Wednesday, December 11, 2013

MacInnes Named to Herald All-Scholastic Team

Jill MacInnes, Melrose volleyball libero, garnered another honor with selection as a Boston Herald All-Scholastic. Congratulations to Jill on hard-earned recognition for outstanding play and leadership.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Borot'sya

Is success about talent or process?

In "The Talent Code", Daniel Coyle examines hotbeds of talent throughout the world, music academies, schools, the Brazil soccer experience, Moscow's Spartak Tennis Club, and more. 

Here's an image from his marvelous book, that I recommend for every coach and every serious athlete. The proper 'deep practice' or from Anders Ericsson's 'deliberate practice' is the key. Developing technical mastery of your musical instrument, scholarship, or athletic event creates your 'talent'.  

Muscles have no memory. We imprint, myelinate nerve pathways in our brain that allows us to perform better, faster, and more consistently. The problem is that if we learn to do it 'wrong', then we perfect doing it WRONG. We learn poor technique and poor decision-making, the negative intersection of hard skills with soft skills. All of which is why learning 'the right way' means so much, whether it's learning to study or the offensive attack in volleyball. 

But what's BOROT'SYA? It's a Russian word for "struggle" or "fight", the challenge the would-be expert must face to achieve mastery. 

In a subsequent book, "The Little Book of Talent" Coyle tells us the following:

EMBRACE STRUGGLE
At all of the talent hotbeds, from Moscow to Dallas to Brazil to New York, I saw the same facial expression: eyes narrow, jaw tight, nostrils flared, theface of someone intently reaching for something, falling short, and reaching again. 

Deep practice has a telltale emotional flavor, a feeling that can be summed up in one word: “struggle.” Most of us instinctively avoid struggle, because it’s uncomfortable. It feels like failure. However, when it comes to developing your talent, struggle isn’t an option—it’s a biological necessity. The struggle and frustration you feel at the edges of your abilities—that uncomfortable burn of “almost, almost”—is the sensation of constructing new neural connections, a phenomenonthat the UCLA psychologist Robert Bjork calls “desirable difficulty.” Your brain works just like your muscles: no pain, no gain.

Borot'sya.




Thursday, November 21, 2013

Breakup Dinner: Tradition



Positive culture has been an important part of Melrose volleyball for over a decade. Teamwork, enthusiasm, energy, sacrifice, persistence, and respect have all contributed to continuing success.

Tonight at the Montvale Plaza, the team celebrated the 2013 season and the their accomplishments on and off the court. After a delicious buffet dinner, the coaching staff enumerated team achievements and presented certificates and awards.


  • Four year record (seniors) 91-9
  • Four year Middlesex League record 65-1
  • Three Division 2 North titles
  • Four Middlesex League titles
  • Last three seasons undefeated in Middlesex League
  • State Championship (2012)
  • Varsity and JV Middlesex League 2013 each 16-0
  • Program (Varsity, JV, Freshman)  GPA 3.69  (great job, ladies!)
Coaches Celli, Wall, and Basteri presented players with certificates and awards while highlighting some of their amusing anecdotes. 

Coach Celli presented varsity individual awards:

Massachusetts Girls Volleyball Coaches Association All-State selection - Jill MacInnes
Middlesex League MVP - Jill MacInnes
Middlesex League All-stars - Annalisa DeBari, Meri Lessing, Jill MacInnes, Allie Nolan

Team Awards
  • Top server - Maeve Moriarty
  • Top defender - Jill MacInnes
  • Most improved - Cat Torpey
  • Unsung hero - Annalisa DeBari
  • MVP - Jill MacInnes
  • Coach's award - Allie Nolan
The attendees viewed another outstanding team highlight video produced by Jeff Mate'. 

The ceremonial handing down of team traditions like "Who Let the Dogs Out?", post-road game brownies, and Tootsie Pops were distributed. 

Coach Celli reviewed his goals and expectations for next season. As outstanding as this season was, Coach noted that next season could even be better. 

