Annie McDonald is a dual sport athlete at Spire Academy in Geneva, Ohio where she competes in both Track & Field and Basketball. Annie grew up in Santa Barbera, California playing a variety of sports before focusing on basketball and track. McDonald has competed in the Junior Olympics twice, in Javelin, Discus and Shot Put. This past summer, she was selected to play on a basketball team that traveled through Europe.
Joining Annie on this episode are two of her coaches at Spire, Krista Phillips, Girls’ Basketball Head Coach, and Michael Larkin, her throwing coach for Track & Field.
Mike and Annie discuss her journey balancing both basketball and track and field. With a strong foundation in athletics, Annie shares her experiences competing in the Junior Olympics and her recent basketball tour in Europe. Her passion for sports is evident as she highlights the importance of teamwork and the human connections forged through competition. Coaches Krista Phillips and Michael Larkin provide insights into Annie's training and development, emphasizing her impressive work ethic and leadership qualities. Together, they explore the challenges and rewards of being a multi-sport athlete, showcasing Annie's determination to excel in both sports while pursuing her academic goals in marine biology.
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Joe Burke:You by Head Start.
Joe Burke:Basketball.
Annie:Fire would be a good place for me if I wanted to do track and basketball as opposed to just one sport.
Annie:I started talking with some of the admissions people about doing two sports and they were super open to it, the coaches were super open to it and honestly, it just felt like the right move.
Host:Annie McDonald is a dual sport athlete at Spire Academy in Geneva, Ohio where she competes in both track and field and basketball.
Host:Annie grew up in Santa Barbara, California, playing a variety of sports before focusing on basketball and track.
Host:McDonnell has competed in the Junior Olympics twice in the javelin, discus and shot put.
Host:This past summer, she was selected to play on a basketball team that traveled through Europe.
Host:Joining Annie on this episode are two of her coaches at Spire Christa Phillips, girls basketball head coach and Michael Larkin, her throwing coach for track and field.
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Host:Grab a notebook and pen before you listen to this episode with dual sport athlete Annie McDonald and her coaches Christa Phillips and Michael Larkin from Spire Academy.
Host:Hello and welcome to the Whop Heads Podcast.
Host:It's Mike Klinsling here without my co host Jason Sukle tonight, but I am pleased to be joined tonight by three guests.
Host:The star attraction here.
Host:Andy McDonald, two sport athlete at Spire Academy in Geneva, Ohio, and he's a basketball player, as well as track and field, as well as some weightlifting in your pass, as I understand.
Host:So we're going to dive into all those things, and then we are also joined by coaches Michael Larkin and Krista Phillips.
Host:And we're going to talk to Michael and Krista a little bit later on.
Host:We're going to start the conversation here with Annie.
Host:So first of all, Annie, welcome to the hoop Ed spot.
Host:Excited to have you on.
Annie:Thank you.
Annie:I'm excited to be here.
Host:So let's start by going back to when you're a kid.
Host:Not that you're not still a kid, but when you were much younger.
Host:Tell me how you got into sports, athletics.
Host:Who was the driving force behind getting you involved in sports?
Annie:I would definitely say my parents.
Annie:I mean, I always.
Annie:I always was interested in sports, but I probably would have quit somewhere along the line if it weren't for my parents.
Annie:Me and my sister are pretty close in age.
Annie:She's just about two years older than me.
Annie:So we were always doing sports together.
Annie:We pretty much tried every sport growing up and then eventually narrowed it down to our favorites.
Annie:But, yeah, I would definitely say our parents got us into sports from a very young age.
Host:What was the sport that you played when you were younger that you liked the least?
Annie:Oh, probably soccer.
Annie:Yeah, soccer.
Host:No, no offense to soccer coaches out there, but I always feel like a sport where you can't use your hands.
Host:I'm not sure that's.
Host:I'm right there with you, and I didn't play a lot of soccer when I was a kid, but if you can't use your hands, I'm just not sure that that's a sport that I want to spend a lot of.
Host:Spend a lot of time on.
Host:So.
Annie:Wasn't my sport.
Host:I completely understand.
Host:So tell me how basketball and track and field sort of moved to the top of the list for you, and as you started to get more serious about those kind of what you did to continue to improve as both.
Host:Both a track athlete and a basketball player.
Annie:Mm.
Annie:So I feel like track was always, like, the heart of it all.
Annie:Like, there was never any question about whether or not track was gonna be in the picture.
Annie:Like, I always knew track would be, like, there, and it was always, like, it came down to track, basketball, and volleyball.
Annie:Those were my sports.
Annie:And I always kind of thought it would be volleyball.
Annie:I don't know why, but I realized that I just love basketball more.
Annie:And so it was sophomore year when I quit volleyball and just focused on track and basketball.
Annie:And honestly, I wouldn't have it any other way.
Host:So tell me about.
Host:Let's start with the track side of it, and then we'll jump to basketball.
Host:So as you're getting more involved in track as a younger person, what does it look like in terms of figuring out what events you're going to do?
Host:And did you try everything within track?
Host:How do you end up with the events that you end up with?
Annie:I definitely tried everything.
Annie:I think young.
Annie:Like, when you're young doing track, they really, like, put you in everything.
Annie:You know, you don't really have.
Annie:Like, maybe you're good, you're better at one event, but, like, you're really forced to do all the events.
Annie:So, yeah, I.
Annie:I tried everything except for pole vault.
Annie:Um, but, yeah, I guess throwing was always just what I was best at.
Annie:Um, I always did running and jumping on the side.
Annie:Um, I ended up getting injured.
Annie:Long jumping.
Annie:So that was the end of my running and jumping career.
Annie:But, yeah, from a young age, like, I just started out doing all the events.
Annie:I kind of always thought I would be like a heptathlete or a pentathlete or something, but it just.
Annie:Throwing ended up being what I was best at and what I liked the most.
Host:When you first pick up the javelin or you first pick up the shot, is it something that just immediately came natural?
Host:Obviously, there's a ton of technique that you have to develop in order to get to be able to reach your potential.
Host:But when you first pick those up, I think for most kids, I'm guessing that those are pretty unnatural things to be able to do in terms of.
Host:Most kids aren't just in their everyday life throwing something that looks like a javelin or picking up a heavy shot.
Host:So did you.
Host:Did you take to it naturally and then obviously over a course of time, you perfect your technique.
Host:But did it come easy to you when you first picked those things up?
Annie:Yes, it came easy to me, and especially because I was so young.
Annie:Like, it just.
Annie:I was so young, I was able to really, like, get a feel for it early and.
Annie:But also, like, it took a lot of hard work because it's so technical.
Annie:It took a lot of time and patience.
Annie:Like, my dad, he built me and my sister like a shop, put ring in the backyard, and we'd be out there for hours and hours just like, practicing.
Annie:So I would say, yes, it came naturally, but it really took a lot to, like, get to where I am now.
Host:Dad, have any Background in the javelin or the shot.
Host:Did he have any technical expertise that he could share with you, or is he just bringing enthusiasm?
Annie:A little of both.
