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Welcome to the GoTennis Podcast.

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Our conversations are uniquely engaging

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and our tips will help you to win more matches.

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Our mission is to keep you well informed,

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give you what you need to improve your game

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and help you save money.

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We invite you to become a GoTennis Premium member

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and join our community today.

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- Hey, this is Shaun with the GoTennis Podcast,

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powered by Signature Tennis.

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Check out our calendar of tennis events at LetsGoTennis.com

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and as you're listening to this,

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please look in your podcast app

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where to leave a review and do that for us.

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We would love to earn your five star reviews.

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And today we have a special guest,

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GSI Executive Search Consultant Andrew Minnelli,

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joined us in person to talk about the partnership

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between the American Racket Sports Association and GSI.

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Have a listen and let us know what you think.

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(upbeat music)

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Who are you and why do we care?

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- I don't know why you care, but Andrew Minnelli,

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I actually started my career, well, I'll back up.

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Graduated from Kalamazoo College

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and I played tennis there

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and it was a great experience.

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We played for a national title, my sophomore year.

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- Exciting.

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- It was very, very, very fun, very neat.

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I was okay.

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I was never gonna be top 10 in D1 or anything like that

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or go on the pro tour.

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So to be able to do that at the level,

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but then also be in an academic institution

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where that was probably more important than sports,

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because there's a balance there

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and sometimes maybe that doesn't exist.

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Anyway, I graduated in '01,

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was done with tennis burnt out,

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put the racket down, my internship experience

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was with the ATB tour and IMG.

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- Oh, fun.

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- So I wanted to be more in that realm

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versus be on the court because I was done with tennis.

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Put the racket down, I was head 10 and ice in the shoulder

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and all of that just wanted to be,

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wanna put that chapter behind me.

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And anyway, '01 happens, 9/11 hits, job market tanks,

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I am not bilingual last time I checked.

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So when I was going for jobs at my former places

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where I worked as an intern,

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when you're not bilingual, we're in a hiring freeze.

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Okay, well, fast forward to going back

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to Kalamazoo one weekend to go support the guys at a match.

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I wanted to get up in parents' basement

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and I saw the women's coach who was there

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and he had some good juniors that he coached on the side

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as he was Tom Walker.

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Great, great guy, good coach.

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And so on the side, maybe for more beer money,

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I'd help him out and work with his kids

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and not with the women's team, his kids.

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And I go back one weekend, he looks at me,

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goes, "Manali, what the hell are you doing with your life?"

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You look like a stiff.

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And I'm dressed in like, you know, about nicer clothes

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and you know, and you know, wasn't me.

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And I go, "Well, I'm interviewing for banks right now

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because that's really all that was available.

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I was going for bank retail jobs

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and I was interviewing with a Federal Reserve Bank.

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And I was getting kind of far along in the process

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and he goes, "Well, would you want to maybe teach tennis?"

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And at that point, I'm starting to circle back and go,

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"I swore I wasn't going to get into this.

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I wanted to do the business side of things.

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I'm maybe looking at, you know, going to banking.

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I was like, "Wait a second.

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Nothing's hitting.

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I need to get out of my parents' basement."

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type of thing.

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Still granted from, you know, fifth grade

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when I do that one thing.

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(laughing)

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But I said, "All right, look, happy to explore that."

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And then literally the next week later,

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I got a call from Billy Sterns in Stan Smith.

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And they go, "We're starting a junior tennis academy

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in Hilton, how did you like to do that?

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Would you like to come down and check us out?"

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So I did that, I said, "Screw the bank.

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See you later, Cleveland, Ohio.

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You know, I'm trying to get to nicer weather

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and packed up a van and just like, grow down."

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And I've really never looked back since.

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You know, I moved from Academy to the more private sector

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where maybe it's tennis for the masses,

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but if it's private country club, you know what I mean there.

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It's just more than just high performance kids.

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- Yep.

