This is a remarkably cool video.
Sometimes the algorithm on this site is truly amazing. A few days ago I posted asking for recommendations of follows for World Cup analysis from an analytical perspective. I didn't actually receive much in the way of direct suggestions. But the algorithm recognized what I was looking for and I've received a steady feed of great stuff like this. And, of course, the more I click on it the more good recommendations I receive of commentary I never would've received on my own. Super cool.
.@jeffzrebiec is optimistic about a Lamar Jackson contract extension:
“I don't sense frustration. I sense Lamar has communicated with the Ravens exactly what his expectations are and they’re comfortable with it.” #RavensFlock
“You CAN coach people… that's the problem with half the league.”
@Hasselbeck explains why he thinks quarterbacks do NOT need to play in order to develop:
Major cheat code for life: Leave people better than you found them. A kind word. A thoughtful question. A small encouragement. A little more belief than they had before. You never know which sentence becomes the one someone carries for years.
“Motion by a wide receiver across the formation is NOT the same man/zone indicator that it was five, ten years ago…”
“Running backs have become a MUCH better man/zone indicator and predictor.”
@GregCosell explains why:
A 77-year-old New Yorker bought a portable urinal so he wouldn't risk leaving his seat during a potential Knicks title clincher.
That's how much this championship meant to New York.
✍️ @FredKatz
https://t.co/VO1Hb4wcBq
William Zinsser taught writing at Yale, then wrote the book that has fixed more bad writing than every English class combined.
Here are 10 cuts from "On Writing Well" that instantly make your writing twice as strong.
1) Delete every word doing no work