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(00:00-30:11) The Blues seem to want a baby. Comparisons to the 2019 team. Only two points back of Minnesota. Puck Monkey. Jackson's in the dark on today's surprise guest. Humdinger tomorrow. Lots of folks unhappy at the difficulty of finding the Blues game on TV. Pronger interviewed Martin. Charlie Marlowe's locked in on fantasy baseball. Equinox Midwest. Opening Day dossier. (30:19-55:35) Jackson's feeling a little more vivacious this morning. The Spread Zone. Dodgers win total. Blues now a favorite to make the playoffs. Fun with math. Averaging more than 4 goals per game since the break. Jim Montgomery talking about knowing during the day the Blues were going to win that game. Who sits when Parayko comes back? (55:45-1:05:19) Runaround Sue. Little Big League. Does Opening Day take a backseat to the Blues? The Tex Winter of local sports. A denture heist. Cards vs. Blues discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
(00:00-30:11) The Blues seem to want a baby. Comparisons to the 2019 team. Only two points back of Minnesota. Puck Monkey. Jackson's in the dark on today's surprise guest. Humdinger tomorrow. Lots of folks unhappy at the difficulty of finding the Blues game on TV. Pronger interviewed Martin. Charlie Marlowe's locked in on fantasy baseball. Equinox Midwest. Opening Day dossier. (30:19-55:35) Jackson's feeling a little more vivacious this morning. The Spread Zone. Dodgers win total. Blues now a favorite to make the playoffs. Fun with math. Averaging more than 4 goals per game since the break. Jim Montgomery talking about knowing during the day the Blues were going to win that game. Who sits when Parayko comes back? (55:45-1:05:19) Runaround Sue. Little Big League. Does Opening Day take a backseat to the Blues? The Tex Winter of local sports. A denture heist. Cards vs. Blues discussion. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Coaching U Podcast with Coach Brendan Suhr presented by Hudl & Hudl Assist
In this episode Coach Brendan Suhr is joined by three-time NBA Champion BJ Armstrong. BJ reflects on his journey from high school standout at Brother Rice in Michigan to starring at the University of Iowa under legendary coaches George Raveling and Dr. Tom Davis, and later playing for coaching icons like Phil Jackson, Tex Winter, and Chuck Daly during his NBA career. In this episode, BJ shares his unique perspective on coaching and basketball philosophy, emphasizing the importance of defense, rebounding, and building a strong team identity. He provides insights into the Triangle Offense and explains why its principles of spacing, ball movement, and decision-making remain timeless. BJ also discusses Bruce Pearl's use of the "cutters" (flex) offense that he played in while at Iowa and how those concepts have proven to be effective for decades when executed properly. All that and more on episode 284 of the Coaching U Podcast presented by Noah Basketball! Noah Basketball is trusted by 28 NBA teams, over 200 NCAA programs, and over 1000 high school programs to capture and analyze key shooting metrics to help your players perfect their shot and reach their max potential. Learn more about our presenting sponsor at noahbasketball.com Special Offers! 7 NEW video sets are now available on Coaching U+ Learn more: coachingulive.com/plus FASTMODEL SPORTS: Save 15% on FastDraw or other FastModel Products with Promo Code 'CoachingU15' at checkout. Visit fastmodelsports.com to learn more!
Michael Jordan, zen ve takım oyunu... Bir arada düşününce biraz tuhaf duyulsa da, Chicago Bulls'un altı şampiyonluktan oluşan hanedanlığı bu temeller üzerine kurulu. 111 Hz'in yeni bölümünde basketbol tarihindeki en efsanevi hikayelerden birinin perde arkasına odaklanıyoruz. Phil Jackson ve Tex Winter'ın Üçgen Hücum taktiği, Zen öğretileri ve Jordan efsanesi üzerine konuşuyoruz.Sunan: Barış ÖzcanHazırlayan: Özgür YılgürSes Tasarımı: Batuhan KösegilYapımcı: Podbee Media------- Podbee Sunar -------Bu podcast, Cambly hakkında reklam içerir.Cambly'de yılın en büyük indirimi %60'dan 111baris koduyla faydalanmak için tıklayınız.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Sam Smith has witnessed just about every Chicago Bulls game since 1987. As a beat reporter for the Chicago Tribune and now covering the team for its website, Smith has chronicled the exploits of Michael Jordan, Derrick Rose and some of their big names in the game. He's also written 5 books including three on Jordan.As for having remarkably close contact for the magical 90s Bulls? “On every flight I either sat with Phil Jackson, Johnny Bach and Tex Winter.” This trio of coaches helped lead the Bulls to six titles in 8 seasons but it was Jordan who got the headlines. Smith wrote three books on him including the New York Times best seller, “The Jordan Rules.” “I remember when the Jordan Rules came out it was kind of controversial but I had a good relationship with Jordan.”Smith is one of the sport's most respected journalists witness how some players and coaches have come to him to write stories, including the late Kobe Bryant during the time when he admitted to having an affair.Smith says he's just the conduit to his readers and that's exactly what he is. But he's managed to gain unbridled respect from not only those who have read his stories but to those he was writing about.In part one of this fascinating podcast, Smith also delves into his relationship with both Jordan and Rose, the disliked but misunderstood Jerry Krause who helped build the 6 time championship teams and a very amusing recollection of a golf game he had with Jordan.Tell me a story I don't know, conversations with Chicago sports legends is now available for pre order on Amazon books and will be released in Mid November. And, you can find new episodes on the Last Word on Sports Media Podcast feed and make sure to follow/subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Spotify, Google, etc.!!
