Ohio State's Russell, Ohio's Ndour Named NetScouts Basketball Players of Week

Freshman D’Angelo Russell had a pair of standout performances this week and proved that he’s a legitimate one-and-done prospect. The Louisville, Kentucky native has been named NetScouts Basketball’s National Player of the Week for games from January 19th to January 25th.

Russell started the week with a dazzling 33 points, seven rebounds, and six assists against Northwestern while shooting 12-of-17 from the field and 6-of-11 from three-point range. The 6-foot-4 guard scored almost half of his team’s 69 points in the win. He followed with an equally impressive 22 points, 10 assists, and six rebounds on 9-of-15 shooting and a 2-of-7 display from deep in a win over Indiana. Russell averaged 27.5 points, 8.0 assists, and 6.5 rebounds per game on the week while shooting 65.6 percent (21-of-32) from the floor and 44.4% (8-of-18) from three-point range.

While Russell was a highly touted high school prospect coming into the season, few saw him as a potential lottery pick in the upcoming draft. Although he usually plays off the ball for the Buckeyes, he’s shown the ball skills and passing ability that should translate to the lead guard position. Russell will push for a top five selection in this year’s NBA draft, likely falling in the 4-8 range.

Elsewhere in Ohio, senior Maurice Daly Ndour led the Ohio Bobcats to a pair of victories. The native of Mbour, Senegal has been named NetScouts Basketball’s International Player of the Week for games from January 19th to January 25th.

The 6-foot-9 forward contributed 17 points, eight rebounds, and three assists in an 82-73 win at Ball State. He was 6-of-10 from the field and 1-of-2 from three-point range. Daly Ndour responded with a career-high 31 points, six rebounds, and three blocks including a game-winning dunk in a 63-61 victory against Buffalo. He was 10-of-15 from the field, 10-of-10 from the free throw line, and nailed his only three-point attempt. On the week, he averaged 24.0 points, 7.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, and 2.0 blocks per game while shooting 64 percent (16-of-25) from the floor and 2-of-3 from deep.

Daly Ndour has been the star for Ohio this season, averaging team-highs in minutes (33.6), points (16.0), rebounds (8.4), and blocks (2.2) per game. The senior has looked like a talented overseas prospect thus far as he hopes to continue the momentum throughout his senior year.

Carl Berman is Managing Partner of NetScouts Basketball.

How To Ruin A Wedding In 5 Words

On Monday night, TV host Chris Hardwick and his @Midnight team got the hashtag #RuinAWeddingIn5Words trending on Twitter. There were many thousands of responses (and way too many involving the members of One Direction), but we managed to pull out the gems. Check them out below.

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A Sense of Belonging

There’s nothing quite like traveling. Exploring new cities, towns, countries, sightseeing, observing how other people live and simply getting out of the daily routine to view what else the world has to offer.

In 2008 I embarked upon my Taglit Birthright Israel trip with no major Jewish connection (I stopped going to Hebrew school after my bat mitzvah), no real sense of what the trip was going to be like but knew I wanted to do it independently not with existing friends. The trip was life altering — I met incredible people from different parts of the United States and Israel, ate delicious food, learned about Israel and the Jewish people and explored a lot of things that I would have never done on my own. By the ninth day of my trip I called my parents hysterically crying telling them that I didn’t want to come home. They reminded me that I get homesick in the Hamptons and that I better get on the plane the next day because I had made a commitment for a temporary job.

I did. I worked this temp job, saved all my money and returned to Israel three months later to staff a Taglit Birthright Israel trip. After staffing the trip and meeting more amazing people, I lived in a hostel on the beach in Tel Aviv for two months. A year later, after the recession hit hard and the company I was working for in New York closed up shop, I decided to move to Tel Aviv. I got a work visa, an apartment, a part-time job, took a photography class and lived blissfully along the Mediterranean coast for four months. I went back the next summer and the summer after that for close friends weddings.

There’s not a day that passes that I don’t think abut Tel Aviv.

Over the holidays this year I went for a visit. It had been 3.5 years since I had last been and I was really itching to get back.

The entire trip I felt a sense of heaviness. A sense of belonging. A sense of confusion care of that sense of belonging. I felt at home. I questioned where home was.

There was something quite relieving about being there — I could be my true authentic self. After all the personal development and discovery that I’ve done over the past few years, this felt like it all came together in this one place and made sense. It felt like there was some level of validation that everything that led up to that time in Israel was part of this journey that I created for myself. Lots of forks in the road and managing to get over or around them in order to find my way.

People work to live in Israel, they don’t live to work. Family and friends are the biggest priority. The sense of community and bonding amongst the people instead of the constant hustle is truly appealing and honorable to me.

