Las Vegas 2024 Event Recap

Have you ever heard the story about the little engine that could?  Let me tell you that story … toot, toot… and how Charlie rigged the trestle!

Okay, on a serious note…

Preparation

When the layout dropped, I think many had mixed thoughts about it, including myself.  At first I thought, okay – Lonestar concept from 2022 (as one Hurricane staff stated, “As if Vegas was cheating off Lonestar’s test but Lonestar said, make sure you can’t tell it was me”).  We met an important goal at that event two years ago and made our first Sunday.  I believe that success came from our due diligence of walking that field for 5 hours and putting together some good theories.  For this layout, I ended up doing a quick digital field walk live for The Coaches Show which was highly rushed. That is where I first recognized some possibilities. And then met with my guys to do the same thing on a Zoom call that same evening.

It shouldn’t come as a surprise that some of us were a little apprehensive during and after the initial discussion.  We recognized early on that this layout had a lot of “holes” depending on circumstances displayed on the break. We would challenge that hypothesis during our layout practice against the ML Kings. As someone who wants to understand how to “control” a field, I was banging my head against the wall until two of my guys Justin Bailey and Britt Simpson said, “You have to let it go and trust us to make good decisions.” They were right. The prevailing wind was that, to lock anything down, you had to take ground early and fast (risk).  We decided, well heck, if we are going to do that, why lock down and not just attack.  In other words, you had to attack forward to get position to control… why not just press the attack. Pressure would be the key.  Once we decided this, it then became a question of statistical analysis on where best to attack from, the timing of it, how to create it when you couldn’t on the break, who to bully/pick on, so on and so forth.  It wasn’t that you couldn’t win from a pocket, but you were certainly at a disadvantage if your opponent was first and beat you out of it. This field could turn like a clock too.

So, we decided it was time to show the “old Canes” from before our pro debut.  Time to start throwing punches… and hard.  This approach became somewhat jeopardized due to the fact that Nic Ripple injured his ankle early on Sunday morning against the Kings along with Britt Simpson who tweaked his knee.  Couple that with not having one of our anchors, Aaron Pate, we were at a little of a detriment.  Or were we? This team has shown time and time again we can address adversity. What I love about my guys is they almost always rise to an occasion and this wouldn’t be any different. We adjusted. No fear, no complaining, just work. And that’s what I got out of them.  My guys answered the call and frankly, I didn’t have any doubt they would.

Headed into this event, we felt that the “D” side could be exploited occasionally along with a fair mixture of the “snake side” aggression. Our guns on break were still showing good statistics as well. We knew a lot of teams would put heavy guns snake way, allowing our risk vs reward approach on the D-side to work percentage wise. We worked on some center pushes, but the D-side attack made more statistical sense to us as the center was susceptible to several guns from several locations on the field.  Pretty much everyone could shoot you from somewhere and the routes were precarious.  We also wanted to try and hide our stack on top of mixing up where we would put players in an effort to be a little harder to scout. Not sure if the latter ended up working but the effort was there none the less.

VS IRONMEN

We had scrimmaged the Ironmen just 2 weeks prior to the layout dropping.  I thought this was advantageous for two reasons.  One, it would give me a good look at where my guys stood heading into the season after our disastrous World Cup and, two, give me insight into the Men’s new talent pool (we knew they were our first match at the event).  The data I got was insightful but when the layout dropped I had a new conundrum from the data set.  I wasn’t sure the data would hold given the layout… but it was better than nothing and we weren’t too far off with our assessment. Now, I don’t want to give too much away here but we were certainly paying attention to their stack on the box.  The first point both teams get all 5 out alive.  We overloaded the D-side and the Ironmen went for a heavy snake presence but pushed the weak D-side with Nicholaou.  We ended up in much better field position with the Men in the pocket save for Nicholaou.  But we made a mistake and a bad read/job was dropped here. We let Kyle take ground. Once Stuart made the corner, Bailey repositioned to counter Kyle.  But now our initial attack has stalled when we allowed Kyle to get a kill. Bailey tried to salvage the point. He made the right call but went just a little too wide on the stab. The Ironmen closed out the 3 on 2 well. 0-1 IRONMEN

We went with a snake attack with the intention to spread when the guns shifted.  We won the break out and Searight made the Ironmen’s side of the field pretty quickly. He began peeling bodies which allowed quick follow up guns with our 2’s.  Apologies to Omara- glad you found that wedding ring brother! 1-1 TIED

Similar break outs save for one asset with the Ironmen pulling up just short of snake where we tried to take it and got eliminated.  With our center tower holding snake way, and Daniel getting into the corner, we stalemated for a moment.  However, the Ironmen made the correct secondaries to the wides as well as the center.  Daniel countered with a snake move but we left him on an island. Which, I didn’t feel was the correct read.  Britt Simpson went to dig out Sentz who sold the ref on a penalty. 1-2 IRONMEN

We had to play a body down on the next point but that didn’t phase us.  We had a goal in mind and I had a time limit in my head for my 4 guys to get it done.  The play worked out but we lost Daniel on the break.  That didn’t change my time frame, especially since we got the set up we wanted… just meant one job had to change.  Even when we lost Drew, I saw Stuart see the line so I didn’t walk towards the concede button.  He almost pulled it off. So, now I had to concede since we lost Nic behind Stu too.  But there was still over 5 minutes on the clock.  PLENTY of time. 1-3 IRONMEN

We send Searight wide and deep to draw the gun out and up on the next play. Daniel then filtered underneath from home.  We also knew that the Men had shown a penchant to go weak D-side save for Nicholaou.  Daniel made it in, and we peeled a body for good measure blowing that side.  We knew that you could counter opposite side so jobs shifted to keep that from happening.  It was a well-executed play that took about 1 minute. 2-3 IRONMEN

I just knew that the Men would try to get to that snake corner. We keyed up, got the kill and were blessed that it wound up being a penalty for the Ironmen as well.  After 5 looks, we send a rabbit but with a twist.  We got to the D-side corner and fed from the home again.  It paid off. The Men were only using one gun to protect that way and with the penalty…well, there you go.  We won the point in about 45 seconds or so.  Tie game with 3 minutes left.  We had the momentum, but we weren’t going to come off the gas. 3-3 TIED

We wanted to get 5 out alive.  I gave Searight the freedom to make the read.  This was actually kind of funny… we shot one off the break and it drew another penalty for the Men which blew the side.  Searight entered the pit upset saying “I screwed that one up coach”.  I said, “You’re fine, we shot two on the break.”  He looks shocked and says, “Man, I REALLY screwed that one up then!”   Love that guy. He holds himself to a standard and, as a coach, you love to see it.  With the Ironmen’s D-side blown, Daniel shifted out to the corner for the wrap and trap. Drew Bell went aggressive on our D-side.  There was plenty of time on the clock. My guys pieced together the correct effective push.  Stuart backed Drew for a two man operation while Bailey and Daniel worked together to change the fronts.  When the Ironmen’s snake allowed it, Bailey took our snake and that was the nail in the coffin for the Ironmen.  They conceded with 21 seconds left on the clock.  But, as we had seen at practice, that is all the time you needed to punch a hole and get a body through.  So now I’m thinking, gotta risk some kill zones to protect…4-3 HURRICANES

We spread the field because we knew they wouldn’t get accurate guns up with 21 seconds. We made it out alive and zoned up. Game.  Close one.  We would have to play much tighter against the next team.  Hats off to the Ironmen. They will have a good season.

VS DAMAGE

I was happy we were able to catch Damage early in the prelims.  I was not happy we caught them after a loss.  Joey and I are both scouters who like to understand nuances about our upcoming opponents.  The question became, how to surmise their adjustments after the loss.  We concluded it was going to be leveraging Raney through the center.  We had shown how we ultimately wanted to play the field in the 7 points against Ironmen. I was hoping we could just make them play our game, react to us, chase us.  We also knew they would be staring into the sun the first point. I want to make sure we won everyone of those points, so we had to make it count.

Sure enough, we got in the snake and they used Raney up the center in what I assume was a plan to ambush my guy on his first engagement (whack a mole).  However, we shot their backline early.  This was probably because of the massive glare/sun they were looking into.  But Raney couldn’t see Searight who got a quick wrap and two kills before Raney cleared through the center to shoot Searight in the back.  Too little too late. 1-0 HURRICANES

The next point we were now facing the sun. We figured let’s get guns up, spread D-side to draw a gun and filter underneath into the snake.  Keith Brown made that snake side dorito (what we were calling the god) but seemed content to stay on containment, that or he wasn’t risking it weighing their guns against ours.  Again, we only had one gun to beat on that same top side. With it drawn deep, we determined we could go underneath with the late launch.  It worked.  Raney released to the center to maintain snake side dominance but I don’t think he knew or received the call that we were in the dorito side snake.  Daniel got a free kill on him.  Damage responded by Keith taking additional ground and getting support out behind him in that can.  We knew they were in there with us now though and we had the body advantage.  Damage was set up to push that way but Daniel readied for the trade and, having over watch, it essentially would come down to a gunfight… and we didn’t have to engage/fight Damage… we knew better.  Unfortunately, that led to them taking ground on the other side as well.  I’m in the pit WAITING for Keith to trade… and he does. We still had the 4-3 body advantage. 

Unfortunately, we gave them a body back (glare got Bailey, like a Douglas Dauntless out of the sun).  3 on 3 but Searight reacted well by getting that ground back D-side.  With Drew in the corner, Stu saw the opportunity and moved up the center with a smart probe and got the drop!  A 6-minute chess match of a point. 2-0 HURRICANES

We were back on the shadow side.  We had gone to the snake a lot so I asked Searight to take the corner.  Unfortunately, I got him shot.   Gratefully, our guns were hot and we traded him for Keith Brown AND Chris Horn.  They tried to take advantage of the chaos, but our zone control took another body. Nic got in on this one and clocked in.  We lost Stu but we were in a 3 on 2 situation and with a 2-point lead.  I looked at the clock and started trying to get it to go faster hoping Joey wouldn’t concede it.  He did. 3-0 HURRICANES

Joey pulled one out of our book by having Rainey shoot from home and feed weak D-side to that important wedge.  The rest was the same with Keith pulling up short in that large dorito snake way.  We lost one on the break but Rainey was picked off, leaving Britt Simpson in the snake alone on that side. He crawled into their side to apply pressure.  Damage looked to plug the hole by getting out into the baby dorito in front of Britt.  Keith finally fed the snake too.  We let a second body get out in front of Britt… and then they filled the corner behind Keith…frustrating.  Tandem line between Britt and our corner was too long.  If Britt had stayed still and relaxed, we would have probably burned more time off the clock.  When he was eliminated, it allowed Damage back into the match as we were now on our heels on the back line.  Drew was caught by Keith which allowed Keith the kill on Stu. This left Mike Brown in the corner.  Mike eliminated two but the Edwards brothers closed it out. 3-1 HURRICANES

About 4 minutes are left on the clock.  Again, we couldn’t sit on our laurels and try to “cross” it up here.  If we wanted to kill the clock, we had to attack and take the fight to Damage. That is what made this layout so derivative.  Our guns were hot on the break the next point, shooting two in conjunction with a minor penalty against Damage. Joey didn’t hesitate and conceded, only knocking 10 seconds off the clock. 4-1 HURRICANES

We were up by 3 with still just under 4 minutes on the clock (last point took less than 10 secs).  Meaning Damage had to win three points in a minute each to tie… certainly within the realm of possibility. But I knew my guys were in the flow state now and should be good.  I knew if we could stuff that next point we would be golden.  But Damage had other plans.  They took the snake and center on the break which we calculated they would do.  We shot the snake and bounced the center… but then WHAMO!  My guys started walking off in droves.  It wasn’t guns on the break, it was looking into first balls… not good.  As a coach I was now thinking I needed to make sure my guys didn’t let that one get in their head…They were way ahead of me of course and were ready to get that one back. 4-2 HURRICANES

We went high probability safety with two short secondaries for zone control (the Dynasty equation is what I am calling it right now).  However, we lost one early.  Not a disaster but not optimum.  People say we were going defensive… my comment to that is that if you felt we went defensive here, you don’t understand how the field plays. One of my guys dropped his job because (I think) he was called off of it allowing Keith into the snake. I don’t think we saw it because when he does get back on the job, he is shooting the zone to protect the snake entry Keith already went through (I later confirmed this was the case).  This causes the entire team to fall. 4-3 HURRICANES

Damage had less than a minute.  Knowing this, they probably aren’t getting more than 2-3 guns up on the break.  We wanted to get guns up and make a play for the weak D-side with a runner.  We shot one on the break and made the position necessary to counter center.  Sure enough, we shot center and now had control of 50% of the field.  I was a little concerned when we lost our snake side but when the clock hit 30 and Damage hadn’t come out of pocket yet, I knew we would win it.  The last second push by the two Damage players was valiant but not enough. My guys had the wherewithal to go get that last point. 5-3 HURRICANES

VS INFAMOUS

Jamroz was a player that could get into the snake at will on day 1. We wanted to get guns on him early.  We used Daniel Camp up the gut to add that on the break force multiplier since we hadn’t been using it.  Infamous put a ball on him anyway.  But we did get the kill… so it’s a 4 on 4 off the break.  I felt we got the better of the exchange though as we got a body wide (Britt Simpson) and we eliminated theirs.  With Britt wide, that allowed Drew Bell to make his way-out D-side and go to work increasing pressure.  Infamous reacted well though and gave themselves breathing room with two quick bumps to expand their pocket a little.  We were set to where they must risk going through guns to counter now and we had one piece (Drew) that could play offense.  Drew got his inside kill which would have been Infamous’ best chance to counter.  He ended up getting clipped by the god counter because we had let off that zone control in order to go offensive with a two-sided attack (timing).  We still had the advantage with positioning but then Infamous did a great expansion move while Mike Brown’s gun was out of the fight on his crawl in the snake.  Both Mike Brown and Infamous retreated out of their respective snake locations.  (Mike Brown and I will be working in the snake some upcoming practices- he said he has a newfound respect for his snake brethren).  He backed up only to have Stuart tell him he was moving the wrong way (you have to laugh at these things)!  Good thing too because Mike worked his way back and blew the side open.  Once that happened, Stu made the right read/move and helped close the game. Infamous conceded an essentially 6-minute point. 1-0 HURRICANES

Infamous wasn’t going to change anything. It would be two at home, the Aztec D-side, the mini wall snake way on a cross, and snake.  We had a similar break but went just short in the god.  We got a minor for a hopper hit which removed both of my home players.  However, Daniel Camp was out a little wider and now we were in a position to at least kill a little clock (as well as shoot a low probability bounce shot…).  But that low probability shot landed!  4 on 3 advantage Infamous but I don’t think Sam Silberg knew where the bodies were or maybe got some bad intel.  He gave us his body.  Now we had evened the count and we knew it.  The comms from my guys on this point (Searight, Bailey, and Daniel) were stellar.  Infamous made a good counter up the center and had the drop on Daniel but missed!  Daniel said screw it and went offensive once he tracked that Nate Schroeder had retreated.  Nate tried to get it back but a heads up play by Searight took him out of the equation.  This put us in a 3 on 2 scenario with Infamous on one side of the field.  As the clock dwindled under 5 minutes, I thought to myself, relax gentlemen, make them come.  Mr. Lemanski knew the score and smartly conceded with about 4:45 on clock. 2-0 HURRICANES

Infamous recognized the situation and had plenty of time to bring the match back.  We knew we had to fight fire with fire though on this field.  And we did.  Regrettably, we ended up in a 2 on 1 (Searight being the one) and they closed it out with about a minute twenty on the clock.  Funny, because that was the average time I had calculated to win a point.  That would play into the next point. 2-1 HURRICANES

Based off what I had seen from Infamous in this match and their two previous matches, I felt we had a pretty good understanding of what they could do or rather what they wanted to do.  If we could get 5 out alive, it would be our game.  They wanted ground so we would take ground too.  Snake on break and dorito corner (this was important) with three guns up was the play.  We made it out alive.  Not only were we in position to have eyes on access points, but we were in position to counter and steal a 3rd point when possible.  Once we got under 30 seconds, I turned away and walked deeper into the pit knowing we had sealed the deal.  Especially when I saw both 1’s for Infamous being overly cautious with their probes.  When the bodies start trading at 15, again, I wasn’t watching.  I was telling the pit crew great job not realizing that Searight would get a 3 pack on Infamous to truly close the door on the match (dorito corner). 2-1 HURRICANES

VS NOTORIOUS

We had 3 wins and were guaranteed a Sunday appearance.  No matter what happened in this match, we would win the bracket.  We discussed and decided we wanted to try a few things.  What I didn’t want to happen was for the match to get out of our hands… never thought that would happen, but it did.  I didn’t want to lose but thought this is exactly what the team needed headed into Sunday.  Hey, we had dodged some bullets earlier and this one landed.  We did get to try some center plays, some rope a dope plays, some pocket guns, and our fast point play. 

Besides their guns being very well dialed, Notorious used the center well (that and we were getting sloppy in our bunkers dying out of spots).  We gave them some help with penalties which was frustrating for me.  When we lost and realized we would be playing infamous the next morning, we looked at this match figuring Infamous would pay close attention to it.  And it appeared that they did.  Notorious (and our own sloppiness) had shown some teams how to beat us.  The good news was we could control the sloppiness and we could do something regarding the “game plan”.

Highlights of this match were point 2, point 6, point 9, and point 10. Yep, those are the points we won. LOL 6-4 NOTORIOUS

QUARTER FINALS VS INFAMOUS

When you are facing a team like Infamous, you’re going to have your hands full.  Like me, Travis was getting production out of everyone, but especially guys like Barret, Jamroz, Messer, and Hall. To prepare for this match, like I said earlier, we watched our loss to Notorious and cross referenced it with the data we had on Infamous already.  We felt Infamous would watch Notorious match and incorporate some of it into their game.  So, we looked at our game plans and made a micro adjustment or two.

The first point, we both came out with an identical breakout. Both teams hit the snake, us with Searight, them with Jamroz. The caveat being Britt Simpson has full reign to counter.  And he does, acting as a stop gap to Jamroz.  As anticipated, Infamous filtered to center to ambush Searight (Messer? Anyway, just like Notorious) and uses the mini wall D-side to contain him on the outside.  We had discussed it, Searight knows it, Bailey confirms it, and now Infamous was wasting two guns on one player.  This allowed our play to develop.  (Searight almost ambushed the Infamous player first but missed his first shot).  Searight settled in and waited while Stu moved behind him in the corner.  Bailey could come off assignment and get on the straights while Drew was able to force multiply top side with Britt.  Perfect execution of the game plan so far by my guys. 

