life skills into simple tactics optimized for your busy lifestyle and goals. Dr. Korem interviews scientists, coaches, elite athletes, entrepreneurs, entertainers, and exceptional people to discuss science and practical skills you can implement to become the most healthy, resilient, and impactful version of yourself. On a mission to equip people to pursue audacious goals, thrive in uncertainty, and live a healthy and fulfilled life, Dr. Erik Korem is a High Performance pioneer. He introduced sports science and athlete tracking technologies to collegiate and professional (NFL) football over a decade ago. He has worked with the National Football League, Power-5 NCAA programs, gold-medal Olympians, Nike, and the United States Department of Defense. Erik is an expert in sleep and stress resilience. He is the Founder and CEO of AIM7, a health and fitness app that unlocks the power of wearables by providing you with daily personalized recommendations to enhance your mind, body, and recovery. SUPPORT & CONNECT Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/erikkorem/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/ErikKorem LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/erikkorem/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/erikkorem Website - https://www.erikkorem.com/ Newsletter - https://erikkoremhpcoach.activehosted.com/f/1 ______________________________________________________________ QUOTES “The key is using stress and adapting to it and improving. That's what high performance is to me, the ability to adapt rapidly so you can achieve your potential. There are five key pillars to creating the conditions for adaptability: sleep, exercise, mental resilience, nutrition, and community/relationships.” - Dr. Erik Korem "Stress is your brain and body preparing you to do something effortful." Dr. Alex Auerbach “I maybe have a different concept on leadership. To me, leading is a verb. If you're leading, you're a leader. If you're swimming, you're a swimmer, if you're driving, you're a driver. If you're leading, you're by definition, a leader. I define leading as being looked to in a particular moment to decide or perform an action based on your unique gifts and abilities. So by that definition, everybody is a leader. All rank and role really describe is how many people are hoping you get it right when it's your turn to wear the weight.” - Clint Bruce "Attention is the currency of performance." - Dr. Peter Haberl “That's what I've discovered in the lives of brilliant, prolific, healthy creatives, is that they have networks of people they leverage in the course of their work. That they learn from, that they were challenged by, that they gave great insight and purview into their own life and work, in such a way that they were able to receive feedback that helped them get better at what they do.” - Todd Henry "Restful and fulfilling sleep enables you to grow, adapt, and thrive. It creates the conditions for adaptation, so you can pursue audacious goals and thrive in uncertainty." - Dr. Erik Korem "Most exercise programs fail, not because the reps and sets are poorly designed, but because the program doesn't adjust for how much stress your body can adapt to that day! That's why Dr. Chris Morris' research and practical application of fluid periodization is the key for unlocking your performance potential." - Dr. Erik KoremSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Is fasted training beneficial for performance? Jeff Rothschild, Registered Dietitian to pro athletes, Grand Slam Tennis champions, and National and Olympic teams, discusses the metabolic health benefits of fasted training. Follow Jeff on Twitter or Instagram Sign up for Erik's weekly newsletter - Adaptation Join the AIM7 Beta Community Quotable moments: 10:17 “The thing that's really determining our exercise capacity during is that one hour isn't different in the fed and fasted state.” 6:34 “If you see some greater mitochondrial adaptations from fasted training, I think it's the most plausible reason why that would be is through fatty acid signaling.” ABOUT THE BLUEPRINT PODCAST: The BluePrint Podcast is for busy professionals and Household CEOs who care deeply about their families, career, and health. Host Dr. Erik Korem distills cutting edge-science, leadership, and life skills into simple tactics optimized for your busy lifestyle and goals. Dr. Korem interviews scientists, coaches, elite athletes, entrepreneurs, entertainers, and exceptional people to discuss science and practical skills you can implement to become the most healthy, resilient, and impactful version of yourself. On a mission to equip people to pursue audacious goals, thrive in uncertainty, and live a healthy and fulfilled life, Dr. Erik Korem is a High Performance pioneer. He introduced sports science and athlete tracking technologies to collegiate and professional (NFL) football over a decade ago. He has worked with the National Football League, Power-5 NCAA programs, gold-medal Olympians, Nike, and the United States Department of Defense. Erik is an expert in sleep and stress resilience. He is the Founder and CEO of AIM7, a health and fitness app that unlocks the power of wearables by providing you with daily personalized recommendations to enhance your mind, body, and recovery. SUPPORT & CONNECT Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/erikkorem/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/ErikKorem LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/erik-korem-phd-19991734/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/erikkorem Website - https://www.erikkorem.com/ Newsletter - https://erikkoremhpcoach.activehosted.com/f/ QUOTES “The key is using stress and adapting to it and improving. That's what high performance is to me, the ability to adapt rapidly so you can achieve your potential. There are five key pillars to creating the conditions for adaptability: sleep, exercise, mental resilience, nutrition, and community/relationships.” - Dr. Erik Korem "Stress is your brain and body preparing you to do something effortful." Dr. Alex Auerbach “I maybe have a different concept on leadership. To me, leading is a verb. If you're leading, you're a leader. If you're swimming, you're a swimmer, if you're driving, you're a driver. If you're leading, you're by definition, a leader. I define leading as being looked to in a particular moment to decide or perform an action based on your unique gifts and abilities. So by that definition, everybody is a leader. All rank and role really describe is how many people are hoping you get it right when it's your turn to wear the weight.” - Clint Bruce "Attention is the currency of performance." - Dr. Peter Haberl “That's what I've discovered in the lives of brilliant, prolific, healthy creatives, is that they have networks of people they leverage in the course of their work. That they learn from, that they were challenged by, that they gave great insight and purview into their own life and work, in such a way that they were able to receive feedback that helped them get better at what they do.” - Todd Henry "Restful and fulfilling sleep enables you to grow, adapt, and thrive. It creates the conditions for adaptation, so you can pursue audacious goals and thrive in uncertainty." - Dr. Erik Korem "Most exercise programs fail, not because the reps and sets are poorly designed, but because the program doesn't adjust for how much stress your body can adapt to that day! That's why Dr. Chris Morris' research and practical application of fluid periodization is the key for unlocking your performance potential." - Dr. Erik KoremSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nick Kyrgios ist so etwas wie der Bad Boy des Tennis und doch ist er einer der besten Spieler der Welt. Doch seine emotionalen Eskalationen kosten ihn immer wieder den großen Erfolg, so wie im Wimbledon-Finale gegen Novak Djokovic. In dieser Folge teile ich mit einige wertvolle Strategien, um mehr emotionale Stabilität in wichtigen Wettkämpfen zu erhalten und bestmöglich mit deinen Emotionen umzugehen.