Annie:He threw in high school, and he became kind of obsessed with it when me and my sister started doing it.
Annie:So he liked.
Annie:He learned, you know, through videos and stuff like that.
Annie:But, yeah, he was.
Annie:He was always there, you know, he was always our biggest, biggest fan and biggest critic.
Host:I think that's a role many parents play, though.
Host:There's no question about that.
Host:All right, let's flip over to the basketball side of it.
Host:Tell me a little bit about your first experiences with basketball.
Host:At what age did you start playing and just how'd you get into the game?
Annie:I started when I was five doing, like, YMCA basketball.
Annie:And it's.
Annie:It's just a fun sport.
Annie:Like, it's always been so fun for me.
Annie:I really feel like it.
Annie:It really.
Annie:I'm able to be, you know, competitive and physical, and that's really fun about it.
Annie:So I think that's what really drew me to it at such a young age.
Annie:Um, and then when I was in, I think, like, seventh grade, I joined this club team, and that's where I met, like, all my best friends.
Annie:You know, it was just like such a family.
Annie:So that team is really what.
Annie:What solidified my love for basketball.
Annie:And I really just.
Annie:Basketball is like the human condition, and I think that's why I love it so much.
Annie:It really.
Annie:I'm really passionate about humanity and.
Annie:And there's nothing quite like a team sport like basketball.
Host:All right, so tell me how.
Host:I love that comment.
Host:I'm going to recommend a book to you in just a second, but tell me about the humanity piece of it.
Host:How does basketball and your participation and how does that represent humanity?
Host:Because I think you're 100% right.
Host:Obviously, there's a lot of different aspects of the game that you can relate to the real world.
Host:Just.
Host:Just tell me your perspective.
Host:Then I'm going to share the title of the book that I think you should read.
Annie:I think just like being such a team sport, you know, like.
Annie:Like, you win together, you lose together.
Annie:You, like, you struggle at practice together, and then you laugh about it later together.
Annie:And even just like, sometimes it can be pretty intense.
Annie:But at the end of the day, like, you're a family and you're going to get through it together.
Annie:And I think that you get so much closer with people when you go through hard things together.
Annie:And so even when we're, like, dying at practice, running or whatever, it Is like, at the end of the day, like, I'm just grateful to be there, having that human experience with my teammates.
Host:Absolutely.
Host:Tell me your favorite memory of playing with that travel team that you talked about, because I know I've had two daughters that have played travel basketball, and I was the coach for both of those teams.
Host:And I know both of my daughters would say that.
Host:Just the memories that they have of playing with those teammates on a travel team where obviously you're going on trips and you're going and staying in hotels and you get a chance to play.
Host:And so just tell me, what's your favorite memory of playing with your travel teams?
Annie:Let me think.
Krista Phillips:This is.
Annie:This is a funny story.
Annie:Once we were at a tournament in la and we all went to Target one night, and we were playing hide and seek.
Annie:We were playing hide and seek in Target, and my best friend Sonia is on that team, and she is not the sharpest tool in the shed.
Annie:And so we were playing hide and seek and she hid inside of, like, the Target toilet paper, like, self, you know, and someone, like some random old guy who wasn't one of us, like, moved the roll of one of the rolls of toilet paper to, like, reveal Sonia, and she didn't know what to do.
Annie:And we still joke about that.
Annie:And it was like six years ago.
Host:That's funny.
Host:That is a good one.
Host:My.
Host:My son, one time they were at a tournament, and I was not present for this.
Host:I was on the trip, but I was not present for it.
Host:But they, him and some teammates grabbed the little carts that you can drive around in the motorized carts that you can drive, like in Walmart that look like little bikes.
Host:And they were.
Host:They were racing around the parking lot, going like two miles an hour, having like a mini Indy 500 in the park in the parking lot.
Host:So there's always.
Host:There's always some hijinks that go on on travel basketball tournaments.
Host:So we talked a little bit about sort of how you went about practicing and improving as a track athlete.
Host:Tell me a little bit about your practice routine back home from a basketball perspective.
Host:How did you work on your game as a basketball player?
Annie:Um, my coach, the coach of that same travel team.
Annie:Over quarantine, we couldn't really do group workouts because we had to, you know, social distance.
Annie:So during quarantine, I started individual training with him.
Annie:And I think that's where I really got most of my skills was from, like, getting such personalized workouts.
Annie:And I really had nothing better to do over quarantine.
Annie:So, like, I was practicing a lot and training, so I think that's where I got most of my skill.
Annie:I definitely owe a lot to that coach.
Annie:And then just over time, just reps on reps, like, I think it was definitely.
Annie:I definitely owe it all to that club team, though, because it was year round, so I really was able to not get rusty during, you know, the off season.
Annie:Yeah.
Host:All right, so I got to give you my book recommendation, before I forget.
Host:So there's a book, it's by David Hollander, who is a professor at New York University, and he wrote a book called How Basketball Can Save the World, and he has 13 principles of the game of basketball that all relate to current events and things in the world.
Host:So it's a great, great book if you love basketball and you love just thinking about how basketball could impact greater society.
Host:It's just a super, super interesting book.
Host:I think anyone who likes basketball would really love it.
Host:When I heard you say basketball is like humanity, it touched a nerve with me because my.
Host:My episode that I did with, with Dave Hollander about his book was probably one of my favorite episodes ever because he and I kind of got to dive into some things, not just about basketball, but how basketball in so many ways.
Host:For a lot of us, it is.
Host:I can never give back to basketball what basketball has given me.
Host:And so that book is.
Host:Is one that had a big impact on me.
Host:So I hope you get a chance to at least take a look at it, because it's a very, very, very good book, and I think you'll.
Host:I think you'll really enjoy it.
Annie:Yeah, that sounds right up my alley.
Host:There we go.
Host:Perfect.
Host:All right, so tell me about the workouts that you would do both with your trainer when you're working by yourself.
Host:What.
Host:What types of things did you like to work on?
Host:Maybe describe your game for the people who are out there listening?
Host:What kind of player are you?
Host:And then what kind of things did you, like, like to work on in your workouts?
Host:When you talk about, you know, developing your skills, what were some of the things that you were working on back then?
Annie:So when I was younger, I was kind of, like bigger and taller than everyone.
Annie:So I was a post player up until high school, so I worked on a lot of post moves.
Annie:A lot of, yeah, post moves and stuff.
Annie:And I didn't really start working on more of, like, my outside game until I got to high school.
Annie:So honestly, I think I benefited from that because I have, like, experience playing the post.
Annie:Not that I think I ever will again.
Annie:But I still have that and I, and I have experience playing the guard.
Annie:So I'm, I'm glad that I have, you know, a diverse background.
Krista Phillips:Now.
Host:You take those little guards down in the post and just post them up.
Host:That's what you gotta do, right?
Annie:Yeah.
Annie:They'll never see it coming.
Host:All right, tell me about the decision to go to Spire.
Host:And for those people who aren't aware, if you haven't read the bio, Annie's from California.
Host:So how does that decision come about?
