Saturday, February 21, 2026

Somebody Job or Everybody Job?

Everybody won't get the "somebody job." But even the "somebody" guys who attack, block, and set have to do the everybody jobs. 

Play unselfishly. 

Play with energy.  

Make good decisions.

Support your teammates. 

If you do the "everybody jobs" and work hard, you will get opportunities at the "somebody jobs." 

What matters most for your individual training is to discover who you are at any given point - and whom you want to become to fuel your dreams. Then, to work to reveal the truth and to narrow the gap between 'A' and 'B'. 

Social Proof and Volleyball

All opinions expressed in the blog are solely my own. The blog is not an official publication of any City of Melrose organization. 

What Is Social Proof?

"Social Proof" has another name, "herd instinct." It's behavior that leads parents to ask, "If your friends jumped off a bridge, would you?"

It's not irrational. In another era, if the "community" started running when one member perceived danger, running might save you from that hungry lion. 

Social proof is one of the core principles in Robert Cialdini's classic book, "Influence." Social proof drives trends in advertising, in fashion, music, and more. If our friends say "ABC" is a great song, book, or movie, then we're more likely to check it out. 

Why It's Useful

The value of social proof depends on its use. It drives charity (think international disasters) and bullying (the unacceptable becomes normalized). Learn to recognize it's use as inspiration or manipulation. 

Social Proof in Volleyball and Team Sports

Team leaders leverage social proof for good. They promote unselfishness, togetherness, toughness, and sportsmanship. 

Social proof drives action. Working out with a partner or as a group creates value. "Group behavior" might drive participation in Summer League or volunteering at a Food Kitchen. 

Social proof permeates the gym. When top players lead in effort and communication, others follow. “Your hustle standard is not what you say. It’s what your best player does.”

When the best players "lift," others are more likely to come with. When the leaders "do five more," the crowd is more apt to see that "champions do extra." 

When "hitting the floor" for diving digs becomes the standard, the program floor and ceiling both elevate. 

When the bench is engaged, that reinforces teamwork and unselfishness. When parents root for all the team, not just their children, that builds culture. 

Summary: 

Social proof answers the question every athlete asks:
“What do people like us do here?”

If the answer is:

  • We work.
  • We communicate.
  • We dive. 
  • We serve tough.
  • We celebrate teammates. 

That is who you are...and our community knows it when they see it.

Lagniappe. Know the responsibilities/zones that Coach Celli wants. 

Lagniappe 2. More on confirmation bias. Imagine that your math teacher provides a series of numbers such as 2, 4, 6... and asks you the "rule" for the sequence. Seek disconfirming evidence. If you say "-3" your teacher will say, "That is not it." But what if you say, "9" and the teacher says, "That works in the sequence." The number 9 disconfirms "generate by adding two" and works for "the next number is higher than the previous." The moral? "Seek disconfirming evidence. 


"The Game Honors Toughness"

Tough players prepare. They "show up" every day, not just when they feel like it.

Tough players train, communicate, mentor younger players, encourage each other, learn to focus better.

It's not complicated. But it's hard. Do hard things better.  

Friday, February 20, 2026

What Tools Do You Need to Succeed?

Develop tools of your trade and become an architect of excellence.

See the Game

"Dig, set, spike" morphed into "Pass, set, hit." What is your responsibility in that context? Are you a DS whose main job is passing - to initiate the sequence or "set" an out-of-system attack? Or are you a hitter who must read the set, read the defense, and execute one of many types of attack?

Control Your Emotions

Excellent players channel excitement and enthusiasm into controlled action. Learn to bring the "right" amount of activation to play. Every elite Melrose athlete learned emotional activation and regulation. 

ChatGPT Plus generates both text and graphics to illustrate the relationships among different "arousal" levels and performance.

🏐 Arousal & Performance in Volleyball (Inverted-U Applied)

LEFT SIDE: 🔵 Low Arousal (Flat / Passive)

What it looks like in volleyball

  • Late to close block

  • Slow transition off the net

  • Casual serve receive platform

  • No talk, no eye contact

  • “Hope the ball comes to someone else”

Language athletes use

  • “I feel tired.”

  • “We just don’t have energy.”

Coaching lever

  • Increase intensity: short competitive drill

  • Force first-contact accountability

  • Use quick scoring games to create urgency

Comment: "Low energy" athletes seldom get over the performance hurdle to make teams and get on the court. They simply lack "activation energy" to build and translate skills. 

PEAK: 🟢 Optimal Arousal (Calm Intensity)

What it looks like

  • Quick read on hitter’s shoulder

  • Balanced block footwork

  • Aggressive but controlled serving

  • Clear, early communication

  • After an error: quick reset, next ball

Language athletes use

  • “I’m locked in.”

  • “The game feels slow.”

This is your “calm fire.” High energy. Low noise.

