Friday, August 29, 2008

"Raising an All-American"

I wish that I could take credit for this, but I literally copied and pasted this excerpt directly from Eric Musselman's blog (see my Favorites to the right). I have not read this book, but it is now at the top of my list...watch out Adi...Daddy has huge expectations!!!! :)
Actually, it is one of the best short "excerpts" I've read in a long time. This totally sums up what coaches are looking for intrinsicly in a player. I have a book of quotes that I will one day give to my kids, and this will be in the front.

"About five years ago, former NBA player Devin Durrant (who averaged nearly 30 ppg for BYU back in the mid-80s) wrote a book called "Raising an All-American." I have a copy here at the house, so I pulled it off the shelf. It's written for parents, but really provides excellent insight on the subject and should be a must-read for players. The following are some excerpts:

Coachable and teachable are synonymous. Coaches are first and foremost, teachers. Players are students. Coaches want to feel players care about what they say. During practice, during timeouts, in the post-game, etc., a coachable player will give his coach his undivided attention and then do what he has been told to do. If a player doesn't learn to listen, then he will have to learn to like a seat on the bench. More opportunities come to those who are willing to be taught.
One of the things that has always amazed me as a basketball player is how much time some players spend wishing the coach would change the way he did things—wishing that the coach would change the offense, wishing that the coach would change the defense, wishing the coach would change who he plays. Those players need to take all that energy and think about what they can change within themselves.
A potential All-American doesn't worry about the things he can't control. He just deals with the things he can control. As a player, one thing he can control is where he is going to expend his energy. An athlete should focus on how to become a better athlete. A coachable athlete will try to understand what the coach is trying to accomplish and then do his best to make that happen.
Some athletes say, "The coach doesn't like me." That attitude creates a self-imposed negative barrier blocking the athlete from success. Remember a coach usually loves his players because they are playing their guts out for him. A coach may criticize a player [EM: Don't take it personally], but that doesn't mean he doesn't like the player [EM: Don't make assumptions.]. The coach wants to win. If a team member helps him do that, he will treat that player like a son because that player is helping him succeed.
Generally speaking, if the coach seems to not like a player, it is because the player is not doing the things that will help the team win. A potential All-American doesn't blame his lack of playing time on a feeling that the coach doesn't like him personally. The coach is going to play those players that he thinks give him the best chance to get a victory.
Some coaches are a lot easier to hate than to love. Despising a coach at times is okay. Keep in mind that an unlikable coach might be the key to future athletic success. It is not pleasant to be yelled at for having made a mistake but it is the coach's job to push the player. A player won't generally have positive feelings toward a coach who at times is critical of him, but his feelings may change over time. A coach has to be a little crazy, even mean at times. He may have to yell and rant and rave in order to get a player to perform at his best.
A coachable player is not an excuse maker. He takes responsibility for his actions. If his coach takes him out and jumps all over him, he doesn't blame the coach. He is accountable for his own errors. When he makes a mistake, he acknowledges it and moves on. He then does his best not to make the same mistake again. A coachable player knows he needs to take criticism or he will never get any better.
One thing all great players seem to have in common is during their careers, one or more coaches were critical of them. As a matter of fact, one common method of coaching is criticism. One of the best examples I have ever seen of someone who could take criticism and then go out and do good things was Charles Barkley. I was his teammate representing the United States in the University Games some years back.
As we prepared for the games, we spent some time in Kansas City where we played an exhibition game. At one point in the game I was on the bench and Charles was on the floor. He made a mistake and the coach immediately sent someone in for him. Charles came over to the bench and sat down right by me. Our coach, Norm Stewart, who was the coach at the University of Missouri at the time, walked down the bench and stood above where the two of us were seated. I don't remember what Charles had done wrong on the court, but Coach Stewart let him have it.
I watched Charles as he looked Coach in the eye. He didn't say anything, didn't challenge him, just took it like a man. Coach Stewart finished his tirade, returned to his chair, and sat down. Charles got himself ready to go back in the game. Nothing more was said of it. It was over for Charles and it was over for Coach Stewart. Charles went on and had a successful experience with that team at the University Games. I was impressed at how well Charles handled that tongue lashing. It took a lot of character just to take it and move on, but I believe Charles knew Coach Stewart's goal was to make him a better player.
One of the pluses of participating in athletics is that it teaches accountability. When [a player] makes a mistake, he is immediately held accountable. That might mean that he will be taken out of the game and get to sit on the bench for a while, or even for the rest of the game. That could happen because the coach is making him accountable for his mistakes.
Pat Summitt, the very successful coach of the women's basketball team at the University of Tennessee, said: “Accountability is essential to personal growth, as well as team growth. How can you improve if you're never wrong? If you don't admit a mistake and take responsibility for it, you're bound to make the same one again."