At the age of 36, Rafael Nadal is still making history. He won his 14th French Open championship Sunday and secured his 22nd Grand Slam title after defeating Casper Rudd. Nadal now has the most Grand Slam titles of any male player and he is the oldest man to win a French Open. Gerald Marzorati, who covers tennis for The New Yorker and is the author of "Seeing Serena,"joins Amna Nawaz to discuss. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
At the age of 36, Rafael Nadal is still making history. He won his 14th French Open championship Sunday and secured his 22nd Grand Slam title after defeating Casper Rudd. Nadal now has the most Grand Slam titles of any male player and he is the oldest man to win a French Open. Gerald Marzorati, who covers tennis for The New Yorker and is the author of "Seeing Serena,"joins Amna Nawaz to discuss. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
The latest updates on AO results and the comment of Russian sports journalist Nikolai Saprin. This content is available in Russian only. - Знакомим вас с последними результатами турнира, а также мы попросили российского спортивного журналиста и комментатора Николая Саприна поделиться впечатлениями о чемпионате.
The 2021 Grand Slam Tennis season is now finished. What have we learned? Join the X Millennial Man as they welcome Tina in to talk all things tennis. Download the podcast for free.
Joining Matty TODAY: Jonathan Thurston on next QLD Maroons Coach & NRL Finals Plenty of listener reaction to Wests Tigers & QLD Maroons Coach QLD Central Region Manager Rob Crow on NRL Finals Fox League Commentator Braith Anasta US Open update with Brett PhillipsTop Tips with SEN Track analyst Chris Nelson
SEN Tennis expert Brett Phillips joined the show for the latest update from the US Open.
SEN Tennis expert Brett Phillips joined the show for the latest update from Flushing Meadows including Novak Djokovic's thrilling match with Jensen Brooskby.
Joining Matty TODAY: Monday Means Test with Greg Alexander Parramatta Eels Head Coach Brad Arthur US Open Preview with Brett Phillips Matty's Motorsports Wrap Football Wrap with Simon Hill Bet Deluxe Update with Paul Sebastiani Paralympics Wrap
Professional Mentor & Ash Barty's Performance Coach, Ben Crowe joined the show after Ash's historic win at Wimbledon over the weekend.
Matty White is back in studio and what a weekend it has been in Sport. From the NRL relocation to Ash Barty's Wimbledon moment, Matty recaps all the action and more!
SEN Host of 'The First Serve', Brett joined the show for all the latest action from Wimbledon.
SEN Host of 'The First Serve', Brett joined the show for all the latest action from Wimbledon.
Paul Sebastiani from Bet Deluxe joined the show for the latest odds update on the Euro semi-finals, NBA Finals & Wimbledon Markets.
Adam Peacock back in the hosting chair today as we recap a busy news day in the NRL world. Joining us TODAY: RLPA CEO Clint Newton NRL Press Box with Matt Logue & Nick Campton Olympic Triathlete Emma Jeffcoat AFL Wrap with Darren Parkin Hockeyroo Mariah Williams Wimbledon Update with Brett Phillips
AAP'S Darren Walton joined the show for the latest Wimbledon including Ash Bart's path to a Final birth, Nick Kyrgios injury and can Roger Federer win once more?
SEN Tennis Commentator Brett Phillips joined the show for the latest update after Day 3 of Wimbledon.
SEN Host & Tennis Expert Brett Phillips joined the show to provide an update after another eventful day at Roland Garros including: Novak Djokovic's & Rafael Nadal win The continued rise of Coco Gauff Fallout from Victoria Azarenka's sexism comments
Host of 'The First Serve', Tennis commentator Brett Phillips joined the show to recap all the action from another day at the French Open.
The Australian Open is a tennis tournament held annually over the last fortnight of January at Melbourne Park in Melbourne, Australia. The tournament is the first of the four Grand Slam tennis events held each year, preceding the French Open, Wimbledon, and the US Open. Tennis coach Indran Ratnam and a young tennis player Sinduja Sureshkumar are sharing information about Australian Open and Tennis with Praba Maheswaran. - Australian Open Tennis போட்டிகள் ஜனவரி 10ம் திகதிமுதல் Melbourne Park இல் நடைபெற்றுவருகின்றன. Australian Open மற்றும் டென்னிஸ் விளையாட்டு பற்றிய பல விவரங்களை எமக்களிக்கின்றனர் டென்னிஸ் பயிற்சியாளர் இந்திரன் ரட்ணம், மற்றும் டென்னிஸ் வீராங்கனை சிந்துஜா சுரேஷ்குமார் ஆகியோர். நிகழ்ச்சியாக்கம் மகேஸ்வரன் பிரபாகரன்.
Jagged with Jasravee : Cutting-Edge Marketing Conversations with Thought Leaders
Navin Rammohan is Vice President, Segment Head Marketing at Infosys. The conversation starts off with 5 Key Tech Trends enumerated by thought leader Navin Rammohan 1. Consumerisation of User Experience 2. Adoption of Cloud 3. Cyber Security 4. Open Source technology 5. Modernization of Core Applications Jagged with Jasravee is facilitated by Jasravee Kaur Chandra, Director- Brand Building, Research & Innovation at Master Sun, Consulting Brand of Adiva L Pvt. Ltd. Jasravee has over 20 years experience as a Strategic Brand Builder,Communications Leader and Entrepreneur. Subscribe to Jagged with Jasravee on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUo6M-uODgb7gIEO014XIGg?sub_confirmation=1 Follow Jagged with Jasravee on Social Media Youtube Page : https://www.youtube.com/JaggedWithJasravee Facebook Page : https://www.facebook.com/jaggedwithjasravee Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/jagggedwithjasravee/ Podcast Page : https://anchor.fm/jagged-with-jasravee Jagged with Jasravee, is an initiative of Master Sun, the Consulting Brand of Adiva Lifestyle Pvt Ltd. Please visit our blog at www.mastersun.in The conversation dwells on Infosys approach to B2B Marketing and the role of digital marketing. In the last decade or so the company realised that Infosys does not have high brand recall when compared to Top Global IT service providers. Besides instead of merely talking to CIOs, it became important that Infosys talked to all the CXOs, since a large part of IT related spends were made by CMO, CSO etc. Navin also explains how Account Based Marketing has become the new buzzword in B2B marketing. He outlines how Infosys is looking at its ABM approach. . He believes that this is a much more effective approach, wherein the marketeers look at an important account as one market. He stresses on the need of sales and marketing to get aligned in order for ABM to be truly effective. Navin outlines some of the characteristics of a good ABM approach. He explains that this requires for great deal of customization and how even Infosys website is customised to different accounts and displays what will be relevant to them. Navin then dwells on using events and sponsorships to drive brand awareness and recall. He outlines the unique and innovative ways in which Infosys has developed a 'true partnership' with Grand Slam Tennis. He explains how Infosys chose tennis over other games, since it was popular in its relevant markets and had tournaments running all year round. Infosys also believed could that technology could actually impact the experience of consuming tennis. Unlike regular sponsorships Infosys doesn't just slap our logo on the tennis tournaments.Infosys has used is as an experiential marketing exercise, wherein they use the work they have done with tennis consumption and analytics as a way to showcase what is possible with data analytics and AI. Clients can see that the Infosys partnerships have truly changed the way Tennis is consumed.