Comment: Even within the "optimal activation" zone, there are levels. Someone like Dr. Victoria Crovo was "fire" and another player like Elena Soukos was "ice." 

RIGHT SIDE: 🔴 Over-Arousal (Tight / Rushed)

What it looks like

  • Service errors long

  • Net violations from tension

  • Over-penetrating block

  • Wild swings out of system

  • Emotional swings after mistakes

Language athletes use

  • “Don’t miss.”

  • “I can’t mess this up.”

Muscles tighten. Vision narrows. Timing suffers.

Comment: For athletes who trend toward "overactivation" tools like mindfulness (stop and take a breath) and softer music choices before games can help. 

🏐 Task-Specific Nuance (Important for You as a Coach)

Different volleyball skills have different optimal arousal zones:

SkillOptimal Arousal
ServingModerate–Low
Serve ReceiveModerate
SettingModerate–Low
BlockingModerate–High
Transition AttackModerate–High

A libero’s peak zone may look different than a middle blocker’s.

Athleticism

Athleticism links skill, strategy, and emotion. Every exceptional MVB player is an excellent athlete. Motivation and competitive character are necessary but insufficient. 

Bo Jackson was an All-Star in both pro football and baseball. In high school, someone suggested he should try decathlon. He "walked on" to the state decathlon competition in Alabama, not knowing what all the events were...and set the state record. 

It's a disservice to name individual exceptional quick twitch/power MVB athletes because there were so many. Some players rely on guile as well. 

Summary: Find your MVB tools that will get you and keep you on the court. Technique, tactics, physicality, and emotional regulation are the keys that unlock elite performance.  

Coaching Translation for Melrose-Style Culture

ACE: Attitude, Choices, Effort.

The inverted-U fits perfectly:

  • Attitude regulates arousal.

  • Choices (breathing, self-talk, routines) stabilize it.

  • Effort pushes you out of the low zone.

The best teams don’t just “play hard.” They learn to self-regulate.

Lagniappe. Get a running start... advice from Kelvin Sampson. 

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Sport Rewards Athletic Explosiveness

The idea isn't to become a "gym hero." Develop functional strength, quickness, vertical jump, and conditioning that pays off late in games.

Elite fitness that you've seen in players like Elena Soukos, Gia Vlajkovic, Sadie Jaggers, and others comes from work. 

When you return for tryouts in late August, leave an impression. Always warmup before getting into strength and conditioning. 

Lagniappe. Become a habit master.   

"Win the Drill"

Coaches want players to succeed and practice is where that starts. Success begins long before the first serve of the season in September.

Clarity

"Compete." When you "cross the red line" onto the court, "be the best version of yourself."

Specificity

What helps you to "always be your best?" Be focused. The last point, won or lost doesn't matter. Win this point. "Don't cheat the drill." 

Coachability

Whatever the task or skill, do it however your current coach, club or MVB wants it done. That's a vital part of building trust and trust gets you and keeps you on the court. 

Excel in Your Role

Maybe you're not a "fully-formed" player with skills across the range of serve, pass, attack, block, set, dig. You might have the skill set needed to contribute at right side, e.g. block, hit. If Coach Celli needs you to be the "jack in the box" because you can, be that guy. 

Lagniappe. Part of leadership and "influence" as a teammate is likability. 

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Be Worthy

All opinions expressed in the blog are solely my own. The blog is not an official publication of any City of Melrose institution.  

In twenty-four years, I have not heard or read Coach Scott Celli say, "We don't have good players; we don't have enough talent."

Excuses don't win games, league titles, or championships. Nothing has less value than excuses. John Wooden simplified, "Dont whine. Don't complain. Don't make excuses."

"Control what you can control..." vintage Stoicism.

"Make every day your masterpiece." - John Wooden 

"Be a great teammate." Teamwork is a choice.

"Always do your best." Your best leaves no room for regret. Sometimes our best won't be as good as the other guy's.

"Don't back down." Whether you're playing the top seed or a low seed, bring the same fight. When Melrose had a powerhouse basketball team, an opposing coach told me, "They're hard to play. You're always going to get five girls who are good players running up and down the court. That's hard to match." 

Regardless of the situation, be a worthy opponent, the kind that will fight and claw and scratch your eyes out. 

Lagniappe. Be like the V-Rex. 


Do not quit. 



Fighters

 
Red Sox pitcher Payton Tolle said it best: 



Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Study Video to Read and React Faster


Volleyball is a thinking-person's sport and it's a 'reacting-person's' sport.

Many sports break down as offense, defense, and conversion (the moments between offense and defense). And scoring divides into point production and point prevention. 

Serve-receive is a vital part of point prevention and conversion as it begins the ideal "pass-set-hit" sequence. 

The video (watch at 1.5 speed for efficiency) shows defenders reading and reacting to serves with an emphasis on eye work. Batters watches a pitcher's release point seeking clues on velocity, direction, and spin. So should volleyball defenders. 

