Mark Burik (00:02.015)
Hey everybody, welcome to the Better at Beach podcast. My name is Mark Burke and I'm here with Brandon Joiner and we are going to talk today about how to make mistakes the right way and then make really fast changes as well. We have a few upcoming camps. We are going to Austin, May 2nd, and we have a tournament in Austin, May 4th, if you want to play King and Queens.
may 23rd, we have a one court men's B and A. men's intermediate on may 23rd in St. Pete, Florida, may 30th will be in Long Island. May 30th. will also be in San Diego. We have a sold out camp. So sorry about that, but that's in DeKind volleyball in Tacoma, Washington and Virginia beach will be June 20th, Milwaukee, June 27th.
Bend, Oregon as a seaside tune-up camp on July 25th and Santa Rosa on August 1st. Also, we have just released our Punta Cana all-inclusive trip, seven days of beach volleyball and all-inclusive life in Punta Cana, Dominican Republic. That will be November 29th. There are only 64 spots. So make sure you sign up now.
And if you want some regular training, I want you to head to better beach.com forward slash film session. Uh, Brandon, myself and Logan Weber, who just qualified for the league big round of applause for Logan Weber for a big win. Uh, he is also going to be helping us out with online coaching in our community and running some private video analysis sessions for anyone who signs up. So if you want to check that out.
You can go to better at beach.com forward slash film sessions and we will take a look at your film, your matches, your practices and show you what you're doing. Right. What you're doing wrong. Cool. That's the announcement part. Also guys, you know, we have a 15 % discount, at Wilson. If you guys, go to wilson.com and use the code at checkout better at beach. Dash.
Mark Burik (02:16.395)
You will get a 15 % discount for anything that you buy at Wilson. So we'd love if you guys supported us, supported the podcast and yeah, obviously you guys need some volleyball gear. So why not? Brandon, how do we make better mistakes?
Brandon Joyner (02:32.846)
Howdy.
Yeah. So, first off, big congratulations to Logan and Hagen. it's been, yeah, yeah, it's been, you know, it's a combined effort between you and I, and Senjin got to throw him some love too. but yeah, it's, it's, it's been extremely fun working with those guys and just wanted to give them a little shout out on here because.
Mark Burik (02:42.475)
Well, big congratulations to you, coach.
Mark Burik (02:55.007)
got their hands on us.
Brandon Joyner (03:06.762)
As far as a team goes, man, they have, they have been working their butts off. They've put themselves into as many situations as they can to, like, they've been right on the cusp of success. Like, I mean, I know a couple years ago when they were working, when you were coaching and then the box with them in Manhattan, they got a third. And I think that was like the first glimpse of them being like, wow, we can be something special.
Last season on the AVP, I think they had a little bit of a down year, but they had a great year abroad, like playing in a lot of world tour events. Yeah, yeah, a few medals. And then this year, it's been really fun working with them. And it kind of leads me into this talk that we're gonna have today is...
Mark Burik (03:46.005)
few medals.
Brandon Joyner (04:00.098)
This year, when I started working with them, one of the things that they really wanted to do is they wanted to scale back a little bit and truly develop like solid technique. And the way I've been talking about it a lot at camps and with them is becoming process oriented rather than results driven. And it's just really cool to see.
Mark Burik (04:13.803)
Okay.
Brandon Joyner (04:27.596)
how patient they've been. They've gone through the ups and down. They've gotten punched in the mouth a couple of times. And, I was, I was bummed because I was in Arizona, but even while was coaching, had my phone on me watching the updates from a volley, volley life. so extremely stoked for that. I was able to watch the last set after our sessions finished. and you could just see the way that they reacted after that win.
that it was like a culmination of all of the emotions that they've had over the last year and a half, two years, three years as a partnership, getting what they've been going for. And so, yeah, we've, we've talked a little bit about the changes that the AVPs had and this new qualifier system for the league. And I can only imagine the stress that's been lifted off their shoulders.
by taking down that first one. And they did it in dominating fashion. Like they didn't drop a set. They looked good. I still haven't had my little debrief celebration with them, but definitely plan on doing that when I get back to Hermosa.