Jagged with Jasravee : Cutting-Edge Marketing Conversations with Thought Leaders
Navin Rammohan is Vice President, Segment Head Marketing at Infosys, London, UK. He talks about his award winning approach to account based marketing and how Infosys has changed the way tennis is consumed. Jagged with Jasravee is facilitated by Jasravee Kaur Chandra, Director- Brand Building, Research & Innovation at Master Sun, Consulting Brand of Adiva L Pvt. Ltd. Jasravee has over 20+ years experience as a Strategic Brand Builder,Communications Leader and Entrepreneur. Subscribe to Jagged with Jasravee on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUo6M-uODgb7gIEO014XIGg?sub_confirmation=1 Navin Rammohan recounts how In the last decade or so the technology spends were increasingly made by other CXOs. In this segment the company realised that Infosys does not have high brand recall when compared to Top Global IT service providers. Besides instead of merely talking to CIOs, it became imperative that Infosys talked to all the CXOs, since a large part of IT related spends were made by CMO, CSO etc. Navin also explains how it became critical therefore for Infosys to adopt Account Based Marketing . He believes that this is a much more effective approach, wherein the marketeers look at an important account as one market. And since a lot of business was repeat business, it was important to market to other CXOs, within the existing roster of clients. He stresses on the need of sales and marketing to get aligned in order for ABM to be truly effective. He recommends that sales and marketing teams co-locate and develop a cohesive strategy for every account. He explains that ABM requires a great deal of customisation and how even Infosys website is customised to different accounts and displays what will be relevant to them. Navin stresses on the fact that ABM requires building trust and strong relationships with clients . Navin then dwells on using events and sponsorships to drive brand awareness and recall. He outlines the unique and innovative ways in which Infosys has developed a 'true partnership' with Grand Slam Tennis. He explains how Infosys chose tennis over other games, since it was popular in its relevant markets and had tournaments running all year round. Infosys also believed could that technology could actually impact the experience of consuming tennis. Unlike regular sponsorships Infosys doesn't just slap our logo on the tennis tournaments.Infosys has used is as an experiential marketing exercise, wherein they use the work they have done with tennis consumption and analytics as a way to showcase what is possible with data analytics and AI. Clients can see that the Infosys partnerships have truly changed the way Tennis is consumed. Infosys Tennis Platform, or ITP, is a suite of digital technology tools contextualised to multiple aspects of analysing and experiencing tennis.Infosys has used various innovations like virtual reality headgear, wherein a person can visit different parts of the stadium. The tennis partnership & ITP has certainly helped in opening C-level doors and nurturing existing relationships at marquee companies for Infosys. Follow Jagged with Jasravee on Social Media Youtube Page : https://www.youtube.com/JaggedWithJasravee Facebook Page : https://www.facebook.com/jaggedwithjasravee Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/jagggedwithjasravee/ Podcast Page : https://anchor.fm/jagged-with-jasravee Jagged with Jasravee, is an initiative of Master Sun, the Consulting Brand of Adiva Lifestyle Pvt Ltd. Please visit our blog at www.mastersun.in
Große Aufregung bei der Tour de France und in der #mspWG. Warum enden die Etappen denn jetzt bitte nicht mehr um 17:20 Uhr fragt sich Tobi und das ist nicht das einzige Problem an der ganzen Geschichte. Viele Stürze, schlechtes Wetter, immer wieder Nizza, aber die Ergebnisse stimmen. Die #mspWG bleibt weiterhin in der richtigen Laune für eine Fahrradtour und so kann man durchaus sagen, dass die Tour in der Mitte der #mspWG angekommen ist. Gute Laune gab es wohl auch im Trainingslager von Hannover 96 man musste sie nur suchen. Nach Hause ging es ein wenig eher als geplant und jetzt wird aus der schlechten Laune des Trainers bereits ein Abwanderungsgedanken gebastelt. Es könnte alles so gut sein. Wirklich gut wird es jetzt nur in New York. Endlich wieder Grand Slam Tennis und dazu gibt es auch direkt zwei neue Podcasts von Chip und Chargae auf meinsportpodcast.de Die meinsportpodcast.de Familie hat sich vergrößert. Unter meinmusikpodcast.de findet Ihr ab sofort Podcast rund um das Thema Musik und wer möchte, kann auch selbst aktiv werden. Bleibt gesund und passt auf Euch auf! Der große #mspWG Marathon wird stattfinden, wir wissen nur noch nicht wann....
Große Aufregung bei der Tour de France und in der #mspWG. Warum enden die Etappen denn jetzt bitte nicht mehr um 17:20 Uhr fragt sich Tobi und das ist nicht das einzige Problem an der ganzen Geschichte. Viele Stürze, schlechtes Wetter, immer wieder Nizza, aber die Ergebnisse stimmen. Die #mspWG bleibt weiterhin in der richtigen Laune für eine Fahrradtour und so kann man durchaus sagen, dass die Tour in der Mitte der #mspWG angekommen ist. Gute Laune gab es wohl auch im Trainingslager von Hannover 96 man musste sie nur suchen. Nach Hause ging es ein wenig eher als geplant und jetzt wird aus der schlechten Laune des Trainers bereits ein Abwanderungsgedanken gebastelt. Es könnte alles so gut sein. Wirklich gut wird es jetzt nur in New York. Endlich wieder Grand Slam Tennis und dazu gibt es auch direkt zwei neue Podcasts von Chip und Chargae auf meinsportpodcast.de Die meinsportpodcast.de Familie hat sich vergrößert. Unter meinmusikpodcast.de findet Ihr ab sofort Podcast rund um das Thema Musik und wer möchte, kann auch selbst aktiv werden. Bleibt gesund und passt auf Euch auf! Der große #mspWG Marathon wird stattfinden, wir wissen nur noch nicht wann....
