The MLPB’s Tampa Bay Open 26 has concluded, marking a historic milestone as, for the first time, professional paintball was held inside an NFL stadium. In this case, Raymond James Stadium. The MLPB/NXL delivered an exceptional level of production throughout the event.
What I think is particularly noteworthy is that this was all accomplished in significantly less time than the MLPB has typically allotted for venue preparation. Under normal circumstances, they will have a full week dedicated to setting up the event. However, on this occasion, the team had only 2–3 days to complete all preparations, both inside and outside the stadium! And boy did they deliver. What an outstanding achievement and effort by all those involved. involved.
When I took on the role of coach for the Jungle Cats, I knew exactly what I was getting myself into. The jump from semi pro to pro is often misrepresented and misunderstood. It isn’t a step but rather a large leap off a cliff. At this event, the Atlanta Jungle Cats got their first real taste of that drop. Our record—one win and three losses—certainly didn’t turn any heads on paper… but if you’re looking at this team through my lens, a coaching lens, the story is a lot more interesting than the standings suggest. And that’s what I want to do with this post… the hype is gone and reality has set in. I want to talk about how we should view this first event performance and the mentality behind it.
First, a little background. The Cats had a few things going for them headed into this season. They are a good example of a modern “pipeline team” in paintball. They started together in 2024 in Division 2 (Under the moniker BR Factory) with the following finishes and winning the series title:
Las Vegas Major – 2nd place
Lone Star Major – 3rd place
Mid Atlantic Major – 2nd place
Windy City Major – 3rd place
World Cup – 1st place
So, they learned what it takes to win at that level. No other team had that kind of consistency in the division that season.
They would enter the semi pro division in 2025 and almost mimic their D2 run winning the series title once again:
Tampa Bay Open – 2nd place
Atlantic City Open – 2nd place
Midwest Open – 1st place
Lonestar Open – 2nd place
World Cup – 5th
They would also go on to win the Summit award for Divisional Team of the Year as well as the Pro spot for the 2026 season.
Like I was saying, they are a good example of what I call a “pipeline” team. What I mean by “pipeline” team is they started in the lower divisions, developed and drew upon local talent, built up their chemistry and sponsorships, stayed in their respective division winning events, and ultimately earned their way into the pro league.
Now, we are nowhere near a legacy powerhouse team like San Diego Dynasty or Edmonton Impact. And whereas we have some things in common with PBFit, we are far from that organization’s level of success and capabilities. This season is going to be a struggle/fight as this first event showed. So many opportunities were missed during our preliminary matches that could have significantly changed the outcome of a point or even a match. In the lower divisions, you can get away with a mistake here and a mistake there. In the pro division, it is often one mistake that costs you. And we had several.
But I believe these guys understand that. They thought they understood this prior to the event. They certainly understand it now. What they did before to be successful in the lower divisions will simply not cut it now. They recognize they must work even HARDER. Much harder than what it took to climb the ranks. The devil is in the details as they say and the details are what win you points.
We met our 5 goals for this event, albeit one just barely.
Win a point
Win two points back to back
Win a match
Don’t get last
Get out of the 5th tier
VS The Royal City Seadogs
This first win matters more than it looks. What I need my guys to understand is that a 3–2 win over the Royal City Seadogs is more than just a check in the win column, it’s proof of concept.
In a first pro event, teams typically struggle with:
tempo
communication under pressure
closing points
We struggled with all of these. BUT… we didn’t just compete, we closed a tight match.
This showed me a few things..
they trust the system
they didn’t panic late in points
our core group has the chemistry necessary to win
they aren’t scared
And look, for a rookie squad, that’s a strong foundation we can build from. Personally, I feel this should have been a 4-1 game but again, small mistakes cost us.
ZEN NOTE: During the 5th point of this match, Baldwin clearly gets hit in the pack when he is in the snake 50. Camera shows it plain as day.
VS Edmonton Impact
We knew this was going to be a tough match. It was the David versus Goliath lived out in real time except that Goliath won the day decisively. It isn’t that the 5-1 loss was surprising but it was exactly what we needed. Impact is one of the most disciplined and talented teams in the league. They put on a clinic regarding survivability, communication, and teamwork. They’re a team that doesn’t beat you with brute force, or chaos, or even fancy tricks. They beat you with structure, game planning, in game adaptation, lane control, and then punish you when you make a mistake.