If defenders can access "end zone" video (contact your coaches), you can study opponents and apply your knowledge to "early warning" of serve type. Gary Klein discusses this in great depth in the book Sources of Power. Military radar operators have to judge rapidly profiles of velocity, direction, and acceleration to identify aircraft from missiles. 

AI take: 

PROMPT: In "Sources of Power" Gary Klein discusses recognition-primed decisions, especially for radar operators detecting airplane versus missile. Can you break similarities for volleyball serve receive? 

Yes. And it’s not a stretch at all.

Klein’s recognition-primed decision making (RPD) is about making good decisions fast when there isn’t time to compare options. Experts don’t “analyze” in the moment. They recognize a pattern, pick the first workable action, then mentally simulate it for a split second: Will this work here? If yes, they go.

That’s radar operators. It’s also great serve receive.

The core similarity

Radar operator: “Is that blip an aircraft or a missile?”
They don’t run a spreadsheet. They scan for cues (speed, trajectory, signature, context), match to a prototype, then act.

Serve receive passer: “Is this serve seam? Short? Flat and fast? Late float? Jump-topspin to 1?”
Same deal. You’re solving a high-speed classification problem with noisy data.

1) Cue pickup under time pressure

RPD depends on noticing the right cues, early.

In serve receive, the best passers don’t wait for the ball to “tell the truth” at the last second. They read pre-contact cues:

  • Server’s starting spot and preferred lane

  • Toss (height, in front/behind, left/right drift)

  • Approach angle (straight vs. across)

  • Shoulder line / hips at contact

  • Contact sound + contact point (clean/topspin vs. float)

  • Immediate ball behavior: early wobble, flattening, topspin dive

That’s the volleyball version of “signature” and “track.”

2) Prototypes, not options

Klein’s experts have a library of patterns: “This looks like that.”

Serve receive prototypes might be:

  • “This is her flat float to seam when she’s under stress.”

  • “This is his jump-topspin to deep 5 when we’re in rotation X.”

  • “This is the short serve bait to pull our OH in.”

A novice sees “a serve.”
An expert sees a known kind of serve with an expected next behavior.

3) Expectancies and anomaly detection

Radar operators don’t just look for what is there; they look for what should be there. When reality violates expectations, alarms go off.

Great passers do this constantly:

  • “Her toss usually doesn’t drift—why did it drift?”

  • “That approach is more across than normal—seam is coming.”

  • “Ball is floating but not wobbling—it’ll stay truer and travel faster.”

The best passers are great at ‘something’s off’ detection.

4) The first workable action, then a quick mental simulation

RPD is not “pick the perfect option.” It’s “pick the first good one and test it fast.”

Serve receive version:

  1. Recognize: “Deep float to my right hip.”

  2. Action script: “Beat it with feet, angle platform to target, hold line.”

  3. Mental sim (split second): “If I lean early I’ll shank—stay centered, move late, absorb.”

No deliberation. Just a script plus a check.

5) Scripts are team-based, not just individual

Radar decisions often happen in a system with shared language and procedures. Same in serve receive.

Serve receive RPD improves when the team shares:

  • Seam rules (“mine/yours”)

  • Short-ball rules

  • Overlap priority (libero vs. OH)

  • Emergency rules (“if it drops inside 10-foot line, take it with hands if possible”)

Without shared scripts, recognition doesn’t translate to clean action. It translates to hesitation.

Where volleyball differs (important)

Radar operators often have more time and can re-check. Serve receive is one-and-done: you’re judged by your first solution.

Also, servers can intentionally “spoof” you (change toss rhythm, go short after deep, etc.). So your recognition library must include deception patterns and “anti-patterns.”

How to train RPD for serve receive

If you want your athletes to “see it faster,” train like Klein would:

1) Build prototypes (pattern library)

  • Scout tendencies: zones, pressure choices, favorite serves by rotation

  • Give passers names for patterns (“late float,” “fast flat,” “drop-short,” “seam sniper”)

2) Train cue pickup (pre-contact)

  • Video occlusion: pause at toss / at contact; passer calls zone/type

  • On-court “call it early”: passer must call type + zone before the ball crosses the net

3) Train mental simulation with quick reflection

After each rep, ask one question:

  • “What cue made you move?”
    or

  • “What did you expect, and what surprised you?”

That builds anomaly detection.

4) Use variable reps, not blocked reps

Blocked reps build comfort. Variable reps build recognition.

Mix:

  • short/deep

  • seam/line

  • float/topspin

  • different servers back-to-back

5) Encode “if–then” rules

  • If toss drifts left → expect seam to 6/5

  • If approach is across body → expect crosscourt

  • If ball is flat with no wobble early → get feet there sooner

Simple. Repeatable. Shareable.


