Tuesday, November 30, 2010

THE ART OF HOW TO TREAT PEOPLE

"Treat people as if they were
what they ought to be, and
you help them to become what
 they are capable of being."

–Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Thanks to Coach Creighton Burns for the following from Ronn Wycoff:

We can't all make it to the top. We can't always have great players. We can only do the best we can with what we have, both with our teaching abilities and with the players we have to work with. However, that shouldn't be a crutch for coaches to prop themselves up with when the wins are fewer than the losses. Sure, lots of us remain in situations for the love of what we do, where we are good coaches in programs that will never be at the top. But, this is where the real challenge lies--are we losers because we don't win? Are the players losers who play on a team that just doesn't have the talent to go the distance versus the more talented? We have to look at the players and communities we serve and know we really are doing the best we can do at teaching the game where the talent pool just isn't there. If we focus on being the best we can be--on teaching and preparing our players to play at the best of their abilities and guiding them to be good young men and women--we win. If we have instilled this same focus within the spirit of our players, then they too win. Coach John Wooden has been quoted often to the effect, saying, "We have no control over how good the other players are or over how well they are prepared. We do have control over how well we prepare, and if we've done our best, even in a losing effort, we have still won."

Now is the time to take stock of your coaching preparation. Are you ready to improve your teaching game? Go to coaching clinics, workshops, and take college coaching courses. Get books and DVDs to help take your game to a higher level. While you are getting your teaching skills "in shape", don't forget the mental and spiritual preparation it will take in order for you to get to a higher level of teaching and to enable you to better guide your players to their own higher levels.

THOUGHTS ON HUMILITY

This comes from Kevin Sivils' Roundball Report (http://www.kcsbasketball.com/) stuff from Dick Bennet:

The following was is one of the "electronic" handouts given to our players concerning the broad topic of being coachable and the basis it has in humility.

Who is wise and understanding among you? Let him show it by his good life, by deeds done in the humility that comes from wisdom. James 3:13

Being coachable. Just what does that mean? One of the biggest sources of sin and problems in our lives is PRIDE. We don't like to admit we don't know, we are wrong or horrors, look stupid in front of our friends.

But is it wise to demonstrate our pride nature by being uncoachable? You have coaches to provide you with the wisdom you need to become a better player. Humbling yourself and learning from your coaches is the right thing to do (and yes, I am well aware we make mistakes as coaches - but we have the wisdom gained from decades of being involved with our sport and we really want to share that wisdom with you).

Let's revisit one of the truisms from yesterday. Every choice you make effects others. Make sure you make the right choice.

When you choose to be prideful and not pay attention, to not ask questions or to not tell the coaches you just don't understand, you are making a choice.

That choice might spare you immediate embarrassment or prevent you from looking "uncool" in front of your friends BUT you AND your teammates are going to suffer from your poor choice to be uncoachable. You don't know what to do or how to execute a given tactic and so the team suffers, either in practice or a game AND you look bad because you don't know what to do.

Have you ever noticed the kids who do really well in school ask questions? I know it can be annoying to the other students who in their desire to look smart or cool, don't ask questions.

But there is a connection between the students who ask questions and do well - they get the information they need in order to succeed.

When you choose to be uncoachable, and it is a choice, you are not only negatively impacting yourself but your teammates.

Everyone is "uncoachable" once in awhile - we just have bad days sometimes. But when you make it a consistent habit and you choose to do so, that is wrong.

Let's look at the positives of being coachable:

1) you will improve - improvement is always a good thing.

2) the team will improve as a result of your improvement - improvement is always a good thing.

3) you will know what to do, how to do it, when to do it and will be able to perform better in a game and in practice.

4) you will be more confident because you know what to do.

5) you will be a better teammate because your decision to be coachable not only helps you, but it helps the team - which is always a good thing.

6) humility is one of the most important qualities a person can develop.

7) you will develop the positive habit of always trying to improve and learn - this will help you for the rest of your life.

8) Humility will save you a great deal of pain in life - pain caused by your pride and being "uncoachable."

9) Being "coachable" helps you to have a servant's heart. One of the greatest sources of joy in life is serving others.

10) Being "coachable" helps lessen the likelihood of making mistakes, thus avoiding the very thing you most feared - looking silly or screwing up in front of your friends.

By the way, REAL friends are OK with you making mistakes and messing up in front of them when you are learning.

So - ask questions, pay attention, say you don't understand - it's a good thing.

THE BOOK OF DON

Here's another great review on Buster Olney's book "How Lucky Can You Be: The Don Meyer Story."  This one comes from Kelli Anderson of Sports Illustrated:

In today's publishing climate, how do you sell a book about a retired basketball coach from a little-known Div. II school in the upper Midwest? That was the question worrying Buster Olney, author of the recently published "How Lucky You Can Be, the story of Don Meyer," the former men's basketball coach at Northern State University in Aberdeen, S.D., whose horrific 2008 car wreck resulted in the amputation of much of his left leg, as well as the discovery that he has terminal cancer. But it turns out that Meyer, 65, whose 923 career wins are the most for a men's NCAA basketball coach, is famous not only in South Dakota, where he has lived for 11 years, but also within a large fraternity of folks who love sharing inspirational tales: other coaches. And their enthusiasm has turned the book into a surprise success. "In the coaching community Don Meyer is a giant," says Eastland (Texas) High boys' coach Doug Galyean, who says he would buy the book "by the case" if he had the money. "He has 923 wins, but he's responsible for thousands more because of the way he has shared everything he has with coaches across the nation."


