- "Do more of what works and less of what doesn't."
- Play to win, not to avoid losing.
- Be aggressive. Volleyball rewards aggression.
- Focus. "Next play." The last play is over.
- Trust. Trust the process, your coaches, your teammates.
Monday, October 31, 2022
Bracketology
Next Up - Home Friday @ 6:30
Number 6, What's Next
As expected, Melrose finished 6th in the final MIAA regular season power rankings. That means Melrose will face the winner of a play-in game of whomever #27 (Stoughton) plays in the prelims.
That will likely be Thursday or Friday at home.
Sunday, October 30, 2022
Just Dance - Why Melrose Can Go Deep in the Playoffs
Volleyball Seedings Released Tomorrow
Correction. Football release is at 10, volleyball at 1. Both tomorrow https://t.co/w9juGKkmTc
— Danny Ventura (@BostonHeraldHS) October 30, 2022
"That's What This Program Is About"
Kelvin Sampson knows basketball and player psychology. This applies to every sport and player/team development.
"Making mistakes is not the problem. It’s the effort that you're making when you're making those mistakes. It’s about experience. It’s about learning the system. It's about picking things up. And they're going to struggle, but effort & attitude are things that they can control." pic.twitter.com/76LtPnJ3gq
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) October 30, 2022
"I Wonder, What If, Let's Try"
The MIAA power ranking system places Melrose somewhere in the top six.
Sunday Second Helping - Turn It Off?
Saturday, October 29, 2022
An Impossible Task
"It is amazing what can be accomplished when nobody cares who gets the credit."
Culture is a keystone to continuity. Everyone can't become a great player, but everyone can be a great teammate.
Steve Kerr was architect of the four championships of the Golden State Warriors, building off three themes - culture, mindset, and mentors. "Culture eats strategy for breakfast."
Coach Scott Celli and his staff give out awards at the end of the season. Defining a Most Improved Player is an impossible task with numerous deserving candidates.
Melrose notes: Priorities exist. Delivery of the frozen cookie dough is underway.
Friday, October 28, 2022
A Hard Concept: Fairness
TRUTH
— Next Level Baseball (@nextlevelbb) October 27, 2022
All players should be treated fairly but not the same! The tireless worker with outstanding maturity that is highly reliable/dependable and trustworthy, shouldn't be treated the same as the immature and/or entitled player that is lazy and has a habit of doing the minimum.
Here are a few enduring lessons from sport.
"Coaches are the most selfish people. We put people on the field who we think will make us look good." - Bill Parcells
"Sport doesn't build character. Sports reveals character." - Heywood Hale Broun
"Champions do extra." - James Kerr, Legacy
Lagniappe (something extra). Melrose volleyball earned recognition by winning a State Title and nine sectional championships. But the program also earned the Massachusetts Team Sportsmanship Award in 2004.
Milestones (2)
Gia Vlajkovic stamps her name on the Melrose "All-Time" list tonight. With a dozen kills against Stoneham, she moves into the single season top ten kill list, tied with the incomparable Hannah Brickley at 270.
Tonight she eclipsed Karen Sen and Victoria Crovo. She has the postseason ahead of her.
Congratulations!
Milestones (I) Congratulations
It's never been about statistics...but we don't ignore them either.
Game 20: Melrose 3 Stoneham 0
What Coaches See Is What Impacts Winning
“The uneducated feel like if you aren’t scoring you aren’t doing a lot, Reggie makes plays that don’t show up on a stat sheet”
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) October 28, 2022
Wise words from a wise man
(Via @gocoogs1 🎥)
pic.twitter.com/6Xnf9Z9UEu
Impact winning. Star in your role. Bring energy. We've seen great energy recently from the bench.
Keeping a ball alive can make the difference between winning and losing.
Advice from a Legendary Basketball Coach That Works for Volleyball
Take the best from everyone you meet and leave the rest.
Coaching has universal truths. Here are some from former Indiana coach Bob "The General" Knight via Don Meyer's website.
Knight coached three NCAA basketball champions. He is a polarizing figure, a brilliant tactician and teacher - and a hothead.
Thursday, October 27, 2022
Friday Finale
"We are what we repeatedly do. Therefore, excellence is not an act, but a habit." - Aristotle
Melrose hosts Stoneham in the final game of the regular season. With the playoffs just around the corner, playing well reinforces good habits. It also allows hardworking teammates to see game action.
You study history for a reason. When we think the past doesn't affect the present, we lack all the facts. Agree or disagree, the past affects the future. 9/11 impacted decisions leading to the Iraq War.
"History may not repeat but it rhymes." I think it was in 2002 that Melrose led a set in Reading and early substitutions cost Melrose the set as the team collapsed. Similarly, in 2005, in the State Championship game, Melrose trailed by two sets and 16-23, only to rally with the starters in to take the match to five sets in a losing effort.
Leaders lead. With six seniors playing their final regular season game, this message goes out:
You are always being judged - attitude, choices, effort, performance. Exceptional teams have the capacity to play "harder for longer" than average teams. Effort is a skill. Focus is a skill. Toughness is a skill.
