CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The Latest on flooding that has devastated parts of West Virginia (all times local):1:15 p.m.A relative says a body found in a West Virginia river has been identified as that of her sister, who disappeared after last months devastating floods.Joetta Goins-Lemons says graveside services are scheduled Friday in Smoot for her sister, 44-year-old Lisa Goins Blankenship of Renick.Goins-Lemons says that on June 23, her sister sent her two sons down the road to call their dad and tell him not to come home because the roads were getting bad. She then asked a neighbor to help get her dog out of a kennel. The neighbor was pulled underwater a few times. When he surfaced, Goins Blankenship was gone.Goins-Lemons says the body was found Saturday in the Greenbrier River more than 30 miles away.The floods killed 15 people in Greenbrier County and 23 statewide.---11 a.m.The owner of The Greenbrier resort says hes reopening the hotel to the public next week following devastating floods.Jim Justice said at a news conference Thursday in White Sulphur Springs that the 710-room hotel will open again Tuesday.Justice says he wants to get hotel employees back to work, saying were not going to heal if you dont have a job.Justice says the resort is scarred and repairing but promised we will be back.The June 23 floods left 15 people dead in Greenbrier County and 23 statewide. The hotel closed to outside guests on June 24 but took in more than 700 flooded-out residents.The PGA Tour canceled the Greenbrier Classic golf tournament was scheduled to start Thursday at the resort.---10:30 a.m.More federal aid is on the way to help West Virginia governments pay for extensive damage done by floods that killed 23 people.Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin announced in a news release Thursday that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has approved public assistance for agencies in 11 counties.The counties include Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Jackson, Kanawha, Monroe, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Roane, Summers and Webster.The aid supports governments in debris removal, emergency preparedness, hazard mitigation and the repair, replacement or restoration of flood-damaged, publicly-owned facilities.Certain nonprofits may qualify.FEMA already has approved more than $18 million in individual assistance to help people with medical and housing support and other immediate needs.Individual aid is available in Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Jackson, Kanawha, Monroe, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Roane, Summers, Webster and Lincoln counties. Cheap Air Max 90 Outlet . - Blake Griffin had 30 points and 12 rebounds, J. Air Max 90 Sale Outlet . The mixed zone is not a place to make friends. http://www.nikeairmax90outlet.com/ . With Parker having a quiet game for once, Nicolas Batum and Boris Diaw provided the scoring as France won its first major basketball title by beating Lithuania 80-66 on Sunday. It was a victory that ended a decade of frustration for Parker and a talented French generation, which lost the final against Spain two years ago and took bronze in 2005. Nike Air Max 90 Clearance Sale . To the surprise of many, it isnt the Wolverines but their in-state rivals the Michigan State Spartans. Cheap Nike Air Max 90 Free Shipping . - Derek Wolfe says hes finally healthy after suffering a seizure in November that doctors now believe was related to the spinal cord injury he suffered in the preseason. When you think of grit in the NBA, you probably think of big men setting hard screens and battling for position in the paint, or players hitting the ground to secure a loose ball.A lot of times its being ugly, not pretty, Portland Trail Blazers coach Terry Stotts says.Your mind immediately goes to Memphis, adds Los Angeles Clippers guard J.J. Redick, referring to the grit n grind moniker the Grizzlies have adopted to describe their defensive-minded style of play.You probably dont think of two-time reigning MVP Stephen Curry making 3-pointers for the Golden State Warriors. But based on the research University of Pennsylvania professor Angela Duckworth has done on the topic, maybe you should.I think the word grit sounds like when you grit your teeth, Duckworth says. I think its less about that than the day-in, day-out dedication and resilience.If you look at Steph Currys career, there were lots of times where you could have counted yourself out. Weak ankles. Whos going to be the best player in the league on 3-point shots? Theres nobody in the league I can think of thats grittier than him.Redefining gritA former consultant for McKinsey & Company, Duckworth became intrigued by the notion of grit when she was working as a math and science teacher and trying to figure out why talented students didnt always succeed and seemingly less-talented kids sometimes did.Duckworths answer, eventually arrived at while working toward a graduate degree in psychology, was grit. Her version of the term, summarized in her recent New York Times bestseller Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance, isnt quite the same as the one used traditionally in sports. Instead, Duckworth defines grit as passion and perseverance for long-term goals.The concept gained scientific rigor when Duckworth tested West Point cadets using the grit scale she created. Despite not having a relationship with academic achievement in high school or SAT performance, grit proved a better predictor of which cadets would drop out of grueling basic training.The definition translates well to sports, where all athletes are going to have to persevere through setbacks at some point in their careers because of their passion to compete.I do think that sometimes the narrative with athletes is we want this linear [progression], says Redick, who read Duckworths book during training camp. It doesnt always work that way -- and not only on the outside and kind of what the public sees and the media talks about, but the internal battles that every athlete faces. There are obstacles and maybe even moments of self-doubt.Its little surprise, then, that Duckworth hears regularly from coaches interested in how they can use her research. While the concepts of hard work, dedication and resilience that are encapsulated in Duckworths version of grit are nothing new for coaches, her research into how grit translates in other fields of high achievement, how to measure it and how to build it provide helpful coaching tools.She gave a greater clarity to the word grit for me, says Philadelphia 76ers coach Brett Brown, who invited Duckworth to speak to his young team. I think that through her examples of what her version of grit was, it resonated with me more clearly.Both of my parents are schoolteachers, and her examples of different practices in different school systems and the different economic situations relative to some of her areas that displayed the most grit -- and the people who were