Friday, August 22, 2008

USA Basketball: The Gold Standard?

Disclaimer #1: I love USA Basketball. I want to watch every game, scrimmage, practice, etc. One of the coolest things about my former boss, Dan Hays of Oklahoma Christian University, is that he used to be the NAIA rep to USA Basketball. I would love to be that person some day. So all of my comments are meant to be unbiased, thoughts about the organization, team, and the games they play. I hope they beat Spain by 40 (mostly just so Michael Redd gets to play more...my new favorite player that's not a Spur or played for Texas).

The USA Senior Men's National Team advanced to face Spain in a rematch for the gold medal today. But it was hardly the kind of game that made you think they were clicking on all cylinders. The win over Argentina was odd in several ways:

First, Manu Ginobili, Argentina's best player and MVP, went out early with an ankle injury and didn't return. Yet, Argentina weathered the storm and cut a 20+ deficit to 6 just before the half. Argentina was led by Luis Scola and Carlos Delfino, two NBA role players that looked like All-Stars against the USA defense. Scola was basically "given" to Houston by the Spurs because they already had Scola's Argentine teammate, Olberto. My thought was that he must not be a contributor since the Spurs are widely-regarded as the best evaluator of foreign talent. Seems to me he's a lot better than Olberto. Delfino was supposedly going to be the focal point of USA's defensive game plan and drew Kobe Bryant as his defender. But he hit shot after shot to keep the game interesting.

As a coach, I've found that teams play better without their best player at times. I hated seeing the opponents best player leave with an injury because I knew it would be immediately followed by a let down from my team, as brief as it may be. Whether it is just role players getting a chance to show their skills or a lapse in intensity by the opposition can be debated. But Argentina made their comeback after Ginobili went out.

The second thing to me that is odd is how USA is being praised for outplaying their opponents. They are supposedly making the necessary adjustments against the zone, etc. To me, they are just winning on talent and athleticism, not coaching or adjustments per se. They miss FT's at an alarming rate, but then get the offensive rebound. They miss 3's but then get the offensive board. Instead, they get Lebron going to the basket or lob the ball to Howard who dunks on 3 people...these aren't adjustments, it's just talent.

Disclaimer #2: (This disclaimer is brought to you by Tim Tibbles) I am a shooter. I love shooting. I think that shooting is the best part of basketball, and thus, feel that if you are a shooter, you should be playing. Read on...

Odd thing #3: An actual substitution by the USA based on need, not just rotation. I must finally give some credit to Coach K...he finally gave Michael Redd some time in the 2nd quarter during Argentina's comeback and the sputtering offense and shooting of the US . He didn't score, in fact I don't think he even took a shot. But as I've previously discussed, he opened up some things just by being on the floor and making somebody stay close to him. Just last night in pickup ball my defender was getting yelled at for not giving help on penetration. He just laughed at the guy and said, "What am I gonna do? I'm not going to leave Rob! I'm not going to leave a shooter!"

But the best example I heard was during a WNBA game between the Sparks and the Mystics earlier this year. The commentator said that former Mystics coach Richie Adubato used to tell 3-point champ Laurie Koehn to stand up from the bench against the Detroit Shock when they'd go zone, because coach Bill Laimbeer was so scared of Koehn's shooting he'd immediately go back to man to man. Adubato would just tell Koehn to sit back down. The power of shooting!

Disclaimer #3: I like Coach K. I think he's a great coach, in fact I've even been a closet Duke fan in the past. I liked the Hurley years, loved Reddick, hated Battier. But Coach K...great coach.

Last odd thing: I'm sick of hearing Doug Collins lauding Coach K for "not feeling like he has to play everybody." That's fine for the Dream Team not playing Laettner, but this was supposed to be a team put together for specific needs. Besides the "stars," Tayshaun Prince is a defender, Boozer is a hard-nosed worker and banger, and of course you know about Michael Redd. But these guys are not being used in the tournament for the skills they bring to the table. Coach K quoted Bobby Knight as telling him "remember that you're a good enough coach to coach them." So if that's the case, coach the team. I think that he's caught up in the hype a little bit. Most coaches I know have a "zone team" they roll out, especially if the offense is struggling. How hard is it to sub Redd for one of the 2 point guards they insist on playing together?