Roster Construction Is Fluid
Regardless of sport, imagine your roster is comprised of four 'categories' of players:
- Lottery picks (high draft picks)
- First rounders
- Second rounders
- Free agents
Lottery picks don't start middle school as elite. They train, play club and high school basketball, and so forth. There's no guarantee that personal training, club play, and time make you a lottery pick or even a first rounder. But you can move between categories with training and experience.
You don't have to be a first round pick to become a champion. Draymond Green of the Golden State Warriors was a second round pick who has won four championships and been on four NBA All-Star teams. The second round pick became first round talent.
Draft status depends on many factors including size, athleticism, and skill. In The Undoing Project, Michael Lewis profiles Nobel Laureate Danny Kahneman and his late colleague Amos Tversky. Lewis explains how top NBA picks depend on age (younger is better), college (legacy programs are better), and performance.
History shows that players evolve. Rachel Johnson spent most of her career as an elite blocker but improved enough to become a "first round" player with improved attacking, averaging nearly ten kills a match during the final three games of the 2012 Melrose title run. Add her to the 'lottery picks' Sarah McGowan, Brooke Bell, and Jennifer Cain and it's easy to understand how Melrose had a 'wagon'.
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Athleticism
Elite play doesn't require elite athleticism. But it helps.
What does elite athleticism help?
- Vertical jump (helps attack/block/net play)
- Hand-eye coordination (setting, digging, receiving, attack)
- Change of direction
- Power for attack
- Adjustment to the ball
Game 19: Melrose 3 Wilmington 0
Melrose grinds toward the end of the regular season with a 25-8, 25-10, 25-15 home win over the Wilmington Wildcats. The win ups Melrose's record to 15-4, 15-0 in the Middlesex League.
Skill, athleticism, and size are key inputs to making plays. The theme for tonight's piece is athleticism.
Leah Fowke's serve set up a long first set run, keeping Wilmington on the defensive (video from MHS-TV).
Wilmington Today
Melrose hosts Wilmington tonight in the penultimate game of the regular season.
Mastery flows from showing up every day. Sam Jackson shares sticky lessons from his career. Show up, step up, bear up."You're never too good to audition."
Jackson went to a reading in 1980 and spotted James Earl Jones. Jackson presumes that Jones is the lead, because he was THE preeminent black actor of the day. "No, I'm here for an interview, just like you." Keep growing and fighting for the parts you want. Dissatisfied with your role? Work harder.
"Your best moments can be lost in the editing room."
He discusses how he played a scene in A Time to Kill and everyone on the set cried, overcome by how he performed. The scene never made the movie. Your contribution may not survive the editing room. That doesn't diminish you. It's part of the process. Jackson describes feeling ruined...because he still had an "Oscar bait" mentality (he no longer does).
In the coaching profession, we suffer similar emotions. Sometimes our best work helps a player, team, or family during practice or a season with a forgettable record. Process and results aren't always tightly linked.
"Every time you're in front of somebody, you're being judged."
Jackson said it another way, "there are no small parts only small actors."
During practice, coaches study your execution and decisions, including attitude and effort. But attitude and effort are choices. Bring your best self to the classroom, the weight room, and the court. Compete.
Cultivate great habits, winning routines. Great routines include study, writing, reading, exercise, healthy nutrition, adequate sleep, time management, and mindfulness. If not up to the preparation, then we can't complain about the results.
Jackson says, "never accept the fact that something is yours." The role you have, your position, your minutes, your paycheck are up for grabs. "It's a tough business."
Screenshot from MasterClass, Samuel L. Jackson Teaches Acting
Lagniappe (something extra). Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) saved up and bought up a little blue bicycle when he was seven years old. In his tough neighborhood, somebody stole it within a week. Later, as Ali, when he walked into the ring, he said to himself, "that guy stole my bicycle." Find your muse. Whatever it takes.
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Hard Coaching
Coach K didn’t call out Deron Williams or Carlos Boozer in the locker room. He called out Kobe & Bron. The BEST players have to take hard coaching for the TEAM. If the HC can call YOU out and you accept it, the team will follow. It’s coaching. Never personal.
— Jhasmin Player (@thePLAYERway) October 15, 2022
Great players embrace hard coaching. But what does that mean?
ACHIEVEMENT = PERFORMANCE x TIME
The formula expresses both the need for practice (not everyone agrees with Gladwell's '10,000 Hours') and sustained excellence.
Michelangelo finished crafting Pieta when only twenty-four years old. When asked how someone so young had sculpted something so magnificent he explained that he had worked ten hours a day for more than a decade to master his craft.
At extremes, coaching comes in two flavors, "relationship-oriented" and "task-oriented." That boils down to "players' coaches" and "hard guys." Seldom do coaches fall at either end of the spectrum.
"Be demanding without being demeaning." We have to 'reach' players to get high performance from individuals and teams.
- Success comes when player and team goals align.
- That may mean sacrifices of 'touches' and 'shots'.
- We can't know goals without asking.
What is hard coaching?
