Monday, June 15, 2009

Camp Team Picture




The special Awards we gave out went to the following:

Most valuable Player (Coaches Award)- Oliver W.
Most Improved Player - Camden C.
Charlie Hustle - Matthew H.
Spirit and Sportsmanship - Baylor R.
Intestinal Fortitude (IF) - Mia S.
Defensive Award - Nick and Matt T.
Offensive Award - Joeli E.
Rebounding/Post Award - Carter S. and Tiana

More award announcements to come!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Camp Highlights

This is by far the best camp I have been a part of. GREAT JOB CAMPERS!

Heather S. was amazing in Belco's Pete Maravich drills yesterday!!! Great job Heather.
Nicholas C. has improved over the last few days as much as any player in the camp.
Camden C. is still learning the game, but she is tall, can learn these skills quickly and has a lot of potential.
Joeli Ehas challenged herself every day by asking to play with the older kids. She has no fear and is a future star.
Jayne F. has also improved so much in the last few days and she has fun with
Brett G. is has improved tremendously over the last year and should be a force in his league in the fall.
Grace is hitting her jumper, and she is playing aggressively. Her ball handling skills are imcredible as well.
Camryn is learning about many aspects of the game. She has no fear of failure and I am impressed with her attitude.
Sofia I. is a star in the making and we hope she feels better.
David K. is a completely different player this year. He is tough, agressive, and a great kid.
Tiana is a star, both in her personality, smile, and ability.
Francesca is an amazing athlete. She is tall and graceful, but very strong a s well.
Caroline Q. is a strong personality player, who always makes comments that make people smile. Her game is also improving daily.
Baylor is complemented by every camper and is a natural born leader.
Leo is still one of the fastest players in camp, and he is challenging himself daily by playing with older campers.
Jake R.can shoot the ball as well as anyone, and is a future star.
Scott R. is having a great week, always a student of the game, and is a star.
Zach R. continues to attack the game and is one of the smartest boys I have met in a long time!!!
Blake R. has become a stronger player over the last few months. He wants to be a star and will be just that if he continues to believe in himself.
Sam R.is a great teammate who makes others smile. She now has a good triple threat position.
Mia S. is one of the best athletes I have seen her age. She can play anything well, and she wins and loses with a smile!!!
Ally S. continues to be a great sport. She has improved all of her skills and is a winner on and off the court.
Jamie S. has great hands, shoots vert well, and has been a leader among the younger girls.
Carter S. is the birthday boy Happy Birthday Carter. He is a menace on the glass (rebounds) and he owns the inside!
Abbey S. is becoming a very good player for her age. She can handle the ball and has no problem reaching the basket. Very impressive!
Allison S. is fearless and one of the best players her age. She always plays hard and has a bright future.
Trent S. is one of the leaders from his group. You can always count on him to help set the example for our other campers.
Lexi T. had the fastest time in our skills competition.
Matthew T. has improved over the last few days. He understands his role and is a great teammate.
Oliver has everyone talking about him, and they only say great things about him. A future HS All Star!!!
Matthew H. continues to love the game. He is the hardest worker his age, and he is a very good player.
Goldman Blake is an amazing athlete. After his first day, he already blended in so much that we feel like we have had him at camp all week.!!!

Monday, May 25, 2009

Congratulating Carlos at his homecoming!

Carlos Cutting the Net down after winning MVP of the Championship!

Arroyo is unreal! He won MVP and the Championship of Isreal!

JPost.com » Sports » Article


May 24, 2009 7:33 | Updated May 24, 2009 7:43
Mac Tel Aviv's Arroyo satisfied with his first season in Israel
By JEREMY LAST






Puerto Rican basketball legend Carlos Arroyo had a massive smile on his face.


Maccabi's Carlos Arroyo.
Photo: Asaf Kliger [file]
It was around 11.30 p.m. on Thursday and he was sitting in the media room at Nokia Arena wearing a soaking wet Maccabi Tel Aviv T-shirt with the word "Champions" proudly emblazoned across the middle, waiting for the post-game press conference to begin.

After a grueling eight-month season, the 29-year-old point guard, who last summer transferred from the NBA's Orlando Magic to play in Israel's Basketball Super League, had finally let his professional guard down and celebrated winning the championship by ecstatically jumping round the locker room as his teammates poured drinks all over each other.

Throughout the turbulent season, which saw some 15 foreign players walk through the revolving doors of Maccabi Tel Aviv and only a handful see the term out, Arroyo has remained the consummate professional.

He confused the Israeli media by arriving and leaving each game wearing a full suit and tie as is the custom in the NBA, and always applied himself in those games.

On Thursday he finished the season with the MVP award in Tel Aviv's BSL 85-72 championship game win over Maccabi Haifa where he scored 22 points and passed six assists in 37 minutes on court.



But when all was said and done on Thursday Arroyo was visibly excited to win the league title with Maccabi.

At one point while speaking to The Jerusalem Post in the locker room after the game he started shouting instead of answering a question about his plans for next season.

"This is a celebration for basketball and each other. I can't talk about next year. You don't get a lot of chances to be in this position. It's amazing," Arroyo said before breaking into a dance with fellow American teammate Dee Brown.

A few minutes later, as he sat in the press conference, Arroyo reflected on his year in Israel.

Despite the disappointing Euroleague campaign - which began with Effi Birenboim as coach and ended with Pini Gershon in charge but Maccabi still failing to even reach the quarterfinals after losing in the 2008 final - Arroyo seemed satisfied with his first season in the holy land.

"I've got to give a lot credit to my teammates," he said. "We went through so much this year - the player changing, the coach changing. And… the guys who stayed as a group here, we stayed focused. We understood what it meant to be in this position to be able to celebrate today.

"That's a lot of credit to my teammates. That shows character and that's why were celebrating right now like we're celebrating in the locker room. We have a great amount of respect for each other. We love each other so much. We knew what we needed to do. We held ourselves accountable all year and that's what championship teams do."

When Arroyo arrived in Tel Aviv last year he became the highest paid player ever in the Israeli league, with a $2.5 million contract, one of the most prominent names to ever play in Israel.

The pressure was immense and sometimes it showed, with the guard unable to inspire his team every week in Europe.

Even on Thursday things did not start as planned and at the midpoint of the second quarter Haifa was leading 32-20.

"It's the final game so you have to understand things are going to happen that aren't going to go your way, so whoever stays focused and fights more are going to win the championship," Arroyo said, looking back at the evening's events.

The man credited with inspiring the team in yellow and blue to fight back and win in a commanding fashion was actually not Arroyo, but 37-year-old veteran team captain Derrick Sharp, who entered the game in the second quarter and scored a quick six points, including the three-pointer which gave Tel Aviv a 38-37 lead.

Asked if his performance in the final proved that he is the leader of Maccabi, Arroyo was quick to answer with another indication of his modesty and professionalism.

"I would say I'm another player. The leader of this team is Derrick Sharp and he showed it tonight... I want to be like Derrick Sharp when I grow up," he added with a smile.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

NBA Playoffs....Leaving Your Best on the floor!

The Celts managed to win one of the best series in recent times. The Bulls were incredible, and I figure they will be a team to reckon with in the next few years. But the Celts pulled this off without their MVP and best defender Kevin Garnett. It takes a strong team to pull that off, but it takes heart.

There is a term called "laying your heart on the floor." That is what the Celts do. When you finish a game, you must be able to say "I left my heart out there" or "I put my heart on the line." This is what winner are made of. They never feel they could have done more.

At this point of the playoffs, I feel Cleveland is the best team, but I wonder if LA can win it all or maybe Dallas will finally turn the corner and win it. The Heat play today and I feel they will win on the road, but even if they get past Atlanta, they will run into King James, and that will be too much for even D Wade!

Everyone who plays the game plays to win, but I want my players and all campers of mine to learn how to leave your best on the floor, and that is a goal of Courts 1on1 for the summer camps. This will be our focus!

I want to reannounce all of my camps as well, so here is the info!

Summer Basketball Camp

Courts 1 on 1 Sports is proud to announce that they will be running 6 separate 1 week camps this summer.

Grades 3 - 9 Boys and Girls

All camps are 9am - 4pm Monday through Friday with drop off and pick up after 8:30am and before 4:30pm.

Dates are as follows:

June 8 - 12 at Ransom Everglades Upper School Gymnasium.
July 20 - 24 at Ransom Everglades Middle School Gymnasium.
July 27 - 31 at Ransom Everglades Middle School Gymnasium.

