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Sunday, August 3, 2025

Dr. John Campbell on US Sports Radio

 

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NUCLEAR WAR ALERT Trump Orders Nuclear Submarines Moved Near Russia In Response To Argument With Russian Official

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The Rock Almighty: The Way, the Truth and the Life and The 'N' Word Has No Power If You Give It No Power Over You

 

  • Author David Smith

"Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God, believe also in me. There are many rooms in my Father's house. If there were not, would I have told you that I am going away to prepare a place for you? And if I am going away to prepare a place for you, I will come again and will welcome you into my presence, so that you may be where I am. You know where I am going, and you know the way."

Thomas said to him, "Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way?" Jesus said to him, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you have known me, you will also know my Father. From now on you know him and have seen him."

Philip said to him, "Lord, show us the Father, and that will satisfy us." Jesus said to him, "Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and you still do not know me? The person who has seen me has seen the Father. So how can you say, 'Show us the Father'? You believe, don't you, that I am in the Father and the Father is in me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on my own. It is the Father who dwells in me who does his works.

Believe me, I am in the Father and the Father is in me. Otherwise, believe me because of the works themselves. "Truly, truly I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I am doing. He will do even greater works than these because I am going to the Father. I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask me for anything in my name, I will do it."

"Strike the Tents"

"Kiss me, Hardy"

"Such is life!"

Question: What do these three phrases have in common?

Answer: They each have three words in them!

Better answer: They are all the last words of famous men (Robert E. Lee, Lord Nelson and Ned Kelly, respectively).

Now I don't know why so many famous last words come in three's ('Et tu Brute') but I do know that in some cultures people take your last words very seriously, believing that a person's whole life can be encapsulated in their final words.

I find that a rather disturbing theory, as I suspect that my final utterance will probably be "urrghhh", which I hope will be a less than adequate summary of my life. Even so, I can appreciate why people take a person's last words seriously, and I think we should take a person's last words seriously, which is why I want to exhort you to listen up to our Gospel reading today as they contain some of Jesus' last words.

These words from John chapter 14 are not Jesus' last last words, of course. Those last last words, spoken from the cross, are the ones we reflected upon a few weeks back now on Good Friday, but these are amongst His last words, taken from a dialogue that took place during the Last Supper – a dialogue generally referred to in scholarly circles as 'the final discourse'.

And if you read through the whole discourse you'll find that it does read like someone's last words – a little like the conversation that takes place around the bedside of someone who knows that their time is short, with their children huddled about, feeling distressed and confused and wondering what is going to happen.

"You know where I am going, and you know the way", says Jesus (v. 4). "Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way?" replies Thomas (v. 5), like a frightened child who has no idea what he will do if daddy isn't there!

Indeed, the whole passage reads like a dialogue between a parent and his children. The kids are asking, "Where are you going?", "when are you going to come back?", "who is going to stay with us while you are gone?"

Jesus 'disciples here aren't so much worried about what is going to happen to Jesus as they are about what is going to happen to them without Jesus. They are uncertain, confused, they aren't ready yet to face the world without their father, or at least, like all children who huddle around the bed of a departing parent, they don't think they are.

And Jesus speaks to His children words of comfort. He promises them indeed that He will not leave them alone but that He will send to them 'the comforter' and that through 'the comforter' He will stil be with them, and He promises too that He will go and prepare a place for them and that when he has gone and prepared a place for them that "I will come again and take you to myself, that where I am, you may be also!" (vs. 3)

And you've heard those words before, I'm sure – most likely at a funeral!

I have taken a lot of funerals and I have read those words at every funeral I have taken, and I have been to quite a few funerals that others have taken and these words have been read at most of them too (the handful of secular funerals I've attended being the only exceptions).

We find in these words both comfort and strength in the face of death, and that is fitting, as they were spoken by Jesus with a view to giving comfort and strength to His disciples in the face of His own imminent departure and death.