But… Britt got clipped.  This hurt but wasn’t the end of the world.  Bailey now had to shift job assignments again. He stood tall for better eyes and worked towards Drew while Stu joined Searight in the snake to punch a hole.  I got a little concerned because, I saw the line for Infamous through the middle here.  But you could tell he (Messer?) was locked in on his job and wasn’t concerned about creating an opportunity and risking it.  Great comms from Stu and Bailey by the way.  Brusselback started to come and I knew Searight would get the kill. But then he changed his mind which extended this point passed 6 minutes.  Once Brusselback dropped back, he gets clipped anyway, and I knew we had won the point.  Searight could now play freely even with Messer who was probably thinking about that meme “I’m in danger”.  Unfortunately, we lost Drew.  Then, Stuart pressed too hard.  We were in position to take a beat, think it through, but I don’t blame him.  He was trying to make something happen which is what I expect from a dynamic player like him.  Bailey did what I ask of my guys as well; when in a down body situation, try to make something happen.  Jamroz made a good heads up play and hit the buzzer while Searight had to fight too many fronts.  All good.  A well fought point.  Plenty of time to get it back. 0-1 INFAMOUS

Again, I saw no reason to change our play.  I am surprised by Infamous’ choice to go corner D-side.  We made snake and that corner can’t contest us from there…  We got Daniel into Britt’s former spot and were set up well, especially since I don’t think our opponent saw Daniel delay feed the other snake. Infamous was so focused on Searight they didn’t see the second intended threat which was Daniel.  Daniel killed two in front of Searight and then traded with his third kill.  My guys closed the gap well with appropriate repositioning based off Infamous’ last two remaining players.  Tie ball game with just over 4 minutes on the clock. 1-1 TIED

There was a high percentage that Infamous would go back to their standard play of Jamroz to snake and the rest in their safe bunkers to try a slower filter to the center, perhaps use the center tower.  Sure enough, they did.  We made one little adjustment by pulling Daniel short in the mini wall D-side since we figured they won’t fall for it again.  Searight just happened to catch that Infamous didn’t stay in the tower and went to the center wedge.  Good catch as this ultimately saves us.  I will admit Infamous beat us to the punch here and were set up well to counter.  But we had seen this before.  Guns turned out to focus on the 1’s and my guys made the appropriate adjustment to counter as well.  We went with the 3/2 linear while infamous took a 3/2 spread.  It’s a crap shoot layout and this is a great example. But what should have been a total disaster struck with Stuart getting dinked and Drew Bell forcing an unnecessary fill at the time.  I think we were around the minute fifty mark… this was one for concern as I know the longest my guys held during practice in these positions was about 2 minutes (scenario training). But we were set up a little different than the optimum spots… still…concede…?

This was gut check time.  I asked myself, do I play the numbers or concede the point knowing, on average we will need a minute twenty or greater to tie.  I rolled the dice (we are in Vegas after all) and made the decision to ride.  The personnel I had out there were solid and in relatively good position. Glad I did.  This call wasn’t math or statistics anymore.  It was faith.  And there is a difference between belief and faith.  I held my rosary, said a short prayer, and watched my guys dig out a kill at 40 seconds. Then Daniel Camp makes a SICK snap on Jamroz at 20 seconds. Daniel was eliminated but Hall got picked up by Bailey and Searight traded at 4 seconds!  They didn’t get it!

Thank you, Lord, for that blessing and thank you to my guys for their composure.  This would not be the last blessing we would receive in this match. 1-1 STILL TIED

OVERTIME

Infamous won the break shooting Drew Bell for the first time but we succeeded in getting Searight out wide to draw the gun deep and fed Daniel Camp into the D-side snake again.  Daniel knew we had to win the snake war against Jamroz and posted up.  We went short to the god but Brusselback took the center looking to shut our progress off from there.  But he was clipped by Bailey.  4 on 4.  The pit side of the field is completely blown for both teams, but we had the slight advantage with Bailey’s gun in the pit side wing.  We let Barret Spread.  I felt like we could have gotten out of the back center sooner, but I didn’t know what heat was keeping Stu put.  I felt like we squandered the opportunity for Stu or Bailey to feed the snake or at least get wider.  Stu finally got out behind Bailey into the temple (good… not a big bite… meticulous and smart).  But Barret gets to corner.  Stu gets picked up… again, had we made this decision before we let him spread, we win in regulation, I feel.  Now we were under a minute and Infamous had the 4 on 3 body advantage as well as a slight positioning advantage.  Daniel pulled back to dorito 3 to set a trap for Jamroz.  Barret takes ground but Bailey became the Great Wall of China.  Barret gets Bailey, takes a second to kill Daniel, but Searight tucked tightly in the dorito corner, commits to just protecting the buzzer at 12 seconds. Searight shoots Barret, Messer clips Searight but doesn’t follow Barret up.  Wow… dodged a bullet there too!. AND STILL TIED 1-1

1v1’s

Drew Bell spread on Cali off the break and it was the right play at first.  Drew should have shot him as Cali left the back center.  All the same Drew caught Rudolph with his first jump shot.  Cali pulls the trigger and had paint in the air for the second jump shot but it was hard to catch.  Mutual.

Daniel Camp, after taking the initiative and then letting Joe Barret press the action, shot Joe with 10 seconds left on the clock.  Legend. Enough said. Incredible composure. Well done!

SEMI FINALS VS AFTERMATH

We watched Aftermath’s match against Bears.  I’m a little nervous that it might have been misleading since they mercied the Bears 6-0.  Couple that with the fact that they seemed to have a two-dimensional approach of thinking to the layout, I was a bit anxious.  It appeared they really only had two plays and their closing was inconsistent or rather, they appeared to try to do it alone or individually.  Would they have something deeper in their repertoire?  We were about to find out.  No matter what, our approach to the field, for all intents and purposes, should cancel out their specific approach.

Their VIP side shooter from home seemed to want to shoot wide and if he missed, he would shoot the blind up center then fill out.  They liked to feed the two mini walls and look for openings or try to win a gunfight. This would offer us an opportunity to double attack our dorito side with two bodies.  Searight drew the gun out wide, Aftermath switched his gun in, Daniel fed snake, Aftermath fed the mini wall with their snake side VIP runner short in the god.  We were now in position, but Camp got picked up somehow (he couldn’t tell me where the shot came from and I couldn’t place it in game either). Jacob Searight understood how important that position was to our goal and craftily begins to sneak in to fill Daniel’s former spot.

We got a body back (I don’t know if it was Stu or Bailey who picked off Grayson Gladstone).  Again, here is a situation where I felt Stu could have filtered out behind Bailey.  Bailey was playing that lay down on the straights and just being a rock.  Drew Bell spread to help Searight and we missed a shot on an Aftermath player (maybe a bounce?).  Searight finally got in and Stu spread behind Bailey.  Now, I’m somewhat happy in the pits… Stu got wide and fed Bailey underneath into the snake.  Yes, now we are cooking.  That was the set up that we wanted and needed.  We had penetration on both sides, but Searight was on their side of the field.  Aftermath must fight the wide fronts.  This allowed Stu to do what Stu does.  Work the center to close.  Once Bailey killed the Aztec in front of him, they scrambled into our guns.  A solid composed first point. 1-0 HURRICANES  

Aftermath went with their standard breakout with one adaptation and that was to the first big dorito.  That’s a hard gap and he got dinked.  We were essentially mirrored, and we had the one body advantage.  Once Daniel and Drew fed forward and out, Aftermath’s one in the god was pretty stuck.  That allowed Bailey to get on the straights and work with Searight.  Aftermath’s one in the god decided to gunfight into two guns and got caught.  Aftermath is quick to fill the Aztec behind that god loss but we now have a 5 on 3 body advantage along with a one-point lead and the clock was ticking.  I would be happy if we fed both snakes again at that point, wrap and trap, and make them concede.  Stu again had an untimely death, but Searight and Camp finally got on their horses and fed both snakes. I’m surprised the horn wasn’t blown sooner as Searight politely put 1-2 on the last Aftermath player. 2-0 HURRICANES

Aftermath figured they might as well go to the D-side snake on the break but didn’t make it.  Again, that’s a big gap for the home to shoot especially when you show it on the box and run high to the mini wall.  However, they finally committed past the god, which is what actually prolongs the point AND, should have won them the point too!  Castro has Daniel Camp and Drew Bell dead to rights and missed.  Castro finally got Daniel. Drew Bell tried to counter but threw his body away.   It was looking good for Aftermath, but they slept on Searight. He shot Castro from the opposite snake and then turned to go to work.  Aftermath’s dorito corner almost saved the point from Searight but missed as well.  Woodruff made a heads up play and tried to flip the field.  Mike Brown recognized it and countered by repositioning to back center to at least keep Woodruff honest.  What unfolded next was pretty spectacular.  Searight knew he had one body in front of him.  He backed up to where he can see both sides of the bunker in front of him and posts.  Sure enough, Grayson Gladstone launched on the highway and Searight caught him.  Gladstone missed Searight as I am sure he thought he would be elsewhere.  Aftermath made a desperation move inside, Mike Brown made the call, that Aftermath player gets eliminated by Searight. 3-0 HURRICANES

With less than 2 minutes on the clock we made one adjustment to ensure we got 5 bodies out alive without sacrificing guns on the break and it paid off.  Kill two Aftermath on the break.  5 on 3, we don’t have to do anything… made them come to us into the meat grinder.  We drew a minor but so did Aftermath.  Chaos there at the end. I didn’t envy the refs on this field. We will take it.

FINALS VS SAN DIEGO DYNASTY

Dynasty came out of a grinder bracket.  They were looking like the champions they are, and I don’t see why anyone would think any different.  We certainly didn’t have it easy during our tournament journey, not just because of our opponents but because of ourselves.  If we could fix the one or two mistakes we kept making, if we could process the scramble a little quicker, and keep our guns hot winning the breakout… we could win the event.  That’s what I was telling myself.  Yes, that is a lot of things when going up against the dragon but at no point was I doubtful that we would do these things.  We must, there is no other way to win.  That’s the difference maker in the pro division… processing speed and mistake free paintball.  Usually, the person who makes the first mistake pays for it.

I have heard the speculation that the moment might have been too much for us.  Whereas it is true this is our first trip to a finals match in the pro division, it isn’t our first trip to a finals match.  My guys did not feel any different than before any other match.  Yes, it was for all the marbles.  Didn’t change anything.  It doesn’t matter who we play or when we play them, we have to win.  Its so simple and people who make that part of the game, I get it… but it wasn’t an issue here. Again, I can understand those who thought it might have played a part.

I do want to address something that I heard over and over again this past week or so.  Why did we go defensive against Dynasty when we were up points?  I have a question in return… what match were you watching?  It wasn’t that we went defensive.  Dynasty’s guns got hot on the break and our processing slowed down.  They shot our attack on the break.  And our “attacks” were injured too.  My hat is off to my ones who were running their butts off and giving me everything I asked of them and then some.  Now, if you want to say we squandered some opportunities to have additional offense/aggression, that is where we will have common ground.  That is essentially where our “foot came off the gas” but I wouldn’t say we were defensive.  We gave every ounce of what we had left… and made some mistakes in the scramble. If you really want to dumb it down, it came down to two points. Choose any two points of regulation that we lost, give me one guy that stays alive for 5-6 seconds longer… and we would win 4-3 in regulation. Woulda, coulda, shoulda. It wasn’t our time. But we will get there.

Proud of my guys.  They played well.  They recognize what is in front of them this season.  It will not be easy. As Jocko Willink would say, “Good…”

Lao Tzu said that, “The key to growth is the introduction of higher dimensions of consciousness into our awareness.”  The Canes are aware now. And we are redefining our goals for the season.

Our journey is never ending. There has to be growth, there has to be improvement.  And it will most certainly come with and from some adversity.  We have to live in each of these moments and learn from them.  We must strive to do what is right and virtuous… the winning will come.

“If you aspire to the highest place, it is no disgrace to stop at the second…” – Cicero

Be water my friends.

2023 NXL Windy City Major Recap

I am of a proud Sicilian heritage. Every once in a while, I find myself tapping into that lineage. For instance, there is an old Sicilian proverb that, in a small way, sums up the recent NXL’s 2023 Windy City Open for me; “Non chiedere ciò che non puoi prendere”.

There was a long break between the Mid Atlantic Major in Philly and the most recent event in Oak Forest, IL just outside of Chicago. Plenty of time to regroup and think about our successes and shortcomings at the last event. We were looking forward to this event as we felt we were on the precipice to reach another goal. Once again, the league (or fate for that matter, depending on how you look at it) had handed us another tough bracket. But we were ready. We like the trenches, we live for the challenge, and we long for the fight where we stand, once again in front of the doubters and say, “Come and get some”.

We have hit a stride and have been a rather well oiled machine this season. We have made the best of our limited time together, looking for advantages where ever we can find them, bouncing ideas off each other, having zoom calls, making and watching tape, drilling, scrimmaging, studying… we were feeling good. But fate was not done with us yet.

During one of our off layout weekends, Drew Bell would be sidelined with a high ankle sprain 3 weeks before the event and 2 weeks out from the layout practice weekend.

Stuart Ridgel, a week after Drew and a week before the layout weekend would be out at the field and suffer an almost identical fate. Another ankle injury but more of a tendon issue. And still, fate wasn’t finished…

The week prior to the layout practice, Justin Bailey would be nursing a back injury. Daniel Camp would fly in for one day on the layout practice as he had his brother’s wedding to attend. Jacob Searight would suffer a mild medical issue his first day on the layout only to bounce back for the Sunday practice.

Now, all of this may sound like I am building up excuses. I assure you I am not. I am simply setting the stage for what was to be an impressive event and what has always been a part of our story. Every team faces some adversity. We are no different. When you have a team like us, it isn’t a matter of “if” but “when”. It was bound to happen. We have faced countless adversities before, this was nothing new per say… We have embraced and worked to overcome several obstacles over the seasons. It is what it is. So we adapted, made some adjustments, and worked to put our best foot forward. And I think we scratched the surface of what we are capable of this event.

We were excited that our good friends Austin Notorious would join us again for the layout practice. But we were also joined by top tier team Edmonton Impact. Bart Yachimac and Dave Baines made the long trip to join us at our home field of LA Xtreme Paintball in Slidell, LA. We were blessed with relatively “cool” weather with temperatures in the mid 80’s (but it is the humidity that gets you). With Notorious playing their brand of paintball coupled with Impact running two lines, the New Orleans Hurricanes got our fair share of looks.


*ZEN NOTE – This marks the 5th time I have had the privilege to see the inner workings of an awesome program. It never ceases to amaze me how these teams operate and work. I am fascinated by the process and the opportunity to watch yet another high level program work as it is just more programming for the old man’s noggin. Thank you again to Bart and Impact.

We had a pretty good idea of how this field should play… and so, we pretty much stuck with the game plan, trying to polish it up, learning incremental lessons, while moving some players around to make the most of our strengths. We always feel good after a good beat down on the layout weekend and that’s what we got (okay, maybe not good, but definitely not bad). Both Notorious and Impact seemed to move at will and get into position first on us quite often. But we worked the timing. We played around a little with some concepts but for the most part, kept it paintball 101. It would be about obtaining key spots, creating the “set up”, and executing the game plan. Sounds simple, I know. It isn’t. It didn’t matter if you had 5 alive and they were all doing their jobs… there would still be a hole. The key was to recognize it quicker than your opponent.

So we were quite literally limping into Chicago but our morale coming into this event was high. It was like the saying, “If you have no confidence in yourself, you are twice defeated.” We were determined to fight every step of the way, and we knew we had the right plan. So we pulled up our britches, slapped our face a couple of times, and stepped into the ring for the first match.

VS Columbus LVL

We were the very first point of the event. We pride ourselves on our scouting and preparation for teams. But there would be no opportunity to see how teams were playing the field, no opportunity to see if anyone else was approaching the layout the way were. It was litmus test time and Columbus LVL is a team that can punch above their weight class when they are on. I was aware they didn’t have Damian Ryan but knew they would throw Danny Schonauer at that snake often, probably with Lehman behind him in support.

Our opening volley was pretty simplistic. We wanted guns up, eyes on, and get to the snake. LVL is similar but they filter a body up into the snake side wedge early. We match them about the same time European/German snake player but 100% Hurricane Nic Ripple shoots Schonauer on the wire to win the snake war. Drew Bell sneaks a ball on the D side tower who was attempting to wrap his bunker. This leaves LVL fighting from a position of inferiority as we are wider on both sides of the field than their widest players. At this point, it is anaconda time. Nic catches the snake wedge and crawls to the end of LVL’s snake. Daniel Camp sees the line, takes the center and polishes off the last opponent. Canes -1 LVL – 0

We decide to keep it simple but Drew Bell and Mike Brown know to look for the read. And they see it. LVL sends a player shooting snake way to that inset baby dorito. He misses his shot but Drew/Mike don’t. Schonauer returns the favor from the previous point and clips Nic on the wire. LVL stays doubled in that home a little too long and lose a gunfight. However, Schonauer has the snake too himself and for all intents and purposes, LVL has the advantage. But we studied this scenario at practice. We had a code for a situation when our opponent had the snake uncontested. The code goes out and Daniel Camp takes the snake wedge looking to play wack-a-mole while Aaron Pate filters wider to add to the gun but not before he puts a ball on LVL’s snake wedge. We now have the numerical advantage even after Schonauer takes Daniel out. Pate assesses the situation and drops the hammer clean. Interestingly enough, the last LVL player is in the home. It’s a 3 v 1 in favor of us, so my guys check in and milk the point a bit. Mike Brown moves down D side and wins the gun fight. Canes – 2 LVL – 0

We are up two now and LVL had shown they would break snake but they weren’t in any hurry to get a body behind him. They wanted to fill that snake wedge first. So we decide to kill the clock a little by going wide and spreading the field. The thought being, if we make it out alive, we slow snake progress, and should be able to shoot the late fill to the snake wedge, isolating their snake presence and putting us in the driver seat. You would have thought we scripted it. We get to corner and stop Danny at the first snake knuckle, and shoot the late fill to the snake wedge. Aaron Pate, with only one gun to beat (the juice box, because the home and d side tower have to try and contest the potential D side push as we are wider than them) filters underneath into the snake. LVL realizes Pate has fed snake so they quickly fill the snake corner. Nic catches LVL’s snake rounding a knuckle. Barring a lost gunfight, we were now set up to drain the clock and suck the life out of this point. My guys all check in and know the situation. With d side and snake side containment in position from the snake, this frees two of my guys to shift the skirmish line and increase pressure on LVL to either make them concede or force bad gun fights. Mike Brown and Drew Bell add pressure through the center and D side respectively. Regrettably, we let LVL back to the snake but it doesn’t matter. We tighten the noose. Canes – 3 LVL – 0

We decided to spread again except we wanted to test the route to the dorito 1. Funny thing is, so does LVL. We mirror up and both team’s dorito 1 runner take the walk. We both make snake but LVL actually fills the dorito 1 immediately. This tells me their ploy was to concede a shot or two and push the field on both sides. It begins to bode ill for us as they get to snake corner but Nic Ripple gets a shot on him. Drew Bell vacates the home to throw a wrench D side and Daniel Camp fills the snake corner. Four on three body advantage to us. One could argue that LVL has slightly better field advantage but we are in position to counter if necessary. We have two pivot positions now so we are set up well. No sooner do I say that to myself in the pit, we pick off LVL’s D side one player. LVL’s next D side player decides to try and make something happen (good man – take it out of coaches hands). This leaves the snake player in a one on four scenario and LVL quickly concedes with just over 6 minutes left on the clock. Canes – 4 LVL – 0

But LVL is a pro team for a reason. And they show it during the next point. They shoot our snake corner on the break while taking the snake, and don’t let us spread. We get caught in the pocket and don’t get our code out to counter. Disaster. Danny comes all the way down the snake and finishes the point. LVL is on the board. Canes -4 LVL – 1

We put two pocket guns on the snake and bounce him. Unfortunately, they didn’t bounce Nic and he comes off early. Though, at the same time Daniel Camp shoots his mirror. Four on four action to start the 6th point. LVL comes all the way to our side of the field, the super secret code reaches Daniel and he posts. But he decides he doesn’t want to guess and just goes and gets him. LVL gets overzealous D side and runs into Drew Bell’s gun as Mike Brown takes ground. This relieves any pressure on Drew who can play freely now. He tracks LVLs next snake attack, feeds data to Pate who launches and removes the snake threat. At the same time, Mike Brown had dispatched LVL’s juice box. LVL concedes with 3:20 left in the match. Canes – 5 LVL – 1

With 6 points under us, we have a good understanding of LVL. They showed us an opportunity in their break outs so we decide to exploit it. We throw Nic up the gut doubling the snake lane and then cut him across into the snake. It pays off as we shoot LVL’s snake runner and Nic makes it in . BUT – we did not anticipate the big dorito side run. This man shoots at least 3 of my guys before trading leaving Nic in a two on one situation. Nic trades with one of them leaving one LVL player to go get the buzzer. What should have been our point is foiled by a ballsy move by LVL. That one is on me. Canes – 5 LVL -2

2:20 left on the clock. Plenty of time to pad the point spread. I felt confident the previous play would work again but to be safe, we have a gun shifted. I felt we shot the snake runner but the ref doesn’t find a hit. No worries though as Nic gets payback with a good shot down the wire. LVL takes the center brick but for some reason gives his back to the snake. Perhaps he was depending on his home player to have filtered snake way by then? Either way Nic gives him a tattoo. Then… chaos. People are everywhere and I black out. Kidding, it boils down to a 3 on 1 and we shoot the last LVL player. I figure LVL will let the time run off. Color me surprised when they conceded the point at 44 seconds.