August 3 - 7th at Temple Beth Am Gymnasium
August 10 - 14 at Temple Beth Am Gymnasium
August 17 - 21 at Temple Beth Am Gymnasium

Price is $250 for a one week session or $225 per week if registering for more than one session, with lunch, t-shirt, and award included.

CLICK HERE for a registration form for camp at Ransom Everglades.

Temple Beth Am will be handling their own registration.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Another one!

Streets to star: Oher's stunning NFL journeyby Mark Kriegel

Where will Oher go? Mock draft: How high will Michael Oher go in Saturday's draft? Our experts fill you in. Glazer: The definitive mock draft
Schrager: Seven-round mock draft
Scout.com: Top 25 NFL prospects

"My foster parents took me," he said.

I ask how many foster homes he'd been in.

"About three or four," he says. "Something like that."

His arrival today, for a pre-draft briefing at the Times Square Westin, is more triumphant than anything that 7-year-old foster child could have imagined. Oher is wearing a Yankees cap, and I find myself wondering if it's a sign of allegiance, or merely a fashion statement.

"They were always on TV," says Oher, explaining his rooting interest.

In other words, when you're a kid living place to place, which is to say, no place at all, the team on national television affords you some consistency, maybe even something to believe in.


Latest from Kriegel Success story: From living on the streets to a coveted NFL prospect, Michael Oher's life gives us all a reason to cheer.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
He's a pro: Mark Sanchez has proved that he's the most NFL-ready QB in the draft, no matter what Pete Carroll thinks.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title or bust: There will be no moral victories. For Kobe Bryant to seal his legacy, the Lakers have to win it all this time.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Complete Mark Kriegel archive
"Jorge Posada, Bernie Williams, I liked all them guys," he says. Then, Oher's eyes narrow, raising a furrow across his brow. It's an arch expression, playful, but with a hint of the menace that awaits opponents on the other side of the ball.

"You thought I was just playing?" he drawls.

Michael Oher isn't playing. He's 6-foot-6, 310 pounds, and still relatively svelte around the middle. He possesses in abundance what the pro scouts covet in first-round left tackles — that uncanny amalgam of nimble ferocity. He can pancake a state of the art defensive end. He can throw a fastball. He can dunk, any which way. "I can do it all," he says of his basketball prowess. "I'm going to blow out a rim."

Still, athletic ability isn't what makes Michael Oher unique. "There's people in my neighborhood," he says, "that had a lot more talent than me."

Back in the Memphis neighborhood to which he was born, Oher was just another lost child, one of 13 siblings. His biological father was murdered. His mother was a crack addict. Until he was 16, he lacked a permanent address.

How did you eat, I ask.

"You did whatever you could," he says. "Whatever you could."

"Yeah, but . . ."


Michael Oher at the NFL combine. (Scott Boehm / Getty Images)

"Churches. Community centers, stuff like that."

"The worst place you slept?"

"I don't know. A porch?"

At 16, quite accidentally, Oher arrived at Briarcrest Christian School, and by turns described in Michael Lewis' bestseller, The Blind Side, eventually found himself adopted by the well-to-do family of Sean and Lee Anne Touhy. They gave him a home, a tutor, a chance and still more.

Asked what hurts the most about living on the streets, Oher says, "not having somebody to take care of you, to be there for you, to tuck you in at night."

To tuck you in.

That's the real saving grace of Michael Oher. It's not his vertical, or his bench, or anything that can be quantified in the combine. Rather, what survived against all odds on the streets of Memphis, was a capacity to love and be loved. To be tucked in.

"For them to take me in with open arms," he says of the Touhys, "that just shows you the kind of heart they have. Where I come from, you don't do anything like that."

I wonder where he'd be if not for his chance admission to Briarcrest or the Touhys.

"That's a good question," he says. "I don't know. I'm very determined in everything I do. But meeting my family made the road a lot easier."


What a concept: meeting my family.

He has two siblings in attendance here at the draft. There's his dreadlocked biological brother, Marcus, and his blond sister, Collins. Collins and Michael attended Ole Miss, where he will graduate in a couple of weeks with a degree in criminal justice.

Why criminal justice, I ask.

"To take the innocent from the bad guys," he says.

To save them, he means.

For the record, Oher finally read The Blind Side about a month ago. "It was all right," he says. "It had a few things that probably made me look like I wasn't smart . . . But people got to sell books."

I don't think that's the case. To my mind, Lewis' book is a near perfect synthesis of analysis and narrative. And while it provides readers several ways to consider Michael Oher, not smart is not among them.

There's still a day and a half before the draft. According to Oher, the team that picks another offensive lineman is a team that's making a mistake.

"If you do, I don't understand," he says. "I know I'm the best. I play in the best conference. Every Saturday. Every snap. All you got to do is watch film."

He hasn't allowed a sack since 2007. "I just have a passion for it, shutting down that elite pass rusher," he says. "Every year, it seems like these guys are evolving into another monster. I just shut 'em down."

He leans in; his eyes narrow. I imagine this is what he looks like to his opponents, as seen up close, through the bars of a face mask.

I step back. Then I find myself wanting to cheer — for Michael Oher, of course, but also for all those kids who have yet to meet their families.

Perfect Game by a girl against boys??? Check it out!

http://msn.foxsports.com/video?vid=0726e916-56f4-4cf7-8182-4a2ef27707d5&from=IV2_en-us_foxsports_articles

Girl, 12, throws perfect game against boysAssociated Press
add this RSS blog email print
Updated: April 24, 2009, 10:36 AM EST 181 comments BAYONNE, N.J. (AP) - On the pitcher's mound, a 12-year-old girl from New Jersey is perfect.

Mackenzie Brown is the first girl in Bayonne Little League history to throw a perfect game. She retired all 18 boys she faced on Tuesday.

There are no official records of how many perfect games are thrown per season. Little League Baseball in Williamsport, Pa., estimates only 50 to 60 occur each year. No one knows how many have been thrown by girls.

Brown says she knew she had something special going in the fourth inning and just tried not to mess up.

She'll get to throw out the first pitch at Citi Field on Saturday when the New York Mets host the Washington Nationals.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

This is the way things are supposed to be!


My wife Jami found this article for me! It is an awesome story!

Life of Reilly
No ticket, no problem. Some lucky D-backs fans got a free pass.
by Rick Reilly


Kaylea Hunt
The Diamondbacks honored Eric Robles (second from left) with season tickets.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The following column appears in the April 20 issue of ESPN The Magazine.

Here's a scoop for you. The Diamondbacks are flagrantly violating MLB rules. They're a pro team, and yet they're giving out full-ride scholarships. Been doing it for two years now!

Not to their players. To their fans.

It's an idea D-backs CEO Derrick Hall came up with at one game when a season-ticket holder who'd lost everything, even her car, introduced herself. She told him a fan in her section had bought her two season tickets for the rest of the year, even picked her up every game and took her home. And Hall thought, "Why don't we do this for our fans?" So he asked fans to send in applications for scholarships. Soon, his e-mail in-box was swamped.

My 13-year-old nephew is a huge fan. He is a really good kid but gets bullied for his need of dental work and lack of "designer" clothes. Baseball is his outlet. No one can see him underneath that catcher mask. His family has always struggled, and recently his father got laid off. He'd love to go to a game. -- Michelle

Michelle's nephew, who preferred not to be named, didn't get a ticket to just a single game. He's going to all 81, along with his parents, brother and sister.

Arizona put 18 families on scholarship.

"He went crazy," says his dad, an unemployed electrician. "He kept yelling, 'Are you kidding me!?!' And he put the letter from the D-backs up on his wall. He's such a good kid."

Next question: Anybody know a big­hearted orthodontist?

I'm a single mom of two amazing little boys. For the past two years [we've] been struggling to pick up the pieces after my [husband and I split abruptly]. We lost our house, our car and had to sell mostly everything we owned. I do not make enough to make ends meet, and my ex-husband is behind in child support by $20,000. [Editor's note: Daniel Lombardi's wages are now being used to pay down that debt.] I would really love to take my boys to the games and give them some enjoyment. -- Tami Lombardi

Derrick Hall called to tell Ms. Lombardi that she was getting not only three season tickets but free parking, $400 in food vouchers and spots for her boys in a Diamondbacks players' clinic. Will that do?

"It was so awesome," she gushes. "We never miss a game on TV. Now we get to go!"

Even better: Her ex is a huge D-backs fan. Choke on it, dude.

