Mark Burik (00:02.478)
Hey everybody. Welcome to the Better at Beach podcast. You got Mark and Brandon here. If it's your first time listening to the show, it's a podcast that you really want to subscribe to. So find the subscribe button really helps us out. And if you like any of the episodes, dive down through. Um, we had some bangers that a lot of people actually like really got a lot from even in the first 10 episodes when we were total rookies at podcasting, not to say that we're really good at it. We still just kind of.
shoot the stuff, but, but scroll through those episodes, filter it from, from oldest first and see if there's any that really tickle your fancy because we got a lot of good ones here. And today we've got an especially good one that I think is going to hit a lot of people in the right way. So of course, you know, the title is podcasts. If you clicked on it, it's tournaments, the easiest way to win B's and A's.
So if you're listening, if you're in California and you know what get your rating means, we're gonna really talk about that. And if you're outside of California and you're wondering what the heck that means, we're gonna tell you what the California beach volleyball scene is all about. And then if you're playing in intermediate tournaments, B and A level tournaments, we're gonna discuss some of the easiest ways that we know and that we recognize you can really win.
matches and control matches and things that you should, should focus on. Cause I just went in with one of my one-on-one guys. just ran a practice this morning with Donnie and his new partner, Chris. They're playing a few tournaments together and we went back to the basics and then I gave them three super important reminders that were again, big light bulb moments for them. So we're going to talk about all that. but we got a few announcements for camps.
that we are popping up. So Austin, Texas, we are coming to you May 2nd and 3rd. Santa Monica, we just opened this one up quick. Remember we can only open them up four weeks in advance. So you want to keep betteratbeach.com forward slash camps as like maybe a tab on your browser that you can check in with regularly just so you could stay updated. And that is May 16th in Santa Monica for all intermediate players.
Mark Burik (02:25.772)
May 23rd, we've got a men's intermediate. So B and A or intermediate if that suits your fancy a little bit better, but that's May 23rd. We're going to be at my Airbnb private one court. There's only 10 spots and I know we've already sold five of them. San Diego May 30th is sold out. But if you want to come to Long Beach, New York in Long Island, that's also May 30th. June 6th in Tacoma is sold out.
But you can wait a couple more weeks and go June 20th to Virginia Beach. Then we'll be in Milwaukee June 27th, Des Moines, Iowa, July 18th, Bend, Oregon, July 25th. And on August 1st, we're going to Santa Rosa, California. And finally, our seven day all inclusive event in Punta Cana Dominican Republic.
That is the week that follows Thanksgiving. So November 29th to December 5th, we only have 32 spots for men and 32 spots for women. So get on that and sign up. And I'm going to let Brandon take the mic for a little bit for our California locals so that you can share some of the new projects we got going on and new opportunities in the South Bay.
Brandon Joyner (03:44.687)
Yeah, so we have finally established a really good relationship with the city of Hermosa Beach. With Hermosa Beach, we still have our small group training. That's kind of what we've been known for for the last decade, where those are now being held at the pier. If you download the app BAB, better at beach, Hermosa, there's two apps.
The Better at Beach app is for all of our online stuff, our online coaching, everything like that. BAB Hermosa is specifically for those classes. Along with that, we have two city programs. One of them is a King and Queens league that happens Monday nights, 530 to 7. It is fantastic. It is super fun, super friendly. We get out there, play King and Queens for
An hour and a half, meet a bunch of really cool people. We go out to tower 12 afterwards, have a couple of drinks, socialize. Right now we're watching some basketball. So really fun night last night. and then Tuesday, Thursday mornings, we have a six week training block. those are kind of geared towards intermediate level players right now. we were kind of in the midst of establishing like a silver group and a gold group right now. We really have a good silver group.
