Great question! I’m not sure it says anything about the competency of the coaches in a setting like this, but it is pretty telling about their coaching style and the type of practices they’ve Typically accustomed to running.
Kafka’s National Team practices were way more uptempo and competitive.
I immediately googled Hancock Whitney and was so disappointed to discover it's a bank and not some southern aristocrat who revolutionized some aspect of cotton farming, served six terms in the state Senate, fought against segregation and had a drink named after himself. I say, I say, just a bank.
Ha!! I spent the entire week hoping that it was some sort of abolitionist. There were even moments when I was staring at the scoreboard/logo and thinking that maybe it was an air conditioning company or something. But, a bank ... How disappointing!
Does the pace of practice imply anything about the coaches? (I ask with hope as a Giants fan that Mike Kafka is competently coaching young players.)
Great question! I’m not sure it says anything about the competency of the coaches in a setting like this, but it is pretty telling about their coaching style and the type of practices they’ve Typically accustomed to running.
Kafka’s National Team practices were way more uptempo and competitive.
I immediately googled Hancock Whitney and was so disappointed to discover it's a bank and not some southern aristocrat who revolutionized some aspect of cotton farming, served six terms in the state Senate, fought against segregation and had a drink named after himself. I say, I say, just a bank.
Ha!! I spent the entire week hoping that it was some sort of abolitionist. There were even moments when I was staring at the scoreboard/logo and thinking that maybe it was an air conditioning company or something. But, a bank ... How disappointing!