All told, the D-backs put 18 families on scholarship -- 41 season tickets worth nearly $100,000 -- and every one of their stories would make your knees give. There was the daughter whose softball-playing mom broke her leg sliding into second, couldn't work and is now losing her house. There was Beth Godfrey, who was fighting leukemia. She won tickets but died soon afterward. Now those tickets are being donated in her name to charity.

One mom nominated her firefighter son, Breezy Morago, who broke his leg playing football, then rebroke it when a Jeep hit him while he was riding his bike, then burned it fighting a fire. Oh, and he lost everything when his own house burned. He gets a pair of tickets. Maybe he'll be safe at the ballpark.

My favorite, though, might be this one:

I couldn't raise my three children without my young brother. He drives my son to all of his baseball games, picks up my sick kids, takes them to movies, helps with homework, always lends a hand. What 20-year-old single guy does this and is still a full-time student and holds down two jobs? My brother Eric! Ever since he was little, he has had season tickets on his Christmas list. Year after year it goes unanswered. This year I ask you to consider my sweet brother Eric, the Greatest Uncle. -- Carol Stuart

Like nearly every winner, the Greatest Uncle, Eric Robles, didn't know what his sister had done. When he found out he won, "It was five minutes before it hit me: I have season tickets!" Robles says.

And in a what-should-I-Twitter-about-myself-now? world, why would a young guy be so selfless? "Well, I know what it's like when your parents divorce. It can be hard. Moving. Splitting up from their dad. I wanted to make sure nothing happened to the kids."

He spends most days three feet off the ground now. In fact, on the season schedule, he has circled in red the games he's going to.

A co-worker was looking at it and finally said, "Eric, every game is circled."

Exactly.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Watching Nova/Pitt Right Now And....

I am so amazed at the will of both teams. It is a perfect game when both teams play defense with such passion....There is no loser in this game. One team basically will run out of time...

After this game, the Big East will be taking the first two spots if the Final Four...WOW!

There is a different level of basketball right now called the Big East. Despite Syracuse losing last game, they were elite as well. I truly believe that Syracuse was worn out from the 6 OT game. Remember, Uconn was rewarded with losing that game, because while the Cuse played the next night, UCONN rested...It is tough to win the Big East and the NCAA Tourney! UCONN has done it...Maybe the Cuse, but its tough!

After Louiville wins, that will make it 3 out of 4!

It is going to be one of the best FINAL FOUR's EVER!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Tourney Time

First of all congratulations to my cousins J and Z for winning their little league basketball championship. I always say, there is only one team who ends their season with a win, so when you do, it is special!

In March Madness, I see the same as I did from day 1. UCONN and LOUIVILLE are by far the two best teams.

Arizona looks like they were deserving of their at large bid, and UNC looks suspect if Lawson doesn't keep up his miracle play.

Duke is in for a tough matchup with Nova, who is Big East tested.

The Big East might get 4 Final Four teams if the Orange can beat OU and UNC. Big if, but the Cuse is loaded...and Big East tested!!!

We are nearing the NBA playoffs, and opening day MLB so I will be posting again soon!

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Syracuse and 6 overtimes

Okay, so did anyone see the 6 overtime game between Syracuse and UCONN?

I went to the Big East tournament from 1992 through 1999. It is in Madison Square Garden in NYC so the atmosphere needs no drama to make it exciting.
Every year, however, the games seem to get more exciting, and as my father said, always come down to the wire. Here is a great article about this game:

Syracuse beats UConn in historic 6-overtime thriller
8:37 AM Fri, Mar 13, 2009 | Permalink
Mike McDermott Email | Email this entry

By Pete Thamel
The New York Times

NEW YORK - It was a game that appeared finished, but never really wanted to end. And after nearly four hours, six overtimes and countless records, Big East rivals Syracuse and Connecticut played a game whose legacy will resonate in college basketball lore.

The Orange defeated Connecticut, 127-117, in six overtimes Thursday night at Madison Square Garden to advance to the semifinals of the Big East tournament. They finished 10 minutes short of completing two whole games.

It was the longest game in Big East history and tied for the second-longest game in NCAA Division I history.

By the end at 1:22 a.m., 3 hours and 46 minutes had elapsed since tip-off. Jonny Flynn played 67 minutes, there were 66 fouls in the game and won the game Orange had walk-on Justin Thomas on the floor. Flynn led the Orange with 31 points.

Oddly, after a game defined by even play and parity, the Orange rolled in the sixth overtime. Andy Rautins curled off a screen for a 3-pointer on the first possession of the sixth overtime and the Orange cruised from there.

And all of those superlatives and hyperbole may have best been summed by Flynn, the Syracuse point guard.

At the end of the fifth overtime, he was too tired to return to the Syracuse bench. He sat down on the press table in front of a few reporters.

"One of these games," he said, flashing his trademark smile and shaking his head in disbelief. "This is crazy."

Five periods earlier, guard Eric Devendorf leaped up on the scorer's table, pumped his fist violently into the air after swishing an improbable 3-point shot at the end of regulation.

But Devendorf's reaction turned out to be a case of premature celebration, as officials waved off the shot after reviewing the replay. It also turned out to be just the beginning of the drama in a six-overtime classic, as Syracuse won a battle of attrition.

Syracuse (25-8), the tournament's sixth seed, will play West Virginia on Friday at 9 p.m.
As midnight passed and then 1 a.m., players fouled out and tugged at their shorts in exhaustion, the bands kept playing and the overtimes toppled one upon another. The most recent six-overtime game in Division I was Minnesota's 59-56 victory against Purdue in 1955.

This game, which ended at 1:22 a.m., will long reverberate in Big East lore. It was the only the second tournament game to reach triple overtime, after the 1981 final between Syracuse and Villanova. Syracuse's Leo Rautins won that game on a tip-in. His son Andy did him one better Thursday by hitting an N.B.A.-range 3-pointer to force the fourth overtime.

Paul Harris had 29 for Syracuse. UConn's A.J. Price led all scorers with 33 points and Stanley Robinson had 28.

It was a taxing night for potential No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament, as Oklahoma, Pittsburgh and finally Connecticut (24-9) were eliminated from their conference tournaments on Thursday.

At the end of regulation, Connecticut's Kemba Walker flipped in a putback with 1.1 seconds remaining to tie the game at 71-71. That set up Devendorf's shot. Paul Harris tried a long inbound pass to Kristof Ongenaet, but the ball was tipped to Devendorf, who calmly swished the shot from the right wing and then celebrated as if he had won the lottery. His leap onto the scorer's table only perpetuated his image as one of the league's most divisive players.

After a review that lasted a few minutes, the Huskies jumped around as if they had won the game. But in a sense it had barely begun.

In the first overtime, the Orange needed a drive and dish from Jonny Flynn to Rick Jackson for a slam with 4.7 seconds remaining to tie the game and force a second overtime.

In that overtime, Syracuse had the ball with the score tied, but Flynn's 17-foot pull-up jumper came up short on the front rim. Walker missed a potential winning shot as time expired.

Connecticut jumped out to six-point lead in the second overtime with a tip-in by Jeff Adrian. But in a game lathered in drama, the Huskies let Syracuse in with a flurry of turnovers and missed free throws. The Huskies missed three of four free throws to keep their lead at three and Rautins hit his long 3-pointer to make it 98-98.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

#1 seed for NCAA tounrney early prediction

UNC
Pitt
UCONN
Louiville

Watch out for Rick Pitino's squad. They are constantly moving up in the rankings, and will be there at the end!

Also, notice there are 3 Big East teams listed. That has never happened before!

Quote of the Day

I have not done a quote in a long time!

No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.

Eleanor Roosevelt


This quote relates to camps and all youth sports in general!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Summer Camps!!!

I am pleased to announce

I will be running

COED BASKETBALL CAMPS at RANSOM EVERGLADES and TEMPLE BETH AM

Full days with lunch included from 9-4 pm

on the following dates

June 8-12 at Ransom Everglades Upper School Gymnasium
July 20-24 at Ransom Everglades Middle School Gymnasium
July 27-31 at Ransom Everglades Middle School Gymnasium

August (TBA) at Temple Beth Am

*Drop-off after 8:30 am, pick up until 4:30 PM.

Ages are going into 3rd-5th and 6th-9th grades. These are two separate goups within the camp.