We received a reality check here. They didn’t outplay us, they outclassed us. You never really truly understand how many mistakes you are making out there until a team like Impact punishes you for all of them. And this match exposed us on several fronts. From zone control, timing, hesitation/slow processing, and job transitions. But we don’t need to look at it as an overall failure. Rather, we need to look at it as data. This is film we can build from. Lots of lessons in this one.
Again, I feel there was a point or two that should have played out differently had we understood the situation or just not lost a first engagement. For example, the second point of the match, I feel we should have created more pressure early snake side with Impact’s set up. But then losing two bodies behind our snake, makes him the island, so he should have stayed alive, instead of running down for a trade in a down body situation.
VS CK Hurricanesand TonTons
I think these two matches were the most telling. Not to take anything away from these two teams, but they aren’t unbeatable. These were the two matches where we had an opportunity to show and prove we belong in this division right now, not eventually. These were both winnable games. Instead, we let certain points slip away early, we didn’t recover well from playing down or from a deficit, and of course, slip ups with mid game processing, comms, and decision making.
That was the real difference here. When you add those things up, it shows the difference between competing and controlling. We weren’t controlling certain factors during each of the matches and ended up chasing.
Key elements during the Hurricane match cost us. In the first point, we bounce my friend Daniel Camp on break. My boy Ronnie beats Nic to snake by a mile. If he gets on the wire sooner, he may have caught Nic on his wide crawl. If Joey was on wire when Ronnie runs Nic down, we probably get Daniel too. Snake side is now blown open and we turn the field. The fourth point was another one that comes to mind from this match. My friend Nic Ripple pulls off a good one. It’s a 2 on 1, Joey yells “Home!” so Davis looks inside for him but Nic had already run from home to snake and shoots Davis. Had we contained him in home, we win this point. Joey can’t get a straight ball and Nic takes the point away from us.
During the TonTons game, a point that comes to mind is the 5th point of the match. It’s tied 2-2. We shoot the snake corner on the break making it a 54… then we give them one back. 44 but they have two at home. Our game plan when in this scenario is to pinch those two hard and we usually get one. If you slow this one down on youtube, we shoot the snake side home in the elbow plain as day… but I guess it didn’t leave paint and ref calls him clean. Then we let them spread wide. We lose Joey but bounce 95 in the dorito shortly after… we also had an opportunity to shoot a solid A+ bounce shot on dorito but we don’t do it because, well, we forgot about it.
Summation/Key Takeaways
We don’t necessarily have a talent issue. We have a pro experience issue and it showed. Duh. Clarity and situational awareness must improve.
After the last prelim match against TonTons, I had a few things I wanted the guys to understand. Managing expectations moving forward was priority #1. I didn’t talk to them about wins and losses. Instead, we talked about what we had just experienced and why. We talked about pace and tempo. The guys now understand that pro paintball is way faster but more importantly, it is way more decisive! The “hesitation window” from semi pro is gone. Every indecision or delay cost us field position, bodies, and points.
Good pro teams don’t just win points. They manage them. Each and every one. We have to recognize when to brake and when to step on the gas, when to lock and when to take ground and increase pressure. When to close and how.
I feel this was a good first event. We won a match, we got exposed by an elite team, and we recognize now how big the gap is. We never truly got blown out… we weren’t “lost” during the matches… we are right on the edge of “belonging”. This is a good place to be.
We need cleaner breakouts, faster secondaries. We need to turn those 5-2 matches into coin flips, the 6-2 into real fights. We came into Tampa thinking we were ready. Now we know what “ready” actually looks like. If we do this right, this event won’t be remembered as a rough debut… it will be remembered as the moment we stopped being a good semi pro team and started figuring out how to become a real pro one. We’ve seen the standard. Now we need to spend the rest of the season setting it.