Host:How do you find out about spire?
Host:Do you come out and visit?
Host:Obviously, I'm assuming at some point you have a discussion with Krista and some of the other coaches on staff at spire.
Host:Just tell me about the decision making process to, to leave home and, and travel all the way across the country to come to Geneva and, and, and be a, be a student athlete at spire.
Annie:Um, so honestly my family has been kind of moving around for the past three years, so I never really felt like I was gonna be, you know, like leaving home necessarily.
Annie:So that part of it wasn't really a concern for me.
Annie:But I found out about Spire.
Annie:My, my older sister went to a track camp here and at the time like she was already committed to going to IMG for her senior year, but she, she thought that Spire would be a good place for me because it's smaller and it's more, you know, they were, they would be more.
Annie:It would be a better place for me if I wanted to do track and basketball as opposed to just one sport.
Annie:So I started talking with some of the like admissions people about doing two sports and they were super open to it, the coaches were super open to it.
Annie:And honestly it just felt like the, the right move.
Host:So tell me a little bit about your day to day and what that looks like in terms of just your participation in both sports and obviously when one's in season versus the other.
Host:And how do you try to balance your athletic responsibilities with your academic responsibilities there at Spire?
Annie:So it's a little tricky because each sport has a set schedule.
Annie:So I'm technically, I have like the basketball schedule so it doesn't necessarily align with the track schedule.
Annie:So every day I go to my three classes and basketball practice and then lift with the basketball team.
Annie:But on Tuesdays and Fridays I have a study hall when track has track practice.
Annie:So I use that study hall to go to track practice.
Annie:So currently I'm only getting two track practices a week.
Annie:But I think that's okay for now.
Annie:It's only preseason and there's only a few other throwers on the team, so I still get a lot of reps, a lot of coaching, so I think it's working out pretty well.
Host:All right, tell me about the basketball experience to this point with Coach Phillips and what you like about it and has it been what you anticipated that it would be coming into it.
Host:What's been the.
Host:What's been the positive aspects of just being a part of the basketball program?
Annie:It's been great.
Annie:It's such a tight knit group of people and we spend so much time together.
Annie:We're getting really close.
Annie:I think also we've really turned a corner in the past couple weeks and we're really starting to find our flow.
Annie:And I've seen a lot of improvement individually and in the team, which is rewarding.
Annie:So I think it's.
Annie:It's been so fun, honestly.
Host:Tell me about making friends and bonding with your teammates, because obviously at a place like Spire, it's not like going to your local high school down the road where there's a bunch of people that have grown up together that know each other.
Host:People are coming in from different parts of the country and building a team together.
Host:But yet a lot of times you come in and maybe you don't know anyone at all, or maybe you just know one or two people, and then all of a sudden, boom, we got to put together this team and bond and make friends.
Host:Tell me what that process has looked like for you and for.
Host:And for the team.
Annie:I mean, we all pretty much clicked right away.
Annie:I don't think that was hard.
Annie:I do think we struggled at the beginning, playing together for the first time, you know, figuring out everyone's strengths and weaknesses and playing to our advantages.
Annie:I do think that was a struggle, but I think we're starting to get to the point where, you know, we're all kind of being a cohesive unit.
Annie:And I think it's.
Annie:That's part of the, like, that's one of the coolest things that everyone's from all over.
Annie:Everyone has a different style of playing and you can put that together and it can be really, really cool.
Joe Burke:Yeah.
Host:To be able to have everybody meld together.
Host:I think it's always one of the things that going back to the basketball is humanity comment.
Host:Right.
Host:It's.
Host:The basketball team is.
Host:Is such an interesting dynamic when you talk about.
Host:Again, it functions best right when everybody knows the role and plays together and shares the ball.
Host:And yet we all know that anybody who's played basketball, that there can.
Host:It's easy.
Host:It's easy within that team concept for people to be selfish and to not necessarily always follow that, that team dynamic that makes basketball so special.
Host:And so it's awesome to hear that you feel like again, not just from a basketball standpoint, but it sounds like from a friendship standpoint as well that you've been able to really navigate that and make it work for you.
Host:How about on the track side, how's it been?
Host:Because obviously as you said, you're not, you're not full time track right now.
Host:You're just kind of a part time track athlete here during basketball season.
Host:So, so what's it been like on the track side?
Host:Sort of with that same idea of making friends and bonding.
Host:Obviously the track dynamic of you as a thrower is slightly different from trying to fit in and make a basketball team cohesive.
Host:But just what's it been like on the track side of it?
Annie:The track team, it's such a supportive group of people.
Annie:Even I think I was a little nervous about that only being a part time for now.
Annie:I was kind of nervous about, you know, not feeling like really part of the team.
Annie:But they are so welcoming, so supportive.
Annie:And we only really have four throwers including me.
Annie:And it's honestly like it doesn't even feel like we're any smaller than, you know, a different throws team maybe because it's so, it's so supportive.
Annie:And I think that's one of my favorite thing about track is that even though you're technically competing against your teammates, it never, it never feels that way.
Annie:It always feels like even if it means they're beating me, like I'm happy to see my teammates succeed.
Host:You know, that's awesome to be able to have that supportive environment.
Host:Right.
Host:The kind of environment that you want to provide for your teammates is the same one that I'm sure that, you know, we all wish that our teammates would provide for us.
Host:Especially when you're talking about an individual sport like track and field and those throwing events.
Host:Right.
Host:And so it's, you know, again you, there's, there's a, there's a team element.
Host:But yet when you go out there and you're throwing, it's just, it's just you, your, your performance is your performance and your teammates performance doesn't affect you in the same way that it does on the basketball floor.
Annie:Yeah.
Host:All right, so let me ask you about your goals, your aspirations as an athlete.
Host:Obviously part of coming out to Spire was to be able to put yourself in the best possible environment to maximize yourself as a person.
Host:As an athlete, as a student.
Host:So when you look ahead into your future, what's, what are your goals?
Host:What are you hoping to accomplish in terms of going to school and eventually again, as you continue to mature as an athlete?
Host:What, what's the, what's the ultimate goal here?
Annie:That's a tough question.
Annie:I think that's what I'm trying to figure out throughout this year.
Annie:I definitely, as of right now, I'm not ready to give up track or basketball.
Annie:So I would say my goal is to find a place where I can do both to the best of my ability.
Annie:Yeah, I just want to keep all my doors open, see what happens, see how these seasons go.
Annie:But yeah, I'm definitely not ready to give either of them up.
Annie:So I guess I would say my goal is to just have, have a fulfilling career in both of them and see where it takes me.
Host:It's awesome that you've continued to be able to pursue two sports because I know that it's a freaking conversation that when we talk to coaches on here, Annie, about the challenges of being a two sport or three sport athlete, which for an old guy like me, back in the day there were many more people that were able to participate in multiple sports simply because sports weren't year round necessarily in the same way that they are today.
Host:And so, so many kids sort of find that to be just challenging in terms of the things that you're talking about, where I'm in basketball season, I've got to go to track practice and I've got to take care of my academics and I've got to do all these things or maybe they're just not skilled enough in one sport or the other.