Sam Smith has witnessed just about every Chicago Bulls game since 1987. As a beat reporter for the Chicago Tribune and now covering the team for its website, Smith has chronicled the exploits of Michael Jordan, Derrick Rose and some of their big names in the game. He's also written 5 books including three on Jordan.As for having remarkably close contact for the magical 90s Bulls? “On every flight I either sat with Phil Jackson, Johnny Bach and Tex Winter.” This trio of coaches helped lead the Bulls to six titles in 8 seasons but it was Jordan who got the headlines. Smith wrote three books on him including the New York Times best seller, “The Jordan Rules.” “I remember when the Jordan Rules came out it was kind of controversial but I had a good relationship with Jordan.”Smith is one of the sport's most respected journalists witness how some players and coaches have come to him to write stories, including the late Kobe Bryant during the time when he admitted to having an affair.Smith says he's just the conduit to his readers and that's exactly what he is. But he's managed to gain unbridled respect from not only those who have read his stories but to those he was writing about.In part one of this fascinating podcast, Smith also delves into his relationship with both Jordan and Rose, the disliked but misunderstood Jerry Krause who helped build the 6 time championship teams and a very amusing recollection of a golf game he had with Jordan.Tell me a story I don't know, conversations with Chicago sports legends is now available for pre order on Amazon books and will be released in Mid November. And, you can find new episodes on the Last Word on Sports Media Podcast feed and make sure to follow/subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Spotify, Google, etc.!!
The distribution of leadership. Getting a strong staff, getting to know each other. Trusting each other and giving everyone meaningful roles. The small room at the Chicago Bulls facility where Coach Jackson developed bonds with Coaches Bach and Winter. Three desks, two doors. Monitors. Scouting upcoming teams. Making videos with the video machine. Doug Collins (head coach) would be working out and rehabbing his knee. Other coaches would be in the room for three hours in the morning and more hours in the afternoon. Conferring with each other, sharing knowledge. Conversations together about the game, its history and evolution. Tex believed the players needed to develop deep knowledge of the game. Exchanging “tricks of the trade” with each other (like letting air out of the balls to fit playing style). Johnny's zone trap. “We'd go through the mechanics of the game." Johnny Bach named defensive coordinator, Tex Winter offensive coordinator. “The exchange of ideas was a lot of fun.” Tex Winter, Coach Jackson, and the evolution of the Triangle offense. Coach Jackson asking Coach Gardner about how the Triangle played a role in their success. "All these stories just geminated" in that room. “I was curious and would listen to these guys who had been watching the game evolve since they were kids." Doing videos with Johnny. “We had an exchange that was very genuine.” What we organized as a system was “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” Teaching players the skills that would operate in the system. Drills and skills that fit into the system. “Everything fit into the system.” Defensive drills in the system. Knowing each other so well that trust was present. How his ran a time-out. “Going to your safe spot on the bench.” Assistants go to huddle. Then everyone stands and Coach Jackson addresses them. “Assistant coaches get to manifest their knowledge of the game." Allowing for and valuing disagreement. But then going forward with one voice. Why it's dangerous when trying one-off copying of what others do instead of staying with your own set of rules. Our basic principle on offense was “go away from pressure.” “Be in the flow.” Using video tape to imprint ideas. (e.g., The way of the peaceful warrior). How to value your opponent to bring out your best self. Lakota perspective. “We're lucky to have the opponent that's creating more thoughtful play out of what we're trying to do. And we don't have to do it through resistance or overpowering or retaliation. We can do it in another way." Letting go. Scottie suggesting Ron Harper should guard Hardaway instead of Jordan. “That suggestion was perfect…That was a player stepping in…They know each other well.”
1. Coach's home golf course in Williston, ND. 2. Giving players books: Why did he do it? How did he decide which book to give to each player. 3. Shaq's book report. 4. Talking to Kobe about being a leader. 5. Going from coaching in the CBA to the Bulls, Jerry Krause wanted him to wear the championship ring as a symbol, “I knew what it took to win a championship…I had some credibility.” 6. Giving associate coaches room to speak. 7. The impact of Tex Winter and Johnny Bach: “I learned a tremendous about about the history of the game from them.” 8. “A lot of coaching depends on voice, on essence, on how you speak, the control that you have of the language, your ability to deliver a message, your ability to be a salesperson about what you are trying to have your team do.Those are the things that I think garner respect.” 9. When correcting a player, “it's not that I'm correcting you. I'm correcting the act that you need to change. I'm not demeaning you.” 10. “You need to deliver messages with the respect that contains who you are.” 11. The importance of building a “fraternal type of atmosphere where it's brotherly or sisterly…You want them to have an atmosphere that's warm and welcoming.” 12. One of the most difficult things for humans is that you are not anything more than human. You make mistakes. And the mistakes you're going to make are sometimes how you endear yourself to your community…The little things, stumbling over a word or how you dress…” 13. Wearing a tie dye shirt to practice…and how it accidentally brought about relatability. 14. “Maybe I can get a birdie on this hole…” 15. Red Holzman. Alertness. “Being in the team, with the team.” 16. Simple lessons from Coach Holzman. “This isn't rocket science.” 17. Coach Holzman: simplicity and giving players voice. 18. Coach as teacher. 19. Turning point: Coach Holzman brought Coach Jackson in to help during and injured period (When Coach Jackson was only 23). Learning the middle path. Staying consistent. Bring energy. 20. Knowing how to handle players who were injured, including the mental side of injury. 21. “What is the purpose of the game?” Love of the game. Giannis, Jokic as good models. 22. What's most important thing to look for in a coach? 23. Lessons learned from coaching Horace Grant. Staying positive. Transformational. “Coaches that stand on the sidelines and yell at players are probably not going to be successful if they're berating their players. But the ones who can teach and want to teach it, are the ones who generate the most interest to me as people to hire as coaches.” 24. Earning players' respect. 25. Growing up in a home with morning devotions. “I've maintained that type of practice my whole life.” 26. Getting centered and fully present every morning. 27. The importance of having a system. Having everyone play within the system. 28. Every player in basketball – like jazz – has a role, has a moment.
