Most of coaching pre- and post-game observations end up on the scrapheap...often deservedly so.
Sometimes players listen.
News, notes, commentary, and volleyball education
Most of coaching pre- and post-game observations end up on the scrapheap...often deservedly so.
Sometimes players listen.
"Success isn't all about talent. It's about being dependable, consistent coachable, and knowing what you need to do to improve." (Bill Belichick) pic.twitter.com/VkbN6Ch5UP
— Coach the Coaches (@WinningCoaches) May 19, 2024
Nobody wins without talent. MVB has talent. Win with consistency, aggressiveness, resiliency (mental toughness), and ongoing improvement.
Lagniappe. The "hip turn" is critical in many sports. Cornerbacks "open up" to sprint, basketball players turn and run to defend, base stealers 'crossover' to start.
All opinions in the blog are solely my own. Blame nobody else.
"Coaches get more than we give." - Brad Stevens
Coaches are teachers. Education changes behavior. Every student won't have the same aptitude, interest, and commitment...just like teaching math or medicine.
The game is for the players. Remember that we help build programs not statues. There is always something to be learned and taught.
Manage our expectations, not the players'. Young players don't have the skill, experience, or maturity to be consistent. They make eye-opening plays and eye-rolling mistakes.
"Never be a child's last coach." When in our life has continual negativity and criticism strengthened us and made us more resilient? If a child quits a sport because of us, that's a strong statement.
There's a saying in Washington, "if you want a friend, get a dog." Everyone won't like us, players or parents. I coached a player who couldn't have been more of an "oppositional personality." Her mother wrote me years later to say that her daughter "figured it out," that coaching wasn't criticism. The girl became an All-League player at a charter school.
Get resources. Read the late Carl Pierson's The Politics of Coaching. Coach Pierson discusses many perturbations of human nature that impact coaches.
"Read, read, read, read, read." - Werner Herzog Read about basketball, coaching, fiction, and non-fiction. Be open to new ideas and concepts from other disciplines. I spent my junior year in high school as a 'stay ready' player doing metaphorical chicken chasing to prepare for a role as a defensive stopper.
We make mistakes. Often I was more concerned about setting lineups balanced for ball-handling, rebounding, scoring and playing time than winning. We would have won a lot more with more inequality.
Know the unholy trinity of minutes, role, and recognition. Nobody advocates for what is good for their child more than parents. I call it "The Prime Directive" that parents place their child above the welfare of the team. "The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior."
"Every day is development day." Coaches never regret having more skilled players with higher basketball IQ. Development applies for coaches, too. Learn from coaching groups, videos, watching basketball, and mentoring if possible.
Set boundaries. Never talk with parents about another parent's child. If they want to praise another player, then okay. But it's often fishing for praise for theirs. Have a cooling off period after games. Don't engage about playing time until everyone's had time to sleep on it.
Seek work-life balance. It's close to impossible, so manage those expectations.
Have a clear policy on transparency. I coached girls, so I invited parents to pre- and post-game brief discussions and practice. There was never going to be an accusation of inappropriate behavior. Volunteerism isn't worth crucifixion.
Network. Let players know that we are there for long-term personal and career growth for players. No college coaches are going to take my word over video evidence and personal observation. But coaches help steer players toward "good fits" and career success. Write recommendations. It's alright to bask in their reflected light.
"Do more of what works and less of what doesn't." My last group wasn't the best at containing the ball. Still, I believed in the value of teaching individual assignment (Man) defense over zone. I believed that was better for their development. So we won a few less games. That doesn't invalidate zones and hybrid defenses. In the playoffs in my final year, we switched to a triangle-and-two with the goal of taking away open threes and living with the paint-protectors protecting the basket. We beat a team that we had lost to seven times over three years.
Winning is hard.
"You have to scratch and claw and it never f–-ing ends. And it doesn’t get better, it just gets harder. So don’t complain to me that I’m making your life hard. You don’t even know what that means." - Deborah Vance in Hacks, Episode 2
Lagniappe. Golf.
Women's sports aren't second class unless you allow them to be. The passion is real. The intensity is real. The training is real.
Rebecca Lobo is no joke - a National Champion, Naismith Hall of Famer, national commentator. She's also a former National Women's Player of the Year and has an Olympic Gold medal.
Been coaching my son’s basketball teams for the past six years. Something new happened today. It wasn’t awesome. pic.twitter.com/buL6rJNKT9
— Rebecca Lobo (@RebeccaLobo) May 17, 2024
Embrace the journey. Celebrate small successes and know there will be setbacks.
"It's not what you get in the end.
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) May 17, 2024
It's what you become through the journey.
You don't change that based on your result.
Do you go after the trophy or are you trying to go after growth?
Our thing has always been - go after growth and embrace the journey." pic.twitter.com/xiqthHPQiV
Lagniappe. There is no 'secret sauce'. Do the right things consistently. "Figure it out."
#Basketball #Coaching you want to succeed as a player?