Olney delves into Meyer's contributions as a teacher—when he coached at Lipscomb University from 1976 through 1999 he ran the country's largest basketball camp—but the book's most compelling story line is how the accident gave the once reticent Meyer the voice to express his love for and gratitude to others. Says Peggy Bieber, owner of Chapter I Book Center in Aberdeen, which has sold more than 700 copies in just two weeks, "The book is really about life and how to live it." That's a theme that resonates beyond basketball and South Dakota. New York Life executive and part-time high school coach Mark Pfaff, who has brought Meyer in to speak at company meetings, has ordered 700 copies for his managers.

Meyer, who has already outlived his two-year prognosis, has been making appearances with Olney on behalf of the book. "The greatest reviews," says the coach, "are from people who say they aren't basketball or sports fans but still couldn't put the book down. And then most say they end up crying reading it. Crying or laughing."

Read more: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1179422/index.htm#ixzz16pzqcDee

TOO MUCH PLAY, TOO LITTLE TEACHING

Please find below a post from Clarence Gaines, a former NBA scout and son of legendary Clarence "Big House" Gaines.  I think there are some legitimate thoughts in his post that our of great importance.  I believe we are playing far too many games on many levels and getting away from solid teaching time.  Even on the college level this is true, I believe, as we continue to lengthen the schedule.  The perfect example is that our team just got through playing 8 games in 14 days.  Because of travel to Connecticut and New Jersey in that time, we only had one day of practice.  Here is what Coach Gaines has to say:

Finished "Play Their Hearts out" by @georgedohrmann What can be gained by reading this book? If you're a parent of a talented basketball player, it's a must read. You'll learn a lot about the pitfalls of youth basketball and the importance of shepherding your child through this maze of deceit, corruption and confusion.

Hopefully, readers will understand the folly that is grassroots basketball and how it's not a necessity in the middle or early high school years to expose your child to the endless stream of games that are a part of travel team basketball. Sonny Vaccaro's advice to Roberto Nelson's dad about being selective about the camps/tournaments a child attends and making certain that young players are mentally and psychologically ready to handle the stress of these events sounds the strongest chord with me: http://tl.gd/76eo22 I also appreciate the comments of Ryan Smith, Demetrius Walker's High School coach in his sophomore year at Fontana High: "Going to tournaments all over the country isn't going to help you. What you need is to spend every hour in the gym, working on individual skills. I don't think you should play grassroots basketball at all."

There's no substitute for skill development in basketball. You can play all of the basketball you want, but if you don't master the fundamentals of the game, your game will be exposed at higher levels of competition. Best to strike a balance between skill development and playing the game. Don't rush the process parents! Find a trustworthy coach, who knows the game of basketball. Watch various practices before committing your child to a program. If you watch a variety of practices conducted by different coaches, you'll eventually be able to tell if a coach is organized and has a sound philosophy and teaching style.

Don't sell your son to the highest bidder. So many stories in this book about parents who abrogated their duties as a parent. Chasing the celebrity of basketball is a powerful elixir for both parent and child. Don't fall for the hype!

The amount of rules violations conducted at the college level is to be expected. I'm not naive, but the rules violations and payoffs that are detailed in this book at the high school and travel team level is very disconcerting. How the hell do you garner the respect of a kid when you're paying his mother's rent or putting him up in an apartment by himself in an affluent area at the age of 16. Talk about growing up too fast!

Athletes often talk about the plantation mentality that schools, teams and people have towards them because of their unique talents. Joe Keller, the antagonist in this book devised a sophisticated form of slavery to build his fortune, his American dream. The fact that he did it and is still doing it off middle school athletes with the blessing of their parents is the tragic component of this tale.

Parents, please let your children be children! This book is a wake-up call to parents of young athletes to slow the process down. Don't let your child be "The Hurried Child." If you don't understand the ramifications of "The Hurried Child," read David Elkind's fine book http://bit.ly/a0tnLZ on the consequences of putting children in harms way by exposing them to too much too soon. I hope parents heed my message, but I'm not counting on it.

cg

NOTE TO BASKETBALL PARENTS - I'm a former NBA scout. Rankings at the highest level never mattered to me. All I cared about was a player's game, not a number on a piece of paper. That Demetrius Walker's mind was programmed at such an early age by Joe Keller to fixate on a number is the highest form of psychological child abuse. Demetrius' growth as a basketball player and a human being was stunted as a result of adults prioritizing an "agenda" instead of a long range "objective." It's a testimony to him and the positive adults that he encountered post Keller that he is as well adjusted today as is represented in the Epilogue.

