Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The "Why" and "What" of the Melrose Volleyball Blog

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

Microsoft Copilot informs the "Why" and the "What" of the MVB blog, including strengths and limitations. 

MelroseVolleyball.blogspot.com is a long‑running, coach‑driven volleyball education and culture blog. Its “why” is to develop smarter, more intentional players and teams by blending technical instruction, leadership philosophy, and curated learning. Its content is a mix of skill breakdowns, coaching frameworks, curated reading, psychology, and program‑specific commentary. It functions as an ongoing “open notebook” for a coach who teaches through stories, examples, and repetition.

Below is a structured, objective analysis based on the fetched content.

🎯 Core Purpose (“Why”)

The blog’s underlying purpose is player and program development—not just physically, but intellectually and culturally. Several consistent motivations emerge:

  • Skill Mastery — Posts break down blocking, attacking, serving, footwork, and decision‑making into simple, repeatable principles. The goal is to accelerate learning by stripping away noise.

  • Coaching Education — The author uses examples, drills, and curated resources to teach coaches how to think, not just what to teach.

  • Culture Building — Repeated emphasis on leadership, habits, reading, character, and responsibility shows a desire to shape a program’s identity.

  • Continuous Improvement — The blog promotes lifelong learning through books, film study, and reflective practice.

  • Documentation of a Program — Frequent references to Melrose Volleyball history, players, and seasons indicate an archival purpose.

In short: the blog exists to make volleyball players and coaches better thinkers, better technicians, and better teammates.

📚 Content Themes

1. Technical Volleyball Instruction

The blog frequently breaks down skills into actionable frameworks:

  • Blocking at the pins — Prioritization, footwork, timing, hand responsibility, and a single high‑leverage drill.

  • Attacking options — Through, around, over, tooling, with historical examples.

  • Serving intentionality — Short, seam, sideline, topspin, and tactical purpose.

  • Setting, defense, tempo — Observations from Melrose match film.

These posts emphasize clarity, simplicity, and repetition, often using “rules,” “one exercise,” or “core competencies.”

2. Program Philosophy & Player Development

The blog repeatedly returns to themes like:

  • Achievement = Performance × Time

  • Intangibles (attitude, coachability, effort, communication)

  • Comfort zone vs. growth zone

  • Will to fail

  • Morning routines and habits

  • Leadership without a title

These posts aim to shape how players think about improvement, not just how they play.

3. Learning Culture & Reading Lists

The author promotes reading as a competitive advantage:

  • Legacy (James Kerr)

  • The Boys in the Boat

  • Made to Stick

  • Wooden on Leadership

  • Team of Rivals

These choices reinforce the blog’s emphasis on leadership, culture, and storytelling.

4. Film Study & Historical Context

The blog frequently references:

  • Past Melrose teams

  • Specific players and their strengths

  • Matchups from prior seasons

  • Video study techniques (e.g., slow playback)

This creates continuity and a sense of tradition.

5. Psychology & Performance Mindset

Posts draw from:

  • Sports psychology accounts

  • NBA and Olympic anecdotes

  • Coaching legends (Popovich, Raveling, Kerr)

  • Behavioral principles (habit formation, resilience)

The blog treats mental development as inseparable from technical skill.

🧠 Writing Style & Structure

  • Didactic — Posts teach directly, often in lists or frameworks.

  • Concise but dense — Many posts are short but packed with actionable ideas.

  • Cross‑sport references — Basketball, rowing, rugby, skiing, and more.

  • Story‑driven — Uses anecdotes to make lessons memorable.

  • Repetitive by design — Key themes reappear to reinforce learning.

  • Coach‑to‑player tone — Encouraging, direct, and practical.

🏐 Audience

The blog is clearly written for:

  • Melrose volleyball players

  • Parents and community members

  • High school coaches

  • Serious youth athletes

  • Anyone studying volleyball technique

It assumes readers want to improve and are willing to think deeply.

📈 Overall Assessment

Objectively: MelroseVolleyball.blogspot.com is a hybrid of coaching manual, leadership guide, and program chronicle. Its value lies in its consistency, clarity, and breadth. It is not a news site or a highlight reel—it is a teaching platform.

