Nike Camp of Champions!
Hosted by Clovis West Girls Basketball
June 22-25
Email: [email protected] to register!
DON’T MISS OUT ON THE LONGEST RUNNING GIRLS BASKETBALL CAMP IN THE VALLEY!
Open to all girls entering Kindergarten through 8th Grade!
Two more delays. This is becoming surreal. This is not the customer service from @SouthwestAir that I’m used to at all.
And now we’re sitting on the tarmac and being told the plane is overweight.
Lost days, lost finances on extra hotel and food, no credit or help at all???
Worst experience ever on @SouthwestAir. 3 leg flight home. Arrive at airport 3 hours before take off.
3rd leg delayed. Then 1st leg delayed
Then after 3 hours in the airport, flight canceled & rebooked to 5:20am next day
No hotel. No credit.
Next day 2nd flight delayed
New York Giants Malik Nabers reacts to the #DallasCowboys selecting Caleb Downs.
“I’d rather get him than play against him…I gotta play against this thing again…bro he’s good. He’s very good, he’s VERY good.”
(🎥: @BleacherReport on YT)
Before joining the
Nike EYBL circuit last year
A college coach mentioned :
“Doing Something vs Nobody … means Nothing …
Doing Something vs Somebody …means Everything”
Challenge accepted
It started with a private jet and a lie.
In early 1986, Bo Jackson was a senior at Auburn University — the reigning Heisman Trophy winner and a rare athlete dominating both football and baseball. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, holding the first overall pick in the 1986 NFL Draft, wanted him badly. Owner Hugh Culverhouse arranged a private jet to bring him to Tampa.
He told Jackson the trip had been cleared by the NCAA.
It hadn’t.
When Jackson returned, he was ruled ineligible for the rest of his senior baseball season. A season taken from him.
He believed it wasn’t a mistake.
He told Culverhouse: draft me if you want—you’ll waste the pick.
They drafted him anyway. First overall. Offered him $7.6 million.
He said no.
Instead, he signed with the Kansas City Royals for $1.07 million and went to the minor leagues. Bus rides. Empty seats. No guarantees.
From the outside, it looked irrational.
From the inside, it was principle.
On November 30, 1987 — his 25th birthday — Jackson lined up for the Los Angeles Raiders on Monday Night Football against the Seattle Seahawks. Linebacker Brian Bosworth had promised to stop him.
He didn’t.
Jackson took a handoff, broke outside, and ran 91 yards for a touchdown — past defenders, past the sideline, straight into the tunnel.
Later, he ran straight through Bosworth at the goal line.
221 rushing yards.
His fifth NFL game.
Then baseball came.
In 1989, he was named MVP of the MLB All Star Game — chasing down impossible plays and hitting a home run off Rick Reuschel that traveled nearly 450 feet.
Two sports. Two leagues. One athlete.
But the most remarkable thing about Bo Jackson wasn’t the speed or the power.
It was the refusal.
He refused to reward dishonesty.
He refused to let money erase what had been done to him.
He chose a bus ride over millions because some things matter more than numbers.
His career ended too soon — a devastating hip injury in 1991 changed everything.
But his legacy didn’t.
Bo Jackson remains the only athlete ever named an All-Star in both Major League Baseball and the National Football League.
And that legacy began with a decision.
A 22-year-old sitting on the ground in Auburn, his baseball season gone, choosing not to bend.
He didn’t break.
The world adjusted around him.
@Amy_Siskind Do you know Addie personally? She’s an outstanding young lady with aspirations who is looking for something different. She doesn’t need to beg for anything. Her character and work ethic will open doors for her and she’ll have plenty of options to find the right fit.
The WCP NorCal Girls Basketball Coach of the Year is Craig Campbell.
14 straight section titles. A 20-point comeback in the NorCal semifinal.
With talk of a down year, Clovis West finished nationally ranked and among the state’s best.
🔗 Story: https://t.co/4a21XrmFzG
@sportsfan6718@Caballaz2005 This is what happens when you have non-athletes making decisions that impact players and coaches. Heaven forbid you ask for input from those actually in the trenches and living it. Happens at every level.
@sportsfan6718 Gino is 100% spot on! Same garbage goes with the broadcast of the championship game. The men play on Monday night every year, while the women are stuck at 12 or 1230. They argue that that is a primetime slot for a Sunday, yet the prime NBA game is still at 5 o’clock on a Sunday.
One of the best in the game with praise for Coach Sopak!
3x national champion head coach and one of the most decorated participants in U.S. women’s basketball history, Dawn Staley has some words to share!
#BattleBorn