The crazy part that I can’t wrap my head around is that this feeling wasn’t short lived. It wasn’t just when I was with my friends. Or when I was alone. It wasn’t when I was walking aimlessly around the city. It wasn’t when I went to a concert. It wasn’t when I saw a photography exhibit. It was everything and everywhere. It was constant.

I kept feeling as if my life was trying to find its way on a seesaw. One way was my fast-paced, nonstop, hectic New York City life that I’ve always known, enjoyed and loved where all my family is and so many close friends. The other way was Tel Aviv, which was much more laid back, slow-paced, relaxing and yet still productive with a whole other group of amazing close friends.

It’s hard to ignore these feelings and these signs even if they’re not clearly defined. I can’t recall a time I felt like this. I know I’m not moving to Israel anytime soon but maybe spending more time there is something in my near future.

I sat on the beach, alone, halfway through my trip, watching the sunset, writing in my journal and all that kept going through my head was this:

DO MORE OF WHAT MAKES YOU HAPPY.

Whatever that means to you, do it. This is your life. You only have one life to live so live it to the fullest, in the most authentic way that makes you the happiest.

Returning back to New York after traveling, especially after being in Israel is always a huge adjustment for me. I want so badly for those laid-back ways to be engrained in the New York life but what I realized is that I need to create that for myself, not the society in which I am a part of. I’ve been seizing the moment and exploring more that New York has to offer whether it’s trying new spicy foods that I had no idea I would ever eat or connecting with new people who have similar aspirations, values and desires as I do. I’m finding my own way and creating my own path towards bringing what I love about Israel here as much as possible and finding ways to get myself back there again soon.

One Step Ahead

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“Yesterday’s fairy tale is today’s fact. The magician is only one step ahead of his audience.”
— Anne Morrow Lindbergh, North To The Orient

How many times have you picked up a magazine on a flight or while sitting with a hard-won five minutes peace and quiet, and seen a brilliant idea — and realized that your first reaction wasn’t “Wow, I wish I had thought of that,” but rather “I can’t believe I thought of something like that… and did nothing about it.”

If the answer is at least once, then give yourself a good hard mental slap. If the answer is “Never, because I act on my ideas,” then congratulations — you are one step ahead of the business pack. You have the edge.

Being an innovator, a disrupter, within your area of expertise, knowledge or ideation is not just about that a-ha moment. It’s about capitalizing on it. It’s about realizing the value of what you hold in your head or your hands and making it all happen. It’s about recognizing a need and responding without letting fear take hold and therefore missing the golden opportunity.

Sometimes it’s about taking what someone else has done and putting a new spin on it, because let’s face it, there can only ever be one iPhone, one iPad, because there was only one Steve Jobs. Sadly, the emphasis has to be on the was — so his legacy has to live on in the continuing innovative brilliance of the Apple team. And the fact that there are new and great Apple products emerging shows that yes, there may only have been one Steve Jobs, but there are others who are still striking out to reach that finishing line first.

If you are a trailblazer you will seize an opportunity to take control of a situation and to see a project come to fruition. This is not just about having a dream. A true disrupter wants to see their idea, their project, actually come to life. They want to see it in action, whether it is a concept or a physical product. They are not interested in it staying as a vague ‘maybe some day’ fantasy. And this perhaps is where you need to ask yourself the question; do you have what it takes to be an innovator? Are you willing to give everything you have to follow your goal? Because being disruptive — in terms of being willing to take chances and step out ahead of the crowd, to seize chances and be seen — takes commitment.

It isn’t easy, and sometimes you will question whether you are strong enough. Having X and Y in your head isn’t going to cut it. You need to put X + Y together and deliver Z. That means being willing to work out all the aspects of delivery for X and Y which will turn it into Z.

But think about it.

Next time you are sitting on a plane… imagine that the person sitting next to you is reading that magazine — and they do a double take. Because the person staring back at them from the business pages is you.

One step ahead.

How to Travel During a Snowpocalypse

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Unfortunately, Arctic dogsledding is not an option for most travelers this week. Here’s what to do if Winter Storm Juno has you trapped under her cold, icy thumb. Continue Reading…

Free-Range Parenting Debate Misses a Critical Point

The social network is abuzz with the news that parents in Silver Springs Maryland have been accused of being irresponsible because they let their 10-year-old son and 6-year-old daughter walk to a park a mile away and return home all by themselves. Somebody thought this was not OK and called the cops. As a result, Danielle and Alexander Meitiv are being investigated by the Montgomery County Child Protective Services. The debate about it continues to rage. I now that many other psychologists are weighing in on the appropriateness of this form of parenting, but I’d like to use the story to make a point that is much bigger than whether or not kids should be allowed to “Free-range.”