My hero in this book is Ryan Smith, Demetrius' High School Coach in his sophomore year. A young coach with old school values who turned the tide for Demetrius by stressing fundamentals and discipline. That Ryan was Demetrius' accidental coach is just one more example that there is a God. When Demetrius needed a positive mentor at a crossroads moment in his life, out of nowhere came Ryan Smith. Parents, always go for substance and character, over style and flash when choosing a coach/program for your child.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

JOHN MAXWELL: LEADERSHIP IS.....

Leadership is the willingness to put oneself at risk.

Leadership is the passion to make a difference with others.

Leadership is being dissatisfied with the current reality.

Leadership is taking responsibility while others are making excuses.

Leadership is seeing the possibilities in a situation while others are seeing the limitations.

Leadership is the readiness to stand out in a crowd.

Leadership is an open mind and an open heart.

Leadership is the ability to submerge your ego for the sake of what is best.

Leadership is evoking in others the capacity to dream.

Leadership is inspiring others with a vision of what they can contribute.

Leadership is the power of one harnessing the power of many.

Leadership is your heart speaking to the hearts of others.

Leadership is the integration of heart, head, and soul.

Leadership is the capacity to care, and in caring, to liberate the ideas, energy, and capacities of others.

Leadership is the dream made reality.

Leadership is, above all, courageous.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

KEVIN EASTMAN: CHARACTERISTICS OF GREAT PLAYERS

More great stuff from Kevin Eastman -- this will be a passout for our team tomorrow:

I have been so fortunate to be in the NBA and observe the great players. I get to see how they operate and what makes them special. There are certainly others, but here's a list of some separators:

• They have tremendous focus on the floor and whenever a coach is talking

• They want to know anything a coach can give them that will improve their game; always willing to learn

• They want to get their work in every day

• They go every bit as hard in practices as they do the games

• They stay on the practice floor or in the drill until they get it right

• They know the little things often separate them from the rest of the players in the league; they pay attention to details

• They can’t stand players that don’t work

• They very seldom sit out of practices

• They don’t mind being corrected and coached when they know the coach is right and the coach is telling them the truth

• They want to hear the truth

• They are committed to all aspects of their game -- their skills, their bodies, their training, their conditioning, the food they eat...everything

• They hold themselves personally accountable

• They will also hold their teammates accountable for their roles

• They despise losing

• They understand that great players need great teammates; they appreciate team basketball

Check out Kevin's DVD/ebook series...I have few and they are all excellent...he's a great teacher!
http://bit.ly/fbQdJZ

QUOTES ON EXCELLENCE

Some great quotes on excellence from John Maxwell's Giant Impact email newsletter:

"Excellence is the gradual result of always striving to do better."
~ Pat Riley

"Great leaders are never satisfied with current levels of performance. They are restlessly driven by possibilities and potential achievements."
~ Donna Harrison

"If you are going to achieve excellence in big things, you develop the habit in little matters. Excellence is not an exception, it is a prevailing attitude."
~ Colin Powell

"Excellence is to do a common thing in an uncommon way."
~ Booker T. Washington

"No man ever reached to excellence in any one art or profession without having passed through the slow and painful process of study and preparation."
~ Horace

Monday, November 22, 2010

JOHN MAXWELL ON EXCELLENCE BEING MORE THAN JUST TALENT

A qualtiy article from John Maxwell from his website Giant Impact:

"Excellence" may bring to mind unmatched performance, unusual expertise, or consistent high-quality performance. In our minds, we often associate excellence with talent. To be the best, surely you have to be gifted, right? Experience has taught me that talent, while important, in no way explains excellence. In fact, the primary pathway to excellence has three main steps, none of which depends on talent.

1) Find Your Passion

"You are nothing unless it comes from your heart. Passion, caring, really looking to create excellence. If you perform functions only and go to work only to do processes, then you are effectively retired. And it scares me-most people I see, by age 28, are retired. If you go to work only to fulfill the processes and functions, then you are a machine. You have to bring passion, commitment and caring-that's what makes you a human being." ~ Horst Schulze, Former President of Ritz-Carlton

People of excellence love what they do. They have learned how to fuel the fire that keeps them moving. How do you spot a passionate person?

1) They work with their whole heart.

2) They work with undistracted attention.

3) They work with maximum energy.

In life, the prize goes to the person, not who's the smartest or most talented, it goes to the person with passion.

Application: Reshuffle Tasks in the Direction of Your Passion

1) Take an inventory of the work activities that you enjoy, and in which you excel. What energizes you and makes you feel alive about them?

2) Take inventory of the work activities that drain away your energy. Ask yourself why these tasks feel so burdensome.

3) Have a conversation with your manager about shifting your workload in the direction of your passion. Don't expect your boss to allow you to reshuffle your responsibilities overnight. Be willing to take very small, gradual steps toward your passion. Even exchanging one de-energizing task for another that brings you energy is a victory.