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- And I think once I started to get, you know,

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more into the Atlanta market, when I came here,

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you know, I realized this actually really could be a career.

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And that it's more than just teaching tennis lessons

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and you know, making okay money

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and it's more than just a stop, you know,

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it's actually very satisfying.

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I don't want to be sitting in a cubicle at a bank.

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You kind of find the love for the sport

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that you put the rack down and you were done with.

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You're like, "Man, this has really given me a lot.

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Here's an opportunity to give back."

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You know, and then I realized, "Wow,

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I can actually do a little bit better

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than just, you know, make money on lessons."

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So I tried to raise my hand, join some boards, you know,

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give back, you know, learn a little bit more than just,

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you know, "Okay, I can teach a couple,

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a couple hours a week, you know, more of the program,

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management, you know, all of that."

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And then just realized, "Hey, this can turn into something."

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And I got really lucky, you know, my first job,

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director's job was at the Riviera Country Club

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in Pacific Palisades, where the fires were a few months ago.

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- Yeah.

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- And I had to get out to California

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because my wife was doing her residency out there.

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So I was, you know, just trying to really make it out there.

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And I fooled them, got that job.

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And it was-- - But before that in Atlanta,

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you were, you left to go to California

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from Atlanta Athletic Club, right?

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- Right, right.

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- Okay, I was the associate director

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at the Atlanta Athletic Club before that.

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- That was Jeff Chandling.

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- Jeff Chandling, I was with Matt Grayson

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at Gretchen, where Roswell Proud of that.

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- Okay.

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- So yeah, that leading up to that,

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that was my first director's job.

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I was able to get out on the same time zone as my wife.

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You know, we were newlyweds,

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and then I've been out west ever since.

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So was at the Atlanta Athletic Club,

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Riviera Country Club, then I moved up to Seattle Tennis Club,

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beautiful club, traditional iconic place.

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And, you know, as luck has it,

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we are back now in the Southern California Desert.

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I get a little bit more vitamin D again,

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not that Seattle's a bad place.

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- Just gonna have indoor place.

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- Yeah, it's exactly.

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But yeah, it's been a really fun journey.

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And then, you know, coming down there,

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I actually didn't have a job.

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Again, it was just, you know,

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being a cheerleader for my wife

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and joining a practice, a medical practice,

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and being dad.

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And then, you know, it's funny how things work where,

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you know, when I'm starting my career,

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9/11 terrible job market.

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And when I moved down to, you know,

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back to Southern California,

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where the Indian Wells area,

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I don't have a job and now COVID hits

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and the world shuts down.

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So you've got all these, you know,

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circumstances that kind of puts you at hold

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and you have to do some reflection.

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All right, well, I'm gonna get back into this eventually,

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you know, and I think the answer hopefully is yes.

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But really what went on coming first is, you know,

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when COVID hit, I would get calls from pros

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around the country going, hey, Andrew,

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I just got furloughed.

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I just got fired.

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Or I've kept my job and I'm nervous.

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- So I wanna get into this transition at some point.

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But 2001, September 11th hits,

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and I know where I was, I was already teaching tennis

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with my first club job in coming,

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working for Kate Sharp and Justin Yo.

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- How cool is that?

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- And I like, I remembered clearly,

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as many of us do, I'm sure.

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But then that was the, I remember as you talked about,

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the feeling of getting back into it,

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'cause I was the same way.

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Put the ragged down, I'm gonna go get a real job.

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- Yeah.

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- And then as I get into it and I realize the career thing,

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and I think that's one of the big pushes right now

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with the certification organizations and USDA as well,

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saying this is a career, this is a real job.

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This does have a payroll, it does have scheduling.

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The product or service might be a sport,

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which is okay, if not great.

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But that was the thing, Darryl Lewis was great

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about pushing me when he said, Sean,

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you should raise your hand and get on some boards

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and do some things, I didn't.

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And what that allowed was for me to fizzle out

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of the career in a completely opposite way.

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- Sure.

