Sunday, May 27, 2012

Express Yourself

Cross-post from the blog at MelroseGirlsBasketball.com.


Legendary coach Pete Newell believed that high school coaches were the most important part of the game. BUT he decried the reduction of BASKETBALL TEACHING, lack of creativity, and forcing players into systems.
He had a saying about players, “they aren’t cattle”.  He asked coaches to take advantage of the players’ intellect, helping them understand WHY.
Newell’s approach worked because he had such magnificent teaching skills, reducing harder concepts to easier ones. And it’s simple to understand why some of his biggest fans included Bobby Knight and Mike Krzyzewski, who had their own phenomenal coaching success.
What does that mean for you, the player? First, consider what you know, ponder what you don’t, and ask how to bridge that gap. Second, while we KNOW you aren’t cattle, we don’t want you to be robots. The joy of basketball comes from both understanding and execution, implementation of concepts (passing and cutting, skills) with team play creatively.
As a coach, I ask myself “where are my players succeeding” and “where do they need conceptual help”?
The players know our corny sayings, but they haven’t fully embraced all of our truisms. Here’s a partial list:

We are here to help you improve as basketball players and succeed as people. 

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Getting After It

Here is a cross-post from Melrosegirlsbasketball.com. Our young players are making the commitment to improve to represent Melrose with skill and heart.

Sunday, May 06, 2012

Leadership

Cross post from the MelroseGirlsBasketball.com blog.

Thoughts on leadership.

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