Mark Burik (05:38.891)
I mean, for dollar, that's, that's the biggest volleyball day of their life because that's that win is worth a minimum of $40,000 this year because now they've qualified for all the leagues. So that's, that's huge. That's probably the biggest payday beach volleyball can offer is that one day qualifier. And that, that's what's kind of crazy.
Brandon Joyner (05:49.72)
Right.
Brandon Joyner (06:01.451)
yeah.
Mark Burik (06:05.839)
No stands. went like old school, right? They just set up courts on the beach. Not a lot of fans, but dollar for dollar. That was the most valuable tournament you could play in beach volleyball today with the exception of maybe this upcoming, four on four city versus city event at ATX beach. Like there's big money, coming from that, but such a huge day for them. And I was from.
Brandon Joyner (06:10.712)
Mm-hmm.
Brandon Joyner (06:24.333)
Right.
Mark Burik (06:35.583)
You know, they've had their passing and setting kind of woes. it looked like their passing was on point. And I know from the sessions that I ran with them early this year, and then as you started running, it's like, yo, we need our technique to be stable and go. And it's crazy to think even as, as an amateur and intermediate, you know, and like, well, how much time can we spend passing?
Brandon Joyner (06:40.492)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (07:04.543)
How many hours did you spend just on passing with them this preseason and see those results?
Brandon Joyner (07:08.958)
it's unreal. Yeah. I mean, I would say over the last three, four months that I've been working with them.
90 % of the practices that we've had were me standing on a baseline, just popping in float serves, bowling in balls and like giving these little minute changes that they were focusing on. And it's cool because like, I think something happens and we see it at our camps a decent amount too, but that fatigue of like the mental focus it takes to make those small changes and find that process oriented passing.
they were able to stick with it. And it, and it was like, it was to a point where we talk about this, whether a setting a lot, it's like after every set, tell your, tell your partner, was it a 10 out of 10? If it was a nine out of 10, what would make it a 10 out of 10? And I was doing the same thing with them with passing, where it was like, Hey, upper body look good. And even if the ball went to the right spot, it was like, all right, but, but our footwork.
We should have gotten a little bit more stable with that left foot, like find a way to cut off that angle. So the amount of specific feedback that I was giving them and that they were welcoming was, it was huge. And it's cool to see like how much that one little change can affect a team going from like a seventh to a ninth in an AVP to now they're finding themselves in those semis finals.
Mark Burik (08:44.651)
Hmm.
Brandon Joyner (08:48.776)
and able to take it home. And so it was yeah, it was cool to see.
Mark Burik (08:53.289)
Yeah, it was exciting to see them take down Theo and Troy. That was going to be a big question mark and that's a big physical team. So once they had that, I was like, okay, the rest of this.
Brandon Joyner (09:02.04)
Right.
Brandon Joyner (09:05.749)
Yeah. And we practiced, we practiced against, we practiced against Theo and Troy because the bracket came out like two weeks ago, but then Tri dropped out. And when Tri dropped out, that changed up the bracket a lot. And so we didn't think, we didn't think. Yeah.
Mark Burik (09:17.823)
See, never scout on brackets. Shane Donahue, I know he never listens to us, but he's been telling us for years, I don't know why people look at the brackets before a tournament because it always changes on the last day.
Brandon Joyner (09:29.152)
Yeah. And so that was actually probably a pretty big, pretty big thing for us because we practiced against them on Wednesday before the qualifier on Saturday. And so one great team to practice against as far as consistency and high level play, those guys are up there. and so, yeah, it was, it was extremely, I think that was, that was very helpful.
Yeah. And in that day, they beat us like a majority of the games. So, but, we found like really cool things that we could switch. And if we made those changes, then the games changed completely. So it looks like they found it. Yeah.
