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Sunday, June 21, 2026

Fearless With Jason Whitlock on US Sports Radio - Angel Reese OUTSHINES Caitlin Clark & York Revolution Baseball Team BOYCOTTS Pride Night

 

Jason highlights Angel Reese and the Atlanta Dream's win over Indiana and Caitlin Clark last night. Jason insists that Clark should follow Reese’s offseason move in search of a fresh start with a different franchise. Clark, while compiling an impressive stat line, once again displayed her childish antics in dispute with officials. Steve Kim, Dre Baldwin, Maurice Drake, Jr., and Charles Baker offer their takes on Angel outshining Caitlin. Steve Kim and Jason break down the breakup of Dan Le Batard and Stugotz. Coach JB makes his weekly appearance to discuss San Antonio star Victor Wembanyama being unfairly targeted by the media, a minor league team refusing to take the field for Pride Night, and Brendan Sorsby applying for the NFL supplemental draft. Now streaming on US Sports Radio



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Saturday, June 20, 2026

US Sports Volleyball: Mastering the 5-1 Rotation in Volleyball: A Comprehensive Guide and Thamela/Victoria vs. Svozilova/Stochlova - Pool Play Highlights

 


Introduction

Struggling to keep track of your volleyball rotations? The 5-1 rotation is one of the most commonly used formations in volleyball, providing a structured yet dynamic approach to gameplay. This guide will break down the fundamentals of the 5-1 rotation, explaining how players should position themselves and transition throughout a match.

What is a Rotation in Volleyball?

In volleyball, a rotation refers to the movement of players in a clockwise direction each time their team gains the right to serve. To ensure proper positioning and avoid rotation violations, players must maintain their correct spots on the court until the ball is served.

The 5-1 Rotation: An Overview

The 5-1 rotation consists of one setter and five hitters, distributed as follows:

Front row: Outside hitter, middle hitter, and right-side hitter

Back row: Another outside hitter, libero, and the setter (when in the back row)

This system allows for consistency in setting, as the same player sets in all rotations. Players must adhere to rotation rules, ensuring they remain in their designated positions before the serve. Once the serve is executed, they can transition into their base positions.


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Breakdown of the 5-1 Rotation

Rotation 1 - Service

This is the first serving rotation at the start of a set.

Players begin in their base positions after the referee checks the lineup.

Libero substitution:

The libero cannot be listed in the official lineup but may substitute in for any back-row player after the lineup is verified.

This substitution does not count toward the team’s total substitution limit.

Key transitions:

The setter is the first server. After serving, they move into their base position.

The outside hitter and right-side hitter switch positions once the ball is served.

The back-row outside hitter and libero move into their base positions.

Rotation 1 - Serve Receive

The first receiving formation in a match.

Objective: Hide the setter to ensure they do not pass the first ball and remain available to set the second ball.

Key transitions:

Since the setter is in the back row, the front-row outside hitter drops back to assist in passing.

Players remain in their designated spots for the first serve.

After the ball is returned over the net, all players transition to their base positions

.Rotation1 Serve and Receive

Rotation 2 - Service

Players rotate clockwise before the serve.

Key transitions:

An outside hitter serves, becoming a back-row attacker.

The other outside hitter rotates to the front row.

After the serve, players shift to their base positions.

Rotation 2 - Serve Receive

The second receiving formation.

Key transitions:

The front-row outside hitter moves back to pass, ensuring the setter is hidden.

Once the ball is played over, all players move to their base positions.

Rotation 2 Serve and Receive

Rotation 3 - Service

Key adjustments:

The libero subbed out in Rotation 2 is replaced by the second middle hitter.

The first middle hitter serves, then transitions into the libero’s base position, playing defense until the opposing team wins a point.

Other players adjust to their base positions after the serve.

Rotation 3 - Serve Receive

Key transitions:

The libero substitutes back in for the first middle hitter.