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- Of what you're talking about.

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But how did you get to the point,

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and you've told me this before,

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so I get to kind of lead the question,

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which I find interesting is,

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you've been in the tennis industry,

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you had a few jobs,

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but people were calling you as though you were a career

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specialist already, because you said you got into,

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we're gonna talk about GSI in a second,

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but you got into that because there was already

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this incoming stream of conversation.

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- Yeah, I mean, I think part of it was because,

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I had raised my hand for boards,

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and I think I was trying to ascend in the career

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fairly quickly and really get that director's job

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and all of that.

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It was important when I was in my early 30s

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when I realized it could be a career.

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So I was kind of on that path.

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And again, it kind of just to the point earlier,

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great, you can teach, great, you can run a mixer,

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but what's all behind that in the programming?

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And I think when the decision makers of clubs

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actually look at you, it goes beyond

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just what can you do on the court or run a mixer.

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- We can all teach a tennis lesson.

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- Right, right.

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And it's, what can you do to be a leader, a mentor,

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manage a department, coexist with other department heads?

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There's a lot more to that.

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And having some experience with Riviera Country Club,

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Seattle Tass Club, and both were equally great

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challenging positions, both good and bad.

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I wouldn't say bad, but maybe more challenging, right?

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You learn from a lot, and then maybe just because

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I've kept in touch with all my friends in the industry

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and because I volunteered for boards,

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maybe that's why I got those calls.

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I don't think it was anything else.

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It's not my good looks, that's for sure.

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But it's, it turned into almost a lesson book

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where they were leaning on me,

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"All right, well, go get your pick-up all certification."

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- Yeah, what do I do next?

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- Round yourself out.

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This is an opportunity while the world is shut down

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to reinvent, rebrand yourself.

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You're not losing your identity of a pro,

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but what can you do to add to your resume

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or your menu at your club?

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So that way, hopefully, when things open back up

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and the world is to somewhat of a new normal,

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you're that much more marketable

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because you use this time wisely.

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And so that became a conversation with a lot of people

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and the company that helped vet me

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on the back-end for Riviera Country Club,

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GSI Executive Search, I called them up and I said,

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"Hey, I'm doing this thing.

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I just helped one of my former staff get a great job

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in Arizona and helped them along the way."

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And this, you know, I'm doing this career counseling

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and it's kind of turning into a lesson book

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and I may be interned before you.

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I'm like, "Ain't Drew, we don't need an intern.

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Join us."

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And that actually was a natural fit.

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So that actually happened first.

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That was my first job coming in the desert.

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I've now been doing this for five years and I love it.

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It's not a job, just like tennis and, you know, it's fun

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'cause, you know, we're all, I think, you know,

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they are industry and not just tennis anymore.

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It's rackets, it's court sports.

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However you want to call it, we're all family

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at the end of the day and we just have to help each other out.

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So that was just more of a natural fit

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'cause I'm just talking to a buddy, going,

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"Well, maybe you should think of doing this."

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And not everything I say is right.

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Ask my wife that.

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But at the same time, you know, at least it helped lead

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some people into some good situations, you know.

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And again, it's satisfying to be able to pair

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a deserving club with a really great pro.

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And then vice versa.

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It's got to feel good.

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Yeah, it's awesome.

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And I don't remember the time of how long I was doing

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that before the club that I managed in the desert came along.

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But it did come on my radar that there was a job opening up

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at Big Horn, Big Horn Golf Club.

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But we call it Big Horn.

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We've dropped the golf in the club, although that is our pride

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and joy in our big amenity.

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And it's a cool place.

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It really is a dream job.

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And I really, you know, like we talked about this earlier

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about how, you know, there's really no perfect job.

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You know, there's the good and the bad of everything.

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This is pretty darn close.

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I've seen pictures of this place.

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It looks like the perfect job.

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It's really cool.

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So I hunted them down.

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And I go, "No, no, no, no, no, I'm not trying to do your search."