Cost is $250 with lunch, award, and t-shirt included for 1 week.
If you pre-register for 2 weeks= $450; 3 weeks= $650


FOR FURTHER INFO:
Contact Courtney Young at 305.926.7899
or via email at cyoung@courts1on1.com

Court

MLB Predictions

AL East
Boston
Tampa
New York
Baltimore
Toronto

AL Central
Minnisota
Detroit
Cleveland
Chicago
Kansas City

AL West
LA
Seattle
Oakland
Texas

NL East
NY
Phili
Florida
Atlanta
Washington

NL Central
Cubbies
Reds
Cards
Pirates
Astros
Brewers

NL West
LA
Arizona
SF
Colorado
SD

Wildcards will be Tampa and Phili

AL Championship Boston over LA
NL Championship NY over Chicago

WS Boston over Chicago....And the cubbies lose again!

Friday, February 20, 2009

All Star Game NBA/March Madness and MLB

Nate Robinson played at Washington and flew under the radar. He looked amazing at the Dunk Contest. To be that small and make the NBA is a near miracle, but to be that little and win the dunk contest twice is beyond.

I think All star weekend is the best in the NBA compared to the other major sports. baseball is next, then Hockey, last, the NFL. The dunk contest has always been entertaining, and watching the great shooters in the NBA is a treat as well. Just look at my blag last year showing Jason Kapono shooting in practice.

SO who is the NBA's best? Cleveland, LA, Boston, Orlando, San Antonio? And NCAA?

They both are up for grabs if you ask me. There is no one clear favorite.

Monday, January 19, 2009

R and M




Great job R and M. I was very impressed with your first lesson!!!

Friday, January 9, 2009

TIM TEBOW is an incredible person!!!

At the end of the video, listen to what he says!


Tuesday, December 30, 2008

WInter Camp Week 2

Everyone has worked so hard this week. I am so proud to be coaching such great campers!!!

Meredith A. has improved tremendously since the last camp. She understands her role and is a great teammate.
Joeli E. is one of the leaders of our Western Division. You can always count on her to help set the example for our younger campers.
Madeline F. always has a smile on her face. She also can play on the post against the boys with no fear.
Grace G. is fearless and one of the best players her age. She always plays hard and is a strong finisher.
Brett G. continues to be a great sport. He has improved all of his skills and is a winner on and off the court.
David K. is hitting his jumper, and he is playing aggressively. His ball handling skills are improving as well.
Matt D. is a true point guard who has the heart of a lion. He always makes his teammates better.
Julian G. is the fastest camper. He hustles more than anyone and is a great addition to any team.
Rachel G. is learning the game. She is head strong and her great attitude assures her a nice future in whatever she puts her mind to.
Matthew H. has played up for the second straight week and is now a difficult cover for the upcoming Beth Am season. He fears no one!
Rylee H. is competing against strong competition, and she is gaining confidence for the rest of her middle school season.
Samantha J. has learned the triple threat position and has improved her pivoting and shooting stance.
Julia K. is a great teammate, and her battles against some of the boys is helping her develop her confidence.
Evan K. always makes others smile, and he is now focusing on improving his post game.
Taryn L. played her hardest today, and showed no fear playing against the boys. She always has a great attitude.
Tamara L. is learning about many aspects of the game. She has no fear of failure and I am impressed with her attitude.
Alex M. is a great talent who has a great future if he can continue to develop his right hand.
Max M. is battling with the older boys, and he is an excellent shooter.
Bailey N. has continued to improve, and even playing against the boys, she has managed to make some great rebounds and passes.
Scott P. is the Tim Duncan of the crew. He simply dominated the post today.
Bailey P. is a very intelligent player who is following her brother's footsteps. She has been a leader in your Western Division.
Lauren P. is a star, both in her personality, smile, and ability.
Alex P. alwyas keeps her Yankee hat on to remind us where she is from. She has improved in all aspects of her game, especially ball-handling.
Caroline Q. is a great teammate who makes others smile. She now has a good triple threat position.
Baylor R. can name every camper in camp, always makes everyone smile, and her skills are improving everyday.
Jake R. has a great future in the game. He made 2 half-court shots today.
Scott R. has his best game today. He made other players better, recognized when to pass, and when to shoot, and I am proud of him.
Danielle R. is now a much better player than when she began camp two weeks ago. She can handle the ball with more confidence and is a great camper.
Zachary R. has learned how to deal with adversity playing against older competition. he is beginning to love the challenge of our drills.
Samantha R. is improving her ball-handling and did a great job in our relays today.
Blake R. is one of our captains, and is always smiling. He is also a great teammate.
Mia S. is our future star who has no fear. She also has great skills for such a young player.
Trevor S. is a confident player who wants the ball in the clutch. He is learning to challenge himself in drills and that is helping his overall game.
Heather S. has a great attitude. She is always smiling, and did a great job learning our triple threat.
Ally S. is very talented. She is a great teammate, and excelled in our ball-handling relays.
Lauren S. has great leadership qualities. Her triple threat looked great today and she always listens.
A.J. is steady. He can shoot, dribble, pass, play D, and he has an amazing attitude.
Ananda W. is learning to be a dominant post player. I can see her being an all-county player in Miami in the near future.
Federico Z. is our other captain. He has a perfect attitude, and for the second straight week he has improved in all aspects of the game.
Leo R. is as fast as his uncle, Jake the Snake, and I have no doubts that he is a future star.
Scott H. is battling in the morning with the older campers and he had a great attitude today.


Okay Rookies...You have been awesome!!!

Aliya H. has been great in our relays, and she is following her sister's footsteps as a future star.
Makenzie L. has impressed us with her great ball handling at such a young age.
Isabella P. has been a leader among the rookies, and has made many shots in our games.
Jamie S. has managed to learn triple threat, shooting layups, and she is very unselfish.
Rachel S. has improved her shooting, and she is never tired when playing the game.
Milena v. has learned the triple threat position, and her ball handling has improved.
Abigale also has a great attitue. She has learned many new skills at camp. Great job everyone!!!

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Courts 1 on 1 Winter Camp Highlights

What a day!!! Everyone worked very hard and really impressed our coaches. More importantly, every camper had a great attitude!

Meredith showed improvement in her triple threat and ball-handling and played well in the afternoon games.
Ethan played great defense and has a perfect attitude. He exemplifies what we are trying to teach at Courts 1 on 1 Sports.
Kelsey also has a perfect attitude. She scored a nice lay-up on a fast break, and she is improving every second.
Annie is playing against older competition and is not afraid. Despite being one of the youngest, she has played very well.
Katie also is playing up against older comp. showing her fearless attitude. She is very strong with the ball in her hands.
Remy has improved tremendously since the last camp. She recently helped lead her Beth-Am team to the finals.
Julien is a very skilled young player. His shooting is lights out and he has great quickness.
Grace is one of the fastest girls with the ball, and along with her great ball-handling skills will continue to be a force.
Brett has become a strong all around player. He is solid on D, rebounds very well, and has a nice corner jump shot.
Lexi is playing against the boys and battling. She has no fear playing with great intensity.
Matthew H. is very consistent. He can shoot, pass, and dribble with the best, and has perfect sportsmanship.
Carly is a fierce competitor. She gives her all, and she has a strong jump shot.
Jarrett has competed against some of the older boys and girls, and he is playing great. He also is becoming a very good shooter.
Steven is an excellent shooter, and he is improving on both defense and ball-handling.
Jordan is a lights-out shooter who is very unselfish. Despite being able to score often, he always makes his teammates better players.
Bailey is an excellent athlete. She plays against the boys with no fear, and she is becoming one of the best rebounders in the camp.
Josh P. is a special player for his age. He combines great shooting, ball-handling, and passing with an unselfish attitude.
Daniel has become a force with the ball. He is very intense and his will to win is tops in the camp.
Logan can score at will, and he is learning how important it is to be a better passer. He also has an amazing collection of uniforms.
David P. is a fighter on the court in the sense that he wants to win as much as anyone. He is now making all his lay-ups and is a great teammate.
Jake R. has shown how great he can be when he makes his teammates better. He can score at will, but has chosen to pass up shots in order to get his teammates the ball.
Scott R. has a Dwayne Wade-like attitude. He always brings his A-game, yet plays with class. He never talks trash despite his great ability.
Danielle R. is improving on her lay-ups. She made some nice outside shots yesterday on our shooting games and is an excellent teammate.
Zachary is learning how to compete against the older kids. He is an unselfish player and he shot the ball very well yesterday.
Mack is a tough competitor playing at the highest level despite an injury to his left hand.
Carter has become much quicker on the court adding a strength to his already powerful post game. His shooting is also improving.
Jacob S. made some great passes yesterday. He is improving his shooting touch and he has a perfect attitude.
Joshua S. is also improving on both passing and shooting, and he is an excellent teammate.
Marlee is battling against the boys. She is fearless and has an uncanny ability to make tough shots no matter who is covering her.
Mia is as skilled as any young player I have seen. She can shoot, pass, and dribble with each hand, a rarity for anyone her age.
Cole is one of the best ball-handlers his age, has great touch with his shooting and is fearless.
Rylee shoots the ball very well, handles the rock with both hands, and also is fearless.
Madeline is on her way to stardom combining her perfect attitude with amazing skill. She also constantly makes other campers smile with her great personality.
Amanda played great in our league games, and she was recognized by other campers for her excellent attitude.
Rudy is constantly battling for his team, and he also was recognized for his unslefishness by other campers.
Cara is on her way to playing varsity basketball in high school. She is improving all of her skills and is another perfect teammate.
Ananda has an opportunity to be one of the best players in Miami combining her great height with great skill and attitude.
Federico made 4 game winning shots in our shooting drills, and is a favorite of everyone at camp.
B. Ratzen hit a game-winning shot yesterday and now understands the importance of having no fear when taking an important shot.
Joeli is a great teammate and in one day improved in all areas of the game.
Spencer caught a pass in traffic yesterday and drained a huge lay-up to seal the victory for his team.
A.J. is steadily improving his quickness, and therefore becoming a difficult guard to defend. He also continues to shoot the lights out!
Nico is one of the best players his age, a great teammate, and deadly shooter.