Host:And so eventually people end up having to choose one.
Host:And in a lot of ways it always feels sad to me.
Host:So I give you a lot of credit for continuing to want to do both sports.
Host:And I can again see in your face as you talk about each one, just how much fun each one of them is for you.
Host:And clearly in slightly different ways.
Host:But when you're talking, I can hear in your voice how much you love each one of those.
Host:Let me ask you a little bit about the academic side of things.
Host:So I know that this is a question that probably people, people ask you all the time, but what do you want to do when you grow up?
Host:What's your, what's your goals as far as, when you see yourself as, as an adult?
Host:What do you think you might study when you go to college?
Host:What do you think you might want to, what do you think you might want to be?
Host:Where do you want to end up?
Annie:I want to study marine biology.
Annie:I've always loved the ocean, animals, the environment.
Annie:Yeah, that's what I want to study.
Annie:And I want to go into something in that field after college.
Host:Very cool.
Host:That's awesome.
Host:That is very, very cool.
Host:So, again, I think what you've been able to do and what you're continuing to do there at Spire is something that not a lot of kids get an opportunity to be able to experience, to play two sports and play them at as high of a level as you've proven yourself capable of doing.
Host:And it's a credit to you.
Host:And it's also, again, a credit to your coaches.
Host:I think that you have to have a cooperative coaching staff and a cooperative environment to make the accommodations that are necessary to be able to allow you to compete in two things that you obviously love very, very much.
Host:So, Annie, I really want to thank you for taking the time tonight to jump on here and talk with us.
Host:Hopefully you go out and pick up a copy of How Basketball can Save the World and read that.
Host:Do a.
Host:Do a book report for me or something and just let me know.
Host:Let me know if you'd like to.
Host:Let me know if you'd like the book.
Host:So, again, I want to be respectful of your time.
Host:I know you're a very busy young woman, so I want you to be able to get some rest and be ready for practice tomorrow.
Host:And we're going to chat a little bit with.
Host:With your coaches.
Host:Okay, Annie?
Annie:Okay, sounds good.
Annie:Thank you so much.
Host:Awesome.
Host:Thank you, Annie.
Host:Really appreciate it.
Annie:Bye.
Host:Bye.
Host:Bye.
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Host:All right, Krista and Michael, we'll welcome you guys back in.
Host:And I guess I'll just let each of you, Krista, maybe you go first to sort of explain your role with Annie and then we'll let Michael do the same and then we'll talk about some of her experiences there at Spire with you.
Host:Guys.
Host:So Krista, go ahead first.
Krista Phillips:Absolutely.
Krista Phillips:So I took over as head coach in October of last year, but previous to that I met Annie in the summer.
Krista Phillips:She came with her mom on a visit to Spire and I got a chance to sit down and talk with them while they were here.
Krista Phillips:She was in her full knee brace, had just had ACL surgery.
Krista Phillips:Her and her mom were like stopping to sell the family car on the way to the airport and move to Costa Rica.
Krista Phillips:So, you know, she's.
Krista Phillips:Has lived an interesting life in that regards, but had the opportunity to obviously meet with her, chat with her about being a dual sport athlete.
Krista Phillips:We talked really openly about the challenges that would come with that.
Krista Phillips:Being as the schedule aspire, is pretty rigorous.
Krista Phillips:And she just, you know, the whole time enthusiastic.
Krista Phillips:You've seen her natural.
Krista Phillips:She's so naturally charismatic, just like the most wonderful young woman.
Krista Phillips:And we were just thrilled to be able to, you know, provide her this opportunity.
Host:Didn't know about her prior to her coming.
Host:She sort of found it on her own.
Host:You guys weren't actively recruiting her or know anything about her.
Host:She just kind of showed up and.
Host:Right on your doorstep.
Krista Phillips:Correct.
Host:Yep, Got it.
Host:All right, Michael, let me know a little bit about your role.
Host:Talk to me about your work with Annie.
Joe Burke:Yeah, so this, my, this is my first year with spire.
Joe Burke:I spent almost a decade at the collegiate level beforehand and I've been lucky to work with dual sport athletes my whole career.
Joe Burke:It's not something that I personally shy away from.
Joe Burke:I really see it as like only a benefit to them.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:Um, just the better athlete you are, the better athlete you are.
Joe Burke:So you can, you know, move a little bit more fluidly between those sports and the things that you pick up as an athlete, you can just translate better to the court or onto the field.
Joe Burke:Um, with her being in like preseason right now.
Joe Burke:She came out, you know, that first week that I was on campus working with the throwers.
Joe Burke:And it's very clear when someone shows up and has a deep background of really what I would consider probably her off event.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:Our first practice was shot put and she's really, you know, excelled in the javelin.
Joe Burke:Excelled in, you know, and I mean since coming here, excelled in like the weight and the hammer.
Joe Burke:So first day not knowing anybody, really not knowing me and just picking up a shot put.
Joe Burke:Responds super quickly to instruction.
Joe Burke:Blended in with the group immediately.
Joe Burke:I try to use each of them as like teaching models for each other.
Joe Burke:And there's just so much in her, like, fluidity and her athleticism that obviously comes from basketball that I can use as an example.
Joe Burke:And I can always just like point to, all right, say, look like I didn't like these sorts of things, but the tempo and the rhythm of her throw is just beautiful.
Joe Burke:Just if you guys can do what she's doing, you're going to have a lot more success.
Joe Burke:And it's cool because then I see them start coaching each other, you know, as they're waiting or they're picking up on things.
Joe Burke:And that's something that she does really quickly.
Joe Burke:She, as you saw today, is super charismatic.
Joe Burke:Talks with all of the throwers, talks with the jumpers, sprinters.
Joe Burke:Everybody knows who she is already, even though it's only been a couple months.
Joe Burke:And it's just one of those things is the more you can make an individual sport like a team sport, like a basketball, the better.
Joe Burke:And she really brings that energy as well as the talent in the, in the throws.
Host:So from a technique standpoint as a thrower does that.
Host:How much, how much of that credit?
Host:I, I don't know how well you know her, her background in terms of how she's been coached and who she's been coached by, but she obviously mentioned her dad and the amount of time that he spent with her and diving into it.
Host:So do you feel like a lot of that in terms of technique is just that she honed with her dad or what's her background like in terms of who was coaching her in those events back before she got to spire?
Joe Burke:She's obviously got a great base in terms of like an understanding of the event and what it comes down to when you start any event, when you start anything you want to get from, you know, really choppy movements to really fluid movements.
Joe Burke:Right?
Joe Burke:Nobody pauses taking a free throw.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:But when you see a 7, a 7th grader shoot their first hoop, it's just, it doesn't look good.
Host:And then.
Joe Burke:And that's really where she's at.
Joe Burke:She's very fluid, I'm sure.
Joe Burke:And I credit that to her coaches both in the past track as well as her past other sports, especially with like basketball now, like the technical aspects, playing basketball doesn't make you a better shot putter and being a shot putter or jab thrower doesn't make you a better basketball player, but it makes you a better athlete, which is a linear progression.