2) Never Cease Practicing

"If people knew how hard I had to work to gain my mastery, it would not seem so wonderful at all." ~ Michelangelo

Passion won't take you anywhere unless you combine it with disciplined practice. Malcolm Gladwell, in his book Outliers, studies success and discovers that innate talent has a lot less to do excellence than does practice. In fact, he found that the successful people he studied (the Beatles, Bill Gates) put in 10,000 hours of practice before making a big splash. Nobody cruises to the top on natural giftedness alone. As Gladwell writes, "Practice isn't the thing you do once you're good. It's the thing you do that makes you good."

Application: Don't Just Learn...Do

In hospital emergency rooms nurses have a saying, "Watch one, do one, teach one." This refers to the fast pace of the profession and the need to learn quickly, then jump right in to practice what you learned on a real live patient, and then pass it on just as quickly to someone else. Notice that learning is only the first one-third of the job. The real key is putting that learning into practice. The principle applies to any profession or business. You can't just read about how to change a tire, write a contract, start a business, or perform open-heart surgery. You need to perform the skill to perfect the skill.

3) Honor Your Values

"I desire so to conduct the affairs of this administration that if at the end, when I come to lay down the reins of power, I have lost every other friend on earth, I shall at least have one friend left, and that friend shall be down inside of me." ~ Abraham Lincoln

We all could give examples of talented, charismatic people who sabotaged their careers by abandoning their values. Passion and practice bring excellence, but character sustains excellence over time. Absence of strong character eventually topples talent. People cannot climb beyond the limitations of their character. Eventually the limelight of success brings to light the cracks in their integrity.

Application: Clarify Core Values

1) Consider the question: What does excellent character look like?

2) Brainstorm a list of qualities you feel are important to character (honesty, integrity, etc.). Keep thinking and writing until you have at least 10. Then choose three of them as "core values."

3) Set aside time on your calendar (30 minutes or so), twice a month for the next four months, to pause and evaluate how you're doing in honoring your core values.

Take the time to check out: http://www.giantimpact.com/

WORTHWHILE ISN'T EASY

"Show me someone who has done something worthwhile, and I'll show you someone who has overcome adversity."

-- Lou Holtz

GREAT NEWS ON COACH MEYER'S BOOK

More great news from Buster Olney on his book about Coach Don Meyer:

"We signed about 1,000 books in Sioux Falls, Fargo and Aberdeen over the last three days, and the stores here sold about 1,500 Thursday thru Saturday. Coach Meyer is getting e-mails from coaches who have just finished reading and are now ordering the books for each of the kids in their programs."

Great idea!  Will purchase some for our team as well.

HEALTHY COMPETITION

Don Yaeger writes a great piece on the Manning family (Dad Archie and sons, Payton, Eli and Cooper) and how they competed against each other growing up and how it had a positive effect on them.  Here is what he has to say about healthy competition:

On your own team, is there someone who brings out your competitive nature? Too often in the professional world, the notion of "competition" is a negative image of a rival company or product; but competition can be a positive force, as well. And that competition may well come from within our own family!

We all owe it to ourselves to find those people whose presence inspires us to do more with our talents and opportunities. By developing and maintaining meaningful relationships with people who continually push us to grow, we learn not only how to develop ourselves, but how to celebrate the accomplishments of others. Much like how the Mannings both challenge and cheer one another, so, too, do other Great individuals.

Who drives you to try harder, study more, prepare better, or reach higher? Whose friendship motivates you to work just a little bit more? If you can point to someone on your team -- or your family -- who fills that role, reflect on the recent way his or her presence has helped you raise your own game a notch or two and consider how to use that in the future. If you don't have such a person in your life, find someone who you can respect and engage with as you work together to improve your performance and stretch your professional muscles.

It is no coincidence that success often runs in families or among tight groups of friends. Greatness surrounds itself with Greatness. It is your responsibility to find - and keep - those people who challenge you to always do better, even as you return the favor to them. Amiable rivalry teaches us to work harder, applaud others, and always keep reaching for our own Greatness.

Lot of good stuff at: http://www.donyaeger.com/

Thursday, November 18, 2010

MUST READ COMMUNICATION CONCEPT

Therapist and leadership expert Rabbi Edwin H. Friedman remarked,

“The colossal misunderstanding of our time is the assumption that insight will work with people who are unmotivated to change. Communication does not depend on syntax, or eloquence, or rhetoric, or articulation but on the emotional context in which the message is being heard. People can only hear you when they are moving toward you, and they are not likely to when your words are pursuing them. Even the choicest words lose their power when they are used to overpower. Attitudes are the real figures of speech.”

From "Everyone Communicates Few Connect" by John C. Maxwell

COACH DON MEYER RULES ON WINNING

From "How Lucky You Can Be: The Don Meyer Story" by Buster Olney:

Players like Richard Taylor would take down his words daily throughout the year, every year; Taylor usually jotted a full page of notes every day, listening for the central truth in what Meyer talked about, rather than attempting to take down every word.