Rookies of the Year!
Kobe made some magical moves and is a great ball-handler.
Leo has a great attitude and is a future star.
Andy is improving his ball-handling and lay-ups and and made some great passes yesterday.
Scott H. is a powerful player who is on his way to becoming a star.
Andres is a great teammate and despite his young age can shoot the ball very well.
Zachary is has a great attitude and is improving his ball-handling and shooting.
Michael is another future star who loves the game and is very unselfish.
Ben is improving in all areas, and he hit some far shots yesterday despite his young age.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Another Great Story!!!

Buckeyes' benchwarmer one in a trillion
By Jason King, Yahoo! Sports
2 hours, 2 minutes agoBuzz up!PrintMore From Jason King
Budinger keeps it togetherDec 18, 2008
KU's new big man on campusDec 12, 2008

An odd thing happened to Mark Titus during an Ohio State home game earlier this season. The Buckeyes guard grabbed a rebound - and people booed.
The reaction might have been puzzling to a few folks in the stands, but for the religious readers of Titus' popular blog, the good-natured jeers made perfect sense. By snaring the rebound, Titus, a seldom-used reserve, had ruined his chance of achieving a "trillion."
"A trillion," Titus explains, "is when you play one minute but don't record any other stats. So when you look at the box score you see a '1' to the far left followed by a bunch of zeros - just like the number 1,000,000,000,000."ADVERTISEMENT

The scenario provided the inspiration for Titus' website. After two months, Titus' hilarious writings about life at the end of Ohio State's bench have made him one of the most popular players on the Buckeyes' squad - and one of the most well-known walk-ons in the country.
On Wednesday more than 40,000 people clicked on clubtrillion.com, where they could read about Titus' favorite pastime during games (gawking at cheerleaders), his nickname for the trendy, long basketball shorts that hang below the knees (shants) and his crush on ESPN sideline reporter Erin Andrews (or, as he calls her, "Erin Andrews-Titus").
"Everyone hears about the guy that scores 20 points each night," Titus says, "but no one talks about the guy at the end of the bench. I can tell people about the game from a perspective they haven't heard before. Still, I never thought it would get this kind of attention."
The buzz is only increasing.
When he looked into the stands during Wednesday's game against Jacksonville, Titus saw four people wearing his No. 34 jersey. A reader has offered to make Club Trillion T-shirts and strangers are sending him emails telling him he needs to become a professional blogger after graduation.
"Just the other day," Titus says, "I was standing in line at the cafeteria and someone walked by and said, 'Love the blog. Keep it up,' and then kept going. I was like, 'Uh, what just happened? I didn't even know that person.'"
Most of Titus' blogs are about things that happen away from the court. On Nov. 28 he told an amusing tale about Thanksgiving dinner at coach Thad Matta's house.
"Coach Matta and his wonderful wife ended up cooking for us," he wrote. "And by cooking, I mean getting food catered. And by Coach Matta and his wife, I mean his wife."
Other funny stories involve the per diem money players receive each week for food and the shenanigans that occurred as he was trying to take a pregame nap at a hotel that was under construction. Last week Titus wrote about Ohio State's game against Butler and his former high school teammate, Gordon Hayward.
"Brownsburg [Ind.] High School," he wrote, "was easily the best represented high school in the game, as Gordon and I combined for 25 points, seven rebounds and two assists. Because I didn't even get in the game, Gordon shouldered most of the productivity, but I looked really good with the towel around my neck on the bench. Seriously, I looked REALLY good."
Titus' teammates aren't surprised that readers are drawn to Titus' wit and sarcasm. Since joining the team two years ago, Titus has been the player to use a one-liner to lighten the mood of a tense locker room. Sometimes he'll break out into a funky dance.
Earlier in his career Titus even held a news conference to announce that he'd be returning to school the following season instead of entering the NBA draft.
"I'm just having fun," says Titus, who blogs about three times per week. "If you can't have fun playing basketball then you probably shouldn't be playing.
"At the same time, I take basketball and the development of our team very seriously. I hope that doesn't get lost in the comedy of the blog. It's not like I'm out there screwing around."
Matta certainly doesn't question Titus' commitment. He called Titus "the best shooter on the team."
Titus received interest from a handful of smaller schools after scoring more than 1,000 career points and earning second-team all-state honors - twice - at Brownsburg High. But his goal had always been to attend a bigger school.
After enrolling at Ohio State, Titus joined the basketball team as a student manager - "just to get my basketball fix," he said - but after two weeks, he quit when he grew tired of filling water bottles. Then, just before the start of the 2006-07 season, Matta called Titus and asked him to return.
Not as a manager - but as a player.
Titus had been an AAU teammate of Buckeyes freshmen Greg Oden, Mike Conley Jr. and Daequan Cook, so Matta knew he was battled-tested and that having him on the squad would be good for team chemistry. Plus, his shooting ability would force Ohio State's guards to pick up the defensive intensity in practice.
Six of Titus' eight career points have come on 3-point shots. In a recent blog, he even developed a nickname for making a heavily-contested 3-pointer over the outstretched arms of a defender.
"We call it 'dotting' someone," Titus says. "When you shoot, your body is in the shape of an 'i', so the ball - if you get the shot off - is like the dot of the 'i.'"
Titus' blog includes a list of teammates he's dotted in practice. Much to the delight of his fans, he's yet to make a 3-pointer on a real opponent this season, thereby increasing the chances of achieving a trillion.
"If you get a foul or commit a turnover or take a shot, the trillion is ruined," Titus says. "People send me emails saying, 'If you're wide open and the shot clock is running down, what are you going to do? ' "
The answer?
"I guess I'm not totally opposed to shooting the ball," Titus says with a chuckle, "I have eight career points right now. Eventually I'd like to get into double digits, so I'm going to need another basket somewhere down the line."

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Quote of the Day...Best one ever!

"I do not think that it comes down to X's and O's. What wins games in basketball is YOUR WILL first, then X's and O's!"
BELCO BAMBA

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

J and Z

Props to J an Z, my 2 wonderful cousins who are playing on the same team and dominating their opponents with great team basketball and more importantly showing great sportsmanship. I love you both and am so proud of you. Keep up the good work!

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

What does this quote of the day mean?

THE GAME OF BASKETBALL
“Basketball can serve as a metaphor for ultimate cooperation. It is a sport where success ... requires that the dictates of community prevail over selfish impulses.”
-- Bill Bradley

Camps

Once again,

Please attend our camps at Beth Am on December 22-24th and December 29-31st. They will be filled with exciting games and drills. They will start at 9pm and end at 4pm.

We will have exciting guests and many awards!

See you there!

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Quick Pointers!

NOT SOME KIND OF BASKETBALL PLAY...

In life, you must always think before you do things and especially before you say things. I have made mistakes in my time by speaking before thinking. When you make that mistake, you do not have a chance to take back your words!

