Whats on her CV?Carolina Marin is currently the top ranked player in womens badminton. Shes left-handed, stands 172 cm tall, and is playing in her second Olympics. Shes won the World Championships twice (2014 and 2015) and has been on top of the rankings for all but two weeks this year. Shes the first player from Europe to reach the finals in the womens singles at the Olympics and holds the record for being the youngest European winner of the Worlds. Shes been the standout player on the international circuit in the last two years and it would not be a surprise if she wins.Whats her game like?Marin is one of the swiftest movers around the court, has a powerful smash and is particularly adept at playing cross court. Her unique advantage, though, is that shes lefthanded - the only left-handed player in the top 10; that helps her create difficult angles for her opponents. Marin cites Rafael Nadal as her favourite sportsperson and her game from the back of the court is very similar to Nadals. She tends to be very aggressive and positive and is known to keep her cool in tricky situations.Whats her previous with Sindhu?Marin currently has a 4-3 edge in her head-to-head encounters against Sindhu. They last met in the first round of Hong Kong Open last year in November, when Marin won 21-17, 21-9 in 35 minutes. Marin has won all her four matches against Sindhu without dropping a game and Sindhu has never crossed 17 points in any of those games. Sindhus two wins over Marin have been in three sets; the last win over Marin came in the semi-finals of the Denmark Open in October 2015. Since the beginning of 2015, Marin has won as many as seven tournaments while Sindhu has won two.How do the coaches stack up?Marin is coached by Fernando Rivas, whos been the Spain coach since 2005. He has a degree in sports science and is known to let players make their own decisions. He doesnt talk much to Marin during games, in stark contrast to Sindhus coach P Gopichand, who is very hands-on coach and known to make detailed plans and strategies for all his players. Rivas influence can be clearly seen on Marin as she has the unique ability to alter her game in the middle of the match based on how her opponent is scoring, unlike Nozomi Okuhara and Wang Yihan, whom Sindhu defeated in the previous rounds.Hows Marin fared in Rio?Marin has not been challenged at this Olympics so far; she is yet to drop a game. She has won 168 points and only conceded 97 points, which is a huge difference in a strong field. Sindhu, by contrast, has dropped a game and won 230 points and lost 166 points, albeit playing an extra match.Whats Sindhus best bet against her?Sindhu has mostly attacked her opponents backhand in her matches so far and has made judicious use of the drop shot. Her best opportunity against Marin would lie in staying patient and extending the rallies and mixing the pace of the game as Marin mostly keeps a brisk tempo. Marin has a tendency to win and lose points in a bunch and it would be critical for Sindhu to not let Marin run away with the match. Adidas Prophere Schoenen Heren . After dropping their final six games of December, the Wild opened the new calendar year with four consecutive wins. Following a loss to Colorado on Saturday, Minnesota rebounded the following night to blank Nashville 4-0, but then had the tables turned on them Tuesday. Adidas Superstar Heren Goedkoop . Brazilian national coach Luiz Felipe Scolari has confirmed that the veteran goalkeeper is set to join Toronto on loan, saying it will help him be ready for the World Cup. http://www.nmdtekoop.com/stan-smith-sneakers.html . Calgary scored on the first shift, and Michael Cammalleri scored twice as the Flames cruised to a 5-2 win over the Washington Capitals on Saturday. Adidas y3 Kopen . He said Tuesday thats a big reason why he is now the new coach of the Tennessee Titans. Whisenhunt said he hit it off quickly with Ruston Webster when interviewing for the job Friday night. Adidas Superstar Nederland . The FA rejected Wilsheres appeal that the length of his punishment was "clearly excessive" and said Thursday his suspension begins with immediate effect. He will miss league matches against Chelsea on Monday and West Ham on Dec. TORRANCE, Calif. -- Karch Kiraly knows a little something about bringing home Olympic gold. After all, hes done it three times, in the 1984, 1988 and 1996 Games.He was also the first player, male or female, to win Olympic gold in both indoor and outdoor volleyball. In short, Kiraly, 55, is one of the most decorated players in the sports history.Now, as head coach of the U.S. womens indoor volleyball team, he hopes to take Team USA to its first Olympic gold medal when the Rio Games start next week. In both 2008 and 2012, the team won silver -- and in 2012, Kiraly was an assistant coach for the squad.We caught up with him to find out how he switched his mindset from athlete to coach -- and get his best piece of advice for coaching Olympians.espnW: Youve been to the Olympic Games as an athlete. Whats it been like stepping into a coaching role for Team USA? Certainly I got some nice practice at it as assistant coach in London. I think theres a tendency in sports that people who have had a lot of success as players dont necessarily make the best coaches, the most effective teachers, the most effective leaders. So I know Im fighting against that and trying to break that norm.But the other thing I have going for me is that unlike many other coaches out there, Ive been on the Olympic court and know what thats like and all of the challenges that come along with that.I plan to leverage that and try to help our team perform at the level wed like to in Rio, which should be the most amazing Olympic Games for volleyball when you combine how popular both sides of the sport are in that country.Is there an experience you remember from being at the Olympics that you draw on when you are coaching? I dont know that there is a single experience, but certainly its a bigger tournament by virtue of the fact that lots of people get to see volleyball that otherwise dont get to see it the other three years, 11 months and two? weeks [between the Games].And also because teams have been striving to try to do something special. You only get one chance every four years, and if it doesnt go your way, youve got to work hard another four years. Its not like losing a Super Bowl and coming back the next year. In a sense, there are some unique challenges there, and its not just in volleyball: Its every sport att the Olympics.ddddddddddddpeaking to that a little bit, the stakes are so different when youre doing it every four years. How does it change how you approach things as an athlete and as a coach? We essentially work in four-year cycles because of the Olympics. People call them quads or quadrennia. There are big events each year that we focus on. Last year, it was the World Cup. Two years ago, it was the world championships. Those are major tournaments and in some ways tougher to win than the Olympics themselves and more challenging.But the Olympics is the tournament that gets a lot more attention in and outside our country. Its just a different beast and so we have to be able to approach it with a level of psychological flexibility. Theres gonna be a lot of adversity.Nobody wins a major tournament like that without overcoming gnarly adversity, and the team that does, wins. Thats a big a part of our preparation, is how to respond to the adversity that will inevitably happen at a tournament like the Olympics. It could be injuries, could be the bus tire gets a flat and we arrive three minutes before the start of a game. Could be things that we cant even imagine right now that are our response to is really whats important.What advice do you have for other coaches, at any level?I havent been coaching that long. Im pretty young, in coaching years. Ive really only been coaching since about 2007. I might be a little presumptuous to give anybody knowledge, but one thing that has helped me a lot is to approach it like, Every day, there are things to learn.You can become a lot better, as a player or as a coach, if you are a really dedicated learner, if you are what [author Carol Dweck] says in her book Mindset, in a growth mindset and embrace -- as hard as it sometimes is -- mistakes. If were not making any mistakes, were not learning fast enough. Were actually holding ourselves back if were not operating at the edge of our abilities.So you have to be willing to be OK with looking foolish sometimes, with making stupid mistakes, sometimes as a coach, as a head coach even. I think if I can be OK with that, I can be a better model for the rest of our program. ' ' '