He outlined the criteria for captaincy, including application, interview procedures, faculty and Athletic Director oversight, and voting procedure. The 2014 Captains were then introduced:


Allie Nolan
Meri Lessing
Victoria Crovo

Congratulations on a terrific season.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Don'ts for Off-Season Play

Hat tip to Jeff Mate' for sourcing this:

Now that we’re in tryout season, players nationwide are focused on impressing club coaches so they can earn a spot on the team. Art of Coaching Volleyball is here to help. We asked a few top club coaches to share things they DON’T want to see from players during a tryout. If you’re a player, read and heed. If you’re a coach, pass it along to your players.
1. Don’t give your setter a hard time. Got blocked? Fine. Move on.
2. Don’t bring your cell phone into the gym. Coaches don’t want to see you texting when you should be concentrating on volleyball.
3. Don’t form cliques. Be sure rotate who your partner is for drills and invite new people into your group.
4. Don’t ever quit on a ball, even if you know it’s unlikely that you’ll get to it. Even in pepper!
5. Don’t talk when the coach is talking – it’s disrespectful and sends a bad message to the coach.
6. Don’t do anything halfway -- lazy footwork on freeballs, not covering the hitter, etc.
7. Don’t pay attention to your parents on the sidelines. No conversations or gestures. Coaches want to focus on the player, not the parent.
8. Don’t carry a mistake with you into the next play. A coach can tell by your body language if you’re not over being blocked on the previous point.
9. Don’t be resistant to stepping into another position even if it’s not the one you’re trying out for. Coaches want players who can adjust and are willing to be versatile if that’s what’s needed to make a drill work or help the team.
10. Don’t give off a negative vibe. Look like you’re having fun playing the game. Smile, be upbeat, support your teammates, enjoy yourself. Coaches like players who bring positive energy to the court.
Bonus: Don’t show up for a tryout wearing a T-shirt from a rival club.
 
Written by Don Patterson

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Success

From the post "All In" at the MelroseGirlsBasketball.com blog.

Friday, November 15, 2013

The Power of Stories

Although Americans have few shared beliefs, ninety percent still believe in the "American Dream", that through hard work you can earn success. As young people, you have the best (the longest time) to write your own narrative, whether you are beginning or ending your high school experience.

An awards recipient listened to a lengthy introduction about his many accomplishments, his rise from humble origins to a prominent position in the judiciary. As he arose to speak he began, "Thank you for that wonderful introduction. And the best part, you delivered exactly as I wrote it!"

Consider for a moment the words of Bill Russell, the greatest winner in the history of sports. Russell won an NCAA Championship, an Olympic Championship, and an NBA Championship in the same year. He also won fourteen championships (eleven NBA, two NCAA, one Olympic) in fifteen years. "My ego demands, for myself, the success of my team." His story revolves around finding ways to make his teammates better, day after day, year after year. By doing so, he received more credit than players who sought individual achievement.

Your team can be an athletic team, a business, or your family. Ask yourself what are you prepared to do, how, and when to drive that success?

Kevin Sivils, a three-time basketball coach of the year in Texas writes about the most important award that his TEAM gives out...the best TEAMMATE award. The players vote and decide (through their own criteria) who is the best. Great teammates are enthusiastic, committed, determined, unselfish, respectful, communicators who radiate positivity.

Pete Carril, former basketball coach at Princeton, reminded his children daily as they left for school, what he had learned through experience. "The smart take from the strong." He knew that education came before sports.

Jay Bilas, former Duke star, and ESPN commentator wrote about getting a small task from his father at home. He was asked to remove and replace some contact paper in his sister's bathroom. He found the job difficult and did a mediocre job at it. His father returned home late from work and removed the paper, sanded down the vanity, and replaced it properly. Bilas wrote that he was ashamed of what he had done, and that it had taught him to do the job right the first time.

Every day we have the opportunity to learn lessons in victory and in defeat. It is our choice how receptive we are to those lessons, the daily stories of our lives.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

What Makes Teams Achieve?

"There's a pattern. All the great organizations...think, act, and communicate in the same way."




"What is your belief? What is your purpose?"

"Inspired organizations...all think and communicate from the inside out."

What is your level of commitment? How do you do business? Why do you do what you do?