It is fitting that we read Jesus' words about the Father's house and its many rooms when distressed by separation and death. What is ironic though, in my view, is that we never add the words that Jesus followed these with – namely, "I am the way, the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me" – as these words were likewise calculated to give comfort and strength to the weak and fearful.

Maybe some people do add these words about Jesus being the way, the truth and the life to their funeral liturgies. I'm not sure They aren't included in the prayer book I use, and I suspect that they aren't included in many, for I must confess that almost invariably, when I hear this verse quoted, it's not to bring comfort to someone who is in distress, but rather it's being used hit somebody over the head with the supposed inferiority of their religion.

I'm sure you know what I'm talking about. This is the verse we throw at Muslims, Jews, Buddhists and Hindus. Jesus said that He was the way, the truth and the life. Therefore everything you believe is garbage!

John 14:6 is the favourite proof text of people like Pastor Terry Jones – that character from Florida who tried to organise a Quran burning. "No one comes to the Father but by me", says Jesus. That means that nobody who isn't a part of the Christian fold (and, more specifically, a part of the doctrinally-correct, Evangelical, Bible-believing end of the Christian fold) isn't going to get to the Father!

'No one gets to the Father but by Him.' It's very simple! There's only one way! It's like booking a cabin for our bush camp next weekend. If you want to get a cabin and a bed you've got to come by me! Nobody comes to Binacrombi but by me, which might sound a little disturbing. Actually ... nobody comes to Binacrombi but by Narelle, my assistant! Some of you who know her may find that even more disturbing!

Anyway, I get this verse thrown at me all the time because of my tendency to fraternise with people from other religious groups (most especially because of my friendship with so many Muslims of course). Well-meaning brethren confront me with this all the time – sometimes in person, sometimes by phone call, but most often via the anonymity of the Web. They say to me, "You need to read John 14, verse 6: "Jesus said ... "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father but by me."

And the assumption, of course, is that I must be a no-good liberal – one of those weak-minded Christians who abandoned His belief in the Bible years ago for an ephemeral faith in the basic goodness of all people - somebody who has resigned himself to the belief that all religions are basically the same. And this is not the case at all!

I remember listening years ago to a certain local member, speaking at an anniversary of the terrible Bali bombing that cost the lives of some of our local residents here, who appalled me when he offered his analysis of the terrorist attack by saying something like, 'what a shame that a little thing like religion should separate people so radically?'

I confronted him afterwards and encouraged him not to trivialise other peoples' religion, assuming that theirs is just some inferior variation on your own. Most people, I would suggest, who blithely assert the equality of all religions, do so simply because they can't be bothered to examine any religion closely enough to understand what it's really about!

It is very easy to say the politically correct thing – that all religions are equally true and have an equal contribution to make and that nobody has a monopoly on the truth.

Personally, I think it behoves us, if we are going to reach out in love and friendship to people of other religious traditions, to start by assuming that people of other religious traditions probably take their faith just as seriously as we do ours, and by assuming that their faith understanding is probably just as complex as ours is. Of course that doesn't mean that we therefore have to agree about everything (or anything)!

Personally, when it comes to the differences between Christianity and Islam, for example, I believe that those differences are deep and profound, but that surely doesn't mean that I don't have anything to learn from my Islamic sisters and brothers, just as it surely doesn't mean that I'm obliged to show contempt for what they have to say!

That I disagree with my Muslim friends in some things surely does not mean that must disagree with them about everything, and it most surely does not mean that I don't need to love and respect them just as much as I do everyone else.

Of course I don't bother saying all this to those who attack me online and elsewhere, as they normally don't have the ears to hear it, though I do sometimes point out to them what Jesus actually said – that HE was the way, the truth and the life – not that Christianity as a religion is 'the way', nor that Christian doctrine (as hammered out over 2000 years of creeds and councils) is 'the truth', let alone that life in the church – whether it be the church of Terry Jones in Florida or even church as it's experienced in the Anglican Diocese of Sydney – is 'the life'.