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I am your search.

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Yeah, like I think I can do both.

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Okay, because that was going to be my next question.

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You already have a job.

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Yeah, I have a job.

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I think I can do both because both can kind of co-exist

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a little bit.

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Right.

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And, you know, I'm always going to help my friends.

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It's satisfying to help place somebody at the club

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and then help a deserving club find a pro for long term.

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But at the same time, I'm missing that directorship position.

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You know, you kind of go through the love and the hate with tennis, right?

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And you know, those spurs.

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I'm like, "Ah, I don't know if I want to do this again.

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No, I miss it."

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I don't want to come back to that.

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And wow, that is a very unique and very cool place.

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I don't know if I keep saying cool, but there's not another way to say it.

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And I interviewed for the job.

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I think there was a couple other people up against me and I was very lucky to get the position.

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And so I'm at, I'm the Director of Rackets Sports at Big Horn as well as Associate Rackets

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Sports Consultant with GSI.

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At Big Horn, I managed their Rackets and Courts Sports arena for eight months out of the year.

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And it's a great blend where I can both jobs can coexist.

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And what's great because it's eight months out of the year, you know, I also get to spend

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time with family in the summer.

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Did I say what happens the other four months?

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Yeah.

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They have somebody else do it or they just do nothing.

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You know, 105 to 110 plus degrees.

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Is it hot there?

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Yeah, and then we want to play tennis in the morning.

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And if you do do it early, it's, you can do it.

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It's bearable or pickable, right?

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Or pedel.

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But you do it in the morning.

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So we don't really need an operation of summer because our members go away.

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Got it.

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You know, and we hear more about that in the Northeast where in the winter, you know, your fancy

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clubs kind of shut down.

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Yeah.

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And the tennis and sailing clubs kind of thing.

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But on the East Coast, we don't think about the desert very often.

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We don't have them over here.

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So I guess it's just between May and September, you just don't bother going to the club because

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those people are all the members of some other club where the weather's nicer during that

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time.

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We're a bit transient.

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You know, I think COVID did change things a lot where we do have some year rounders.

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I mean, I'm a year rounder in the desert.

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But a lot of our members do go elsewhere, maybe they'll travel, you know, maybe they go home

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to their other home.

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You know, it's a home away from home.

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These are the type of people that have other homes.

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Yeah.

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And we pride our sell.

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Yeah.

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Not everybody has other home.

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Yeah.

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I wouldn't necessarily say that they're out to collect home.

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They're not.

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They're not.

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You collect watches.

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They collect houses.

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It's true.

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True.

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And some people collect memberships, right?

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Yes.

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But no, we've got my segment of the population over club.

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It's their great people.

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It really is family.

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We have fun.

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And I think at the end of the day, like, you know, four rackets and court sports, it is a job.

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It is spelled J-O-B, but it's also fun.

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And this is pretty darn close to having at least for me.

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And kind of getting back to like the balance of things.

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You know, I lost my father probably almost two years, almost to the day.

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And you know, at the end of the day, you do have to think about this.

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You know, we all have a shelf life.

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Life is somewhat short on this planet.

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And so you need to maximize it in all the areas.

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And I think what's great, at least for me, and again, I didn't set out to do all these things

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that just happen.

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And you know, maybe it's hard work.

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Maybe it's here in Dipiti too, you know, but it just kind of like happened.

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You know, I really get to spend the summers with my kids almost like a school teachers off

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for the most part of them, then maybe doing some summer camps and lesson plans.

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You know, but I'm really at home with the kids.

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And I don't get that time back.

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You know, whereas I think when we all grew up, you know, we had parents that were on the

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go and we just saw them at dinner time.

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And that's neat for me.

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Or even most parents now.

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Two jobs.

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Yeah.

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You see your kids, not you.

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They, most parents see their kids.

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They wake them up in the morning, feed them, stick them on a bus.

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And when they get home from work, they pick them up from daycare.

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They feed them, they put them to bed.