- Extreme attention to detail
- Insistence on strength and conditioning
- Demanding sacrifice of time for practice and study
- Repetitions and more repetitions
- Setting higher expectations
- Most of all, it's asking for more from players
Yelling isn't hard coaching; it's just yelling.
Chuck Daly explained, "I'm a salesman." Players have to buy what we're selling. It's unrealistic to think that everyone responds to the same message. We ask players to sacrifice time, effort, BST - blood, sweat, and tears. We might be asking parents to sacrifice money - team fees, gym memberships, strength and conditioning, travel, extra medical costs, and more.
Players have to see added value. For professionals, "10,000 shots can make you $10,000,000" might work. There's no equivalent for adolescents. Coaches ask for sacrifice in return for uncertain possibilities.
Lagniappe. Geno knows.
Sound Bytes from Bilas
Many of you have read parts of Toughness by Jay Bilas. Here's a brief Bilas' clip worth your minute.
"There's a difference between playing and competing"
— Duke Men’s Basketball (@DukeMBB) October 25, 2022
🗣️ @JayBilas pic.twitter.com/1jkA8SXFHJ
Updated Power Rankings
MIAA Power Rankings determine seeding.
Teams beyond the top 32 get in depending on record (.500 or better) and "Sullivan Rule" of .500 or better in your division games.
"Chalk" means higher seed wins.
- The top seed would play #32 to start.
- The 4th seed would play #29.
- Advance to the second round and #4 meets #13.
- Advance to the quarterfinals and #4 meets #5... and so on.
Monday, October 24, 2022
Walking the Path
Savor the journey. Enjoy practice, pasta parties, bus rides, and spending time with your teammates. They forge memories that last a lifetime, more than wins and losses or trophies.
No two seasons are alike. Most aren't even comparable. For example, last season Ruth Breen had thirty-one assists and the senior setter has over four hundred this season.
No previous team has played the top seed in three separate divisions.
This is the second season of the MIAA All-State tournament that produced a great postseason in 2021.
As the regular season winds down, uncertainty abounds. A top four seed offers the possibility of three home playoff games. But what matters most is not where or whom you play but how.
Melrose Notes: "Moving on up."
With a pre-Halloween haul of 23 kills, Gia Vlajkovic (246) moves into a tie for 13th on the Melrose All-Time single season kills list. Sweet!
Stats vs. Burlington
Game 18: Melrose 3 Burlington 2 "Resilience"
Melrose's road warriors chilled 'The Inferno' en route to a possible undefeated ML12 campaign, downing the Burlington Red Devils 25-22, 19-25, 21-25, 25-8, 15-10.
The win brings Melrose to 14-4, 14-0 in the ML12.
The large Burlington crowd witnessed outstanding play by both teams and resilience by Melrose down the stretch.
Melrose re-engaged in the fourth set with aggressive play. Sustaining aggressive play often carries the day.
Keys to victory?
- Chloe Gentile had a strong match throughout.
- Melrose came out angry after the third set and rebounded by thumping Burlington in the fourth.
- Sophomore Leah Fowke had an extended service run and Melrose got out to an 18-3 lead en route to the tying set.
- Emma Desmond continued her strong play at libero.
- Melrose reduced service errors significantly.
Winning Is Hard
Sunday, October 23, 2022
Melrose Kicks Off Final Week of Regular Season at Burlington Tonight
Melrose travels to Burlington Monday for a rematch with the Red Devils, a solid club which has won 9 of its last 10.
More Lessons from Coach Meyer
This article about Don Meyer deserves sharing. It popped up during a search for "hard coaching." Great players want to be coached hard.
Here are the main themes:
- Criticize Players in Private
- Emphasize What's Most Important
- Know Why You're Coaching
- Be Nice to Everyone You Meet
- Put the Team First
- Effort is a Choice
Nobody wants to be 'called out' publicly. A coach's job, to get high performance, requires 'correction'. As a player, you control attitude, choices, and effort. Control what you can control. When coaches thinks you need correction - better attitude, decision-making skills, or to work harder - they tell you.
"The main thing is the main thing." TIA - teamwork, improvement, accountability. Accountability is holding yourself to a high standard. You can't do that without adequate training, nutrition, rest, and study.
Coaches help people become more. Someone asked legendary coach Amos Alonzo Stagg about his team. He answered, "ask me in twenty years and I'll be able to give you a better idea." Melrose volleyball alumnae are going places. Numerous graduates have advanced degrees as educators. Victoria Crovo is a second year veterinary student. You read about Emma Randolph last week.
Wakefield Coach Kayla Wyland is as nice as anyone you will ever meet. And you know she played on the Melrose 2012 State Championship team.
Why play team sports if not to achieve more together? The African proverb says, “If you want to go fast, go alone, if you want to go far, go together.”
Winning is hard. "The magic is in the work." To win big in sports or in life, do 'unrequired work'. In James Kerr's book, "Legacy" about the New Zealand All-Blacks rugby team, he explains, "Champions do extra."
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Melrose - Wakefield Statistics
Statistics via Maxpreps.com, submitted by Coach Scott Celli.
The first set saw a high number of service errors (6) contributing to the overall low (85%) service percentage.