Suited & Connected Issue 15

Illuminating relationship chemistry via the CROWNLINE Method

Welcome to the 15th issue of Suited & Connected©! 😊😊😊

CrownLine has a proprietary method for illuminating human relationship chemistry, which fuses certain tenets of mathematics (e.g. Fibonacci sequence, sacred geometry); neuroscience; psychology, and astrology. At the heart of propelling CrownLine's mission is The CROWNLINE Method, which enables us to recognize how birthdays correlate to certain numbers and suits on cards, identifying patterns of birthdays and certain outcomes according to specific periods of time -- daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, and even into 7- and 13-year cycles.

CrownLine offers its CROWNLINE COMMUNITY members tools and 'playbook' to understand which individuals are best to link up with -- be it for a friend, best friend, mentor, business associate, sports teammate, or even soulmate.

In this 15th issue of Suited & Connected©, especially since we are in the thick of the NCAA Basketball ‘March ‘Madness’ tournament, we examine how birthdays come into play for ‘winning’ players and their coaches, with optimum performances embedded ‘in their cards’.

The following player-and-coach examples have a common theme/pattern of athlete and coach having an identical card.

When any of us have a matching card with another person, there’s typically a great fit, a feeling of understanding one another, with significant results to follow suit.

Iowa’s Caitlin Clark & Lisa Bluder: Identical First Cards (5Diamonds)

Iowa women basketball superstar Caitlin Clark is known for knocking down clutch 3-point shots.

Iowa Hawkeyes women basketball head coach Lisa Bluder’s index fingers do the math: 1 superstar head coach plus 1 superstar player with same exact first cards (5Diamonds) equals super success.

Iowa Hawkeyes superstar guard Caitlin Clark (left) was born January 22, making her 5Diamonds/KingClubs; Iowa Hawkeyees Coach Lisa Bluder was born April 16, making her a 5Diamonds/9Diamonds. Player and coach each have 5Diamonds as their birth card, respectively.

The Iowa Hawkeyes women basketball team coached by Lisa Bluder and led by Superstar sharpshooter Caitlin Clark is heading to the Sweet 16 for the third time in four years.

Clark — the record-breaking guard, who became the NCAA Division I all-time leading scorer earlier this year by passing Pete Maravich — will almost assuredly be the No. 1 overall pick of the 2024 WNBA draft..

In advance of that draft, hip-hop mogul Ice Cube and his BIG3 basketball organization has offered Clark $5 million to suit up for its 3-on-3 league that attracts former NBA players and international players.

Caitlin Clark turned 22 on January 22, 2024. What makes this year exceptional for her is:

—She has the 8Diamonds in her yearly spread. Anytime you have the 8Diamonds in any time cycle, that can signal substantial success; just as we pointed out in Suited & Connected Issue 14, Christopher Nolan had the 8Diamonds in his yearly spread when he won the Academy Awards Oscar for his directing of the epic film Oppenheimer.

—In Caitlin’s yearly cycle she also has the Queen of Diamonds as her Venus card, which would amplify the financial opportunities since Venus represents money, art, and other representations of “value.” It is not surprising then that Ice Cube, asserting Caitlin is a generational athletic phenomenon, would approach her with an offer to join his league for $5 million.

—Having an 8Diamonds in any CROWNLINE time cycle — but especially in a yearly cycle — can produce off-the-charts outcomes. For Caitlin Clark that entailed breaking Pete Maravich’s all-time NCAA scoring record; she led Iowa to the Big Ten Championship; she was the NCAA Women’s Player of the Year; she will be the number one pick in the WNBA draft; she was invited to the 14-player U.S. national training team roster, and the only college player included. From this roster eventually 12 will be selected to represent Team USA in the Summer Olympics in France. Caitlin has created great fanfare for women basketball in this country to an unprecedented level of excitement. The purple squares in the chart below are the positive cards for Mercury, Venus, Mars, and Jupiter — signaling great position to attain pathbreaking athletic and financial success.

Caitlin Clark’s yearly chart for age 22 (birthday January 22, 2024) shows groundbreaking performance via both her birth card and Astrological Ruling Card (King of Clubs).

Meanwhile, Iowa Women’s Basketball Coach Lisa Bluder was named a finalist for the Naismith Coach of the Year award by the Atlanta Tipoff Club. Bluder was a semifinalist a season ago and was the recipient of the award in 2019. The winner for 2024 will be announced April 3.

Michael Jordan and Dean Smith: Identical Second Cards (5Clubs)

Michael Jordan’s rise to fame began when he played guard for the University of North Carolina (1981-83), where he was coached by Dean Smith, who would pass away in 2015.

(Left) Michael Jordan was born February 17, making him an 8Diamonds/5Clubs; Dean Smith was born February 28, making him 10Clubs/5Clubs. Player and Coach each has a 5Clubs as second card.

We now know him as “Michael Jordan”, but when he was coached by Dean Smith at University of North Carolina, Jordan was introduced to the fans his freshman year as “Mike Jordan.”

Thanks to freshman “Mike Jordan”, Coach Smith finally attained a national championship, when the Tar Heels beat the Georgetown Hoyas 63-62 — winning with a last-second shot by Jordan.

Michael Jordan in 1982 was 19 and his CROWNLINE yearly chart shows both his cards (8Diamonds/5Clubs) residing in the Jupiter Column (see the cards boxed in red).

When “Mike Jordan” was a freshman, he turned 19 during the 1981-82 basketball season. His birthday being February 17 had both his cards (8Diamonds/5Clubs) a few weeks before March Madness moving to the Jupiter Column. (See visual above). When one sits in the Jupiter Column and is working to achieve, that Jupiter Column recognized for individual and team success is a coveted position to be in. Even though Jordan was a freshman with upperclassmen teammates — stars in their own right (James Worthy and Sam Perkins) — “Mike Jordan” made the winning basket in the final seconds against Georgetown in the Championship Game, providing Coach Dean Smith with his first national title. Not coincidentally but nonetheless stunningly, Dean Smith’s cards were 10Clubs/5Clubs— are the same two numbers as the cards of Jordan’s father; Dean Smith’s 5Clubs was also residing in the Jupiter Column (of Smith’s 7-year cycle, ages 49-55) with Smith being 51 years old.

In 1982, 51-year-old North Carolina Coach Dean Smith had the great fortune of his 5Clubs astrological ruling card/ARC residing in the Jupiter Column during his 7-year-cycle (ages 49-55).

 

Some Performance Stats for “Mike Jordan” Coached by Dean Smith:

University of North Carolina was ranked #1 in the nation in the Associated Press poll in 57 of his 101 games as a Tar Heel.

Jordan’s teams went 11-1 against top-10 opponents.

UNC finished Jordan’s three seasons ranked No. 1in 1981-82, No. 8 in 1982-83 and No. 1 in 1983-84.

Jordan led the Tar Heels in scoring as a sophomore and junior. As a freshman, he was the third-leading scorer behind junior James Worthy and sophomore Sam Perkins.

“Mike” scored a Tar Heels career-high 39 points against Georgia Tech on Jan. 29, 1983.

Jordan is one of six Tar Heel players who were elected to the Naismith Hall of Fames as a player with Billy Cunningham, Bob McAdoo, James Worthy, Charlie Scott and Bobby Jones.

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