LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — Coaches of the Vegas Golden Knights and Las Vegas Aces passed their championship-level talent onto the next generation at Rancho High School on Monday.
"It means a lot that they would take time out of their schedule to be with us and help us," Finlay Middle School teacher and coach DC McDonald said.
WATCH| Alex Eschelman talks to Aces assistant coach on instilling confidence in players
Hundreds of local Clark County School District coaches and teachers learned new drills that they can take to their schools and programs.
One physical education teacher told me that for some students, P.E. is the only place they learn how to play sports.
"A lot of our kids enjoy sports, but don’t have the opportunity outside of playing at recess, so if we can help them learn new skills they can build on them as they grow," Robert Taylor Elementary School teacher Olivia Tomlinson said.
Whether it is how to shoot or how to pass, some coaches say it all comes down to the basic fundamentals no matter the sport or the level.
"The fundamentals are the foundation, and if there are no cracks in the foundation you can build vertically," Aces assistant coach Ty Ellis said.
The educators also learned how to instill self-confidence in their students.
"It’s my job to strip away to power of failure," Ellis said. "I tell people all the time — failure and success are fraternal twins, they’re born on the same day, they need each other, that’s the biggest advice I would give these educators is encourage it, we want it, this is the time where failure is necessary."
The next clinic is this fall and one Golden Knights legend says it is the least they could do for local teachers.
"Teaching my kids just their homework is enough for me," Deryk Engelland said. "These guys do it everyday all year long, so my respect to the hard work they do for our community and our kids."
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
-
Long-time Atlanta Braves manager Bobby Cox dead at age 84
Hall of Fame manager Bobby Cox, who led the Braves to the 1995 World Series and 14 straight division titles, has died at age 84.
Las Vegas women's college volleyball event will be 2nd to offer $1 million purse
A second million-dollar college volleyball event will be played in late August and national power Nebraska will appear in both.
Marner's first playoff hat trick propels Golden Knights to 6-2 rout of Ducks
Mitch Marner had three goals and an assist in his first career playoff hat trick, and the Vegas Golden Knights routed the Anaheim Ducks 6-2 in Game 3.
NFL avoids referee lockout with new 7-year labor agreement
The NFL and the NFL Referees Association agreed Friday on a new seven-year collective bargaining agreement that avoids a potential work stoppage and use of replacement officials.