“The chief task in life is simply this: to identify and separate matters so that I can say clearly to myself which are externals not under my control, and which have to do with the choices I actually control. Where then do I look for good and evil? Not to uncontrollable externals, but within myself to the choices that are my own . . .” –Epictetus
I would imagine there are some people out there who, if they were in my shoes, would be upset about following up a 2nd place finish at the Las Vegas Open with a 13th place finish at the Lonestar. Whereas, I am certainly not happy with our performance, my personal attitude is not one of anger or distress. I am quite aware of the opportunities we missed and the mistakes we made. The key is how we will respond to what was controllable and what was not. If we let single events define us, we wouldn’t be in the professional league today. The success the New Orleans Hurricanes has seen in this sport is due to our ability to assess and adapt to obstacles and adversities placed in our path. Yes, some of those are self inflicted but those are usually the greatest lessons. No one should allow negative emotions or reactions to bad performances become a weight around their shoulders…
Additionally, no one wants to remind themselves of mistakes. As I stated above, the key is to understand why that performance happened. Identify the issues and take a proactive step in addressing them. A prime example would be our performance at Cup, our work to correct issues from there, and our performance in Las Vegas. I think most would agree it was night and day. Consistency is key, especially in the pro division. That consistency, whether it is with the team or an individual player, is paramount to success. But when it falls short on both levels, you will not have a good event.
It’s been said by great men that success is “neither magical nor mysterious.” It is the natural consequence of consistently applying basic fundamentals. We were not anywhere close to consistent in our execution of play at this event. That falls on me. I failed to lead my men out of an off malaise… I will work on that.
With that said, this event recap may be a little different from others. I will address the matches we lost in detail and briefly comment on the matches we won.
That cucumber is bitter, so toss it out! There are thorns on the path, then keep away! Enough said. Why ponder the existence of nuisance? Such thinking would make you a laughing-stock to the true student of Nature, just as a carpenter or cobbler would laugh if you pointed out the sawdust and chips on the floors of their shops. Yet while those shopkeepers have dustbins for disposal, Nature has no need of them.” –Marcus Aurelius
PREPARATION
I think we prepared well for this event. We had a great practice partner, we worked the right aspects of the field, and we had a good game plan headed into the event. I know this because, when we did execute the game plans well, we won. That’s all the proof I need. We knew this field came down to four things:
Win the break. As with all layouts, a numerical advantage off the break usually pays dividends and for this field, I felt it was multiplied. I also felt our guns were dialed in and ready.
Be first to create opportunities from your secondaries to shift guns and/or get crafty and set traps.
Get lost/crafty to create hesitation and uncertainty with opponent during mid game scramble.
Close clean with a good stranglehold and good clock management.
We had shown a good understanding of how to do this and practiced it significantly. However, when we got to the event, we struggled with recreating that success…
VS Aftershock
I felt confident heading into this match. There was no doubt in my mind it would be a match similar to many knife fights we had endured before. But I knew if we could put Aftershock away, no matter the score, it was going to be a good event for us. We also knew that, with their roster, no matter the performance at the last event, they would be prepared. So we were definitely looking at them as a great test.
Pt1 – We went pocket and Aftershock beat us to the Center punch. We got the first body though with good zone control shooting their snake player. But we gave them one right back from our home. A-rod may have been first in the center, but a slow patient probe in the center by Stuart Ridgel paid dividends when he took A-rod off the board and staid alive. We gave them one back again though in our attempt to take the snake. Came down to a 3 v 3. Another attempt at craftiness cost Stu his body (it’s first point, I like the idea just not how it was attempted). Drew Bell got sneaky but got caught and Searight made me proud pushing forward. We squandered that point. 0-1 Shock
Pt2 – Strong guns on the break, which was prevalent during our prep, show up on the second point and we made smart fills to our secondaries in support of the goal. We were in control from the break and start our stranglehold. A good point. This point was, in my opinion, indicative of how the field would play and how the Canes would play it. 1-1 Tied
Pt3 – We set up with the “Big 5” in order to get eyes on snake, increase guns, and position ourselves to take center when necessary. Shock went pocket save for a d-side wide asset. Shock was first to the center, not with one, but two assets. Again, our secondary is just behind Shock’s but we determined at practice that being first isn’t always best in that center. The two bodies though was an effective counter to the theory. What made me happy was our composure during the scramble. A disciplined understanding of the situation. 2-1 Canes