Even so, it misses the point, for these words from Jesus were never intended as a polemic, but as words of comfort and strength for disciples in distress.

When we feel anxious and alone, when we are not sure where Jesus is going or how long He is going to be or why He ever left us in the first place, He says to us, "I am the way and the truth and the life".

'Look to me! It doesn't have to be so hard! It's not that you did anything wrong or that there is some great task that you have to fulfil in order to get yourself right with the Father. I am the gate to the sheepfold. I am the way to the Father. I will take care of all of that for you. Yes, you are confused, and yes, there are lots of things you don't understand, but you don't have to understand everything either. Just leave all that to me. If you have seen me, you have seen the Father. I and the Father are one. You can trust me on this. There is nothing more that needs to be done. You can relax. I am the way, and I love you!'

Last words are very important. I still remember the last words my father said to me before he died. He had three words for me too: "go home son!", to which he then added another three: "I'll be fine!"

And I did go home, and I'm sure he is fine, and I guess he was trying to make things easier for me in what he said, and I suspect that when my time comes I'll be trying to do the same for those I leave behind. It's the final act of love that parents give to children, just as Jesus, in his last discourse, gives these words to us:

'I am the way and the truth and the life. Be at peace. Relax. I've got it under control. Believe in God. Believe also in me! No one comes to the Father but by me.'

Get a free preview copy of Dave's book, Sex, the Ring & the Eucharist when you sign up for his free newsletter at [http://www.fatherdave.org](http://www.fatherdave.org)

National Youth Sports Strategy

Saturday, August 2, 2025

US Sports Partner Spotlight: American Eagle

 

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Become a Master at Bunting and MLB Highlights from ALL games on 8/1! US Sports Baseball

 

  • By Brandon Ogle

Former college baseball coach Billy Godwin showed the importance of bunting when he said, “I think it’s about creating pressure. When you can get a bunt down in a good situation in the right location against a team defensively, now you’ve created where the team’s got to make that throw.” Bunting isn’t always going to be a success, but it is creating a situation where the defense has to make a play. However, players need to know the fundamentals that will make this process more effective.

Step-by-Step Technique Guide

( Free video lesson from 'The Complete Guide to Hitting for Beginners' by Coach Billy Hall)

In a game that can often be decided by one run, being able to bunt can be a lifesaver. In this section, I’ll provide you with a beginner’s guide on how to bunt properly. While developing your ability to bunt consistently depends on practice, just mastering the technique can take you a long way.

Once you step up to the plate, you don’t want to give away your intentions too early, so make it look like a normal at-bat. Then, as the pitchers enters his windup, prepare to bunt. The hand placement will involve the left-hand being moved up slightly and the right-hand up towards the middle of the bat. Make sure to keep you’re right-hand on the backside of the bat to avoid a ball clipping your fingers. This placement is for right-handed hitters, but with lefties it would be the direct opposite.

Finally, as the pitch comes in, let the ball hit the bat and angle it to the direction you intend. The key is to not try to swing at the ball in bunting form. This will not get the job done!

Bunting for a Hit

If your bunting ability is good enough and you have the speed to get down the line quickly, then you’ll always have the possibility of bunting for a hit available to you. It can be a deadly weapon as it will affect how pitchers throw to you and where the infielders position themselves on the infield. If you intend to bunt for a base hit, then you can either pursue a drag bunt or a push bunt.

A drag bunt is one that is hit down the third base line. If a righty is on the mound, then usually he’ll fall off more towards the 1st base line. This leaves the third baseman as the main guy you’ll need to worry about. If you see him or her playing in a standard or deep position, then it’s a good set-up for a drag. Meanwhile, a push bunt is hit towards the second or first baseman. This is the recommended strategy for when a lefty is pitching due to the fact that they’ll fall off towards the 3rd base line.

If you see the first baseman anticipating a bunt, then try to bunt it hard enough to beat the pitcher, but not hard enough to reach the second baseman. With the first baseman off his line, there will be no one to cover the bag. These are just a few scenarios in which players could turn a bunt into a hit.