What I learned from reading Michael Jordan: The Life by Roland Lazenby.---Join Founders AMAMembers of Founders AMA can:-Email me your questions directly (you get a private email address in the confirmation email) -Promote your company to other members by including a link to your website with you question -Unlock 27 Ask Me Anything (AMA) episodes immediately-Listen to new Ask Me Anything (AMA) episodes every week ---(5:07) His competence was exceeded only by his confidence.(5:58) He worked at the game, and if he wasn't good at something, he had the motivation to be the best at it.(6:33) It seemed that he discovered the secret quite early in his competitive life: the more pressure he heaped on himself, the greater his ability to rise to the occasion.(14:06) At each step along his path, others would express amazement at how hard he competed. At every level, he was driven as if he were pursuing something that others couldn't see.(16:10) Whenever I was working out and got tired and figured I ought to stop, I'd close my eyes and see that list in the locker room without my name on it, and that got me going again.(19:29) Jordan could sense immediately that he had something the others didn't.(59:53) The Jordan Rules succeeded against the Bulls so well that they became textbook for guarding athletic scorers. The scheme helped Detroit win two NBA championships, but it also helped in the long run, by forcing Jordan to find an answer. "I think that 'Jordan Rules' defense, as much as anything else, played a part in the making of Michael Jordan," Tex Winter said.(1:16:35) Jordan had been surprised to learn how lazy many of his Olympic teammates were about practice, how they were deceiving themselves about what the game required.(1:19:56) I have always liked practice and I hate to miss it. When you miss that one day, you feel like you missed a lot. You take extra work to make up for that one day. I've always been a practice player. I believe in it.(1:29:47) Jordan presented a singleness of purpose that was hard to dent.----Join Founders AMAMembers of Founders AMA can:-Email me your questions directly (you get a private email address in the confirmation email) -Promote your company to other members by including a link to your website with you question -Unlock 27 Ask Me Anything (AMA) episodes immediately-Listen to new Ask Me Anything (AMA) episodes every week ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested, so my poor wallet suffers.” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
Jeff Webb is a retired NBA player who played for both the Milwaukee Bucks and the Phoenix Suns. He won an NBA Championship with the Bucks in 1971 playing alongside Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Oscar Robertson.As a college player at Kansas State University he played for two coaching legends in Tex Winter and Cotton Fitzsimmons. Following his playing career Jeff worked as a rep for Converse and worked on some of the earliest shoe deals with schools and coaches across the country.If you're looking to improve your coaching please consider joining the Hoop Heads Mentorship Program. We believe that having a mentor is the best way to maximize your potential and become a transformational coach. By matching you up with one of our experienced mentors you'll develop a one on one relationship that will help your coaching, your team, your program, and your mindset. The Hoop Heads Mentorship Program delivers mentoring services to basketball coaches at all levels through our team of experienced Head Coaches. Find out more at hoopheadspod.com or shoot me an email directly mike@hoopheadspod.comFollow us on social media @hoopheadspod on Twitter and Instagram.Get ready to hear some great stories from the game's history as you listen to this episode with former NBA Player Jeff Webb.Website - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Webb_(basketball)Email – info@hemewe.com
«Questo è uno dei quintetti più talentuosi della storia della Nba». (New York Times) «Non solo ci aspettiamo che vincano il titolo, ma che lo facciano all'insegna dei record». (Espn) Queste sono soltanto due delle previsioni che la stampa specializzata aveva prodotto alla vigilia della stagione Nba 2012-13. Riguardavano entrambe la stessa squadra, i Los Angeles Lakers. Chi ricorda bene quell'annata sa già di cosa sto per parlare, chi invece ha la memoria corta, non seguiva l'Nba o aveva semplicemente meglio da fare, può allacciarsi le cinture, perché quello che sto per raccontarvi è uno dei fallimenti più fragorosi della storia della lega. Questo è il disastro dei Los Angeles Lakers 2012-2013. LE PREMESSE Campioni Nba nel 2010 agli ordini di Phil Jackson e semifinalisti di conference un anno più tardi sempre guidati da coach Zen, i Lakers avevano iniziato la loro trasformazione nella stagione 2011-12, con Mike Brown in panchina, il tutto dopo aver visto sfumare per volontà di David Stern la trade che avrebbe portato a Los Angeles, sponda gialloviola, Chris Paul. La semifinale di conference persa contro gli Oklahoma City Thunder, futuri finalisti, era parsa una buona base da cui ripartire, pur con alcuni tasselli da sistemare. Il primo, e forse il più importante, nel ruolo di playmaker: quello di CP3, appunto. Dopo anni improntati sull'attacco a triangolo, caro a Jackson e a Tex Winter, l'introduzione della Princeton Offense voluta da Mike Brown richiedeva un play di caratura leggermente diversa rispetto a Ramon Sessions e Steve Blake. Il secondo, invece, riguardava il centro titolare. Andrew Bynum era reduce dalla sua migliore stagione in carriera per punti e rimbalzi, ma a preoccupare i Lakers c'erano due motivi che poco avevano a che fare con il suo talento: la prospettiva di perderlo in caso di mancato rinnovo del contratto e alcune grosse preoccupazioni sulle condizioni delle sue ginocchia. L'11 luglio, i Los Angeles Lakers annunciano di aver chiuso una trade con i Phoenix Suns: Steve Nash arriva in gialloviola in cambio di due prime scelte e due seconde scelte. Già da qualche anno, l'ex MVP deve convivere con problemi alla schiena: capita di frequente di vederlo seduto o addirittura sdraiato sul parquet durante le soste in panchina. Ha compiuto 38 anni, il passo non è quello degli anni in cui riusciva a dominare la lega, ma rappresenta certamente un upgrade rispetto alla stagione precedente. Il 10 agosto, un mese dopo la firma di Nash, arriva un altro scambio. Stavolta è un terremoto per la lega. Sono coinvolte quattro squadre. Gli Orlando Magic ricevono Al Harrington, Arron Afflalo, Moe Harkless, Nikola Vucevic, Josh McRoberts, Christian Eyenga, tre prime scelte e una seconda scelta. Ai Denver Nuggets arriva Andre Iguodala. Philadelphia abbraccia Jason Richardson e Andrew Bynum, l'elemento principale sacrificato dai Lakers per arrivare a Dwight Howard. Miglior difensore dell'anno dal 2009 al 2011, miglior rimbalzista dal 2008 al 2010, miglior stoppatore nel 2009 e nel 2010, Howard arriva con due grossi punti interrogativi nonostante il curriculum: la ripresa fisica dopo l'infortunio che lo aveva costretto a saltare quasi metà stagione e il futuro contratto. Howard, infatti, è in scadenza a fine anno e potrà valutare le offerte da free agent. I Lakers, in sostanza, decidono di fare all-in: una stagione ai massimi livelli per dare l'assalto al titolo, poi si vedrà. Nello scambio arrivano anche Earl Clark e Chris Duhon. A posteriori, l'unica scelta azzeccata si rivelerà quella di scaricare Bynum: giocherà solamente 26 partite in carriera dopo la trade prima di ritirarsi.