And we're starting to build out that gold group so that we have like a little bit of a graduation phase where as you take part in that you can kind of level up the next session for our six-week training block Starts next Tuesday April 29th, so head to better at Beach comm forward slash hermosa Beach volleyball to find that link
And then our King Queens league, I believe starts May 12th. That's our next one. have two weeks remaining, in this session. so that's for Hermosa. we also are really excited about that. We're bringing some stuff up to Santa Monica. we will be running events there on Sundays. And, I think our first two events.
Brandon Joyner (06:07.949)
are leading up to that three day camp that Mark mentioned before, where we have a passing and setting mini clinic, mini three hour clinic.
Mark Burik (06:17.054)
I love that our mini clinics are everybody else's full clinics. We're like only three hours.
Brandon Joyner (06:20.623)
Right. Only three hours to really dial in your passing and setting. have a lot of gameplay as well, but really focusing on the passing and setting that session, May 12th, the following weekend, we're doing kind of attacking, just a lot of attacking. so, my goal is for Santa Monica specifically is we're going to host four, four weekend trainings per per month.
Two of them will be skill specific. So like this month we're in passing setting and attacking. And then we'll have a three day camp one of those weekends. And then the goal is to eventually start a little, some form of tournament, whether it's Kings and Queens, grab bag tournament, little swingers tournament where you play with different partners. And yeah, so we're just trying to, we're,
growing in the LA County. And then we're also going to be starting some stuff in Redondo Beach. We're going to start off there with some kids programs. That will, I'm trying to get it built out so that our first kids program will be a five week session for the month of May. And then, yeah, we're just going to kind of keep kicking butt in LA County and offering as many opportunities as we can for as wide of a range.
So yeah, it's exciting news. If you're interested in any of those, email us support at better beach.com. We'll point you in the right direction. If you're in California, I promise we've got something that suits you. Whether you're a kid, adult, looking for just opportunities to play, opportunities to learn, opportunities to find a group. We got you.
Mark Burik (08:13.794)
Yeah. Nice. Lots of irons in the fire as usual. Okay. So if you were to give one piece of advice to the blanket, unrated player,
Brandon Joyner (08:19.663)
Yeah.
Mark Burik (08:35.64)
who wants to get their B rating. So they're going to play in an unrated tournament. And if you guys don't know what that is in California, unrated means that it's the lowest level tournament. It's kind of a beginner slash intermediate tournament and everybody can play in it. So you might end up facing like an NCAA division one volleyball player, but typically those tournaments are reserved as like your entrance into playing tournaments.
And if you win one of those, or if there's enough teams and you finish in the top two or three, then you earn your B rating. And once you have any rating, B, A, A or triple A, you can no longer play in the unrated events. Now this works really well in California because there's such a huge, huge audience of people who will play tournaments. And it's a really good way.
to segregate the levels. Like I don't believe that you should be able in any neighborhood. I don't think you should be able to win two, three, four tournaments in a row at the B level and not be forced to upgrade to playing A. Or same thing, if you're playing double A and you just kick butt every weekend, like you should have to upgrade. If it's an open level. So there are open levels.
That's where, if in California, we call it a AAA, and that is an utter source of pride for people. get, listen, if you get any rating, like you should be proud. It means that you've put in some hours. It means that you've got some athletic ability and you know what to do on the court. But there are people who are still talking about when they had their AAA back in the nineties. And that's like, I hate it for our fans, but that's like your,
Brandon Joyner (10:09.478)
Mm-hmm.
Brandon Joyner (10:28.963)
Right. It's a rite of passage.
Mark Burik (10:32.353)
high school championship. but it also represents like a pinnacle of, of your athletic career. So your highest finishes are your highest finishes and they, and you should be proud of that. but that's what an unrated tournament is. It's before you get a rating and you're playing against people who are signing up maybe for their first tournament or, are still just trying to get to that level of control and play. So Brandon.
Brandon Joyner (10:58.875)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (11:00.832)
If you were to give one piece of advice of what they should and shouldn't do for an unrated player playing their first ever tournament against players at their level, unrated, so beginner slash intermediate level, what would you go for?