Große Aufregung bei der Tour de France und in der #mspWG. Warum enden die Etappen denn jetzt bitte nicht mehr um 17:20 Uhr fragt sich Tobi und das ist nicht das einzige Problem an der ganzen Geschichte. Viele Stürze, schlechtes Wetter, immer wieder Nizza, aber die Ergebnisse stimmen. Die #mspWG bleibt weiterhin in der richtigen Laune für eine Fahrradtour und so kann man durchaus sagen, dass die Tour in der Mitte der #mspWG angekommen ist. Gute Laune gab es wohl auch im Trainingslager von Hannover 96 man musste sie nur suchen. Nach Hause ging es ein wenig eher als geplant und jetzt wird aus der schlechten Laune des Trainers bereits ein Abwanderungsgedanken gebastelt. Es könnte alles so gut sein. Wirklich gut wird es jetzt nur in New York. Endlich wieder Grand Slam Tennis und dazu gibt es auch direkt zwei neue Podcasts von Chip und Chargae auf meinsportpodcast.de Die meinsportpodcast.de Familie hat sich vergrößert. Unter meinmusikpodcast.de findet Ihr ab sofort Podcast rund um das Thema Musik und wer möchte, kann auch selbst aktiv werden. Bleibt gesund und passt auf Euch auf! Der große #mspWG Marathon wird stattfinden, wir wissen nur noch nicht wann....
The Grand Slam Tennis podcast is back for a second series. From players and coaches, to authors and filmmakers, we've spoken to some unique people from across the tennis world about their stories, passions and histories. Here's a taste of what's to come. Music by Drive Me Home See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, Allistair gets to chat with 2x Singles Grand Slam Tennis Champion, Mary Pierce. In this conversation, Allistair asks Mary about her background growing up, her years training at the famous Nick Bolleteirri Academy in Florida, what she misses most from her playing days, dealing with pressure, who her toughest opponents were, and so much more.
Bret McCormick speaks with Kyle Ross from Grand Slam Tennis Tours. This week, Ross is overseeing the launch of a 120-match tennis exhibition series spread across the U.S., from his mother-in law’s house in Rhode Island. The pair discusses the conception of the series, including the inherent logistical challenges of running a tennis competition during a global pandemic, as well as Grand Slam Tennis Tours’ challenging business experience of the past few months.
The Cutting Edge Japan Business Show By Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo, Japan
Anyone presenting in public eye is going to experience fear. I am a veteran, having done over 500 public speeches and usually I am relaxed about speaking in front of an audience. But put me in front of an audience of Dale Carnegie High Impact Presentations instructors at a Dale Carnegie international convention, a room positively bristling with presentations expertise and I can tell you I get nervous. Getting nervous is natural. The interesting thing is what we do with the power inside us, that the nervousness releases. Welcome back to this weekly edition every Tuesday of "THE Cutting Edge Japan Business Show" I am your host Dr. Greg Story, President of Dale Carnegie Training Japan and best selling author of Japan Sales Mastery. We are bringing the show to you from our High Performance Center in Akasaka in Minato-ku, the business center of Tokyo. Why the Cutting Edge? In this show, we are looking at the critical areas for success in business in Japan. We want to help advance everyone's thinking so that we be at the forefront, the Cutting Edge, of how to flourish here in this market. Before we get into this week's topic, here is what caught my attention lately. Japanese banks are interested in reducing the number of ATMs they have. The costs of operating the ATMs is no longer worth what they generate in fees. The four largest banks in Japan have reduced their ATMs by 10% over the last 15 years. This is part of a shrinkage in bank's costs. Mizuho Financial Group is plans to eliminate 19,000 employees and 100 branches by 2026. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Japan's biggest bank in terms of deposits will cut 9,500 jobs by 2023. The banks want their customers to switch over to on-line banking. This is episode number #36and we are talking about No More Nerves Public Speaking Soredewa ikimasho, so let's get going. Unexpectedly, multiple Grand Slam Tennis tournament winner Novak Djokovic has some good advice for public speakers. “I believe that half of any victory in a tennis match is in place before you step on the court. If you don't have that self-belief, then fear takes over. And then it will get too much for you to handle. It's a fine line. The energy of those moments is so high: how are you going to use it? Are you going to let I consume you, or are you going to accept it presence and say, ‘OK, let's work together'. ” What he is saying is we don't worry about having fear or not having it, we look for how to control it. When we feel fear, our psychological fight or flight response provides energy to our major muscle groups in the chest, arms and legs. This is great energy to tap, in order to bring our belief and our passion to our messages. Speakers who look tired, bored or uninterested, are not going to be persuading anyone of anything, ever. So we should accept that fear is part of the process of public speaking. I read that Frank Sinatra felt fear every time before he performed, he always worried that the first note would not be there. Once he got going however, he could relax and enjoy the process. That applies to us as well – we have to get that first couple of minutes settled down and then we can relax and enjoy the opportunity to help the audience through providing our message or our valuable information. Fine, but just how do we do that? Tap into your energy and work with it, rather than try and fight it. Here are some do's and don'ts. Don't put unbelievable pressure on yourself by trying to memorise your talk. Do have some key points you can elaborate on though and have them in a logical sequence, that will be easy for an audience to follow. Find out more when we come back from the break Welcome backDon't spend all of your preparation time putting together the slide deck. Do allocate time for rehearsal. The amount of time spent before our speech is the key to success. Incredibly, most people spend no time rehearsing and wonder why presenting is stressful. Ideally, watch yourself on video if possible, if not then use a mirror and record the audio on your phone, so you can review how you sound. Rehearse as you will give it, looking at all parts of the room, gesturing, using voice modulation, inserting pauses etc., while talking to your imaginary listeners. Don't look down at your notes or laptop screen for too long though. Do look at the people in your audience and make eye contact with individuals, one by one, so you can speak directly to as many people as possible. Don't do that though with audience members who are scowling, doubtful, unhappy, angry, negative, cynical or sneering. Do ignore them completely and look for the audience members who are nodding, smiling, agreeing and look either supportive or at least neutral. This will help to maintain your confidence and equilibrium. Don't be thrown by anything unexpected - the show must go on. So unless it is an emergency and we have to leave the building, keep going no matter what. This is not always easy. I was giving a speech in Nagoya arranged by the local Japanese Chamber of Commerce. I was speaking in Japanese, had barely gotten into my first sentence when a senior official of one of the central Japanese Ministries, sitting in the front row to my left, suddenly erupted into loud laughter upon hearing my Japanese. Being a non-native speaker of Japanese and always a bit shy about my Japanese ability, you can imagine how debilitating that very public outburst was for me. I looked at the guy incredulously, but kept going for the next 40 minutes. In my mind I had to put all of my self doubts aside. I purposely only made eye contact with audience members who looked like they were supportive. Many were visibly impressed that I was trying to speak their language and they really helped me to keep going. Face our fears and remember only we know we have fear – let's keep it a secret just between us. THE Cutting Edge Japan Business Show is here to help you succeed in Japan. Subscribe on YouTube, share it with your family, friends and colleagues, become a regular. Thank you for watching this episode and remember to hit the subscribe button. Our website details are on screen now, dalecarnegie.com, it is awesome value, so check it out. In episode 37 we are talking about The Death Valley In Sales. Find out more about that next week. So Yoroshiku Onegai Itashimasu please join me for the next episode of the Cutting Edge Japan Business Show We are here to help you and we have only one direction in mind for you and your business and that is UP!!!