What I learned from rereading The Mamba Mentality: How I Play by Kobe Bryant. Subscribe to listen to Founders Daily [0:01] If you really want to be great at something, you have to truly care about it.If you want to be great in a particular area, you have to obsess over it.A lot of people say they want to be great, but they're not willing to make the sacrifices necessary to achieve greatness.They have other concerns and they spread themselves out. That's totally fine. After all, greatness is not for everybody.Greatness isn't easy to achieve. It requires a lot of time.[1:08] You can't achieve greatness by walking a straight line.[1:12] Respect to those who do achieve greatness and respect to those who are chasing that elusive feeling.[1:29] Start of what Founders Daily is and why I am making it.[5:58] Start of this episode.[6:10] May you find the power in understanding the journey of others to help create your own.[6:23] He dedicates a lot of time in this book to the importance of learning from and studying the great people that came before you.[7:31] Showboat: The Life of Kobe Bryant by Roland Lazenby (Founders #272)[7:52] His dissection of the game was at another level. In my entire career, I've never seen a player as dedicated to being the best. His determination is unparalleled. He unquestionably worked harder than anyone else I have ever played with.[8:07] Kobe knew that to be the best you need a different approach from everyone else.[11:24] If I wanted to implement something new into my game, I'd see it and try incorporating it immediately. I wasn't scared of looking bad or being embarrassed.[12:08] I had a constant craving, a yearning, to improve and be the best. I never needed any external forces to motivate me.[12:31] If something has worked for other greats before you, and if something is working for you, why change it up and embrace some new fad? Stick with what works, even if it's unpopular.[12:47] Kobe mentions reading: Jackie Robinson's autobiography [13:14] Reading is forced meditation.[14:12] I never thought about my daily preparation. It wasn't a matter of whether it was an option or not. It was, if I want to play, this is what I have to do, so l'd just show up and do it.[14:44] I always found that short 15 minute cat naps gave me all the energy I would need for peak performance.[14:52] Your routine can change but your obsession can not.[15:11] You can find an edge by doing things your competitors are not doing.[16:58] I revere the players who made the game what it is, and cherish the chances I had to pick their brains. Anything that I was seeing or going to see, any type of defense or offense or player or team—they had already encountered years before. I talked with them to learn how to deal with those challenges.[19:23] I devoured Bill Russel's autobiography. There were a lot of valuable lessons in there. [19:49] If you wanna win championships, you have to let people focus on what they do best, while you focus on what you do best.[20:28] You train an animal. You teach a person —Sol Price: Retail Revolutionary & Social Innovator by Robert E. Price (Founders #107)[21:31] In our first year together, he (Tex Winter) and I would rewatch every single game together. Preseason, regular season, playoffs. That's a lot of basketball.[22:12] As I learned time and again, success in business often rests on a minute reading of the regulations that impact your business. —Becoming Trader Joe: How I Did Business My Way and Still Beat the Big Guys by Joe Coulombe. (Founders #188)[24:33] Coach K is really intense. He and I approach winning and losing the same way in that winning is the goal, and losing is, well, losing isn't even on the table.[25:35] Coach K in The Redeem Team documentary: Understand the responsibility. I know I'm not going to fucking lose. I am not going to fucking lose. Not when I'm wearing this (team USA jersey) and not at this time in my career. You're going to have to fucking shoot me. That's how I want you to play.[26:37] These greats won't hang around you if you don't display the same passion as they do. They won't share their time and memories with you if you don't display the same effort and drive for excellence that they did. I was accepted so quickly because everyone saw how hard I worked. They saw how badly I wanted to fulfill my destiny.[27:01] The Fish That Ate the Whale: The Life and Times of America's Banana King by Rich Cohen. (Founders #255)[29:18] It is to the point where if you know the basics, you have an advantage on the majority of players.[29:33] “There are two things in business that matter, and you can learn this in two minutes- you don't have to go to business school for two years: high gross margins and cash flow. All companies that go out of business do so for the same reason – they run out of money.” —Don Valentine[30:55] I felt that my destiny was already written. I felt I knew that my future was undeniable and no one, not a person or a play, could derail it.[32:01] This is the goal. This is my goal: For almost a decade he did nothing but address weaknesses and add to his game. Now his skill set is completely fleshed out. His game has no weaknesses. He's a nightmare to go up against, and he's worked to achieve that status.[33:36] That's the money right there: That thirst and quest for information and improvement.