All-Star Selections

Middlesex League coaches met and have named Middlesex League all-stars. I don't have the full list and suffice it to say Melrose had other deserving players.

 Middlesex League All-Stars
- Jill MacInnes 
- Annalisa DeBari 
- Allie Nolan 
- Meri Lessing 

Freedom Division Co-Players of the Year
- Jill MacInnes 
- Maya Russell (Burlington)

Correction

The great photo of Jill MacInnes is from Donna Larsson!

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Miscellaneous Post Script

All opinions contained within are solely those of the author. This blog is not sponsored by the city of Melrose, Melrose High School, the Melrose Athletic Department, the Melrose Volleyball Booster Club, or any other organization.

"An article in USA Today (July 26, 2002) told of parents hiring skills coaches to enhance their children's athletic performance. A number of parents were quoted. Two particular fathers spoke effusively of how they had shaped/orchestrated their sons' athletic careers. Not mentioned in the article: One son stopped speaking to the overbearing parent. The other, upon meeting me for the first time, asked, "How do you get a father off your back?" - from Coaching the Mental Game, H.A. Dorfman

Dorfman also wrote that in a 1981 article in the New York Times Magazine, a parent opined, "I should probably tell you I support my son's tennis because he gets so much out of it, that it improves him mentally and physically and teaches him so much about life. All that is certainly true, but the real reason is because it adds drama to my life." 

Every season has a post-script, an addendum to the campaign. A few thoughts follow.

Supporting the volleyball program, the players, and the coaches is fun. As a part-time assistant basketball coach, I enjoy chatting with the parents, who make willing sacrifices (in many ways) for their children. Today's parents may discover, that it is far easier to enjoy the season from a distance, when you don't have children battling for roster spots, then playing time, and sometimes struggling to contribute under a variety of pressures. Seeing so many alumnae parents at games must make that true.

Bill Parcells' used to say that coaches are the most selfish people, because they put the players on the field whom they believe will make themselves look good. At the same time, coaches make "Sophie's Choice" because they only have so much opportunity (playing time) to distribute. A player getting less game action may not be an inferior player, but fit into the system or 'grand scheme' differently or less well at that time.

I knew a player who was the sixth man (as a sophomore) on a sectional champion basketball team despite great ability. How much ability? The following two seasons he was the league MVP, got a college scholarship, and was drafted by professional sports teams in two different sports. I would be surprised if his parents didn't think he deserved an expanded role as a young player.

I know another player who as a freshman was selected for the basketball 'B' team. He could have felt sorry for himself, but he worked extremely hard, improved dramatically, became an outstanding player and played in college. An excellent student, he became an executive for a Fortune 500 company.

When you are not satisfied with your role or your results in that role, your best response is to redouble your efforts to find ways to contribute now while working to enhance your skills to increase your chances of reaching your individual goals later. Working to pattern yourself after successful models and to improve your mental simulation of key moments can help you reach your maximum 'potential'.

The 2013 edition of Melrose volleyball accomplished many goals and to have achieved more, in my opinion, would have been overachieving in the wake of last season's departures. Enjoy what you have earned, and decide on goals, planning, and preparation to meet subsequent life challenges. You write your narrative; make it uniquely yours and the best it can be.









J-Mac Latest in Lengthening List of Lady Raider All-State Players

Photo from Donna Larsson! 

For past MGVCA all-state teams, go here. Since 2005, when All-State teams were divided by divisions, Melrose has had at least one all-state player every year except 2006. 

Hat tip Jeff Mate'. 

Monday, November 11, 2013

More Shots - Melrose vs Bishop Fenwick

Photos courtesy of Don Norris. Click images to see the full frame.






Sunday, November 10, 2013

Melrose - Fenwick Photoessay

Celebrate what you have achieved rather than bemoaning what you have not. Four years in the sectional finals for the seniors, three D2N titles, four Middlesex League titles, 21-3 this season...two trips to the state championship, including one state title...not too shabby.

Don Norris shares some shots. Click images for full frame. I'll share pictures over a few days.






Saturday, November 09, 2013

Grey Matter

First, congratulations to Bishop Fenwick and Coach Adam DeBaggis on a hard-fought victory, a Division 2 North title, and advancing to the state semifinals Thursday.