DO you ever think about what your most unslefish acts are during the week? This week, write down your top 5 most unselfish acts!

Thursday, November 13, 2008

TO

Sports are an amazing avenue to teach real life skills. This is what NOT TO DO!

BEEF

BEEF is an acronym designed to help any aspiring basketball player to learn the skills necessary to shoot correctly. By working on the points of BEEF you put yourself in a better position to be selected for a competitive team, since coaches will notice that they don't need to teach you the basic mechanics of shooting.

'B' - Balance

Keep your feet shoulder-width apart, with your shooting foot slightly ahead of your non-shooting foot. If you're right-handed, your shooting foot is your right foot. If you're left-handed, then your shooting foot is your left foot. Make sure your entire body is aligned at a square to the basket.

First 'E'- Eyes

Choose a target - it could be the front of the rim, the centre of the hoop, or the basket as a whole, and focus only on that. Don't watch the flight of the basketball, or your hand as you release the ball.

Second 'E' - Elbow

Cock your elbow back to a 90° angle and look at the back of your wrist. If you can see wrinkles, then you have your arm in the correct position. Rest the ball on the pads of your fingers with the centre of the ball on your index finger1, then place your guide hand on the side of the ball and make sure that it doesn't slip underneath the it. You will not be using that hand to help shoot the ball - it is there to make sure that the ball doesn't fall off of your hand before you shoot it and nothing more.

'F' - Flick or Follow-through

Straighten your elbow and release the ball by flicking your wrist, which gives the ball some backspin2. You should look like you're reaching into a cookie jar that is on a shelf above your head.

Make sure your guide hand stays straight and doesn't help to push the ball.

To add distance to your shot, simply add a jump. Do not try to push the ball harder with your arms. All of your power should come from your legs.

In Practice

All of these skills are useless if you don't practise them, but only a certain kind of practice will actually help you become a better shooter in game situations.

•Warm up by shooting close shots before moving out and launching up the three-pointers.

•Whenever you go out to shoot some hoops, use game speed; run after your rebounds and shoot quickly as if the defence were closing in on you.

•If you are just playing around, feel free to shoot trick shots, behind the back shots, half-court shots etc, but if you are working on your game, then only take shots that you would take during a game.

•Most importantly, work with intensity and heart and you will now be on your way to having a great shot.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Making The Team

As we continue to go through the so-called try-outs this month, many of our players our making their school teams. If you have, congratulations as it is a credit to your hard work and dedictation.

If you did not make your school team, then you must work hard in the offseason to improve and make it the following year. Once you get past the initial let down, you must rise above it and focus on how to develop your skills.

Here is a little article about getting cut:

Michael Jeffrey Jordan was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1963. He was the youngest of four boys born to James and Deloris Jordan. James Jordan was the son of a share cropper from rural North Carolina, and he was in Brooklyn to attend a school that trained employees of General Electric. Jordan's mother, Deloris, was a homemaker until her children were old enough to attend school, and then she became a bank clerk.

When Jordan was about seven years old, in 1970, his family moved to Wilmington, North Carolina, the town he would later consider to be his hometown. He began playing basketball at an early age, often with his older brother Larry. "When I was younger," Jordan said on his Web site, "my motivation came from wanting to beat my brother. This inspired my extremely competitive nature."

As a freshman in high school, Jordan joined his school basketball team. It was on his high school team that Jordan chose the jersey number he was later to make famous as a pro, number 23. When later asked why he chose that number, he replied to the Associated Press, "I wanted to wear No. 45 in high school, but my older brother (Larry) wore that number. So I decided to go with half of 45, which is actually 22½." Jordan at first had trouble standing out on the school team. In fact, only a year after joining the team, as a tenth grader, he was cut from the varsity team. But this only pushed him to work harder at perfecting his game. As he later said on his Web site, "I think that not making the Varsity team drove me to really work at my game, and also taught me that if you set goals, and work hard to achieve them—the hard work can pay off."

Friday, November 7, 2008

Arroyo Update from Jerusalem Poat

Nov 7, 2008 0:15 | Updated Nov 7, 2008 0:40
Arroyo sends Maccabi to thrilling overtime victory
By ALLON SINAI


A Carlos Arroyo jumper with 1.1 seconds to play in overtime gave Maccabi Tel Aviv an 82-80 victory against Le Mans at the Nokia Arena on Thursday night.

Despite a poor game Maccabi somehow managed to escape with its second straight Euroleague victory to the relief of the capacity crowd.

With just 10 seconds to play in regulation Maccabi trailed 73-70, but Marcus Brown saved the team with a clutch three and Arroyo clinched the victory in the most dramatic of fashions.

Arroyo scored 19 points, grabbed seven rebounds and passed five assists for Maccabi, with D'or Fischer adding 20 points and seven rebounds.

David Bluthenthal, who spent three seasons and won the 2004 Euroleague title with Maccabi, led Le Mans with 23 points and seven rebounds.

Bluthenthal scored the first points of the night and three more points by the former Maccabi forward gave the visitors a 7-3 lead.




Arroyo finally found his scoring touch in the closing minutes of the first period and the Puerto Rican led Maccabi to within two points (20-18).

In the final minute of the quarter, Le Mans managed to extend its advantage once more and Tel Aviv trailed 24-18 after Brian Chase sprinted down the court and laid the ball in the basket to beat the buzzer.

In the first five minutes of the second period Maccabi only managed to score three points and Alain Koffi's turnaround jumper gave the visitors a seven-point cushion (28-21).

A Jason Williams three with half of the quarter remaining sparked a Maccabi fight back and D'or Fischer's basket with three-and-a-half minutes to go to the interval brought the hosts within a single point (29-28).

The offensive blitz, however, lasted for no more than 90 seconds and despite Le Mans's ineffectiveness Maccabi still trailed at the break (31-30).

The hosts entered the final 10 minutes of the encounter still ahead by a point (54-53), but the lead was back in Le Mans hand early in the fourth quarter, setting up a thrilling final few minutes.

Arroyo twice gave Maccabi a three point gap midway through the quarter, but each time the hosts were quickly pegged back and Chase's acrobatic basket with 2:19 to play opened a 69-66 Le Mans lead.

Tel Aviv closed to within one point several time in the final two minutes, but was down by three points with 15 seconds to play after Chase's free throws.

The hosts weren't down and out just yet, however, with Marcus Brown tying the score with a triple just nine seconds before the end of regulation to send the contest to an extra session.

Both teams continued with their disorganized play in overtime and the lead exchanged hands several times in the extra period.

An Arroyo basket gave Maccabi a 79-77 lead with a minute to play, but Dewarick Spencer hit a triple at the other end and the visitors were in front once more.

The final 10 seconds would belong to Arroyo, however, and Maccabi somehow managed to claim the win.

Also Thursday, Cibona Zagreb maintained its perfect record, defeating the previously unbeaten Olympiacos 85-76 in Croatia.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Fun, but Why?

I have a small challenge for our ballers out there. We know we play sports because they are fun. But....What exact details make the game fun for you? Have you ever actually thought about what your reasons for playing really are? Write down some of the fun aspects of the game. Then before you play, you can review these key components of your ideal time in a sport. I can tell you that when it comes to basketball, I love watching the ball go throug the net. I am not sure why, but I do... I try to remember this when someone scores on me when I play, and it allows me to respect the game more and forgive myself and teammates for mistakes. Just appreciating the beauty of the game is very helpful for me...SO, email me why you love playing the game at court@courts1on1.com!

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Holiday Camp

I will be running a camp from December 22th - 24th and December 29th-31st from 9 am to 4PM. If you are interested, email me at court@courts1on1.com.

Random Usher Video Clip "Singing in the Rain"

This has nothing to do with basketball or sports, but I felt it was worth everyone seeing!!! Watch Usher with the Umbrella!

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Great Time for Sports!!!

Now that school is well under way, we have football season, basketball season on the horizon, and baseball playoffs are about to start. This is the time that you can really watch some great games, but more importantly, this is the time to pick certain players you love in and watch their mannerisms, focus, and desire to win. Instead of watching their exciting moves, see if you can find the non-statistical aspects of their game. How are they helping their team outside the lines. Are they being a great teammate? Are they interested in their own stats or team stats. How hard are they hustling? How do they react after they make a mistake? How do they react after a teammate makes a mistake? Do they talk trash? See if you can learn more about these areas and enjoy this part of the game. In order to be a great player in a sport, you must study the game along with practice.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Arroyo to Israel!