[33:57] Driven From Within by Michael Jordan and Mark Vancil. (Founders #213)—I use Readwise to organize and remember everything I read. You can try Readwise for 60 days for free by going to https://readwise.io/founders/—“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman, and Phil Jackson got all the media attention during the Chicago Bulls' second three-peat, but role players were crucial to their success. While Jordan was still on his baseball hiatus, the Bulls signed small forward Jud Buechler, who'd previously shown what we now call “3 and D” skills with the Warriors, Spurs and Nets. The following March, Jordan sent the basketball universe into a frenzy with just two words: “I'm back.” In this episode of Basketball Strong, Jud shares the inside story of the three championships that followed, what it was like in those intense Bulls practices after Jordan's return, and why he appreciated the tough love and leadership of His Airness. We also rewind to discuss Jud's college days with Lute Olsen's expert tutelage, what he learned as a multi-sport athlete, and the unsurpassed work ethic that earned him a 12-year NBA career. In this episode, you'll hear Jud share:Which core values he learned from Arizona Hall of Fame coach Lute OlsenHow fellow Wildcat Steve Kerr mentored him through his NBA journeyWhat happened in Michael Jordan's first practice with the Bulls after he came out of retirementWhen he decided to choose between volleyball and basketballWho his favorite teammates were and what he gleaned from Tex Winter, who invented the Triangle Offense
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VIEWERS DISCRETION (PROFANITY INCLUDED) Full Installment of Episode 23 Topics: 1984 Draft, North Carolina Origins, Cut in High School, UNC Years, Rookie Year, Lord of the Rings, Rookie Shoe Deal, NBA Drug Problem, Lack of Seriousness, FIBA Basketball, Kevin Love Team USA, Karl Anthony Towns FIBA, 1970s Basketball Marketing, Magi & Bird, Steph Curry v. Magic Johnson, Revolutionizing the 3 Ball, Rules to Help MJ, Mr. Accolades, Chris Paull Narrative, ESPN Creating Storylines, 100 Million Profit, Sydney Moncrief, Early Playoffs, Michael Jordan's Official Height, Larry Bird, Dunk Boys, Doug Collins, Tex Winter, Triangle Offense, Bad Boy Pistons, Soft Era, Scottie Pippen, Horace Grant, 90's Basketball, NBA Finals, Threepeat, David Stern, Mr. Jordan, Gambling, 3 Point Line Adjustments, Jordan Rules, Flagrant Foul, Skip Bayless, Mafia, Gambleman, Expansion Teams, etc. LINK: https://linktr.ee/dtpent
The Zen Master expounds on his teacher's scientific system
A lifetime of working on breaking down a defense
Doc opens talking about the vaccine in sports, art and medicine. Doc uses examples Jonas Salk who created the polio vaccine and Tex Winter's triangle offense. Klapper Vision is about the Covid-19 vaccine. The Weekend Warrior Clinic opens for listeners.
Doc opens talking about the vaccine in sports, art and medicine. Doc uses examples Jonas Salk who created the polio vaccine and Tex Winter's triangle offense. Klapper Vision is about the Covid-19 vaccine. The Weekend Warrior Clinic opens for listeners. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Na news de hoje, o apresentador Gonçalo Luiz fala as principais notícias que saíram no Blog do Souza e no mundo do basquete.
Well it's finally here! The inaugural episode of The Black and Blue Pod has finally arrived and the first guest is sports writer Roland Lazenby, who has written over four dozen sports books on icons such as Colts quarterback Johnny Unitas, Lakers legends such as Kobe Bryant and Jerry West, global icon Michael Jordan and his legendary Chicago Bull teams, and many more. In this episode, we discuss the creative process behind his lengthy biographies on Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant (1:19), what it was like to be in the locker rooms during the 1980s NBA(5:30), I ask him his thoughts on the structure of the modern game (8:58), the groundbreaking Detroit “Bad Boys” Pistons teams in the late 80s (18:45), Tex Winter's attempts to get both Michael and Kobe to buy into the triangle offense (36:05), how professional leagues and amateur athletics are attempting to play amid the COVID-19 pandemic (42:55) and we finally wrap up with a special segment called Off the Dome (65:00). Hope you guys enjoy the episode!
The Last Dance ja s'ha acabat i nosaltres aquí dándole a la sin hueso. 3'00" CPK és als podcasts el que BTV és a les televisions, orgull de tieta. 12'00" Esperem en candeletes l'anunci de la temporada dos de The Last Dance (Wizards, Bobcats) 18'45" Netflix ha donat els ratings del documental, ho ha vist mazo de penya. 26'02" Potser ho vam somiar però creiem recordar que Ron Harper era bo. El Marc mira els números contraposant-los amb els de Steve Kerr. 35'45" Estimem sense reserves i de manera incondicional Steve Kerr. 46'45" El model de lideratge de MJ va influir negativament les estrelles que van venir després? Tex Winter creu que sí. Va iniciar també -indirectament- aquesta tendència de parlar de fites individuals i no dels equips? 1:01'30" Comparem dos models narratius que poden explicar l'èxit d'aquesta série: el tradicional 'hero journey' i el més contemporani anti-heroi. 1:18'40" Karl Malone entrant a l'autocar per felicitar els campions. 1:20'50" Entren cinc tius al Marriot de Salt Lake City per portar una pizza i fot una pudor a Faria que et tornes boig. 1:35'35" Phil Jackson arriba a una reunió amb l'equip (porta un barret posat amb plomes), rebusca a la bossa, treu una llauna de Saimaza buida i automàticament baixen les llums de l'habitació. Ritual de cloena de l'últim ball. 1:43'00" Greatest hits de patrañas, tonteries que ens han flipat del documental. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cantplaykanter/message
Long time broadcaster Rich Burk joined Chad and Travis to discuss the time a flight to Chicago turned into one of the most incredible trips of his life when Tex Winter asked him to stay at his house, 5-19-20.
