Pregame
Speech (March 2005)Thoughts, stories, examples
and ideas on challenging your team to perform at their highest level possible. Thoughts
for the Month
"Don't be fooled by the calendar. There are only as many days in the year
as you make use of. One man gets only a week's value out of a year while another
man gets a full year's value out of a week." - Charles Richards "Time
is the most valuable thing a man can spend." - Diogenes Laetius
"If
you want to make good use of your time, you've got to know what's most important
and then give it all you've got." - Lee Iacocca
"The
man who views the world at 50 the same as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of
his life." - Muhammad Ali
"Time
is a circus, always packing up and moving away." - Ben Hecht
"Every
morning you are handed 24 golden hours. They are one of the few things in this
world that you get free of charge. If you had all the money in the world, you
couldn't buy an extra hour. What will you do with this priceless treasure?"
- Author Unknown
"I
wish I could stand on a busy corner, hat in hand, and beg people to throw me all
their wasted hours." - Bernard Berenson
"Time
is a great story teller." - Irish Proverb The
Worst Things We Do as Teachers By
Mike Dunlap, Metro State Head Men's Basketball Coach 1.
Take time to explain what we want from our players. We must strive for clarity
first.
2.
Demonstration after we tell our players what we want; there must be a demonstration
each time. We need to give our players a picture demonstration before we get into
repetition.
3.
Building blocks are the only way to develop a player. For example, if we do not
address a players feet and be specific about how we want him to pivot then it
will cost us down the road. Do not rush your teaching. We should do one thing
at a time.
4.
Teaching your team to be physical takes technique, sequential instruction, and
patience. It is easy to call a player a "nutless wonder" without considering
that most players have never been taught the finer points of hand to hand combat.
If we would spend a little more time with football coaches we would figure out
how to teach our team to be physical.
5.
Be objective about an all out effort. We demand that a player go at 100% effort.
What is 100% effort and has there ever been a player who knew what that meant.
Probably not? For instance, put a heart monitor on a player and measure their
heart rate. The instructor can be more objective about individual effort this
way. Yet, we talk and sometimes yell at our players about going "all out"
all the time. What a stupid statement when you really think about it. How can
a player read and think? For example, a good offensive player must learn how to
change speeds with cutting and ballhandling. This requires that the offensive
player control his body and NOT play at 100%. Too many times we buy into the myth
of the 100% effort and forget about going after a player's intellect before asking
for a quality effort.
6.
Demanding perfection. What a bunch of crap! The more a person chases perfection
the less they can enjoy each act. How can a perfectionist be happy with anything?
The least enjoyable person to be around is the perfectionist; I find a lazy dog
to be just as unpleasant. Demand that people do the right thing, yet do not fall
into the trap that nothing is ever good enough. If you are always chasing perfection
then how can you teach a player to enjoy a job well done. As Coach Wooden stated,
"A man must find balance, be it emotional, physical, spiritual, or intellectual.".
Why is it that certain coaches will say that they were devastated by the loss
at the end of a 33-1 season? If you believe in your preparation and teaching process
then how can any loss devastate you? In other words, losing is part of sports;
you learn from it and move on. A disciplined mind comes in many different forms
and being mentally tough also requires that you must accept the brutal reality
that no one is perfect and a quality effort is a joy in and of itself regardless
of outcome.
7.
Follow through. If you want discipline in your organization then follow through
with consequences for actions. Our discipline breaks down when we do not quickily
punish the transgression. How come so many coaches fall prey to this area? Because
it could hurt the outcome of your season if you lose a certain player. My experience
tells me just the opposite. For example, George Gwoldecky, head hockey coach at
Denver University, benched his best player for the national championship game.
Coach Gwoldecky made a statement for all time- period.
8.
Take care of ourselves first. Whether it is our mental and physical health (i.e
eating, exercise, prayer, reading, etc) daily schedule, finances, family, and
other personal matters, we need to address those things first. Why? Because if
you are not in order how can you fully give to your team, staff, and school? You
cannot.
9.
Apologize. We demand so much from others and we want them to see their mistakes
and fix them. In short, we set ourselves above our own vulnerabilities; we should
openly admit our errors. Once you have done this in front of your team it will
be much easier for them to acknowledge their mistakes. This is an imperative act
by the head coach if you want quality communication.
10.
Allow for failure. Part of learning is the margin of failure and sometimes you
just have to let the players fall flat on their rumps. This is difficult but necessary.
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