Mark Burik (10:12.095)
I saw one clip that, Eric Grabowski from Eric cam beach volleyball. he, was fun to see this cause I've done it sometimes and defenders can ruin what a blockers trying to do. And a blocker can ruin what a defender is trying to do. So Eric got a little closeup of Theo with the sound and Theo's like, I'm going to run a four, but you're going to stay in the diagonal. You're not going to get a high line.
And like immediately Theo walks up there, runs a four with his hands. The joy didn't move behind him. So they ended up doubled up, but Theo absolutely clamped him. And I was like, yup, this is high level, high intelligence volleyball. Yeah. And that's one of those cases where if you run a four as a blocker, but your defender bailed early and the hitter somehow saw something, they don't fall for that trap. You know, so.
Brandon Joyner (10:55.212)
That's huge. Yeah.
Mark Burik (11:10.323)
You can, you can tell a story as a blocker, but then your defender ruins it because they moved too early. You can tell a story as the defender, but then your blocker kind of ruins it. So when you guys are playing and when you guys are listening to this as well, remember that you can, you don't just have to run the opposite zone calls that your, that your other player is running, right? You can just sit, let them do the work.
you can double up. You don't always have to fill these holes. It's not indoor volleyball. And that was for the people who are coming from indoor to beach, the whole idea of filling a hole around the blocker. I do not believe in that in any way at all. is defender versus hitter. if you're too busy trying to fill holes, then that gives away your spot. That big movement gives away your spot to the hitter and.
Brandon Joyner (11:55.106)
Right.
Brandon Joyner (12:06.262)
It's so funny that you say that because like literally a text that I have like wrote out for Hagan and Logan after a practice was food for thought. think we can be okay with within reason realizing that plays can look different. One, twos, threes, fours don't always have to look the same. We can run a basic four one play and then another for the next play where Hagan stays in the angle. Middle or move.
Mark Burik (12:27.52)
Mm.
Mark Burik (12:33.739)
You
Brandon Joyner (12:35.288)
to the middle and then juke back to the line. And so it's like, it's funny because even though these guys are at such a high level, I wish we could somehow get our hands on that little talk with Theo. And I think Theo's moving into the, it's cool to see him. He's like starting to coach some pros himself. So he's, he's, he's
Mark Burik (12:37.77)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (12:57.12)
Bye.
Brandon Joyner (12:59.522)
Definitely getting into the coach realm and I'm wondering if it's effects. mean, he's a phenomenal blocker and under like volleyball IQ, the guy gets it. but yeah, it's, it's cool to, cool to hear somebody like have that on camera because that's like the next level. I didn't realize that until like when I moved out to California, I was playing with, Tomas Cooner from Austria lot. And he would, especially when I was serving and running up to the net.
He would call for a play and then they would shoot the ball over me and I would be like, Oh, we didn't get that one. And then all of sudden Tomas is like right behind me making that play. I'm like, he's making me do plays knowing that he's going to do something different from what that play is. I was like, he's using me to set himself up to get a, to get a dig. And I was like, huh, there was like a little light bulb moment there. was like, all right.
Mark Burik (13:48.436)
Yup.
Brandon Joyner (13:59.958)
This is, this is deeper than I'm realizing. and that, like, think I talk about this a lot with, I think for me, beach volleyball, the reason I played as long as I did was because of this cat and mouse game as a setter and indoor. loved the set up the offense, create a story and then change the story. and so with beach volleyball, can, it can be done the same way, but since.
Mark Burik (14:02.175)
Good.
Brandon Joyner (14:29.206)
Since there's only two of us and we're relying on systems, we just have to pick and choose how we kind of narrate that story. I think it's pretty fun. But yeah.
Mark Burik (14:40.181)
So let's maybe think about some of the mistakes that they were making and then maybe tie it to some of that Scottsdale camp and how to make good mistakes, the right way to act around them, and then how we get results where we can qualify for AVP leagues.
