|
Post by nyline on Nov 3, 2017 10:24:52 GMT -5
I was struck by his response that there are very few players he "trusts" and that he does not trust all of the players who are presently on the court. I guess never being satisfied is what makes him so successful. Although, in life,society,workplace and even family we all have but a small handful or less in each of those situations that we may "Truly" trust to get a job done properly. Doesnt me we dont like or love em..... 😁. Or maybe he's just messing with his players heads......and now ours. Honestly I dont really Trust NYline to get it right most of the time....thats why I bypass and go to Mrs. NYLine. 😎 Which, ironically, shows the good judgment that leads me to trust you
|
|
|
Post by fj11211 on Nov 3, 2017 11:05:32 GMT -5
I only listened once this morning. My take is for the Trust question, he did not think it was important to answer regarding who he trusts. Rather, he was trying to emphasize Trust among the players themselves, which I think is a sound position. I do feel that players have trust for each other now. It is part of the "connectedness". Because of the trust, the defensive players are doing to dig hard, hoping it will lead to a kill; the front court player rely on the back court players to tell them where to hit, and to protect the ball should the ball be blocked. The beauty of a team sport. I think that is why Coach talks about being a "good teammate" often.
On a side note, when watching the match again last night, really impressed by White's spirit. She may be the emotional leader on court. She gets so excited when her teammates get a good play, and she shares the joy with them. she "erased" opposing team's kills by her fierce defense. Being the smallest player on court, it is a little scary to think what she can do if she were 6'3"...
|
|
|
Post by nyline on Nov 3, 2017 12:16:03 GMT -5
I only listened once this morning. My take is for the Trust question, he did not think it was important to answer regarding who he trusts. Rather, he was trying to emphasize Trust among the players themselves, which I think is a sound position. I do feel that players have trust for each other now. It is part of the "connectedness". Because of the trust, the defensive players are doing to dig hard, hoping it will lead to a kill; the front court player rely on the back court players to tell them where to hit, and to protect the ball should the ball be blocked. The beauty of a team sport. I think that is why Coach talks about being a "good teammate" often. On a side note, when watching the match again last night, really impressed by White's spirit. She may be the emotional leader on court. She gets so excited when her teammates get a good play, and she shares the joy with them. she "erased" opposing team's kills by her fierce defense. Being the smallest player on court, it is a little scary to think what she can do if she were 6'3"... I'm going to take a wild guess that if Kendall White were 6-3, one thing she wouldn't be able to do is play libero the way she does at 5-5 But she would be awesome!
|
|
|
Post by elliotberton on Nov 3, 2017 14:19:42 GMT -5
Once again I appreciated the recap and the discussion with Talking Head. I think that Detering's success in this as compared with the first go round is as a result of the team's improvement. On several of her swings Wednesday, MSU's middles were not in front of Detering because our other attackers established credible threats. Detering also had 2 (or was it 3?) attacks "on 2" which surprised MSU. Better passing (and digging) led to more options which meant less well established block on the right.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Nov 3, 2017 14:51:46 GMT -5
Thanks PSUMAUI for loading the interview and for Traveler for identifying the location. I find it amazing that from identification to its appearance on the DigNittany site was only three hours (during the night!). The interview was fantastic. I'm always amazed how Coach Rose doesn't pull any punches about players not meeting his expectations.
Can't wait for another opportunity to listen in to one of these interviews.
|
|