Joe Burke:They're the same thing, right?
Joe Burke:We're trying to, we're trying to make a better athlete.
Joe Burke:The technique side of it comes that I have my way of coaching it wherever she goes for College is going to have another way of coaching it.
Joe Burke:We're all trying to get the same thing.
Joe Burke:And the more athletic you are, the easier it is to make those changes.
Host:Absolutely.
Host:I think what's interesting to me always about this conversation and I think back to myself like 10 years ago when all of this athletic training started coming online and I remember I was actually working, training a kid in basketball at the local rec center and there was some kids with a guy who was teaching like running technique to like 7 year olds.
Host:I remember thinking in my head going, who's paying for this?
Host:Like, why would anybody go and do this athletic training?
Host:And then I started thinking about like the way that, at least for me, the way I became a better athlete was like running through my neighborhood and climbing trees.
Host:And how did I learn to throw?
Host:Like, I learned to throw by trying to hit my neighbor with apples as he was hiding behind some fort somewhere and jumping out of, you know, running off my neighbor's garage roof and seeing how far I could jump and doing stupid things and all this stuff that like again, kids today, they don't necessarily have those things.
Host:And, and like I talked about with Annie a little bit, right?
Host:It's, it's so hard now to be a dual sport athlete because at such a young age kids are, I don't want to say forced is maybe the wrong way to do it, but at a certain point you kind of have to make a choice because so many kids are doing things year round, especially in a sport, again like basketball or a technique based sport like track and field.
Host:If you're not practicing those techniques all the time and then there are kids who are, you're obviously going to fall behind and it's just such a challenge because again, as you said, Michael, I think the benefits of being able to play multiple sports to you as an athlete, but also just again, as a person in terms of your role on different teams and obviously track and field as a more individual sport compared to basketball, the way you fit in and do those different things impacts you not just as a, as an athlete, but also as a, as a human being.
Host:And so Krista, I know both of you have mentioned, and clearly I could see it in our conversation with Annie, right, that you mentioned how charismatic she was, you mentioned how comfortable she is speaking.
Host:I mean, there's not many high school kids that can come on and be able to have a conversation with an adult and speak and do the things that she just did for 25 minutes.
Host:So how does that impact Krista on the basketball Court you, as I asked her, you're bringing a bunch of kids together who maybe three months didn't even know each other.
Host:And now you're trying to put together this team.
Host:So talk about what, having somebody with Annie's personality and that ability to be outgoing and I'm assuming, connect people.
Host:What's that like having her a part of the team?
Host:Aside from whatever her basketball contribution is just her contribution to your team as a human being?
Krista Phillips:Absolutely.
Krista Phillips:I think Annie is so special in that way.
Krista Phillips:She, when she speaks, people listen.
Krista Phillips:She is the vice president of the student council.
Krista Phillips:She was the very first Spire athlete of the month.
Krista Phillips:All of these things are not by accident.
Krista Phillips:She is the type of person who is punked, genuinely cares about people and their experiences.
Krista Phillips:And the way that she interacts with the other student athletes aspire, that's very evident that she just is a genuine, kind person.
Krista Phillips:And you pick up on that.
Krista Phillips:And so I think her contribution that way, she's a natural born leader and she sees the world through a different lens.
Krista Phillips:She knows exactly what she's trying to do.
Krista Phillips:She, you know, is comfortable with where she's at.
Krista Phillips:What she does couldn't happen if she's not who she is.
Krista Phillips:Because she's like, again, one of the most mature high school seniors I've ever dealt with.
Krista Phillips:And I think, again, that's because she's spent her time getting life experiences.
Krista Phillips:And the way that she handles herself every day is what makes her ability to do this possible.
Krista Phillips:Because she rolls with the diversity.
Krista Phillips:Like, obviously she's torn her acl.
Krista Phillips:She's just rolled with the diversity.
Krista Phillips:You know, it's tough walking into what we do where we have the ability to recruit highly talented athletes.
Krista Phillips:And that's the challenge in itself.
Krista Phillips:And she couldn't be here doing what she's doing if she didn't have the hard work, the dedication, and just the grit to get the job done every day.
Krista Phillips:She hasn't come into practice and had one bad practice in the two months that we've been here.
Krista Phillips:She always comes with a great attitude, one of the hardest working.
Krista Phillips:And just like that lends itself to the kind of team that we can build, the kind of culture we can have with someone like that who's showing up every day saying, I'm here, I'm ready to go.
Krista Phillips:Who's coming with me?
Host:Yeah, that.
Host:And I think that's Michael.
Host:Kind of what you were getting at, right, Is that when you have somebody who's on your team like that, that sets the tone.
Host:And again, forget about their Basketball or their skill on the track.
Host:You're talking about just from a human being standpoint, just bringing that enthusiasm and being a model not just of athleticism, but a model of, hey, this is what a great teammate looks like.
Host:This is what come and being prepared every day.
Host:So that's kind of what you're seeing as well, Michael.
Host:Kind of what Krista just described, if I'm not correct.
Joe Burke:Absolutely, absolutely.
Joe Burke:Every day it's.
Joe Burke:She's locked in.
Joe Burke:Every day that I work with her, she works with another one of our coaches, Coach Powell, specifically in that hammer and weight category.
Joe Burke:And a lot of this stuff is new, right?
Joe Burke:Like she's done shot, she's done discs, she's done, she's done jab very, very well.
Joe Burke:But to do that and then on top of it, add new events, the weight and the hammer that you don't typically see in high schools unless you're in Rhode island, you don't typically see that.
Joe Burke:And it's different.
Joe Burke:You're spinning the wrong way, right?
Joe Burke:You're spinning different than you do with a shot and disc and it's way heavier.
Joe Burke:But she just picks up things super quickly.
Joe Burke:She's there ready to learn, ready to listen, and it immediately translates to success in the technical aspects of the events.
Joe Burke:So yeah, when Krista said that she's like one of the most mature high schoolers she's ever worked with.
Joe Burke:Coming from a collegiate background, she's one of the most mature athletes I've ever worked with.
Joe Burke:I mean, whether they're a 23 year old grad student on their second Covid year or what like way she's able to like lock in and take.
Joe Burke:Take direction and then apply it immediately like that, that neuroplasticity that she has to just hear what she needs to do, see it on a video and then execute it within three minutes is incredible.
Host:All right.
Host:I'm not about to compare Annie to LeBron James, but I'm about to compare Annie to LeBron James in this way that when I think about LeBron and this is a conversation I've had with lots of different people, that when you think about him as a 18 or 19 year old coming into the NBA and obviously Annie's situation, she's not facing the kind of media scrutiny and press conferences and all the things that LeBron had to do, but there really wasn't like LeBron is who he is because he just that ability to be able to speak to the media, to be able to talk articulately about what was going on in his life, what was going on during games.
Host:And to be that polished and that present is something that.
Host:Now, people may have talked to him about it, but that's not something that you can teach to somebody.
Host:You either have that ability to do that, and you can hone it.