Brandon Joyner (14:59.992)
Yeah. And, and so I think, I think where, where we have to start is, you know, we're, we're extremely lucky because the people that we see at our camps, most of the time, there are some people that come out and they're just like, Hey, I just want to play some volleyball for the weekend. I want to have a good time. I want to meet some people. love those people. but most of the people that come to our camps are, interested in improving. And whenever we're improving, we have to.
Mark Burik (15:16.043)
It's good.
Brandon Joyner (15:29.8)
welcome something new, you know, and a lot of times whenever we're trying something different, it feels so different that we feel like it's wrong. Like it, we, we, think we commonly associate different with wrong, especially if it's like, if we're self-taught players, which I think a majority of the listeners that we have are. If you taught yourself how to play the game.
There's a good chance that, one, you figured out a way to compete by yourself, which is phenomenal. But you've also probably taught yourself some things that might be making your game more difficult. We see it a lot with passing and setting and attacking, like just the basic skills. But something that I've been, or like one of the most common ones that we see is like with hand setting.
taking the ball a little bit lower. a lot of us really like this high contact. And when we have that high contact, yes, like theoretically, when we look at the rules of beach volleyball, that's what's encouraged. But as far as controlling a game, like if I tell people to take this ball low, and then we have them take it low and they make the set from an outside view, that set looks a lot cleaner, but
Mark Burik (16:42.24)
Mm-hmm.
Brandon Joyner (16:56.888)
They've convinced themselves that because it's such a different contact point that now that now it's a lift. Now it's a, can you still hear me?
Say it again.
Mark Burik (17:09.821)
Well now you're on a different voice thing.
Mark Burik (17:20.437)
Think you might be back, I still got your recording.
Mark Burik (17:29.451)
I'm still getting the bass from mine
Mark Burik (17:36.139)
You can try that.
Mark Burik (17:42.303)
while Brandon's fixing technical difficulties. One of the things that's...
So I was just saying, Brandon, one of the things that we talk about in training is also this contrast or spectrum training. And it's sending people to the opposite side of what they think they're doing. And when you get somebody who's contacting so high and so fast that their fingers are stiff and they're totally out of control, yeah, we do want quick set contacts. But if we ask somebody, hey,
try setting from your chest, try setting from your chin. Their interpretation of that, they'll be like, no, he doesn't really mean that. So then their body just like brings them to their mouth for set contact. And then this cue worked, right? And it's interesting as a coach to go, what cue or how far do I need to tell them to go to bring them to average?
Instead of like the the side of the spectrum that they're on and a lot of times I'll have people I'll say hey You have to keep your thumbs on your collarbone until you sit and they're like that low and I just try it and Then usually they set from like their eyes or their nose and I go perfect Right. And so now their cue for their life is Set here. Am I gonna tell every athlete that like no, but I needed to bring this individual back from whatever they think is comfortable
to a totally uncomfortable place. And then usually you settle in the right area. And then just one note on handsetting, the difference between starting here or bringing the ball from here to here. That's the difference in a lift, folks. It's if we contact the ball high, then bring it low and then go back out. That's when we're gonna call for a lift, but you can set straight up from your chest.
Mark Burik (19:39.549)
And you can contact the ball down here underneath your chin. And it's not a lift so long as you go straight up with the ball. It's the lifts get called when you bring it from high to low and then eject again. So I just want to make sure because we always get the handset in question, so that's clear. You can start at your belly button. And so long as you go only up and you have quick contact with the ball, it is a clean set.
Brandon Joyner (20:04.913)
Yeah. And I, so I think it's like, and it's kind of funny because I posted, I was taught having a little conversation with Eric Brannock this morning. he posted something on it. He's doing great, man. He's coaching. He's, Strandside. He's got his whole thing going there with a lot of juniors and it seems like he's doing great things. I know he's coaching a couple of pro teams, but he posted, something on his Instagram. That's it. It's not negative.