Brandon Joyner (11:18.033)
I got a couple, but I'll start at the beginning of the play. I think establishing a good serve and a serving strategy. Those are very, very different things. I think a lot of people, especially if you're playing in an unrated tournament, a lot of us see the other side of the court, like that big box as
my goal is to get the ball from the end of the service line into that big box. And there's no other thought after that. but yeah, I would say my first thing is establish a routine, like develop a really good serve and play around with a couple of serves that you do at your practices or your trainings with your friends that, and keep tally of like, when I serve this ball, I tend to win more points.
I would say for this level, something to play around with is really focusing on the short deep. Be able to hit a ball that lands on the back line. Be able to hit a ball that lands within 10 feet of the net. And then as you start to gain control, then you can start working on sidelines. You can start working on velocity and trying to hit a little bit harder. But being able to aim your serve, this is
kind of bleeding into my next one without making unnecessary errors. That's something I want to, I'm sure we'll talk about at some point, but yeah, establish a good serve, something that you can rely on and something that you, have a video that came out last week when we were going through all of our serving, one of the reels is like, be okay going out there and serving a whole game of trying to get the ball to land in the back three feet of the court. See what happens.
I guarantee you're going to put that passer in a lot of pressure and that alone can win you a lot of points in a lot of That'd be mine. Yeah.
Mark Burik (13:20.256)
I agree. I like it. And that was one of the first three tips that I gave to, to Donnie and Chris this morning at our lesson. said, cause we played a one on two coach, coach versus two, where I have the whole court. all they have to do is beat me, but I'm serving full time and I had one touch. So I serve every ball and the balls that I served even fast that crossed their chest. They got a reasonably good pass on them.
Brandon Joyner (13:49.105)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (13:50.152)
Every ball that I served short, they were scrambling. I got two or three overpasses or the setter was like too tight to make any sort of decent thing happen. So the short serve is devastating. Stand there. If you can get the serve into the court eight, nine out of 10 times, then it is time to start practicing putting it into the front 10 feet of the court, eight or nine out of 10 times.
Right. And forcing somebody to move and then have to add their own velocity to the pass where you like, you have to power it up enough. First of all, the moving is hard. Then they have to get back to their approach position, which if it's an unrated tournament, nobody is passing a short ball, getting to half court like they should and getting a full approach out of this. Like.
Brandon Joyner (14:44.144)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (14:44.686)
It's not happening. It was a reminder during this practice that I constantly had to give them like, Hey, you just passed the ball. You got to move without the ball. Now you got to set yourself up for a position. And then the, the deep serve, I'll just add like a little wrinkle is just because it lands deep doesn't necessarily mean it's a deep serve. So a lot of people are afraid of this rainbow style serve.
to get the ball to the back half of the court. but if it crosses their chest, so let's say it's going to land in the back three feet of the court, but it still crosses their chest right where their platform is right where they're passing. They don't have to actually move, you know, just kind of like playing catch. You want to see if you can add the rankle of making them move backwards just to be able to touch the ball. And if you get them to Tomahawk in serve receive, you won the serve receive battle.
Brandon Joyner (15:26.981)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (15:41.23)
Now you can start playing defense. you see that they tomahawk anytime you serve high and deep, and that's why I say high and deep, not just deep, but if you get it to like, a good visual is if you've got a six foot fence that is four feet from the baseline and you need to serve it over that fence and then land it at the court, that's a really good visual to have in your mind to have an effective deep serve. But those are,
Brandon Joyner (15:43.365)
Yeah.
Brandon Joyner (16:08.709)
Yeah. And the higher, the higher that fence gets and you're still able to land it in there, the more difficult it is. So like if you, if you have a 10 foot fence and you're still able to conquer that serve, that's going to be even trickier of a, of a pass.