Host:You can make it better.
Host:But I don't think anybody took LeBron from somebody that couldn't speak in front of a microphone to suddenly somebody who looked as polished as he did.
Host:And I get a sense that Annie's probably the same way that we could probably wake her up out of bed in the morning and throw a camera in front of her, and she'd be able to.
Host:She'd be able to talk and explain very articulately what she.
Host:What she wants to do.
Host:And so it's just interesting when you have, as you guys have both described, an athlete, a person, especially at such a young age, that is able to talk with adults in that way and also be able to relate to their peers.
Host:The way that you guys are describing, that's something that's very special.
Host:I don't know if you guys have talked to her at all about just sort of where that ability has come from in terms of almost like a metacognition with her to, like, does she realize that the things that she's doing in that realm is unique, or is it just.
Host:She's kind of still, like.
Host:It's just, I'm me, and this is just what I do.
Host:So, Krista, I'll let you take that first, and then, Michael, you can feel free to hop in.
Krista Phillips:Sure.
Krista Phillips:She came with a plan, and I think that's one of the reasons that she can articulate so well how she's gotten here and where she's going.
Krista Phillips:She, I think, quite humbly and quickly passed over that subject, but she came with a plan.
Krista Phillips:When we, you know, I sat down with everyone, every single person on the team, and said, okay, like, where do you think you can play right now?
Krista Phillips:And where are you trying to go?
Krista Phillips:Right.
Krista Phillips:If you, you know, your dream and her.
Krista Phillips:She, you know, very quickly and very astutely listed where she thinks she can play and what she's trying to do.
Krista Phillips:And so I think it's.
Krista Phillips:I think it comes naturally to her because she's a planner, and you would have to be to do what she's doing.
Krista Phillips:We.
Krista Phillips:We.
Krista Phillips:I.
Krista Phillips:I guess, specifically make no exceptions for her.
Krista Phillips:She is doing this on her own, so she has to do everything that everybody else is doing.
Krista Phillips:And on top of that, she's doing track two days A week.
Krista Phillips:And she only has a study hall because she's taking an online course outside of Spire to ensure that she can graduate.
Krista Phillips:So she's, she's taking on everything and more.
Krista Phillips:Our schedule is rigorous.
Krista Phillips:We're like 6am to 7pm like almost every, almost every day of the week.
Krista Phillips:Um, on top of that she's doing individual workouts on the basketball side.
Krista Phillips:On top of that, all of our kids have to make 250 shots a day.
Krista Phillips:And then on top of that she's going to track practice.
Krista Phillips:So again, you don't, you don't have the ability to do all that if you don't know exactly what you're trying to do.
Host:Michael.
Joe Burke:Yeah, it's the, it's the professionalism that comes with the teams, right?
Joe Burke:You, you can have all the measurables and the things that are going to set you apart really at Spire is how well you're able to maintain that level of composure, that level of focus and drive for a long season.
Joe Burke:Basketball is a long season, track is a long season and they overlap.
Joe Burke:She will be in competition, your first competition was a few weeks ago for basketball.
Joe Burke:She'll be in competition through the end of May.
Joe Burke:So and that, that's every, it's every week.
Joe Burke:She's going to be competing at a high level at multiple different things, right?
Joe Burke:She's playing basketball, which is always changing, play to play.
Joe Burke:And then she's going to track meets where she has to switch and sometimes be doing multiple events at the same time, right?
Joe Burke:Javelins going on, shot puts going on at the same time.
Joe Burke:She's in finals for shot.
Joe Burke:She's going to have to move to jab.
Joe Burke:She's going to have to move to hammer, right?
Joe Burke:Those, the ability to switch and like know where I'm going.
Joe Burke:What that plan is on a day to day basis has really built out into her life.
Joe Burke:She knows what she's doing every day.
Joe Burke:She sets that schedule.
Joe Burke:We can try our best.
Joe Burke:We set our practice times.
Joe Burke:We tell them, hey, you gotta go fuel and do this and try to get, you know, minimum seven and a half hours of sleep and you gotta get your work done and you gotta do all that.
Joe Burke:And here, watch these videos.
Joe Burke:We can say all that.
Joe Burke:It takes the athlete to do it, right.
Joe Burke:I say to all my athletes, I haven't told them this yet because we haven't gotten to a competition.
Joe Burke:But all of their results are their own.
Joe Burke:All of their successes are because of them.
Joe Burke:And if we hit a roadblock, I need to look at that, I need to look at what I've done.
Joe Burke:So I can make sure that you're doing the best that you can.
Joe Burke:Because I just assume that they're doing everything that they should be doing.
Joe Burke:And for her, I'm right every single day, I know she's doing what she's supposed to be doing.
Joe Burke:And I see that every time she practices.
Joe Burke:I'm excited to see her compete because I'm sure it's going to be the same thing.
Host:All right, so when I asked Annie the question about where she thought she was going to go or what her goals were, she said that she wanted to be able to continue to play both sports as long as possible and continue to be able to have fun with both of them.
Host:So I'm not going to ask you to reveal her secrets, but just tell me a little bit about each of your roles in.
Host:I'm assuming that her recruitment, her college decision making process, she's starting to think about what she's going to do next year.
Host:So just without revealing, again, details that you don't need to reveal, just talk to me a little bit about your role in her recruiting and her college decision making process.
Host:So, Krista, I'll let you go first and then Michael, you can jump in after.
Krista Phillips:Sure, yeah.
Krista Phillips:So her, I think, goal, and you know, we've talked at length about track versus basketball versus both because at the end of the day, she wants what she wants, but whether or not both are possible will remain to be seen.
Krista Phillips:And I think she's very clear on that.
Krista Phillips:Our goal on the basketball side is to ensure she has the tools and has done the work to do her best to secure that opportunity.
Krista Phillips:So her, you know, continuing to practice every day is, and to continue to work on her skills is really what's going to afford her that opportunity.
Krista Phillips:At the end of the day, if it's just track, it's just track.
Krista Phillips:If it's just basketball, it's just basketball.
Krista Phillips:And again, not a conversation that I had to have with her because she brought that to me.
Krista Phillips:She said, you know, I like both.
Krista Phillips:I'm not, you know, I may be more talented at track than I am in basketball.
Krista Phillips:She said, but I'm not willing to give up basketball.
Krista Phillips:I said, okay, so we've got, you know, eight months to put the work in to see if we can make this happen for you.
Krista Phillips:And at the end of the day, she'll be happy with kind of whatever comes.
Krista Phillips:But she's a competitor, so she wants both.
Krista Phillips:So we'll do our best to try and get her both.
Krista Phillips:So you know, we on the basketball side are already doing all of the things because, you know, I design our schedule to be immersive.
Krista Phillips:We're getting the competition, we're getting the exposure in front of college coaches.
Krista Phillips:So that's already built in.
Krista Phillips:So she just has to, you know, bring herself to the table and give herself that opportunity.
Host:Michael.
Joe Burke:Absolutely.
