Association football defender, 2014 NWSL Rookie of the Year
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The emergence of Julie Johnston, now Julie Ertz, during the 2015 World Cup brought attention to her relationship with Zach Ertz. Their journey together from college athletes to professional athletes and, in the case of Julie, international star, made headlines. As their careers progressed, their place in the sports power couple continuum evolved. And fans of each cheered on the other. Jonathan Tannenwald is one of the leading soccer writers in the country and a previous guest of the show. As a college student, he was in Philadelphia to see AJ Feeley and Heather Mitts create the football/soccer couple archetype. Then, as he began working for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Tannenwald witnessed Julie's impact on soccer in the city where Zach was becoming an NFL star. He joined Founding Futbol to share his memories of covering Julie Ertz during her emergence, and discuss the merits of how sports couples should (and shouldn't be) covered, as well as the impact of cross-pollinating fans. Founding Futbol is a year-long exploration of the critical moments that have led to soccer's emerging popularity in America. Visit our website for more information: FoundingFutbol.com. Email us at kent@foundingfutbol.com Subscribe to Founding Futbol on your platform of choice. Host: Kent Malmros Guest: Jonathan Tannenwald (Chief Soccer Correspondent, The Philadelphia Inquirer) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
in 2015, en route to a third Women's World Cup victory, new stars emerged for the US Women's National Team. No one's profile was elevated more than Julie Johnston, who at the time went by Julie Johnston. The Santa Clara product had been a key part of the Youth National Team pools, but was on the fringes of the USWNT roster heading into the World Cup Qualifying cycles in 2014. Injuries opened the door, she impressed Jill Ellis and Johnston made her way to Canada with the team. She quickly emerged as a key part of the squad, anchoring the backline next to veteran Becky Sauerbrunn. With her blond ponytail, blue pre-wrap and propensity for biting tackles followed by a bright smile, fans quickly fell in love with Johnston. The more she gained popularity, the more fans craved information about the new star. They quickly learned that Johnston, was in a long-term relationship with emerging NFL star Zach Ertz -- a tight end for the Philadelphia Eagles. Just as USWNT fans fell in love with Julie, so too did they fall in love with Zach. And as their individual fame grew, their collective fame grew as well, transcending sports journals into the pages of People and US Weekly. But, something interesting happened along the way -- in a country where American football is the biggest sport on the block, a woman playing association football was seen as the bigger overall star and the more accomplished athlete. The cross pollination of both fan bases brought more people to soccer. And the power of sports power couples was realized. Katie Baker, a writer for The Ringer that covers sports, culture and more, joined the show to talk about the impact of Zach Ertz and Julie Johnston when they first broke onto the scene, and the continued interest in their relationship as they became Zach and Julie Ertz once married. Baker also talked about why America is fascinated with the love lives of celebrities and how it helps bring attention to a sport like soccer. She also explores why the USWNT uniquely features a variety of power couples. Founding Futbol is a year-long exploration of the critical moments that have led to soccer's emerging popularity in America. Visit our website for more information: FoundingFutbol.com. Email us at kent@foundingfutbol.com. Subscribe to Founding Futbol on your platform of choice. Host: Kent Malmros Guest: Katie Baker (Senior Staff Writer, The Ringer) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
I'm delighted to speak with Ben Ashdown this week. Ben is joined by return guest, Dr Mustafa Sarkar. Ben is a senior lecturer in Sport and Exercise Psychology at Nottingham Trent University. He is part of the Sport Performance Research Group in the Sport, Health and Performance Enhancement (SHAPE) Research Centre and is a PhD researcher focusing on resilience in youth football. Ben's research interests are observational methods and assessment in sport psychology, resilience behaviours in youth football and resilience development practices. Before moving into lecturing, Ben was a research associate at The University of Nottingham on the Steps to Active Kids (STAK) project that sought to evaluate the impact of a school-based physical activity programme on outcomes including self-efficacy and obesity risk factors. Ben is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has a Postgraduate diploma in teaching in the lifelong learning sector. After graduating from York St John University on a BA (Honours) degree in Sport Studies and Psychology, Ben completed an MSc in Sport Psychology at the same institution. Mustafa is Associate Professor of Sport and Performance Psychology at Nottingham Trent University. His main area of research is on individual, team and organisational resilience in elite sport. Mustafa has a background in teaching and research with most of his research focusing on the psychology of sporting and performance excellence, specifically looking at resilience in high achievers in sport and business. Mustafa also works with coaches and organisations helping them to develop resilience in athletes and teams. We talk about a brilliant paper led by Ben and co-authored by Mustafa and Dr Chris Saward and Dr Julie Johnston entitled “Exploring the behavioral indicators of resilience in professional academy youth soccer”. The study offers insight into the observable behaviours characterising resilience in youth soccer. Participants identified 36 resilience behaviours, highlighting the multifaceted nature of the concept in this specific context. The results provide a platform to support practitioners in observing resilience behaviours and structuring practices for resilience assessment and development. The findings of this study can support youth soccer players in reflecting on their behavioural responses to in-game stressors, and thus better understand how and when they demonstrate resilience.