The front-row outside hitter moves back to pass, keeping the setter available.

Players maintain their correct positions before the ball is served.

After the ball is played over, players shift to their base positions.

Rotation 3 Serve and Receive

Rotation 4 - Service

Key substitutions:

A defensive specialist may substitute in for the right-side hitter to serve and play in the back row.

The defensive specialist’s base position is in the back-right.

If needed, the right-side hitter may remain in the back row instead of being substituted.

When the defensive specialist rotates to the front row, the right-side hitter subs back in.

Setter’s new role:

The setter is now a front-row player, leaving only two hitters at the net: an outside hitter and a middle hitter.

The setter must act as the right-side blocker and has the option to dump the ball when setting.

Having the setter in the front row enhances back-row passing efficiency.

Rotation 4 - Serve Receive

The setter, now in the front row, is stacked behind the other front-row players on the left side to facilitate movement into base positions.

The defensive specialist functions as the third passer, allowing the front-row outside hitter to focus on attacking.

Once the ball is played over, players transition to their base positions.

Rotation 4 Serve and Receive

Rotation 5 - Service

The outside hitter rotates to serve, while the other outside hitter moves to the front row.

After serving, all players transition into their base positions.

Rotation 5 - Serve Receive

The back row has three passers, reducing the need for the front-row hitter to pass.

Once the ball is returned over the net, all players shift to their base positions.

Rotation 5 Serve and Receive

Rotation 6 - Service

The libero substitutes out for a middle hitter, while the other middle rotates to serve.

This rotation is identical to Rotation 3 - Service in terms of positioning and transitions.

Rotation 6 Service

Final Thoughts

The 5-1 rotation is a highly effective system that provides offensive consistency while maintaining defensive stability. By understanding each rotation’s transitions and responsibilities, players can improve their positioning, minimize errors, and enhance overall team performance.

By mastering this rotation, teams can optimize their strategy and maximize their chances of success on the court.

Want to help kids find sports they love? Sign up to be a coach or volunteer in a local youth sports program. Learn more ways to support youth sports in the National Youth Sports Strategy: https://bit.ly/2lIHPUc



Friday, June 19, 2026

US Sports Softball: Three Great Drills For Softball Infielders and Texas vs. Texas Tech: 2026 Women's College World Series finals game 2

 

Three Great Drills For Softball Infielders


Having a plethora of good infielders in softball is crucial for any team’s success. 

Being a good infielder requires both physical and mental components. Having quick reflexes, agility, and a strong arm are all essential for making defensive plays. In addition, good infielders also must be able to anticipate the next play, communicate effectively with their teammates, and have excellent decision-making skills. Their role in preventing runs and helping the team maintain control of the game is vital. 

Playing infield in softball can be challenging for several reasons. First, the speed of the game requires quick reflexes and fast decision-making, because the close proximity to the batter also means that there is less time to react to hard-hit balls.

Additionally, fielding ground balls and catching line drives require precise hand-eye coordination and good timing. Furthermore, the pressure to make accurate throws to get the runners out adds to the difficulty of playing the infield. Overall, the combination of speed, precision, and split-second decision-making makes playing infield in softball a challenging and demanding position.


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This is why having a series of softball infield drills that can sharpen and continue to finetune your infielder’s skills as a season progresses is crucial for the entire team. While there are a lot of infield drills you can use, Tony Medina has a few drills he swears by — and we highly suggest his expertise. 

Coach Medina has been actively coaching Softball for more than 30 years and is the founder of Medina Softball Clinics, which offers weekly schedules of fielding skills clinics in the Los Angeles and Orange County, California area.

 

Known for offering a high-paced and fun environment, Coach Tony keeps his players challenged and moving, packing in the skills work into every session. Coach Tony has trained countless college, high school, and recreation level softball players in addition to coaching top Nationally ranked travel ball teams. 

