Friday, January 17, 2025

Training

You don’t have to be great to train, but you have to train to be great.

Thursday, January 16, 2025

An Important Volleyball Exercise

Goblet squats 

Bequests to Young Coaches (and Players)

What "best advice" have mentors given you throughout your life? If you could bequeath coaching advice to a young coach, what would it be? 

1. Build relationships. Establish trust with coaches and players. Help the players build trust with each other. Small player rivalries can grow to unfathomable proportions. 

2. Never stop learning. Nobody has the franchise on continuing education. Everyone can learn from Coach Don Meyer's "three notebook" policy. One was for basketball, another was for general information, and a third was a gratitude notebook that he gave to his wife at the end of the year. MasterClass and Blinkist are additional resources I use. 

3. Be a problem solver not just a critic. Most of us have no issues solving other people's problems when we struggle with our own. Solutions require listening, openness, and nonjudgmental attitudes. 

4. Find mentors. Mentoring lineages go back thousands of years. Socrates taught Plato, who taught Aristotle, who mentored Alexander the Great. Among the worst mistakes any coach can make is believing they know-it-all. Kevin Eastman advises coaches to become a "learn-it-all" not a "know-it-all." 

5. Share. My favorite basketball quote is Phil Jackson's "basketball is sharing." Sport is "open source." There is no secret sauce. Share. 

6. Learn player development. Even if you're literally the "Recruiting King" (think Nick Saban), you still need to develop players. "Every day is player development day." Consider adding "every day is role development day." Teach players to know and to embrace their roles. For example, if you don't serve reliably, it will bite you on your backside eventually. 

7. Fundamentals beat strategy. Coach Popovich says, "technique beats tactics." Lesson one from Sahil Bloom is, "you'll achieve much more by being consistently reliable than by being occasionally extraordinary." 

8. Keep a rethinking scorecard. Professor Adam Grant wrote, "Think Again." The ability to change our mind is strength not weakness. The "arrogant jerk" you can't stand could become a trusted confidant. 

9. "Read. Read. Read. Read. Read." - Werner Herzog  "The differences between the person we are today and whom we become in five years are  the people we meet and the books we read." Read widely and find elements from other domains to bring into our lives. 

10.Seek work-life balance. Life is about finding balance. Courage balances recklessness and doubt. Without balance, many careers have the potential to lead to self-destruction. Avoid that path.

Lagniappe. Highlight videos have merit. Jen Cain was terrific and I think there are talents in the system that remind me of her. She gets on top of the ball, has excellent hitting power, and strong instincts that translated to playing college volleyball. 

TEAM First

Some messages resonate across sports. Find ways to contribute to "keep the line moving." 

Everybody doesn't get the same number of attacks (shots). Get married to the scoreboard not the scoresheet. 

Coaches have priority messages to share:

"Care about your teammates. Be a great teammate."

"Put the team first." 

"Pay attention. Do what we're teaching. Communicate." 

"Impact the game." 

Think about a player like Leah. Yes, she was an excellent setter. She was an impact server. She was the best ever blocking setter for Melrose. She was an excellent defender. Build your all-around game...coaches will appreciate you. You'll earn minutes. You'll get recognition. 

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Success Versus Process

Nobody sees the hours the concert pianist put in to craft her performance. Nobody sees the extra time the valedictorians spent earning their grades. Nobody sees the first, second, and third draft of the best-selling authors. People notice the result not the process.

Show your work. Plan your process. Write it down. Keep track of your progress. Some of you have HUDL accounts displaying your highlights. That's terrific. "Unseen hours" show up in late August at tryouts and scrimmages. 

Simple Equations for Life - IYKYK*

All opinions expressed in the blog are solely my own. Don't blame anyone else. 

IYKYK*

Mathematics can restate 'concepts' into equations. Here are a few for your consideration. Don't memorize them; embrace them. Think about these in the context of "control what you can control." 

ACHIEVEMENT = PERFORMANCE x TIME

HAPPINESS = RESULTS - EXPECTATIONS 

SAVINGS = EGO - SPENDING 

VOLLEYBALL OFENSE POINTS SCORED = ACES + BLOCK KILLS + ATTACK WINNERS

VOLLEYBALL NET POINTS = POINTS WON + OPPONENT POINTS LOST - POINTS LOST - OPPONENT POINTS WON

Design your life. Choose to make it happen in a way that works for you. 

