Via Herb Welling
Can we simplify?
1) Care for others
2) Be positive
3) Put the team first
News, notes, commentary, and volleyball education
Recognize a hierarchy of training activities with argument about the precise order. These are just a few options.
Random practice
Sport is chaos and training cannot be precisely sequenced and simultaneously random. Scrimmaging is chaos but often without "enough touches" to maximize benefit.
Small-sided games (SSG)
SSGs overcome the limitation of scrimmaging (number of repetitions). Fewer players -> more reps -> faster learning -> clearer accountability. An example: 3 person, 2 contacts
Whenever there is a dispute, both parties are required to have equal levels of integrity, to be open-minded and assertive, and to be equally considerate. The judges must hold the parties to the same standards and provide feedback consistent with these standards. I have often seen… pic.twitter.com/jWLn5ED64P
— Ray Dalio (@RayDalio) March 25, 2026
All opinions expressed in the blog are solely my own. The blog is not an official publication of any City of Melrose organization.
*Adapted from my basketball blog.
"Good artists borrow; great artists steal." - Picasso
Joe Mazzulla fills up the postgame statsheet with buzzwords and sound bytes. There's value to the approaches of the best coaches.
Give credit to the players.
Coaches know that their livelihood depends on the players. Excellent coaches inhabit the "give credit" realm.
Never become complacent.
The Celtics won three games in four nights, including Monday night's win in "Cream City" (Milwaukee). When asked about that, Mazzulla responded, "We'll see how it goes Wednesday." Everyone in sports gets judged by the next performance and you have to be willing to put it out there.
Process...process...process
Mazzulla said that it starts with the Front Office. "Brad" finds guys with "competitive character." Rookie Hugo Gonzalez, playing a few minutes a game for Real Madrid last season, got a start and delivered tough defense (+27), career highs in points (18) and rebounds (16), three steals and two blocks.
Competitive Character (An AI digression)
Competitive character means:
Valuing the right shot over your shot
Sprinting back on defense when tired
Screening with force even if you won’t get the ball
It’s substance over style.
Stevens has often emphasized that the game rewards people who focus on “winning behaviors” - the unglamorous details.
For Stevens, competitive character includes:
Responding to adversity without drama
Playing the next possession
Not letting officials, mistakes, or momentum swings dictate effort
It’s poise without passivity. Competitive character shows up most when things go poorly.
He has repeatedly valued:
Daily work habits
Film engagement
Practice intensity
In his programs, talent alone was never enough. The question was: Can you bring the same competitive edge every day?
This echoes your “rare is dear” theme - consistency is scarce.
Competitive character includes:
Accepting hard coaching
Telling the truth in film sessions
Taking responsibility for breakdowns
It’s the opposite of blame-shifting.
Stevens’ Butler teams weren’t the most athletic, but they were famously connected and disciplined. That wasn’t accidental — it was cultural selection.
He has described competition as:
Guarding the ball
Rebounding
Executing late
Trusting teammates
Results don’t come from strategy they come from execution (behavior).
— Alan Stein, Jr. (@AlanSteinJr) March 2, 2026
Lagniappe 2. Improvement.
Neemias Queta on where he’s taking the biggest strides this season:
— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) February 25, 2026
“I feel like I'm taking strides in so many different aspects of my game, and there's so much more I can get better at.”
-@CLNSMedia pic.twitter.com/cNfStmn9L1
“Get out of the bucket.”
— Greg Berge (@GregBerge) February 7, 2026
Bookmark this one.📍 https://t.co/M71Hazws89
Volleyball is a game of momentum. That is why it's vital to keep opponents from getting "on a roll." Don't allow "death by a thousand cuts."
Self-regulate.
Help teammates self-regulate.
Find ways to refocus such as "stop and take a deep breath," having a catchphrase like "next play" or visualization tool to see yourself making the next play.
“You’re not allowed to give excuses because excuses are a sign of weakness. We give no excuses when we fail. Failure is just fertilizer to help us grow as a team,” Rick Pitino
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) March 17, 2026
Excuses are yours to make.
Standards are yours to own.
Your choice matters. pic.twitter.com/4tqhyPVKkA
‘This honest Turk,’ he said to Pangloss and Martin, ‘seems to be in a far better place than kings…. I also know,” said Candide, “that we must cultivate our garden.’
In the French philosophical novel Candide, Voltaire reminds us to care for our garden. This resonates throughout sports as coaches explain, "I'm only worried about our team" or "I don't have any control over that." Charlie Jones wrote a novel about covering Olympic crew, having asked an oarsman about conditions. "That's Outside My Boat."
Coach Scott Celli can't concern himself with the ML12 schedule, stronger opponents, or (limited by MIAA) offseason player development.
As a player, recognize that "losses are lessons" and the most vivid lessons arise from failure not victory.