Mark Burik (16:10.862)
Thank
Mark Burik (16:24.886)
Yeah. So playing, playing with those serves short and deep and forcing somebody to move. I, this morning I said, if they move one step, that's okay. If they move two steps, that's great. If they move three steps, you're a champ. Like you putting real pressure on them from this line.
Brandon Joyner (16:41.765)
Yeah. Yeah. And same idea with the short serve. Like I think a lot of times when people are going for that short serve, they miss on the net a lot. because they still have this idea of, can't, I can't serve at high, but remember the goal is it's not necessarily to ace them. It's the goal is to make them take those extra steps. So it doesn't matter if the ball crosses the net at 30 feet or
Mark Burik (16:57.4)
Mm.
Mark Burik (17:01.634)
Mm-mm.
Brandon Joyner (17:11.281)
10 feet, like if you make them make those steps, that's the goal. It's not about necessarily scoring the point right on the serve.
Mark Burik (17:20.172)
Yeah. If you get an overpass or a tight pass, you won the serving battle. Like if they don't approach from half court or behind you won the serving battle. So, really important thing to think about. I want to add my tip.
Brandon Joyner (17:25.755)
Yes.
Brandon Joyner (17:33.361)
Mm-hmm.
Brandon Joyner (17:36.911)
Yeah, I like that. Yeah, go ahead.
Mark Burik (17:39.822)
Don't think that if you truly want to win in unrated, maybe even a B, I don't think you should jump.
Brandon Joyner (17:43.697)
.
Brandon Joyner (17:52.337)
Whoa. Jump like at all, like even serving or I mean even jump when you're attacking. I know where you're going. I know where you're going with this and I love it. So hard. So hard to convince yourself to do that. Yeah, but no, I agree. think it's especially, yeah, at that level.
Mark Burik (17:57.155)
putting it out there.
Mark Burik (18:01.09)
putting it out there. I don't think.
Mark Burik (18:07.127)
Yeah
Mark Burik (18:12.812)
Yeah.
Brandon Joyner (18:21.935)
Yeah, I'm with you. Explain.
Mark Burik (18:22.798)
If you got a million bucks and you got an unrated tournament and you, know, you've only played, you've played less than five, two on two tournaments in your life, right? And played, let's call it less than a hundred hours of volleyball. Don't yell. You. Okay.
Brandon Joyner (18:39.793)
Yeah, go, you gotta, why? Why, yeah, why?
Mark Burik (18:46.856)
If you jump, there's a level of technical complication that you're adding where your brain is still thinking right, left, right, left, double arm lift, timing the ball, being able to do that. And then you also have this instinct that you should be smashing the ball, right? That you should be hitting hard. And in an unrated or a B tournament,
It's at least 50 % errors, right? So if you just keep the ball in, you've got a 50-50 chance that they are going to lose the point for you. And then if you don't have the control, so if you're not super precise yet, this is, this is one by ball control and limiting errors. That's what, that's what B tournaments and unrated tournaments are, are won by.
So if you can control the ball on your side, be able to pass that and then just stand pretty much everybody has the ability to create a stiff hand and either push it right, push it left, push it deep, push it short. Right. So you just need to make that defense scramble and run. And maybe they come back and hit at you, but if you can control a, you and me for sure, a B tournament.
There definitely, we would not have to jump to be able to win it. Like I would bet lots and lots of money on that. which is a video we should probably put out and not jump, but you know, I, I realize that you don't have, you might not have the control yet, even from the standing, but you will have more control and less to think about than if you try to take the full approach. And if you're.
Brandon Joyner (20:23.569)
That's that's a dare. Yeah, I like it
Mark Burik (20:42.028)
Your brain is telling you that, you know, you should spike this ball like Anders Moll when you will win that tournament if you keep the ball in and you keep the other team moving so that you can focus on spots over Palio.
Brandon Joyner (20:47.291)
Mm-hmm.