Peter Yannopoulos revient sur la grande finale du documentaire The Last Dance. Il a adoré revisiter toutes les facettes de la grandeur des Bulls de Chicago, de Michael Jordan à Tex Winter.
Joe Ostrowski was joined by author Roland Lazenby, who wrote "Michael Jordan: The Life" and "Blood on the Horns: The Long Strange Ride of Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls." Lazenby discussed Jordan, "The Last Dance" and his unique perspective on covering the Bulls' dynasty. He also shared stories and thoughts on coach Phil Jackson and assistant Tex Winter, among others.
Hey, guys, welcome back for another episode of Let’s Be Real. In this episode, we’ll continue our coverage of “The Last Dance” documentary. The access that the media had to players back then would be unimaginable in today’s era. Not only that, but we also get to see the relationship between Dennis and Phil. Which, in some cases, is the highlight of episode 3. We’ll discuss how that relationship helped the Bulls to their 2nd 3peat, and why Dennis was the hero thus far of “The Last Dance.”
0:00 - K-State lands a JUCO linebacker...kinda 12:44 - K-State football Mount Rushmore 25:05 - "The Game" Classic: Frank Martin 32:54 - Bruce Weber & Tex Winter look alike
Nikko Ramos gives 22-time Champion (???) Coach Tim Cone a call to talk about the PBA in the time of COVID-19, the evolution of The Triangle Offense, his friendship with Tex Winter, the Grand Slam titles, nearly drafting Jimmy Alapag (TWICE!), and the tiny sliver between winning and losing.
#Wwtb! @whtwetalkinbout is back! The essential Podcast. Long episode but when this thing catch fire. We like the bulls in 96. Great bicker with @dez_arnez & @trav_dave about @Champagnepapi mixtape. @ceoreese lead this week show and things got real. @thekidblaze the Tex Winter of the show Control the boards. Ladies we got at y’all. Local ONLY fans talk got heavy. We support local. Insecure talk. Again, ain’t not yes men on this show. The temperature got hot. As Always, the Culture from a Midwest POV.
Last Dance特集 02:00 兩集幕後 05:15 活塞Bad Boys 19:00 Jordan Rules 22:00 Collins 23:20 Tex Winter + 三角戰術 33:25 Dennis Rodman 54:00 Phil Jackson 55:25 騎士 01:09:20 Wes最難忘的 01:11:20 Fu的你不知道的 01:14:35 Hans的你沒發現的 喜歡節目別忘了訂閱! 粉絲頁面
First Hour: Robert “Bob” Nelson, a former basketball coach and former trustee at St. Louis Community College, joins the show to talk about working with Tex Winter and the "Triangle" with the Chicago Bulls. Second Hour: Dr. Rick Lehman joins the show to take all medical question.
Former Chicago Bulls Asst GM Clarence Gaines Jr discusses Michael Jordan transforming from an exciting scorer to a more well rounded player, Tex Winter, Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer.
4/29/20 Clipps & Drew are joined by Craig Hodges former NBA player, 2x NBA Champ with the Chicago Bulls, and 3x 3PT Contest Champ. The boys discuss Craig's journey from growing up in Chicago, to playing college ball at Long Beach State under coach Tex Winter, and his NBA career including his time with the Bulls during the transition from Doug Collins to Phil Jackson and the implementation of the triangle-offense. Craig share's his insights into life as an NBA player during the Golden Age, how different the game is today, and the potential impact that COVID will have on society moving forward. Check out the new Load Management show from Clipps & Drew exclusively on patreon.com/clippsndrew! www.clippsndrew.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app (https://anchor.fm/s/1743334/podcast/sponsor/acugkf/url/https%3A%2F%2Fanchor.fm%2Fapp) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Dragon and the Wolf analyze our teams’ NFL drafts, discuss if the Packers are fed up with Aaron Rodgers’s shit, if Tex Winter was the Dick Cheney of the first Chicago Bulls three-peat and much more. ⏺ 2020 NFL Draft blowback (5:32) ⁃ Chargers + Giants recap ⁃ Packers are done investing in Aaron Rodgers Show ⁃ Eagles fans always get mad after the draft ⁃ “Football is Racist”: Patriots draft kicker with militia logo tat ⏺ Death of the NCAA? (43:57) ⏺ Beastie Boys documentary (54:10) ⏺ “The Last Dance” episodes 3 & 4 (1:13:38)
The triangle offense, influence of Tex Winter and the firing of Doug Collins covered in episode 4 of The Last Dance.
The guys kick off the week recapping their weekends and the NFL Draft including Nate Stanley now being a Minnesota Viking but Ross Peterson poses the question to Vikings fans Chris Williams and Erick Zamora: will Stanley make the team? Chris also talks about being daddy daycare over the weekend and who knew smoked corn beef was just pastrami? Then they get into The Last Dance including how its covered like its happening now, BJ Armstrong looking like he's 25 and Carmen Electra hiding from Michael Jordan in a hotel room. They also get into the coaching and discuss if Phil Jackson got the credit he should have and also touch on Tex Winter.
0:00 - K-State's 26 year draft streaks ends/1994 11:47 - Interview with the Boston Globe's Bob Ryan 21:12 - Tex Winter is a basketball legend 30:17 - More faith in Klieman/Epitaph for "the streak"
Patrick and Andrew talk about the 3rd and 4th episodes of the Michael Jordan documentary "The Last Dance". They go in depth about Dennis Rodman, Doug Collins, Phil Jackson, Tex Winter, and of course Michael Jordan.
