📈High Performance Consultant 🏀 NBA Player Development Coach ⚡️Build People - Build Careers

Joined September 2009
3,031 Photos and videos
Phil Beckner retweeted
From today’s newsletter …
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Jalen Brunson. Ultimate winner. Two NCAA championships and just led the Knicks to their first title in 53 years.
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Unhealthy food ➡️ unhealthy body. Unhealthy thoughts ➡️ unhealthy mind. If you consistently find yourself angry, stressed, anxious, on edge, look at your inputs. Consume things that stir up peace, patience, perspective, gratitude, joy. Inputs ➡️ Outputs Own your mindset.
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Jun 13
Ben Affleck says The Town’s coldest cop scene came from a real bank robber in prison "for The Town, I went through all the prisons... Massachusetts federal prisons, state prisons, and sat down and talked to guys who robbed trucks and banks" "after talking for two hours, I was like, is anything just fucking weird ever happened? and one guy said, we robbed this truck, we had the mask, we got the switch car" "we pull up, we get out, fucking guns, the masks, whole thing... we look over and this cop's sitting there doing construction duty... he looked at us, we looked at him, he looked the other way... he didn't want to end up on the wall at the VFW" "I was like, I'm putting that in the movie... that's straight from research"
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Great 2 days with @HPUMBB & @coachclayman working to build a Player Development Program that Separates! Amazing group of hard working dudes who are HUNGRY & HUMBLE after massive success last year. High Point University is a hidden gem! #Better #Different
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WINNERS WIN! Excited for @chambershoops and his group! #Better #Different
"We have everything we need. We're very, very talented. The defining characteristic of our team will be the why, our collective why and the character of our collective why." The Brandon Chambers era officially tips off for UTRGV men's basketball. The Vaqueros get to work on bonding together two returners, two freshmen, 10 transfers and a new coaching staff for the 2026-27 season. @UTRGVmbb @GoUTRGV @chambershoops @cbs4rgv @kveotv23
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Phil Beckner retweeted
Ball Screen Monday: Guard-To-Guard Ball Screens on YouTube now!⬇️ youtu.be/IVzCYJ6QQ5s?si=yMHV…
A preview from this weeks Ball Screen Monday Attacking Switching Defenses with Guard-to-Guard Ball Screens Clip 1: One thing I love about guard-to-guard ball screens is that they create pressure in multiple places at once. The on-ball defenders have to communicate the switch. The weakside defenders have to decide when and where to help. The more information you force a defense to process, the more likely it is to break. Clip 2: Screen-setting technique isn't just for bigs. Guards need it too. The screener gets downhill in this action because of his screening angle and ability to create contact at the point of the screen. Clip 3: One of the biggest misconceptions about attacking switching defenses. Not every action needs to create confusion. Sometimes the best actions work because the defense executes the switch exactly how it's supposed to.
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"You never know how tough you are until being tough is your only choice." -- Phil Beckner
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Footwork. Balance. Rhythm. Repeat. The game rewards preparation. Doing the work and trusting the process is how we separate ourselves. Check out our full All Access workout with Bryson Tiller on YouTube : 🔗 youtu.be/pUjwRryORmQ?si=QpEN…
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"0-0. Stay desperate at all times." Damn.
Watch this dude. Look at the intensity. The demeanor. He’s built for this.
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Why Jalen Brunson is so tough to guard. Some of the earliest defensive fundamental principles teach the "arm bar". A quick breakdown of how Brunson is able to use this technique against defenders.
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You’ll never get rich thinking poor.
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Darryn Peterson — Smooth scoring process
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2 things i learned in the last 5 years you not gonna be liked by everyone and it’s ok to be the bad guy
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RT @garthbrooks: This is for Country Music, Country Radio, and the Country Music audience. Thank you for my life! love, g t.co/6Hc4
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This guy is going to be working in a NBA front office sooner than later. Sheesh. Intelligence separates.
