Stephen A Smith DESTROYS Lebrons GOAT Case
"He played 23 years,he still has 2 less titles than Michael Jordan, Michael Jordan played all 82 games 8 times, how many times did Lebron do it?, Michael Jordan is a 10x Scoring Champion, how many times did Lebron do it?, Michael Jordan is 9x All Nba defensive player, how many times did Lebron do it?, theres nothing to discuss. Michael Jordan averaged over 30 in the postseason 7 times, how many times did Lebron do it?, theres nothing to discuss, hes approaching year 24 and still has 2 less titles"
(Via The Late Run Show)
If I were an AD, I’d create a 1 week minimum no practice policy for athletes that finish a season before they can start another sport. 1 week should not put any team or athlete “behind” and should not affect playing time, starting lineups… etc especially for sports that don’t officially start for months!
@ASmithqfrg@FixingEducation I’m game for this. Schools provide a service. They cannot continue to function as parents, counselors, mental health experts, nutritionist, and baby sitters for kids who throw desks, curse out teachers, and disrupt others rights to learn under the guise of special ed
Teachers:
Should high-demand positions like math, science, and special education receive higher pay because they’re harder to fill?
Or should all teachers stay on the same pay scale regardless of subject?
See a parent sitting quietly at a game?
Often, that’s the one who gets it.
No complaining.
No criticizing coaches.
No yelling at refs.
No drama.
Just watching their kid compete.
Youth sports need more parents like those.
Be part of the solution.
As an AD, one of the biggest challenges is understanding what athletes and parents truly want. Everyone says they want to win, but too often the communication I receive is centered around why practice is being missed, why workouts can’t happen, or why the commitment isn’t possible.
Winning is rarely about what happens on game day, it’s built in the unseen hours of preparation, consistency, and sacrifice. You cannot claim to want success while consistently avoiding the work required to achieve it.
Too often, “we want to win” really means “we want the rewards of winning without the discomfort of earning it.” When that gap exists, the blame often shifts to the coach instead of the habits.
Great programs are built when athletes, parents, and coaches all align in understanding that commitment comes before results. Wanting to win and being willing to do what it takes to win are two very different things.
@DanCrenshawTX I’m disappointed by this stance. The answer is YES! We should take the PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES literally. A president should communicate clearly and concisely, full stop.
Incredible take from Charles Barkley on Tom Izzo:
"The media, who don't know anything about sports, say 'Why is he yelling his players?' That's called coaching... if parents & friends get mad because you're getting yelled at, get better parents & better friends."
Salvador Perez:
2015 World Series MVP
2020 Comeback Player of the Year
2022 Lou Gehrig Award
2024 Roberto Clemente Award
2024 Stan Musial Award
2026 World Baseball Classic champion
9-time All-Star
5-time Gold Glove
5-time Silver Slugger
@LyndiMaxwe28968@MrDanielBuck I think you’re wrong. I think you have administrators that are handcuffed bc of district policy, state laws, OCR, and lawyers and lawsuits.