Which is easier, doing one thing well or doing five? Students learn the alphabet before studying Shakespeare. There's a progression.
Coach Don Meyer said that coaching had three phases - blind enthusiasm, sophisticated complexity, and mature simplicity.
A great offensive player like KD doesn't trick people. Establish catch-and-shoot, then work on a handful that become second nature.
Do simple well. Organize, prepare, execute.
1) Handle pressure defense. Be able to separate in isolation full court. Be able to back-dribble crossover or pass early to nullify the double team.
2) Good > Great. Great is the enemy of good. Efficiency in the ordinary beats occasional excellence.
3) Do well what you do a lot. Play and defend in the half-court. Stop transition attacks. Execute and defend the PnR. If you're a shooter, extend your range.
4) Grow your game. Regardless of our domain, we're either advancing our skillset or falling behind. What one skill you can add? What current skills can we enhance?
5) What is your skill? What gets you and keeps you on the court? Consult your coaches if you're not sure. Any good coach will tell you to earn trust to earn more playing time.
6) Study the game. "The WHY is everything." Study video. Study basketball teaching videos (YouTube, FIBA, trainers (Hanlen, Brickley, Kelbick), coaches (Popovich, Etorre Messina, Krzyzewski, Auriemma, Obradovic).
7) Connect. Some of you have played together and attended school together for years. Strengthen those ties. Share.
8) Keep a notebook. Write down what you learn. The act of handwriting improves retention. If you learn three new basketball concepts a day, that's over a thousand a year.
9) Work out together. Shared experience builds skill, competitiveness, and connection. Former Ohio State coach Urban Meyer had the 10-80-10 concept, that players sort into the top 10%, middle 80%, and bottom 10%. He insisted that top 10%ers bring someone in the middle to training. "Drag them" into the top 10%.
10) Want to be great. What makes exceptional coaches? Exceptional players. Do not fear greatness.
One of my favorite basketball teammates played on the freshman "B" team. He asked Coach how he could improve. Coach said, "Play a lot." John became an ML All-Star, outplayed a future Celtics draft choice in Boston Garden, played at Tufts, and had a wonderful career in the petroleum industry.
11) Never tire of the little things. Coach Wooden attributed Bill Walton's greatness to his will to excel and never to tire of working on "the little things," like his impeccable footwork. You can't be "too good" at fundamental skills.
12) Believe. Ted Lasso's "fourth thing" was BELIEVE. Belief helps you make a play "in the moment." The 2005 team lost the third set in the State semis and won the fourth something like 25-8. The 2012 State Champions won the fourth and final set 25-10. Excellence has no doubt and leaves none.
Lagniappe. This volleyball post contains many hoop truths.