Brandon Joyner (20:56.657)
Yeah. Yeah, I like it. Yeah. I think it's kind of interesting because as you like, if we talk about it, the one in my next, this kind of goes into my next thought of what I, that I kind of mentioned is eliminate errors, like eliminate unnecessary errors. And a lot of times errors come from attacking. Um, if
Mark Burik (21:23.073)
you
Brandon Joyner (21:25.409)
it when we're. Trying to decide which which side of the line I want to start on, but like at the pro level there are certain points in the game where. You have to win the point.
As the level goes down, that idea of win the point, it gets smaller and smaller. And it becomes, it changes into like when you're in an unrated tournament, it's almost more important to not lose the point. Like I'm talking about me as a person. Like it's not necessarily the most important thing for me to go up, hit a ball, it hit the sand. It's almost more important for me.
to at the end of the game, be able to count on two or three fingers how many times I ended the point in a negative way. If I hit the ball in the net, if I hit the ball out of bounds, something like that, where you're losing the game because of your errors, let the other team do that. We actually had one of the guys that comes to our Kings and Queens last night.
his name's Matt Kent. Hopefully he like enjoys me saying this because I, had a great night last night. He's a really athletic guy. He's got great ball control. passing and setting is phenomenal, but he's one of those guys that goes in and really tries to like crush balls time after time after time. And he got brought down to the second court.
When I was playing on there and the first couple points that he hit like he hit one in the net really hard. It was everyone on our side was really scared, but we didn't, it didn't matter because we didn't have to play anything because he hit it on his side. And then his next two hits he taped and like went right to a defense and an older defender who like. If he would have had to move anywhere, he probably scoring that point. And then all of sudden.
Mark Burik (23:37.378)
Yeah.
Brandon Joyner (23:41.009)
Like I think Matt got a little frustrated and he decided, okay, now I'm just going to go up and I'm just going to shoot for a little bit. I'm going to take like 30%, 40%, 50 % power off my swing. And I'm just going to put these balls in play. And he did that. And he went on a run for like 14 points in a row. And then like in that style of a tournament, there's no catching you.
Like it, and it's the same thing in the CBB A's or any other tournaments that are in California when you're trying to your rating is there were during that timeframe of the 14 points that he won, he didn't score on the first time he scored on a lot of the first times, but even the rallies that he would hit and there would be a dig. A lot of times the errors came on the other side of the net because now they're in that same mindset of.
but they haven't listened to this podcast where they get the dig and they go up and they're like, yeah, it's time for me to finish the point. And they do just in the bad way where now they've lost the point. but yeah, I love that. think, yeah, not jumping eliminates a lot of those things. It's crazy at our camps. Like I'm sure you see it too. That second day where it's all attacking the first like
hour, two hours is so full of errors. And then people get tired and they're like, I'm not jumping like I was like, can't swing as hard as I was before. Then it's like, wow. I'm starting to score on every single point. This is weird. And, yeah. So it's kind of funny.
All right, I shared another one for me, so it's back to you. I want to hear, do you have your third one?
Mark Burik (25:36.799)
I mean, if you do those things, if you don't make errors, right? It's more what I wanted to do.
Brandon Joyner (25:44.655)
Which is an obvious statement, but if you think about how to not make the error, that's the important part. Yeah.
Mark Burik (25:48.632)
How do we get there?
Mark Burik (25:53.4)
So one of the analogies, like I'm been playing a lot of tennis lately. I'm getting back into it. And in tennis, it's so similar. So I'm making these direct translations of when is it time to continue the point? When is it time to put them in trouble? When is it time to go for a winner?
So if you watch the game of tennis, just as a fan, you go out there and you're like, they're trying to score points on every single swing. In tennis, you're hitting your forehands and backhands from behind the back of the line, or you are forced to back up during a play, you're supposed to hit that ball deep middle.
