Sean McVay on wanting to quit after the 2022 season —and how a conversation with his wife forced him to have a tough conversation with himself
This interview is incredible and I hope you all check it out on @BussinWTB
Inside the Program: Matt Soria 🔍
“The Scheduling Guru.”
Behind the scenes, Soria helps keep the entire machine moving — scheduling, travel, operations, logistics and the day-to-day details that allow SDSU basketball to operate at a high level.
Share a fantastic live performance?
Mine: Queens of the Stone Age - ‘Song For The Dead’
Dave Grohl on drums, Josh Homme &of course on vocals RIP, Mark Lanegan.
The energy, fervour, lineup & a cracking song!
Your nomination!? Share a link, vid etc!🤘
Cherie DeVaux worked as an assistant for over a decade, learning under some of the top trainers before starting her own barn in 2018.
Her horses have won her over $33M in career earnings, and she is now the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby.
There were more desert freaks per square foot than any other show last night & it made me proud to celebrate among my people. Cleaver is happy. Thank you.
Photos by Andreas Neumann
Watch @qotsa play with Nick Oliveri for first time since 2014
The band's former bassist joined them for a version of 'Rated R' track 'Auto Pilot' in Joshua Tree, California https://t.co/dg0kVid1g0
Queens of the Stone Age reunited with Nick Oliveri for the first time in 12 years, joining forces to perform the Rated R song "Auto Pilot."
https://t.co/uTMDmQLA2I
Chris Fowler shares a must-listen message on coaching and why it's more than just a profession.
"You have been nasty and irrational and deeply personal in your criticism of coaches from time to time. If you're a sports fan, I guarantee it. I've certainly been guilty."
"But do you know why coaches choose that as a profession in the first place?"
"Almost every single one of them - because they want to help people learn, grow, and improve as people and as athletes. I promise you, that's why they get into it."
"Coaching is a calling more than a profession. Lee Corso taught me that a long time ago."
It's one of the greatest examples of being a servant leader. It's pouring yourself into the growth of other people.
"You have to have what it takes to pour yourself into others in order to make a difference. Not everybody can do that."
"Yes, they're accountable for the wins and losses. But consider that so much of that is actually beyond their control. You're accountable for it. You're responsible for it. How much do you really control it?"
"Know the grind. What each and every coach at whatever level puts into it - whether you're a coach in Little League or AAU or high school - what they put into that is so demanding on them and their loved ones."
The sacrifices are invisible and the criticism is public.
"Consider them as human beings when you rip into them."
"I promise you, at their heart, they just wanna help people. That's the greatest joy they get out of it."
Coaching is a calling.
The wins feel good.
But watching someone become who they're capable of becoming that's why they do it.
(🎥 @cbfowler)