I built this one-page profile so a coach can understand a 2010-born shooting guard from Thessaloniki, Greece in minutes—identity and contact details first, then film in a simple order: highlights, extended sequences, and full games. The goal is clarity over persuasion: accurate basics, organized footage for real context, and a downloadable PDF that can be saved, shared, or printed—nothing extra, nothing distracting.

One Link, Honest Evaluation

One clean link for honest, coach-friendly evaluation.

A Recruiting Profile Built Like Film Study

I build one-page, coach-friendly player profiles that make evaluation simple: one clean link with the essentials arranged in the order coaches actually use. I came into recruiting through film, not promotion, and I kept running into the same problem—player information scattered across messages, social clips, drives, and outdated PDFs. That fragmentation wastes time and creates noise. My alternative is disciplined and calm: clarity over persuasion, and truth with context. A coach should be able to find identity, role, competition environment, contact details, and film within seconds—then choose how deep to go. That’s why I pair a short highlight reel with extended sequences and full games, so decision-making, off-ball habits, defensive possessions, pace, and response to adversity are visible. The page itself is intentionally minimal—white background, clean typography, generous spacing, mobile-first layout, fast loading, and no popups, ads, autoplay, or animations—so it works between practices on a phone or during film study on a laptop.

Built for the 30-Second Scan

I treat the top of the page like a coach’s checklist: who the player is, position/class year, location, team context, measurable basics, and the right contact details. If those answers aren’t immediate, the profile isn’t doing its job.

Highlights, Then Context, Then Full Games

Highlights can show tools, but they can’t show habits. I organize film in a progression—highlights → extended sequences → full games—so coaches can evaluate reads, spacing, defensive reps, transition decisions, communication, and consistency, not just best moments.

Minimal Design as a Recruiting Value

The design is intentionally plain because the goal is evaluation, not attention. White background, simple typography, clear headings, and generous spacing keep the page readable and fast. No popups, ads, autoplay, or distracting effects.

Work Built for Coaches, Not Clicks

These projects are built around one idea: reduce uncertainty. I organize identity, film, and contact details into one stable link so a coach can scan in seconds, then go deeper only if the player fits.

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Anastasia Almpanidou — 2010 SG | Thessaloniki, Greece (Single-Link Profile)

I built a one-page, coach-friendly profile that answers the basic questions immediately—who she is, what role she plays, where she competes, and how to contact the family—then guides evaluation through film (highlights → extended sequences → full games). The design stays disciplined: white background, clear headings, generous spacing, fast load, and nothing that competes with the footage.

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Full Game Library — Organized Evaluation Playlists

I organized complete games into stable playlists by date and competition so coaches can verify what highlights can’t show: decision-making, defensive possessions, off-ball habits, pace, and response to adversity. The structure is meant for honest evaluation—quick to navigate, easy to reference, and consistent over time.

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One-Page PDF Recruiting Sheet — Print/Forward Ready

I produced a clean, single-page PDF that mirrors the site: core data, film links, and parent/guardian contact details in a format that’s easy to save, print, or forward. The goal is utility over promotion—clear labeling, readable layout, and information that stays accurate and shareable.

What this profile gives a coach

01

Everything in one clean link

I keep identity, key basics, film, PDF, and contact details on a single page so a coach can find what matters in seconds—no digging through messages, social posts, or multiple drives.

02

Film ordered for real evaluation

I don’t rely on highlights alone. The page moves from a short highlight reel to extended sequences and then full games, so a coach can judge decision-making, defense, off-ball habits, pace, and consistency.

03

Truth in context, not best-case moments

I curate clips to represent the player’s real actions and role. Extended film and full games stay available so the evaluation includes possessions that are messy, quiet, or imperfect—the parts that show who a player actually is.

Start with the highlights. Follow with context. Then watch full games.

I built this profile to reduce uncertainty—one stable link, clear film order, and real information.

Next Steps for a Fair Evaluation

Anastasia Almpanidou Player Profile

12345 Street Name, City.
State 12345
(123) 456 7890.