VISIT NEWS: 2027 4⭐️ Justin Frison has scheduled the following official visits, source told @LeagueRDY:
Miami Ohio: August 28-30
Murray State: September 10-12
Ole Miss: September 18-20
West Virginia: September 25-27
The 6-foot guard out Germantown, Tennessee currently leads the EYBL in assists.
Can’t wait to see who gets to hang the JuCo summer banner after this weekend ! Usually lose one and have people storm the court for the net cutting ceremony … lol
Summer Hoops !
0-0 before and after ! Just hope we get better and some guys get some 4 year looks #hawkseverywhere
Jersey Day at Camp is always 🔥🔥🔥
Campers are up this morning working & full or “ENERGY” which is the word of the Day.
@CoachNicholsj the Red Throwback is 🔥🔥😭😭
Texas A&M Head Coach Bucky McMillan on roster spending in the SEC:
"This year, in the SEC, this recruiting class - it's been something different. It doesn't even mathematically make sense, and I mean this, what some of these places have spent this year."
Excited to announce the RETURNING players for 26-27. @CoachNicholsj has built a monster for 26-27 season.
College coaches these guys will be all over this summer, so check them out!!
Returning a All-American & ✌🏽All-Conference Guys, with some studs 💨
🔴🔵🤘🏽#WaltersUp#GUTH
@NicoYantko's vision and leadership for @MSURacers has been legendary. He has adapted quickly to new leadership challenges in the current college athletics era. He has innovated and stayed one step ahead of the competition. The impact he’s made on the brand and region is truly special. I’m grateful to work under a leader who deeply understands the future of college athletics and works tirelessly to elevate Murray State. #GoRacers 🏇📈
Find a $20 bill in an old jacket and you're happy for about a minute. Lose $20 somewhere and it nags at you all day. Same twenty bucks. To your brain, a loss weighs about twice as much as a win, and that lopsided math leads somewhere strange.
Researchers have put a number on it. Picture a clean coin flip: heads you win $100, tails you lose $100. Most people pass. The odds are fair, but it feels like a bad idea. To get a yes, the win usually has to climb to around $200. A psychologist named Daniel Kahneman won a Nobel Prize in 2002 partly for pinning this down.
In 2007, UCLA researchers scanned people's brains while they made these bets. When the possible win climbed, the brain's reward center, the part that gives you a little hit of pleasure, lit up. When the possible loss climbed, that same spot went dim. And it went dim faster than it ever lit up. Your pleasure system slams the brakes harder for a loss than it hits the gas for an equal win.
The fear has an exact address in the brain, and we know because of two people who are missing it. A rare disease wiped out their amygdala, the almond-sized alarm bell that runs fear. These two do not feel fear the way the rest of us do. And they were not scared of losing money either. They cheerfully took bets everyone else refused. The same wiring that makes you flinch at a spider makes you scared to lose cash.
This goes back further than money itself. A lab at Yale handed capuchin monkeys little metal tokens and taught them to buy food. The monkeys picked it up fast, even loading up on a snack when its price dropped. But put a gamble in front of them and they hated losing the same crooked way we do, even though none had ever seen money. Looks like the fear is built in, there from the start.
It costs people money, too. One team combed through 10,000 investment accounts and found the same habit. Folks sell their winners fast to lock in the good feeling, but grip their losers for months, because selling one means admitting the money is gone. The losers tend to keep sliding, while the winners they dumped keep climbing. The move that feels safe is the one losing them money.
The cheap version is two hours on hold fighting an airline for a refund you'll forget by next month. The expensive version is a pile of losing stocks you can't make yourself sell. One wastes an afternoon. The other can eat away at your savings for years.
Memphis prioritized other guards and now have to face Jordan Frison twice in AAC play next year.
Frison is another example of how much talent is actually in the city 🤷♂️
It’s also awesome to see Memphis-based agent @zlucchesi of @SportsNetLLC having now helped secure big time landing spots for two Memphis kids over the last few days (Brock Vice to Kansas State and now Jordan Frison to Wichita State).
Great work he and @CoachEBuggs are doing over there putting on for the city of Memphis 👏
He took over a team that was 1-27 and went to two national title games. I keep telling you guys, there’s amazing coaches out here you’ve never heard of.
Thank you, FIU, for a meaningful eight years filled with adversity, growth, wins, lasting relationships, and unforgettable moments.
A special thank you to @jeremykballard for giving me the opportunity. I’m truly grateful.
I look forward to watching the continued success of the program in the years ahead.