The Do One Better! Podcast – Philanthropy, Sustainability and Social Entrepreneurship
Club Director at Wimbledon's All England Lawn Tennis Club, Martin Guntrip, joins Alberto Lidji to talk about the Wimbledon Foundation and the inner workings of the world's most prestigious Grand Slam tennis tournament. The Wimbledon Foundation was founded in 2013, and the All England Lawn Tennis Club has been involved in charitable work for many years prior. One could say the Foundation was a way of formalising a philanthropic undercurrent that has been an important part of the Club’s ethos for many years. Wimbledon wholeheartedly embraces gender equality and every aspect of the tournament is equal irrespective of gender. Interestingly, over 50% of those coming through the gates to watch the Championships in person are women. About 40,000 visitors per day come in to watch the Championships during the two weeks. Martin speaks candidly about the inner workings of the world’s most prestigious Grand Slam tennis tournament – we hear how tennis stars’ entourages are getting larger, how ice baths are now a default feature and how the strict dress code is a key differentiator that’s unlikely to change any time soon. There’s a constant drive to improve the Club and the Championships. We hear of the ‘Grand Slam Committee’, where representatives of all four Grand Slams engage with each other to exchange notes and improve how things are done. Indeed, Martin attends most Grand Slam tournaments every year. Martin has been in the world of tennis for most of his life; having played in the Championships during the early 1980s. His passion for the sport, and for the Wimbledon Foundation’s philanthropic work, comes through loud and clear. The Wimbledon Foundation is active locally, nationally and internationally. They have established fruitful partnerships with the likes of WaterAid and Magic Bus. Most of the funding comes from the Club, the Championships and from members. Locally, through their ‘Wimbledon Junior Tennis Initiative’, they introduce approximately 14,000 children to the world of tennis annually – they work closely with primary schools in the boroughs of Wandsworth and Merton and make a point to support local causes – over 50% of their giving is local. Sustainability has also become a key consideration. Last year, the Championships removed all plastic straws and this year their partner, Evian, is launching a 100% recycled water bottle. Martin notes that the All England Lawn Tennis Club has 500 members and he jokes that the easy way to become a member of the All England Lawn Tennis Club is simply to win Wimbledon. Interestingly, many people don’t know that the All England Lawn Tennis Club is active throughout the year, as are most regular tennis clubs – not just during the two weeks of the Championships – and players like Andy Murray can be seen practising there throughout the year. Martin notes that sometimes it can be a bit embarrassing playing tennis when you have Andy Murray hitting balls in an adjacent court! The 'Key Takeaway' he shares with listeners: find out what’s unique about you or your organisation and find a way to give whatever is special about you to others. People are very appreciative when you do. -- For full episode notes, guest bios and useful links, visit Lidji.org Please subscribe to this podcast if you enjoy it. Thank you!
Madden 2019, NBA 2K19, Just Cause 4, and Grand Slam Tennis 2 experience. Review of movies like First Man and Bohemian Rhapsody.
Gigi Fernandez is a 17x Grand Slam champion in doubles tennis. She won 14 of those titles with Natasha Zvereva and the other three were with Robin White, Martina Navratilova and Jana Novotna. On this week’s Best in the World with Richard Parr, Gigi talks about how Jana’s decision to split up their team led her to her ‘invincible’ partnership with Natasha. Gigi also won two Olympic gold medals alongside Mary Joe Fernandez in 1992 and 1996. Along with raising her children, Gigi runs doubles.tv. Identifying the lack of doubles specific tennis coaching, the Puerto Rican created this online platform to help recreational players. By listening to this podcast you’ll get to learn about the Gigi Method and the five most important steps any doubles players need to know to be successful. Gigi is helping raise funds to power Puerto Rico. You can learn about the Viktre Challenge here: https://www.viktrechallenge.com. You can also follow her on instagram @gigifernandeztennis17 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Adam Blicher Show: Dissecting High Performance In Tennis
This is a round 2 with Allistair McCaw which many of you have requested. Allistair barely needs another introduction on the podcast, but shortly he is a Sports Performance Specialist with more than 20 years of experience. He has trained a host of world champion athletes including Grand Slam Tennis champions, PGA Golfers and Olympians. […] The post #64: Allistair McCaw – Championminded appeared first on AdamBlicher.com.