Dr Julie Johnston is a Senior Lecturer in Sport & Exercise Psychology at Nottingham Trent University who also competed in international swimming for Ireland and Northern Ireland for ten years, participating in three Commonwealth Games and three World Championships. Her research focuses on behavioural, social and environmental influences on children and adolescent psychosocial development, health and wellbeing, and more recently on Gen-Z athletes and how best to support them. Expect to learn; the challenges that Gen-Z athletes face, how to best communicate with Gen-Z athletes, whether coaches are becoming softer, strategies to for developing Gen-Z athletes, and much more. X - https://x.com/julespjohnston Extra Stuff: Get 20% of MindStrong Sport app subscriptions mindstrongsport.com/checkout (Use code raisingyourgame) Get in Touch: Instagram: @lewishatchett TikTok: @lewis_hatchett To sponsor or contact the show visit: podcast.lewishatchett.com
There isn't really a particular list of things that a virtual assistant can and should do. But that's where the beauty of this kind of outsourcing lies. You get to choose which tasks you need to offload so you can focus on the things that you're good at and make the most impact on your business. This is what Julie Johnston helps entrepreneurs with. As the founder of Rhino Squad, she helps entrepreneurs and business leaders hire virtual assistants in the Philippines and design the systems for their assistant to follow so they can stay in their zone of genius. Julie prides herself for building a team of 600 rhinos and for all the things they do for her clients. Tune in and find out if this is a service you could make good use of!Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! https://superbrandpublishing.com/podcasts/
Welcome to Episode 2 of Season 2 of the BioHackers Podcast! In this episode, David and Alex welcome education innovator and AI evangelist Julie Johnston to the show. Together, they share their perspectives on Gen-AI and the fast-approaching future of education, including challenges for faculty, the speed of change, new assessment models, AI mentoring, and how educators are building policies around the use of Generative AI in the classroom. Disclaimer: Praxis AI is a human-first organization.
Jo interviews Julie Johnston about her experience as a discipleship leader. Julie shares about how discipleship first changed her life, and later, the Lord used her to be a part of the transformation in the hearts and homes of other women.Support the show
I speak with Dr Julie Johnston and Joseph Stanford in this episode. Julie is a Senior Lecturer in Sport & Exercise Psychology at Nottingham Trent University. Her research focuses on behavioural, social and environmental influences on children and adolescent psychosocial development, health and wellbeing. Both her PhD and current research has focused on developing an understanding of coach and parenting roles within sport and the impact of these roles on young athletes' psychosocial development, health and wellbeing. Joseph is a PhD student at Nottingham Trent University, a Performance Swim Coach at University of Nottingham Sport and A squad coach at Nova Centurion - the elite performance programme for Nottinghamshire swimming and one of the UK's top swimming clubs. Joseph's research focuses on what makes a successful athlete and how coaches and athletes work together to facilitate positive relationships. Both Julie and joseph have a particular interest in swimming. Julie competed on the international swimming arena for Ireland and Northern Ireland for ten years, participating in three Commonwealth Games, three World Championships, three World University Games and a number of European Championships. We discuss an upcoming paper that Julie led and was co-written by Joseph along with Dr Chris Saward, Dr Mustafa Sarkar, Prof Chris Harwood and Prof Daniel Gould entitled “How to help coaches meet the psychosocial skill needs of their Generation Z athletes: A season long investigation in swimming”.