Mark Burik (20:15.531)
How's he doing?
Mark Burik (20:19.915)
Strandside, this is VoiceClip.
Brandon Joyner (20:34.917)
It's just info to help us later on. And I love that saying. when I read it, was like, cause this weekend when we're at the Arizona camp, it's so interesting because a lot of times when we learn a new skill.
If we don't see the success right away, we start to think so, one, so negatively on what we're trying to accomplish, but two, we start to doubt ourselves. And it's like, it's just such a tricky place to put yourself because like, if you learn a new skill, it's going to take you.
so many reps in order to feel like you have conquered that skill. Something that Fred used to say when we were in college is like, it takes 10,000 perfect reps to be a master of something. And we can't shorthand that. But if we're using it in a shorter term, let's say this weekend we had a lot of conversations about really focusing on our spacing.
Mark Burik (21:30.624)
Mm-hmm.
Brandon Joyner (21:45.181)
Mainly our spacing from the net and the way that we do that at better at beach is we reverse engineer it So we have you start on the net, right? You do a swing so that you're so that you don't hit the net Then you turn around from that starting position you do your normal four-step approach for me I'm a righty. So it would be right left right left and then draw a line in the sand. I Guarantee you if you've never done that before you're going to feel like that distance from the net is like
absolutely wild. You're be like, there's absolutely no way this is going to work. But then all of sudden you do an approach and you end up in the same spot.
Mark Burik (22:16.415)
Yeah
Mark Burik (22:24.083)
love the light bulbs that go on in that meeting when they looked around after they did their own approach away from the net and they're like, Whoa. I'm like, that was your body. I wasn't me.
Brandon Joyner (22:24.785)
Yeah.
Brandon Joyner (22:31.38)
Right. Yeah, yeah. I didn't, I didn't draw the line. Um, but then all of sudden, like they start approaching and maybe now we're having to figure out timing. We're having like, there are some other variables that get entered into the chat. Right. Um, but if we trust the process, like over time, we're going to find a more capable way of doing something that's easier to obtain, obtain. And so like,
had people hitting the ball on the net feeling like they were late, maybe hitting a ball out of bounds. And I'm like, and it's so hard as a coach and it's way easier said than done. I know I've been, I've been the player that you start to question if, if, if this new idea is, is worth the time. But I'm like, Hey, don't worry about where the ball goes. I don't care if you hit this ball 30 feet out of bounds, or if you don't even get to the ball and it lands before you've even touched it. Let's trust the process.
Trust this new idea because once we figure it out and you hit a ball and it's the best hit you've had in your life, then you're gonna be like, okay, cool. This is amazing. But it's not gonna happen, the first time that you do it, if you get 10 balls, it might feel like you do one out of 10 right.
Mark Burik (23:51.625)
Yeah. Change is ugly, right? Like in any part of life, like change is ugly, messy. know we've got four new hires right now. And it's like, things feel like a mess. They feel rushed right now, but we're
Brandon Joyner (23:52.281)
Yeah, it's super ugly. Yes.
Mark Burik (24:09.307)
Growing so that growth process is like it's ugly. Things are disorganized again. We can't just communicate with each other by text and call people at 11pm, even though we still do. but like there is a process to growth and whatever your status quo is currently in order to get better results or go where you want to go. You, you have to do some of what you're currently doing, see what got you there, but
Most often, you're going to have to shatter that old version and then recreate it at this level.
Brandon Joyner (24:45.181)
Right? Yeah. And so I think it's like, especially if you're doing reps, it's like, don't think that it's going to be the first time you do it, it's one out of 10. And then the next time you do it, it's not going to be 10 out of 10. Like you're literally hoping that you can do it again, where you get one out of 10. Right? If you happen to get two out of 10, amazing. But the goal is that over time, maybe within the next two weeks, maybe that number jumps up to three out of 10.
Mark Burik (24:57.525)
Mm-mm.