Pt4 – Aftershock had shown a tendency to crash the center and then expand (a smart approach as most teams would leverage this tactic including us). It was time to use that against them though and beat them to the punch. The goal of our play here was to take the path of least resistance to the center d-side (Aftershock was leaving that hole available), try to snag the center kill, and take anything additional they give us. Hopefully, the chaos would draw attention (at worst trade), and we would build off that crash to take snake and dorito wides. We were rewarded with the play developing better than I had hoped as Stu got two kills immediately, AND we made both wides. We were now set up to kill clock with the lead. Shock helps us by sending a body to trade with Stu. It was now a four on two situation, we owned the spots… Shock smartly concedes the point with just under 4 minutes left. 3-1 Canes
Pt5 – Internally, I was feeling confident in our game plan and was pleased (save for that first point) with the execution up to that point. Shock had shown mostly center push then expansion, where we had shown mostly pocket. The play call was to risk the snake on this one to counter their center push and/or meet their anticipated snake run. Disaster strikes. Our high risk runner made it and my lower risk home died followed quickly by two more from our pocket. This was the point that was the deciding factor for the match in my opinion. Had we survived this break for just 30-40 seconds, we would have won in regulation. Woulda coulda shoulda… 3-2 Canes
Pt6 – Naturally, we felt that Shock would want a combo of center with snake presence. We felt this would be an opportunity to take dorito wide on the break. Again, my high risk player made it but we gave them a home player… followed quickly by our snake side tower. Stu survived the snake attack while in the dorito tower and made a play to take the snake off the board. He succeeded. It was now a 4-2 advantage to Shock. I always give my guys time to win a gunfight or pull something out. They won a gunfight. It was now a 3-2 advantage for Shock. We had worked on the alamo scenario at practice. Daniel Camp knew he needed to make snake corner and did with about a minute and a half left. Again, we played this scenario out several times in preparation so my confidence is high. My confidence SOARED when we picked off another shock player making it a 2-2 with about a minute left and we owned dorito 2 and snake corner. Put it in the bag… or so I thought. A bad decision to gun fight over the top of the snake corner cost us this game in regulation with, you guessed it, 30-40 seconds left. 3-3 tied
Pt7 – We wanted to go for the win. We had a few different fast point plays in the ol’ playbook. The question was which one to use based off Shock’s (and Todd’s) tendencies. There was a little less than 30 seconds on the clock but there were a few instances at practice where we pulled off 20-25 second wins. In this particular case, it isn’t a full send. The plan was to attack hard center and d-side leaving Daniel Camp and Nic Rippel as contingency in case it didn’t work out. We would crash the center with Stu but used Drew Bell on a delay just off center d-side and let Jacob Searight wheel and deal wide. Stu crashed, took one with him, and then Drew cleared through getting two. Shock got a minor but with only 4 seconds left, Searight can’t make the buzzer. Close but as we all know, that only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
OT – We get a minor. On the break. Playing 3 on 5 with 5 minutes on the clock, against Shock, who owned the snake and center… not a high probability positive outcome. Barring a miracle, we just lost a match we shouldn’t have lost. No miracle arrived. The positive take away was, when we executed the game plan well and played as a team, we looked phenomenal. Consistency… we would have to increase that aspect and would be just fine…
VS Bears
We won this match and were in control for the majority of it. Our guns on the break showed up along with our zone control on every point we win. However, I do want to address the two points we lost in this match.
Pt2 – We had good guns on break to start the match shooting the Bears snake runner AND we made the snake. Gun fight losses will happen… but when it came down to a 3 on 3, we made a small mental error. Drew Bell attempted to spread to the d-side from the snake side since we had no presence there and the Bears did. We owned the center and snake which can contest the Bears snake and snake tower. One could argue, we could have used our Center to contest d-side aggression but I digress. I am not upset with Drew’s repositioning per say. More that he tried to push the envelope when it wasn’t necessary. We weren’t at a point where we needed to press anything or make something happen. Had he been content with making the dorito one, we more than likely would have been good. Instead, we forced the issue, gave the body away, and let the Bears back into the game with a short clock.
Pt6 – If just one of the two Canes players who played dorito can or snake side tower, either one, stayed alive, we would have won 4-1 in a 50 second point. Either one of them. But it didn’t happen, allowing the Bears to find the hole and put another point on the board with a 46 second point.
VS MLKings
On this layout and in this division, you can’t play 3 on 5 and expect to win the points much less the match. We were not hitting our shots in this match and if we were, well, we needed better paint management. We knew they were slow into some key bunkers and even when they did this in our match, we weren’t catching the body. We scouted them and expected them to play a little pocket, and we were right. Even knowing what they were going to do, we weren’t able to generate any momentum.
Pt1 – The kings shot two of us off the break and we gave them a third all within the first 20 seconds. Nope. Concede, reset.