IYKYK* = "If you know you know." 

Lagniappe. This shows "the future," applying AI to analyze volleyball performance. Sport gets back to "technique beats tactics." 

Battle for Every Point

Nebraska with an extended rally. 

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Separate Yourself

Lagniappe. An underdog story... from walk-on to the NFL. On Netflix... 

Optimism and Pessimism

"Pessimism just sounds smarter and more plausible than optimism." - Morgan Housel, “The Psychology of Money”

Housel adds, "Optimism is a belief that the odds of a good outcome are in your favor most of the time." 

Imagine two previews of MVB 25. 

(Melrose, MA) "Melrose volleyball faces steep challenges after graduating nine seniors from the 2024 season. Gone is All-State setter Leah Fowke. Gone is starting middle hitter Sofia Papatsoris. Gone are number two hitter Carol Higonenq and the defensive trio of Maggie Turner, Gg Albuja, and Alex Homan. ML12 opponents literally lick their lips at the prospect of facing a depleted Melrose squad."

(Melrose, MA) "Melrose volleyball returns a cast of veteran and young players which helped the team to their sixteenth consecutive title. MAVCA Hall of Fame Coach Scott Celli begins with 6'5" Sabine Wenzel looking to establish herself as the most dominant frontcourt player in Melrose history. She has considerable size up front paired with rising senior Emme Boyer and junior Maggie Shoemaker. Promising defenders Anna Burns and Adele Akland are poised to become the newest back row stalwarts. Three freshmen contributed to MVB 24 success - Sadie Smith, Elise Marchais, and Ella Friedlaender. And help arrives with developing players from the JV and middle school program. Melrose fans can't wait for the 2025 season." 

There's an old joke that says, "I can predict the MVB 25 record before the season even starts. 0-0." 

Apply the "COTE of armor" of Weisinger and Pawliw-Fry in Performing Under Pressure. 

C - Confidence 

O - Optimism

T - Tenacity

E - Enthusiasm 

After you've done the work, success begins with self-belief. 


Monday, January 13, 2025

Unseen Work


Mia Hamm inspired Anson Dorrance's quote. 

What happens in the shadows prepares you for the spotlight. 



"Win the Game in Your Head"

Coach Auriemma says, "force me to play you..." 

How do you earn playing time (in my opinion)? 

1) It starts in the offseason with your plan, preparation, and action. Commit to outworking and out-thinking everyone. Yeah, that's hard. 

2) Earn the right to self-belief. The work produces the magic. 

3) Grow both your mental and physical skills. Mindfulness improves focus, decreases stress hormones, and improves sleep. 

4) Become a better athlete. "Sports reward athletic explosion." The ability to move more quickly and powerfully translates. 

5) Impact the game; impact winning. It's not just numbers... communication, teamwork, reliability in all areas. 

When you've worked on your mind and body, your communication and technique, and increase the probability of your team succeeding, you earn the coach's trust. That translates to playing time. 

Some players are so valuable to the process that it's psychologically painful for the coach not to play them. Been there.  

Lagniappe. Better reception. Exceptional teams win the serve-receive battle. 

Sunday, January 12, 2025

The Workout Habit

"The magic is in the work." Do the work to have a shot to be a contributor or more on MVB 25.

Let's look 'under the hood' of Fogg’s excellent "Tiny Habits" to influence your behavior (workouts). I

Start with the Maui habit, a phrase when you put your feet on the floor:

"Immediately say this phrase, “It’s going to be a great day.”" 

A behavior (Fogg) equation: 


A cue (prompt), plus motivation and ability determine our behaviors. We change behaviors by altering the inputs. For example, imagine you're like me and you like ice cream. Seeing ice cream in the freezer would be a cue to enjoy. Except that it's not in our freezer. 


Imagine that your motivation to workout is good or better...and that you have a home gym or gym membership. High motivation and easy ability puts your "dot plot" above the action line, so it will likely happen. 

Now imagine the same situation except that your motivation is low. The "dot" shifts way down, maybe below the action line so the workout doesn't happen. 