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Yeah.

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And they come back.

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I don't want to talk about it.

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You know, I'm playing about, oh, I'm raising kids.

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It's so tough.

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No, you're not.

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You bathe the kid every once in a while.

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You're not raising children.

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And this is me picking on the.

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Yeah.

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The parent that has two jobs, but that's a different life.

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It's a different thing.

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They don't get summers off.

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So they have to maximize that morning and evening time.

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I get to work from home as well.

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So I get a chance.

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Yeah.

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I get to work from time with my wife and son.

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And the other kids when they come to visit, which we appreciate.

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And this might be a little bit of a tangent.

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And we can get into it.

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But, you know, I think too, you know, as our industry changes, yes, we work holidays.

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Yes, we work hard.

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You know, yes, we put the hours in.

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And sometimes we don't see family, too.

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But is there a way to be efficient within the hours that you have at the club, but then

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make sure that you're at home because really at the end of the day, that's most important.

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You know, you think about like, how do you leave your legacy?

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I mean, for me, like, I want to be remembered as a good dad.

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First and foremost, you know, if anybody says anything else, okay, they're probably lies.

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But, you know, my legacy with being a good parent and a father, you know, and a good spouse.

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It's a great target.

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Right.

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You know, of course, you know, rackets and court sports are a passion and that helps fuels

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and, you know, put some food on the table for the family.

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But, you know, my priorities kind of switched a little bit and I'm in a situation now where

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again, didn't set out for this to happen, but I got really lucky.

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Yeah.

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Some people would say there's no such thing as luck.

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Yeah, I think that-

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Obi-Wan says that and he's almost always right.

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Sorry.

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My college coach at Kalamazoo, Tim and Kaurwin, he said this one day and it stuck with me.

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He goes, "We don't, you know, if you hit that serve, you know, and it just dribbles over

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and it's in or you hit that winter and, you know, you kind of day with your eyes closed

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and you hide out and I do that."

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You may be luck, but remember all the hard work that you put in.

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It's not luck.

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It's work.

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It's work for you.

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It's-

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Yeah.

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You do all this stuff, but you really only see like, you know, that part of it, but it's that

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whole journey below that's what's most important.

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Absolutely.

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And I'm sure we can wax it intellectual and feel asophical all day long.

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So I want to jump into the main reason we're here.

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So one, you get summers off.

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That's fantastic.

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So that's why I'm here.

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You're here.

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Yeah, get out of the heat and the helicopter.

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Exactly.

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You left, came all the way to Beaufort.

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Yeah.

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No, you're here because we're doing a deal.

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You, me, us.

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Do you want to do that?

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I'm not sure.

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And not necessarily go tennis specifically related, but the ARA, the American Racket Sports

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Association and GSI are coming together and we are going to support the Racket Sports

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world with some career services that GSI will provide.

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So we're creating this partnership.

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You guys are going to be sponsors of the Association.

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Yeah.

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And we're going to create basically as much as we can possibly create in that world.

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We've got a jobs board, basically a jobs posting system that's just come out.

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It's weeks old.

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So nobody's on it yet, but we're going to build that out.

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So tell me a bit about without getting technical within the contract, but tell me a bit about

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what GSI and Andrew Monelli are going to be able to do for the American Racket Sports

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Association membership beyond just tennis coaches.

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Because this isn't just if you're a coach type.

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This is anything in the Racket Sports industry, what I've been saying is if your Racket Sports

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adjacent, if you are near anything like this, then this is number one, somebody you want

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to talk to.

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We want to put people in touch with you specifically because at one point, it's not just, can I get my

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next job down the street or what's the next country club that I can go to, but it really

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is what about the rest of the country?

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What about everywhere else?

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Where do the guys that are already running country clubs go next if they're looking for that,

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rather than just assistant pro going to head pro and the typical path staying within Atlanta?

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So you get a chance to help us expand what we can do.

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Yeah, this is exciting.

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Thanks for partnering on this.