Here’s my point: Kids can’t grow unless they are allowed (I would say encouraged) to visit what I call the frontier of their competence. Most kids live in an adult-constructed world. In classrooms, learning goals and the means to attain them are created and managed by adults. Differentiated instruction or student-centered learning are admirable concepts, but the truth of the matter is that external forces shape, control and limit the experience of school. This reality leaves little opportunity for children to journey to the actual edge of their abilities — that place where their confidence is momentarily shaken by the challenge and then bolstered by mastering the task.

Outside of school, kids have very few opportunities to do things over which they have much control. If you think about it, the list is extremely short. Because of this, kids don’t have the opportunity learn how to self-manage or self-repair. When push comes to shove, it’s more likely that over-controlled children cry and crumble than rally and rule.

Why do we see such a burgeoning number of kids with anxiety or anxiety disorders? I’ll tell you what I think: It’s because they have not been judiciously and purposefully inoculated against difficulty, and when they stare it in the face, they overestimate the size of the challenge and they turn and run or try to hide. Since kind-hearted parents and teachers find it painful to see kids in discomfort, they collude to put kids in situations where they look happy doing stuff that’s, well… easy.

Here’s an interesting piece of information which has relevance here. Steel is made harder, stronger and more elastic by a special heating and cooling procedure. Without this annealing, it’s brittle and prone to fracturing under strain. Similarly, kids who are not consciously tempered, that is, made more flexible and resilient by monitored exposure to stressors, are cracking and breaking in record numbers across this country.

Sports, private lessons, tutoring, homework and even play time (oh sorry — play dates) are controlled by adults. I get it: Schedules are tight, everybody’s crazy-busy, and uber-planning wards off intra-familial chaos. In sports, kids are expected and taught to win, but it is not often that they are consciously taught how to handle losing. In fact, their exposure to failure is mollified by hollow praise and “trophies for trying.” Kids who are made to feel good and safe at the expense of learning to live with challenge and stress are headed for trouble.

Even the strongest advocates of the free-range parenting movement would agree that turning kids loose to roam unmonitored through unknown (and potentially dangerous) territory is like signing your kids up to compete in the Hunger Games. You’ll recall that there are many more losers than winners in that competition! Kids don’t come equipped with the skills of a Katniss Everdeen, able to deal with every danger that is thrown at her with incredible courage and skill. What Jennifer Lawrence’s character does exhibit is the ability to do something positive with the stress created by the threats that are hurdled at her. A survivalist if ever there was one, this nimble and talented young woman quickly converts fear into the neurochemical fuel that her body and brain need to quell the inborn, protective fight or flight response. In this way, she’s able to face challenges with exquisitely honed executive functioning skills that keep her alive.

Free-Range Children and Competent Students: What’s the connection?

Most advocates of responsible free-range parenting talk about the need to create a wide zone of safety around kids’ forays into the unknown. Keep them alive, but give them room to explore and encounter challenges that require threat assessment, decision-making, action-taking and evaluation. Having these kinds of experiences, both in the neighborhood and in the classroom, turn kids into adventurers and explorers who seek the next frontier and face it with a sense of excitement, a feeling of competence, and the confidence that says “Bring it on!”

I have written and talked much about the impact of stress on kidshttp://www.jeromeschultz.com. In school, where learning and growing is a primary goal, kids need to be guided by talented teachers to the very boundaries of their competence. Facing and mastering new material promotes psychological toughening. It’s like building muscles at the gym. If we lift the same weights every time, we don’t increase our strength. Without a personal trainer, we’re likely to try a weight that’s way too heavy for us. We feel something pull, wince in pain, drop the weight, and most likely–stop going to the gym.

The same phenomenon can occur in school. High stakes testing often requires “heavy lifting.” Unless kids are strategically taught to find their “edge” — the point at which stuff gets too hard — and given the skills and support to work through it, two things happen; They stay at a level of work that allows them to feel the pleasure that comes from doing something they can do fairly well, and they avoid challenges. Sometimes, they like being in the safe zone so much that a teacher can’t get them to stop, switch directions and head off into some unfamiliar, anxiety-producing territory. Too often, when kids are asked to do something that they believe will be too hard, they crumble. It’s then that we see the tears, avoidance, opposition, school refusal, acting out — that are all the predictable consequences of unabating or excessive stress. They act in these ways not because the work is too hard, but because they believe it will be, and because they lack the fortitude to embrace the challenge and turn it into a success. I believe that are seeing the dramatic rise in kids with anxiety (or anxiety disorders) because they have not been adequately prepared to handle things that come their way, and they crash and sometimes burn at the thought of facing a challenge over which they believe they have little control.