 

Monday, February 16, 2026

"One Team, One Fight"

General George Joulman greeted superiors and subordinates with "one team, one fight.," That places everyone on the same team and leaves no ambiguity.

It's not always agenda-free in team sports. Recall the sign in the University of North Carolina women's soccer locker room. 

Excellence is our only agenda

It doesn't read, "my playing time" or "my stats" or "my All-America campaign." They won 22 National Championships through commitment to team excellence. And you know that every woman on those elite teams wanted to play. 

The "Team First" standard is a big ask in a world of scholarships and NIL money for some. "Team First" attitude comes as part of the culture promoted and nurtured by Coach Scott Celli and his staff. 

Former UNC basketball coach Roy Williams shared a story about watching a recruit who fouled out. The player didn't sulk. He sprinted to the water cooler to get water for the four guys still on the court during the thirty second substitution period. Williams knew he had a keeper. UNC legend Dean Smith said he didn't recruit superstars who didn't help their team win. And he said if a recruit was dismissive to his parents, then Smith didn't want him either. Character is Job One.

I keep an eye on what's going on with reserve players during games. Are they dialed in, studying the game and supporting the team. 

Leading 2-1, late in the fourth set of a playoff game, Emma Desmond makes one of the great plays in MVB history. Watch the bench. 

"One team, one fight." 

Lagniappe. The roster and lineups for MVB 26 won't be known for over six months. What is certain is that trust earns opportunity. 

Lagniappe 2. The non-schedule is coming together. Included are: Marblehead, @Newburyport, @Ipswich, Lynn Classical, @Methuen. There is room for seven non-league games. 

 



AC in DC?

Melrose has a number of Avidity Club volleyball participants in Washington, D.C. for an offseason tournament. (Photos via Facebook) 




Sunday, February 15, 2026

Being Present


Full commitment helps elite operators make faster, better, instinctive decisions. Total commitment "takes a lot of work," the opposite of multitasking.
How can we build the habit of "playing present?"
  • Reduce distractions (e.g. background television)
  • "Pomodoro technique" - 25 minutes work/study, 5 minute break
  • Mindfulness. Mindfulness improves attention. 
  • Remove the cellphone from our immediate environment. Schools recognized this and banned cellphone use during class. 
Input from AI (ChatGPT Plus)

Attention Wins Points

Volleyball is not chaotic. It only feels that way to the unfocused mind.

The ball moves fast. The rallies are short. One lapse becomes a point. The scoreboard is an honesty machine.

We talk about skill, vertical, strength, speed. All matter. But attention may be the most undertrained skill in high school sports.

You can be strong and distracted.
You can be talented and late.
You can be athletic and unaware.

Attention is the separator.

Focus Is a Trainable Skill

Attention is not a personality trait. It is a habit.

Five minutes a day of quiet breathing — count from one to ten and restart when your mind wanders — builds the same muscle that allows a libero to read a hitter’s shoulder or a blocker to hold discipline on a slide.

If you can’t hold your attention in a quiet room, you won’t hold it in a loud gym.

Shrink the Target

“Play better” is useless.

“Low and loaded before every serve receive” is actionable.
“See the setter’s hands before I move” is actionable.
“Call seam early and loud” is actionable.

Attention improves when the cue is specific.

Big goals distract. Small cues anchor.

Pre-Decide Under Pressure

Great teams reduce thinking in the moment because they’ve already thought before the moment.

If we give up three straight points, we huddle and reset.
If I miss a serve, I breathe and repeat my routine.
If I feel tight, I exhale and say my cue word.

Pre-decisions protect attention from emotion.

Respect the Routine

Watch elite servers. Same breath. Same bounce. Same target.

Routine reduces randomness.

Before every serve:

  • Deep breath.

  • Visualize zone.

  • Cue word: “High and hard.”

Routine shifts attention from fear (“Don’t miss”) to execution.

Eliminate Attention Leaks

Sleep matters.
Phones fragment attention.
Emotional drama drains bandwidth.

A tired brain makes more unforced errors. A distracted athlete misses seams and tips. A reactive player chases the ball instead of reading the play.

Attention requires recovery.

Make Focus Measurable

If you want attention to improve, measure it.

Track:

  • Serve routine adherence.

  • First contact quality.

  • Communication errors (“campfires”).

  • Late transitions.

Film should not be passive. Show ten clips. Ask one question per clip:
Where were her eyes?
What cue was missed?
What happened first?

Attention sharpens when thinking is active.

Process Before Outcome

Scoreboards are outcomes. Attention lives in process.

Control what you can control:

  • Attitude

  • Choices

  • Effort

Every rally asks one question:
Were you present?

The teams that sustain focus win the long match. The ones that drift lose tight sets.

Talent sets the ceiling.
Attention sets the floor.

And in volleyball, the floor matters.