Barbara Gaughen-Muller Interviews Julie Johnston, teacher trainer through GreenHeart by Barbara Gaughen-Muller
I speak with Dr Laura Healy and Joseph Stanford in this episode. Laura is a Senior Lecturer in Sport & Exercise Psychology. Her research explores how to optimise goal pursuit in sport and physical activity for individuals and teams. This has included examining how the motivation underpinning goal striving can impact upon the self-regulation of goals and well-being. Recently, Laura has researched in areas associated with elite performance environments, including the role of personality in elite coach-athlete relationships, resilience, psychological safety and fear of failure in a national sport governing body, and the experience of release from professional football academies. Joseph is a PhD student at Nottingham Trent University, a Performance Swim Coach at University of Nottingham Sport and A squad coach at Nova Centurion - the elite performance programme for Nottinghamshire swimming and one of the UK's top swimming clubs. Joseph's research focuses on what makes a successful athlete and how coaches and athletes work together to facilitate positive relationships. As part of his undergraduate degree and continuing in his PhD, Joseph has written a paper along with Laura, Dr Mustafa Sarkar and Dr Julie Johnston entitled “Interpersonal perceptions of personality traits in elite coach-athlete dyads” You can read the full article the article here https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S146902922200022X
As we face into the first International break of the season we're discussing International camps with recently retired International goalkeeper Niamh Reid Burke and long range screamers with Cork City captain Becky Cassin. Once again Stephanie Roche and Breifne Earley chat through the domestic action of the past weekend as they look back at each of the games played over an idle weekend for Peamount United. They're joined by her Peamount United teammate Niamh Reid Burke who chats about her own international career which came to a close two weeks ago. She talks about the experience of her second start for Ireland playing world champions USA in California lining up against the likes of Megan Raphinoe, Carli Lloyd, Abby Wambach, Julie Johnston & Hope Solo. She discusses her experience of struggling to break into the international starting side with a net minder of Emma Byrne's quality ahead of her in the pecking order. She outlines her reasons for turning down numerous opportunities to move abroad to further her football career and the harsh reality of the finances within the women's game outside of a small number of top clubs. Cork City Captain Becky Cassin also popped in to discuss her own viral strike from the opening weekend of the league. She chats about her late equaliser in Galway ten days ago and the immediate impact of streaming games and the attention that can be brought upon a player before they even hear the final whistle at their game. Becky and Stephanie swap stories of their mutual time in the Girls Football Academy in Kilcoole where Becky outlines her memories of looking up to Stephanie and Aine O'Gorman as an impressional youngster starting out. She chat's about her time in Carlow IT, her time in the pink of Wexford Youths and being exposed to Turners Cross as part of her college placement at Cork City. Her familiarity with the club made it a really easy decision to accept the call from Rónán Collins when it arrived. Finally Stephanie chats with Breifne about her own disappointment of missing out on the finalised International squad after being named in the provisional squad.
Anna sits down with Cassandra Martineau (she/her) and Dr. Julie Johnston (she/they) to learn about mentoring trans youth. Together, they paint a picture of how trans people support each other and how cis allies can help. Show notes and our social media can be found at our website: https://www.therule63podcast.com/episode-44-notes Support Rule 63 on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rule63 Follow Julie on Twitter! @queermsfrizzle Learn more about Queer Science! http://queerscience.umn.edu/ If you’re in the Eastern CT area, follow Willimantic Rainbow Connection on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/groups/willimanticrc Cass is looking for employment! She has lots of experience leading workshops and discussions about LGBTQ issues. If you’re an LGBTQ-friendly org in the New England area, shoot us a DM on social media or send us an e-mail at therule63podcast@gmail.com and we can get you connected with her.
One of our great #WomenOfAV, Julie Johnston, Senior Director of Learning Technologies, at Indiana University, Bloomington joins the show! We discuss her recent increased role, including lessons learned with her new perspective and how to build interdepartmental relationships. We also cover Indiana University's return to campus plans, her rockstar staff, CCUMC, and the two recent webinars we recently sat on together with HETMA and AV Technology. Oh, and hear about her people watching and how that applied to space design.Connect with Julie Johnston on Twitter at @JohnstonJulie1 and on LinkedIn. Learn more about Indiana University on Twitter at @IUBloomington and online at https://www.indiana.edu.
Kirsten discusses the ways we can create more authentic remote conversations, featuring Amar Bakshi of Shared_Studios and Julie Johnston of University Information Technology Services Department of Indiana University.