With a change of thinking and a different approach which costs nothing — we can get kids from “I can’t, and I won’t,” to “I can and I will.” It’s pretty amazing to watch this happen. Free-range parenting, which gives kids controlled exposure to just a little more challenge has some lessons to teach us. Let’s listen and learn.

2 Vanderbilt Football Players Found Guilty Of Rape Charges

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — A jury has convicted two ex-Vanderbilt football players of raping a former student inside a dorm room.

The jury deliberated for about three hours before finding Brandon Vandenburg and Cory Batey guilty. They face decades in prison.

Prosecutors say Vandenburg brought an unconscious 21-year-old woman he had been seeing back to his dorm room after a night of drinking in 2013 and the assault occurred as he took pictures.

Defense attorneys say Vandenburg took “deplorable” photos but did not take part in the assault. Batey testified that he was so drunk he didn’t remember what happened until he later saw cellphone photos and video.

The alleged victim testified she didn’t remember the alleged assault.

Two other former players are facing charges. Their trials have not been set.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

Two former Vanderbilt football players accused in the rape of a woman in a dorm room believed they were entitled athletes who could “get away with anything,” prosecutors said Tuesday.

Defense attorneys countered that the teammates were extremely drunk on the night of the alleged assault, and blamed a college culture of binge drinking and promiscuous sex.

Jurors started deliberating Tuesday about 2:30 p.m. EST.

Brandon Vandenburg and Cory Batey are each charged with five counts of aggravated rape and two counts of aggravated sexual battery. If convicted, they could face dozens of years in prison.

During closing arguments, Deputy District Attorney Tom Thurman told jurors that the college culture argument was a “red herring” and that the athletes thought the law didn’t apply to them.

“That’s the culture that you really saw here . their mindset that they can get away with anything,” Thurman said.

Earlier, one of the defense attorneys conceded that Vandenburg took “deplorable” photos, but shouldn’t be convicted of rape because he didn’t take part in it.

“He took photographs that he never should have taken,” Vandenburg attorney Fletcher Long said.

Prosecutors say Vandenburg encouraged three of his teammates to have sex with the unconscious 21-year-old woman in June 2013 and didn’t participate because he couldn’t perform.

Batey testified Monday that he was so drunk he didn’t remember what happened that night in Vandenburg’s dorm room until he later saw cellphone images on his phone.

“I was just drunk out of my mind,” Batey said. “This is something I would never do in my right state of mind. I’m just sorry.”

The woman, who earlier testified that she didn’t remember anything that night, was crying as Batey was on the stand and appeared to be vomiting at one point.

Two other players were also accused in the rape. They have pleaded not guilty. Their trial dates have not been set.

Vandenburg and Batey are on trial together, but represented by different attorneys. Batey’s defense said the photos and videos don’t actually show him having sex with the woman and one of his lawyers blamed a college culture so accepting of binge drinking that many people saw the unconscious woman that night but did nothing to help.

The woman testified that Vandenburg plied her with alcohol at a Nashville night spot and the last thing she remembers is waking up alone in a strange dorm room and feeling sick. She said she still has no memory of what happened.

Police officers who testified said they didn’t find evidence of body fluids on the dorm room floor that would indicate a sexual assault, but they did not go to the dorm room until four days later.

Throughout the trial, jurors have seen graphic images and videos recovered from cellphones and a laptop. Prosecutors said that players took pictures of the assault and that one sent videos to his friends as it was happening.

Jaborian “Tip” McKenzie, who is also charged, testified that Vandenburg was “amped” and coaching the players. McKenzie testified that he did not touch the woman himself but took pictures.

A trial date for McKenzie and Brandon Banks, the fourth player accused, has not been set.

The Craziest Secrets Of Marvel's Original Secret Wars Comics

The Craziest Secrets Of Marvel's Original Secret Wars Comics

As you get ready for Marvel comics’ mega-event this summer, it’s worth remembering this isn’t the first time Secret Wars has been waged. Back in 1984, a similarly “covert conflict” enveloped these heroes and villains. How much do you know about the first event that changed Marvel universe forever?

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We've Officially Entered a New Age For Mega-Airports 

We've Officially Entered a New Age For Mega-Airports 

Today, Dubai International Airport announced that it’s reached a milestone. It is now the busiest airport in the world for international travelers, a claim that has long belonged to Heathrow, in London. Here’s the thing: It won’t be for long.

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FCC Finally Lays Down the Law: Hotels Can't Block Wi-Fi 

FCC Finally Lays Down the Law: Hotels Can't Block Wi-Fi 

The FCC released a blunt warning to hotels today: Stop blocking guests’ personal Wi-Fi connections.

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