A good coach will teach you what they know. A great coach will teach you what they wish they had been taught at an earlier age.#chopwoodcarrywater
— Earl J Watson (@Earl_Watson) August 30, 2025
"What stands in the way becomes the way." - Marcus Aurelius
Growth and struggle are inseparable. Success rises from failure. In 2002, Melrose played Arlington Catholic in the postseason second round and lost in straight sets. In 2003, they met again in the sectional finals, AC 22-0 and Melrose 21-1. With a pair of 6'2" middles, AC had not lost a set all season. Melrose earned its first sectional title with a 3-0 sweep.
Sport teaches and reveals certain truths. Young players filter the "firehose" of information, trying to figure it out. More experienced players understand that they're still trying to figure it out.
1. What's your MVB skill?
What gets you on the court and keeps you on the court? Think of an 'array' of core skills.
- Serving
- Attacking/Blocking (the yin and yang)
- Setting/Hitting (the horse and carriage)
- Digging/Passing
Via ChatGPT Plus: Mental repetitions in volleyball—often called visualization or motor imagery—have measurable physiologic effects that overlap with actual physical practice. Here’s a breakdown of the mechanisms and outcomes:
1. Neural Activation
-
Motor cortex recruitment: Brain scans show that imagining a skill activates many of the same neural pathways as executing it. A volleyball player mentally rehearsing a block or jump serve stimulates motor cortex, premotor cortex, and cerebellar circuits.
-
Myelin reinforcement: Repeated activation strengthens synaptic efficiency, which can accelerate skill acquisition and sharpen execution when the actual movement occurs.
-
Mirror neurons: Visualization engages mirror neuron systems, which link observation, imagination, and physical performance.
2. Autonomic Nervous System Effects
-
Heart rate and respiration: Athletes who vividly visualize often experience subtle increases in heart rate, respiration, and galvanic skin response—showing that the body partially “believes” it is performing.
-
Arousal regulation: Controlled imagery helps athletes simulate high-stress situations (match point serve, defending a quick attack) while practicing calm breathing and emotional control. This can lower cortisol and improve composure in real matches.
3. Muscle Recruitment and Priming
-
Motor unit facilitation: Even without movement, small EMG (electromyography) activity can be detected in the muscles being imagined (e.g., quadriceps during a jump, forearm flexors during a serve).
-
Neuromuscular readiness: This primes muscle fibers, making subsequent physical repetitions more efficient. Mental reps act as “extra touches” without physical fatigue.
4. Cognitive and Perceptual Benefits
-
Pattern recognition: Visualization helps train reading skills—seeing the opponent’s setter’s shoulders, anticipating tips vs. swings, or tracking serve trajectories.
-
Spatial awareness: Players mentally map positions, rotations, and seam coverage, sharpening decision-making in live play.
-
Error correction: Imagining the “perfect technique” without the distraction of fatigue reinforces correct mechanics, helping overwrite bad habits.
5. Performance Outcomes in Volleyball
-
Serve and serve-receive: Mental rehearsal of target zones improves accuracy under pressure.
-
Blocking: Imagining the hitter’s approach and timing the jump can improve reaction quickness, since the brain is trained to recognize cues faster.
-
Transition speed: Players who visualize moving from defense to attack show smoother, faster real-time transitions.
-
Confidence and resilience: Regular imagery enhances belief in execution, especially for players who may physically be rehabbing or limited in practice reps.
✅ Bottom line:
Mental repetitions in volleyball produce real physiologic changes—from subtle muscle activation and neural reinforcement to autonomic responses—making them a powerful complement to physical training. They extend practice time without adding mechanical stress, help regulate arousal, and prepare athletes to execute skills and decisions under competitive pressure.