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I look at it more as a blank canvas, and I know there's other partnerships with other

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relations and our competitors and all of that.

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It's great.

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We're not really out to duplicate that.

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I've been doing this for a while.

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Pro Bono until my wife said, "Figure how to monetize that.

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You dummy."

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But I—

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Why is there good with that?

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Yeah, yeah.

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You're doing a lot of work.

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They are.

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What are—

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But this is an opportunity for a lack of better words.

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There's no silver bullet on career journey.

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There's not one right way.

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There's lots of different segments.

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You can work in the industry.

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Our firm is not just me.

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My colleagues within the firm are all former general managers and most of them are platinum

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clubs.

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We have a wealth of knowledge within the firm.

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Based on my rack, it's background.

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I'm able to at least share the story, share the journey, kind of like what we're doing

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now, help people understand maybe what their short term and long term goals are.

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If there's a club that happens to have a search and they want assistance with it, that

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can be a luxury to have somebody help you.

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But in a lot of ways, it's nice to have that unbiased voice to come and go like, "Look,

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I understand where you are.

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Put your politics aside.

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This is where the industry is going.

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You know your membership.

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Let's merge all that information together and find somebody that can be a good fit for

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you for long term."

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On the back end of it too, if there's a club that needs some assistance and you're very

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happy with your staff but you want that unbiased voice to come in and help as well, GAsI can

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do that.

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But mediation, you mean?

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We're just trying to figure out comp packages and stuff.

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That can be part of it.

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Also, it could be programming, budgeting, all of that.

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We can come in and we can help with that.

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It can help me do my job better.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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And I'm not stepping on your toes.

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I would say that the partnership between GAsI and the American Racket Sports Association

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is an enhancement.

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How can we all share knowledge?

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Because again, at the end of the day, that's how we all get better.

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Yeah.

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And that's one of the things we're doing.

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And I say we now, when I talk about the American Racket Sports Association, is trying to create

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more connectivity.

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Trying to create more cooperation, tennis, Racket Sports, very competitive.

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We're competitive people by nature.

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We make good salespeople.

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We make good winners.

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We're going to go figure out how to win.

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But sometimes winning isn't growing the pie.

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It's trying to get my piece of it.

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And so this kind of scenario is coming together and saying, okay, we need somebody like GAsI

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to say that they can help us not just with Atlanta.

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Okay.

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We've built the job system.

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It works.

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It's in Atlanta.

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It's going.

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Okay.

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That's going to go so far.

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Right.

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And the question is, what about the guys that are doing the hiring?

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What do they look at?

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How can we help everybody in this industry?

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And career services is not what we do.

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That's what you do.

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And that's where the partnership is.

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We try to get more people to, I don't want to say maintain your lane.

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But if you have an expertise, then stick with that as best you can.

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And it doesn't necessarily have to be like COVID.

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You mentioned like round yourself out.

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Go learn to be a different thing.

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Improve your menu.

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I think it was a phrase that you used.

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But people went out and tried to be everything to everyone.

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And we don't always have to be that.

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We can go find an expert, partner, offer more, that actually creates some scalability.

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We're happy to help.

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Again, we're all family at the end of the day.

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That's what I want the relationship to feel like.

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Of course, it's nice in the business end of things for both organizations, until hopefully

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scale nationally.

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But at the end of the day, I talked about priorities in life.

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Obviously, family is important, but career I'm very passionate about.

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I didn't know that when I first get out of college because I was done with it.

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But I've gone through this journey.

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It's okay.

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My journey might be different from somebody else.

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But they're all relevant at the end of the day.

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And we are all within the same cloth here.

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How can we make it better for everybody?

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And it's just an opportunity to share.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, I agree.

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Okay, so pretty much covered everything.

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And before we blow past our time frame, because I'm sure we can talk for hours.

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Yeah, we can.

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Yeah.

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Anything else you want to share specifically that I didn't ask or that we want to talk about

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before I ask you about King of Tennis?