If you have the flu or a sprained ankle, then the ability point shifts to "hard to do," so the workout won't happen.

For many players, the problem is less with motivation than with ability. How can you "shift the ability" to easier to do. 

1. Schedule it. Bake it into your day. Put it on your 'to do' list on your phone. 

2. Workout with a friend. Friendships strengthen, workouts can be competitive, and more drills can be competed as a pair. 

3. Bring your workout gear to school and see if you can get permission to work out 'on site' after school, preferably with a friend. 

Another trick Gelb discussed was "keeping it tiny." He did two pushups after using the bathroom. "Anybody could do that." 

Make good habits easier to do and bad ones harder.  

 

ISO - "In Search Of"

A former President toured NASA Houston. He asked a custodian, "what's your job?" The janitor asked, "I helped put a man on the moon." 

What's your WHY? Author Simon Sinek poses a question, "what's your WHY?" Why do you get up in the morning? Why do you play volleyball? What do you do? 

When you're young, you probably don't ask yourselves these questions. You just do, under the guidance of your family. 

Why do you read the blog? There's no secret sauce. There's nothing you can't hear elsewhere. 

Be an excavator of knowledge, of truth, in search of excellence

Tom Peter's wrote In Search of Excellence. What separated excellence from something less? 

...a unique set of cultural attributes...developed under the tutelage of a special person. Nobody wants to win as much as Coach Celli. 

"Leaders make leaders." That's where the expression "coaching tree" arises. The tree is more than the coaches spawned. Think about the "fruit of the tree," the MVB graduates. 


Think about that. IT'S ABOUT YOU, the players and the meaning, your WHY? Why do you pepper, train your platform and run-up, jump rope and lift, meditate? In a world of infinite choices, is sacrifice rational?

Evaluate the triad of ATTITUDE, CHOICES, and EFFORT. Excellence requires focus, positive attitude, productive choices, and relentless effort. 

Exceptional players build a vocabulary designed to flourish under a wide array of conditions. Two decades ago North Andover got to the sectional finals with consistency and an excellent 'short game' of tips. MVB contained the tips, erasing their dominant weapon. And MVB won the sectionals. 


The 'why' of "the blog" seeks to inspire inquiry into excellence. "How you do anything is how you do everything." Team first. Improve always. Accountability matters. Family. School. Sport. Find excellence.

 

Lagniappe. You can do most of this without a gym. Having a partner makes it more fun and you elevate each other. I've heard that some of you are close friends and work out together. 












Saturday, January 11, 2025

What Made You Think It Would Be Easy?


Winning is hard...whether in the soft suburbs or the hardscrabble streets of Chicago. When the Manley High School crew team was practicing in the late 1990's, a teacher asked, "what made you think it would be easy?"

Your families don't have it easy. Your teachers don't have it easy. Your teammates don't have it easy. What made you think it would be easy? 


  • Acquiring skills isn't easy. 
  • Game understanding for ideal positioning isn't easy. 
  • Athletic training and endurance training isn't easy. 
  • Resilience, learning how to win, how to fight for your teammates isn't easy. 
What made you think it would be easy? Be up for the challenge. 

Your "Out Pitch"

There's a concept in baseball of the "out pitch." Watch top pitchers and they have a pitch that gets guys out - even when they know it's coming. Mariano Rivera had the cutter. Pedro Martinez a blazing fastball and a vicious changeup. Ron Guidry had a slider.

In every sport, every field you need something to 'separate yourself' from ordinary. In the NBA pregame show, Charles Barkley would ask, "what's your NBA skill?"

An outside hitter might have a full repertoire of attacks, but she has a "special delivery" when she absolutely has to have it.

If you're a setter, maybe it's a quick set, a shoot, or a setter dump. Alyssa DiRaffaele had that deadly topspin-sidespin 'slider' of a serve.

Bad teams beat themselves. Exceptional teams beat their opponents with combinations of service, attacks, and block kills. Winning more points is a sine qua non of excellence. What's your MVB skill? What's your 'out pitch'? 

Bonus Material: Comfort Food, Lentil Soup

Readers know that I periodically provide "bonus recipes." Want to increase dietary fiber? Legumes are a food group for you.

Here's a recipe for a delicious lentil soup - high fiber, low calorie.