Carlos going to Israel to be their most famous player ever is an unbelievable chapter in his life and in my friendship with him.

Here is the article from Israel!

Arroyo touches down, says he's ready to take lead at Maccabi

By Oren Kessler



Maccabi Tel Aviv's newly signed point guard Carlos Arroyo, the highest-paid player in club history, arrived in Israel last night to a warm welcome from hundreds of fans at Ben-Gurion International Airport.

The Puerto Rico native said he is aware of the high expectations placed on him by the team's management and fans, and is ready to lead the Israeli powerhouse to a championship this year. Advertisement


Maccabi signed the 6'2", 200-pound point-man to a record $2.5 million a year contract a month ago.

The 29-year-old will take part in the team's first practice of the 2008-09 season, having last week led Puerto Rico to the gold medal at the CentroBasket tournament, the biennial championship tournament for Central American countries.

"This is a very big step in my career," he said on arriving at the airport. "It'll be a great experience."

"I always have high expectations," he added. "The crowd here is amazing, and I can hardly wait to start playing."

Arroyo starred during four seasons at Florida International University.

Though not drafted out of college, he accumulated seven years of NBA experience with five different teams.

Arroyo played at Denver and Toronto in addition to three-year stints with both Utah and Orlando, averaging 6.9 points and 3.5 assists with the Magic last season.

When his contract ran out with at Orlando, Arroyo considered signing with New York and Miami, but eventually decided to join the growing exodus of NBA players seeking to make their mark in the European leagues.

"I played a lot in the NBA, and I felt there was a need to make a change. I wanted to be a more effective player for my team, and with Maccabi I'll be able to be that," he said.

Arroyo is taking the expectations in his stride, saying, "I'm ready for the challenge."

He added that he is already familiar with Maccabi forwards Rodney White and Marcus Fizer, and center Esteban Batista.

"We want to win a championship and I'm excited to be here. I don't have any problem leading the team, I'm prepared for it."

Arroyo is known as a deft passer and capable scorer, and for the mental toughness characteristic of players from the island. He is the fifth Puerto Rican to have won a slot in the NBA.

Puerto Rico is a Central American powerhouse, having taken a medal in each of the CentroBasket tournaments in which it played since 1965.

In the 2004 Olympics, Arroyo scored 25 points in the team's shocking 19-point rout of the United States.

Maccabi, the most prestigious team in Israeli basketball, disappointed last season, falling to Hapoel Holon in the title game and losing the State Cup to Hapoel Jerusalem.

Monday, September 8, 2008

Back to School

It has been a while since I have posted anything, so I am sorry for anyone who I have kept waiting. We are back in school, and the afternoons have been filled with great workouts by all of my students. Everyone is pushing themselves to get to the next level. As we get ready for the school, travel, and recreational basketball seasons, here are some tips:

1. Ball Handling: This is the most important area in getting yourself ready. If you can handle the ball well come gametime, your offense will be in good shape, even if you have an off shooting night.

2. Balance: You must continue to keep a low and balanced position in all areas of the game. As long as you are low and balanced, you can change speeds quickly, and you will have good strength on your shooting.

3. Inside Shooting: Master your inside shots. Get in the habit of shooting high percentage shots and then back up to where you feel comfortable once you are making all of the close ones.

4. Free Throws: You need to feel money from the foul line. Take 100 free throws every day with the same routine so you can show your coach that you shoot a high percentage from the line so he knows he can keep you in the game towards the end.



These are a few important keys to your preparation for your upcoming seasons!!!

Friday, August 15, 2008

The Finals

The game began with the Dallas team taking control, playing aggressive...It was as if they believed they were better. I was impressed. Now, right before the game, I was speaking with one of my players' parents, and I mentioned that I used to look too much into pregame warmups. For example, "I feel they are ready", or "They look flat." The truth is, you never really know how your team is going to play. So at least, when we started the game slow, I wasn't surprised. Everyone was a little nervous. After all, it was the Finals!!!

What made this game even more interesting was that everyone seemed to be rooting against us. The JCC was loud, and it felt like a road game. Also, not having Allie in the lineup was a huge loss. She is an excellent basketball player who gives 100% every second.

Despite the slow start in the first quarter, I could tell the girls were not going to back down. During an early timeout, I explained that the other team believed they were better than us, and they were bullying us on the court. All of the girls glanced at each other's eyes, and it was clear that they didn't agree with Dallas' opinion of us, nor the Baltimore girls', who were jeering us from the stands.

About midway through the second quarter, we found ourselves down 10. The all of a sudden, Lindsey B. began drawing fouls, getting us to the line, and making free throws. She then stepped back about five feet behind the 3-point line and nailed an unbelievable shot! For the first time, the momentum was on our side. Lindsey had brought us back. Despite being down at the half, the girls appeared to have gained control of the game. I really felt at this point, we had a strong chance of winning. I firmly believed that despite the Dallas team practicing since April, we had better players.

During halftime, Mark had worked worked with Danielle on the post for a few minutes, and that helped us in the second half. When the third qurater began, Sam F. kept taking the ball to the wing, and entering it down to Danielle, who would proceed to score. When she didn't, Emily E. was always in the perfect spot for the offensive rebound. Emily grabbed as many rebounds as any other girl in the tournament. She was all over the glass ever single game, and defensively, she covers shooters like a hawk.

As Danielle continued to dominate the game, Lindsey, Jen D, and Sam F. controlled the tempo, keeping it fast and exciting dribbling through double teams, unslefishly sharing the ball, and playing flawless defense. When Erica came into the game, she played great, giving us help both at the guard spot and the post. Erica does whatever she is asked with great effort, and she learned to play multiples positions in only one week.

Jen D. played the entire game, never showing signs of fatigue. She reminded me of a high school phenom just coming into college, but playing like an experienced senior. She simply won't let up, and alonside Sam F. and Lindsey, we were stronger than the Dallas backcourt.

After Danielle scored a late basket, we went up 6, and we felt we could pull away. Unfortunately, depsite our constant ability to keep Dallas from getting into the paint, they kept knocking down 3 pointer after 3 pointer. I was looking over at our bench at Sam A. thinking that I needed to get her into the game more. Sam A. had played well in the first half in her usual role, backing up her older sister, but I had not yet put her in during the second half. I let her know that we would need her at some point as we were in major foul trouble. She nodded that she would be ready. When she did come into the game, she played pivotal minutes knocking down a free throw, and of course grabbing rebounds. She had a great tournament.

The game came down to the wire with us down by 2. After a timeout, Danielle scored a basket to tie the game to send it into overtime. The only people making any noise now were our boys' team as the rest of the fans were silent in their dismay.

Before the overtime, the girls looked at each other once more, this time knowing they had come too far against difficult odds to not accomplish their goal. Danielle came out and scored the first basket of overtime, just seconds after telling the team in the huddle that we had to score first and take cotrol. I realized there that her 2 previous gold medals had given her the confidence to carry the team home. After a defensive stop, the girls broke pressure with Jen throwing a great lead pass to Sam F. who flew, and I mean flew down the sideline. As she was laying the ball in for 2, she let out a "wooooooooo" with excitment.

We maintained a lead throughout overtime, but after a few lucky bounces and accidental bankshots, we found ourselves down again. Jen then weaved through the defense like a veteran, this time without Lindsey and Sam F. who had fouled out. She sliced the lane to make a beautiful layup, giving us the lead for good. Even though Dallas once again knocked a 3 pointer to give them a cahnce to win, we confidently finished them off with free throws, knocking down one after the other like a championship team. Emily, Erica, and Sam A. hit huge ones, and Danielle hit almost every one, finishing with 33 points, her jersey number by the way. After Jen broke full court pressure for the fifth consecutive time, she was fouled with 2 seconds left, and we were only up by 1. During the final timeout, Jen asked if she should intentionally miss the second free throw starting the clock immediately, but I told her to try to make them. After missing the first she looked over at me, and I changed my mind asking her to miss the second shot, as she had suggested, feeling her strategy would work. She nodded and then came through with a bang off the rim. By the time Dallas got the ball and called time, there was not enough time for them to score, 0.2 seconds to be exact.

Now, I would rather lose every game than have a player on my team hurt their head, but that is not how the game works. After the game, we huddled up as a team for the last time. We recognized that we won the game without Allie. We had won the game for Allie!!! It was beautiful! The girls each received their gold medals. They earned it!!!

A Golden Victory!

As you probably know already, the girls won the gold! I will post all of the highligts later tonight! Great job Team Miami!