This week we lost an absolute legend from the sporting world, as 5 times NBA winner, Kobe Bryant was killed in a helicopter crash along with his 13-year-old daughter and 7 other people. I really want to reflect on his life and what we can all take away from this tragedy, regardless of whether you knew who Kobe Bryan was. To me, he represents so much of what I think is important and I believe there are many lessons we can learn which I would like to share with you. Kobi Bryant once said, “The most important thing is to try and inspire people, so that they can be great at whatever they want to do” If you know me, you know that is the most important thing in the world to me. I was obsessed with another sporting legend, Michael Jordan who was also a huge inspiration to Kobe. Even though I wasn’t the biggest fan of basketball, people who achieved great things, were always of interest to me. We remain alive for as long as people remember us. How many people around the world will remember Kobi Bryant in 1 year, 5 years, 10 years, 50 years? Kobe said that when Phil Jackson became his coach at LA Lakers, he learned a lot about mindfulness and how to play the game more effortlessly. What is it in your life that you feel you have to pass onto other? My Dad used to say “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know” and my mum “There is an answer to everything” I continue their legacy and say these two things to many people on a regular basis. At some stage in our lives, we all have to look to the future and leave behind a legacy. Kobi was always interested in getting better and improving. He always wanted to go to the next level. Tex Winter, former assistant coach at the Chicago Bulls, played a major part in Kobi’s life. I think, as did Kobi, that the goal of life is to learn and grow, almost in a childlike way. Getting better for him was like a drug. Can you see that you are here to get grow and get better? Or have you just settled for a life of mediocrity? What are you striving towards? If you have a hero or someone you look up to, are you putting into practice what they stand for? In order to grow, we need to challenge ourselves and go through pain to stretch our skills. Right now, do you have any goals in life? More importantly, do you have a strategy in place to achieve those goals? If you need help to turn your goals into a reality, then ASK for help. Please never forget that. I want to thank you Kobi Bryant – you inspired me, and will forever stay alive with me. "Take action - not now but right now! All our podcasts are available at; https://petecohen.com/podcast/ You can subscribe for podcasts here and receive our weekly newsletter to keep you inspired. I help everyday people achieve their goals & dreams! Helping and coaching people is my expertise. And it is VERY satisfying to change people’s lives so they improve and change their health, finances, relationships, confidence and mindset. You can also check out our brand new free case study: “3 Steps To Closing The Gap Between Where You Are And Where You Want To Be” https://petecohen.com/coaching/ In This Short Case Study Training You Will Learn How Create the Future You Want For Your Business And Your Life. Connect With Me! Come join our free Pete Cohen Podcast Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/223961357935535/ Follow me on Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/petecohen_/ About Pete Cohen: Pete Cohen is one of the world’s leading life coaches and keynote speakers. Hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world have been motivated and inspired by Pete’s presentations. He has professionally impacted on the lives of thousands of people worldwide, including business executives, professional athletes and the everyday person. Pete focuses on the importance of closing the gap in our lives between where we are and where we want to be both personally and professionally. It’s then all about coaching you to remove the obstacles that are in your way and helping you install the habits of success. He is the author of 19 published books, several of which have been best-sellers across the world, including Shut the Duck Up, Habit Busting, Life DIY and Sort Your Life Out. He has also presented his own show on TV called The Coach and was the resident Life Coach on GMTV for 12 years. His new book Inspirators - Leading The Way In Leadership is available for free here https://book.petecohen.com/
this is our biggest and best show by far. We were able to lock down two great interviews. Greg Bergman who is the producer of the Mason & Ireland show on ESPN LA 710. Greg had great insight on the young core and what the future holds for the Lakers this season. Hannah Kulik who is a long time reporter from LakersNation.com comes on and had to rank the young core and you'll never believe the order she put her favorite Laker Kyle Kuzma in?!?!?! We also talk about how the preseason went and what we see for the first 2 games of the regular season against Portland and Houston. With the passing of a Lakers great Tex Winter this week we remember him on our podcast. follow Greg Bergman on twitter: @BergmanGreg look for him on his Dodger Postgame show on twitch, periscope, facebook, Instagram, dodgers nation......He's everywhere folks! follow Hannah Kulik on twitter: @Hannah_Kulik on Instagram: @hannahrosekulik as always thanks for supporting the podcast! Please don't forget to subscribe, rate and share with your friends! email questions to 16andCountingPod@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/LakersUnfiltered/support
Join our hosts Chris Murman and Jay Hrcsko as they sit down with experienced dojo coach Andrew Deal to talk about the Agile dojo...what is it? How does it work? What should you expect? Somehow they involve Tex Winter's triangle offense in the conversation, and close out with some death metal. What a fun ride!
The Star's Kellis Robinett and Blair Kerkhoff discuss the memorial service for legendary basketball coach Tex Winter and K-State football coming off a bye and heading to Oklahoma. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ozman The Wizard and Na'imah breakdown the entire meeting between Kanye West and Donald Trump (the good, the bad, and everything in between). They also talk about the conversation between LeBron and Drake on HBO's "The Shop", the drama between Jimmy Butler and The Minnesota TimberBulls, R.I.P. Tex Winter, the possible return of Toys R Us and more!!! Please subscribe, share, rate and review.
En el ultimo episodio preview revisamos las nuevas incorporaciones a la lista de lesionados, comentamos el fallecimiento del gran Tex Winter y sus aportes al juego y al desarrollo de grandes leyendas. Debatimos la posibilidad de que Durant se vaya al finalizar la temporada, Anthony Davis tambien podria partir, se confirma la llegada de Joel Embiid a Under Armour y esta vez si revisamos la encuesta de general managers.