Coach Medina’s ‘Medina Softball Clinics - Fielding’ course is not only for players but also for teaching coaches about how to elevate their skills and conduct their practices so that their team wins more games when it matters most.

Reaction Drills

Reaction drills are crucial for any softball infield coach’s repertoire because having fast reactions and hand-eye coordination is a must for softball players who play any infield position. 

One reaction drill Coach Medina swears by starts with the infielder positioned at one cone, another cone positioned 30 feet directly in front of them, and then a third cone 10 feet behind that, positioned 40 feet away from the player. 

From there, the coach will stand at the 30-foot cone and just hit the ball at the infielder while they have a screen behind them. 

This will test the infielder’s reactions as they only have a few split seconds to catch the ball headed their way. After enough repetitions of this, the coach will then move back to 40 feet and do the same thing. 

30 feet is the correct starting distance because that’s the closest an infielder would ever be to the hitter (when a corner infielder is preparing to field a sacrifice bunt).

When doing this drill, the coach should be making sure that their players are getting into their ready stance with their feet pointed directly forward. 

If you are dealing with younger softball players, you might want to use a tennis racket and tennis balls for this drill rather than a bat and softball to ensure that your players stay safe. 

Quick Hands

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Just like how having fast reactions is important when playing in the infield, having quick hands is crucial for the same seasons. 

One drill Coach Medina loves is what he calls the ‘Inside Inside Drill’. This will require two players at first base with another two players (ideally shortstops or other middle infielders) at second base. 

The drill starts with the coach rolling a ground ball to the first base player from about 10 feet away. The player will field the ball and then turn to make a throw to second base. From there, the player standing on second base will catch the ball, make a quick and clean transfer, and deliver a firm and accurate throw back to the first base player. 

This simulates a double-play scenario where there’s a runner on first base and a ground ball is hit to the first baseman.

When inspecting this drill, the coach should make sure that their players are communicating to each other that the throws between them should go to the inside of the bag (hence the drill’s name). In addition, the coach will want to see the infielders at second base catch the ball smoothly and go straight into their transition without too much movement of their feet. 

Double Plays

More often than not, it’s up to a middle infielder’s preference as to whether they want to step on a bag and then step off, or step over the second base bag when turning a double play. 

However, there are some scenarios where the infielder must have a specific one of these two maneuvers to evade a sliding baserunner or turn the double play as quickly as possible. This is why Coach Medina runs a drill where he has infielders practicing both types of turns. 

For this drill, a coach will stand out ten feet directly in front of the infielder, who is a couple of steps behind second base. The coach will then underhand toss the ball to the infielder, who will receive it while simultaneously stepping on second base with their left foot. From there, they’ll step back and deliver a throw to first base. 

Next, the infielder will come across the bag with their left foot staying on the bag and their right field going to the ball while receiving the catch. After catching it, they’ll step in front of the bag and then deliver a throw to first base. 

Sports help kids #GetActive and learn new skills – but don’t forget about fun! Learn about @HealthGov’s National Youth Sports Strategy and help make fun the top priority in #YouthSports: https://bit.ly/2lIHPUc



The Rock Almighty Wake Up Call: How to Keep Building Your Ideal Life without Burning Out (Hustle Harder is Bad Advice) and Faith Comes By Hearing And Manifests By Doing!

Dickson Okorafor

I used to think exhaustion was a status symbol.

Last year, I pulled a seventy two hour week. Not because I had to. Because I had internalized this stupid idea that if I wasn’t grinding, I was falling behind. I remember sitting at my desk that Thursday night. It was late, maybe 10:30, maybe later, I'd stopped checking. I was staring at this spreadsheet, some Q3 thing I don't even remember the name of anymore, and at some point I realized I'd been looking at the same row for what felt like an hour. Not reading it, just… looking.

My left eye kept twitching. That little flutter under the lid that makes you look like you're winking at nobody. My phone was face-up on the desk. Three missed calls from my sister. I'd forgotten to call her back. The coffee next to my keyboard had gone cold, I don't know how long ago. I kept sipping it anyway. My hands just needed something to do.