Pt2 – Kings pocketed up and we took the center first with a delay out to dorito 2. We were in great position for this point. We shot Kyle Barry followed by the Kings countering through the center only to have missed their shot. We should have now been in control of the point as Stu repositioned in the center to counter their counter. But, once again, we gave them a body out of our backfield allowing the Kings to take snake. So, an advantage lost. Stu played sloppy and got caught. But Daniel Camp and Jacob Searight almost turned it around with Danimal getting into the snake to contest and Searight taking ground into dorito 4 generating a kill. 3 v 3 now. In a rare moment, Daniel missed a shot on the snake tower for the Kings which would have blown the point open since that player was stalling the d-side attack. When Drew Bell got out behind Searight, I thought okay… force multiplier. Then Drew called his shot on the snake player for the Kings. I, too, thought I saw it but, ref calls him clean. The big domino to fall was Searight getting clipped in the loader… I love Drew and Danimal trying to break things open but it doesn’t pay off.
Pt 3 – The Kings spread (that’s the best two bunkers to own to kill clock – Dorito 1 and snake corner). Again, no kills on break for us even though we set up for it. We lost a body again from the snake tower. Searight understood the situation and got out wide on d-side. We evened the count with a kill from snake side tower and then shot another from their dorito corner. We had a four on three body advantage but we gave the Kings the snake again and allowed Kyle Barry to play fast and loose in the center. The snake took Drew off the board. Our only hope was to win a gunfight or to have Searight clock in. Stu ended up getting a bullstuff penalty… it was bang bang. Kyle, like many of the pros, gets to talk after being eliminated and plead a case. I am not allowed to review.
Pt 4 – We were down by three with 5:40 left on the clock. Enough time to come back and win. But we had to execute better. For example, not hitting our shots and then hanging over the top for too long at the center bunker to get shot. Not how we do it. I said I would let the point go until 4:30 unless I saw life from my guys. Searight was in position d-side again (as he was apt to do most of the event) and Pate took the center. The boys bought themselves another 30 seconds. But then, we lost Searight…so no, you don’t get another 30.
Pt5 – At this point, I’m looking at the clock thinking, we need at least two points. Plenty of time to do it. But I wasn’t getting production out of any one of my starters really, save for Searight. A good coach knows what to say, how to say it, and when. This is where I fell short. I thought, let’s take a breath, get our guns up, don’t force the point, get a point on the board with a base play. We lost our d-side tower, Kings took dorito 3 and we don’t see it because of the elimination on the break (best eyes to see that move). Daniel Camp almost pulled off a heroic response attacking down the snake side but with his teammates dying behind him, it was a valiant effort between him and Searight, but not enough.
Pt6 – I’m looking at the clock, I’m looking at the score, and I am looking at my guys. None of those things looked good. Time to see what my guys who haven’t seen the field much can do. We have dug a serious hole in order to make Sunday now. Time to take the opportunity to see how bad my guys want to show me what they can do. I look to the bench and they wanted it. So they got the call. They go out and look better than the starters did the entire match. Searight, Mike Brown, and Ryan Williamson go out and play well. Searight and Mike Brown pressed the issue dorito way as they know the situation and gave me 200%. Ryan Williamson goes full send but we ran out of time.
VS Impact
Based off our scouting report of Impact, we had a good understanding of what they wanted to do. But you can’t ignore the fact that we were playing subpar… I had done the math and knew we weren’t making Sunday. I had a theory though on Impact which was confirmed and would make the difference in my opinion. That theory was confirmed when we went down 2-0, and then Impact conceded the 3rd point when they still had a player on the board. I knew they were playing for the margin. We were playing for pride and pride only. There is a difference. And it was the small edge we needed. My adjustment (besides personnel) was to adapt the game plan to the corners. If we could get wide either on the break or through secondaries, Impact would put us on the board with their aggression into our zone control. Granted, our zone control had been spotty all weekend but my guys are warriors. They knew what needed to happen. It would not go as planned but… it went. And I will take it. This was a great growth moment for the squad as a whole.
Pt1 – We shot their pocket shooter, expanded well and set the trap for Urena in the snake. Urena popped the top though and made a great shot on Pate. Not much you can do save for what I said in the pit, “Well… damn.” Mike Brown clocked in and got wide dorito. We now owned dorito 1 and the snake, so we aren’t in a bad position. Ryan Williamson, who stepped up for me, got clipped once Impact finally got through the zone dorito side. But Mike Brown got it back for us making a great shot on Cornell. It was 3v3 as we crossed the 5 minute threshold. A great shot by an Impact player caught Drew Bell, was returned by ANOTHER great shot by Mike Brown but in the chaos, Impact took the first point.