Joe Burke:I will say, like, from the track side, from what I've seen that there, there's definitely a big, there's a shift happening at the NCAA level where 10 years ago, 15 years ago, we saw a lot of dual sport athletes and then we saw a big shift to, nope, everybody's doing one thing.
Joe Burke:Working with, working with coaches.
Joe Burke:They were like, nope, football's football.
Joe Burke:We're, we're, we're football all year round.
Joe Burke:And, you know, you can look at athletes like Tiger woods or Stefan Holm, he's a high jumper.
Joe Burke:They only did that forever.
Joe Burke:But you look at so many athletes now, like, all of the really elite athletes talk about how good, good they were at other events.
Joe Burke:They specialized when they had to be professionals.
Joe Burke:And you look at University of Miami football team, when they won the Rose Bowl.
Joe Burke: I forget when that was,: Joe Burke:They had six athletes on the track and field team.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:They absolutely dominated Oregon.
Joe Burke:Devin Allen was an All American football player and then an all American hurdler, and now he's an Olympian and he plays for the Philadelphia Eagles.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:I don't think playing those sports took away, obviously, from their ability to have success.
Joe Burke:It's just finding those coaches that are willing to be flexible in their schedule.
Joe Burke:And Krista does a great job with that.
Joe Burke:I've been lucky to be able to do that for the past 10 years.
Joe Burke:And it's, it's really not a, a training problem.
Joe Burke:It's a scheduling problem.
Joe Burke:Everything she's doing on the basketball court is helping me out.
Joe Burke:And I try to have everything that she's doing in specifically the weight room.
Joe Burke:And the mental side of, you know, throwing, where you have to reset literally every time you get six throws and you're done, like, you're done in an hour.
Joe Burke:And most of the time you're sitting around waiting, thinking about all the things you messed up in your previous throat.
Joe Burke:So taking that, you know, goldfish mentality of I did poorly on this, I'm going to, I know what I have to do.
Joe Burke:I'm going to do it again to the court.
Joe Burke:That's awesome.
Joe Burke:For me, she's doing plyometrics every single day, running up and down the court.
Joe Burke:She's in a ridiculous, ridiculous fitness shape for a thrower.
Joe Burke:We like, we like to think of throwers as just kind of, you know, thousand, thousand meals and throwing up tons of weight in the weight room.
Joe Burke:And to a certain extent that's true.
Joe Burke:But you see Ryan Krauser, world record holder in the shot put.
Joe Burke:He is an over 3 meter broad jump, right?
Joe Burke:His plyometric measurables and his athletic measurables are humongous.
Joe Burke:They're off the charts.
Joe Burke:And that's, you know, what she's working on in the weight room, that's what she's working on.
Joe Burke:When she's in the circles with me, that's what she's working on in the court.
Joe Burke:So it's not a training issue.
Joe Burke:There's definitely some scheduling that has to be done, but that's our problem.
Joe Burke:That's a coach's problem.
Joe Burke:That's not an athlete problem.
Joe Burke:So I think now we're seeing a lot more coaches, ironically more so at the Division 1 level just because of the access to resources.
Joe Burke:Be more open to that division, that, that dual sport type thing.
Joe Burke:Now I'm not going to have a softball player and a track and field athlete at the same time.
Joe Burke:It, it happens.
Joe Burke:There's, they're in the same season, so that's, that's really difficult to do.
Joe Burke:But a soccer player, a basketball player, a fall sport to a winner in spring sport happens all the time.
Joe Burke:And like, I, like I can just reiterate if she wants to do that, we're going to make that happen for her.
Joe Burke:And I, you know, I.
Joe Burke:For track, it's a little bit harder for coaches to come out and see, but they will at our, especially at all of our indoor events.
Joe Burke:Right?
Joe Burke:They're going to be there and you just have to look at it.
Joe Burke:You're like, okay, that girl is crushing it.
Joe Burke:And she's doing well.
Joe Burke:She has a, you know, whatever in O season this year.
Joe Burke:These are her, you know, metrics on the basketball court.
Joe Burke:She's been doing this.
Joe Burke:The change isn't for her, the change is for me.
Joe Burke:How am I going to be a better coach?
Joe Burke:That's, that's the mentality that they have to have.
Joe Burke:I think there's a lot of coaches at the collegiate level at this point that are really kind of embracing that.
Joe Burke:So for us, it's just finding those opportunities for her and advocating on her behalf because she can explain it super well.
Joe Burke:But when they ask us questions, it's like, yeah, you, she's been doing this.
Joe Burke:This is nothing new for her.
Joe Burke:You Got to figure it out.
Host:What you see.
Host:What you see is what you get, right?
Joe Burke:Exactly.
Joe Burke:Exactly.
Host:I mean, when you start talking about, again, all the measurable things and the athletic performance that you can see, whether it's on the basketball court or on the track side of it, yeah, that all counts for something.
Host:But then I would assume just the way that I came away from my 25 minute conversation and each of you have come away from your now many interactions with her.
Host:The measurables are one thing.
Host:And then when you put the personality and the person behind those measurables, now you really have something.
Host:How much have you guys talked with her family in terms of kind of what they wanted to accomplish with her and what she wants to accomplish?
Host:What were those conversations like?
Host:What are they like with the family and Krista, I'll let you go first.
Krista Phillips:Man.
Krista Phillips:Annie.
Krista Phillips:Annie's driving this boat.
Krista Phillips:So what Annie wants, I think Annie gets.
Krista Phillips:And that's gotcha again.
Krista Phillips:The reason that she has the ability to do what she can do.
Krista Phillips:I mean, I've spoken with her parents.
Krista Phillips:We talked after the first game.
Krista Phillips:They were lovely.
Krista Phillips:They were supportive.
Krista Phillips:And that's exactly what I would love for all parents to be, you know, not.
Annie:She's.
Krista Phillips:She's the master of her own destiny.
Krista Phillips:And she's.
Krista Phillips:Her maturity has given her the ability to do the heavy lifting in that regard.
Krista Phillips:And, you know, her parents have the opportunity to be supportive.
Krista Phillips:You know, I was very clear with our whole parent group about, you know, the expectations that I lay out for our student athletes.
Krista Phillips:And I'll.
Krista Phillips:I don't ever leave them guessing about, you know, what expectations are for them.
Krista Phillips:And I do that for a reason.
Krista Phillips:So there's no questions.
Krista Phillips:They can't say, oh, I didn't know.
Krista Phillips:Yes, you did.
Krista Phillips:And you know, her parents were just extremely supportive on board.
Krista Phillips:She's taking a couple of our student athletes who are here over Thanksgiving.
Krista Phillips:She's taking them to her home.
Krista Phillips:That's just the kind of kid she is.
Host:Michael.
Joe Burke:Yeah, I haven't had the privilege of meeting her parents yet.
Joe Burke:I'm excited for.
Joe Burke:I can't wait for our competitions to start.
Joe Burke:But that's just me being selfish.
Joe Burke:And so she's gonna.
Joe Burke:I'm sure her parents are coming out.
Joe Burke:I know she's excited to have them see her compete in the.