Strengths:

  • High educational value

  • Clear frameworks for skill development

  • Strong emphasis on culture and character

  • Rich historical context

  • Frequent, consistent posting

Limitations:

  • Highly coach‑centric; less interactive

  • Assumes familiarity with Melrose program history

  • Dense for casual readers

  • Not optimized for modern UX (typical of Blogger)

 

Monday, June 22, 2026

"Two Months to Go"

So little time, so much to do. Sometimes we'd gather the team and play "word association." Pick a topic and ask for player responses. 

Let's do it.

  • Study historical video - MVB 2012 video is great - Sarah McGowan (attack), Brooke Bell (setting), Rachel Johnson and Kayla Wyland (blocking), Jill MacInnes (defense), Jen Cain (versatility), Cassidy Barbaro (serve). 
  • Plyos, strength, and conditioning. 
  • Work out with a teammate
  • Attack fundamentals (get more from your arms)
  • Mindfulness scripts to improve focus 
  • One person drills (choose what you can do)
  • Conditioning (jump rope - build up to five minutes)
  • Reading (check out Habits That Make a Champion)
  • Watch your personal video (what can you do better?)
Lagniappe. Dolphin dive...it is vital that you keep your head off the floor. 

Six Military Principles That Make Volleyball Teams Better*

*Some AI editing assist from Microsoft Copilot

Sport is not warfare and volleyball is not combat. High‑performing organizations - military units, elite athletic teams, scientific expeditions - share common DNA: discipline, preparation, leadership, adaptability, and the relentless pursuit of mastery.

When athletes learn across domains, they think better and expand their toolkit. The goal isn’t to glorify conflict; borrow the best ideas from organizations that operate under pressure and depend on teamwork for success.

Below are six military concepts that translate directly to volleyball that can make any team tougher, smarter, and more resilient.

1. Red Teaming: Stress‑Testing Our Plan

In the military, Red Teams exist to challenge assumptions and expose vulnerabilities. They simulate an intelligent, adaptive opponent whose job is to break your plan before the real enemy can.

One of the most famous examples is the Millennium Challenge (2002), where retired Marine Corps General Paul Van Riper - commanding the Red Team - used speed, surprise, and unconventional tactics to overwhelm a technologically superior Blue Force. His success forced the exercise to be reset with new rules.

Volleyball Application:

  • Scout teams mimic the tendencies of upcoming opponents.

  • Film study becomes “enemy analysis.”

  • Coaches run scenarios that stress‑test serve‑receive, transition, and end‑game decision‑making.

  • The goal is not comfort—it’s exposure.

A team that challenges itself honestly becomes harder to defeat.

2. Force Readiness: Stay Ready 

Military readiness is holistic: training, logistics, equipment, health, immunization, mental resilience, and the ability to deploy on short notice. It’s not one thing - it’s everything.

Volleyball has its own version of readiness:

  • Skill building and maintenance

  • Strength, conditioning, and recovery

  • Nutrition and hydration

  • Mental health and emotional regulation

  • Injury prevention and rehab

  • Understanding fatigue—your own and your teammates’

Readiness is built daily, not defined on game day.

3. Preparedness: Winning Before the Match Begins

Over 2,500 years ago, Sun Tzu wrote that “every battle is won before it is fought.” Preparation shapes outcomes long before the whistle blows.

You can’t choose your schedule. You can only choose your response to it. That means:

  • Preparing physically and mentally for every opponent

  • Controlling what you can control

  • Using After Action Reviews to extract lessons from wins and losses

  • Treating losses as data, not identity

Prepared teams don’t fear opponents - they respect the process.

4. Force Multipliers: Making the Whole Greater Than the Parts

A force multiplier is anything that makes a unit more effective than its numbers suggest. Colin Powell famously said, “Optimism is a force multiplier.” Earned belief is powerful.

MVB’s Force Multipliers:

  • Coaching: A MAVCA Hall of Fame coach (Scott Celli) and All‑Scholastic assistants (Ryan Celli, Gia Vlajkovic). Being coachable is itself a multiplier.

  • Education: Learn from everyone - AD, coaches, seniors, and parents with deep volleyball experience.

  • Tradition: A proud history of excellence. "Leave the jersey better than you found it."