Pt2 – Both teams have the same breakout with Impact winning the break as we lost Searight dorito way. They then had some really crisp secondary expansions trapping us in the pocket. Daniel Camp, knowing we had to have that snake made it and actually got our first elimination. Stu tried to make something happen through the center but got caught. Drew Bell knew we had to be wide d-side and got out there picking up a crucial elimination on Impact. 3 v 3 again. But the wheeling and dealing went on too long and Drew got picked off. Pate understood where the hole was, tried to fill it but he and Daniel both died almost simultaneously.
Pt3 – We were down 2-0. I explained again the importance of having these corners and why Impact has to come. We risked throwing Nic at the snake corner to draw the gun deep with the intent to feed underneath from snake tower. It worked partially as we made the snake but Nic got picked off. It paid off though because impact must not have seen the feed as we caught their snake coming to our side. We have evened it up and Britt Simpson created an opportunity making dorito corner. We are now set up to let Impact die coming forward. We got some key eliminations, to make it a 3 on 1 and Impact conceded the point. Confirmation of theory and now we were on the board. The guys are all in now. We’re going to win.
Pt4 – It was time to take the fight to them while the guys are spirited up. “Crafty time.” We knew Impacts’ tendency now and decided to take advantage. Britt Simpson got the call and we shot him to dorito 3 on the dorito can route. This would shift at least two guns and allowed a center punch dorito side as well as got a second asset out dorito way. It worked. The penalty on Drew was bogus but hey, it didn’t matter as Britt Simpson and Mike Brown closed out the point with a great shot by MB dotting Urena’s eye in the corner.
Pt5 – One name. Mike Brown… We sent Stu to the snake side 40 wall to wrap and trap, to take a body, and draw a gun to allow snake to feed. We had d-side tower to position for center and be a force multiplier when necessary. Stu did not take a body and got picked up… but we made the snake. Britt forced the outside dorito move since he knew what I wanted and Bell got picked up. We were in dire straights now… it was 4 on 2 advantage to Impact. But Mike Brown and Daniel Camp said “not today” making it a 2 on 2! Mike Brown with his super power of survivability won his gun fight! Daniel heard this and in the chaos launched on Impacts snake player and trades! Mike Brown was still alive and Impact conceded. Mike Brown… way to be. He really has earned the nickname, “Clutch”
Pt6 – I wanted the corners on the break. Let’s just get there. And we made it. Very pleased. But then we lost the dorito corner shortly after. Drew Bell made a play to dig out Impacts center presence but got picked up. Even then, we were still in good spots to hold (snake, snake corner, and dorito can). We lost our dorito can and Impact has the bodies to trade. They hit the buzzer with 5 seconds left. We wanted to play the point so we could work on game plan.
OT – Ride or die… it was time to get back to basics. We had had plenty of practice now… no excuse not to execute the game plan that we had prepared headed into this event. Time to make it work for us instead of against us. Full Circle… let’s see if we had learned. And we had. We shot interior while protecting wides. Paint broke on Impact’s dorito tower. 5-4 advantage Canes. Zone control picked up Mike Urena as he tried to force the snake move. 5-3 advantage Canes. Bell took the center, Daniel made snake corner, Nic took the snake, Searight took the dorito corner, Mike Brown contained. We would win this point barring anything ridiculous. Nic Rippel showed why he is a Hurricane by going down the snake to Impact’s side of the field. He got a three pack to close out the game leaving us with 4 bodies alive.
Not a bad consolation prize finally beating Impact and knocking a top team like them out of the tournament… but I would really like to have that Aftershock match back.
This event was strange. It’s been a few days now, and I still haven’t put my finger on what our issues were other than, we were missing/bouncing some shots on opponents, and I wasn’t getting production out of my starters. Several big moment mistakes by guys who don’t normally make them appeared to be the main issue. My initial reaction is that we were our toughest opponent this event. Not the teams in front of us… us. The goal now is to focus on our next practices and event prep with renewed optimism and understanding. We will assess our performance in order to improve our consistency and not dwell too much on the mistakes and missed opportunities from this last event. Back to the opening message about consistency… Consistency requires you to “be as ignorant today as you were a year ago.” To move forward, the Canes need to review our process, ensure we are emphasizing the proper things, and develop solutions.