— Ron Sen, MD (@rsen01) May 17, 2024
- make everyone around you better (impact winning)
- identify your core skills (your 'superpowers')
- leverage them
- limit mistakes
- choose to be a great teammate
- be fully engaged and coachable
- never be a distraction
“Youth is wasted on the young.” Disprove that.
Young people seek independence to do what they want, when they want, how they want. Parents know this. Everyone has oversight, even adults.
What timeless lessons can you learn early and repeat often along your MVB journey?
1. Be prepared. At home, school, and on the court know your role and responsibilities. You cannot do your job without knowing it.
2. Be polite. Know the five answers of a freshman at the Naval Academy.
3. Say “thank you.” A lot. Everyone wants appreciation. Nobody deserves that more than your parents.
4. Appreciate your youth, fitness, athleticism, and high functioning brain power. Do everything to cultivate high performance from your magnificent machine. Do nothing to self-sabotage.
5. Build great habits, winning habits in school and extracurricular activities. Be focused, coachable, and diligent. Action transforms goals into results.
Timeless lessons yield timeless results.
Lagniappe. Not totally accurate but close.
What's your 'compete level'?
Don't wait for the season to compete.
— Jeff Janssen (@janssenleader) May 16, 2024
✅ COMPETE every day
✅ COMPETE on every drill
✅ COMPETE on every lift
✅ COMPETE on every sprint
✅ COMPETE with your teammates
✅ COMPETE against the standard
✅ COMPETE against the clock
✅ COMPETE against the best#CultureWins
Raise your compete level. Bring your best self to every room.
Celtics' President of Basketball Operations Brad Stevens seeks "competitive character." Find players with extreme ownership about character.
Lagniappe. Timeless.
Goals alone don't produce results. Habits link goals to outcomes.
Identity is key. Atomic Habits author James Clear explains how "habits are votes for the kind of person we want to become." Want to be a great student? Improve study habits. To be an elite athlete, build skill, strength, and conditioning.
Write your plan.
'Consolidate' habits.
Need workout planning structure? Here's one to consider:
Post by @the.volleyball.strength.coachView on Threads
PRACTICE WITH PURPOSE
— Jamy Bechler (@CoachBechler) April 10, 2024
"What's your purpose for your practice? I practiced to be the best ever. So, every time I walked on that field I had a purpose for my practice."@DeionSanders bringing the 💯 TRUTH 🙌 pic.twitter.com/x7aeU4ZuDI
Practice makes champions or it fills up time, "breaks up the day." What bothers coaches? What would you put on your list?
Strive to be fearless. What does that mean?
Self-made billionaire Spanx CEO Sara Blakely says people tell her, "you're so fearless." She answers, "No, I'm not." She's afraid of heights, flying, public speaking. But she overcomes her fears, even holding a "Comedy Night" for her employees where everyone performs standup.
Share examples. The Patriots faced the 'Greatest Show on Turf' in 2002, with an unheralded quarterback (Tom Brady) against Kurt Warner and the NFL's highest octane offense. Virtually no one gave the 14-point underdog a chance...except the Patriots.
Harvard's women met Stanford at Palo Alto in the 1998 NCAAs as a 16 versus 1 mismatch. That didn't prevent the Crimson from winning. A future ER doctor made the winning basket.
As an underdog, believe and compete.
Unheralded doesn't mean untalented. Trust YOUR ability and system. "It's just a game."
There no shame in defeat but never fail to show up.
Lagniappe. Consistency is more than the hobgoblin of foolish minds.
Deion Sanders said, "You don't have to be great or successful to be consistent. But, you do need to be consistent to be great or successful."
Consistency is rare.
— Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness (@coachajkings) March 26, 2024
• It means discipline.
• It means showing up.
• It means doing the work.
The hallmark of greatness is long-term… pic.twitter.com/0O1H9vhYfY
Lagniappe 2. Gold. Just gold.
This is an awesome from Clemson HC @Coach_Brownell on toughness 💪💪💪 pic.twitter.com/6tjG0H7I08
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) March 26, 2024
Lagniappe 3. Training makes toughness.
Give the same effort as your mothers.
In honor of Mother’s Day. A Throwback to this amazing quote:
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) May 12, 2024
"When you're tired, what do you start thinking about? Be as tough as your mother. They show up all the time." - Coach K
(Via @CoachBechler 🎥)
pic.twitter.com/rUjmPLnszT
Success often parallels attitudes, beliefs, and values that drive action. "Nothing works unless you do." Action beats intentions.
Organizational psychologists Chip and Dan Heath wrote several books about change, Made to Stick and Switch: How to Change When Change Is Hard.
The Heath Brothers argue that reaching your destination involves metaphorical elements:
R - The Rider, an excellent thinker, sometimes short on action.
E - The Elephant, emotional inputs that encourage or deter us.
P - The Path - the journey to navigate to success.
What concrete tips help the Rider (Rationality)?
Coaching leadership maven Jeff Janssen shares his ideas:
NEXT SEASON'S CHAMPIONS ARE..
— Jeff Janssen (@janssenleader) May 13, 2024
What are YOU doing NOW?#CultureWins pic.twitter.com/5y44xyreFY
Lagniappe. Ideas. Useful? I don't know.