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Masters Alliance Uncut

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engelsk

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Les mer Masters Alliance Uncut

Honest Conversations with Masters of their craft about life and Olympic Sport Issues

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26 Episoder

episode Mount Olympus Is Not A Highlight Reel cover

Mount Olympus Is Not A Highlight Reel

A viral “Mount Olympus of Taekwondo” post sparks a bigger argument: who actually earns greatness in a sport built on results, not hype. We draw a hard line between highlight culture and championship culture, then start naming the legends people keep skipping when they talk about the best Olympic taekwondo fighters of all time. If you care about history, standards, and what real dominance looks like, this one is for you.  From there we pivot to the uncomfortable truth longtime fans keep saying out loud: modern WT taekwondo can look like a different sport. We break down how electronic hogus, the Protector and Scoring System, and point incentives reshape technique from the beginner level up, rewarding stuck legs, canceling, and sensor hunting over retraction, angles, rhythm, and clean basics. The athletes are not the problem, the system is, and we talk about what coaches can do right now to build complete fighters anyway.  We also pause to honor Day One Moon and what it means to lose pioneers who built national programs from scratch. Then we get practical, comparing Europe vs Pan Am depth, the wild card pipeline, and why credibility slips when access replaces earned selection. Finally, we talk governance: board oversight, missing transparency, and the Olympic Charter window around LA 2028 that could allow the community to challenge USA Taekwondo’s NGB status and force real accountability.  If this conversation hits home, share it with your coaching circle, subscribe, and leave a review. Who is on your taekwondo Mount Olympus, and what is the first rule change you would make?

19. mai 2026 - 1 h 13 min
episode Why Brazil Dominated The Pan American Taekwondo Championships cover

Why Brazil Dominated The Pan American Taekwondo Championships

Brazil didn’t just win the Pan American Taekwondo Championships, they sent a message: culture plus coaching equals medals. We’re recording with boots on the ground in Brazil, reacting to what we saw at Pan Ams, what the brackets reveal, and why “they had a good weekend” is too small of an explanation when a team takes half the available gold. We dig into the uncomfortable details: repeat matchups like CJ vs Henrique and what they expose about game planning, emotional control, and corner leadership. We also talk about the modern obsession with highlight reels, viral clips, and “style points,” and why that mindset can quietly sabotage athlete development when winning stops being the standard. From there, we zoom out to USA Taekwondo and the national team pipeline: missing weight categories, confusing absences, and decisions that leave athletes under-supported on the day it matters. We compare it to what Brazil is building with juniors and cadets, where seniors stay, leaders engage, and the next generation feels connected to the mission. We also touch the growing talent exodus, athletes switching countries, and what early European Championship results suggest about the widening international gap. If you care about high performance taekwondo, coaching accountability, and building a real national team culture, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a coach or teammate, and leave a review with your take: what has to change first for the USA to own the Pan Am region again?

12. mai 2026 - 1 h 19 min
episode Green Stamps For Kicks And Double Secret Probation cover

Green Stamps For Kicks And Double Secret Probation

The sport isn’t just fought on the mat anymore, it’s fought in rankings, calendars, email lists, and who gets invited to the table. Tonight at Warehouse 15, we talk candidly about the points culture spreading through Taekwondo and why “more tournaments” doesn’t automatically mean better athlete development when families are paying for every step of the so-called pathway.  We dig into USA Taekwondo and AAU Taekwondo realities that coaches see up close: monthly rankings that feel performative, memorandums of understanding that look like leftover paper from the printer, and a growing sense that governance is being run like PR instead of high-performance sport. We also address serious trust issues, including ongoing suspensions without clear explanations and the kind of rumor mill that can smear coaches for things as absurd as “hacking a Zoom call.”  On the competition side, we preview the Pan American Championships in Brazil, talk travel logistics, and break down what a points reset to zero could mean for the new cycle. We also debate World Taekwondo policies like junior points carrying into senior Grand Prix access, plus scheduling conflicts that make a two-year cycle even messier.  If you care about Taekwondo coaching, athlete funding, competitive fairness, and how leadership decisions ripple into real matches, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share this with a coach or parent, and leave a review so more people can find it. Where do you think the system breaks first: money, transparency, or trust?

5. mai 2026 - 1 h 10 min
episode Olympic Hopefuls And The Chancleta Awards cover

Olympic Hopefuls And The Chancleta Awards

Eight years of flat results is not a slump, it’s a signal. We start with the adrenaline of a collegiate taekwondo tournament and quickly get to the bigger question: what are we building in the U.S. right now, and why doesn’t it reliably translate to medals and deep runs at World Taekwondo events? We react to the stats making the rounds, talk about “pound for pound” comparisons, and draw a hard line between a rare phenom and sustained competitive excellence. That turns into a blunt look at national team identity, coaching presence, and the culture shift where early losses get framed as “good experience.” We don’t say it to be harsh, we say it because standards shape outcomes, and the rest of the world can see what we tolerate. From there we get practical: development pipelines, selection systems that keep changing, and why fundamentals still win. Footwork, distance, timing, and clean technique matter more than trendy drills, especially when electronic scoring can push athletes toward habits that look wrong but score. We also preview the Pan American Championships, what different countries have to prove, and why recent rule tweaks hand even more control back to referees at the worst possible moments. If you care about Olympic taekwondo, athlete development, and building a program that’s more than highlights, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a coach or teammate, and leave a review with one change you’d make to fix the pipeline.

28. april 2026 - 1 h 11 min
episode Stop Selling Auditions And Start Coaching cover

Stop Selling Auditions And Start Coaching

The Junior World Championships didn’t just showcase great taekwondo, it exposed which countries are building real systems and which ones are hoping talent can cover the cracks. We walk through what we saw up close: young athletes who look comfortable in chaos, teams that share an unmistakable rhythm, and programs like Uzbekistan that don’t feel “small” when half the bracket seems to come from the same pipeline. From there, we get honest about Team USA. We can compete, we can steal matches, and we can celebrate a medal, but that’s not the same as being dominant. We talk about the development gap and why it shows up early: coaching time, culture, and the unglamorous work of building juniors and cadets who are ready for long tournaments and world-level pressure. Mexico and Brazil become the contrast points. Mexico’s long camps and tournament toughness show how preparation translates on the world stage. Brazil’s hybrid approach highlights a different path: find talent early, invest in it, pair it with experienced support, and create opportunities that are earned, not sold. Then we dig into the uncomfortable stuff, pay-to-play auditions, bloated event calendars, and what happens when selection becomes marketing instead of development. If you care about USA Taekwondo, Olympic taekwondo, athlete development, and what it takes to build a national identity that actually shows up on the mat, this one will hit. Subscribe, share this with a coach or parent, and leave a review, then tell us: what’s the first change you would make?

23. april 2026 - 1 h 4 min
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