Right? You return another deep shot so that they can attack you from, from close. if you have the opportunity to be pretty balanced, then you do a setup shot where you try to peel them off of the court to make them just uncomfortable enough so that they return a ball that you can hit from like three quarters court so that you can attack moving forward into the court. And that's your opportunity to go for the actual kill.
And if we just translate that to beach understanding, when is the time to live back middle? When is the time for a setup shot that's going to get them in some kind of trouble, which is usually like our serve, right? and then being patient enough to say, this is a set, this is a pass and a set.
where I can confidently go for this swing because I'm balanced and moving forward and I'm in control. But it takes so long, like me in tennis and then definitely in my volleyball career, it takes so long to understand the patience where not every attack should be a kill. There are drills for that.
Brandon Joyner (27:47.718)
Yeah.
Mark Burik (27:48.95)
Right. We definitely drill that. Let's expand your range where there are more balls and more situations where you can go for kills, as well as like athleticism and being able to jump high and all that, that of course helps. But, knowing that, hmm, this sets on my left shoulder. I just have to keep it in. I'm leaning back. Okay. Like I was too early or the set was off the net. This is time to keep it in.
put them in just enough trouble on a 70 % shot or a 60 % shot to live, knock them off balance a little bit, and maybe they'll return an error and give me a better chance. Because if you play a ball to the other side that gets you a relatively easy dig, that is a great recycle. That is one way that you can recycle the point. And if this team is never getting kills or they're making errors 50 % of the time,
then you should just be in recycle mindset. Like, if it's possible spots, five feet from the net, five feet from every sideline and or deep middle, and you're set because you know that the stats are going to work in your favor if you can control your side.
Brandon Joyner (28:59.267)
Right. I've said it before at our camps and I think it's like a hot take kind of statement. Beach volleyball specifically is it's not about it's not about winning points. It's about putting the other team in uncomfortable situations long enough that you win the game.
You know, like I think a lot of us, we go up into this, we have this mindset where we're like, I have to win all these points, but a lot of times that again, it leads to errors. And then you're shooting yourself in the foot more often than not. If you have a per going back to the serving, if you, if you put somebody into a situation where they're having to take three steps or four steps every single time that they pass. Sure. The first five, six.
serves that you hit, they're probably going to pass them perfectly. What are they going to do the last five or six points? It's worth finding that out. Same thing on defense. If you can make a person lay down for a dig, you've done your job. Like it doesn't mean that you have to win the point because if you make it make a person lay down to make a dig, sure. The first three, four, five times they lay down to make a dig.
They might get up. might, I would say on a generous note, they might score three out of those five. That's extremely generous. But I would say as the game goes on, like the first 10 points, maybe it's three out of five, the next five points, I bet it's two out of five. And then the end of the game, it's one zero out of five. Like it's about putting the other team in an uncomfortable situation. It's not necessarily about you winning the point.
Mark Burik (30:28.206)
That's super generous.
Brandon Joyner (30:50.961)
I have one, I have one more that it's very quick. One minute. It doesn't even deal with volleyball. It's concentrate on your warmups and limit your, your attacking before games. I think so many of us, we spend so much time or one, we don't warm up well enough before a game. So get your warmup in your dynamic motions and whatever. So that when you step on the court, you're ready to play.
Mark Burik (30:53.294)
Okay, we got a minute.
Mark Burik (31:13.325)
Mm.
Brandon Joyner (31:20.417)
Two as the day goes on you need to hit less and less balls and warm-up and your first in your first game if You hit you shouldn't be hitting more than four or five balls After your first game it maybe goes down to three after that maybe two then maybe maybe by the end You're not even doing any attacks. So limit your warm-ups be smart about it. That's my last one
Mark Burik (31:46.869)
The last, my last little 32nd one is, uh, unrated and B tournaments. Stop playing with a blocker, leave a net protector there at the 10 foot line. And if they get one or two kills on an open net, right. It's probably because that other team set too tight, more, more tight than they're comfortable with, which means you'll get a bunch of oversets.