At midnight I finally closed the laptop. I didn’t feel accomplished. I felt hollow. And then I couldn’t sleep because my brain was still racing through a to do list that would never end. So anyway, that’s when I started questioning the whole hustle thing.

The problem isn’t hard work. It’s the religion of “more.”

Let me be clear: working hard isn’t bad. But hustle culture took something reasonable, effort matters, and twisted it into a suicide pact. The message everywhere is that if you’re not exhausted, you’re not trying. That rest is for people who’ve already made it. That burnout is just the cost of doing business.


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I bought that for years. I wore my tiredness like a badge. I’d tell people “I’m so busy” with a weird pride in my voice, as if busyness proved my worth.

But here’s what actually happens when you hustle harder for too long. Your brain gets slower. You snap at people you love. You forget what you enjoy doing when nobody’s watching. And eventually, your body throws a check engine light that you can’t ignore.

A friend of mine, let’s call her Maya, learned this the hard way. Maya is a freelance designer. Two years ago she was working eighty hours a week, seven days, for months. She doubled her revenue. Then one morning she woke up and couldn’t get out of bed. Not because she was lazy. Her nervous system just shut down. She spent the next three months in and out of doctor’s offices, trying to figure out why her heart kept racing and why she couldn’t remember what she’d said five minutes earlier.

The diagnosis? Chronic burnout. The cure? Doing almost nothing for six weeks.

Maya told me later, I thought I was winning. But I was just borrowing energy from a future that couldn’t pay me back. That line stuck with me.

The science is pretty clear, but you don’t need science to feel it

I could quote studies. Stanford did one showing that productivity drops off a cliff after fifty hours a week. After fifty five, you’re basically just making more mistakes for no extra output. Another study showed that chronic high cortisol—the stress hormone—literally shrinks the part of your brain that helps you make good decisions. But you already know this, don’t you?

Ever feel like you’re just going through the motions? Yeah, me too. For me it usually hits on Sunday afternoons. I’ve been “working” for six hours, but I’ve accomplished maybe two hours of real progress. The rest was just… motion. Answering emails that didn’t matter. Rearranging files. Opening the same three websites over and over.

That’s the hustle trap. You confuse activity with achievement.

And the worst part? Hustle culture makes you feel guilty for noticing. Like if you’re not constantly exhausted, you’re not a real entrepreneur, a real creative, a real adult. I’m calling bullshit on that now.

What I started doing instead (and why it felt wrong at first)

About eight months ago, I decided to run an experiment on myself. I’d been reading about this idea, treating your life like a garden instead of a machine. A machine breaks down if you run it too hard. A garden needs rest seasons to stay fertile. Obvious, right? But I’d never actually lived it.

So I tried something small. I picked one day a week where I wouldn’t do any “productive” work. No email. No Slack. No “just one quick task.” I called it my slack day. The first one was horrible. I sat on my couch for twenty minutes, phone in hand, thumb hovering over my email icon. I felt physically uncomfortable. Like I was doing something illegal.

I ended up pacing around my apartment. Checked the fridge three times. Stared out the window.

But by the fourth week, something shifted. I went for a long walk without my phone. I noticed the way the light hit a row of trees near my house. I had an idea for a project I’d been stuck on for months—just popped into my head while I was looking at those trees. No effort. No grind. Just… space. That was the moment I realised: rest isn’t the opposite of progress. It’s the prerequisite.

Five things that actually work (from someone who used to burn out twice a year)

I’m not a guru. I don’t have a framework with seven pillars and a paid course. I just have a list of habits that stopped me from crying over a spreadsheet at midnight. (Yes, I cried over a spreadsheet once. Not my finest moment.)

  1. Stop managing your time. Start managing your energy.

For years I planned my day around the clock. 9 AM to 11 AM: deep work. 11 AM to noon: emails. It never worked because by 10:30 AM my brain was already foggy. I’m not a morning person. I learned that the hard way.

