Thoughts on Basketball, Leadership, and other Walks of Life
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Jim Calhoun Thoughts
In this third blog of a five-part series from this year's Final Four coaches, I will provide some thoughts from UConn Head Coach Jim Calhoun. I have read his book "A Passion to Lead." The book is a great summary of Calhoun's leadership principles and beneficial for not just coaches but all leaders.
ON COACHING...
"I coach because I love to help transform impressionable kids into responsible adults."
"I want every kid, first, to value himself and his potential as a human being. I want him to learn that getting a good education is important; that being dependable and responsible to yourself and your family, friends, and teammates is vital; that there is no substitute for hard work; and that the need to broaden yourself never ends."
ON CHALLENGING HIS PLAYERS...
"I ask our players all the time: 'How did you feel at six this morning?' What I'm really suggesting is that they take an aggressive, can-do approach to life."
ON LEADERSHIP...
"I think that one of the things that separates good leaders from lesser ones is this: attention to detail."
"If you want to build a winning organization, you must first establish a culture of winning. To do that, set high standards for yourself and your colleagues in every aspect of the operation. Make everyone accountable. Out of high standards come victories."
"All good leaders have two key responsibilities which are vital to organizational success. First, you have to surround yourself with good talent to achieve goals. Second, you've got to be a hellacious motivator to develop your talent every day so that it performs at a peak level."
ON DEVELOPING HIMSELF AS A COACH...
"My tactical ideas about basketball don't change a lot from year to year, but I keep my head in the game every day by talking to other coaches, by attending coaching conferences and seminars, by running basketball camps in the summer, and by spending lots of time chewing the fat with my assistants. I'm still curious about the world, too. I read books about psychology and leadership to pick up motivational ideas. And I enjoy talking to people in other professions."
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
John Calipari Coaching Thoughts and Dribble Drive Motion - Final Four Series Part 2 of 5
ON HIS COACHING PHILOSOPHY…
“In a paragraph, my goal each year is to help each player have a career year and to get those players to play together. It’s simple…. have each guy have a career year and have that group of players play good together. Get them to play off each other.”
ON RELATIONSHIPS…
“Look, in this profession it’s all about building relationships…If you’re not being fair with kids, guess what? All those people over time build up too, and they’re working against you.”
“What have you done for another coach? What have you done for our profession?”
ON THE DRIBBLE DRIVE MOTION OFFENSE…
"The players are unleashed when they play this way," he says, "because every player has the green light to take his man on every play."
DRIBBLE DRIVE MOTION OFFENSE from Sports Illustrated Feb. 12, 2008…
“Instead of going straight into the offense, Memphis sometimes swings the ball around the perimeter or springs the point guard with (gasp!) a ball screen. And instead of sending his post man straight to the lane's weak side, Calipari allows him to go on what Memphis calls a ‘rim run,’ in which the penetrating guard throws a lob in the vicinity of the basket for an alley-oop dunk.”
Special thanks to Sports Illustrated and collegehoopsnet.com for some information from Coach Calipari.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Shaka Smart Coaching Philosophy - Final 4 Part 1 of 5
Three Priorities in Starting a Program
1. Develop relationships – “This doesn’t happen overnight. It takes work.”
2. Build a staff – “The most important decision a new head coach makes.” Looks for “work ethic, loyalty, and personality”.
3. Recruiting – “Different and challenging wherever you go”
Recommendation to Young Coaches...
“Work as many camps as you can to build relationships. When I was a graduate assistant, I worked camps at both the University of Dayton and at the University of Florida…those relationships I built with the staff helped me in my career.”
Special thanks to www.winninghoops.com for some of the material on Coach Smart.
Labels:
Program Development,
Shaka Smart,
Young Coaches
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Chris Mack's Plan
Scott Gaede, a friend of Xavier head basketball coach Chris Mack, chronicled Mack's first season as head coach at Xavier during the 2009-10 season and published it in the form of "Next In Line". As both a fan of the program and the fact it's a great read, I got through this one in less that 48 hours. One of the things Gaede covers is Mack's nine-point plan for the program that he discussed in his interview for the job with Xavier Athletic Director Mike Bobinski:
1) Keeping the Core - Continuity through rapport and buy-in from players
2) The Xavier Way - A culture that has produced results
3) The Xavier Mission - Developing basketball players as students and people
4) Basketball Identity - Coaching with respect and dignity toward players; developing close-knit coaching staff; similar X's and O's identity that was developed under Sean Miller
5) Coaching Staff - Having "the smartest room of people" with which to work
6) The Bridge to Xavier Past and Cincinnati - Involvement of past players; ability to sell the program through media and community members because he's native of Cincinnati
7) The Xavier Vision - Moving the program to the next level; playing in the Final 4
8) The Plan and the Philosophy - 360-degree total development of players (academics, off-floor life skills, basketball skills, knowledge of player's support system); systematic approach to recruiting; passionate belief in current offensive and defensive systems
9) Established Trust - Continuity within the program; importance of communication
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