  • Technology: Video, analytics, and specialized equipment that accelerate improvement.

Multipliers turn good teams into dangerous ones.

5. Always Forward: A Culture of Relentless Improvement

General Alexander Suvorov, “the general who never lost,” trained relentlessly, cared for his soldiers, and lived by the principle “Always Forward.”

Applied to volleyball, “Always Forward” means:

  • A growth mindset

  • Distributed leadership - everyone can lead

  • A learning culture where mistakes are fuel

  • Mentorship between classes

  • Focusing on how you play, not who you play

Coach Don Meyer captured it perfectly: “It’s not whom you play, it’s how.”

6. Chop Wood, Carry Water: Mastery Through the Mundane

Samurai archers spent years mastering fundamentals before ever touching elite techniques. Their apprenticeship began with simple, repetitive tasks -self‑care, discipline, attention to detail.

“Chop wood, carry water” means:

  • Doing the right things, the right way, every time

  • Owning setup, cleanup, and everything in between

  • Taking pride in the unglamorous work

  • Understanding that mastery is built on repetition, not inspiration

Championship habits are built in the mundane moments.

Conclusion: Learning Across Domains Makes Teams Stronger

Volleyball isn’t war. But the military’s best ideas about rigorous preparation, critical self‑assessment, discipline, and a culture of continuous improvement, translate powerfully to sport.

Teams that embrace these principles become more resilient, more adaptable, and more capable of performing under pressure. And they compete with a sense of purpose that goes beyond the scoreboard.

Always forward.

Lagniappe. Hitting solid downballs is an underrated skill. In my opinion, Sadie Jaggers was one of best MVB players to hit downballs. 

Blocking at the Pins (An Hour with AI)

ChatGPT functions as a tutor...if we know how to use it. It probably borrows from Feynman Technique.

  • Choose the topic
  • Explain it 
  • Research it 
  • Restate in simple terms
Here's the process from Prompt to Response (with light editing)

PROMPT: "You're a teacher with one hour, and you'll never see me again. Make me functional in blocking at the volleyball pins before time is up. No theory without practice. What to learn first, what to skip completely, and the one exercise that puts me ahead of people who've been studying for months."

RESPONSE: "This is a great prompt because it forces ruthless prioritization."

If I had one hour and my only goal was to make a player functional at blocking the pins, I would ignore 80% of what is typically taught.

Skip Completely

For today:

  • Hand signals
  • Advanced scouting
  • Read systems
  • Swing blocking terminology
  • Triple blocks
  • Matchups
  • Statistics
  • Most whiteboard theory

A beginner doesn't lose points because they don't know enough. They lose points because they can't get in front of the hitter.

Core Competency

Rule #1: Beat the Ball to the Spot GET THERE

Most pin blockers are late.

Not short.

Not weak.

Late.

Everything starts with:

See → Move → Load → Jump

The blocker should be moving while the set is traveling, not after it arrives.

Rule #2: Inside Hand Owns the Court BE INTENTIONAL 

At the left pin:

  • Right hand takes line.
  • Left hand takes seam.

At the right pin:

  • Left hand takes line.
  • Right hand takes seam.

Most young blockers wave both hands equally. Functional blockers understand responsibility.

Rule #3: Press, Don't Reach SHRINK SPACE

The goal is not to touch the ball.

The goal is to take away space.

Hands penetrate across the net.

Think:

"Hands over. Not hands up."

The One Exercise

If I could teach only one drill:

Shadow Blocking with a Coach Setter

No ball.

No hitters.

No distractions.

Coach stands at target.

Player begins in base.

Coach points:

  • Outside
  • Middle
  • Outside
  • Right side
  • Outside

Player performs:

  1. Read
  2. Crossover
  3. Plant
  4. Load
  5. Press

Over and over.

Fast.

Hundreds of reps.

Why?

Because blocking is primarily a footwork skill.

Months of study won't overcome poor movement.

Ten minutes of correct movement beats ten hours of talking.

The Progression

Minute 0-20

  • Base position
  • Crossover footwork
  • Plant sequence

Minute 20-40

  • Add a setter
  • Read the set
  • Move while ball travels

Minute 40-60

  • Live hitter
  • Don't care about touches
  • Grade only:
    • Was blocker on time?
    • Did blocker seal space?
    • Did blocker press?