Sacrifice Bunt

A sacrifice bunt is relatively simple, but nonetheless requires technique. This is where a player bunts to essentially give up their out and advance the runner who is already on base. However, this doesn’t mean you can just bunt wherever. Failure to accurately execute the bunt can lead to the defense getting the lead runner out, rather than yourself at first base.

In terms of effectively laying down a sacrifice, you need the ability to utilize the bat to aim the ball where you want it to go. If that means the third base line, then hit a short bunt that stays fair, but not hard enough to reach the third baseman in time to throw to second. Essentially, at the heart of a sacrifice bunt is technique.

When Does Bunting Make Sense?

When should you bunt? Some critics argue that bunting never makes sense. After all, some of the time it just gives away an out for free. While I used to think this was true, after watching the Kansas City Royals make a run to the 2014 World Series, I realized salvaging one run can be the difference in any given game. One time I think bunting makes perfect sense is when you’re facing a dominant pitcher. Say this pitcher has already shut your team out for four innings and shows no signs of slowing down. With the infielders back, this could be the perfect time to lay one down for a hit. It could not only result in a base runner, but also help disrupt the pitcher’s rhythm. They’ll be forced to throw out of the stretch then as opposed to a traditional wind up.

Similarly, imagine your team being down one run in the bottom of the ninth. The first guy gets on. With you at-bat, wouldn’t it make sense to move that runner into scoring position with a sacrifice bunt? This could bring the winning run to the plate with a runner on 2nd.

Finally, a bunt might make sense if you’re just having a bad day at the dish. If you’re struggling to make contact, this might be the perfect time to bunt one and just give full-out hustle to get a base knock. These are just a few of many situations where it might make sense, but show bunting isn’t always a waste.

Players Who Should Never Bunt?

While I have shown that bunting can help a team win games, that doesn’t mean every player should go out there bunting. Even though some may assume that fast players should regularly bunt and slow players should never bunt, this perception is not always accurate.

First off, it depends on the defense. If the defense is positioned in a cautious set-up, a bunt may be a possibility for any player if executed properly. With this said, my main reason why you shouldn’t agree with that perception is because I believe that elite hitters should never bunt. Some may attribute this to ego, but if you have a guy like Mike Trout at the plate, I’m not afraid to admit that I’d rather have him swing the bat than move a run into scoring position.

It is a simple risk vs. reward measurement. Some may argue everyone should be a potential option for bunting, but I don’t believe that is always the case.

Utilize Batting Practice

The only way to get good at something is through practice. Once you’ve got the technique down (which, honestly, isn’t that complex), you’ve got to work on being able to bunt to different areas. Whether it be a drag, push, or sacrifice, all of these take time practicing. So, when you’re in the batting cage taking some swings before the game, use about five of those pitches to practice bunting. It’s better to miss on a couple during practice than foul one straight up during a game.

Don’t Hesitate

Most baseball people I’ve talked with have said the important thing about bunting revolves on this idea of not hesitating. While deception dominates the early stages of the at-bat, once you square around and the pitch is in the zone, you must execute the bunt. You don’t want to get nervous once the pitch is thrown and lunge at the ball, thus resulting in a failed bunt. Utilize the technique given and accomplish the task at hand!

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Friday, August 1, 2025

US Sports Partner Spotlight: Bass Pro Shops

 

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Johnny (John L) Morris, founder and Lead Outfitter of Bass Pro Shops, got his start in 1972 by selling fishing tackle out of the back of his father’s store. Since then, Johnny has earned a reputation as one of the most visionary and influential retailers of the last 50 years. Today he is known as a retail and travel destination pioneer.