Rules on Winning

1. Work hard.

2. Stick together.

3. Have the right attitude.

4. Be positive; don’t criticize, look to compliment.

5. Improve every day, especially as a person.

6. “How badly do I want it?”

7. Know that no one can beat you; you beat yourself. Morale is what motivates the best to get better. As you think, so you shall be. A spirit of devotion and enthusiasm for the team and pupose… Until you find a purpose higher than winning, you will never win.

Dean Smith says: “The single most important factor is team morale.”

BOB STARKEY: This book was far better than I had imagined.  Coach Meyer is a coaches' coach and Buster Olney does an amazing job of weaving Coach Meyer's life story into his coaching methodology.  There are so many stories relayed by players and coaches that give you an inside to how and why Coach Meyer was so successful as a coach and so loved by his players.  It is also an emotional ride of the pain and struggle Coach and his family have gone through over the last couple of years.  I've already bought  10 books to give to some friends of mine in the profession and placed another order today.  I've said it many times, I know of no one that has impacted our game more than Coach Meyer.  He has impacted the major college level on both the men's and women's side all the way down to the junior high level.  He has devoted his life to helping us become better coaches.  I've known Coach for almost two decades and there was a great deal that I discovered about him through Buster's writing.  If you haven't already, be sure to get a copy -- I promise it's a great read!

Here is a link with more information about purchasing the book on-line if you haven't already:

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

COACH DON MEYER ON GUARDING 3'S

1. Make contact by the line of scrimmage (the half line), and form a wall with some depth.

2. Chase around the screen. IF you short cut, you'd better get there.

3. The man guarding the screener must extend the bump.

4. Close out with high hands. Upper arms parallel to the floor.

5. Ignore the three point line when guarding a "Dead 3's".

6. Straddle the lane on helpside against a "Dead 3's".

7. Give great shot pressure without fouling.

8. Block Out a man, Pursue the ball, Chin the Rebound, Outlet.  Don't give up any second shots. He won't miss tow in a row..

Dead 3's are:

More than half of his shots are three's

He doesn't shoot many free thows

He won't put the ball on the floor


Open 3's are:

Where a good close out takes away his three


Player 3's are:

He can shoot

He can drive

He can has an intermediate game

He is a player

I got this information from: www.coachmeyer.com -- a great resource center for coaches and players!

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

WISDOM FROM DALE BROWN

Coach Dale Brown with great wisdom in a radio interview from Mental Toughness:
http://bit.ly/dtfUuY


MAKE TODAY COUNT: ATTITUDE

Our assigned reading for our team this year is John Maxwell's "Make Today Count."  Our first worksheet deals with pages 1 through 11 on "Attitude."  In that section, Maxwell gives us attitude pointers.  They are listed below.  We asked our team to pick one they could improve on and then explain how.

_____ Recognize that your attitude needs daily adjustments

_____ Find something positive in everything

_____ Find someone positive in every situation

_____ Say something positive in every conversation

_____ Remove negative words from your vocabulary

_____ Express gratitude to others daily

Monday, November 15, 2010

TEAM

Rather, in humility value others above yourselves, not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others.

Philippians 2:3-4

JIM COLLINS: HOW THE MIGHTY FALL

5 Stage for How the Mighty Fall:

1. “Success leads to ‘arrogance’ – causes failure”
..... a. Great leaders have humility
..... b. It is not about you!!! Focus on the team.

2. “Undisciplined pursuit of more”
..... a. Get the right people in the right seats of the bus
..... b. Life is People

3. “Deny of risk and peril”
..... a. Denial of what is right in front of you!
..... b. Confront brutal facts

4. “Response to Falling”
..... a. Be aware of false hope
..... b. Overnight success takes 20 years!

5. “Irrelevance – Death”
..... a. Never come back- Its Over

MARK FEW OFFENSIVE CONCEPTS

1. Attack: Whether it’s coming off the rim or out of the net, they are attacking and getting the ball down the floor as quickly as they can to put pressure on the defense. They want GREAT shots early in the clock. Few firmly believes that an open three early is often as good of a look as you’ll get all possession.

2. Get to the Free Throw Line: The most underrated aspect of offensive basketball as roughly 25% points scored in division 1 basketball are from the free throw stripe. They have 2 goals surrounding this: make more free throws than the other team attempts and to be in the bonus by the 2nd media timeout (8 minutes in)

3. Limit Turnovers: Worst thing you can do offensively is turn it over because it allows you no chance for an offensive rebound or a chance to go to the FT line.

TRANSITION OFFENSE THOUGHTS FROM BILLY DONOVAN

"A team changing from offense to defense is one of the most difficult things in basketball. Exploit this!"
-Billy Donovan

1. On a miss, free-for-all, score as quickly as possible.

2. On a make, we want the ball the inbounded as quickly as possible by whichever big is closest to the ball and we want the ball advanced up the floor as quickly as possible as well.

Teaching Point: In UF’s practices, ball isn’t across half court in 3 seconds it is an automatic turnover.

3. No set lanes, he wants his players to play. Coach Donovan wants his wings to run their lanes as wide as possible and sprint up the floor. If the two happen to be on the same side, it’s the 2nd player’s responsibility to call “push” and send the first wing through to the other side.

