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7 great variations to improve acceleration… 1. Lateral half-kneeling sprints 2. Loaded/resisted sled sprints 3. Band release walkout sprints 4. Drop back sprints 5. Med ball sprints 6. Med ball drop back sprints 7. Three point stance sprints

35,744 views • 6 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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Video generated by Seedance 2.0 on Lart AI Try it there 👇🏻 Prompt 10-Second Cinematic Timeline Prompt — "The Train Escape" 0–2s | The Robbery A crowded 19th-century train station during golden hour. A masked thief steals a mysterious black briefcase and runs toward a departing steam train. Crowds scatter in panic. Cinematic lighting, realistic motion, dramatic atmosphere. Camera: Wide establishing shot → handheld chase shot. --- 2–4s | The Pursuit A fearless young female detective wearing a black trench coat sprints after the thief through the crowded platform, jumping over luggage carts and avoiding passengers. Steam fills the air as the train begins moving. Dialogue: "Stop! Drop the case!" Camera: Dynamic tracking shot with cinematic motion blur. --- 4–6s | The Leap The thief jumps onto the moving steam train. The detective runs at full speed and leaps onto the train moments before it leaves the station. Sparks fly from the tracks. Camera: Slow-motion side tracking shot transitioning to normal speed. --- 6–8s | The Fight On the roof of the speeding train, the detective and thief engage in an intense hand-to-hand fight. Strong wind blows their clothes as steam and sparks surround them. Mountains rush past in the background. Camera: Fast cinematic action shots with dramatic close-ups. --- 8–10s | The Victory The detective defeats the thief, recovers the briefcase, and stands on top of the speeding train as the sun sets behind distant mountains. The thief lies defeated. Camera: Epic wide aerial shot slowly pulling back. Atmosphere: Heroic, cinematic, action movie ending, ultra-realistic, 4K.

Stacy Lee 🇺🇸

22,899 views • 19 days ago

Bogoljub Markovic Film + Notes 🧵 Best thing I saw: Loved his feel for the game. He was so good out of the short roll. Always knew where everyone on the floor was and made quick decisions with the ball. Biggest Concern: He was just throw around like a doll down low. When hedging screens he had such a hard time getting back to his man and being in good position to box out. Even when in good position, he still got thrown around pretty easily. Offense: - Extremely high IQ - Quick decision maker - his shot is super smooth / high release and quick trigger - Really solid feel when catching in the short roll / but hard to get him in good position on the roll bc of him not being big enough to hold guys behind him - great feel for spacing on and off ball - really solid ball handling for his size / had some good moments getting a rebound and pushing the ball up the floor - a lot better finishing through traffic than actually finishing through contact - not really going to be able to create his own shot at any point / it’s either catch and shoot or catch pump fake and drive or catch and finish Defense - Hard for him to get back in position when hedging screens because of the weight - ^ piggy backing off this, thought he had the foot speed and length to hang with guys on the perimeter (Mega Superbet just had really small guards so they had to run this drop to keep them out of bad switches) - is not a big that’s going to excel in drop coverage - wouldn’t classify him as a 5. He’s definitely a 4 - doesn’t offer much rim protection at all - doesn’t offer much help side defense - was bullied down low fighting for rebounds / even when in position he was easily pushed out the way

Bucks Breakdown

137,145 views • 1 year ago

I have not seen enough about the decision from Mike Vrabel and Tim Kelly to go for 2 down by 8 last night. Here’s why I loved it: 1) NFL teams this season have been successful on 55% of two-point conversion attempts. The odds were in the Titans’ favor. 2) Will Levis was dealing in the 2nd half. 3) Titans still had all three timeouts and the two-minute warning. 4) Miami struggled to move the ball on offense all night. Their three scoring drives went for 12, 7, and 59 yards. 5) If successful on the two-point conversion, a stop on defense and a TD wins the game. If unsuccessful, you can still send it to OT. 6) Titans offense marched down the field, scored the TD to make it a one possession game and essentially told Miami, “we are going for two because we know you cannot stop us right now.” The odds are in your favor. It’s a good mathematical decision. You want to psych out an opposing offense? Give them the ball knowing they need to run the clock out, or you are going to have a chance to WIN the game, not send it to overtime. They saw what your offense just did to their defense. They saw your QB on the sideline screaming and hyping everyone up. Cutting the lead to six put WAY more pressure on the Dolphins offense. You want to hype up your defense? Put them back on the field knowing your offense just did their job. Put them back on the field knowing a stop and a TD wins it. At that point, they aren’t in the mindset of “we need a stop to have a chance to go to OT.” They are thinking, “let’s go out here, get a stop, and give our offense a chance to WIN.” There’s a fundamental difference in playing to WIN and playing NOT to LOSE. This was a decision by a coaching staff that was playing to WIN. Brilliant game by Vrabel and Kelly. Brilliant execution late in the game by the offense and the defense. Completely out-coached one of the best offensive minds in the game. #Titans

Jake!