Brandon Joyner (25:13.211)
And then within the next two months, that number jumps up to five out of 10. and obviously I think as you start to figure it out, those steps become a little bit easier. but then you usually run into another thing that you can change. And now we're talking about, okay, how can we put ourselves in a body, like a body position where now we have all of our options where we have the hard driven, we have the cut shot, we have the high line, we have the hard line. yeah. So there's always ways.
There's always going to volleyball is one of those special sports where there's always something that you can improve on. And a lot of times, whenever you find that thing, it's going to feel like you take a couple steps back. and I think that that's like, most of the time when we are at our camps, it's this, it's speed, it's sped up because you have that really what like all of our coaches, especially this weekend with Maddie.
Mark Burik (25:50.059)
Mm.
Brandon Joyner (26:10.241)
Joe, phenomenal having Kevin out there. it's, it was great because you have somebody watching you and giving you immediate feedback right away on like, okay, Hey, that was a really good one. But now if we focus on this, it should allow us to get a little bit better. And the coolest thing I always talk about this at our camps, when we started day one, the coaches are the ones doing all the talking.
It's, Hey, this is what happened. And then players are like, okay, yes. By day three, you go, we go to say something as a coach and the players are already giving the fix back to us. Which I love. And that's like, and that's the, that's the goal with what we are doing is like, obviously the in-person stuff. Phenomenal that's where you're going to see very, very quick results because you have a coach on site with you.
Mark Burik (26:53.759)
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Brandon Joyner (27:08.891)
you can have those little deeper conversations and ask all the questions that you want. And then another way is like the online memberships that we have.
I've said it multiple times. I wish I had this. I wish I had it when I was first starting on beach. I shoot. wish I had it when we were doing all the indoor stuff. but yeah.
Mark Burik (27:34.111)
And I've run a, I've run a couple of the private sessions where they set up the camera with me, at their practice. And I just ran their practice, right? Like, Hey, come back to the camera. This is what's going on. Okay. Go fix it. I mean, it's, it's really easy now. Cause like we can help anyone anywhere in the world at any time and we can do it in film analysis, or we could just run your practice from the video in the back and
Brandon Joyner (27:40.615)
amazing.
Mark Burik (28:01.473)
I got that idea from, I think it was Corrine Quagle and maybe Sarah Sherman horn. They're running a practice and like, were both crowded around their cameras. Like camera broken. Like, no, we're getting coached. They had their Brazilian coach who was just watching their practice. was like, yeah, that's easy. Yeah.
Brandon Joyner (28:18.353)
Yeah. And we, and I think we started implementing that a little bit in our camps as well as like when we have people do their approaches and record each other and then go back, like we have them record a coach and then we have them record themselves as players. And then they go, they take a little time out, stealing it from JM where they, we call it the lab.
And it's like going to the lab, check it out and watch some videos, see what you can pick up on. And then the next time you go out there, you can do it. So yeah, I think bringing it full circle, like if you're trying to make changes, you're trying to get better. Like making bad plays is an amazing thing. Like doing something that feels completely wrong is probably the best thing that you can be doing in that.
Mark Burik (28:46.347)
you
Brandon Joyner (29:12.133)
because that's actually something that you can learn from and you can continue to grow on. If you're playing the exact same way, we get those people at camps too, where it's like, hey, I'm here to get better. But then all of a sudden, when you give some feedback, they might do it one rep and then they just go back to being the player that they want to be because yeah, it's like, hey, that's okay. That's fine. I'm okay with it. But just know you're going to stay the same player.
Mark Burik (29:30.247)
No, I've been doing it this way since high school. Well, right.
Brandon Joyner (29:40.529)
You're going to say the same player that you were in high school.