Now, Stu had dressed out to keep up appearances. We didn’t want anyone to know (like they wouldn’t notice… but hey). He wants to test the ankle. I agree…hesitantly. We decide to get heavy guns up and let Stu take the line. It is there and he gets one but should have got two. A lot to ask though for the hobbled player. Justin Bailey reads and reacts perfectly, reaches the corner, wraps and traps shooting the home player leaving only one D side player for LVL. Bailey launches but time runs out. 2-3 more seconds and Bailey would have increased our win by five instead of four. However, prior to point, we decided not to jeopardize anyone’s injuries. FINAL SCORE: CANES -6 LVL – 2

VS Latin Saints

The Latin Saints and NRG Elite are the only two teams that the Canes have not faced in our short two year pro career. After Word Cup this year, NRG will be the only team we have never faced at least once.
Headed into this match, I was NOT looking past Saints. Heck, I don’t look past anyone, but the Saints had just taken Diesel deep, scoring 3 unanswered. Granted, it looked as if Diesel was trying something particular or rather specific after going up 4, but I am not in Mike Hinman’s head so I won’t speculate. The Saint’s guns on the break were solid and I happen to know 3 of their players very well. So no, we would not take them lightly. A team that has nothing to lose is very dangerous…and can be quite unpredictable.

Point 1 we would go with a base play looking for the set up of 3 bodies snake way and 2 retaining the read option. Similar breakouts but we beat them to the snake wedge. Saints did a good job of keeping Pate from spreading to snake corner so he filters to the god instead. We know they want the snake wedge so we keep Mike Brown on the gap and sure enough, he picks up the secondary fill. Greg Turton played well at this event and he decides to get offensive D side for the Saints by taking dorito 1. This spot has an excellent bounce shot into the snake. If a snake player is playing “tall” inside, that bounce will eradicate him quickly. Nic stays disciplined on snake wire while Colin Cherry tries to clear a zone and make snake corner. We have it on lock and Cherry takes the walk. It is now 5 on 3 advantage to us so, we zone up, sporadic paint, allowing the remaining Saint players to burn their paint off their backs. Pate moves to the head of the snake.

*ZEN NOTE – I was asked about why we do this and not get to the corner. It is a risk/reward equation. It has some good shots on the wrap, can stop a spread with good protection, it protects against the highway run, and if we lose asset one in the snake, we still have a snake presence. But it does have a significant weakness which is shown in point 2 (and other matches).

We set up here to choke them out again. Saints make a desperation run highway, zone control addresses it, final Saints player tries to build off chaos, zone control handles him too. Canes – 1 Saints – 0

We did have a small discussion in the pit after that point. My four guys were at the buzzer checking each other over and discussing the point. That was good. BUT… since we were a bit skeleton crew-ish, I asked them all to check each other over, choose one guy to stand at buzzer, and the rest get in the pit so we could get ready for the next point. Efficiency people!

We decide to make the Saints beat us at our game. Keep it simple, gather some data on their adjustment, and go from there. The Saints smartly take that snake corner on the break and we allow them to secondary D side, filter to the god, and get out of the doubled home. Pate ends up taking the snake with Nic but this decision was made unaware that we had lost Drew behind him who would have naturally filtered out behind him. The Saints quickly take ground in the snake and D side. But like I said earlier, if you come into that snake wedge high and unaware, the bounce will take you. And that’s what happens to the Saints player. Once we eliminate the first snake threat, Mike Brown is free to get wide D side to contest the Saints presence there and create more options for himself. Incredibly, the Saints player filters to the D side wedge. On top of this, he doesn’t seem to know the situation and gets picked up by Nic from the snake. The Saints snake corner is forced to feed the snake since I am pretty sure he was out of paint. We pick up another kill D side and are in a 4 on 2 body advantage but the snake player for Saints gets a free kill D side on Mike Brown. This is the issue (one of a few) with not having snake corner and having the head of the snake instead. I would learn after this point, there was a “caution D side corner” call which is why Daniel Camp kept eyes on that way. I am pleased my guys eventually work it out (well, the Saints do that for us) but it was concerning none the less. Pate had the ball early and could have traded with a clever highway run when Evan Manners was in the Home. However, once Evan filtered to the snake wedge, coupled with the miscommunication (lets call it a misunderstanding?), we have now allowed this point to get out of hand. Deductive reasoning. We had discussed at practice that there has to be an “assumption of risk” on this field. But when data is unsure, cover the fronts and that’s what my guys essentially did. Saints win this point if not for the penalty. Canes – 2 Saints – 0

We are on the power play here for the next point. It was a 5 on 3 to start, Canes advantage. We know they will take the back line three bunkers. I anticipate the moment we shoot one, they will concede to get 5 back on the box. I would be lying if I said I was not looking to pad our point margin headed into the 2nd day. To be safe, we double guns up at home, get our cross guns up to foil a big run or at least see it, and take the snake. Saints get wide but their dorito player runs into Nic’s gun from the snake. And then the concession. Canes – 3 Saints – 0

I want to push the D side a little. We decide to spread a bit and see what Saints show us being down 3 and with 3:30 left on the clock. I found it interesting they spread (we would usually do it from the “red” side as well but not sure if they were doing it for the same reason we were). Perhaps they saw no issue with their secondaries. The Saints finally get the right set up. They have the snake, snake wedge, snake corner, coupled with a Home and a dorito 1 (which eventually moves to dorito wedge). Britt Simpson had already made his primary and knows the Saints will more than likely make what we were calling the snake 2. He times it well and shoots the snake 1. Saints home player filters out and draws a minor leaving them with snake corner and snake wedge only versus my five. I would have liked my guys to create a little more pressure at this point and we had a brief discussion afterwards about it. I had also not shared with them my desire for a point spread so that is on me, too. Just the same, Drew Bell sees the line, and makes the right read. He trades with Evan Manners in the snake wedge. The penalty that followed surprised me as Evan was looking that way. I thought I saw a ref call a mutual but then saw a flag go up. Tough break. Canes – 4 Saints – 0

We are on a bit of a power play again (5 on 4) and I am now thinking we are going to get out of this with the bare minimum spread I wanted. But… with 1:26 left on the clock, I don’t want to take any chances. They haven’t been shooting our snake so we are going back. I want to spread to use a “alamo” play but with assets that can shift gears and attack D way if necessary. I state that, if we get the opportunity, I want the point but let’s not be careless. Justin Bailey wins his first engagement with his mirror making it a 5 on 3 advantage. We lose Britt out of the corner (pretty sure Saints snake player got that shot) but Bailey smartly takes the snake corner. Daniel gets hyper aggressive in the snake (I like it!) but the Saints snake player gets a ball on him. But to do it, he had to come out into Bailey’s lane. Bailey, knowing the situation, launches down the snake route, gunning the whole way, and gets us that 5th point. I would have liked him to wait a bit before hitting the buzzer but I don’t blame him. He looked good and that feeling of hitting the buzzer at that point is pretty cool. Canes – 5 Saints – 0

Now, here is where coach makes another mistake. I initially want to take another alamo approach and get out of the match with a 5 point win. In addition, I don’t want to risk further injury on the team. But I let myself get talked into a play call by two of my guys. I normally would have vetoed the request but they were feeling it and I need to let the dogs hunt occasionally. Regrettably, we would pay for it. Not that it was a bad call by my guys, it wasn’t. It was a bad call by me. I am accountable.

During the final point, a decision to call Ryan Williamson off his zone allows Brandon Portman to take a seam and round our D side corner. Ryan does turn in time and they lock eyes both raising their markers at the same time to shoot each other. BUT – Portman hits the buzzer. He is clearly hit. As a matter of fact, Portman wipes himself down immediately after hitting the buzzer (left forearm). You’re probably wondering how I know this for sure. My man Ryan Williamson came to the pit and was adamant that he had got a ball on Portman. I asked for a review which was graciously granted. Jason Trosen confirmed for me that I was, indeed, correct. He concurred that Portman was hit and did attempt to wipe the hit. However, because the on field refs called him clean, I had no recourse. I appreciated his candor and that of the head ref as well (who also felt he saw the hit). Shouldn’t have come to that anyway. Woulda coulda shoulda… FINAL SCORE: Canes – 5 Saints -1

We now had two wins by a margin of 4. I was pleased with the teams performance on day one but the real test was awaiting us on Saturday. We had AC Diesel who surely were addressing the issues they had day 1 and the defending previous event champions, Tampa Bay Damage. We had scouted both and both were playing the field similar to us when it mattered. I had chatted with Mouse on the way into the event that morning and he briefed me of his injury. The dude is a fine tuned machine so I wasn’t weighing his injury too much. I suspected that Hinman would call out the mistakes from their previous matches and the experienced team would adjust. During our scouting of them, we saw a small nuance in the snake and we would try and exploit it (something we learned during our scrimmage with Notorious and Impact). We also had a good understanding of their breaks depending on personnel. We anticipated a knife fight and that’s what we got.

VS AC DIESEL

The first point we kept it simple and took high survivability bunkers to assess while not limiting our options. We bounce BJ (dang it) and they break essentially the way Impact would on us at practice with smart crisp secondary moves. We counter but once again, Pate can’t get to that corner so he options up. This also allows him, Daniel, and Nic to have easy conversations. Once we reposition, I think, okay just don’t let mouse out to the snake corner and we’re Gucci (coach is learning the nomenclature of the youth). Maybe 30 seconds later, I look up and dang it if Mouse isn’t in the friggin’ snake corner. Since we don’t have snake corner, Nic has to be more defensive facing two guns. BUT, my man Pate finally makes it to the snake corner too. Sigh of relief from coach there. Spicka smartly re-positions to the center brick to set a trap. Spicka misses his first shot though and Nic backs up to place the inset mini wall between him and Spicka. I felt Nic could have used the mini wall to block out Spicka and try the bounce off the pin, especially since Clint Johnson had vacated that D side Wedge and was now at dorito 3. If that bounce worked, that relieves tremendous pressure. But Drew Bell gets caught which now creates a small problem, especially based off Clint’s positioning. Daniel Camp has to shift the gun. Mike Brown gets out to D corner which actually sets up a line for Spicka who doesn’t miss his first ball on Daniel Camp. The dominoes fall as Spicka obviously knows the field layout and our positions. I concede the point. A well executed point by AC. Canes – 0 Diesel – 1

We know if it isn’t broke, don’t fix it and figure AC was coming with a similar game plan as their last point. Only difference is they double home. We match them without the two at home. Drew Bell lands his shot on the D side one player for diesel and our nuanced snake approach works catching BJ crawling. The guys check in and once they understood kill count and where Diesel was, Drew knows he needs to filter up the gut and Jacob Searight knows to wrap and trap from dorito way. Spicka makes a smart move again to counter but Drew survives initial engagement and then wins the gun fight. Now its just a matter of polishing things off. A good answer from the Canes if I say so myself. Two well played points from both teams. Canes – 1 Diesel – 1

Diesel spreads to D corner the next point and we go short that side. Both teams take snake and Nic posts up. Daniel Camp filters to snake wedge putting an asset in place to address either threat either side. But dang it if we don’t let Mouse get to corner again! We miss the snake shot opportunity and Mouse is wrapped keeping Pate from getting wide. So once again, he optioned to the god. This point ultimately goes to us because BJ tries to finish his run on Nic in the snake while Daniel was over-watch. I saw it coming actually and threw my own imaginary flag when he got shot by Daniel and continued forward and pulled the trigger on Nic. Baginski tries to stop the hemorrhaging by spreading back snake way from the D side but is picked up and stalled. Hinman smartly concedes the point around the 8 minute mark. Canes – 2 Diesel – 1

When we see BJ and Jess out on the box, we know they will go snake corner and snake on the break. But just because you know doesn’t mean you can stop it. Spicka wins his first or second engagement against Daniel in that center juice box near the snake wedge. However, Nic once again wins the snake war with a clutch shot on BJ. Nic does a head check and sees Diesel’s late fill to the snake wedge. Up a point, he retreats to connect with Pate and piece things together. Then moves back to snake one. Spicka successfully re-positions himself in order to fill the snake. Nic just misses Spicka as he rounds a knuckle. Would have liked for Pate to get to corner but he ops for the god again. Probably because he has been trained by our opponents at this point as they only let him get there once so far. Nic just misses Spicka a second time. But then the read happens. With Spicka that close, Nic knows he has to go, jumps the beam and pulls off a dynamic highway run to get Spicka clean. In the chaos, Pate fills the snake. Drew Bell moves to center to increase pressure. We are just under 5 minutes so I am okay with my guys doing our slow strangle/choke-out, as I am anticipating to win the point. I am hoping to burn another minute or two. We have position and eyes on the three remaining Diesel players. All we have to do is maintain the pressure, not lose a gun fight, and let them hang themselves. I end up getting about 2:20 before Diesel concedes. Canes – 3 Diesel – 1

I would not be an honest man if I were to tell you I was comfortable with a 2 point lead and 2:40 on the clock against Diesel. We were now going to get a peek at Diesel’s bag of tricks. I am confident it will be D side but that is about it. Diesel gets a kill on our two position snake side on the break. We are now dangerously exposed with only Nic on snake side. Drew Bell filters out from home to stem the bleeding. Spicka clocks in AGAIN and scores a kill on my D side corner… Now the cookie is crumbling faster than I anticipated. That’s a terrible feeling when you see two of your back line die and leave your snake player alone. But I’m not hitting that concede button. So Nic has to wear it to further tick time off the clock. Leaving Nic hanging in the wind as sacrifice gets us 10 more seconds off the clock. Canes – 3 Diesel -2

Based off personnel on the box, we assume they want the snake corner and the snake simultaneously again, so we call the audible. Drew Bell does the right thing and keeps Daniel Camp on that D side cut so Drew can take the snake wedge. This was done because Mouse made the snake corner and won’t let Pate spread to match. Once this happened and we were just under a minute, I felt we were in position to contain and dictate, for the most part the next 50 seconds. I was wrong. Jesse makes an amazing crawling shot in the snake on Nic. Then a shot in on Drew. Now the back is broken and the hope is they don’t recognize it in the next 30 seconds. But they do. Spicka clears through and Diesel hits the buzzer with 6 seconds left.

We want to play the 6 seconds so we have time to think about how we want to approach the overtime point. My guys go out and buy us time to confer.

Because we have a margin to play with I decide to spread. Especially since Jacob Searight has shown his willingness to get sneaky and press the issue D side. Nic hasn’t been shot on the break this match so… let’s go boys. I got the feeling Diesel won’t risk anything and will probably go with their base play confident in their secondaries. Sure enough, that is what happens. This is what I call the “kenpo” effect. One strike creates a reaction from the opponent which leads to the next strike and the next reaction. With Diesel essentially using one gun to slow the D side push, Searight does what he needs to do, beats the gun, and gets into the 50 dorito. Spicka filters to snake wedge to look D side and address the now large thorn in their side. Nic catches Jesse to win the snake war while Mouse gets caught in the gap by our gun in D tower we specifically asked to shoot for that fill. The desired effect had been achieved and we have them on their heels. The risk had paid its rewards at only 30 seconds in of the 5 minute overtime point. With just over 4 minutes to play with, Diesel will ultimately dictate how fast we tighten the noose. We comfortably move the skirmish line forward with the 5 on 3 body advantage. At least, that was the plan. Mike Brown gets caught. Okay, not the end of the world. We still have the tactical position advantage. But then Jacob loses a gun fight. Well, this… changes things. Especially since my snake side is unaware we had shot Mouse and still think there is a snake corner (meaning someone died with data). As a coach, it is moments like this that you play the point over in your head trying to understand the issue. But Drew Bell remembers his bounce shot and scores a key kill on Diesel’s widest D side player. But then he puts the team on his back again, hauls butt on a bad ankle and no ACLs to cinch up the noose. He gets Spicka making it a 3 on 1. But Baginksi gets a ball on him. But it was too little to late as Nic Ripple launches and takes Baginski out to give the Canes the win in overtime. FINAL SCORE: CANES – 4 Diesel – 3

We have now had the opportunity to scout Damage three times. I’m looking at my data, I’m looking a Damage, I’m looking at my guys, and I’m looking back at my data. We are playing the same game. It will be a matter of who makes the small mistakes. We felt good coming into this match. But I am a contingency guy. So I am looking at our point margin as well as the rest of the matches that will be played that afternoon. I felt confident in Dynasty and X factor’s remaining schedules, and thought to myself, even if we lose, all we need to do is keep it close and we should have a straight shot to quarters… I know what you are thinking, “Coach, what do you mean “lose”?! You play to win!” – yes, correct. But I have injuries on my roster and I want to make sure we have every advantage. We are facing a champion team with tremendous experience who had no doubt scouted us… and my job is to put my guys in the best possible position. So sometimes you have to think uncomfortable thoughts.