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Is there anything interesting that's happening?

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You got a search coming up?

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You got something we can announce?

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I don't know.

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I always like to give a platform if there's something on your mind.

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If not, we can pull it as well.

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Well, we got a few pending searches, but maybe a plug for the job board.

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You know, as this is more formalized, is look for details on that.

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You know, because anything that we have going on, whether I know you or I don't, it's always

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an open door.

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I'm approachable.

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And let's hear your journey.

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Let's figure out what can work.

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Maybe one of the opportunities that we have available through our firm that's relevant to

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the association could be a good fit.

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And let's see where that conversation leads us.

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But other than that, no.

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I'm just excited about the partnership.

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It's good to see you again.

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It's been many years.

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In the flesh?

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In the flesh.

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We've gotten older and hopefully a little wiser.

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Hopefully.

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We hope.

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We hope if anybody's going to put us in charge of anything.

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Yeah, that's a mistake.

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And we'll make sure that your contact information is there because one of the things you want

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to be clear about, you use the word approachable.

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Yeah.

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Because anybody can call and say, hey, I have some questions.

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I want to figure it out.

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It doesn't necessarily have to be the fancy country club.

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I'm looking for a director's job.

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Anybody in the industry, anybody that is interested in it?

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Yeah, I feel, you know, going into that for a second, you know, our industry, like I said,

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there's a lot of different segments to it.

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You've got colleges.

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You've got resorts.

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You've got private clubs.

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There's different levels of what a private club is.

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Here in Atlanta, you've got HOAs that are very strong and amazing teams that come out of

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it, right?

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And then you've got public facilities.

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And some of those jobs can be great as well.

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So there's a lot of different segments, you know, and you can, you know, based on how you

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shape your journey, you can put yourself in a good position to get either one of those.

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And there can be some crossover.

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You're going to be some challenges with that, but it's not impossible.

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But it's just a matter of strategizing and figuring out what you can do to put yourself in

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the best position based on what your goals are.

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And there's a lot that's out there, you know, and even if I'm not doing the search, come

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talk to me.

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Yeah, come call me.

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Just know that in California, there's a three hour difference.

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So if I don't get to, it might be, it might be 4 AM.

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I feel like that's a dig because every once in a while I schedule a meeting with you and

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I show up three hours early.

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Well, I appreciate the problems.

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I'm like, oh man, I forgot about the timeframe.

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Yeah, so I'm one of those guys where it's like, look, great if we can schedule something,

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but you can also call me on the costume.

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And you know, and I wanted to feel like that because I want this, I want this partnership

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between the firm and, you know, any relationship, you know, that I have with a member, you know,

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maybe they don't know them or I didn't know that person, you know, it needs to be organic.

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Yeah, that makes sense.

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And you're well connected in Atlanta.

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So it's not as though these guys haven't heard of you.

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So that's another reason why I like the relationship is because it isn't just, hey guys, we found some

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search firm.

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Frank's coming in, and like, this is great because it's a little bit of a homecoming and not

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that this is home for you really, but for us, you're one of us, not just a tennis type or

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a racket sports professional, but we worked with you.

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It's a homeaway from home.

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I have a lot of great memories.

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It's a special place.

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You know, and I think I do too, again, talking about our community.

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Our community is like a Kevin Bacon, you know, game where you might not know somebody directly,

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but you're one person removed.

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And you know, that's the way it works with careers, you know, and there's, it can intersect

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and you never know.

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And if I can ever help bridge the gap in some way, that's why I'm here.

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Well I got myself one person away from Andy Roddick, and we got to do a podcast trade.

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Yeah, let's work with that.

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We got to figure that one out too.

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All right, so let's wrap this up.

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So King of Tennis, I did a pretty good job of not letting you know it was coming.

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So you're going to have to come up with something on the fly here.

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The question, my favorite question I was asked is if you, Andrew Manelli, were King of

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Tennis, whether it's the entire world or just California or just the United States, if

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you were King of Tennis, is there anything you would do or change?