Coming off of a state championship, most teams have a hangover, losing talent, and rebuilding. Melrose didn't achieve its end outcome goal (a state championship), but learned a lot about itself during a 21 win season.

Attribution bias is a psychological defense where one blames external forces - weather, health, fatigue, playing conditions, officiating, the media, or other factors. In the end of the day, sports peak performance is about making plays not excuses.

Melrose played hard throughout, but at times couldn't maintain aggressive offense, in large part due to the paucity of Fenwick serious mistakes like service errors, defensive mistakes, and attack inefficiency.

Melrose jumped out to a 5-1 lead, which Fenwick narrowed to 5-4. At that point, Fenwick put two points on the board with one play, without any explanation from the official scorekeeper. Melrose and Fenwick had a to-and-fro outcome from there, with ties at 8, 13, 14, 15, 17, 19, and 20. Melrose went up 22-20, 23-21, and 24-22, and had a chance to take the set at 24-23 but couldn't deliver the kill, and Fenwick closed them out behind the superior play of Kate Lipka.

Victoria Crovo dominated as a freshman with six kills, and Meri Lessing added four, with three for Marissa Cataldo.

Melrose fell behind 6-4 in the second set, with a phantom pancake dig not helping the locals. Melrose got as close as 7-6, but the wheels came off the wagon, and Fenwick opened up a 19-10 lead en route to a 25-11 tally.

Victoria Crovo was immense with three spectacular kills, and steady Meri Lessing had four in the frame.

In the final set, Melrose came out fast again, up 4-1, but Fenwick responded to go up 8-5. Melrose got as close as 8-7, but Fenwick extended their edge with 11-7 and 16-10 leads. Melrose got within three at 17-14, but the Crusaders opened it back up to 20-15, and Melrose could only get within 21-17 as Fenwick cruised to a 25-18 championship berth.

Meri Lessing fired in another four kills, Annalisa DeBari added two, and Cat Torpey and Marissa Cataldo had one apiece.

Game Summary: Bishop Fenwick used senior experience and strong play to defeat Melrose by playing more aggressive and more consistent volleyball. The Crusader attack limited Melrose from generating enough offense and making enough aggressive choices to get the winners necessary for championship play. Melrose has a bright future, with strong play from Meri Lessing overall and exceptional, at times, dominant play from freshman Victoria Crovo.

Success follows the '3 C's', the melange of concentration, composure, and confidence, and Fenwick brought more to the court today than Melrose.

Game 24: Fenwick stops Melrose's String of D2 North Championships, 3-0*

Note: This blog is not an official publication of the City of Melrose, Melrose High School, the Melrose Athletic Department, the Melrose Volleyball Boosters, or sponsored or endorsed by any official entity.

*Full report to follow.


Championship Saturday

Championships are not only about what you do, but about who you become.

John Maxwell writes about leadership, including The 17 Essential Qualities of a Team Player. 

Here is an excerpt:

If you want to be an enlarging team player, then do the following:


  • Believe in others before they believe in you. If you want to help people become better, you need to become an initiator. You can't hold back. Ask yourself, What is special, unique, and wonderful about that teammate? Then share your observations with the person and with others. If you believe in others and give them a positive reputation to uphold, you can help them to become better than they think they are. 
  • Serve others before they serve you. One of the most beneficial services you can perform is helping other human beings to reach their potential. In your family, serve your spouse. Free up time and resources for enriching experiences. On the ball field, find a way to get your teammate the ball. In business, help your colleagues to shine. And whenever possible, give credit to others for the team's success.
  • Add value to others before they add value to you. A basic truth of life is that people will always move toward anyone who increases them and away from others who devalue them. You can enlarge others by pointing out their strengths and helping them to focus on improvement. But remember this: encourage and motivate people out of their comfort zone, but never out of their gift zone. If you try to push people to work in areas where they have no talent, you will only frustrate them. 

Norris Trophies - "Hit Me with Your Best Shot"

Don Norris shares his 'eye'. Click image to see full frame. And some 'oldies but goodies'.











Annalisa DeBari punched out another winner.