So I tracked my energy for a week. Just a note on my phone every hour: 1 to 10, how sharp do I feel? Turns out I peak around 2 PM and crash around 7 PM. So now I do my real work—the stuff that needs focus—between 2 and 5. Everything else? Emails, admin, calls? I shove those into my lower energy windows.

Try it. You might be surprised. A friend of mine discovered she’s razor sharp at 6 AM. She’d been fighting that for years because she thought waking up early was “for crazy people.” Now she just leans into it.

  1. Make fewer decisions before noon

This one sounds small, but it changed my life.

Every decision you make—what to wear, what to eat, whether to check your phone—drains a little battery. By the time I’d decided on breakfast, scrolled through news, and replied to three non urgent texts, I was already tired. Before I’d done anything real.

So I got boring on purpose. I wear the same four shirts every week. I eat oatmeal for breakfast, same thing every day. I check email exactly twice a day: 11 AM and 3 PM. Not because I’m disciplined. Because I’m lazy and I want to save my brain for things that matter.

You don’t have to go full Steve Jobs turtleneck. Just pick one area. Maybe you plan all your meals on Sunday. Maybe you stop reading the news in the morning. See if you feel less scattered by lunchtime.

  1. Find your one thing that actually moves the needle

Here’s a question I wish someone had asked me five years ago: If you could only do three hours of work tomorrow, what would you spend them on?

For me, it’s writing and talking to clients. Everything else—invoicing, social media, scheduling—is just noise. So I started asking myself: can I automate this? Can I delegate it? Can I just… stop doing it?

I hired a virtual assistant for five hours a week. Costs me less than a dinner out. She handles my calendar, my receipts, my travel bookings. Suddenly I had ten extra hours a week. I didn’t fill them with more work. I took a nap. I read a novel. I went to the park with my niece. That’s not laziness. That’s leverage.

  1. Leave empty space on purpose

This was the hardest one for me.

I used to schedule every minute. Back to back calls, no gaps. I thought gaps were wasted time. Then one day a call ended fifteen minutes early, and I just sat there. No phone. No laptop. Just silence. I felt this wave of relief in my chest. Like I’d been holding my breath for months and finally let go.

Now I build in buffer zones. If I think a task will take an hour, I schedule ninety minutes. The extra half hour isn’t for going slow. It’s for the surprise—the glitch, the distraction, the moment of inspiration that only comes when you’re not rushing.

And once a week, I block out ninety minutes with no agenda. I call it my white space. Sometimes I walk. Sometimes I cook something slowly. Sometimes I just lie on the floor and stare at the ceiling. My partner walked in once and asked if I was okay. I said, I’m practicing being unproductive. She laughed. Then she joined me.

  1. Actually stop at the end of the day

This sounds stupidly simple, but I bet you don’t do it.

I created a shutdown ritual. At 6 PM, I close my laptop. I write down what I finished and what I’ll do tomorrow. Then I say out loud, Work is over for today. I know how weird that sounds. But try it. Your brain needs a signal that it’s safe to stop producing cortisol.

For the first two weeks, I kept sneaking back to check “just one thing.” I’d be brushing my teeth and think, oh, I should reply to that email. That’s the addiction talking. The real test is whether you can ignore it.

Now I put my phone in another room after dinner. Not because I’m a monk. Because I noticed that checking email at 9 PM made it harder to fall asleep. And bad sleep meant a slow, grumpy morning. And a slow morning meant I’d try to hustle harder to catch up. Vicious cycle.

Breaking it felt impossible for the first week. Then it got easier. Then it felt normal. Now the idea of working at 10 PM seems almost silly.

A few things I still mess up (because I’m not a robot)

Honestly? I’m not 100% sure this works for everyone. Here’s why I think it worked for me, but I’d love to know if you’ve tried something different.