Mark Burik (29:44.139)
It's funny because I love that I've had sport in my life to kind of grow in these business environments and things like that because
When I go to somebody who I know is smarter than me, I'm looking at them. go, I want you to tear this apart. Like show me all of the holes, show me all of the question marks. I'm the type of guy that like, don't want you to hold back. I want you to tear it apart and show me exactly where every hole is. Then let me go out and get a few reps and I'll bring it back to you in the next version and say like, okay, now look at this business plan. Now look at this pro forma. Like, is it any better?
where do you see the holes now? And so if you, if you become open to that type of feedback and the discomfort with making radical changes, man, that helps in every other aspect of life from your relationships. Like if you don't have a relationship coach or there's no one that you lean on for advice, like if you're only
You know, your boys nights are all about just ragging on wives or girls nights are about ragging on like, okay, that's an okay event. But at what point do you get to the conversation where you're looking for somebody to say, hey, I'm going to give you this as it is. I want you to help me improve it.
Right. And I think relationships are the biggest place where people don't do that. or they don't hire a third party or they don't go to events where you can upgrade those or get advice from, from other people who have done it and who have seen it. And then business as well. think a high level business people know that they need and want mentors and coaches, but,
Mark Burik (31:28.393)
just like volleyball players, amateurs and intermediates who have been there for a long time and have been at the same level for a long time, it's because you're not having somebody look at and upgrade you. And every business, just like every athlete has a certain ceiling, right? But how do we get as close to that ceiling as we can? And that comes with shattering whatever you're currently doing, holding on to some of the good stuff.
And then rebuilding it. And you look at Tiger Woods, who was 30 years old, winning everything. And he goes, the next year and a half, I'm going to rebuild my swing. Like, Crazy.
Brandon Joyner (32:03.33)
or yeah the guy who just won the Masters.
Brandon Joyner (32:10.523)
Yeah, yeah. And I've been lucky, a little shout out to you. I've been lucky to have a mentor that I've worked with every single day for the last six years that I've known for the last 15 years. And you've given me a lot of cool bro, like, hey, we got this moment. You've also given me some tough love along the way. yeah, it's definitely made me a better person. So I appreciate you as that mentor as well. It's been awesome. Yeah.
Mark Burik (32:38.98)
Thanks dude. Yeah, we got to get you your first real estate
Brandon Joyner (32:41.275)
Yeah, still working. I talked to Nick this weekend too. He's in the same conversation.
Mark Burik (32:45.279)
That's good.
Mark Burik (32:49.483)
Yeah, nice. Okay, we got to run. got those players hanging out in the community. We are working on the last couple of weeks of our serving games. So the guys in the community, our guys and girls in the community have just posted all of their jump spike serves, which we're going to analyze. And then this week we're getting into high level serving strategies. If you guys want to check that out, just go to better at beach.com forward slash serve.
Brandon Joyner (32:50.438)
Yeah.
Mark Burik (33:18.475)
You can also check out betterbeach.com forward slash virtual training, which just flashed up on the page and Yeah, and we can help you out too and we're getting next week we're getting into our passing block So if you want to pass like Hagen and Logan and work on upgrading it
We are working on passing for the next five weeks So if you want us to look at all of your passing technique and fix it go to better beach comm forward slash virtual training We're going through that course live Starting next week. So get signed up now
Brandon Joyner (33:52.593)
Yeah, I worked with your girl Claire, one of our elite members that's on the Unlimited plan. Yeah, it was awesome. was, yeah, she was great. Yeah, it was fun. All right, brother.
Mark Burik (33:58.261)
She just texted me, she said she loved you. She was like, she's like, felt like they had such a good bond. Cool. All right.
Brandon Joyner (34:09.649)
I'll see you on Friday at our comedy show.
Mark Burik (34:10.232)
From me. Comedy show. hook then comedy show.
Brandon Joyner (34:15.079)
Hooked in comedy, so what a night. Friday in California, wind nailing it. Yeah, all right, man, I'll talk to you soon.
Mark Burik (34:18.111)
busy. Yeah. All right. Later, Brandon. From me, from Brandon, from the entire team, which has just doubled at Better at Beach. We'll see you on the sand.