Another rare shot of the freshman double block. After the "Great Wall" comes the "Fresh Wall"

Playing the underdog this time, Melrose heads to the sectional finals for the eleventh consecutive season, looking for its eighth sectional championship. "EIGHT WOULD BE GREAT".


What kind of attitude do you bring to this game?

Thursday, November 07, 2013

Game 23: Jolly Roger Sunk, Melrose 3 Bedford 0

Melrose hosted Bedford in a D2 North Semifinal and departed with its eleventh consecutive to the trip to the sectional championship, winning 25-16, 25-15, 25-17. Melrose will face Bishop Fenwick Saturday for the Division 2 North title.

Bedford had sent a pair of Middlesex League teams packing, but the young Buccaneers didn't have enough to end Melrose's season. 7

Bedford took the opening pair of points, but Marissa Cataldo answered with a kill, and her buddies piled on ten of the next twelve points to go up 11-4. But Bedford didn't quit, getting closer to 12-7 before Melrose opened it up to 16-9 and cruised to the win. Annalisa DeBari had a trio of kills abetted by a pair by fab frosh Victoria Crovo. Melrose had no service errors in the set.

Set two had an eerie cyclicality, with Melrose leading 5-1 only to trail after a 6-1 Bedford run, then answer with a 7-1 run of their own to lead 13-7. From there out they simply expanded the lead and coasted. Allie Nolan was excellent with a pair of kills, Victoria and Cat each adding 1.5 kills (via the double block).

Bedford came out strong to lead 4-0 in the third, but a six point Melrose run sparked by Maave Moriarty gave Melrose the lead, only to see ties at 7 through 10. Melrose proceeded to ice the set and match with a 10-0 run.

Annalisa piled on another three kills, Victoria and Marissa a pair, and Meri Lessing broke through for three down the strength.

Game Summary: Bedford did a lot of good things including blocking and well-coordinated defense. They just lacked the offensive consistency needed to overcome Melrose's total game, and Bedford hurt themselves with nine service errors. Jill MacInnes led another successful effort by the back row, and Melrose did enough to win easily.


Melrose Hosts Bedford Tonight

Bedford (16-8) comes to town tonight, looking to chop down their third Middlesex League opponent after toppling Burlington and Stoneham, each by 3-2 scores.

The match begins at 7:00 P.M. at the Veterans Memorial Middle School Gym.

The winner advances to the Sectional finals Saturday to play the winner of Bishop Fenwick and Arlington Catholic.

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Outcomes and More Pictures

From H.A. Dorfman, Coaching the Mental Game: "Statistics are the results that fans, media, and some administrators scrutinize. (Coaches should know better.) An athlete is a performer. If he accepts what happens - outcome, instead of his approach and execution, he'd better learn a thing or two that goes beyond his inappropriate interpretation. 

He should reconcile himself to the fact that he has no control over results that take place once he has executed his task. If he executes well but gets a bad result, he must respond by understanding that he did what he wanted to do (and what he could control) and that he should do it again. And again. Regardless of the result, which he knows he cannot control."

Dorfman's message is to control what you can control. When you are aggressive, communicate with your teammates, play hard, play smart, and play together, you have a winning process. Let the results take care of themselves. Focus on the process.

Photos courtesy of Don Norris. Click to see full frame.





Pancakes for everyone!


Tuesday, November 05, 2013

The Makings of Decisions

I have a great interest in how decisions are made, via Critical Thinking and/or in environments where time pressure, high stakes, expertise, and dynamic situations exist. These can include (but are not limited to) fire command, military operating theatres, chess, stock trading, emergency rooms, and at times, sports.

There are traditional decision analysis approaches emphasizing risk and benefit and another model defined by researchers including Gary Klein in Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions.

In general, two major approaches dominate, the former "recognition primed decision" (RPD) and the other singular (sequential choice) decision making. Domain experts identify or 'see' the best suitable option by virtue of training and experience rather than making 'either or' choices.