Joe Burke:In the throws, especially the new throws.
Joe Burke:Weight and hammer, like sets you apart as a high school athlete.
Joe Burke:Getting exposure to them.
Joe Burke:They're super technical.
Joe Burke:And she really does drive the boat.
Joe Burke:When I came in and I asked her, I said, Hey, I, I've looked up your me, I've looked up your marks.
Joe Burke:You're.
Joe Burke:You're a solid athlete across the board.
Joe Burke:You've got, you, You've got more of a background in jab.
Joe Burke:What do you want to do?
Joe Burke:You can't throw jab indoors.
Joe Burke:We're going to train it.
Joe Burke:You can't throw it indoors.
Joe Burke:She's like, well, I just want to do everything.
Joe Burke:I was like, have you ever thought about doing weight?
Joe Burke:Have you ever thought about doing hammer?
Joe Burke:She's like, it's an event.
Joe Burke:I'll do it.
Joe Burke:And that's really, that's really where it came down to.
Joe Burke:It's like, okay, we're doing everything.
Joe Burke:We're not shying away from this.
Joe Burke:She's already doing so much.
Joe Burke:This is not a extra thing on her plate.
Joe Burke:She.
Joe Burke:She knows how to handle it.
Joe Burke:And like she said, she really, really drives, you know what she wants to do and she's in control of that.
Joe Burke:So I'm excited to kind of show that off.
Joe Burke:She gets to.
Joe Burke:She gets to put on a show for her parents when she gets to see the competition.
Joe Burke:We can send, we can send them all the practice videos, but, you know, even though I'm hyped behind the camera, they don't know what that means.
Joe Burke:They've never seen a hammer, you know, get thrown.
Joe Burke:So I'm just excited for that.
Joe Burke:And I think, I think her parents, you know, a testament to them, you know, coaching her in the throws growing up and then, you know, really giving her free rein to do what she wants has really made her the athlete and the privilege to coach her has been.
Joe Burke:Has been awesome.
Joe Burke:So.
Joe Burke:Yeah.
Host:All right, before we wrap up, I want to give each of a chance either to.
Host:If you have any final thoughts that you haven't shared about Annie or about anything related to her story, you can do that.
Host:And also, if you wouldn't mind just sharing how people can reach out to you and find out more about each of your respective programs at Spire.
Host:And then after each of you do that, I will jump back in and wrap things up.
Host:So, Krista, we'll go to you first and then Michael second.
Krista Phillips:Yeah.
Krista Phillips:Annie is just a privilege to have kids like that.
Krista Phillips:This generations, I think built a little different, but I would exclude her from that, that, that group because of just the way that she is by far one of like my favorite kids I've coached.
Krista Phillips:And you know, on the basketball side, fact check me if I'm wrong, Mike, but I think it's like less than 2% of high school basketball.
Krista Phillips:Female high school basketball players play basketball at the next level.
Krista Phillips:And I tell them that every single day because they need to hear it, because I think they're, you know, they have to have realistic expectations.
Krista Phillips:And she does more than probably anyone else we have.
Krista Phillips:I had so many kids last year who came and said, my dream school is UConn.
Krista Phillips:And I said, okay, our dreams need to be attainable.
Krista Phillips:You know, we can't all play you Gone.
Krista Phillips:And so, you know, just to have a young woman like that whose head is so securely on her shoulders is a privilege, an absolute privilege.
Host:Michael, go ahead.
Joe Burke:Yeah, I'll piggyback off that.
Joe Burke:Her.
Joe Burke:Her drive, her focus, her determination to be successful while also keeping a positive attitude.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:I've worked with a lot of athletes who have that drive, have that passion.
Joe Burke:They don't have a lot of friends.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:They're very successful, but, you know, they're.
Joe Burke:They're intense and, you know, can.
Joe Burke:Can be a little abrasive.
Joe Burke:She's not like that.
Joe Burke:She's got all the drive, she's got all the passion.
Joe Burke:She's got the plan that she's executing, and she's doing it with a smile on her face.
Joe Burke:She's doing it while making friends while, you know, really taking a leadership role without even being asked, without even probably knowing how much she's taking a leadership role.
Joe Burke:I've got, you know, my four athlete, my four throwers, and I work with the sprinters and hurdlers and jumpers as well.
Joe Burke:So, you know, I've.
Joe Burke:I'm split in a couple different directions, and it's very easy for me to say, all right, I'm coaching with Kellen or Nico today and working on them on this.
Joe Burke:Annie and Larouche, like, you guys are working on this, and then they work and bounce off each other, and she really drives the boat with that, which is.
Joe Burke:Which is great to see.
Joe Burke:It makes my job easier.
Joe Burke:It makes my job a pleasure to do so.
Joe Burke:I'm super excited for that.
Joe Burke:In terms of the realistic aspects of it.
Joe Burke:She knows what she wants, and that makes it very easy for her to have those real conversations with coaches as she's getting recruited.
Joe Burke:You don't have to, you know, waiver to somebody at the collegiate level just because they're recruiting you.
Joe Burke:They're recruiting you for who you are.
Joe Burke:What she is, is she's an amazing athlete, both as a basketball player and as a track athlete.
Joe Burke:So I think that's going to take her to wherever she wants to go.
Joe Burke:Right.
Joe Burke:Yukon.
Joe Burke:UConn's probably done recruiting.
Joe Burke:They probably got her class.
Joe Burke:But, you know, she's, she's been realistic.
Joe Burke:The places that we've talked about, you know, throughout the country and the places that she wants to be a dual sport athlete for or have at least negotiations about that she knows what she wants.
Joe Burke:She could sit down in a interview like it's a, like it's a job interview and be totally prepared.
Joe Burke:Hit that elevator, pitch tight 15 and everybody's going to, you know, want to bring her on.
Joe Burke:So that's, that's the coolest thing for, for me as a coach to see.
Joe Burke:And so I know by the end of this year she's going to be at a spot where she wants to be.
Joe Burke:She's going to be ready for success at that next level.
Host:Kristen, Michael, I want to just say thanks to the two of you for taking the time out of your schedule to come on and join us tonight.
Host:And I want to also thank you for the opportunity to talk with Annie again.
Host:Obviously, from listening to the two of you talk and having an opportunity to talk to her directly tonight, you can see what a special person and special athlete that she is and the impact that she's had on the two of you.
Host:Just like I told her when, when she was talking that, you know, I could sense her enthusiasm and passion for sports.
Host:And talking to the two of you, I can sense your enthusiasm and passion for her as, as coaches.
Host:And again, when I think about what we do as coaches, right, the opportunity to be able to have a special athlete, a special young person like that that you get an opportunity to, to interact with and you get an opportunity to impact them.
Host:But then also conversely, they get an opportunity to impact you.
Host:And I think that's really when you start talking about the coaching profession.
Host:That's really what it's all about.
Host:So again, thank you for sharing your time.
Host:Thank you for sharing Annie with us.
Host:Truly appreciate that and to everyone out there, thanks for listening and we will catch you on our next episode.
Host:Thanks.
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