VS Tampa Bay Damage

I think we all knew we were in for a grinder. And that’s what this match would be. Two fighters feeling each other out, probing, jabbing, head movement, footwork… the works.

First point, we come out with very similar break outs. Damage uses the pocket space behind the baby dorito to put a gun on the head of the snake and it pays off as they shoot Nic on the break. This was only the 2nd time he had been shot on the break the event. But that Damage player has to sacrifice his body to do it as he gets picked up as well. A better trade for Damage though as they now own the snake. Keith Brown wastes no time at all coming to our side of the snake and they also release up the gut to the center brick to keep us from countering to the snake. Luckily we don’t take the bait and take the snake corner and not the snake. Keith still gets his first two kills on Mike Brown and Britt Simpson. Pate finds Keith and gets him off the board making it a 3 on 2, advantage Damage. I’m looking at the set up and the clock and decide I can give my two a minute to pull something off. Sure enough, we pick up Chris Horn and make it a 2 on 2. Jason Edwards knows the deal and gets out to the snake corner. With Raney at the center brick, it’s essentially a stalemate. But Raney has been at this game a while and cleverly retreats to spread further to the D side. But Pate is no slouch either and knows he wants to spread. He tells Drew so, Drew Bell does a Drew Bell thing. Full send. And it pays off. Holy hades…. composure and gumption won that point. Canes strike first. Canes – 1 Damage – 0

Drew’s D side shot is still dialed and we strike first on the break shooting Damage’s first attacker D side Chris Horn. Keith gets in the snake again but we get Nic to the snake corner which hems Keith up at snake 1. We feed Pate underneath Nic and now we are in position with dorito 1, dorito tower, home, snake corner, and snake. Damage has snake, juice box, home, and dorito tower. Advantage Canes. Those of us in the pit settle in for what will no doubt be a long point. Raney takes a page out of our book and filters to the head of the snake and one of the Edwards gets out to the god bunker. Drew understands he needs to get his gun in the fight snake side and makes his way up to snake wedge. Still I give the advantage to us. Drew pulls back to a pivot bunker to re-assess. But I felt he was good where he was. Pods are piling up at some of my guys feet and we are a little over 3 minutes into this point and I’m starting to grow a bit concerned about paint consumption… Turns out I was right to be worried as Nic only has 1 pod at this junction. Jason Edwards decides to move back dorito side to even guns up. Raney backs up in a serpentine motion and ends up in the snake corner. At 5 minutes into this point, Nic has pulled his last pod and I’m pretty sure Mike Brown was on his last hopper as well. Now Jason makes it out to dorito corner and Keith takes one more knuckle. Easy for me to say but Pate has an opportunity to go highway here. Unfortunately, Nic is dangerously low on paint and we aren’t really communicating well which is unlike us. We are 6 minutes into this point and no coach wants to hear his guys go quiet. So Keith gives his location away after missing his shot on Britt Simpson in the dorito 1. Drew Bell gets crafty and sneaks into the mini wall next to the snake… but misses his shot! I feel like he should have just committed and taken Keith at that point. We would still have the body and position advantage. But then Jason Edwards gets picked up and shot! I’m thinking Joey may towel… but then, he has probably done the math like I have… keep it close. So he is going to ride it. Especially now that this point has gone over 7 minutes and we are at the 5 minute mark. If Joey was on his way to the towel button he stopped as Keith shoots Britt cross field making it a 4 on 3. Then… chaos. Keith goes highway as Pate launches. Keith gets Drew, Nic gets Keith, Raney gets Pate! It is now a 2 on 2 and my last two guys both have less than half a hopper between them. Nic moves inside (I wish he had stayed… I meant to ask him. If I had to guess he didn’t want 50 brick pushing him into Raney’s gun?). Raney smartly takes the snake, gets down to our side and catches Nic and then finishes off Mike Brown. I want that one back. It was now tied up with just under 3 minutes. Canes – 1 Damage – 1

Both teams make it out 5 on 5. We opt for the 2-1-2 split with our snake side one being the corner while Damage doubles home, and takes dorito 1, juice box, and snake. We had been running Nic ragged so I make the call to put Daniel in for him to get to the corner. Unfortunately, Jacob Searight takes a core sample and has to clear his gun (he ends up taking the front of the barrel off) allowing Raney to get to corner and back Keith up. The first domino falls with Pate getting a tad sloppy in his bunker exposing his hopper on a transition. We get it back though when Daniel Camp wins a gun fight with Raney coast to coast. 4 on 4 with just under 2 minutes on the clock. One of the Edwards brothers sees the opportunity since they have an asset in the snake and hauls butt to backfill the snake corner. Daniel vacates the snake corner with the intent to get Drew Bell behind or at least near him. Damage gets into dorito 3 and clips Drew and then we lose Daniel out of the snake… at this point I see we are under 30 seconds. I am not going to towel for two reasons. One, if my math holds, we are already quarters bound and not wild card. Second, why risk the charge lowering our margin? Or worse, my team is already beat up as it is. No need to pull out a dynamic attack play and risk further injury. My guys will go till the wheels fall off. But I need to save them for Sunday. It was a good match by Damage. FINAL SCORE: CANES – 1 DAMAGE -2

SUNDAYVS Tampa Bay Damage… Again…

We waited and watched for the afternoon brackets to play out. Sure enough, Dynasty and X-factor won their brackets and the points fell where I had hoped. We would be 5th seed headed into Sunday edging out Xtreme, Infamous, Revo, and Impact who would now have to play a wild card round. We waited for the drawing (honestly, I wish they would go back to seeding for Sunday but… I’m new here). We would draw none other than Tampa Bay Damage.

Some would think, “Well dadnabbit, that sucks.” I would not be one of those people. I was actually happy with the draw. Here’s why… we had lost a nail biter to them in the prelims. We knew their game, we knew what they wanted to do, how they wanted to do it, and who they wanted to do it with. We knew this because it was the EXACT same thing we wanted to do. It would be a good match up. We simply had to tighten up, shore up, be first, and play the mistake free paintball my guys are becoming known for. Unfortunately, we would make mistakes and the match would not be as close as our first meeting. Damage was in a rhythm. I wanted to knock them out of if but it was not to be.

*Zen Note – I loved the fact that Raney Stanczak tried to get in my head following our loss to them in the prelims. That guy is a competitor and is always looking for an edge. He made a comment walking by me afterwards about how I had anticipated the wrong break out in the first point of our match. I joked back and forth with him a bit about how I had not. But he was adamant. I smiled ear to ear. What Raney doesn’t know is you can’t get in my head. It’s too crowded and there is no room. But I certainly appreciated the effort.

We wanted to change it up just a bit for the first point. We had planned on using space to get three guns on Keith. We knew if we could shoot him on the break, contain the fill out to the corner, we would be in control. It was a risk reward ploy that didn’t pay off. Couple that with Damage shooting Nic on the break quick followed by a Daniel Camp death out of the back center… I look at our situation, let it go about a minute to see if my guys can dig a kill out. I scan Damage’s posture and positioning compared to our own. This is the stranglehold approach we had used successfully in the prelims, and decide I want to get 5 back on the box. I hit the concede and we get back to basics. Canes – 0 Damage – 1

I knew placing Searight out there would give Damage a consideration for a bite on the D side in hopes of drawing at least a gun away from snake side. The plan was to keep it simple and send him short to dorito 1 (but the goal was for him to press as his stature allowed for him to maneuver better than most over there). Sure enough, they only put one gun snake way and Nic makes it in. Drew Bell had his dorito shot dialed again and gets the dorito 1 elimination. And dang it, Pate bounces Raney on their first engagement… meaning we would have returned the G2 favor Damage gave us the previous point. Again, woulda coulda shoulda. Pate moves forward and we let Raney get to corner. Drew Bell works his way into the snake wedge to be a force multiplier where needed. This point begins to play out past 5 minutes long and we know we have to start making things happen (all my guys are carrying an extra pod or two now). Nic makes the bump and gets clipped on his heel. I feel this is where Pate and Nic should have connected better. Couple that with dumb luck as Keith Brown just happens to switch his gun at that moment. We are now tied up on bodies but Searight is sticking to the game plan. He makes the 50 brick D side. Damage isn’t dumb though and sends the body to trade with Searight. And then another disaster… it appears that Mike Brown got caught in that same exchange somehow. I’m about to towel but Pate catches Keith. It is now a 2 on 2 with Drew and Pate. I’m going to give the boys the opportunity to try and dig the cross out. Regrettably, Drew gets caught making it a 2 on 1 so I concede the point. Opportunity squandered there. Canes – 0 Damage – 2

Time to adjust. Get those guns on Keith again but ensure we get the snake corner with the plan to fill underneath with Nic and as a contingency push the gut. Daniel gets the call to book it to corner with Nic playing the two to slip in underneath. Guns pay off as we eliminate Keith but we lose Daniel. Nic decides we need the corner instead of the snake and makes it out there but we let Damage fill the corner as well. It is looking to be another stalemated point which is obviously Damage’s advantage but Drew Bell sticks to the game plan and takes the center 50. Obviously Damage is spread and should have no plans to vacate these bunkers. With a 2 point lead, just under 6 minutes, they start to push the d side which was a little surprising. I’m thinking, setting a trap at the 50 won’t work but then, maybe it will if they press the issue. Just as I am thinking this Drew drops his gun for a microsecond, misses his shot, and now they know he is there. Searight tries to make something happen as well and gets caught. Mike Brown tries to push while Drew presses the line through the center not getting anyone but both made the right decision. 4 on 2, down on points, time clicking off… I have to save clock and see if we can’t make something happen. Canes – 0 Damage – 3

We know we have to have that corner and snake connection so, let’s just take it off the break. We have nothing to lose at this point. We are under 5 minutes and have to have that combination early. The goal is to create a skirmish line of snake corner, two in the snake, and let our dorito side players go since there is no doubt in my mind Damage is going back line to hold. And why wouldn’t they? But because of this, we were going to try and exploit the hole. It works but takes us longer than originally anticipated to capitalize on our positions. Pate rewrites the script and thankfully so as he realizes he may have an opportunity to be a bowling ball in the center since we have stalled out. Britt is pressing dorito side and Pate sees the opportunity to help him. Pate hits Raney on first exchange but Raney isn’t stupid, he knows the score and isn’t going away. Pate commits to remove him from the field. But Britt and Nic die out of there spots. Daniel and Drew become men possessed. Daniel dies but somehow Drew falls, gets his kill, and stays alive to get us on the board. The game is all but over but proud of that herculean effort. Canes – 1 – Damage – 3

This last point was a fight for a pride. And my guys made it spectacular. I genuinely feel if Justin Bailey doesn’t slip and fall, he gets the last two backs and we snag a second point. Thank you to Joey Blute for the kind words during the handshake after the match. I have taken them to heart sir. FINAL SCORE: CANES – 1 DAMAGE – 3

The New Orleans Hurricanes finished our 4th event for the season with a 5th place finish. The trajectory, for the most part, has continued moving in a positive direction. As a coach, this is what you want to see. Steady and continuous improvement. The fact we were able to perform with the adversity we faced heading into this event, I am incredibly pleased with our team. Grit and gumption. My guys have it in spades.

After our fourth quarter-finals appearance this season, we would win 17 points of the 28 points played giving us a 61% win average and an overall win ratio performance of 55% over 5 matches. Less than our last event but higher than the first two.

In retrospect, I truly enjoyed having Stuart Ridgel help me on the sidelines. At practice, it created an efficiency where he and I could discuss and deep dive more than usual speeding up the learning curve. The extra set of eyes at practice and at the event was outstanding. But I would be absolutely crazy if I didn’t feel he serves the team better on the field. I feel he would have been quite the force on this layout. Now, we just need to get everyone healed up. I am not that overprotective parent though. Not gonna wrap them in bubble wrap and keep them inside. Grown men need to do grown men things. But the GOAL is to get healthy!

Like every event since I have come to coach the Canes, I made some mistakes and have tried to document them here. Whether it was a play call or a personnel decision, I know I can do better. There were a few play decisions I made and there was a player I should have leveraged sooner and more often. Hind sight is always 20/20. That is the toughest part for me… reviewing my performance knowing that I could have put my guys in a better position if I had just made one different call or considered one more piece of data (or perhaps didn’t emphasize a data set as hard). Just like my players, I need to work hard to improve as well. I have to show a positive trajectory too. One thing I will say, my guys gave me 150% AGAIN. And that’s all I can ask. I need to make sure I can look back and say the same. These recaps help me with that process.

We jumped Edmonton Impact and are currently sitting 6th overall for the 2023 NXL series. That’s a positive take away from this event besides our highest finish this season (7th, 7th, 6th, and now 5th). But keeping it is another task that will require every member of this program to be firing on all cylinders. We have two more goals to reach with cup…

Of course, we get handed another difficult bracket headed into cup (the argument can be made the most difficult). But hey, “Non chiedere ciò che non puoi prendere”…

Be water my friends,

2023 NXL Mid Atlantic Major recap

Damn…

The above statement was going to be the extent of this month’s blog regarding the 2023 NXL’s Mid Atlantic Major. I think it sums it up quite succinctly. But, like my team, I will “endeavor to persevere”. Team Captain Stuart Ridgel came up with this event’s theme. He made an excellent statement earlier in the week. We are “limitless”. The only people putting limits on us are ourselves. It was time for us to step out of our own way and get what was ours. Awe-inspiring and one of 5 million reasons I am blessed to be a part of this team.

We have set rather specific goals for this season, just as we did the last. But we don’t just state the goal and will it into existence. No, when we reach a new plateau, we develop a plan/infrastructure to lead us to the next. We all fill out “audits” after every event and we use these to pave a path forward. No filter, pure honesty, and 100% accountability. Everyone sees what everyone wrote.

We met 2 of our main goals for this event: Beat Houston Heat and make Sunday. But we were very close to a 3rd goal we had set for the season. That goal is a top 4 finish. And had you asked me Sunday morning to bet on us reaching it at this past event, I wouldn’t have just called the bet, I would have raised you.

Coach Paul “Bear” Bryant said, “It’s not the will to win that matters — everyone has that. It’s the will to prepare to win that matters.”

In preparation for Philly, we had the distinct privilege to scrimmage AC Diesel. Mike Hinman is, quite literally, a legend when it comes to coaching. And you instantly see why. He commands the room. There is no “fluff”, it is to the point, efficient, and practical. My guys got to put themselves up against some legends of the game while I got to see the inner workings of a mind. We are all students and in order to be successful, we must watch and listen to learn. Every opportunity we get, we want to learn. So, we watched and listened a lot that weekend. And then applied Bruce Lee’s method: Absorb what is useful, discard what is not, add what is uniquely your own.

It became obvious to me you had two options on how to approach this layout. Where most matches have what we like to call the “scramble” mid game, with this particular layout, it was almost as if the scramble was taking place off the break.You either had good guns on the break with a pocket to start play off up bodies (risk getting stuck) or you took real estate fast to create pressure early (risk getting whittled). The Canes would learn both. If we could, we would hide our offensive approach until necessary. We would also shift personnel around, as well as add several audibles for the box. This would play out well as we played a total of 34 points this event. We would win 22 of those 34 for a 65% win ratio. An improvement over Sunshine State Major (57%) and Lonestar (56%). Continuous improvement is the goal and I am glad to see the needle moving in the right direction.

*Zen Note – had more than a few conversations at the event about our “style”. Supposedly we have earned a reputation of playing a lock-down style. I’ve never looked at it that way. I’ve always looked at it as, we play the field the way we think it needs to be played. There are several variables that go into that, one of which is almost always dependent on our opponent.

The Canes would head to Philly minus two valuable assets. Jacob Searight, who I felt would have been an absolute monster on this layout, and Justin Bailey who not only has tremendous survivability and excellent communication skills but showed everyone at Lonestar why he wears a Cane jersey.

VS Ironmen

We had scouted the Ironmen the day before at their practice on Thursday. You should always take a team’s practice with a grain of salt. What you will see does not necessarily translate to what you will get once the event begins. But it can be telling. You can extrapolate certain aspects of information from the breakout, the personnel, their positioning, demeanor, and of course, their game play. I got the distinct impression we were watching the Ironmen’s total game. And I would be, for the most part, right. They had solid lanes on the break for the snake, they knew the importance of the snake, but there appeared to be a large chink in the armor. And we would try to exploit it.

Headed into this game, we wanted to go short, have them waste a gun and get ours up. We shoot two. But the Ironmen take the Center Brick and the snake 50 which can make our bunkers feel small. But we had faced this scenario at practice several times so we knew how to address it. The guys maintain composure and shoot the bounce to kill the center. This leaves the Men with only two bodies left, both on the snake side. Mike Brown has steadily been taking ground on the D side looking for the slow squeeze as there is no reason to get in a hurry and run into a gun. But we give them a body in an attempt to challenge that 50 snake wrapping. The Ironmen’s snake player makes a valiant effort to make something happen (something us coaches appreciate) but it doesn’t work out and it doesn’t work out for the last push from the last Ironmen player either. 1-0 Canes

The next point was a cluster and certainly not one you want to witness as a coach. We trade bodies off the break making it a 4 on 4 but the Ironmen would have position with a snake presence. That presence peels off Mike Brown from the dorito corner making it 4 on 3 advantage Men. Aaron Pate makes the right read and re-positions to contest the snake. Those two trade. It is now a 3 on 2 in favor of the Ironmen. But this is a great example of how your opponent’s one mistake can save your rear end. The Men were in dorito 2, inset dorito, and snake side can. The snake side can Ironmen player (Pretty sure it was Keith Devitt) releases to the can near the center brick on the snake side. My guess is he wanted to keep one of my last two guys from spreading snake way. But he plays it so tight that, either he fails at this job, or he thought there was still a Canes player in the snake corner. This allows Drew Bell not only to get out to snake side can, but to shoot him. In order to do it though, Drew exposed himself to the Ironmen’s slow D side push. This leaves Stuart Ridgel in a 2 on 1. Nick Slowiak attempts to spread the field to make Stu fight two fronts. However, Stu had sneakily taken ground to the D side wedge which has a Mac Truck lane snake way, and catches Nick. It’s now a 1 on 1. Last Ironmen player doesn’t know the situation and Stu get’s the drop. 2-0 Canes.