4. Utilization of random ball screens: If our first big down the court is behind the ball or not in position to get the ball in the low post in transition, it’s an automatic flat ball screen for strongside wing (trailing big can run in to set a double).

DO YOU HAVE A READING TEAM?

We are big believers in give our players things to read...books...magazine articles...passouts.  It's a great way to pass on information.  Each year during the season we give our team a book to ready (this year it is "Make Today Count" by John Maxwell) and we have accompanying worksheets to see how they are filtering what they read.

The following comes from Steve Smiley's book "Playing for Coach Meyer" (a great book as well) and speaks to how and why it was important for Coach Don Meyer's teams to have things to read:

Coach would also sometimes bring books to practice, buying copies of books for the whole team, including John Wooden’s book, Wooden: A Lifetime of Observations and Reflections on and off the Court, among others. I think Coach did this for two reasons.

First, Coach Meyer simply loved the game of basketball and he loved to teach, and whenever he found any type of useful information about basketball he wanted to share it with his players, just as a teacher would share information with his or her class. Secondly, Coach Meyer was giving us a huge competitive edge because we began to learn the game; not just play the game, but actually learn the game. By writing in our notebooks, reading articles from different experts of the game, and continually studying every aspect of the game we eventually would become a smart team. And, when two teams play that are equal in talent, we believed the winner would be the team that was smarter on the floor. We always wanted to be that team.

IS YOUR TEAM INSANE?

Albert Einstein has been famously quoted as saying that “the definition of insanity is to continue doing what we have been doing and expect different results.”

TIME MANAGEMENT THOUGHTS

Here is some more great stuff from Brian Tracy on time management.  Two of the most organized people I have known are Coach Don Meyer and Coach Dale Brown.  To me, the thing I learned about time management from these two is to have a system that you believe in and and use it daily.

Coach Meyer is big on his planner.  He carried with him where ever he went.  He was constantly referring to it, writing something down it, using it to its full capacity. He utilized all the facets involved in his planner system.  Coach Brown simply used a yellow-legal pad but wrote down everything he wanted to get done and then meticulously checked it off as he went through day.

Have a system -- use that system!  Here are some great pointers from Brian Tracy:

There are five time management tools and techniques that you should practice for maximum productivity and good personal organization. Each of them takes a little time to learn and master, but pays you back in greater efficiency and effectiveness for the rest of your life.


1. Use a time planner.
The first time management tool that you need is a time planning system that contains everything you need to plan and organize your life. The best time planners, whether loose-leaf binders or electronic versions, enable you to plan for the year, the month, the week, and for each day. A good time planner will contain a master list where you can capture every task, goal, or required action as it comes up. This master list then becomes the core of your time-planning system. From this master list, you allocate individual tasks to various months, weeks, and days.

2. Always work from a list.
Every effective executive works from a daily list. It is the most powerful tool ever discovered for maximum productivity. When you create your daily list, you begin by writing down every single task that you intend to complete over the course of the day. The rule is that you will increase your efficiency by 25 percent the very first day that you start using a list. This means that you will get two extra hours of productive time in an eight hour day from the simple act of making a list before you start work, of everything you have to do that day. You can bring order out of chaos faster with a list than with any other time management tool.

3. Organize your list by priority. Once you have a list for your day's activities, the next step is for you to organize this list in order of priority. Once your list is organized, it becomes a map to guide you from morning to evening in the most effective and efficient way. This guide tells you what you have to do and what is more or less important. You will soon develop the habit of using your list as a blueprint for the day.

4. Use any time management system you like.
The variety of personal digital assistants (PDA's) and computer-based time management systems available today is absolutely wonderful. No matter what you do, in whatever field, there are digital time management systems that you can tap into or load onto your personal computer or mobile device to help organize every part of your life.


5. Set up a "45-file system."
There is a simple method of organizing your time and your schedule for up to two years in advance. It is called the "45-file system." This is a tickler file that lets you plan and organize your activities and callbacks for the next twenty-four months. This is how it works. First you get a box of forty-five files with fourteen hanging files to put them in. The forty-five files are divided as follows: There are thirty-one files numbered one through thirty-one for the days of the month. There are twelve files for the months of the year. January through December. The last two files are for the next two years. This is a wonderful system that you can also use with hanging files in your desk drawer.

Check out: www.BrainTracy.com

Friday, November 12, 2010

LEADERSHIP QUESTIONS FROM KEVIN EASTMAN

It’s easy to get comfortable with success when you are the leader. The best will constantly evaluate what they are providing to those they lead. Answer these questions honestly. I think it will give you a good idea of your effectiveness. Come up with personal strategies to questions that raise a red flag for you.

1. How can they follow you if you are not helping them develop, not investing in them, too?

2. How can they follow you if you give them no true input or role in the outcome of success? How will they feel valued?

3. How can they follow your lead if you are asking them to work harder than you are willing to work or give more than you are willing to give?