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Boy, really good question.

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I should have done my homework.

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No, give me enough time.

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Yeah, you didn't give me any time.

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Everything is better on the fly anyway.

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Sometimes.

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Think so.

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So getting back to the situation that I'm in, you know, where I've been able to carve out

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this unique balance.

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So if I was the King of Tennis, having that in mind, I still think that the tennis schedule

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is absolutely brutal.

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You know, and I mean, tennis schedule as a coach, as a pro, like on tour.

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Oh, as a professional tennis player.

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Yeah, and we could probably even dig into that as well, right?

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You know, I think there's different layers to that.

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It's complex and it's not.

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But on tour, I mean, those guys and gals, how much time do they actually really get off?

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Not much.

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I don't want to quote it.

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Like a few weeks, six weeks, something like that, six weeks at best, after the world title

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has been crowned.

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So what can they do to change that?

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If I was the King of Tennis, you know, find more balance.

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I don't know what the answer is, but that's my answer.

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But you're the King.

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They were go.

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So you have to actually do something.

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Because right now, you just sound like someone coming to petition the King and saying,

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please help me come up with an answer.

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Can the King petition?

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Sure.

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You want an answer?

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Wait, does that make me King if I give the answer?

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Yeah.

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I got an answer for you.

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I don't know.

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These guys can play--

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There's not like a politician where there's no answer.

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Exactly.

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Yeah, okay.

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Hey, no, you're going to start with, look, what I'm trying to say here is, and I've

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said this a thousand times.

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You don't even study anything yet.

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They can play whatever they want.

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Can you talk about it?

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They can take off March.

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I think is there a way to install some breaks within the calendar?

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These are independent contractors.

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They are not forced to play.

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They can play whatever they want.

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So why is this a brutal schedule?

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They're not playing for an NFL team where if they don't show up, they get fired.

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You know what?

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If these guys don't want to play in October?

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If the season is year long, you know, and I get how it all flows, but can there be some

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breaks in between?

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So if I was King, I would do that.

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There you go.

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Okay.

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And then on the other level of what we all do and what our passion is, again, it's getting

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back to what I said earlier.

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It's be efficient with your hours there.

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You know, if you can do 12 hours of work in six and go home and see your kids because you

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don't get that time back.

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And is there a way to, you know, maybe it's tough if you're a one person showing you're wearing

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a lot of hats, you know, because that scenario can exist.

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But if you're lucky enough to have a staff where you've got a lot of people that are good

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in different areas and they're shining, can everybody have a break and go see their family

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or go hang out with friends or go talk to their parents because again, you know, the Grim

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Reapers coming for us at some point, right?

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So let's maximize our time on this planet and have fun, you know, in our career, but as

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well as with our family and our friends.

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Beautiful.

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There you go.

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If I was King, that's what I would do.

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Making families better.

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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Nothing to do with tennis, just if you have a job, if you have kids, if you have a family,

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make that the priority.

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They make that why you go to work.

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Right.

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Not in the way like I'm trying to get away from them, the why I go to work.

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But for me, it is the driver.

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It is why I get out of bed in the morning.

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And it's nice to be able to leave your mark, you know, on what you love to do.

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But again, I think it's, you know, if that happens, that's a bonus.

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But I don't think it should necessarily be your goal.

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You know, I think it can happen through passion.

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Family comes first.

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Well, there you have it.

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We want to thank reGeovinate.com for use of the studio and signature tennis for their support.

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And be sure to hit that follow button.

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For more racquet sports content, you can go to LetsGoTennis.com.

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And while you're there, check out our calendar of events, great deals on racquet sports products,

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apparel, and more.

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If you're a coach, director of any racquet sports, or just someone who wants to utilize

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our online shop, contact us about setting up your own shop collection to offer your branded

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merchandise to the racquet sports world.

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And with that, we're out.

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See you next time.

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