Ray Lewis & Ed Reed on taking Notes
— CoachTube.com (@thecoachtube) September 22, 2018
“There’s not one word if you haven’t heard it before, or if you’ve heard it a 1000 times, that you shouldn’t write down. That’s how you create Mastery.”
📝📝📝 @raylewis @TwentyER pic.twitter.com/Z0f2nlQNML
"Dumb jocks" is mythology. Teach players to study better. Notes help retain and expand ideas. Contemporaneous notes reduce questions about accuracy and memory.
Learn to take better notes as a study plan. Handwritten notes are better. "The students who were taking longhand notes in our studies were forced to be more selective — because you can't write as fast as you can type. And that extra processing of the material that they were doing benefited them."
"Generative note-taking pertains to "summarizing, paraphrasing, concept mapping..."
Add value by including:
Big ideas. For example, "What 'musts' belong to transition defense?
What’s the why? Explain our key offensive and defensive themes. Such as:
- Allow 'one bad shot' with communication and collaboration.
- Pressure and contain the ball. No direct drives.
- No middle.
- Contest shots without fouling.
- Block out and rebound to end the possession.
Lagniappe (something extra). How do ideas impact winning?
- Discuss the "four factors" - Score.Protect.Crash.Attack.
- Explain "possession enders"
- What is the "power of negative thinking?"
- Share three ways to 'give games away'
- Discuss how an underdog increases their chance of winning
Players who get bored in practice don't really want to be good. Champions get better. Losers get bored. pic.twitter.com/bCjQiXaECv
— Advice for Athletes (@Coach2Athlete) August 4, 2023
Duke Clear Out Backdoor
— Hoops Companion 🏀 Resources for Coaches (@Hoops_Companion) August 5, 2023
- opposite post lifts to take away just enough help on the backdoor pic.twitter.com/pmcS7sltlm