The Coaching Cue

If the player remembers only one thing:

"Arrive early enough to be stopped before you jump."

Almost every blocking error stems from arriving late.

Great blockers look athletic.

Elite blockers look early.

Those are different things.

The player who masters early movement, crossover footwork, and pressing over the net will be ahead of many players who have spent months learning blocking vocabulary but still can't consistently close a block at the pin.

Summary: 

  • Get there
  • Be intentional
  • Shrink space
  • Master your footwork
  • Study a great blocker (e.g. Rachel Johnson) 
You don't need a gym or a net to practice footwork and pressing. You need a little space and could put a string between two points to simulate the top of the net. 

Rachel and other historical great MVB blockers get there, they don't "ball watch" and arrive late. 



Hang time (stay with the play):
 

One block doesn't end the play. 



  

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Study Melrose Video



Develop technique and tactics. MVB 11 went to the State Finals with many familiar names. 

Points to study:
  • Service intentionality - short (Bell), seams (Cain), sideline (McGowan), topspin (McGowan and Diraffaele)
  • Attack versatility - McGowan (direction, power), Johnson (quick jumper), Slabacheski (power)
  • Blocking - Johnson-Wyland pair and McGowan (middle)
  • Setting - Bell, model of consistency
  • Defense - no weaknesses
  • Tempo - capable of playing fast or methodically
Watching at reduced playback speed (wrench tool) clarifies some technical aspects. 

Link to player statistics Four players with over 125 kills...that's a possibility for MVB 26. 

 

Lineups

Another coach informs reality - "Players decide the lineups" with good coaching.

Return to the "Achievement Equation."

ACHIEVEMENT = PERFORMANCE x TIME

The better your performance, the more court time you earn. It's a "feedback loop" where positivity is self-reinforcing. 

Everyone gets a chance during scrimmages and the PlayDay. This is not new. 

Intangibles (attitude, coachability, effort, encouragement, positivity) all factor into the equation. AND positive contributions on the court - communication, decision-making, and the ability to put the ball down on offense or keep the ball up on defense.  

Character and competence...

 

Summer Reading*

*Adapted from my basketball blog. 

Read. Read. Read. Read. Read. Notorious coaching readers include the late Coach George Raveling, Gregg Popovich, Mike Neighbors, Steve Kerr, and Brad Stevens. 

I asked ChatGPT for the favorite book (if known) about these five or about books 'associated' with them. For what it's worth, I've read all except "The True Believer" which I am reading now. 

Coach George Raveling - "The True Believer" by Eric Hoffer

Gregg Popovich - "Team of Rivals" by Doris Kearns Goodwin (note this is a tome that will consume a whole summer). Perhaps her "Leadership in Turbulent Times" which includes her thoughts on Lincoln would be better.

Steve Kerr - "Wooden on Leadership" by Wooden and Steve Jamison

Brad Stevens - "Good to Great" by Jim Collins

Mike Neighbors - "Legacy" by James Kerr 

As summer and summer break arrive for many, what's on your bookshelf for summer reading? Here are my top three recommendations:

1. Legacy by James Kerr

Legacy informs the culture and leadership principles of the New Zealand All-Blacks rugby organization. It's an international bestseller, highly readable and actionable.

  • "Sweep the sheds." Leave the facility in better shape than we found it. 
  • "Old men plant trees in whose shade they will never sit." This Greek maxim explains what coaches do. 
  • "Leave the jersey in a better place than you found it." This summarizes team culture and the individual's responsibility to it. 
2. The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown

BITB weaves a tapestry from three stories, culminating in the 1936 Olympics. The first inhabits the struggle, survival, and rise of Joe Rantz, a "big kid" whose family literally exiles him from the home during the Great Depression. As a 15 year-old he has to find work and make his way in the world. Along the way, he finds rowing or rowing finds him at the University of Washington. 

The second narrative arc is life during the Great Depression. Unemployment reached 25 percent and the author describes the despair and suffering of the era.

The third part informs the politics and conditions arising in the early to mid 1930s in Germany, the national pride and prejudice, and the media construction leading up to the 1936 Olympics. 