We move back to our base play (this can change the next day dependent on opponent and what we learned first day) and pocket up a bit to get guys in primaries and guns up. And it pays off big. We shoot two and then they get a minor all within about 3-4 seconds of the break. Shane/Nicki/Pax saw enough and quickly concede. 3-0 Canes

Plenty of time on the clock. No need to risk bodies since our base seems to be working. We also know they will try to take ground early snake way and probably position one other asset far dorito. When Keith Devitt lined up in the stack snake side in the one spot, we knew he would try to round snake corner and feed the snake. We audible and put another gun there. We shoot Keith but they take one of ours as well. Interestingly enough they choose to go center brick. Smart read by the two on snake side for the Men as he quickly rounds the snake corner to feed the snake and maintain that pressure. But they give us another body from the D side. This leaves us with 4 and the Men with 3 and we know they have the center brick. With a 3 point lead we don’t have to go anywhere. We are zoned up appropriately and the clock is rolling. We kill the center leaving the two Ironmen in the snake. We had just seen this scenario before in an earlier point so, again, no need to get spectacular. But my guys body language and comms are telling me they still think there is a d side presence. So we are off on the count. Mike Brown gets out of the corner, probably because he knows the snake is hot and doesn’t want to get pinched if there is an unknown D side asset for the Men. Aaron Pate uncharacteristically dies but we start to turn the field shooting the bounce to take the first snake player. Another valiant effort by the last snake player to make something happen but just two many guns. 4-0 Canes.

We test the gun, Nic makes the snake and shoots the Ironmen’s snake player. However, Ironmen use that center brick again and catch Nic’s pack as he gets to 50 snake. At the same time, we lose Mike Brown out of that insert dorito near back center. We press the issue snake side not checking the center off and pay for it. Drew Bell and Stuart Ridgel try to stem the bleeding but the Men finally slow it down, check in, and squeeze the point. Ironmen get on the board. 4-1 Canes

If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Back to base with our guns up and sure enough, kill three on the break (we shot one snake way, we shot one in the center, and we shot one dside). The coaching staff for the Men let’s it play out though and I understand the call. Perhaps one of your two remaining guys picks a guy off or the Canes get a penalty… we shoot the last two and the Men concede the point with 4:55 remaining on the clock. 5-1 Canes.

Obviously the Men have to press so we move a chess piece to the first wedge dorito side to slow options down snake way and shoot for any secondary fills. And we position our juice box to maintain honesty D side. Other than that, the song remains the same. We shoot two on the break again, win another gunfight almost immediately after that, followed by another… five on one and the Ironmen concede the point. 6-1 Canes.

At this junction, I would be very happy to get out of the match with a mercy rule win since my initial paint estimate is looking to be perfect (the number of cases I told the pit crew we would need for the match). And we have not had to show much at all before our second match. I figure we go base play, turn two guns in, two guns out, with safety valve and let the men kill themselves. But, the Ironmen had other plans. We get a kill out of the center but we let them take big real estate on the snake as well as the D side. My two center players get stuck and eliminated and well… next thing you know, they put another one up on us. 6-2 Canes.

We were in X-ball now (what’s new, we always end up with at least 1-2 matches at events going into X-ball). I had a strange thought in my head at that moment. I’m always looking for the psychological edge and I remember thinking to myself, what is going on in their pit right now? I know Shane and Pax well as they are two of my first mentors not to mention close friends. I finally met Nicki and spoke to her this event. I enjoyed speaking with her but I didn’t grab much insight. And I figured Slowiak has to be part of the conversation as I had finally had the opportunity to speak to him and see him in his element. He has a big personality and would most certainly give his 2 cents. There I am thinking they were obviously over there discussing what to do down 6-2 with 3:46 left. Would there be concordance? Would their be differing opinions? Would there be doubt? What could I do to ensure we put this one away… I think that is one of the things I love most about my guys during a match. Our efficiency. We don’t have any doubt in our game plan. We make the call and my guys produce the center kill.

But… two of my guys catch mystery balls and the point quickly devolves into a 3 on 3 and then a 3 on 2! My guys are stacked in snake side can and the god bunker with Ironmen who have two in the snake and a D side asset that is quickly taking ground. But the two I have left? Daniel “Clutch” Camp and Aaron “Hold My Beer” Pate. Numbers 2 and 3 on the Canes gun fighting list…

Not that any of that came into play though…

No, instead, an Ironmen player runs to the side of the bunker that Pate is holding a lane for the D side. He and Pate trade but he continues his run to shoot Danimal. Red bird of death flies and the swing point is awarded to us. 7-2 Canes

2:14 on the clock, the score is 7-2. I’m thinking we are getting out of this match with a win so, why show anything else. We have seen great success with our pocket guns on the break. I believe I had said earlier in the match that our base play beat their haymaker 9 out of 10 times. The guys agree and we get ready to go to work. I needlessly point out that if we see opportunities to gain ground and put ourselves into position to get that buzzer… full send. We shoot both their wide players in exchange for one of ours. 4 on 3 advantage to us. But I think it was Hughes who tries to flip the script by coming on our side of the snake. However, we have a call for this scenario as we saw it often in practice. The code is given and we hammer the bounce shot eliminating Mr. Hughes who also draws a minor. We had peeled off another one prior to the flag leaving my guys alone on the field to walk down and seal the deal.

VS Notorious

I will admit that this one had me a little nervous though I would never admit it during the event. We are close with the Notorious program and Ryan Gray has become a good friend. We made a gentleman’s wager on the match and I was broke. I hope this isn’t taken in a derogatory manner by any of the Notorious crew but it felt like a little brother/big brother match up. And that’s how we approached it. We had scouted their match against the MLKings and felt we had a good read. Knowing how each other thinks and plays though can be both advantageous as well as disadvantageous. And that would play out during this match.

First point we decide we want a snake presence early. Notorious goes short but takes the center 50 brick on the break. But he doesn’t seem to know which side he wants to shoot and we make it in. He posts up snake side, perhaps waiting for a secondary. We shoot Archie out of the center on the break (they were going to get his gun up and then send speed demon underneath no doubt) and I believe we get a ball on Ty Batemen in the dorito corner. Notorious’ newest pick up, Harris Husein, quickly back-fills Ty’s old spot. Markie then tries to fill out to snake corner but gets picked up. We had discovered the center earlier and Stu decides to go trade as Nic Ripple, German snake player extraordinaire, closes out the point. This all happened in the span of less than a minute. 1-0 Canes

The rest of the match would not go as smoothly as that first point. Notorious comes out swinging next point sending Archie to the snake and shooting two of us on the break. We catch Arch in the gap but Markie makes a good read and gets into the snake almost immediately. Notorious has body advantage and position now. Markie shoots Stu out of back center leaving us with the snake side can and the dorito corner. Hussien is now in the snake with Markie and that combo crops Drew Bell. Mike Brown learned his lesson from Texas and makes the decision for me by moving forward and attacking. Tied now 1-1.

The next point would prove to be a grinder. We trade two of our bodies for one of theirs giving Notorious a 4 on 3 advantage. The battle for the snake had begun and Nic was in S2 for us and Archie was in S2 for Nototious. But then my guys just start dying out of spots. As a coach, I usually meet my guys at the net as they come off if I see something that was uncharacteristic or I don’t know what happened. This was one of those times. We had spoke about this after the Ironmen match. We have to be tighter and leverage our gun discipline. Pate gets to the snake corner to contain allowing Britt in the dorito wedge to dump paint into the pinball machine that is the snake 50 hoping to catch Archie if he got sloppy. Nic re-positions to 2nd snake mini brick to get his eyes up in front of him. Notorious gets Jared Sherman in there with Archie so they definitely have the advantage. But we even it up when Archie takes the walk. With the 3 on 3 spread, unless someone wins a gun fight, this was going to be a long point and it was. Nic moves again to S1 but I don’t think we knew about the next body in the snake. When Pate joins Nic in the snake, I thought to myself, okay here we go, now we have it. Unfortunately, Britt gets picked up on a bounce shot. Ty starts to figure out he can go and begins taking ground D side. Harris joins Jared in the snake and Ty beats Pate’s cross field gun. THERE WAS A FIRE FIGHT! Nic actually did bounce Ty as he runs in to get the buzzer. Notorious takes the point. 1-2 Notorious.

LVL and Damage finally give us a little time to game plan and we take advantage of it. Call it statistics, gut feeling, or simply knowing what we would probably do, we key up on the snake corner and it pays off as we shoot what I think was Anthony Bowles. Daniel Camp fills out to snake corner for us while Stuart Ridgel keeps a lock on the head of the snake. Mike Brown applies pressure by taking D3 while Drew and Pate just keep dumping paint. Daniel knows the deal and feeds snake. He gets to snake 50 and gets two kills almost instantly. This leaves Notorious with dorito corner and snake can. This allows Stu, Drew, and Pate to come off jobs and join the fray. Harris gets a running start and leaps on his own sword taking Mr. Camp with him. My other three dispatch the last remaining Notorious player. Tie ball game 2-2.

We run a little “switcharoonie” on the next point. We get Daniel into the snake and release Stu a little earlier than normal. This works out well as Notorious does not go snake and we dig a kill out of the center. Daniel does a patient creep to the snake 50 and peels off Archie in the god bunker. Once he does this he immediately posts up on the snake side can (they were on the cross) who would have seen Archie die and have to come off his job to contest the obvious snake threat. The tactic works and Daniel gets another kill. This allows Daniel to stand tall, apply pressure to dorito corner, whom he shoots. Regrettably, the center juice box player (was it Alex Hubert?) gets caught in the crossfire and draws a minor. This means Notorious will be playing a body down the next point. Score 3-2 Canes

With 2 minutes left in the match, down by one, and us on the power play, we know they are going snake. We decide to get guns up with the plan to match on a delay. They make it in and somehow get three in there! And we end up losing our delay. All in the first 20 seconds! Me and two others in the pit swear we see a hit come off Harris and so does the ref. A minor goes up and that makes the three in the snake now 1. Archie gets on his stomach and posts up to shoot any fill into the snake with him. What he doesn’t know is his two players behind him have been eliminated. Stu gets the memo, goes to counter Archie, can’t see him and simply decides to just hit the buzzer. Score 4-2 Canes.

Stu didn’t let the time go under so I think there were still 13 seconds on the clock. We settle in for the oncoming onslaught. Notorious does the right thing, acts like it is 1854 at the Battle of Balaclava during the Crimean War and they are the English Light Brigade Calvary. That would make us the Russians. Game.

*Zen Note – hats off to Ryan and the Notorious camp for making Sunday their 3rd pro event in and a 10th place finish.

VS ML Kings

We had done our homework on Kings. They had beat Houston Heat the day before after losing to Notorious so we wanted to understand the adjustment. One thing that was immediately noticeable when studying their tape were their guns off the break. We would plan to adjust for that. We noticed one other minor adjustment they had made and from their we planned on how to counter with our own small adjustment.

First point we wanted to give a slightly different look to throw them off from their scouting us. We knew that Carter liked to go to the snake corner, round it and crawl up to the snake. We take the snake and the center for three reasons: one, we use the center to shoot Carter and two, have the safety valve of having a snake asset in place to counter him if we miss. The third was to screw with their scouting sheets. I can be petty like that sometimes. It works as planned as we shoot Carter and begin peeling bodies. Kings concede the point 37 seconds in. 1-0 Canes

We get to see those solid guns of the Kings on the break next point as they shoot one and then we get a minor. So a fast 5 on 2 for the kings who answer and close the point out. Tied 1-1.

We pull back to base but with a D side rabbit. It appears the Kings had the same breakout but not the same goal. We lose one on the break but Pate gets into the snake. Pate’s presence seems to draw a lot of guns (all of them?). Pate misses two opportunities which we talked about after and he laughed…well, he didn’t laugh but if you know Pate… Kings filter to first D side wedge and it appears they are looking to try and lock the field up. Daniel Camp gets the memo and joins Pate in the snake since the Kings are so focused on Pate. We pinch out the D side attacker making it a 4 on 4. The inset wedge player for Kings decides there are plenty of guns to contain snake so he fills out into the dorito 2 in an effort to plug that hole. Pate wins the gunfight against Woodley who was in the snake can and proceeds to wrap and trap the god. Pate sneaks another one in on Kings’ home player. Barry tries to get crafty but Daniel had anticipated the maneuver. Danimal had moved to the inside of Pate and posted up for the cross shot and lands it. Kings concede to save time on clock. 2-1 Canes.

The Kings are sticking with the game plan they used to beat Heat. So we put a gun for snake runner and plan on matching him. We get the shot on the King’s snake player and have it to our own with two players. Nic can stay dorito way, Daniel is in there with him and can control wire, Britt is in wedge to control center and any late fill attempts… now we let the Kings run into guns. Charlie recognizes what we are up to and smartly concedes the point. 3-1 Canes

We are up two points with just under 5 minutes on the clock. Plenty of time and not necessary for anything too desperate from the Kings yet. But this layout on the break is like playing rock, paper, scissors. We decide to spread the field, dig in like an Alabama tick, and hope to catch the King’s push. The Kings take the snake and the center. Kyle Barry loses a gun fight dorito side and takes an early walk. I was not upset about that. We pick up on the center and start shooting the bounce. Sure enough, one of them finds a home on Woodley’s pack. Minor penalty goes up and we are now up bodies 5 on 2. Unfortunately, Ridgel gets team killed going to assassinate the last two and Pate finally allows that mini cake to get too small. One of the last two Kings takes a walk. As the last King tries to push through the guns of Bell and Camp, Mike Brown shows good situational awareness and just goes and gets the buzzer. 4-1 Canes.

Both of us get 5 out alive. The Kings cleverly filter Woodley from home under the gun to the snake after taking the snake corner and putting the wedge in play. Woodley is joined by another King (Calleja maybe?) but as soon as that happens we shoot their Wedge over watch. We give them one back as Stu takes the walk shortly after. Then Woodley and Calleja put together a smart push and just start stacking my guys. 4-2 with approximately 50 seconds left.

We know the push is coming snake way so we get guns up on it and it pays off. We get the one and the secondary snake fill as well. We had discussed prior to this point that, if we had the body advantage at 20 seconds, lets go and try to get that point to better our spread. Stuart and Pate finish off the last and Ryan Williamson flies in to get the point. A well executed match. We didn’t have to show too much, we got away with a fun play on the first point, and now we are feeling it.

VS Heat

This is the match we were looking forward to. Heat has got the best of us 3 out of the last 4 meetings and we wanted them to know we are getting better and better with each lesson. We knew we had made Sunday so it was time to reach into our bag of tricks and show the paintball world why we are here. We had a completely different strategic approach for this game based off being able to scout them for 3 matches. We saw some things we wanted to exploit and we would get the opportunity. But as always, whenever you are playing Heat, you are playing some of the best to ever play the game. So we would have to execute at a higher level than we had been. But the Canes are dangerous when we are having fun and we were in a really good mood. That, and if you had scouted us for three matches, you didn’t see too much.

The first point Heat does what we thought they would do. We make a stack audible and shoot Federov off the break. They went short snake way but we didn’t. We go straight to the 50 and wrap but keep pressure on the interior. That generates another kill from Heat’s back center. We pick up Tyler on the fill out to snake can and Connor Kelley gets the minor to finish the point. That’s what we wanted to do. We wanted to set the pace, bloody the nose a little bit, impose our will. 1-0 Canes

The next point both teams mirror each other up and we both shoot a player out of the back center. We know we have to keep the pressure and keep paint in the air early. We end up shooting Conner Kelley giving us the 4 on 3 advantage. We were in complete control now. Heat’s center juice box has to contain D side. Chad George is now dominated by two snake side guns, and Federov is dominated by two D side guns. Then we make a blunder. Daniel sees the opportunity to feed the snake and really put Heat on their heels. But this doesn’t get communicated to Pate who starts a rope on Chad as Daniel launches. That rope finds the side of Daniel’s head. Yes… I met both Daniel and Pate at the net for that one 😉 But Britt makes up for it by shooting Chad George as he tries to sneak his way in the snake. Federov then tries to go coast to coast on his own back line and eats one. We are now in a 3 on 1 scenario and I’m expecting Todd to blow the horn any second. And he does. 2-0 Canes

We decide now is the time to give Heat a special look. I wish I could take credit for it but Stu is the one that suggested hitting the gas. And I will always listen to my guys when they are feeling it. And man did the initial execution of the play look pretty. We kill two on the break but lose one. Heat owns the first baby dorito, the snake can and the god bunker. But we have two in the snake with support and the juice box with eyes on D side for containment (or so we thought). Obviously, it would have been stronger had we not lost the body but still, we are set up. We set the trap, and Harmon takes the cheese and gets shot by Nic. However, while this is happening, Captain America, Ryan Moorehead is moving down the D side. Stuart makes a tactical retreat and over slides the bunker. Ryan gets a shot in on him. But Chad George saw the cheese that killed his teammate and says to himself, I want some of that cheese too and gets clipped as well. Now it’s a 3 on 1 with Moorehead on our side of the field. Nic starts moving for the buzzer. Todd Martinez knows the deal and concedes the point with just under 5 minutes left. 3-0 Canes.

Now we are really feeling it. But we know from practice, you can score points in less than 30 seconds (Diesel had done this to us – fastest we did was 38 seconds). And Heat was about to give it one hell of try. As Matty Marshall likes to say, they are known for stealing matches. We match up and trade center players. The only issue is, our snake containment was who we lost on the break…and we didn’t change jobs fast enough. Heat has this really good balanced attack and they show it on this point. Heat gets into the snake and Federov presses the issue D side. Daniel takes the walk allowing Federov to press further. He continues to press and closes out the point shooting out snake can and Home after we lost D side corner. 3-1 Canes

With 2:19 left on the clock, and down by 2, Heat will more than likely risk two assets. Being ahead, we decide to risk one asset and get guns up. Both teams kill one on the break but Heat makes the snake. But then we lose our D side attacker. 4 on 3. We get another back. 3 on 3. Heat starts the push and the guys are holding. Pew pew pew! Bodies are dropping everywhere! Its a 2 on 2! Daniel shoots Chad George but Tyler Harmon shoots Drew.

Now before I say anything further, I want you the reader to know I was standing dead even with Daniel Camp in the pit. There is a ref on the base line looking towards me and Daniel. So the ref and I both had good views. There was a second ref who was in position as well just off corner.

Daniel transitions to the inside of his bunker as Tyler tries to bunker him. The exchange is BANG BANG! We are talking micro seconds. The two refs ON THE FIELD call it a mutual. No point. 3-1 Canes.