You have stumbled across the best Chicago Bulls show on the air. The voice of true Chicago Bulls fans lies here in this show. Hosts Jordan Maly and Matt Peck provide you with a daily dose of Chicago Bulls news and stories. We are Locked On Bulls. Join the conversation by leaving texts and voicemails at (331)-979-1369.Locked On Bulls is back, the guys kick off the show breaking down last night's win over the Pacers, 104-89. The guys discuss Fred Hoiberg's starting lineup adjustment, the option to bring Jabari Parker off the bench, how Parker reacted to it, and some of the best defense we have seen so far from this Bulls team. The guys talk about Wendell Carter Jr.'s first start and how Fred Hoiberg has cooled on the idea of playing Jabari Parker at SF.The second segment of the show the guys talk about the passing of Chicago Bulls legend Fred "Tex" Winter. The guys share some tweets from Scottie Pippen, Kobe Bryant, and Michael Jordan sharing their thoughts on his passing. The guys also get into the story of the day, Jimmy Butler's return to Wolves practice.The final segment of the show is dedicated to beef..., the guys may have sparked a rivalry with Locked On Hornets and Hornets fans over clowning their crowd earlier in the week. The guys have some thoughts of their own on their new found rivals. All of this and so much more on Locked On Bulls. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It's Bulls Podcast episode 12 and we've got Swaggy Brice in the house! Hosted by Marcus Couch and Wyse Black, we're covering the Chicago Bulls vs. Indiana Pacers pre-season post-game and remember Tex Winter, inventor of the triangle offense, who just passed away at age 96. Remember, we are a new show and we do need your support in social media. ... Read More The post Bulls Podcast #12 appeared first on Chicago Bulls Podcast.
En este episodio discutimos lo que pasó durante el regreso de Jimmy Butler a la práctica de los Timberwolves. Hablamos del despido de Ryan McDonough y la disfunción de los Phoenix Suns. Recordamos al legendario Tex Winter y por último hablamos de que jugador creemos podría estar participando en su primer juego de estrellas esta próxima temporada.
You have stumbled across the best Chicago Bulls show on the air. The voice of true Chicago Bulls fans lies here in this show. Hosts Jordan Maly and Matt Peck provide you with a daily dose of Chicago Bulls news and stories. We are Locked On Bulls. Join the conversation by leaving texts and voicemails at (331)-979-1369. Locked On Bulls is back, the guys kick off the show breaking down last night's win over the Pacers, 104-89. The guys discuss Fred Hoiberg's starting lineup adjustment, the option to bring Jabari Parker off the bench, how Parker reacted to it, and some of the best defense we have seen so far from this Bulls team. The guys talk about Wendell Carter Jr.'s first start and how Fred Hoiberg has cooled on the idea of playing Jabari Parker at SF. The second segment of the show the guys talk about the passing of Chicago Bulls legend Fred "Tex" Winter. The guys share some tweets from Scottie Pippen, Kobe Bryant, and Michael Jordan sharing their thoughts on his passing. The guys also get into the story of the day, Jimmy Butler's return to Wolves practice. The final segment of the show is dedicated to beef..., the guys may have sparked a rivalry with Locked On Hornets and Hornets fans over clowning their crowd earlier in the week. The guys have some thoughts of their own on their new found rivals. All of this and so much more on Locked On Bulls. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Eating MREs with Steve1989, Jimmy Butler's scandalous, curse-filled practice (10:51), Karl-Anthony Towns' sinking reputation (18:34), Suns axe their GM 10 days before the start of the season (31:00), Brooklyn (43:30) and Oklahoma City (50:02) are secretly entertaining squads, if we've been underappreciating LeBron James (57:30), "Basketball: A Love Story" (1:00:20), Tex Winter's legacy (1:06:05). Cookies is hosted by Ben Detrick, Jordan Redaelli and Andrew Kuo.
To order your Pinch Post T-Shirt, Click on THIS Link HERE: http://bit.ly/2vytBJn Coach Nick explained why he is so dedicated to the Triangle Offense and its principles - from coaching it at the High School level, to spending time with Tex Winter discussing how to implement it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
More with Peter Vecsey as he talks about his unfiltered thoughts about Phil Jackson and a story on an interview he had with Michael Jordan on his thoughts on Jackson's and Tex Winter's triangle offense. Along with his thoughts on the current playoffs and if Cavs-Warriors is good for the NBA.
The accomplished author of many acclaimed basketball books has delved into the story of Los Angeles Lakers legend Kobe Bryant with his new book "Showboat." Our discussion ranges from Kobe’s youth in Italy following his father’s professional basketball career, how he evolved during his NBA playing days, the relationships with Phil Jackson and Tex Winter, as well as the spectacular 60-point finale this past April. Photo courtesy of Little, Brown and Company Audio courtesy of NBA.com
Know-How – The Medicare Coach! Larry Weigel attended Kansas State University on a full basketball scholarship in the mid 1960’s and played for legendary coach Tex Winter. Larry graduated from K-State with a degree in Business Administration and a Master’s in education in 1968. He remained in Manhattan, KS and devoted twenty years working for the […]
Legendary NBA Sharpshooter Craig Hodges won championships alongside Michael Jordan with the Chicago Bulls and coached Kobe Bryant with the Los Angeles Lakers, and he's dedicated his post-playing career to building the bridge between athletes and their communities. Craig chats with us about some initiatives he's working on to bring sports and entertainment personalities together, plus gives his opinion on some of today's NBA topics: MJ vs. Kobe, Derrick Rose, The Triangle Offense, and more! This is Sports Without Borders. This is Sports for the Hip-Hop Generation. http://twitter.com/Section357 Search: The Section 357 Show (On iTunes, Stitcher, and Apple Podcasts) Show Tags: Chicago, Community, College Basketball, Tex Winter, Phil Jackson, Sports, Kobe Bryant, Long Beach State, Chicago Bulls, Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Pau Gasol, Chris Paul, LeBron James, Dwayne Wade, Detroit Pistons, Bill Cartwright, Dean Smith, Bill Walton, Triangle Offense, Brian Shaw, Bill Laimbeer, Isaiah Thomas, Jerry Sloan, Chuck Daley, Kevin Durant, Ray Lewis, Terrell Owens, Common, Magic Johnson