Workouts were done at 6 am on Wednesday morning as Heart High Football Players, the injured player Micaya Underwood was given an important task – blowing the team drone to take the video. He was trained by head coach Jake Gosen.
When an alarm went to alert to alert the battery, the underwood manipulated peacefully to bring the drone down – although it was briefly gone so much that the team companions were joking that it was out of control.
Managers make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches to eat after practices for football players.
(Eric Sondhaimer / Los Angeles Times)
Each head coach needs to entrust responsibilities and rely on others so that he can help focus on preparing his team, and in 2025 is three important posts drone operators, manager and athletic trainers.
Each program requires one of each.
Earlier this week, at a city section school, three managers were making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches to eat after practices for players. In another school, the athletic trainer was tapping the ankles and roaming the ground in terms of emergency. Without athletic trainers, for those teams, coaches were forced to work.
The coaches kept handing their keys to the managers to recover or open something.
The managers and instructors are for almost the years, but the drone operators are new. In the heart, they have to pay special attention to hooks. Seriously, Hart had disabled a drone by a hawk. Now to ensure that no hox is nearby. After all, Hart’s new surname is Hawks and apparently real huxes like flying drones.
So everyone calls thanks to drone operators, managers and trainers. Every program is needed.
The electric bike hit the line on Heart High.
(Eric Sondhaimer / Los Angeles Times)
Oh, and another trend. There are many players using electric bikes to achieve practices, perhaps a charging station is added to the football budget of a program.