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US Sports Martial Arts: Learning the Fundamentals of Mixed Martial Arts and Feat. Dramatic Comeback Victory 😤 Otis Waghorn vs. Kongklai | Muay Thai

 Author Ross Natonason

The popularity of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and shoot wrestling has led to the creation of American and Japanese mixed martial arts. This kind of full contact combat sports was originally held as a competition aiming to discover the most effective martial arts which will be very helpful in real unarmed combat situation. In 1995, the sport got its coined name by the President and CEO of Battlecade, Rick Blume, and now famously known as the "mixed martial arts". At first, the players are to follow minimal rules. As fighters executed multiple martial arts, organizers and promoters started to employ additional rules to intensify safety and secure mainstream acceptance as a sport.

With the warm acceptance from the audience and avid fans, mixed martial arts practice has spread around the globe. Adults, kids and teens have enrolled to various martial art schools that offered courses for different types of martial arts. With the purpose of learning the art of fighting, most of the students aim to become experts in this field and become professional competitors of this sport. Although this was primarily practiced almost exclusively by competitive fighters, it has become available to wide range of practitioners of any age and with varying levels of competitiveness. Martial arts courses include judo, muay Thai, taekwondo, karate, wrestling and others.

Usually, fighters train with different styles under multiple coaches or an organized fight team. Before going to complex styles and fighting techniques, players must learn the common disciplines in mixed martial arts which are gained from traditional martial arts. The following enumerates three common disciplines of mixed martial arts:

a. Stand-up fighting tactic

This discipline consists of effective stand-up striking while the fighter avoids ground fighting. This style is usually applied using sprawls to defend against takedowns. Footwork, kicking, elbowing and punching are enhanced in this style. Muay Thai kickboxing and Karate principles are usually applied in this discipline.

b. Clinch

Applied by wrestlers and Judokas, clinch fighting as well as dirty boxing are tactics used to prevent opponent from moving away into more distant striking range. This tactic is applied in attempting takedowns and striking competitor using knees, elbows, punches and stomp.

c. Ground

Another strategy to takedown or throw opponent to the ground is the ground-and-pound. An effective ground technique will let opponent obtain a top or dominant position then strike opponent with fists and elbow. This fighting tactic is aimed to attempt submission holds.

Although males dominate mixed martial arts, the sport also has female players commonly coming from Japan. Personalities such as Megumi Fujii, Gina Carano and Miesha Tate have represented women power and known as faces of women's MMA.

MMA equipment and clothing gear

To preclude the use of fighting kimono, MMA promotions have required male and female fighters to wear appropriate fighting attire. Male fighters play bare-chested and wear shorts as well as groin protectors underneath their trunks. Female fighters wear shorts and sports bras or other similarly fitting tops. Both fighters are required to wear mouth guards and rash guards. Choosing the best MMA equipment and gear must be based on functionality, style, and quality craftsmanship. Examples of quality clothing gear include Sprawl Fusion shorts, UFC fight and sparring gloves, brain pad mouth guards and grappling shin guard.

Ross is author of this article on Learning the Fundamentals of Mixed Martial Arts. Find more information about Mixed Martial Arts here.

NYSS Twitter Focus on Fun

Thursday, July 31, 2025

US Sports Partner Spotlight: Academy Sports & Outdoors

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US Sports Volleyball: How to Make Your Volleyball Practices More Game-Like and Italy 🇮🇹 vs. Brazil 🇧🇷 - Gold Match Women's VNL 2025 - Highlights

 

  • By Grant Young

Given volleyball’s nature, it can be difficult to construct a practice plan that doesn’t feel monotonous. 

But finding a way to do so is crucial when it comes to keeping your players feeling both engaged and excited about showing up and improving each day. 

Not to mention that if your players aren’t focused during their practices, it will be that much more difficult for them to flip a switch and become prepared for the pressure that comes when the lights are bright and the games begin to count in the season. 

Yet, what part of playing volleyball do players find the most fun? Playing in games, of course. And remembering this allows coaches to kill two birds with one stone (so to speak), by making their practices as game-like as possible. 

And Genny Volpe is the perfect person to teach you how to do so. 