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

These Girls are Amazing!!!

It is one thing to win...It is another thing to shut a team out for an entire half. I had never seen it happen...Well, that is what the girls did today. But, let's backtrack a little to yesterday. In our game vs. Baltimore yesterday, we were up twelve with 5 minutes to go in the first half when the head coach of Baltimore began to taunt Lindsey by sarcastically yelling at her to shoot. I immediately walked over to the opposing coach and said to him with a shocked look, "Did you just talk trash to one of my girls?" I said this repeatedly until the referee stopped the game and reprimanded this disgusting man. I do not mind losing games, but I do mind an intimidating unprofessional bully who calls himself a coach, and this was not acceptable. And how did Lindsey respond to this? She hit a half court shot at the buzzer of halftime. (By far the best shot in both the boys and girls' tournament) Okay...Back to today. We now are coincidentally playing the same team today in the semi-finals of the playoffs, and our girls did not forget what had happened. They came out in a full court press and dominated the game scoring baskets off of steals, and passing the ball like a professional team...AGAIN!

By halftime, we were winning 24-0. 24-0? Unreal. I am so proud of them. The second half went smoothly, and I do not even remember the score, but every possesion the girls passed to each other until they made a layup. They were weaving the ball around like a 1950's team...

Now I have some good experience teaching the game, but I have learned it is always the players who make it work. The girls are awesome basketball players. I was so amazed at each of their abilities, and more importantly, I was so happy for them to feel great about their team effort and individual plays as well.

We are at the point where I ask the girls what they want to do giving them guidance, but trusting them in how they feel about what plays we are running. It is as much fun as I have had coaching games since college, and that was in 2004. Here are some highlights:

Jen has played flawless defense creating turnovers, and her ball handling and passing are beyond her years. Her intensity is like a pro, and she is shooting the ball well.

Lindsey is similar to Jen, hitting 3's, leading the team in assists, and of course hit the shot of the week.

Emily has more rebounds than any girl in the Maccabi games, and she is the catalyst in our fast break. She also is as unselfish as any player around.

Erica is our most versatile player playing guard and forward, and always makes the extra pass. She is so dependable for a coach and has given up some of her scoring for the other girls, even though she is a strong shooter.

Danielle has dominated the game on defense not only blocking shots 10 feet out of bounds, but she is a constant presence in the paint scoring and rebounding.

Samantha A. has played great copying her older sister with scoring, rebounding, and blocking shots. She is a great teammate and has been a pleasant surpise as she has little experience playing ball.

Sam F. had her best game stealing the ball every few possesions, setting up her teammates at the point, and she scored at least four straight baskets in the second half today.

Allie has been our 6-man, coming off the bench with energy on defense and offense. She is one of the most intense players on the court, and she stepped in for a charge today and took a hard hit to the head. Despite missing the second half from the fall, she was a pivotal part of our halftime shutout, and I am so proud of her. Tomorrow she will miss the game as she has a mild concussion, but if it was up to her, she would play.

Once again, I am so proud of the girls and cannot wait until tomorrow for the finals at 10:30 at the Akron JCC. I will forever remember today thanks to them and win or lose tomorrow, I know that they are learning the game and getting better.

More Pics




More Pics





Pictures!!!






Courtesy of Mike Elkin...Thanks Mike!

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Quick Update

The girls played as well as any team I have coached today. They looked like a pro team passing the ball around and scoring off of inside and outside shots. We had two games. The first against a mediocre Cleveland team, and the second against a strong team from Baltimore. In the first game we went up 19-0 before finally letting up a basket. It was a great team defensive effort. The second game was just as good as the girls played a near perfect game highlighted by a true half court shot at the halftime buzzer by Lindsey.

It has been a very long day so I am off to bed, but I will write a full recap either tomorrow or Thursday detailing all of the girls' best moments. We have a playoff game tomorrow at 10:30 am. Looking forward to some rest!!!

Monday, August 11, 2008

Maccabi Games Day 1

Game 1: Dallas 42, Miami 41

After an early morning wakeup, the girls patiently waited for their 10:30 am game against a strong Dallas team. Dallas came out hitting their outside shots to take a 6 point lead led by a small point guard who was making it difficult for our guards to bring the ball up the court. Once we made some adjustments, Jen, Lindsey, Allie, and Sam began to pressure Dallas full court creating some turnovers and easy baskets. Emily and Erica were getting their hands on many loose balls allowing our team to come back and take the lead. Both Sam Amaya and Danielle were dominating the paint grabbing rebounds, blocking many shots and finishing layups. By halftime, we were winning 19 - 18.
In the second half, we continued to play better passing the ball around unselfishly, and avoiding mistakes despite the constant pressure defense by Dallas' small, but quick point guard. Emily was grabbing many rebounds as was Samantha A. and Danielle. Erica made some great defensive plays, while Sam Friedman, Lindsey, Jen, and Allie were moving the ball around creating easy baskets for each other as well as Danielle and Sam. As we came down the stretch of the game, it was back and forth with both teams trading baskets. It was clear to me that this game was going to be decided by whoever ran out of time first, meaning both teams were playing well, and it was up to who scored the last basket. With about ten seconds to go down by 1, Jen Deutch had a great look at a baseline runner only to see it go in and out. She made a great play to get the shot off, and as I told her, sometimes they fall and sometimes they do not. It is mostly luck of the roll or bounce that decides a close game. So...despite defeat, it is clear that our girls are as good as any team here in Akron. Fortunately, we are most likely going to play the Dallas team again in the finals giving us another chance to beat them, and that game is when it counts.

Not only did we give a great effort, but the other team's coach told me they had been practicing since April... That is 5 months vs. 6 days! Great Job Girls!!!

Our next game is at 8am tomorrow! More updates soon.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Off to Ohio

Today I leave to Akron for the Maccabi games with the 16 and under Boys and Girls Teams from the JCC in Miami. I will be posting updates in the evenings following the progress of the girls. I am confident that we will have an incredibly fun week!!!

I feel there are two main goals for the team. We would like to win the Gold medal as that is why you play the games. If we do not, I want the girls to learn how to understand the difference between losing doing your best and losing by being afraid. If we can manage to play without being afraid of making mistakes, then we will have accomplished our goal as well. Time to depart!!!

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Camp Day 3

Great job by everyone today. I am so impressed with all of my campers.

Here we go!!!

Brian has showed great improvement in his shooting and always has a good attitude.
Andreu had a strong afternoon playing games and he has made some nice new friends.
Grace is so smart she already knows everyone's names and her shooting was awesome.
Jessica did great on her ball handling and has as good an attitude as anyone.
Noah is becoming a leader on the floor and always encourages his teammates.
Aditi makes more shots everyday and it the famous gitchie goomie today.
Matt continues to be an MVP on the floor and off, and he sustains this greatness for 8 hours.
Brett has become a solid ball player making shots, rebounding, and playing great defense.
Marcus K. is on is way to the NBA, as he is one of the more talented young players around!
Spencer manages to hit three pointers while guarded and also sustains his greatness for 8 hours.
Trevor has great suggestions for the coaches, always plays his hardest, and is a great teammate.
Tyler has improved on his defense, and also is shooting the ball very well.
Jessica L. is one of the best players I have seen her age, and she also has a great collection of autographs that she earned through her play in many prior camps.
Sean is a leader, and he has a strong athletic approach to the game always giving his best.
Madeline is always making everyone smile with her great sense of humor, but she also is an amazing athlete.
Jacob is on his way to being a star, and no matter what types of injuries he might face with his hustle, he always shakes it off and continues to play.
Marissa continues to improve her skills, always has a smile, and has a great knack of walking on her hands...Pretty Cool Marissa!
Baillieu is a coach or teacher's perfect kid. He is nice, an athlete, and everyone loves him.
Stephanie is everyone's all american. She is one of the best players in the camp, and everyone knows she is amazing at softball and volleyball as well.
Leo continues to surprise us with his great rebounding, and there is word that he is almost a blackbelt in Karate. Great job today Leo!
Josh hit a game winning shot yesterday, and he continued to play at a high level today. He also toughed out a couple of jammed fingers and kept playing!
Joshua S. played like an all star today, as he has improved in his ball handling and scoring.
Jacob S. has become one of the best ball handlers in the camp and always has a positive attitude.
Christian and his long arms is now starting to become more than a great defender. He has been scoring, and handling the ball very well.
Armando has the best attitude of any kid I have coached, always helping out and he is a very good player as well.

See you tomorrow fellas!