On a personal note, I think that Carlos Boozer is getting the raw end of the Coach K deal. Here's why: when I was coaching high school girls, I had a group of 5 seniors that started the first half of the season, with a junior guard and sophomore post as subs. Late in the year I decided to insert the sophomore post in the starting lineup to go "big" and because she was easily going to be the best of the bunch when it was all said and done. So who to sit? Do I sit the 4-year started? No. She'd "earned the right" to start. Right? Do I sit my best defender. No. I might lose her because she can lose her head sometimes to frustration. So I sit personal favorite player, although she might be our most fundamental player. But I knew she could handle the "demotion" and would still give me the same effort whether starting, playing, or not. I think that this is the case with Coach K and Boozer. He's sitting because of familiarity, understanding, trust, and comfort. Not saying that he should play ahead of Howard or Bosh, but only getting scrub minutes at the end of 20-30 point blowouts? I just get the feeling that if he hadn't played for K at Duke he wouldn't be sitting so much.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

My Mistake: USA Basketball

Ok, so we're 3 games into the Olympic Prelims for basketball and the US has been mostly dominating by today's worldwide standards. Although the first halves are pretty competitive, the USA men basically have their Sportscenter way in the last half of games.

Although I stick to the premise of my earlier post on the USA Senior Men's Basketball Team, I have to admit that some of the players have surprised me. Through the first 3 games the USA's best 2 players have been Lebron James and Dwayne Wade.

Lebron has lived up to Skip Bayless' title as "the best driver in the history of the game." He has been active on defense, run the floor, and has 2-5 dunks in every game. He's even hit a few 3's, although I'd rather him shoot them after a few passes, rather than shooting off the dribble with no passes to start the offense.

DWAYNE WADE IS THE MAN!!! That pains me to say it. As stars go, Dwayne Wade has to fall into my Top 5 least favorite. I ripped him for his selection, I didn't like him in the exhibitions (too much out of control penetrations in the lane), but he has easily been the best player for the USA in the Olympics. Today against Greece he single-handedly changed the game and made the best highlight pass to date (steal at midcourt, falling out of bounds, lob alley-oop to Kobe). He's scoring at will from inside and out (Kobe thanks you), and is defending well in the halfcourt (not something he's known for in the NBA).

Here's a few other observations:

Chris Bosh is the USA's best big man and most versatile defender. If he didn't play in Toronto he'd probably be 1st Team All-Defense.

Assuming that USA beats Spain on Saturday, they should spend Game 5 of the prelims force-feeding Kobe Bryant to get him out of his shooting slump. Let him score 50, whatever it takes to get him going. He is the best player in the world (although Chris Paul should have been the MVP), but right now he scares me with his abysmal 3-pt shooting.

Most importantly: Where is Michael Redd????? Greece sits in a zone for the majority of the game, and Michael Redd gets garbage time the last 6 minutes of the game up 25? He's your designated shooter, a specialist, your struggling from the outside against zone, and he sits? How about this other option for Game 5: if you don't like the Kobe scoring idea, how about you give Redd Kobe's minutes for the entirety of Game 5. 1 of 2 things will happen. Either they'll faceguard him which opens up driving lanes for the slashers, or they'll help and he'll score about 25, like he has in every other game he got reasonable minutes.

Coach K...USE YOUR SHOOTERS!!!!

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

NEW Breakthrough Basketball Shooting System!!!

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Our recommended shooting aids, resources, and DVDs (reviews).
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Monday, August 4, 2008

Big Fish

This is my "big girl" showing her Mommy how she swims underwater. She surprised me at the waterpark today by doing this. We've been trying to get her to kick her feet and "close her mouth." But today was the breakthrough, ironic as it was...

See, last week we signed Adi up for swim lessons at the waterpark, but it was not a fun experience. The first day she cried, then after some comforting by dad, she went with the lifeguards/teachers. The second day was worse, but then had fun with the teacher since dad was helping. Then on Wednesday she was even worse then the first 2 days, not wanting any part of the lifeguards. So I decided that we were done with swim lessons (much to the chagrin of the coordinator...but don't get me started on that).

So today we found ourselves at the waterpark, as usual, although Adi wasn't sure about going at first, "I don't want to go to swim lessons." But after assuring her we were just going to have fun, she was her normal happy self, then I took her to the deep end. Actually she chased me to the deep end, where I'd tell her, "kick, kick, kick." And she'd struggle to keep her face above water, but eventually making it to me. Then...

Out of nowhere, she just puts her head in the water and starts kicking to me. Again, and again, and again. I was just cracking up. I couldn't believe my 2 year old was REALLY SWIMMING! Who needs swim lessons? She then added the breaststroke arm movement at home when we were showing Mommy. It's amazing. I would rank this up there with the first time she walked.

Aren't kids amazing?