Julie Johnston once made $18,000 in front-end revenue from paid ads in a single month. But there was a problem: She didn't like how those ads represented her business. Yes, they helped her close sales, but the clients weren't good fits.Tired of the turnover and of feeling icky, Julie quit paid ads—and her business didn't die. In fact, she's actually grown her gym by 41 percent since then by fixing what was wrong in her business, identifying her ideal client and marketing to that client for free.Tune in to learn how you can do it, too.LinksCamp RhinoGym Lead MachineForever FierceGoogle My BusinessFree ToolsBook a Free CallTimeline:4:42 – Making money with paid ads—but feeling gross about it.8:34 – Learning from mistakes.11:02 – Get your mission and your client avatar right.13:18 – Build systems based around serving your client avatar.17:50 – Get a mentor.18:30 – Solve your clients’ problems.21:24 – Your secret weapon: “Google My Business”25:04 – Commit to making one post per day.26:30 – The snowball and the long game.30:40 – Getting attention from local media outlets.35:36 – Content creation: Passion is better than perfection.39:14 – Building a following.
Julie Johnston, director of learning spaces for Indiana University, has been working hard to make classrooms safe for students and faculty this fall. In this episode, she talks with Campus Technology Executive Editor Rhea Kelly about how the new reality of COVID-19 is impacting IU’s campuses, the challenges of preparing classrooms for the fall, and technology’s role in ensuring a successful teaching and learning experience. Resource links: Indiana University’s Return to Campus Guide IU’s Classroom Database IU’s Keep Teaching Resources for Faculty Educause Learning Space Design Community Group Music: Mixkit Duration: 32 minutes
A trip down memory lane for the Over Bar Hosts, to the USA versus Japan rematch after Japan staged a great fight back in the 2011 Women’s World Cup in Germany on penalties. This week we tactically analyse the match, discuss the effect of crowds in the women’s game, why attendance is such a hot button topic and commentary bias.Enjoy!(Apologies for the dip in sound quality for a few minutes at around the 42:00 mark)Sources:Please go to the YouTube video description for the full list of sources or request them directly from us via our email.Link to YouTube video: https://youtu.be/N13xIxYzoboTime stamps:00:09 – 01:08 – Intro03:05 – 13:57 – Thoughts on the Game, Attendance in Women’s Sport and Anchoring13:57 – 29:11 – USA Tactics29:17 – 45:18 – Japan Tactics41:20 – 42:22 – Stuck in Our Ways45:22 – 01:07:50 – Goals56:30 – 58:49 – Commentary Disparities?01:07:31 – 01:07:44 – 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.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/overthebarTwitter: @OvertheBarPod Support the show (http://patreon.com/overthebar)
This one got a little loopy Welcome to part two of Days of Red Stars Past: Beginnings, where Sandra and Claire discuss the Red Stars' first win in the NWSL (against..Portland?) and the first match featuring Vanessa DiBernardo and Julie Johnston in 2014. They also discuss 2013 NWSL fashion, that one foul, what makes a captain, more fouls, and a player lost to the annals of early Red Stars history. Bear with us, y'all. Quarantine brain is real. Enjoy. We'll have the viewing guide for our next episode theme once we decide what we're doing, probably sometime this weekend. * *Also, tell us what you'd like to see! We have some solid ideas, but as this hiatus stretches on for however long, we'd love to hear what eras you guys are interested in hearing about. Stay safe, love y'all, enjoy
Mike Warkentin is writing his memoir, and he needs a new pen to do it. Can Mateo Lopez give him the perfect pitch?Your prospective clients probably don't need pens, but they do need fitness—and in this episode of Two-Brain Radio, Mateo will show you what an effective sales pitch looks like. You'll learn what to say and when, how to get in touch with the client's "why" and why your programming and community aren't going to seal the deal.You'll also get to observe an effective sales funnel in action as Mike opts in for more info on two gyms' websites live on air.Links:Building a Sales EngineBook a Free CallTwo-Brain Business Free Tools"Help First"Make More Money: The Secrets of Ad TargetingForever FierceContact:mateo@twobrainbusiness.commike@twobrainmedia.comTimeline:2:57 – Putting real lead funnels to the test.5:40 – Who’s checking your notifications?7:29 – Jack Wheeler’s automated texts.8:57 – It’s not enough to be a great coach—you have to learn how to sell.10:30 – Current vs. desired situations.12:41 – You’re not selling community.14:07 – After the desired situation is achieved.15:31 – Julie Johnston and the double dial.19:00 – You need to constantly re-evaluate the desired situation.20:22 – How Jack Wheeler builds a sales-friendly environment.25:43 – Matep Lopez’s sales process: Step one—build rapport.27:16 – Take the lead.28:23 – Find the “why.”29:14 – Connecting past obstacles with what your program has to offer.30:23 – Kicking the bruised knee.32:19 – Offering the solution.35:03 – Identifying obstacles and filling the void.38:06 – Sell results, not programming.41:24 – Dealing with objections.45:00 – How to get better at sales.46:24 – Selling the pen.