Or so we thought…

The Head Ref listens to a dead player (Tyler) as he walks off the field complaining. We are already in the pit drawing up the next play. Damage and Dynasty are coming back on the field for their next point. The Damage/Dynasty point starts. We are a minute into the Damage/Dynasty match and we have just completed drawing up our next play when Ultimate Ref Jason Trosen taps me on the shoulder and says, “Mike, the head ref has overturned the call on the field. You guys get a major and will be playing with three.” I plead the case that the refs were in position to see that it was bang bang. How can the Head ref, who is in a camera stand just off center of the field, see through the bunker (can) on how the exchange went down? Jason says he will review the tape but that it has to be “indisputable” to overturn the Head Refs call. So we prepare a play with 3 guys and a play with 5 guys. Jason reviews it and says my players gun was down and we will be starting with 3… it is what it is.

If they can play reindeer games, so can we. My guys come up with a clever ploy as a little “poke in the eye” of the establishment. At 25 seconds, two of my guys start to run on the field with their gear saying, “They over turned it!” with absolutely no intention of stepping in bounds or breaking the 50. This panics Heat, and they call a time out. We were giggling a bit. Talk about icing the kicker… Ultimately, we get a good laugh out of it and that’s about it. Heat launches the power play. We make our spots and start to wheel and deal. We get 1 and then …another. It’s looking good but then a hopper hit gets us the minor letting Heat close out with 35 seconds left.

We know you can win a point on this layout quickly. As I stated earlier, our fastest clocked at practice was 38 seconds. So we keep those plays ready. And were was the litmus test opportunity. The full send works but it turns out you need about 37 seconds (there was only 35 left). So 2 seconds short on winning that point.

I remember thinking…we are already Sunday club bound. And we have overcome a lot of adversity to get here. You’re Todd Martinez and you look around at that stable of talent in your pit… and you are probably telling yourself, you win this scenario 7, maybe 8 times out of 10? You like those odds. So you’re probably going to get your 5 out alive in a pocket, maybe risk one asset but lean on your gun-fighting to win the day. And I would agree that is probably the right call. But we are the New Orleans Hurricanes and we know that you know that we know you know this. “They will never see it coming. These guys don’t have to fight every day like we do. They fight to win paintball games. We fight to live, to eat, to put food on the table! We are not the same. Lets show them.” I didn’t really say that but I felt it inside…Kinda. And isn’t that what this world has become? All feelings based or some stuff like that? Anyway, I digress…

We throw Britt Simpson into Dorito 2 on the break and Nic Rippel into the snake, we get two guns up at home, and take the snake side can. Heat goes short snake side with god, snake can, two at home, and a rabbit out to D corner who quickly takes the 2nd dorito. Our statistics were right again. The stage is set. I knew if we survived the break we would win. And we did. They shoot Stuart out of the center but before they can call the kill, we shoot Conner out of the god and Nic wraps the 50 snake to shoot Tyler Harmon in the face. 4 on 3 advantage to us. Federov sneaks a ball onto Britt making it a 3 on 3. But with Nic on their side of the snake, Daniel Camp sneaks up into the snake as well and catches Federov napping. This frees Pate up to take ground through the dorito side center cut. Pate shoots Dizon in the snake can leaving Mishka by himself in the juice box. Pate launches drawing Mishka’s gun but Pate misses. Daniel launches forcing Mishka to contend with him allowing Nic to give Mishka a winning back message. We were all excited and I let it go this time. I even joined in.

We were now undefeated in prelims for the second time in our pro careers, had won our bracket for the third time (Chicago ’22, Lonestar, and this event), and had made our 3rd Sunday in a row this season (5 total out of 8 events). We were feeling good, had met two goals for the event, and were within striking distance of another goal for the year. But we would need to do some homework, get some rest, and be at the field early to scout the winner of the wildcard match featuring Damage/Revo.

I was confident Damage was going to beat Revo. But NRG Elite had caught the boys from Florida a little flat footed and Revo has proven they can be a spoiler in the past. But not this time. It was sheer dominance from the Damage camp. We watched Damage’s loss to Dynasty and cross referenced that against what we watched them do against Revo. With that data, we felt very good going into the match as we felt there were some opportunities in Damage’s breakouts we could exploit to take better position, and to win that “scramble” on the break.

VS Damage

First point we knew Damage would go short. We also felt confident we would make the snake. We double the gun snake way and break snake. We get our kill on the snake can, place an asset to keep Keith out of the snake, and Nic Ripple goes straight to the 50 snake looking to wrap and trap. Phase 1 complete. Phase 2 is to get Daniel in the snake with Nic. We know we can sneak Mike Brown out to the corner and get a small push that way as well. Damage has the god bunker, home, inset dorito, and a dorito corner who quickly makes dorito 1. Daniel joins Nic within the first 40 seconds of the point, Mike Brown has already snuck out and eventually gets to dorito 2, Stu has the cut between god and snake, and Drew has doritos. The guys are executing pretty flawlessly. We are now set up to pressure and squeeze Damage all within the first minute and a half. Then, at almost 4 minutes in, Nic gets clipped hopping. This is not the end of the world though. It’s a 4 on 4 and we still own position. Mike Brown is now in dorito 3 and gets a shot in on Keith. But it bounces… Jason Edwards gets out of home and into the snake can and Keith decides now’s the time to get out of Dodge and into the snake. Stuart re-positions into snake can to support Daniel. Jason counters and fills the snake corner. The next exchange to go down is between Daniel and Keith. Personally, I felt as if Daniel got the best of Keith but it is what it is. Mutual exchange in the snake. 3 on 3. Stuart reads the situation and takes the snake 50 but didn’t see Jason Edwards move to the 1st snake brick nor does he hear Mike Brown calling it. Jason gets the drop on Stu quickly followed by Mike Brown catching a ball as well. Six and a half minutes into the point, I concede it. We should have won that point. We all knew it. I think Damage knew it too. But their gun fighting skills mixed with our mistakes snatched that one away from us. Still plenty of paintball left to play. 0-1 Damage.

Damage recognizes they don’t want us in the snake early and in order to ensure that doesn’t happen, they put three guns shooting that way. Rainey in the pocket, Jason from home, and I’m pretty sure their center juice box was shooting that way too. This successfully chews up our snake side. With over 8 minutes on the clock and only being down by 1, I’m going to give my remaining 3 at least a minute to a minute and a half to pull something off. Especially since Stu starts pressing the issue D side. But they get a shot in on one of my guys leaving us in a 2 on 5. I concede the point at just under 7. Time to take a deep breath and regroup. 0-2 Damage.

Point three was another point we should have had in the bag. We’re pretty sure Damage is going to get guns up, make primaries and lock it down. And for the most part, we call it right. We get Britt into the inset wedge and Nic out to the snake corner. They peel Aaron Pate off which is an issue for the game plan but not the end of the world, especially since we shoot Keith in our first engagement. 4 on 4 but I see Chad round that dorito corner. Luckily, he posts up at the first dorito. Nic takes the snake but Rainey makes a good move to the snake corner. We catch Rainey getting a bit sloppy. 4 on 3 advantage us. I’m feeling confident we are going to win this point. Jason Edwards makes his way out to the snake corner while he still has Chad in the dorito 1 and a dorito corner. Britt gets outside to dorito 2, Drew gets behind Nic in snake can and Stu gets over dorito way with Britt. Good, we are positioning correctly to bully Jason. Britt and Stu have pressed the action dorito side and Britt gets a kill on Jason in the corner. Outstanding. 4 on 2 our favor, let’s close as a team. But then I hear it. We have the kill count wrong. It’s kill 3 but my guys are calling kill 2. This is not good, especially for us and the clock. And then Britt loses a gun fight. We still have Nic and Drew in the snake and Stu to keep the two Damage players in front of him honest. But then we force the issue snake way and Nic gets picked up. 2 on 2, Stu sees the seam and launches but his timing is just off as Damage turns just in time to pick him up and he takes no one with him. Drew tries. I concede. 0-3 Damage.

We’ve been here before. We know how to do this. We know what has to happen, we know the deal. With just over 3 minutes and 3 points needed to win, we have the play and we know we will get away with it at least once. We need to win in no more than a minute 10. We know Damage is confident with a lock down. We get two guns up on Keith and get the kill then flood the snake side with assets and use one gun D side as we are confident Chad will hole up at dorito corner on the cross (he actually went inset dorito which was even better). Nic gets to their side of the snake and goes to work. His first victim is home. Stu, whose one gun is D side containment, filters to center 50 to continue his containment but this also put himself in position for a launch if necessary. He knows that center juice box is the hold up and trades his body for it. Camp is now with Nic and launches to get the last two. Drew Bell cruises in to hit the buzzer. We took approximately 20-25 seconds more than I would have liked. But a point is a point and we can work with it. 1-3 Damage.

We go back to our first play. We get the kill on Rainey again and Nic goes straight to the 50 snake. But Chad gets to the dorito 2. I should have anticipated that and that’s on me. That cross shot shuts down any center push and has a great bounce shot into the snake. And sure enough, he catches Stu on the center push. Nic makes a great shot on Keith Brown. I’m watching the clock figuring we have to win in the next 10 seconds to give ourselves a shot to tie. Drew backs up Nic in an attempt to bully a gun and get another body. They shoot the home just as we lose Britt on the d side making it a 2 on 2. At this point it is around 20 seconds or so and its for pride. A valiant effort by Nic and Drew but Damage survives as the clock hits zero.

Congratulations to Damage. What an absolutely gritty and determined event for them. They fought tooth and nail all event and showed us what it takes to win on Sunday. Thank you for the lesson gentlemen. Well done. Hats off to that team. As I was apt to say in the booth while commentating on the semis, “Incredible”.

Jocko Willink says that, “When a team takes ownership of its problems, the problem gets solved. It is true on the battlefield, it is true in business, and it is true in life.” And he is absolutely, 100% correct. This is the root of the Hurricanes success. Our camaraderie isn’t by accident. It’s our culture. We have a strong sense of trust, accountability, and togetherness with each other and when it comes to the team’s goals, we make sure we are all on the same page and in sync before we take the first step. I’ve said it 100 times and I will say it 1000 more, I’m lucky to be part of this team. They deserve credit for their hard work and determination. I ask for 150%, they give me 200. And I love them for it.

To finish where we started this blog, there is a saying, “The largest room in the world is the room for improvement”. We have walked through several of those rooms and will continue to open door after door. We ARE improving. Every event is a new lesson, and we pay attention to those lessons. We are students of the game and we are learning at an exponential rate. We win as a team and we learn as a team. Again, proud of my guys composure and discipline this event. But we recognize we need a little more. So we are going to go find it, learn it, grow from it, and be better for it. See everyone in Chicago.

Be water, my friends.




The Evolution of Zen Coaching

I believe it was Thomas Sowell (the economist) who said, “The beauty of doing nothing is that you can do it perfectly.  Only when you do something is it difficult to do without mistakes. Therefore, people who criticize can feel both intellectually and morally superior.”

Ain’t it the truth?

Marcus Aurelius said, “You have power over your mind, not outside events. Realize this and you will find strength.”

Facts

Aristotle said, “We are what we repeatedly do”.

Amen.

In order to achieve excellence, we have to create good habits.  Good habits alleviate chaos in our lives. The goal is consistency… doing things every day to recognize potential. Now hang in there, I am getting to a point.

I see so many bad habits out there among players, but none are more debilitating and crushing than those with the wrong mental attitude.  Unfortunately, it is more prevalent than we probably realize. Changing a player’s mentality and behavior is not very easy once they reach a certain point. 

Listen carefully, becoming good at paintball doesn’t happen “naturally” or overnight. 

If I have said it once, I have said it 1 million times.  The mind is the weapon…

And the body is the ammunition.

Jacob Searight is an excellent example of brains and physicality

If you are constantly feeding your brain with good data and taking care of yourself physically, you are more prone to succeed in something that requires you to think while being physical… say something like paintball. 

I have talked about motivation a lot here at Zen but I have come to believe that this is only part of the equation… and it is the weakest part.  The strongest part of the equation is discipline.  When you can develop the right habits that lead to improvement, no matter how repetitive or routine it may seem, but you stick with it, that is discipline, and it will lead you to where you want to be. I get it, discipline can be tough for some.  There are, often, internal and external factors that make things difficult. Sure. We all struggle with SOMETHING.  But I wouldn’t look at it as a personal failure. At least, not always. We will all have setbacks.  But if you do encounter a set back or worse, several, then I would suggest changing your approach to becoming more disciplined. I would try to create discipline in myself through “smaller wins”. Build to it, with smaller more manageable goals. Then build upon those. See, it isn’t you who are necessarily failing to be disciplined… it is your tactics, your strategy to said goal. Make sense?

I have found that the key to creating a lasting habit is to ensure I “like” it. I have to enjoy something about it. What benefit and enjoyment do I, or rather, will I get from this new habit? That should be my focus. And I need to make sure that the benefit encompasses the whole process, otherwise I have all but ensured failure. Wanting to do something and actually doing it are not the same. Wanting to succeed at something and continuing to do the things required for success are not the same thing. Wanting alone will not create the habit much less allow for it to endure.

Bruce Lee taught, “Absorb what is useful, discard what is useless and add what is specifically your own”

The brain learns best through small, repeated measures set in the right environment.

How many of you are familiar with the S.A.I.D. or “SAID” Principle?  It is an Acronym for “Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demands”.  I stumbled across it recently during some research in sports psychology.  The concept is very simple.  It essentially teaches that to improve in a specific sport, you should practice the specific skills and “moves” used in that sport.  But in its more complex version, it is all about adaptation!  Adaptation does not and will not happen in a vacuum.  Adaptation occurs in a response to a specific stimulus or demand imposed by the environment.  I know, this is getting deep.  But this is what I tried to explain to Matty Marshall about teams becoming more academic… why they are becoming more competitive.  Why the Canes were so successful our Pro Rookie season. I just didn’t articulate it well.       

As a coach, I need to leverage my assets (players) to the best of their abilities.  But I also need to create continuous improvement in them and ensure that it is obtained regularly.  How do I do this?  When I have said in the past that my role as a coach is to put my players in positions to succeed, that means playing them in a role that meets their skill set to a specific layout.  And from there, I begin the individualization of their training!

If one wants to replicate success in PAINTBALL, then coaches must train their players beyond the fundamentals and physicality of the sport.  They must be taught the game.  That includes the tactical and the strategic for each and every layout within the parameters of TEAM while emphasizing their individual strengths and abilities… We have to train the brain! 

Most coaches are caught up in execution and not the WHY we do the execution.  They want to teach “when you see this, you do this.” If A then B paintball (a good concept).  This is a speed factor, an efficiency creator… but it is only half of the potential for making great players.  However, the more we teach, explain, understand the concept behind the why, that process of learning will get faster each time, with each layout.  Their own cognition will take over and their individual understanding will assert itself leading to even greater efficiency and use of time.

Asking and understanding why.

Too many coaches simply teach the fundamental aspects of our sports without emphasizing why.  Sure, a lot of it is self-explanatory.  And don’t get me wrong, the foundation of our sport is certainly important.  But too many take this as the only concept required.  Anyone can pick up a clipboard, call a line with your 5 most talented guys, and ask them to win.  That is not coaching.  That is managing. Great job PB manager.  But what are you doing to continue their growth, to make them elite?  Think about it, if that were the way, there would be a lot more elite players in each division.  But there isn’t… so, in my opinion, it is about the individualized attention and growth plan that must be discovered and then implemented.

Do I know how to do this every time with every player?  Absolutely not.  This is something that will require a lot of trial and error.  And something I started personally about 6 years ago and I am still navigating.

I am a firm believer in training as a TEAM but affirming and supporting that effort with individualized concepts.  None of this is a science.  But we can all be scientists by experimenting and studying results.

I guess my whole point is, as a coach, we need to look at our players in a much more holistic manner.  Their diet, their workouts, their READING, their home life, ALL OF IT… instead of just the one size fits all approach to practice in our sport. They will be better for it, you will be better for it, and the team will be better for it. Who knows, you might be surprised and start winning at a lot more than paintball.

Be Water My Friends,

Zen

Dream Team

Recently I posted a photo of the New Orleans Hurricanes on social media where I quoted Andrew Carnegie.  He said, “Teamwork is the ability to work together toward a common vision. The ability to direct individual accomplishments toward organizational objectives. It is the fuel that allows common people to attain uncommon results.”

Unfortunately, we don’t see this type of thought embraced very often, especially in paintball. 

Everyone was smiling inside this huddle because we had just overcome a tough scenario. Because “team”

This past weekend I was asked by a player for advice on how to eventually go pro.  I have been asked this question quite frequently as of late, in one form or another.  A simple enough question really, but one that has numerous answers depending on who you are speaking with all while also weighing heavily on your circumstances and a myriad of other variables… and my answer is no different. Heck, I just got here.

Here are two more quotes for you from tried and true champions:

 “Talent wins games, but teamwork and intelligence win championships.” – Michael Jordan.

 “Individual commitment to a group effort—that is what makes a team work, a company work, a society work, a civilization work.” – Vince Lombardi

Sensing a theme here?

Big thank you to Cory Andrews of APP Photography

Teamwork is what usually leads to success in most endeavors.  Yes, there are exceptions but let’s talk paintball specifically.  Again, yes exceptions, but one would be considered irrational if you thought any successful paintball team achieved success and maintained said success through the simple efforts of individual players.

Teamwork has to have a strong foundation.  That foundation has to be trust.  Personal ambition can be, in some cases, admirable but it can and routinely does poison teams.  The team that removes ego, the team that puts the organization as a whole above the individual will usually survive longer and do better.  Most successful teams have figured out that if everyone “buys in”, has the same goals and are moving toward those goals together in a unified front, then it becomes a matter of when, not if, success will arrive. 

The strength of any team is made up of the individual members. The “weakest link” and all that… but you can overcome that “weakest link” bit if everyone recognizes that the strength of each member IS the team.  There is strength in unity which should lead to no weak links if everyone contributes in their own unique way.

I did an interview recently with Matty Marshall and he inquired about what we attributed the success of the New Orleans Hurricanes to so far.  The question intrigued me at first only because I realized he understood our goals.  To the outsider looking in, we are not successful.  In our first three events as a professional team, we have only made Sunday once.  We are currently sitting in 10th place for the series (and will probably drop to 12th based off what I see happening in Sacramento).  We have played 13 professional matches and only won 6 of them.  We were outscored at the Sunshine State 15 to 19, did better in Dallas 23 to 21, and fell again in Philly 13/17 for a total of 51 scored and 57 scored against. Hardly a success, right?  So why did Matty assume we were seeing success? 

There are a couple of reasons really.  One, because he is familiar with the goals we set for ourselves at the beginning of the season as well as at each event. We are  meeting those goals as a first year rookie pro team.  And two, by most accounts, we aren’t doing too bad regarding the annals of history. But that still remains to be seen as there are still 2 events left (Chicago and Cup).

But I would be totally remiss if I didn’t state that the success is garnered from the guys being a close knit group, who understand the importance of “team”.  It is ingrained in our culture. And that’s a very important aspect. 