4. How can they follow you if they don’t respect your knowledge and your willingness to continue to grow yourself?

5. How can they follow you if they know you are in it for yourself first?

6. How can they follow you if they don’t see and feel your passion for the job?

7. How can they follow you if you give them no true vision to follow?

8. Are you just “occupying the seat” of leadership or are you “executing the position”? There’s a big difference!

Do yourself a favor first, and then to those you lead. Answer these questions honestly. They will keep you on track, or put you on track, to lead the way you should be leading. I am often asking myself the same questions and find that I have to readjust at times. The best leaders will do this self-check and continually assess the leadership they are -- or are not -- providing.

DON'T MISTAKE ACTIVITY FOR ACHIEVEMENT

Love this quote by Jim Rohn:

"Don't mistake movement for achievement. It's easy to get faked out by being busy. The question is: Busy doing what?"

Reminds me of Coach Wooden's "Don't mistake activity for achievement." 

We talk to our team about this in terms of our motion offense quite a bit.  We want them to "move with a purpose" offensively.  Running around is not motion -- it's, well, running around.  Are you cutting to create help, screening to create help, maintaining spacing and balance?

But you can see that it also pertains to life as well.  Often we get got up being busying but not necessarily effective or efficient.

JON GORDON'S POSITIVE SUCCESS FORMULA

"You have more control and influence than you think you do."

These were the words of an economist I heard speak as he talked about the economy, the housing market and the recession.

He reminded his audience that a lot of people make a lot of money during recessions. He stressed that these are the times when successful companies and successful people gain market share. He shouted when he told the group to look for buying opportunities over the next three years because there will be many.

In essence he was saying not to let the economy dictate your situation and success. Rather, change your belief system and focus on opportunities instead of challenges. Reminds me of the "Positive Shark Formula" (also known as The Positive Success Formula) I wrote about in The Shark and The Goldfish.

E + P = O

In the book, Sammy, a nice shark who feels that sharks get a bad rap and are in need of some positive publicity, teaches Gordy the goldfish that while we can’t control the events (E) in our life, we can control our positive energy and our positive actions (P) to these events and challenges and in turn this will determine the outcome (O).

Indeed, we have more control than we think we do. Our positive energy, our belief system, our attitude, and our actions have a huge impact on the life we live and the success we enjoy.

You can listen to the Constantly Negative News Channels and believe that success is impossible or you can change your belief and know that with God and an optimistic attitude, all things are possible. Instead of focusing on what they say you can't do, focus on what you can do. Instead of listening to the negative voices, focus on your positive choices.

I'm not saying it will be easy. We will certainly be tested on our journey. I'm an optimist but also a realist. These are challenging times. We may lose our job. We may experience financial difficulties. We may not sell our house as fast as we'd like. We may have to start a new business or venture. We may have set backs. But if we apply the Positive Success Formula to our life I guarantee we will have a big say and influence in the outcome. Instead of letting the world create us we will have a significant role in creating our world.

PREPARATION AND CONFIDENCE

The following comes from "Mental Toughness: Baseball’s Winning Edge" by Karl Kuehl, John Kuehl, and Casey Tefertiller:

In the bullpen and between innings, Greg Maddux spends most of his time working out of the stretch. The toughest pitches during a game come from the stretch, and Maddux wants to be ready, both physically and mentally. Knowing that he can make his best pitches from the stretch in the bullpen builds a confidence that carries over into the game.

Practice is a time to build confidence.

Consistently doing it right in practice builds confidence that carries over into the game.

Being prepared also means being well conditioned. Added strength and stamina from workouts give an athlete confidence in his physical abilities to meet the challenges of competition.

It may sound almost circular, but confidence breeds success, and success leads to confidence. The trick is to use success to build a level of confidence.

A process of replay and pre-play enhances confidence. A player can replay past successes in his mind, recalling past successes that have led to his current level. The pre-play is the process of visualization, in which an athlete envisions every situation in his mind in order to prepare for what will actually occur on the field. Curt Schilling goes so far as to acquire his own personal computer program that plays his previous outings in order to help him prepare for upcoming games. In visualization, as we shall see, every thought should be positive.

Confidence does not always mean achievement—it means believing in the ability to overcome challenges and adversity. A confident player can fall into a slump and know that he will somehow find his way out rather than folding in despair.

ICEBOX ATHLETE: STAT MENTAL TOUGHNESS

This comes from my Icebox Athlete email newsletter today.  I'm a really big believer in this concept.  Players are very stat conscious so why not create a stat that targets area of important to you system and style of play?  Email me at rstarke@lsu.edu if you are interested in our stat package.  Here's what Icebox has to say:

Statistics are kept for almost every facet of the game; from metrics on quickness, agility, assist to turnover ratios, points, offensive rebounds, defensive rebounds, steals, and the list goes on. Many smart coaches also track the mental toughness traits of their team during the pre-season and also in-season. As is commonly said, "mental toughness does not guarantee you a championship, but a lack of mental toughness is guaranteed to lose you a championship."