Julie Johnston's Interview by Eastpoint Church Belfast
Julie Johnston is the Co-Owner of Vision Loft Indy Events and is the Director of Learning Space for Indiana University. Although she confesses that the first time she's ever called herself an entrepreneur is right here on this episode, Julie is just that: a creative entrepreneur. Her background in technology paired with a beautiful vision created a unique space that allows people to come together for all reasons. Listen as Julie explains how women need to put more jam in their lives, and just: dream bigger.
Julie Johnston is the Co-Owner of Vision Loft Indy Events and is the Director of Learning Space for Indiana University. Although she confesses that the first time she's ever called herself an entrepreneur is right here on this episode, Julie is just that: a creative entrepreneur. Her background in technology paired with a beautiful vision created a unique space that allows people to come together for all reasons. Listen as Julie explains how women need to put more jam in their lives, and just: dream bigger.
In this episode, I sit down with Julie Johnston (https://www.linkedin.com/in/julieajohnston/), director of Learning Spaces (https://learningspaces.iu.edu/) for Indiana University and co-owner of VisionLoft (https://www.visionloftevents.com/). We dive into what IU's Learning Spaces initiative is and how its helping the state's community hubs. We talk about how customer experience is crucial for students, faculty, and outside resources to thrive. Julie dives deeper into her passion with Learning Spaces, Mosaic (https://mosaic.iu.edu/), and VisionLoft on how spaces help people and bring them together. Special Guest: Julie Johnston.
Julie Johnston of Camp Rhino created the first bootcamp in Vegas (maybe the world!), had a Ninja Warrior course before anyone else, and now combines OCR, CrossFit and her giant bootcamp under two enormous roofs in the desert.Just listening to Julie on this episode will make you smile. It's a great kickstart to your week--and the way she kickstarts all of her bootcamps--a two-hour lesson called "The Happiness Workshop"--will kick your BRAIN into high gear! It's a perfect interview for a Monday!We'll talk about how Julie grew her businesses to where it is today through some ingenious techniques, crazy risk and massive personality.Julie comes from a long line of business owners. Seeing the stress that so many of her relatives went through to own their own business motivated Julie to steer clear of ever owning her own business. It wasn’t until she was in college that her entrepreneurial spirit took root and she soon abandoned her initial impression of what it was to be an entrepreneur. After much stress in her first entrepreneurial adventure, Julie began gaining a lot of weight and she knew something had to change to get her health in order. Julie decided it would be best to join a boot camp class and within a few weeks she was teaching her own class. It wasn’t long before July wanted to start her own boot camp even though her friends and family thought she was crazy. For the first year, it was not very successful. Julie was determined to succeed however and she not only lost the weight that she needed to lose but she was slowly gaining clients for her new business. It was at this time that Julie came up with an ingenious idea to generate some buzz around her new business when she challenged two news stations to battle it out in a boot camp competition. This gained her the publicity she needed to really push her business to a new level. One of Julie’s keys to success is her supportive family surrounding her business. Julie’s brothers have been trainers at her gym since the beginning and have gone along with all of her crazy obstacle course ideas. In addition to CrossFit, Camp Rhino offers some outrageous obstacle courses. Julie even built an obstacle course out in the desert at one point in time. Family is extremely important to Julie and she will always make time for them no matter what. Being a successful gym owner can take a large investment of time. Despite this, Julie makes time every day to train and stay in shape. She has learned that no one likes a fat gym owner and the fear of gaining weight like she once did keeps her motivated to set the pace and lead by example in her gym. Another important component of Julie’s gym is running something she calls, The Happiness Workshop. Julie takes creating a positive and happy environment very seriously. This allows Camp Rhino to be a positive place without whining, excuses, and complaining. Loving others and being the best version of yourself is what it is all about and what Camp Rhino is all about.
Julie Johnston of Camp Rhino/Rhino CrossFit shares how she has diversified her business.