In "Golf Is not a Game of Perfect," Dr. Bob Rotella writes that one of the biggest mistakes a golfer can make is to work on swing mechanics during a tournament. Total focus belongs on the shot at hand, which includes club selection and course management. Similarly, don't fix your attack mechanics or serve during a match.
Coach Celli adheres to John Wooden's advice, "Don't whine, don't complain, and don't make excuses."
The best way to find playing time, role, and recognition from September through November is to refine your technique, tactics, physicality, and psychology now, during the offseason. Refine now, reward later.
Lagniappe. Control your breathing.
Navy SEALS use box breathing to stay calm & intensely focused during stressful situations.
— Bitcoin Teddy (@Bitcoin_Teddy) February 22, 2026
3 times per day for 5 minutes each will exponentially reduce your cortisol / stress levels.
Come back to this tweet to practice daily pic.twitter.com/vnnPlbIvfJ
Where are your weaknesses or physical needs? This instagram video suggests a simple test (do with both legs) to help diagnose problem areas.
"Each deal we measure against the second-best deal that is available at any given time - even if it means doing more of what we are already doing." - Warren Buffett
Choose the best option among all available options.
Scarcity Is Real
You know the saying "robbing Peter to pay Paul." There are only so many roster spots, minutes, and practice hours. Coaches and players make hard choices about allocation of scarce resources.
What if a coach decides that only serving and scrimmaging matter. Both may even be the best options.
The question becomes, how much of each?
And which serving drills? Which type of scrimmage? Not all “good” is equal.
Take middle hitters. There are two starting spots and multiple capable players
It’s never Player A vs Player B. It's Player A vs Player B vs Player C… and sometimes Player D.
And then: who fits best with the setter? Who blocks better against this opponent? Who performs under pressure?
This is not vanilla vs coffee.
Julian Edelman was a college quarterback. He became one of the most clutch receivers in the NFL. Why? Someone saw another option.
Exceptional programs don’t just work hard. They evaluate constantly, compare options honestly, and adjust when better choices appear.
Don't become "blind to possibilities" in life because there are often more possibilities than you know.
Lagniappe. What is your contribution?
Geno Auriemma said, "Your contribution doesn’t have to be 25 points. But it has to be something."
— Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness (@coachajkings) February 21, 2026
"Your number one contribution is the energy you bring."
You don’t have to score to make an impact.
Great teammates bring energy, effort, and attitude. pic.twitter.com/8d8CYE0xuk
Lagniappe 2. Excellent coaches are students.
The best coaches don’t just study the game. They study other ways to see the game.
— James Purchin (@JamesPurchin) March 23, 2026
That’s what Joe Mazzulla did this summer.
Instead of staying comfortable, he went to France, not for vacation, but to learn.
He spent time with Le Mans head coach Guillaume Vizade to exchange… pic.twitter.com/syMb0IQtza
― Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass
Writers toss words around like children throw playthings - culture, standards, values. Casual abuse of English is lazy. Inhabit specifics, terms as shared experience.
Humpty Dumpty answers: Meaning belongs to whoever has control. Coach Scott Celli owns that narrative.
When the coach defines them clearly:
shared language
shared expectations
shared behavior
What words shape values? Simplifying, think effort, teammate, compete, accountability.
Values need visibility.
Not: “Play hard.”
Instead:
Sprint to base every transition
Close the block every rep
Cover hitters on every swing
Not: “Be supportive.”
Instead:
Talk on every serve-receive rep
Help a teammate up immediately
Own your role, even as a reserve
Not: “Be competitive.”
Instead:
Score the next point after an error (stop the bleeding)
Stay present at 23–23
Execute despite fatigue
Not: “Be responsible.”
Instead:
Stop excuses.
Make corrections.
Do your job so others can do theirs
Your actions define your values.
Lagniappe. Train your focus and skills.
Kelvin Sampson shares what separates good programs from great ones.
— Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness (@coachajkings) March 17, 2026
It comes down to 3 things.
"The best teams come from the coaching staffs that are the best demanders. There are certain non-negotiables."
"We're not going to sit down and talk about this...This is the way it's… https://t.co/3XXHNDrng8 pic.twitter.com/ZWxYInHGdS
The formula is:
1. Standards 2. Accountability 3. Raised Expectations.Be a life-long student. pic.twitter.com/1ZLXBSfSJh
— Reads with Ravi (@readswithravi) March 15, 2026
Top players aren’t always faster. They’re earlier. They see it sooner. Reading the serve, the setter, and the hitter are part of the continuum of CARE - concentration-> anticipation-> reaction-> and execution. Top players are "one step quicker."
Volleyball is a performance. But the best performances happen when players: forget the crowd, forget the noise, and forget themselves and lock into the game.
Dance like nobody’s watching. Not because nobody is. But because the moment you stop thinking about the audience…you start playing at your best.
The person you will be in 5 years: pic.twitter.com/Sfac2zq4ye
— Reads with Ravi (@readswithravi) February 19, 2026