The Metrics

So what are some of the mental toughness variables that should be tracked? The following four areas of mental toughness are an excellent gauge of the mental makeup of any team:

1) Ability to sustain intensity

2) Commitment to excellence/passion for the game

3) Clutch poise/Clutch confidence

4) Ability to execute game strategy - regardless of opponent.

A great exercise for any team is for the coach to rate each player on each facet of mental toughness on a 1 - 10 scale, and then rate the entire team on the same scale. Players should also rate themselves, and the coach should set some collective goals for improvement. This exercise should be repeated multiple times throughout the season.


TRESSEL TEACHING MORE THAN TO FOOTBALL PLAYERS AT OHIO STATE

The following was written by Rob Oller of the Columbus Dispatch:

A few minutes after 7 on a chilly Wednesday morning, bleary-eyed students began filing into the Woody Hayes Athletic Center, lugging book bags and wearing Ohio State colors. Or else.

"That's not Notre Dame Irish," Jim Tressel said in mock disapproval to Grace Miller near the team meeting room that twice a week doubles as a college classroom.

Miller recoiled for an instant; the OSU senior and Dublin Scioto High School graduate was unsure whether the most famous professor on campus was kidding about the cursive Irish, her high school's nickname, stitched across her sweatshirt.

He was. Sort of. But it was hard to tell that early in the morning. The Buckeyes' head football coach began his 7:30 a.m. class promptly at 7:28 because "everything is a race against time," he reminded his students.

And so began Theory and Practice of Football Coaching, a three-credit-hour course taught by Tressel, with much help from football staff assistants, as well as former OSU head coaches John Cooper and Earle Bruce. It meets on Mondays and Wednesdays in the fall, with a "lab" on Fridays that sends students out to scout high-school football games. The course includes pop quizzes and a midterm heavy on football history. And students must design a high-school-level training program for a position of their choosing.

"There's a lot more work than you would expect," Miller said.

Tressel, the only coach in all of major-college football to teach an academic course during the season, was dressed Wednesday in a scarlet-and-gray short-sleeved nylon shirt - no vest. He immediately began the roll call for the 50 students (no football players), who come not only for the novelty of being taught by Tressel but also to learn about X's and O's.

Some students, such as Miller, knew next to nothing about football when class began in September.

"Now, I can watch it and actually know what's going on," the molecular-genetics major said.

Other students, such as 64-year-old Vinny Sue Herwig, already understood the game but wanted to dig deeper. And Tressel provides students with a big shovel.

"Tress says, 'Little things don't mean anything; little things mean everything,'" said Herwig, a Westerville hairdresser who attends the class free through the university's program for those 60 or older. A classmate is her 76-year-old friend Frank Barone, a former Ohio University business professor who has gone from thinking that football is a slow, crazy and silly game to something "sophisticated and complicated, with a beauty to it I have not seen before."

Read the entire article: http://bit.ly/bpnXlM

Thursday, November 11, 2010

2ND PRINTING OF COACH MEYER'S BOOK ORDERED BY RANDOM HOUSE

I just received an email from Buster Olney informing us that Random House has ordered a second printing of "How Lucky You Can Be: The Don Meyer Story."  The book, written by Buster was only released on November 9.  It is truly a well-written book about a special coach/person and one that all in our profession should read.  I just bough 10 for our staff here at LSU. 

Thanks to all that have purchased the book and helped spread the word!

Here is a link with more information about purchasing the book on-line if you haven't already:


ALL GAVE SOME, SOME GAVE ALL

Today is Veteran's Day -- but in fact everyday should be Veteran's Day...each day we spend freely doing that which we love we have a lifetime of Veteran's that made it possible.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

COACH NEWELL: "I WANTED TO MAKE THEM FIGURE IT OUT"

I think one of the most underrated things that the best coaches teach, in any sport on any level, is that of educating their players how to think on their own.  Few were better than Coach Newell.

“I wanted players with initiative, guys who could control a difficult situation on their own.  People may not realize that years ago, you couldn’t bring a player over to the sideline to talk to him.  Players had to stand out in the middle of the court during your timeout.  They changed that rule during my second year in coaching (1947) and I was madder than hell.  I felt my team could always interpret what I was teaching; we didn’t need all these damn meetings.  I didn’t want my players depending on me.  I figured I’d teach ‘em during the week, and when the game comes along, it’s up to them.  That’s one reason I didn’t like to call timeouts.  I didn’t want the players thinking that every time they got in a little jam, I’d bail them out.  I wanted to make them figure it out.”

-Pete Newell
From: "A Good Man - The Pete Newell Story" by Bruce Jenkins

WISE WORDS FROM COACH NEWELL

“Don’t ever allow yourself to think you invented the game, or any part of it. But it doesn’t mean you can’t refine what you borrow."

-Pete Newell 

COVEY ON EFFECTIVENESS AND EFFICIENCY

"Effective people lead their lives and manage their relationships around principles; ineffective people attempt to manage their time around priorities and their tasks around goals. Think effectiveness with people; efficiency with things."
-Stephen Covey