36,853 views • 2 years ago

Seedance 2.0 on Yapper Prompt: Shot on ALEXA 65mm anamorphic lens. Photorealistic cinematic quality. Aspect ratio 2.39:1 widescreen. Teal shadows, warm amber highlights. Film grain. Tokyo neon dusk. Lens flares, motion blur. Dolby Vision HDR. 0.0s–2.5s: Extreme low-angle tracking shot — a hyper-focused street female food chef sprints at impossible speed through a neon-lit Tokyo alley, clutching a steaming bowl of ramen. Crisp apron flapping, sleeves rolled, sneakers splashing through puddles. Camera shakes aggressively behind them. Steam trails like smoke. Neon signs streak across frame. Their face — intense, locked-in, slightly unhinged determination. 2.6s–5.0s: Whip-pan — they shoulder-check a stack of plastic crates. TIME REMAP: slow-motion chaos — vegetables, bowls, and chopsticks explode into the air. Broth ripples in perfect cinematic detail without spilling. They tilt the bowl mid-run, saving every drop. Quick glance back, dead serious. Continue sprint. 5.1s–7.5s: Drone shot — they leap across narrow alley gaps between buildings. SLOW MOTION: steam spirals upward into neon light. A cat jumps out of the way. Laundry lines ripple. They casually garnish the ramen mid-air with one hand — flawless precision. 7.6s–10.0s: 360° orbital shot — they slide across the hood of a parked car, spin, land clean. One sandal nearly slips off but is caught mid-motion. They adjust grip on the bowl, completely composed. 10.1s–13.0s: First-person POV — a small ramen shop door rushes forward. SMASH CUT: door slams open. Steam floods the frame. They step in, perfectly calm now. Place the bowl gently on the counter. Slow push-in. Low-angle shot. They look at the customer: “Still hot.” Customer sits in stunned silence as steam rises dramatically.

Zara

18,228 views • 3 months ago

You think you know where the football is going. You don't. Made with Seedance 2.0 on BudgetPixel AI A rolling ball. A bustling Moroccan souk. A chain of perfect reactions. And an elderly woman who delivers the final shot nobody sees coming. Prompt: Setting: Busy Moroccan souk at golden hour. Terracotta walls, hanging lanterns, spice stalls, bread vendors, copper goods, warm amber sunlight. Joyful, chaotic, heartwarming energy. Arri Alexa 35 look, shallow depth of field, dynamic handheld camera, ultra-fast cuts. CUT 1 (0:00–0:01.5) An elderly tea-shop owner casually rolls a football down a cobblestone alley from outside his shop. CUT 2 (0:01.5–0:03) A young athletic man rounds a corner, spots the ball, and runs onto it. CUT 3 (0:03–0:04.5) He strikes the ball cleanly down the market alley. CUT 4 (0:04.5–0:06) The ball crashes into a spice merchant's display, sending colorful spice clouds into the air. CUT 5 (0:06–0:07.5) A butcher casually flicks the bouncing ball upward with his forearm without stopping work. CUT 6 (0:07.5–0:09) A teenage girl on a bicycle redirects the ball with the back of her hand while riding through a narrow gap. CUT 7 (0:09–0:10.5) An elderly woman lowers her bread basket, plants her cane, and calmly prepares for the incoming ball. Market sounds fade. CUT 8 (0:10.5–0:12.5) She strikes the ball powerfully. Slow-motion tracking follows it flying through golden light. CUT 9 (0:12.5–0:14) The ball smashes into a giant pyramid of clay tagine pots, triggering a spectacular collapse. CUT 10 (0:14–0:15) The elderly woman picks up her basket, turns away, and walks off as the stunned young man watches. Audio: Authentic market ambience, playful rhythmic music building with each pass, near silence before the final kick, triumphant finish during the clay collapse, ending on a single warm note.

Shami

45,832 views • 21 days ago