Episode 151 - Part I of our 2015 OCR World Championships coverage includes interviews with top finishers :Jon Albon, Ryan Atkins, Cody Moat, Lindsay Webster, Claude Godbout, Robert Killian, KK Paul, Rose Wetzel, and Hobie Call. We continue the finish line interviews with Peter Norris, Marc "The Muddy Highlander" Leinster, Michael Breese, Alena Dawn, Julie Johnston, Greg Kawanishi, Simon Weig, and Yancy Camp, er Culp. Stay tuned for Part II. Today's show is sponsored by: Thrillseeker 5k Stunt Run! Code ORM15 saves you $15.00 at all 2015 locations. Show Notes 2015 OCR World Championship blog review and video.
It's been a fun month, but all good things must come to an end and that is sadly true of the 2015 Women's World Cup. The tournament came to an end in Vancouver on Sunday as the US steamrollered Japan, and the defending champions didn't know what had hit them in those opening 16 minutes. It ended with the US lifting their third Women's World Cup trophy and the celebrations began at BC Place and continued the following day at the special Fox Sports studios in Vancouver. And AFTN was there to capture some of the post tournament joy for you. In our penultimate WWC special podcast, we're all about the World Cup winners this episode as we chat with some of the key members of the US Women's National Team. We kick things off with the Final's hat-trick heroine Carli Lloyd as she talks about it all sinking in, waking up to be front page news and going back to club football after all that. We also catch up with a couple of the USWNT old guard, strikers Alex Morgan and Abby Wambach about the win, the legacy and the team. We also hear from victorious mother Judy Wambach about like watching your famous daughter play. It's a case of out with the old and in with the new as we catch up with one of the US squad's players of the future, defender Julie Johnston. How did she feel her own personal tournament was, how inspiring were the 1999 winning team and did her conceding a penalty in the semi-final actually kickstart the team on to a win?! And there's still time to end the episode with an American hero but a Canadian villain, BC born striker Sydney Leroux. An emotional Leroux talks about winning a World Cup in her home country, the struggles and abuse she's had after leaving that country and what lies in store for her. Have a listen!
Rog talks with USWNT center-back Becky Sauerbrunn about the team's great defensive start to the World Cup, her partnership with Julie Johnston, and the team's "nerd squad."
When you wish upon a star, makes no difference where you are, any Filibuster your heart desires, will come to you! Filibuster is back on its regularly scheduled Tuesday delivery time, and Adam, Jason, and Ben have some soccer talk for you. We start off with D.C. United's loss to Orlando City, and we have to talk about the state of United's attack. We also talk about where Chris Rolfe can be most effective, the play of Chris Korb and Taylor Kemp, and the larger width issue that they bring and that is also up the field. We then talk about tomorrow night's US Open Cup between D.C. United and the Pittsburgh Riverhounds. We talk about its streaming, how they're scoring (and giving up) tons of goals, and what lineup we expect to see. We then move onto Sunday's game against the New England Revolution, talking about their season so far. We talk about their (sometimes) potent attack and how United can keep from failing against them. Finally, we talk about the Women's World Cup and the USWNT. We talk about how awesome Julie Johnston and Becky Sauerbrunn have been, the midfielders and also "midfielders" that Jill Ellis has played, and what we expect to happen today against Nigeria. Its a jam-packed show, so make like peanut-butter and give it a listen!
Women's World Football Show, Episode 45 features an exclusive interview with Spanish midfielder Vero Boquete (conducted by German sports journalist Jana Lange); Plus Mexico WNT striker Veronica Perez; USWNT defenders Christie Rampone and Julie Johnston; and Doncaster Rover Belles head coach Glen Harris.
Women's World Football Show, Episode 25 features an exclusive interview with USC National Champion Ashley Nick; Pregame chats with USWNT stars Abby Wambach, Hope Solo, Alex Morgan, and Julie Johnston; Plus a W-League report with Aussie sports journalist Cheryl Downes.
Episode 87-In today's episode, we catch up with Anthony Matesi. Anthony was once a dude like you or me, now he works for Spartan leading their 12 hour Hurricane Heats amongst other duties. Let's find out how he got there and what he has in store for those that attempt the HH. The next conversation is with Julie Johnston of Las Vegas' Camp Rhino. Find out how this one of a kind entrepreneur had fun with bootcamp and obstacles before they were cool. In the process, another amazing OCR community was born in a city known for anything but fitness. Today's episode is sponsored by Race The Reaper.