Is it the greatest sports story ever written? I'll leave that to you, although it is brilliantly written. “What mattered more than how hard a man rowed was how well everything he did in the boat harmonized with what the other fellows were doing. And a man couldn’t harmonize with his crewmates unless he opened his heart to them. He had to care about his crew.”

3. Made to Stick by Chip and Dan Heath

Man is the Storytelling Animal. People remember more from a great story than from a lecture. Facts usually matter less than the personal impact the story has on us. I heard an interview with Doug Collins. He said that the last song he heard, leaving the US dressing room before the Olympic final in 1972 was "What Becomes of the Broken-Hearted?" He hates that song. 

The Heath Brothers present the acronym SUCCESS -
  • Simple
  • Unexpected
  • Concrete (specific)
  • Credible
  • Emotional
  • Stories
Red Sox clubhouse manager Vin Orlando told me a story about meeting Ted Williams as he got off the bus in Scottsdale, AZ in 1939. Williams asked whether anyone had ever hit a ball over a house beyond the fence in right field. Orlando said, "No, that's too far." Williams replied, "I'll do it." And of course, the rest is history. 

Become a storyteller and change others and yourself. 

Lagniappe. Make friends with the dead. hat tip: Rae Radford

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Understand Your Attack Options

Develop a "common sense" approach to attack against blockers. Options:

  • Through - low success rate although softer defenses or extreme power sometimes score
  • Around - Melrose literally lost in 2003 against a Marlboro team that excelled at using cut shots to hit crosscourt short. Another 'around' choice is down the line, think Abby Hudson versus Billerica in 2021 or Laura Irwin against Barnstable in 2009 (for older fans). 
  • Over - not going to happen often
  • Tooling - attacker most commonly hits off the outside part of the outside hand of the blocker. Highly effective and unexpected. Watch Coach Donnie's video for more detail. 

If you want to become a high volume attacker, understand these approaches are critical. 


The Will to Fail

Have the will to fail.

Unconventional wisdom allows the neonate to walk, the pitcher to pitch to contact, the attacker to find new ways to score. 

The story that resonates shares the mogul skier watched by a nine year-old who says, "I love how you ski. You never fall." At that moment, the woman realized she could not become a champion without taking more risk, having the will to fail. She became a champion. 

There's a saying that the cost of an Olympic Gold Medal in figure skating is falling 20,000 times. 

The conventional advice is "leave your comfort zone." 

Leaving the Comfort Zone 

Growth rarely happens inside your comfort zone. Improvement requires a willingness to be uncomfortable, make mistakes, and risk failure in pursuit of mastery.

1. Seek Better Competition

One of the fastest ways to improve is to compete against athletes who are better than you.

Leveling up can be humbling. What worked may not still work. Your favorite serve may come back faster than expected. Weaknesses are exposed that were hidden against lesser opponents.

Many college programs have a scrimmage team comprised of men. 

Better competition illuminates gaps in your game and forces change. Great players do not avoid strong opponents; they seek them out. "Iron sharpens iron."

2. Change Weakness Into Strength

Most athletes enjoy practicing known skills. The problem is that comfort does not foster growth.

The outside hitter who struggles in serve receive needs more and tougher serve receive reps. The setter who avoids blocking should work on athleticism, footwork, and timing. The server content to "get the ball over" needs to become more intentional with better planning and execution attacking seams, sidelines, short, or weak defenders. 

The will to attack weaknesses separates good players from exceptional ones.

3. Assume Leadership 

Leadership can create stress, especially for athletes who are natural introverts. You don't need a title to lead. 

Leadership means communicating early, loud, and often. Hold teammates accountable, encourage others through mistakes, and raise standards when hard times come...and they always do.

Leadership can improve performance though commitment to excellence and growing confidence. Teaching, communicating, and setting an example deepen understanding and strengthen commitment to the team.

The Common Thread

In each case, the athlete chooses challenge over comfort:

  • Better opponents instead of easier wins.
  • Weakness development instead of favorite drills.
  • Leadership responsibility instead of retreat to the background.

The comfort zone feels safe, but growth lives elsewhere.

The athletes who consistently stretch themselves - physically, mentally, and emotionally—are the ones most likely to approach mastery. Have the will to fail. 

Lagniappe. Love our losses.