Emma interviews world-leading sports performance coach, Allistair McCaw where he reveals how failing every day is a major weapon in his own coaching success and the satisfaction that comes when those he coaches reach out with gratitude. Both Emma and Simon reveal quite a number of stories from their own coaching experiences that is sure to both entertain and inform. Allistair McCaw is an internationally recognized leader in the field of athletic performance enhancement. His well-proven method of athlete training, ‘The McCaw Method', has set the standard for providing world-class athletes and coaches with cutting-edge training techniques, products and knowledge. A fitness expert with over 17 years of experience, Allistair has trained a host of world champion athletes including Grand Slam Tennis champions, PGA Golfers and Olympians. Allistair's expertise in movement & agility training has seen both the world number 1 player's in Tennis and Squash seek his guidance. He also contributes articles to various magazines on performance enhancement training, motivation and mindset. Allistair McCaw website: http://www.themccawmethod.com/
THE Presentations Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo, Japan
Goodbye Presentation Nerves Unexpectedly, twelve time Grand Slam Tennis tournament winner Novak Djokovic has some good advice for public speakers. “I believe that half of any victory in a tennis match is in place before you step on the court. If you don't have that self-belief, then fear takes over. And then it will get too much for you to handle. It's a fine line. The energy of those moments is so high: how are you going to use it? Are you going to let it consume you, or are you going to accept it's presence and say, ‘OK, let's work together'. ” What he is saying is we don't worry about having fear or not having it, we look for how to control it. When we feel fear, our psychological fight or flight response provides energy to our major muscle groups in the chest, arms and legs. This is great energy to tap, in order to bring our belief and our passion to our messages. If the energy is a bit too high and you are feeling too hyperactive, then try and burn some energy off before you go on stage. Out the back, out of sight, pace up and down strenuously for about 5 minutes and take some of the edge off those nerves. The opposite feeling of “butterflies in the stomach” is a result of the blood being directed away from our internal organs to our major muscle groups. The body is getting ready for survival mode. To overcome the butterflies feeling, just find a quiet place off stage, sit down and do some slow, deep breathing from the diaphragm to inject more oxygen into the brain. Take it slowly though, because if you do it too fast you may become dizzy. This oxygen hit will sharpen us up, get us concentrated and ready for the speech. The slower breathing will also help to slow down the pulse rate. We should accept that fear is part of the process of public speaking. Let's use the adrenalin coursing through our veins as a power source to hit key words, have more energy, use bigger gestures than normal and send our power vibe out to the audience. Speakers who look tired, bored or uninterested, are never going to be persuading anyone of anything. I hate those presentations. I saw the head of a huge division of a major global resources company, give a totally lifeless presentation. This guy was rich, immaculately groomed, in charge of thousands of people and billions of dollars of revenue. Yes, he spoke in concert with the slide deck, was not nervous, spoke slowly and clearly but with absolutely no energy, passion or commitment to his message. It was seriously painful to watch and his audience was lost to his message about his company. Despite his big title and big bucks he was a dud. We judge the entire organization on who we see in action. Sadly that day, his organisation's reputation was harmed as a result of his lifeless presentation. I read that Frank Sinatra felt fear every time before he performed. He always worried that the first note would not be there. Once he got going however, he could relax and enjoy the process. That applies to us as well – we have to get that first couple of minutes settled down and then we can relax and enjoy the opportunity to help the audience through providing our message or our valuable information. Fine, but just how do we do that? Here are some do's and don'ts. Don't put unbelievable pressure on yourself by trying to memorise your talk. Do have some key points you can elaborate on though and have them in a logical sequence, that will be easy for an audience to follow. Being able to speak to your points is a basic requirement. You have knowledge of your subject, you have experience in this field of expertise, you know stuff we don't. You know what you want to say, so you can glance at notes briefly for data points as you need them. Remember, in the room, only you know the order of the talk and the content, so if you get it mixed up, keep going, as no one else will know. Keep any disasters, errors and mistakes to yourself. A recent speaker I saw got herself into serious trouble by trying to read the line by line from the screen on her laptop and also simultaneously make eye contact with the audience. Looking to and fro, she was losing her place, this triggered an attack of nerves, such that she had to stop speaking and try and regroup. The problem was obvious to all and she then compounded the error by telling us she was nervous. She lost 100% of her credibility at that point. She should have paused briefly, taken a slow (silent) deep breath and carried on. We would have just imagined it was a pause. Nobody is going to dismiss a speaker who takes a pause or reflects before they speak. It is a very natural thing to do and we accept it. Don't spend all of your preparation time putting together the slide deck. The slides are not the main game – we speakers are the main attraction. Our face is one million times more convincing and more powerful than whatever is up on screen. Even when trying to use slides for impact, there are usually too many, too much text, too many different colours, poor sizing of graphs (too small and too many). The tool itself is misused. If you can use photo images with no text and just speak to the point that is ideal. One or two words with the photo is also good. We don't need a lot of text every time in order to be persuasive. Apart from our face, photos and images are the next most powerful mediums. Also, don't rely too much on video. There is always that break in the flow while the video is retrieved, the sound adjusted etc. I often see visiting big shot CEOs get up to talk, then abrogate responsibility for their presentation by going straight into the corporate video. What a wasted chance. They do this because they are scared, shy, lazy or out of their comfort zone. Unless the video is demonstrating something that can't be shown at the venue, like a new technology etc., then don't use it at all or make it very short. We want the audience to connect with us, to become our fans, our supporters. We have limited time in which to do that, so don't squander opportunities to connect with people. Do allocate time for rehearsal. The amount of time spent before our speech is the key to success. Incredibly, most people spend zero time rehearsing and wonder why presenting is so stressful. Ideally, during rehearsal, have supporters provide feedback. Don't just let them do this without any direction or they will start critiquing your performance and undermine your confidence. Rather, ask them for two pieces of feedback only – what was good and how to make it better. If you can't have a live audience during rehearsal, then watch yourself on video if possible. Most of us have video on our phones or iPads, so the technological barrier today is pretty low. If that isn't available, then use a mirror and record the audio on your device, so you can review how you sound. I have found that when travelling to give a presentation, the windows of the hotel room become mirrors at night when the room lights are off and this provides the visual feedback I need. Rehearse as you will give it, looking around at all sectors of the audience, gesturing, using voice modulation, inserting pauses etc., while talking to your imaginary listeners. When live, don't look down at your notes or laptop screen for too long. Do look at the people