For more leisurely choices, the rational choice model (from MIT's Sloan School) has a more "NFL Draft" feel to it:

1) Determine options (e.g. players A-Z)
2) Define characteristics (e.g. size, athleticism, position, production, intelligence, character, etc.)
3) Assign weighting to characteristics (e.g. do not draft if character flawed)
4) Rate the choices
5) Rank and select based on ratings

That is not to say that "intuition" has no role in decision-making...but certainly lacks quantitation.

As a coach myself, I work to understand the many inputs that go into determining strategy, preparation and practice, lineup selection, and motivation. Coaching the Mental Game is one useful resource for coaches and The Politics of Coaching an excellent analysis of coaching dynamics that would benefit every coach and parent.

Melrose has a remarkable streak on the line, with ten consecutive sectional Division 2 North championship appearances including seven wins. A lot of people have ownership, including the coaches, players, parents and families, and community support. It's never easy.

Melrose - Winchester Photoessay (First Look)

Photos courtesy of Don Norris. Click images to see full frame.

Meri with the block and the defense at the ready.

Surrounded

The Melrose faithful showed up to cheer on their favorites to another post-season win.


Freshman double block...




Game 22: Twenty Game Winner, Melrose 3 Winchester 0



Melrose (20-2) hosted a strong Winchester (16-6) team and dominated "box to wire" en route to a 25-10, 25-16, 25-18 win. The victory advances Melrose to the sectional semifinals Thursday against the winner of Bedford and Stoneham.

On the left side of the bracket, it's an all-prep semi-final as Bishop Fenwick hosts Arlington Catholic.

Melrose and Winchester were tied after 2 points and Melrose never trailed in the contest thereafter. Early on it was the Meri Lessing Show up front, but she got by with a little help from her friends, with scintillating performances from senior Jill MacInnes in the back, junior Allie Nolan at setter, and sophomore Marissa Cataldo having her best performance as a Lady Raider.

Melrose led 6-1, 10-5, and 16-6 and sprinted to the finish with a 9-4 close. Meri had four kills in set one, Allie had three, Annalisa Debari two, and Victoria Crovo and Marissa each had one. Melrose had a lone service error of the match in the first set.

The second set saw Melrose jump out to a 4-0 lead and never look back, leading 10-3 until Winchester fought back to 16-14, only to see Melrose go 9-2 down the stretch after a critical time out to win 25-16. Meri hammered in another five kills, Allie delivered four, and Maave Moriarty racked up service points early and late.

Melrose left no doubt in the final stanza, leading 9-1 and coasting as Winchester never threatened. Melrose led 22-11, only to see the Sachems go 7-1 before a Cataldo kill and a final Winchester receive error finished the match. Allie had another three kills to go into double digits, Meri had two, and Marissa had another trio for Melrose.

Game notes: Melrose played their best volleyball of the year, never trailing and playing very aggressively throughout. As usual, Jill MacInnes was outstanding in the back, but the supporting cast played their best roles. Very few balls hit the floor, and Melrose made a handful of mistakes and limited their service errors to a solitary wide serve in the first set.

LATE information: Bedford tops Stoneham 3-2 to earn the right to face Melrose Thursday.

Then and Now



We've talked about the "sister acts" in Melrose volleyball, with a pair currently on the team, Stephanie and Victoria Crovo and Jill and Kaitlyn MacInnes.





Former Lady Raider Liz Sheerin stopped by and we've got an updated photograph, although the sisters are on opposite sides of the picture this time.

Watch the team host Winchester tonight at 7:00 in Division 2 North quarterfinal action at the Middle School.

Sunday, November 03, 2013

Chalk Talk? Not Exactly

After the opening weekend of the D2 North playoffs, several darkhorses emerged.

On the left half of the brackets, no surprises, as Fenwick, Weston, North Reading, and AC survive and advance. AC and Fenwick would be favored to move on to the sectional semis.

On the right side, a big surprise, as Bedford ousted Burlington, the 15-4 six seed. Burlington recently gave Melrose a devil of a battle. Melrose hosts Middlesex League sister Winchester on Tuesday and Bedford hosts Stoneham, which hopes to use its big front line to keep its season alive.


Melrose - Wayland Photoessay - Second Look

Images courtesy of Don Norris. Click frame to see the entire frame.


Need a theme? Get up, get up, show me what you got now.