For the record, I am much more of a college basketball enthusiast than an NBA Draft expert. One thing that has stood out to me throughout this draft cycle, however, is how little Richie Saunders has been discussed relative to his production. Obviously, age, injury concerns, and a lack of elite physical tools have all limited his draft buzz. Those concerns are fair. Still, Saunders was nothing short of one of the most productive and efficient scorers in college basketball last season. Richie Saunders was one of only 10 Power Conference players last season to post a True Shooting Percentage of at least 63% while attempting 8.5 or more three-pointers per 40 minutes. Among that group, he ranked second in points per 40 minutes. Additionally, Saunders was one of only two players in that same group to also post a Free Throw Attempt Rate of at least 35%, highlighting not only his perimeter shooting ability but also his effectiveness at generating rim pressure. He also finished an impressive 67% of his attempts at the rim. The combination of high-volume shooting, elite efficiency, and consistent rim pressure provides a strong statistical foundation for his NBA projection. Saunders projects as a prototypical floor-spacing possession finisher at the NBA level. An overwhelming 90.5% of his field goal attempts last season came either at the rim or from beyond the three-point line, reflecting the type of shot profile NBA teams covet for his archetype. While Saunders was assisted on the majority of his made baskets, the numbers do not suggest a player who is completely dependent on others to create offense. 34.1% of his made two-point field goals were assisted (64th percentile) and 92.2% of his made three-pointers were assisted (65th percentile), reinforcing his projection as a high-level off-ball floor spacer. Saunders also converted 44.1% of his corner three-point attempts, another indicator that his shooting should translate well to an NBA role. Defense is unlikely to be Saunders' calling card at the next level, but there are indicators that suggest he can hold his own. While steal percentage can sometimes be misleading, Saunders posted a strong 3.1% STL%, which, when paired with his reported 5-inch wingspan, points toward solid anticipation and the ability to disrupt passing lanes on the perimeter. Additionally, his 0.93x Personal Foul Efficiency (90th percentile) is noteworthy. Saunders consistently avoided unnecessary fouls while remaining engaged defensively, a valuable trait for role players expected to stay on the floor. When projecting Saunders' offensive role, players such as Cameron Johnson, AJ Green, Max Strus, and Will Richard come to mind. This comparison is not necessarily about overall talent level, but rather the archetype: floor-spacing wings who thrive playing alongside higher-usage creators, make quick decisions, punish defensive mistakes, and provide offensive value without requiring heavy on-ball responsibility. With Saunders on the floor, BYU was better in nearly every meaningful offensive category. Most notably the following listed below. On/Off ORTG: 125.3/114.3 TS%: 59.6%/56.9% A:T Ratio: 1.39/1.06 The offensive improvements are significant, but what may be even more impressive is Saunders' ability to elevate the players around him. There may be no better example than fellow BYU star and potential No. 1 overall pick AJ Dybantsa. Dybantsa saw increases in TS%, 2P%, 3P%, and FTAr when sharing the floor with Saunders, illustrating the value of Saunders' spacing, gravity, and willingness to play within a complementary role. Elite complementary players are difficult to find, and Saunders consistently demonstrated an ability to make life easier for those around him. Saunders' floor-spacing ability is amplified by the speed of his release and his willingness to fire immediately off the catch. His ability to quickly get into his shot forces defenses to close out aggressively, creating additional opportunities for him to attack off the bounce. When defenders run him off the line, Saunders does an excellent job leveraging his shooting gravity to create straight-line drives to the rim. While he may not possess elite burst, he consistently capitalizes on defensive overreactions and attacks open space effectively. As someone who primarily evaluates college basketball rather than NBA draft boards, Richie Saunders has been one of the more surprising cases of this draft cycle. The concerns are understandable. He's older than the typical prospect, suffered a significant injury, and doesn't possess the type of elite physical tools that usually drive draft buzz. At the same time, it's difficult to ignore what Saunders actually produced on the court. He was one of the most efficient high-volume scorers in college basketball, combining elite shooting volume, strong rim finishing, and an ability to generate free throws at a level rarely seen from players who occupy a similar offensive role. His shot profile, floor-spacing ability, and offensive efficiency all align with the types of complementary wings that continue to carve out long NBA careers. Saunders may never be a primary creator or a player offenses are built around, but the NBA has consistently found value in wings who can space the floor, attack closeouts, make quick decisions, and fit seamlessly alongside stars. Whether he ultimately hears his name called in the late first round, second round, or enters the league through a two-way contract, Saunders feels like the type of prospect whose production and NBA-ready skill set could allow him to outperform his draft slot.
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