in your audience and make eye contact with individuals, one by one, so you can speak directly to as many people as possible. Around six seconds each works well – not too short and not too long. Look around the room but not in an easily predictable way. Don't always going from left to right. Instead break it up, so you are looking at the back, then the front, the right, then the left. If you use predictable eye contact, people know what is coming and they mentally switch off. Keep them guessing. Don't make eye contact however, with audience members who are scowling, doubtful, unhappy, angry, negative, laughing at you, cynical or sneering. Do ignore them completely and look for the audience members who are nodding, smiling, agreeing and look either supportive or at least neutral. This will help to maintain your confidence and equilibrium. I was giving a speech in Kobe in Japanese to a room full of 100 salesmen and one guy about half way down on the left, sat through my one hour talk and had the angriest expression on his face you can imagine. He did not seem to be buying one word I was saying. At the end of my talk, he jumped out of his seat and bolted up to the front. I thought he was going to punch me. Instead, he shook my hand and told me how great the presentation was and how much he appreciated it. I was almost speechless, given how hostile his face appeared during the presentation. So we never know how to interpret what appears to be negativity, but let's be on the safe side and only look at our supporters. Don't be thrown by anything unexpected - the show must go on. So unless it is an emergency and we have to leave the building, keep going no matter what. This is not always easy. I was giving a speech to 300 people in Nagoya arranged by the local Japanese Chamber of Commerce. Again, I was speaking in Japanese, had barely gotten into my first sentence, when a senior official of one of the Japanese Government Ministries, sitting in the front row to my left, suddenly erupted into raucous laughter upon hearing my first burst of Japanese. Being a non-native speaker of Japanese and always a bit shy about my dubious command of the subtleties of Japanese grammar, you can imagine how debilitating that very public outburst was for me. I looked at the guy incredulously, but kept going for the next 40 minutes. In that instant, I had to put all of my linguistic self-doubts and paranoia aside. I purposely only made eye contact with audience members who looked like they were supportive. There were others in the audience who seemed to be impressed that I was trying to speak their language and that really helped me to keep going. I will never forget that rude outburst and when I think back to that incident, I am reminded that there is never a dull moment in Japan! Like Novak Djokovic let's tap into our nervous energy and work with it, rather than try and fight it. We need energy to be a successful presenter, so let's try and surf the wave of our nervousness, rather than have it wipe us out. Action Steps If feeling too tense, go out back and stride around Do deep breathing to get enough oxygen and reduce the pulse rate Don't look lifeless, bored and uninspired Don't try to memorise it, use notes and speak to them Don't make the slide deck or video the star of the show - make you the focus Only make eye contact with your fans and supporters Don't let anything faze you – the show must go on Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse Engaged employees are self-motivated. The self-motivated are inspired. Inspired staff grow your business but are you inspiring them? We teach leaders and organisations how to inspire their people. Want to know how we do that? Contact me at greg.story@dalecarnegie.com If you enjoy these articles, then head over to www.japan.dalecarnegie.com and check out our "Free Stuff" offerings - whitepapers, guidebooks, training videos, podcasts, blogs. Take a look at our Japanese and English seminars, workshops, course information and schedules. About The Author Dr. Greg Story: President, Dale Carnegie Training Japan In the course of his career Dr. Greg Story has moved from the academic world, to consulting, investments, trade representation, international diplomacy, retail banking and people development. Growing up in Brisbane, Australia he never imagined he would have a Ph.D. in Japanese decision-making and become a 30 year veteran of Japan. A committed lifelong learner, through his published articles in the American, British and European Chamber journals, his videos and podcast “THE Leadership Japan Series”, he is a thought leader in the four critical areas for business people: leadership, communication, sales and presentations. Dr. Story is a popular keynote speaker, executive coach and trainer. Since 1971, he has been a disciple of traditional Shitoryu Karate and is currently a 6th Dan. Bunbu Ryodo (文武両道-both pen & sword) is his mantra and he applies martial art philosophies and strategies to business.
Tři herní mušketýři (0:00 - 13:21) Milionová adventura od Double Fine (13:21 - 25:50) Brainstorming Skyrimu; Český nároďák zpět ve FIFA; Half-Life 3 (25:50 - 36:08) Hra týdne: Grand Slam Tennis 2 (36:08 - 47:40) Retro: Caesar III + Pharaoh (47:40 - 59:55) Dotazový fičák (59:55 - 1:17:35) Soutěž o Ratchet & Clank: All-4-One pro PlayStation 3 (1:17:35 - ZVOLÁNÍ!)
Tři herní mušketýři (0:00 - 13:21) Milionová adventura od Double Fine (13:21 - 25:50) Brainstorming Skyrimu; Český nároďák zpět ve FIFA; Half-Life 3 (25:50 - 36:08) Hra týdne: Grand Slam Tennis 2 (36:08 - 47:40) Retro: Caesar III + Pharaoh (47:40 - 59:55) Dotazový fičák (59:55 - 1:17:35) Soutěž o Ratchet & Clank: All-4-One pro PlayStation 3 (1:17:35 - ZVOLÁNÍ!)
Tři herní mušketýři (0:00 - 13:21) Milionová adventura od Double Fine (13:21 - 25:50) Brainstorming Skyrimu; Český nároďák zpět ve FIFA; Half-Life 3 (25:50 - 36:08) Hra týdne: Grand Slam Tennis 2 (36:08 - 47:40) Retro: Caesar III + Pharaoh (47:40 - 59:55) Dotazový fičák (59:55 - 1:17:35) Soutěž o Ratchet & Clank: All-4-One pro PlayStation 3 (1:17:35 - ZVOLÁNÍ!)
New Releases. News. What We’re Playing & Watching. Vita Talk. Review of Scary Girl. Midwest Gaming Classic. Emails. Comedian is Mindy Kaling. http://psnation.org 4:30 - Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning 26:00 Saints Row: The Third 29:32 - Choplifter HD 32:02 - NFL Blitz 35:30 - Rock Band 3 41:00 - Killzone 1:06:03 - Grand Slam Tennis 2 1:07:20 - Hot Shots Golf: Out of Bounds 1:21:15 - Scary Girl 2:24:36 - Modnation Racers: Road Trip Comedian is Mindy Kaling http://psnation.org
This week! It's a bit of a slow time in terms of new releases but not of demos. So we talk about a a few - Choplifter HD, Grand Slam Tennis 2, Asura's Wrath, and Final Fantasy XIII-2. Plus the full games we've been playing this week like The Legend of Zelda Skyward Sword, Abobo's Big Adventure, Zen Pinball 3D, Mario Kart 7, LEGO: Life of George, Run Roo Run and Azarashi. Refreshing! Check out Greg's new web series Generation 16 (Episode 2 now available) - click here. And take a trip over to Phil's YouTube Channel to see some awesome retro game vids. Own an iPhone/iPod touch? We've got an app for that--the Player One Podcast player app is available now. Play shows new and old, read show notes, access the show Twitter, website, email, voicemail line and more! Plus, you'll be able to access bonus audio and video content (soon, once we figure out what that is). Click here to download. Got an Android device? You can now download our app on the Android Marketplace. Find out all about it here. Follow us on twitter at twitter.com/p1podcast. Thanks for listening! Don't forget to visit our new web site at www.playeronepodcast.com. Don't forget to join our forums if you haven't already! Running time: 1:19:00
With Comic-Con in full swing down in San Diego we inaugurate the new weekly four minute warning question to start the second segment with a discussion of what makes a good comic license-based game. Sam, David, John, and Garnett blow right past the four minute timer before tackling other topics including the announcement of Sam Raimi directing the WoW movie, Valve's Gabe Newell talking about gamers financing games, and the future of jRPGs. A summer of sports theme kicks the show off in a Watcha Been Playin? segment filled with Wii Sports Resort, FIFA 10, Tiger Woods, and Grand Slam Tennis with a little change of pace from Need for Speed: Shift and King of Fighters XII.