To me, teamwork is absolutely essential and quite honestly, the beauty of our sport.  When you have five guys out there, working as one, communicating, selfless, and in a flow state, man… it is something to behold. Even better if you are one of the 5. But if you missed or flew past the word “selfless” in that sentence, then you missed the most important piece of it.

Team, Squad, Crew, Tribe, Clan… Family

Whether most realize it or not, teamwork is the true definition of efficiency.  After all, 9 or 10 brains are better than 1.  I can’t remember who said it, but it struck me as so very true.  What does efficiency really boil down to other than doing something better than what was already being done?  And that is where we are seeing our success:  in the process of creating efficiencies.  The process of learning, the process of repetition, the process of trusting one another, the process of pushing one another, the process of trying to be just a little better than we were the day before. And yes, the process of losing and winning.

When you make that individual commitment to the team goal, you flip a switch that turns on accountability and selflessness.  When everyone has that light on, man that stuff will shine bright. It will drown out all the noise and hyper focus everyone on what needs to be done, what has to be done.

Yes, it takes time and make no mistake, we have been at this for a while.  But I believe we have kept the focus on the right things.  We always start with fundamentals.  We don’t lapse on those drills.  We don’t phone it in. We don’t go through the motions. We make sure it is productive. There are no attitudes on this team.  If we see something that needs to be mentioned, it gets said.  And no one gets offended (no betas here).

What is my role in all of that?  Easy.  Keep them focused on the important things that paint the big picture.  I recognize the things that may take us off course, that distract from what we really need to be doing, and kill them. I identify opportunities for my guys, push them to be their best, remove them from their comfort zones only to make that uncomfortable place comfortable and then develop strategic based concepts which allow my tacticians (the guys) to implement, make better, and execute.

Old and busted

So how did we get here and where is this all going?  Well, we started with a question from a player this past weekend… how do I become better/pro.

Besides getting out there every weekend and practicing the fundamentals and playing as much as you can?  Be something a team can’t do without.  Find a job or role that no one wants to do and get so good at it, you are the only name they think of when it has to get done. That.. and one other thing…

Be a great teammate.

Be water my friends,

Zen

Rec them? Darn near killed ’em!

Recently, I was able to get out on the paintball field with friends for several hours of recreational fun. Here’s what I absolutely love about weekends like this besides the fact I get to play; there is no expectation save one – have a good time. I get to cut up with my friends and play ball. It always reminds me of why I started playing this sport in the first place. The sheer fun and joy one finds playing paintball with your friends. Sure, the competitiveness and excitement of the sport were aspects that drew me to the game but the comradery within those aspects is what has ultimately kept me in the game. Us against them and no matter what happens, we would still win out because, well… we were us and they were them.

I wasn’t there to coach, teach, help (this always happens anyway), or scout new talent (although I do keep an eye on certain players development and take notice of newer players who show promise), run a practice, learn a layout, or drill. Nope, I was there to have fun with my friends. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy doing all those things. And it doesn’t mean if I am asked for help that I won’t. As a matter of fact, I am happy to do so. I am opinionated after all (and that’s all it is, my opinion – my personal view on something). But something my friends constantly rag me about is this; when I am at the field where the goal is to play and have fun, I need to focus on THAT. Unfortunately, I can’t help myself sometimes when I see something that could help someone improve. I want to help. This is not ego. This is genuine interest in helping those who enjoy the game get better at it.

This weekend was more of the same I’m afraid. I sincerely tried to stay mission focused which was having fun. But I did find myself helping on a few fronts. However, I still had a great time!
Interestingly enough, my friends and I chose to have fun during a layout weekend for the upcoming SPL (Social Paintball League). A few teams had shown up to run points in preparation for the event happening the 9th and 10th of April at Big Indian Paintball in Perry Georgia (this past weekend at the time of this writing).

*Zen note – Big shout out to the two teams who were at this practice and focused on the event. My boys on I-75 and Dangerous Toys. The I75 crew won their division in both 3 man and 5 man and the Dangerous Toys placed both 2nd and 3rd in the D6 3 man division!

Our plan was simple. Step out on the field and play against competitive teams even though we hadn’t played together much at all in the last few years. We told ourselves, nothing matters, go forward, attack! and have fun. And we did. It was a blast and we laughed a lot.

But, as usual, I noticed some things and felt inspired to comment on them this month. Three things actually:

  1. Pace – team practices that involve more than two teams are always a little screwy because different teams (hopefully) have set different goals or have different ways of approaching scrimmages. One thing that shouldn’t be different is the pace. Practices that involve multiple teams should be organized prior to the first point run. Establish or agree to a rotation or system that will get everyone playing time. Have someone or a couple of people in charge of keeping the games/points moving. This person (people) needs to understand clock management and be familiar with or have a contact he can communicate with for each team. The point is to get as many points and looks in as humanly possible. Have a game plan, show up prepared with what you want to accomplish, preload paint, get paint and air after every point, and be ready on the box when called.

    Now, there are several subsets about pace we can go into here. Especially dependent on the amount of teams present. Three teams is easy… even four. Practices with more than that can be a cluster but not totally unmanageable. All in all, have a steady pace. 3-5 minutes between points is good. Anything greater than that is boarding on unacceptable.
  2. After point discussion – What is the purpose of scrimmaging teams at a layout practice? If you said to learn the field, you are only partially correct (about a 1/3rd correct actually). But I digress. After you play a point, we need to ask ourselves a few questions:

    What did we do well?
    What did we do poorly/what could we improve?
    What did we learn?
    How do we remedy?

    If you are not having these discussions (or something to this extent) and having them efficiently then you’re missing the whole point of the practice. If all you’re asking is did anyone see the move you made or how you “blasted that fool”, you’re wasting valuable time and energy. Come together as a team or under the coach and have a discussion about what happened and why and then understand what you will try to accomplish with the next point.
  3. Learning the field – this technically is part of number 2 above. If at the end of the day, there is a player that still doesn’t have an understanding or confidence on how to approach certain in-game scenarios, you have wasted your time (or need to consider some other options surrounding that player). The point is to see situations, scenarios, and the like and to understand what needs to happen when you see them at the event. A road map to success so to speak. By the end of practice, players should have a relatively good understanding of how the field plays and what obstacles they will face at the event.

    I am often amazed when I watch a player face the same situation time and time again on the field and they continue to make the same mistake. I actually did this during my time on the field at the recent rec day I was speaking about at the beginning of this blog… I got caught by a blind shot… twice. After that second time, I didn’t get caught again… as a matter of fact, I used that aspect to my advantage.

    The point of all this is simple – manage your time effectively at practice. Not everyone has access to a private field or a closed practice. If you find yourself at a layout practice the weekend before the event with a bunch of teams, have a plan and insist on efficiency. Get your reps. You will be glad you did (usually).

    Be water my friends.

Season Prep Part 2 (be Positive)

The first event of the NXL 2022 season is just four weeks away. Building off last month’s blog, I have continued to received even more questions about my personal thoughts on

1. How well I think we will do

2. How we will prepare

3. What we think about the draw

All legitimate questions and I am happy to answer them to my best ability one on one. However, let me answer as best I can right here:

1 – Simply, we will do our best. And that can mean a lot of things. We have a tough road ahead of us on several fronts. And we will meet it with the same vigor and aggression as before and then some.

2 – We will prepare as we always have: thorough study of layout, apply our strengths to said layout, and develop what we feel is the best approach to game-planning and execution dependent on layout/opponent.

3 – It’s a tough one. Say what you will about recent events, Impact still has tremendous talent. Their depth is substantial and they will have an axe to grind. Reports have Russian Legion back to full strength. That’s scary as hell for any team in the division. We know AC Diesel well and those cats are hungry. They were a semi pro team just 3 years ago and are a top 10 team already. And you can never look past Uprising. They have plenty of weapons on that team. They were a top 10 team as recently as 2019. So yeah, baptism by fire is coming.


It’s interesting because no one really cared when we were Semi-Pro. As a matter of fact, there is a large faction of NXL pro fans who still don’t know we are a professional team. That’s on us. We haven’t done a very good job with our brand. That will change. And it will change because we have decided we need to make that change. Us… the New Orleans Hurricanes. We decided to do better. So we are doing our best to up our exposure. We have decided as a team to take a positive approach to this new endeavor. And this is where we build off last months blog.

Last month we discussed developing SMART goals and how they can lend to creating a positive mental attitude… this month we will talk about what that positive mental attitude looks like from my perspective and how I think others should create or incorporate into their routine and, in essence, practice it.

Competitive Paintball teams devote hours upon hours of practice to honing their skills. At least, serious ones do. The physical aspect of our game requires a lot of training. Talent within that aspect of the game can take players pretty far. But only SO far. There needs to be several other components such as communication, teamwork, chemistry… But something that is occasionally overlooked and required (in my opinion) to maximize a player’s (and team’s) true potential is having a positive mental attitude.

Do you believe any elite players in any sport are successful because they hate what they are doing or have a negative perception of themselves, their team, or their capabilities? Positivity can be that force multiplier to get you where you want or need to be. Physical and mental energy, whether low or high, can and will affect how well you ultimately perform. So why wouldn’t we take note of it?

I believe in a positive culture but one that is ruled by accountability. When you have a negative Nancy culture that’s all finger pointing, no affirmation, dissing each other, and a coach yelling… well… yeah, sometimes that environment can create growth but only for so long. Negativity can promote a drive, sure… but not for the right reasons usually.

Being optimistic is not necessarily the same as being positive but it certainly can help.
I try to build my guys up and I encourage each and everyone of them to do the same. Now, to be clear, should a mistake be made, and made again… and again… well, this is where the accountability “fail-safe” kicks in. Positivity is obviously not working… now it’s time for tough love. But be honest in that tough love and be sincere.

So what are some of the things that affect us in a negative way? Besides the obvious, like injuries, making the wrong read, giving bad data/communication during a game that costs you the point or match… think there is anything else?

For me, I sometimes get adversely affected by something I read or perhaps a family friend’s troubles (or my own) or all sorts of awful things present in the outside world (of paintball). But I have taught myself to recognize that and try not to bring that into my “other world”. I don’t always succeed and when I don’t, I make sure my guys know. And they usually know too before I say something.

One of the ways I use to defeat the negative creep is by (stand by for something that is going to sound crazy in 3…2…1…) talking to myself. I’ll turn my thoughts around and pump myself up by reminding myself of who I am, where I come from, why I am here in the first place. Or sometimes it is as simple as saying one of my family’s traditional Christian prayers. You can make one of your own – create a “catch phrase” or maybe words from one of your favorite songs, hell, listen to the damn thing if you have one of those little boxes with earphones that plays music (phones can do that now too, yeah?). When I’m feeling particularity spicy, I’ll reach back into the old man’s repertoire… I have been quoting Conan the Barbarian for quite awhile (movie came out in 84 I believe):

“Conan, what is best in life?”
“To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and to hear the lamentation of their women!”

Of course, sometimes just seeing my teammates lifts me up. Just takes that one to realize the camaraderie you have with these men.

Anyway, I find this an effective way to manage any negativity that can get in the way of me doing my job well.

As a matter of fact, research has shown that this technique not only helps reduce anxiety but effectively improves performance. Constant practice of this over a long period of time was shown to be more effective than just physical training alone. Start incorporating it into your training. You will be glad you did.

How many of you have used visualization? I talk about this all the time and tell my guys before each match to play the game in their heads. Visualize what you will see, what you will do, how you will do it, what it will all look like. I use to do this all the time when I was on the field. Still do actually… that is when I find myself on the field which is rare these days. Something I hope to remedy.

A positive attitude can not only help you stay motivated but help you meet any anxiety you may have head on. Listen, it doesn’t happen overnight. As with all change, it can take time. But I promise having a good attitude vs a bad one will positively affect your performance. Create that new mindset and see where it takes you.

Thinking positively before an upcoming and important match is a necessity to grow whether you win, lose, or draw. Self-affirmations have to be there. You have to believe you belong there. You have to believe you earned it. And that is what we will do in preparation for the first NXL event.

We did earn it. We do belong here. And we are going to do our best to be a positive force in the NXL pro division.

I value positive mental attitudes. I currently have 10 under me. All 10 know how to pump themselves up. All 10 know how to control their demeanor. All 10 have confidence in themselves and each other. And all 10 trust me and each other. That’s powerful stuff. But that is only half the battle. It will require us executing, playing as a team, communicating, hitting our shots… but you gotta start somewhere. You have to believe that you can do all those things. And if things go south? Okay – what did we learn? We know where we stand and we will just have to work harder and harder…

Failure is not a catastrophic end. At least not in this sport. But it can be a powerful motivator… as long as you stay positive about it.

Be water my friends.

The Case of The Windy City

2020 was a pooch. But there was one thing that came out of that season that I remember with great affection. The New Orleans Hurricanes won the coveted World Cup of paintball in the Semi Pro division. I call it the “covid cup” because we were neck deep in the pandemic and only had 2 events that year. 19 teams showed up in the semi pro division for that event, down 6 teams from the Vegas event, including Camp Factory (TonTons). The team went 4-0 in the prelims outscoring our opponents 22-7 which included Annapolis A team (4-2) and the New England Hurricanes (5-0). On Sunday, we would outscore our next 3 opponents 17-8 winning against TCP machine (5-4 in quarters) Indianapolis Mutiny (6-3 in Semis) and the finals match against the New Jersey Jesters (6-1).

2nd place

I was aware of the legacy I had joined. The history of the N.O. Canes (Formerly the Gulf Coast Hurricanes) is quite storied. Believe it or not, the team is 5 years old. There is a pedigree there that some may not be familiar with. Players from Rock-It-Kids, Warped Army, Chicago Aftershock, Birmingham PRIME, and St. Louis Avalanche.

They began their career by entering the semi pro division in 2016. With most of the core players having Division 1 and some Professional experience, they believed they would be competitive. However, they would be served a big slice of humble pie. They were quickly shown to be unprepared finishing in the back of the pack the first few events. When the 2016 NXL World Cup came around, the team decided (appropriately) to play Division 2. Once again, they received another rude awakening. They were beaten in their first match Sunday morning finishing the event in 11th place (I know as my team Birmingham Prime took 2nd at the event in D2). It became painfully obvious they had a lot of work to do. This was hands down THE BEST THING that could have happened to the organization at the time. Sometimes in life, you have to fail in order to learn how to succeed.

After that first season, they re-evaluated their goals, swallowed their pride, and began the 2017 season in Division 2 of the NXL. They put in the work and we were rewarded with their first win on the national stage. They took 1st Place in the 2017 NXL Chicago Open. Interesting fact, this was my official introduction to the ‘Canes as I was invited down for a 2 day clinic prior to the event. I will never forget it because team members Matt Hamilton and Drew Bell showed me a great time. BTW – at Chicago – the ‘Canes would knock my team out in the Ochos! Some “thank you”…

World Cup Champions 2020

Once again, they decided to stay in Division 2 for the 2018 season and ended up taking 2nd at Las Vegas, 5th at the Texas Open and rounded out the season with a 1st Place finish at World Cup.

The team would rebrand themselves as the New Orleans Hurricanes for future marketing and set their sights on the NXL’s Pro Division. They made the bump up to Semi-Pro in 2019. They would finish the season in 3rd place for the series. The year consisted of a 3rd place in Vegas, 5th Place in Texas, 3rd place in Philadelphia, an 11th place stumble in Chicago, and 6th place at World Cup. Not how they envisioned the season, but they knew if they wanted to win they would have to work even harder. And maybe add a little something extra (hint hint wink wink zen something or another).

When they first asked me to coach, I remember thinking, “Why?” These guys already had a winning program. But the more I talked and became familiar with this team, the more I realized we were very similar in approach and philosophy. Compatible systems you might say.

The team knows that, in order to be successful, you must have a culture that emphasizes several positive components. Components such as motivation, persistence, and determination. However, in the New Orleans Hurricane camp, those components are tempered with even more important aspects such as integrity, honor, sacrifice, and generosity. It isn’t just about winning. It is also about the pursuit of bettering ourselves and those around us, on and off the field and achieving the results in a way we can be proud of. Benjamin Franklin said that “Well done is better than well said.” In other words, don’t tell us, show us. We couldn’t agree more. Every member is held to a standard and there is no deviation. Steel sharpens steel and we lift each other up and hold one another accountable. Each member brings strengths that will ultimately lead us to our organizational objectives. Those objectives will be met with hard work, resilience, and faith in one another. And that is our mission – to succeed. But not just in the traditional understanding with wins on the field. We want to have a positive impact on our sport and in our communities. To represent our friends, families, and our sponsors in a positive,meaningful way and to make them proud.

FACTS

“WINNING” is a mindset and a process. Not a RESULT. Not achieving a result is no excuse to abandon the PROCESS of getting better. Achieving a goal is not an excuse to become complacent and abandon the mindset that helped you get there. We expect all members to want to excel all the time. There is never an END to this process.

And that is why I coach the New Orleans Hurricanes. I love these guys and this program. You will not find a more blue collar, hard working team. And I am proud to be a part of such a program. You don’t find a group of guys like this often. It’s quite rare really. I’ve succeeded in doing it twice now. I know I am blessed.

With that said, let’s take a look at this season so far. We already talked about World Cup 2020… lets start with 2021.

Sunshine State Major
We went 4-0 in the prelims outscoring our opponents 24-6 (mercy ruling 3 of our 4 opponents). We won our quarter final match with a controlled game and then stumbled in the semis and finals. We lost both matches in overtime to Crisis and Mutiny. A 4th place finish but a top 4 finish none the less. Goal 1 secured. I guess I should mention we set the goal of finishing within the top 4 of every event at the beginning of the season.

Click the youtube link for a recap of the Sunshine State Open

Mid Atlantic Major
This event was tough but not because of the team. This was failed leadership on my part. I take full responsibility for the teams performance at this event. Whether it was my play calling, personnel calling, my scouting, whatever, no excuses, I messed up on a few fronts and I own that. However, this event is what would ultimately set the table for Chicago… but I digress. The team went 3-1 during the prelims dropping a match to a pretty dominant looking Annapolis A-team (6-3). 20 points scored by us versus 15 points scored by our opponents is not the stat a coach wants to wake up to on Sunday. But there we were, another Sunday (our 12th straight). We would pull the New England Hurricanes for the Ochos match first thing that morning. The matches in Semi pro are 15 minutes long… We won by mercy rule 10-5. That’s approximately a minute per point. A Helluva match. We would go on to mercy the Noobies in quarters 6-1. We were feeling confident as we had finally (or so we thought) found our groove on this layout. We would get mercy ruled for the first time 7-2 by Annapolis A-team who would go on to win the event. We would then turn around and, once again, lose by 1 point to the great off the break shooting of Arsenal taking our second 4th place for the season.

