Monday, March 11, 2024

Seeking Excellence


Coaching the exceptional player blends privilege and opportunity. And it happens rarely. What distinguishes the exceptional player from the other hundreds of players we coach? The bulk of the iceberg lies below the waterline. 

The list is incomplete.

1. Ambition. Influence expert Dan Pink describes qualities of autonomy, mastery, and purpose. Special players showed exceptional commitment from a young age. Autonomy informs 'self-starters'. 

2. Physical gifts. Top players have at least two of three qualities - size, athleticism, and skill. Coaches can help with athleticism and skill, but coaches cannot transform players without inherent gifts. 

3. Curiosity. Pete Newell's mandate, "see the game" manifests as being in your notebook and regularly studying video. At higher levels, become your own coach, learning how to 'utilize strengths and to attack weaknesses'. 

4. Say, "Yes." Opportunities arise for extra training, extra instruction, extra development. That implies the will to tolerate physical and mental fatigue. "Champions do extra," says James Kerr in Legacy. The exceptional player takes advantage to develop an edge. 

5. Mentoring. Selected figures in history leveraged force of will to success, such as Abraham Lincoln. Mostly, "mentoring is the only shortcut to excellence." 

6. Coachability. Excellent players thirst for coaching. 

7. Athletic training. Few individuals, such as Bo Jackson, develop the strength, power, and endurance to excel without intense physical training. But the rest need focused development. On sites like Threads.net, readers can direct desired posts using the word, 'algorithm'. 

8. Resources. Training, teams, and competition takes time and money. Strong family or external support help. But you don't need expensive equipment to study your video, workout with a teammate, or build strength and conditioning. 

Lagniappe. Don'ts matter, too. 

Lagniappe 2. Get more direction with exit interviews.  

 

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