 Every Olympic trial, somebody fouls out. These are the best guys in the country that worked their whole life and somebody fouls out. Every Olympic trials. Nice and easy again. The throwing chain reaction system. Well, we are in, we checked out our venue. We're always gotta get in, look at logistics and see where we're gonna set up and how we're gonna run the morning. Now we're got to the hotel heading into Destin, which is beautiful and we're gonna hit up a grocery store, get some food, dinner, stuff for tomorrow. I'm teaching you. This is what I did at the Olympic trials. Rhythm was terrible, I couldn't find my throw. All I did was lock my hips up, got my discus back. Here we go. The format's good, it's a lot of information. We always tell everybody it's a lot of information for the first few hours. We can spread everybody out, we got a ton of room to do drills and so now we moved over to their throwing field. For you guys that aren't here tomorrow, do me a favor, come over here to the side. I, by the way, I've got stickers for everybody, okay? Yes! It was really hot and I didn't like that part, but I like, he explained it slow and I really liked that because I'm a beginner. I like that you don't have an implement in your hand and you can fine tune with a band in the weight room on the field anywhere. So I think that's it, we are out. We're gonna go get some AC dying from the heat. We're here in Florida and again, that's what our six pillar system's all about. We wanna lay it out in a way so everybody's starting to understand it. Gotta keep the shot tucked under. This is what the best gliders do. Boom, shots down here. Rain on, off, again, the kids here are completely used to it so we were like, do you guys wanna pause? Everybody's like, heck no, we just threw in the drizzle. It was actually quite nice, it's just been a good day so running really smooth today, temperature change, kids are really engaged. This, we don't fold the arm, what do we do? We wind the left side. They're a good way to know like where you are and what angle you should shoot. It was fun, a lot of information. It was complicated but it made perfect sense. It was a whole chain of reactions. Oh, yeah like a few minutes ago, I was trying to learn the glide. The glide is like, see I usually do something to caught the stuff back in the glide. It's kind of hard for me but when him teaching me how to do it, it makes it better and easier for me to learn. It was really good. This is everything. This is us. Six more to go, next week, three more this month. That'll be the big kickoff. So big thanks to Coach Webb here in Niceville and to Niceville coaches. Next stop, tomorrow's jabbling camp. To the front of the grip and hold it up flat. Next camp, my wife got this from my bird. Hip, strike, knee, hip, strike. Level, level, level. Right, what we talk about. Because he's trying to be super relaxed, he tells me he tries to behave like a hummingbird, not a rhinoceros. I would love to see you improve on that dramatically. I hope it was helpful. He is the most handsome guy I've ever seen in my life. Second day, shot put day, was really great. Day went really amazingly well. It had rain and it was funny. We got to the point and it started raining. Got some private coaching in. I had requests. We had some people who had traveled all the way from Virginia. Then today, we did the jabb camp. Tom Puxtis, Tom Puxtis is a legendary American he has. But thanks for watching and we'll see you on the next video.