Click the youtube link for a recap of the Mid Atlantic Open

The Windy City Major
The table was now set. The 3rd event of the season was a make or break moment for us. And we were determined to put in the work. The first issue came when three of my players had life events that could not be avoided. Work, family, and health all come first in our program. These three players all had a life occurrence that would keep them from participating in this event. I wasn’t too concerned since the team does have depth and had no doubt they would step up. We would still need a little help snake way though, just to be safe. So I called an old friend from my past to help us out (shout out to Aaron Barnes). We were in a good spot.

Then Hurricane Ida decided to make land fall on August 29th… the Sunday before the layout drop. $95 billion in damages, homes and businesses destroyed, flooding, power outages… The New Orleans Hurricanes are based out of Slidell, LA just 30 miles north of New Orleans. As you can imagine, the team was adversely affected. We couldn’t reach some of our teammates for a few days due to phones being down. Talk about nerve-racking. The following weekend, we had to move practice north and into Alabama. Unfortunately, but certainly understandably, only 5 players would make that practice. And on top of that, the new pick up for the event, Aaron Barnes, contracted Covid keeping him from practice as well. So we did what we could to make the best out of the weekend and up the learning curve. I pushed those guys hard. The second layout weekend we had all the roster we would have for the event. So we got after it, playing a tremendous amount of points.

Hurricane Ida was a *@#$%

Day 1 (Friday)
We would meet our old friends the New Jersey Jesters in the first match winning by mercy rule 5-0. We hadn’t had a chance to scout them so it was a matter of doing our thing. We were hitting our shots, executing well, slow steady pressure, and finishing strong with good communication mid game. A good start.

The next match would be against a familiar team. I coached CEP to their Division 2 series win in 2019. I am close friends with those cats and now they were being coached by a good friend who knows my process pretty well. Shout out to I-75 Alex Hicks. Something no one knew outside of our team was that player Jacob Searight, one of our two D-side attackers for this layout, couldn’t play this match. He is getting his PHD/Doctorate or whatever brainy smart stuff he does and had to be on a zoom call for a peer review! Crazy… I know. We would win the match 4-2 but not after another catastrophe… my other 1/attacker on the D-side, Britt Simpson, would dislocate his knee during the 3rd point and had to be carried off the field. *Zen note – even though he was in excruciating pain, he would not let the ref pull him. Instead, he communicated with his 2 (Drew Bell) and they worked together to get Drew down the field to finish and win the point. Shout out to my player and friend Justin Bailey for stepping up and playing the spot like a boss.

Hurricane Ida… Covid…work/family obligations… and now this injury. It appeared the world was against us. But all it did was stiffen our resolve. We got Britt taken care of and had a pretty serious team meeting that night. (Searight’s zoom call went well BTW!) Truth be told, I didn’t sleep. I just kept playing the next day’s games in my head. We had a good plan and we would have one more opportunity to scout our next two opponents to see if/how they adjusted.

Day 2 (Saturday)
We would play Utah Bro Army the next morning. We had paid attention to their approach to the field and after watching their first match that morning, we were confident our previous scouting was sound and our game plan would prevail. And it did. Another mercy rule win (7-2). Shout out to those cats. Great group of guys.

And there they were… standing in front of us for the last prelim match. The team that gave us a 4th place finish at the first event of the season. We had beat them at World Cup, they had beat us at the Sunshine State Major. This was going to be epic to say the least. We knew we could win the break but we needed to connect cross field to win this match. We did both. We ended up beating Indianapolis Mutiny via mercy rule 5-0.

After day 2 we were sitting at 4-0 in the 1st seed with a 4.25 point margin. As luck would have it, by beating Mutiny 5-0, it knocked our friends the Jesters into the 8th seed. So they would be our first match Sunday morning. They would be prepared this time. But so would we. Anyone who thought differently would be considered, at least by me, daft.

Spine time


Day 3 (Sunday)
Headed into Sunday morning and preparing for the match against the Jesters, we knew they were going to adapt. Unfortunately, there is only so many ways you could adapt on this layout. Being familiar with their squad and using statistical analysis, we called it. Those guys don’t quit, they are tenacious and I think that is what I love about them. We would mercy them 6-1.

We knew we would get the winner of the Noobies (4th place in series at this time) and the NE Hurricanes (3rd place in series at this time) match (I believe they were the 4th and 5th seed respectively). We watched the match intently. It was back and forth with the Noobies prevailing 4-3.

This was it. We were not walking away playing for 3rd and 4th again. And it was a knife fight. Back and forth, point for point. Headed into the final point of regulation time, the score is 3-3 with a little over a minute left. We make a last 20 second push, get the last kill, and hit the buzzer. I saw it, the team saw it, several people in the crowd saw it… we hit the buzzer with 1 second left. The ref gives our player a check and the thumbs up. YEAH! WE DID IT! MISSION ACCOMPLISHED! SEMI FINAL SLUMP ENDED! WOO-HOO!

But wait… I get called over to the scorekeepers booth. The scorekeeper is overruling the call saying that no, by his clock, time had expired just as my player hit the buzzer. I didn’t even bother arguing or wasting any energy, Suit up boys, overtime. The call is the call and I respected it.

You’re not going to believe this but that point went all 5 minutes. But in the last 20 seconds it became a 3-1 advantage for the Noobies! It looked like the slump wasn’t over after all! But Jacob Searight got crafty and scored two quick kills, protected the buzzer, and traded with the last player. Wow! I picked a bad time to quite sniffin’ glue… (that’s a joke. Go watch the movie Airplane!)

So now it comes down to a 1v1 first blood win with 1 minute on the clock. Drew Bell steps up for the team, rolled his gun, got dominance, and even with refs following/chasing him the entire time bird-dogging (in their defense, they thought they saw some spray but he was clean) kept his opponent in the home bunker and on the defensive (in that players defense, I think he was exhausted), marched down the field, onto his opponents side of the field, and scored the elimination. Finals bound.

Never doubted it.

We are now headed to the finals. I think we finished the semi final match at 1:20pm? We were scheduled to play the finals against Blast Camp at 3:40 but they were running behind. We had scouted Blast Camp early knowing we may very well meet them and with good reason. That team has shown tremendous growth over the past two seasons. They took 7th place last year at World Cup losing to Crisis in the quarters. At the Sunshine State Major, they didn’t make it out of prelims placing 13th. They would turn around and right the ship at the Mid Atlantic NXL event taking 2nd place losing to Annapolis A team by 1. But then the Astra event happened. And they showed a new vigor that has propelled them to the forefront of a lot of paintball discussions about up and comers. And rightly so. Their strength is in their communication. It is top notch.

We knew going in we would have to be perfect. And we weren’t. We weren’t hitting our on the break shots (they were). We hadn’t drawn a penalty all weekend but got 3 in this match. And, just like Philly, our gas tanks ran out. We dug a hole we couldn’t get out of. But we never quit.

And we won’t.

World Cup is looming large. God willing, we will be back to full strength for that event. Preparation for the New Orleans Hurricanes started immediately after the loss to Blastcamp (By the way, congratulations to them, they played almost flawlessly).

Regardless of what came before or of what is yet to come, what matters most is how we choose to respond to what is in front of us…World Cup. There is no way this team lays down. You can most assuredly bet we will fight and finish strong. After all, starting strong is great… but finishing strong is epic. There will be those who say we don’t deserve it for this reason or that. I don’t care what they say. What they think is arbitrary. We are the only team that has been in the top 4 all three events. We have beat the top teams consistently. And we have done it against a lot of adversity. So, love us or hate us, I promise you this, we are here to play, we are here to win. John Dresser came into the pit just before the finals match. He looked at me and my old face and Britt on Crutches… then looked over our shoulders at the rest of the team and said, “Ya’ll aren’t spring chickens.” No, we are not. And that’s why you should respect us and our game. “Beware an old man in a young man’s game, he is there for a reason.” And if you pull us at Cup… you damn well better bring your best game because we hit above our weight class.

Be water my friends

My Personal Seinfeld

Recent conversations this past month (not all paintball related) led me to consider writing about Intrinsic Motivation. This is when our behavior is driven by internal rewards, not external. Then a few other conversations steered me towards the topic of “righting the ship” (see what I did there?) and how to fix a struggling program or player. Then the idea of having another guest blogger popped up because a recent conversation at a wedding brought up an interesting topic. I guess I should be thankful I have 3 potential topics lined up. And I am.

Then I realized… this blog really has evolved over the years from a “this is what my paintball team is doing and why” to a “how to” from a coaching perspective and eventually to what it is today – an amalgamation of my personal psychological, tactical, strategic, and leadership experiences and approaches applied to the sport of tournament paintball.

And that can get tiring.

So what I want to talk about this month is… nothing.

The old man and his dog

That’s right, the topic will be nothing specific. Rather this will be more of a steam of thought (nothing new there) about how I personally overcome obstacles and what led me to write this blog in the first place (in a broad sense). If you read that last line and are still reading… thank you. Hopefully, what follows can help someone.

Life can and usually is, filled with missed opportunities. Usually from fear of failure, the unknown, injury, embarrassment… But what is fear really? Fear is essentially a signal of danger, a threat, or motivational conflict. It manifests psychologically and physiologically (that’s mentally and physically). There is a lot of it out in the world today, much of it unnecessary. So I thought maybe we might touch on a microcosm of it this month.

I started writing this Blog (albeit under a different title and perspective) in 2010. There was no fear of doing so because it was just going to be a chronicle of a team I was playing with and I was going to have help. But as it evolved and Zen was born, there came doubts. And that was okay. It has turned into something that, based off feedback, has helped a few people out. In addition to that, it has helped me as an individual grow in a path I didn’t think was ever planned or possible for that matter. And that all happened because of how I approach my fears.

Fear only exists in our minds. We ultimately control it and it’s effects on us. I had no real idea what I was doing when I stepped into this world of blogging, coaching, and clinics. All I had was my experiences and ideas. Would they be good enough? Would I write something that was perceived as “stupid”? Would anyone care? Am I sure I want to put myself, my thoughts, and my ways out into public domain for consumption and scrutiny?

Of course those thoughts arose… but they didn’t stop me. I never really thought about it until now. But I understand it more now than ever.

I think my background in the martial arts helped prepare me for the endeavor as it did for many things. My martial background taught me numerous things about fear, limitations, and more. As I trained (when I was younger), I overcame many fears and doubts. I got faster, stronger, more confident. Ultimately, it taught me that getting out of my comfort zone was where the greatest growth was found and accomplished. For the record, that fear was accompanied by lots of injury and pain. And if those components don’t teach you something, nothing will.

Becoming a fighter is not easy just like becoming a good paintball player isn’t. All the same principles apply in both worlds in order to meet success. Whether it is being physically fit, having a solid foundation in fundamentals, training, you name it, both require a lot of WORK. If you are adverse to hard work or like to take short cuts, you will not succeed and if you do succeed, you either have an incredible natural born and God given talent… or you cheated.

My work outs are a lot different than when I was younger. But don’t stop.

As my confidence grew when I was younger, so did my willingness to step out of my comfort zones. The willingness to learn, the willingness to understand differing thoughts and perspectives, all helped me recognize there are a myriad of ways to train and prepare. I was exposed to different styles, philosophies, and training methods. All strong in one way or the other but many with flaws too.

I also began to push my own limits. Where were they? Where is my envelope? This also opened my eyes to believe the only limit… is you/me.

The key to all of this, besides having an open mind, was adaptability. If you are so rigid, so set in your way that only your way will suffice, you’re missing out. If you want to stay with what you know and what is familiar, that’s fear rearing its head. It’s “safe”. Change can manifest growth… or, it could prove that maybe your way IS the right way… or it can IMPROVE your way… this is adaptability. And it is paramount to being a successful PB player (just like being a fighter).

Nobody is perfect. But should we settle for where we are? Do you strive to be the best you can be? Whether it is being a better PB player, accountant, Dad, friend, ditch digger… I’m constantly learning. As a matter of fact, I love watching lower divisional players. Why? Because you can learn from them too! And they ask great questions that we all need to be reminded of from time to time. Remember your fears and how you overcame them when first starting PB? When you meet a new player, do you empathize with them when they ask you a question? Do you recognize your opportunity to help them? Well… do ya?

Identifying opportunities in others


We shouldn’t be afraid to expose our weaknesses. Once we recognize them, accept them, we can work on them. And, if done correctly, turn them into strengths. But guess what that takes? Yep… hard work. Like all things in life, you have to commit. You want to fix something in your game? Put yourself in scenarios that will make you face your weaknesses or shore up your strengths so much they compensate. Trust me, when you are no longer afraid to make mistakes or deal with your weaknesses, you will improve.

Be water my friends

Boss Level

You may not believe this but I am an extraordinarily competitive person. However, I don’t show it very often. And when I do, it isn’t usually or immediately apparent. I internalize it mostly. But let me be clear… I’m not necessarily competing with someone opposite me. I’m competing against myself. How many of you are like that?

“But don’t you want to win?!” Yes, certainly… and with integrity thank you. But there is something else you need to know. I want you to read this very carefully and let it sink in…because it took me a long time to realize as well.

It’s not about winning for me. It’s about preparing my guys, helping them see the vision to playing a layout or a specific team, trusting one another, building each other up, creating strong character, confidence, and giving 100% at all times. And if done well (which is the GOAL), then winning is usually the result. Does that make sense? Winning IS A RESULT. Read that again and again and again until you understand. Yes, I will make mistakes in the preparation, the vision, trust, etc. (that’s what makes winners BTW…prep among other things).

We have a finite amount of time on this earth. I want to live it well and if I worried about what others thought of me all the time, especially in paintball, I would be miserable and damn sure wouldn’t be writing this blog. I don’t let “the noise of others’ opinions” drown out my own inner voice (I made that mistake once…okay…several times… but I have learned from it and moved on). That’s the part you don’t see or hear. If you did hear my “inner voice”, you might try and sell it to Hollywood as a horror film or the first 20 minutes of a Full Metal Jacket reboot.

It would be dishonest of me to say this concept isn’t sometimes pushed to the limit. That happened at the most recent NXL event near Philly. No, I am not speaking about the field conditions. Although, if you want a comment on that – we found them manageable – and we used the elements to our advantage on day 1 of play. We decided to play the field a little differently: we noticed one side had a better lane snake way which we leveraged dependent on what side we played. And we used the dust that was kicked up by opponents to let us know where they were… then changed things up on Day 2. But I digress.

No, this was more about the first match Sunday morning. Our Ocho match on Sunday morning at 8:40am versus the New England Hurricanes. We have met the other Canes 3 times in the past. First was in Chicago 2019 (prior to my arrival as coach) where we tied them 3-3. We met them again at World Cup 2020 on Day 1 besting them 5-0. And finally, this latest match in Philly where we beat them 10-5. Do the math on the last one since we play 15 minute matches… 60 second average per point. It was epic! Don’t let the score fool you. It was back and forth until the last 6 minutes. Now, internally, I wanted to DESTROY them. I wanted there to be no doubt about when these teams meet, we have the upper hand. I kept a calm demeanor, coached my guys, they executed, and we got the win. For the record, the “guys up north” are a great team and there is a lot of history there.

First match on Sunday. See my face?

Now… where am I going with this?

How many of you know what “extrinsic incentive” is? It’s a psychology term. “Extrinsic” simply means the motivation to act or behave a certain way is decided or rather created by external means as opposed to internal means. In other words, you act or behave a certain way because you will be rewarded for said behavior.

Competing is fun but make no mistake… I believe winning is more fun. I don’t like to lose but I have been on the receiving end of the latter outcome more than I can count. Someone has to lose. We have seen it throughout the history of organized competitions. From the first Olympic Games to today’s organized pro and collegiate sports. The NXL is no exception. But how come we keep seeing the same teams performing well almost every event? The top 10 professional teams in paintball haven’t changed much in the last 5 years, would you agree? Sure, there is the occasional outliers each event and the last 2 years have seen some shake ups… but why?

I promise to bring these two streams of thought together… the Hurricanes match and the top Pro’s consistency… hang in there. First, a quick detour that should lend to the journey:

Paintball players/teams don’t have to be high level athletes. They don’t have to have the best gas tank or the best snap or guns on the break. No, I have coached teams who had none of those things but still saw success. Why? Because they gave great effort. They gave their absolute best that day and at practice. They competed well when it was important. Remember? RESULT…

I’m not yelling. I am simply projecting so everyone can hear me.

Competing at the highest levels(Pro and Semi Pro) in our sport however requires much more than just hard work and preparation. The teams that always make it deep into Sunday will have done much more than just practiced hard.
They play every game as if it is the championship, as if they are up against their toughest opponent, every point. They are giving 101%. They put in the EXTRA work mentally and physically. But it is the mental game they win every time before every match.

See, not every player is always 100% mentally or physically. But the BEST, the ELITE, well… it doesn’t matter if they are or not. Why? Because even if they are only 75% physically, they are going to give all 100% of that 75% in that point, in that match. That’s the difference. No one can give 100% all the time. But they can give 100% of what they have when it matters.

How many of you before a game realize you aren’t 100% and just figure, whatever happens happens? You’re injured or feeling sick…your girlfriend is mad at you…whatever. Because of these things you subconsciously give up before you even step on the field. But what many of you don’t realize is that you don’t have to be 100% to beat your opponent. That’s right, you don’t have to be your best to win. You just need to play better than your opponent. So, to increase the likelihood of winning, you must learn to play your best with what you have. As I stated above, if you’re only at 75%, play at the full 75%. I think you will find that it will be enough to meet the goal. And if not, well, you shouldn’t have any regrets. You literally gave your best.

And that is how simple it is most of the time. Those who play best win. And that was my thought headed into the Hurricanes match. We chose a few things we were doing well at and stuck to them. We didn’t get complicated, we kept it simple. We capitalized on their chinks in their armor by leveraging our strengths. We went with what we did well, executed the game plan, and it prevailed.

Proud to be a Cane

Look, it is simple but it isn’t easy. You shouldn’t expect competing at the higher levels to be. Hell, that’s the whole point! Yes, there will be matches against teams in your division where you will ask yourself, why are they playing this division? But don’t let those matches fool you. Every match is against Heat, or Impact, or X Factor, or Russian Legion, or Dynasty (choose your top pro team). Every game is your tournament life on the line.

The point of sports is to challenge ourselves. It should be hard, it should be difficult. Tell me… if you destroy a team that you outclass in every way, how do you usually feel afterwards? Accomplished? Perhaps entitled? Doubtful (and if you do… you probably suck and that was the only match you won.)

Winning the mental game is a big deal. Before that match Sunday morning at 8:40am, myself and the team had already won in our minds. Because there are two games we play. The mental game and the actual match. If you haven’t won the former, you won’t stand a chance winning the latter. And that, my friends, is the key. Given equal capabilities and the same playing field, whoever wins the mental game will usually win the real game.

Remember, stay focused from the moment you wake up on game day to the moment you leave the field to go eat. Keep your mind and body in the game from start to finish and don’t let up. Give it your all and I think you will find it is usually enough. And when it isn’t? That’s okay… try harder next time.


Be water my friends