able to overcome different socioeconomic barriers or boundaries or obstacles and still persevere -- that interested me a lot, as well as the coaching side of it.Brad Stevens of the Boston Celtics?is one of a handful of coaches, including Pete Carroll of the NFLs Seattle Seahawks, who have built more lasting relationships with Duckworth. She spoke to the Celtics last season before a game in Philadelphia, and Stevens endorsement appears on the back of her book, alongside those of authors such as Malcolm Gladwell.One of the aspects Stevens likes about grit is that it can apply equally to a player or team that has experienced success and one that has dealt with adversity.Ive always felt like the best players have these attitudes and the best players are able to bounce back from a tough night, he says. The best players are able to handle success. Certainly the best players always get better.I learned it at Butler when we went to the national championship twice. Obviously we were hurt because we didnt win it all, but a lot of people treated us like we had. It was fun to watch those kids just move on to whats next and try to do it again and try to be a little bit better next time and not rest on what was already achieved. I think thats a big part of mindset or grit, just as recovering from a tough day is.That sounds a lot like an MVP and champion coming back even better the next season.A new grit paragonTelevision writer and producer Michael Schur, the co-creator of Parks and Recreation and the creator of new NBC sitcom The Good Place, has spent enough time thinking about grit that he calls it one of my favorite topics.Under the pseudonym Ken Tremendous, Schur wrote about baseball -- and more specifically about writing about baseball -- on the influential blog Fire Joe Morgan. One of the blogs favorite hobby horses was how writers lionizedd the grit of white players who had average or poor statistics, like former St.dddddddddddd Louis Cardinals shortstop David Eckstein. (Later, Schur paid tribute to this relationship by giving a law office on the show Parks and Recreation the name Fwar, Dips, Winshares, Gritt, Babip, Pecota, Vorp & Eckstein.)Grit is a catch-all term for any baseball action writers deem hard-nosed, or physical, or dogged, Schur observed in an email. Grit is crashing into walls, sliding hard, hustling on an infield grounder, diving for a line drive. Grit is Aaron Rowand breaking his nose on the wall, or Dustin Pedroias always-dirty uniform, or Paul ONeill smashing a water cooler after a strikeout. Which reminds me -- grit is also nearly always a term used to describe white players.In 2014, Deadspin parsed online NFL draft scouting reports, allowing readers to look up how frequently different terms were applied to white and black prospects. Grit or gritty appears nearly twice as frequently in scouting reports for white players (1.9 times per 10,000 words) as black players (1.1 per 10,000).In the NBA, there may not always be the same element of racial coding. After all, African-American Tony Allen coined the grit n grind moniker that has come to define the Grizzlies run of contention in the Western Conference, as well as their relationship with a diverse Memphis fan base. Still, even grit n grind reinforces the notion that grit is the domain of less-talented athletes.I think partly it indicates that a guy is playing hard to compensate for having less natural ability than other guys, Schur writes. Which is not to say those players actually do have less natural ability -- just that they are perceived as having less natural ability.In the common usage, players can be either talented or gritty. By Duckworths definition, players can -- and should -- have both traits.One thing that surprised me when I started doing this research, she says, is if youre really talented, why arent you the hardest-working, longest-trying player? Because rationally speaking, youre getting so much out of every moment on the court. You should be the one! Why wouldnt you be the one to show up early and stay late because every moment youre there, youre getting this huge return?Ive wondered whether its partly because to pass some threshold of good enough, you can kind of trade off talent with grit. If youre trying to get to a threshold, you can be talented or gritty. I think one of the things about the players that I most admire is theres no ceiling on what they want to do.I dont know that Steph Curry goes to bed and says, Ive reached it. [If Im Curry] I just want to continually get better. If thats true, rationally, analytically, then you dont trade them off against each other. You just try to maximize both.I think Steph is gritty, Redick concurs. I would put him in that category. As many superlatives as you can talk about with him, hes definitely gritty.Currys progression demonstrates how he has epitomized grit in multiple ways. As a prep player, he had to ignore doubts about his ability to overcome a small frame to be a contributor in college -- famously not getting a scholarship offer from an ACC school -- let alone in the NBA. Having established himself as an NBA player, Curry subsequently had to deal with the setback of recurrent ankle injuries, resulting in surgery that limited him to 26 games during the lockout-shortened 2011-12 season.All the while, Curry kept improving his shooting, ballhandling, finishing and defense. As I noted during the 2016 NBA Finals, Curry has developed more late in his career?than any other superstar in league history.Even after hed reached the pinnacle as a champion and MVP during the 2014-15 season, Curry came back better in 2015-16. Last year was Currys sixth consecutive season of improving his win shares per 48 minutes, according to Basketball-Reference.com, tied with role players Jay Humphries, Thabo Sefolosha and Sedale Threatt for the longest streak ever to start a career.During the media conference honoring Curry as MVP last season, Warriors coach Steve Kerr highlighted Currys work ethic.I think what makes you special, Steph, is obviously youve got a lot of God-given talent, but its the determination, its the love for the game, Kerr said. There is no agenda, and every day you come in and you work.Later in the media conference, Currys advice to kids hoping to learn from him sounded a lot like Duckworths definition of grit.Find what youre passionate about in this life, Curry advised. Everybodys given a certain skill set, a certain talent, a certain passion. To hold on to that and work as hard as you can to being the best that you can at what you feel like your place in this world is and what your role is.I learned at an early age that basketball is something Id love to do every single day. But like every single person -- theyre a great journalist, theyre a great commentator, there are great doctors -- everybodys great at something, just to find that and to work as hard as you can.I dont think its as simple as that, but its something that you can hold on to. Find what youre passionate about in this life and just work at it. ' ' '