2024 was Coach Volpe’s 21st season as the head women’s volleyball coach at Rice University in Texas. Genny Volpe has established the Owl volleyball program as a power in the Southwest, having taken them to eight NCAA tournaments (2004, 2008, 2009, 2018, 2019, spring 2021, fall 2021, 2022), the only eight appearances in Rice's history.

Volpe was inducted into the Rice Athletics Hall of Fame on October 27, 2023. The sixth head coach in Rice volleyball history, Volpe holds the program record for both career wins (394-210 overall) and highest career winning percentage (.652). The 2020-21 AVCA Southwest Region Coach of the Year and also a two-time C-USA Coach of the Year (2008 and 2018), Volpe has led the Owls to five conference championships under her watch (Conference USA: 2009, 2018, 2020-21, 2021, 2022), and has coached 16 All-Americans and 64 all-conference selections. 

Coach Volpe’s ‘Game Ready! Implementing Game Situation in Daily Practice’ course is a masterclass when it comes to getting your players excited for each practice while preparing them for actual games. Her practice plans and drills are exactly what you need to not only set your team apart, but have them winning endless sets this season. 

General Principles for Planning Practice

One of the most important principles for Coach Volpe when it comes to planning for practice is understanding how much practice time you’ll be allotted. 

This is going to vary depending on what level of team you’re coaching at. Regardless of that, knowing how much practice time you have per week will allow you to prioritize the drills that you know your team needs most in order to improve. 

One somewhat unconventional aspect of Coach Volpe’s practices is what she calls “practicing ugly”. This is her way of acknowledging that much of what happens in a volleyball game can look ugly, and involves improvisation that occurs outside of whatever system the coach and team are trying to implement. Therefore, Coach Volpe believes it’s important to ensure players are getting these “ugly” reps (perhaps just by scrimmaging without any set plays, and just trying to keep a rally alive by any means necessary) during practice so that they’re prepared for them inevitably occurring in-game. 

In addition, Coach Volpe likes to drill game situations that might occur in a game, such as a team running out of rubs or pivoting to an offensive-focused formation. Therefore, if these scenarios occur in the game, a team won’t be hapless to deal with them.

Finally, Coach Volpe notes that she wants to ensure her practices are fun so that her players remain engaged and get what they started playing the sport for in the first place.

The 3 C’s

Coach Volpe’s practice philosophy centers around her “Three C’s: Collaborative, Competitive, and Challenging.

Collaborative: Coach Volpe wants to be asking a lot of questions to her players during practice. She wants to get their opinions on whether they feel like they’re optimizing their time, she asks them to set goals for each practice, and asks them to make sure they understand all of the different strategic aspects she discusses throughout a practice. 

Keeping players engaged and getting problems and confusion solved before they become something bigger is a major part of running an efficient, effective practice in Coach Volpe’s eyes. 

Competitive: Making practices competitive both enhances focus and the overall performance of practice. Regardless of what a team is doing in their practice, there’s almost certainly a way to make it competitive. 

Challenging: Coach Volpe is a big believer in what she calls setting stretch goals. What she means by this is that she wants to set goals for her team (and wants her players to set these goals for themselves) that might be too lofty for them to achieve. This will not only help players to improve and get closer to achieving these goals, but it will also get them acclimated to failing; which will come in handy when they inevitably fail at some point during a game. 

Non-Traditional Plays, Reaction Drills

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Coach Volpe has several what she calls “non-traditional” plays that happen all the time in volleyball games but aren’t necessarily practiced, because they aren’t part of a set play or formation.

Among these are when the block has to turn and play a ball that’s coming right at their face. Others are creative coverages, getting touches off of the block, playing balls that come off the net in a strange way, jousting, and handling overpasses. 

Teams are bound to across multiple of these scenarios in games. And while it may seem difficult to simulate a scenario in practice where it occurs, all you need to do it make it as barebones as possible or mimic the brief reaction time a player will need in order to execute one of these split-second plays.

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