Brandon Joyner (31:58.545)
Mm-hmm.
Mark Burik (32:09.914)
on your side, if you're paying attention, if you're actually like playing a true net protector position instead of blocker and instead of double down. And then if you do for whatever reason, decide to put a blocker up there. Do not care as a defender that they see you in your spot. There is no sitting in the middle and then flash to the diagonal because this person is seeing me like.
First of all, nobody at a B rated tournament really has good ball control and vision enough to be able to see what's going on and then execute to beat you, you know, with you being able to chase the ball. So I love when an attacker sees me where I am. Now let's see if you can actually beat me in the race instead of me so concerned.
With I gotta hide in the middle. gotta hide in the middle. Then when he jumps, then I run because everybody does it too early. And then all they have to do is hit a sloppy shot to one half of the court to beat you instead of a good shot that you're actually able to chase. So go straight to your position and sit there and stare at the hitter and let them stare at you. And you'll start finding that they're not even looking at you anyway.
Brandon Joyner (33:26.159)
Right. I like it. I think this episode can be used by literally anybody. Like whether you're an unrated player, be a like wherever you are in the country, if you take those ideas, maybe not the not jumping one, if you're like double a, triple a, but the limiting errors, being a positive points player, it's big. That's what Logan and I, Hagen and I are working on right now is like at the end of the game, if we're positive players, we won.
Mark Burik (33:32.535)
Yes.
Brandon Joyner (33:56.847)
Hands down every time. you're negative, miss serves, errors, everything can't win.
Mark Burik (34:04.654)
Nice. All right, quick wrap up. If you guys know of any parents or juniors out there, we are finally building our juniors programs out. So one of the best things that you can do is just get a video analysis, work with one of our coaches to have them run down a full video analysis of the match you're playing. You can check that out at betteratbeach.com forward slash film session. That's whether you're a junior or an adult or a parent.
but head there so that they can actually see what they're doing right and wrong in the match play. If you're trying to get them to college, if you're trying to get them to the next level or just get ahead of the players that they're around, you need to remember that showing up to practice and practicing the same amount as everybody else on your team is the bare minimum requirement to be on the team. Your child getting better is everything that happens outside of practice time.
They will improve at the same rate as everybody else if they put the same effort as everybody else in practice, but where the elite players are developed and gotten to the next level and their process accelerated is the work that they do outside of the court. And so if you want us to run through a video analysis film session with them, we can do that at barabeeze.com forward slash film session. are also working on building a full recruiting course.
and a highlight editing and skills video editing so that you can send recruitment videos to colleges. So those are coming late spring of this year. So just be on the lookout for them. But our film session is up and running. So you can start with that video analysis. And if you want, you can upgrade to the full Pro membership where you'll get access to all of the.
courses as well. So check out betterbeach.com forward slash film session. If you want to get your video analyzed, watch work with a coach one-on-one or if you know any juniors or parents who are just wondering what it, what the next step is to get to the next level.
Brandon Joyner (36:10.481)
And if you're listening to this podcast and you've been supporting us and we haven't seen you in person or met you in person come to a camp I Promise it'll it'll change your life in a lot of ways. So come see us. We want to meet you
Mark Burik (36:17.485)
Yeah.
Mark Burik (36:25.346)
All right, that's it from us. Thank you guys. Enjoy the beautiful weather that we have in California. Hope you guys are playing a tournament. And if this episode helped you win your tournament or at least gave you a few extra points, shoot us a DM somewhere on Instagram. Yeah, we want to celebrate with
Brandon Joyner (36:41.743)
Yeah, we love celebrating.
Yeah, and the second league qualifiers this weekend in Huntington Beach. If you guys are around, I know it's going to be one of the best tournaments that won't have stands. show up. See everybody competing for a pretty high prize.
Mark Burik (36:57.486)
You
Mark Burik (37:03.822)
All right, from me, from Ran and everybody at Better Beach, we'll see you guys on the sand.