I still have weeks where I fall back into old patterns. Last month a big client asked for a rush project. I said yes, then worked through the weekend. By Monday I was snapping at my partner over nothing. I paused longer than usual before answering when she asked what was wrong. Something about it didn’t sit right.

I had to apologise and admit that I’d broken my own rules. That sucked. But it also reminded me why the rules exist.

The difference now is that I catch myself faster. A year ago I would have just kept grinding until I got sick. Now I notice the warning signs: the eye twitch, the short temper, the feeling that everything is urgent. And I force myself to stop. Even if the work isn’t done. Even if I feel guilty. Guilt fades. Burnout doesn’t.

What to do if you’re already in the red zone

Maybe you’re reading this and thinking, that’s nice, but I’m already exhausted. I can’t afford to rest. I have deadlines. People depend on me.

I get it. I’ve been there.

Here’s what I’d tell you: take one day. Just one. No work. No guilt. Sleep in. Go outside. Call someone you haven’t talked to in a while. Eat something that isn’t from a delivery app.

See what happens. You probably won’t fall behind. You might actually think more clearly the next day. And if you can’t take a whole day, take an afternoon. If you can’t take an afternoon, take two hours. Start somewhere.

Because the alternative, continuing until you break, is way more expensive. Missed work. Doctor bills. Months of recovery. I’ve watched friends go through it. It’s not worth the revenue.

A quick checklist for your own anti hustle experiment

If you want to try what I did, here’s a plan. I’m not even sure it’s a plan. More like a few things I messed around with for a week or two. No pressure. And definitely no ten step anything.

Week one – just watch

• Track your energy every few hours. 1 to 10. No judgement.

• Notice when you feel sharp and when you feel foggy.

• Also notice what triggers your hustle reflex. For me it’s seeing a competitor’s LinkedIn post. For you it might be a late bill or a critical email.

Week two – cut one thing

• Pick one low value task. Delete it. Not delegate. Delete.

• Add one rest block. Thirty minutes, three times a week. No screens. No goals. Just exist.

Week three and beyond – make some promises to yourself

• Write down two or three rules. Examples: no email after 7 PM. One full day off per week. Stop working when my energy drops below 6/10.

• Post them somewhere visible. Tell a friend. Have them check in on you.

That’s it. No app required. No paid course. Just small, weird experiments until you find what keeps you from crashing.

The real goal (and it’s not what hustle culture told you)

Here’s the thing I keep coming back to. Hustle culture promises that if you just push hard enough, you’ll finally earn the right to rest. You’ll make enough money, get enough recognition, build enough security and then you can relax. But that day never comes. It’s because there’s always one more goal, one more competitor and one more thing to prove.

I don’t want to earn rest anymore. I want rest to be part of the deal from the beginning. Like oxygen, like water, not a reward but a requirement.

So I’m not trying to do less because I’m lazy. I’m trying to do the right things with enough energy left over to actually enjoy the life I’m supposedly building. What’s the point of a successful career if you’re too exhausted to taste your dinner?

I don’t have that all figured out. Some weeks I’m great at this. Other weeks I’m typing at 11 PM with one eye closed. But I’m getting better at noticing. And noticing is the first step to changing.

Anyway, that’s what I’ve learned from burning out twice and slowly crawling back. I’d honestly love to know what’s worked for you. Or what you’ve tried that failed. The failed experiments are usually more interesting.

Thanks for reading. Now go take a break. I mean it.

Dickson Okorafor writes about self development, intentional life design, and why refreshing your approach beats clinging to old goals. Through personal experiments and honest failures, he shares how Life Architecture can turn stagnation into momentum. Find more real world strategies on Medium at @DyHez.

Sports help kids #GetActive and learn new skills – but don’t forget about fun! Learn about @HealthGov’s National Youth Sports Strategy and help make fun the top priority in #YouthSports: https://bit.ly/2lIHPUc