With Comic-Con in full swing down in San Diego we inaugurate the new weekly four minute warning question to start the second segment with a discussion of what makes a good comic license-based game. Sam, David, John, and Garnett blow right past the four minute timer before tackling other topics including the announcement of Sam Raimi directing the WoW movie, Valve's Gabe Newell talking about gamers financing games, and the future of jRPGs. A summer of sports theme kicks the show off in a Watcha Been Playin? segment filled with Wii Sports Resort, FIFA 10, Tiger Woods, and Grand Slam Tennis with a little change of pace from Need for Speed: Shift and King of Fighters XII.
Inicio en la Playa, Prototype, Grand Slam Tennis, Virtua Tennis 2009 Wii, Pequeño debate sobre las declaraciones de Activision sobre PlayStation 3
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 114) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga), David Ellis, Greg Ford and Andrew Fitch, as they recap the sports efforts at E3, argue over the Madden NFL 10 team ratings, semidouble day and date Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 and Grand Slam Tennis, and once again shove AMC's Breaking Bad down your throat.
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 114) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga), David Ellis, Greg Ford and Andrew Fitch, as they recap the sports efforts at E3, argue over the Madden NFL 10 team ratings, semidouble day and date Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 and Grand Slam Tennis, and once again shove AMC's Breaking Bad down your throat.
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 114) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga), David Ellis, Greg Ford and Andrew Fitch, as they recap the sports efforts at E3, argue over the Madden NFL 10 team ratings, semidouble day and date Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 and Grand Slam Tennis, and once again shove AMC's Breaking Bad down your throat.
Reaction of the Nintendo & Sony press briefing at E3 2009.Nintendo - New Super Mario Brothers, Wii Motion Plus, Wii Sports Resort, Tiger Woods, Grand Slam Tennis, Virtua Tennis, Red Steel 2, Final Fantasy, Kingdom Hearts, Golden Sun, Women’s Murder Club - Games of Passion, Style Savvy, DSi Ware, Facebook, Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks, Wii Vitality Sensor, Super Mario Galaxy 2, The Conduit, Resident Evil: The Darkside Chronicles, Dead Space Extraction and Metroid: Other M.Sony - inFamous, Uncharted 2 (Multiplayer Beta kick off), MAG, Hannah Montana PSP, PSP Go Launch details, Gran Turismo (PSP), Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker (PSP), Final Fantasy VII coming to PSN, new Home spaces, Rockstar's Agent, Assassins Creed 2, Final Fantasy 14, Motion Controller, Modnation Racers, The Last Guardian, Gran Turismo 5 and God of War 3
> Need for Speed: Shift, Fight Night Round 4, Grand Slam Tennis y EA Sports Active.
Featuring: Neal Ronaghan is here with hands-on impressions of Tiger Woods 10, Grand Slam Tennis, and Wii MotionPlus!New Business is packed with talk of Little King's Story, DSiWare, Chinatown Wars, and Kelly McGillis!Listener Mail: Cheat codes of the past and the WiiWare games that were too big for the fridge!RetroActive #5: Super Ghouls 'n Ghosts will make you tear your hair out!
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 108) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) going Skype-to-Skype with Greg Ford as they discuss NCAA Football 10's Teambuilder, rookie ratings in Madden NFL 10, a first-look at Madden on the Wii, and the final lineup of raqueteers in Grand Slam Tennis
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 108) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) going Skype-to-Skype with Greg Ford as they discuss NCAA Football 10's Teambuilder, rookie ratings in Madden NFL 10, a first-look at Madden on the Wii, and the final lineup of raqueteers in Grand Slam Tennis
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 108) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) going Skype-to-Skype with Greg Ford as they discuss NCAA Football 10's Teambuilder, rookie ratings in Madden NFL 10, a first-look at Madden on the Wii, and the final lineup of raqueteers in Grand Slam Tennis
> The Wheelman, Grand Slam Tennis, Los juegos que nunca llegaron a Europa y la bienvenida a Xbox 360.
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 107) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) virtually alongside David Ellis, Greg Ford and Andrew Fitch, as they interview The Bigs 2 producer (Rob Nelson) and cover athlete Prince Fielder, who's on the varied covers of NCAA Football 10, what Madden's retirement from announcing means, and a Grand Slam Tennis draft!
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 107) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) virtually alongside David Ellis, Greg Ford and Andrew Fitch, as they interview The Bigs 2 producer (Rob Nelson) and cover athlete Prince Fielder, who's on the varied covers of NCAA Football 10, what Madden's retirement from announcing means, and a Grand Slam Tennis draft!
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 107) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) virtually alongside David Ellis, Greg Ford and Andrew Fitch, as they interview The Bigs 2 producer (Rob Nelson) and cover athlete Prince Fielder, who's on the varied covers of NCAA Football 10, what Madden's retirement from announcing means, and a Grand Slam Tennis draft!
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 102) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) alongside the merriest men of sports gaming mayhem: David Ellis, Greg Ford, Andrew Fitch and Tyler Barber, as they press the time-space continuum to create the longest Sports Anomaly ever, chatting about a wide range of topics, from a Fight Night Round 4 preview to what teams they're taking for their tournament runs in NCAA Basketball 09. Plus, UFC 2009's cover athlete announcement, John McEnroe in EA's Grand Slam Tennis and a reader mail extravaganza!
The latest Sports Anomaly podcast (episode 102) features The Sports Game Guy (Todd Zuniga) alongside the merriest men of sports gaming mayhem: David Ellis, Greg Ford, Andrew Fitch and Tyler Barber, as they press the time-space continuum to create the longest Sports Anomaly ever, chatting about a wide range of topics, from a Fight Night Round 4 preview to what teams they're taking for their tournament runs in NCAA Basketball 09. Plus, UFC 2009's cover athlete announcement, John McEnroe in EA's Grand Slam Tennis and a reader mail extravaganza!