The long offseason provides many opportunities to explore the intersection of sport and history.
One of the great 'commanders' of over a century ago was Field Marshall Erwin Rommel, a master of tank warfare. His book, "Infantry Attacks" remains relevant to both military and sports today.
Rommel’s Infantry Attacks is not a book about weapons. It’s a book about decision-making under stress, small-unit leadership, and how advantage is created when conditions are chaotic.
That makes it relevant to basketball.
Rommel commanded at the point of contact. He was a legendary observer and note-taker. He valued initiative and speed over perfection. His lessons translate well to a game decided by elite decisions and execution.
1. Initiative Beats Instructions
“Opportunities are fleeting. Whoever acts first often wins.”
Rommel emphasized junior officers acting without waiting for orders. Delay, he believed, was often fatal.
Basketball rewards the same mindset.
- Top defenses attack.
- Top playmakers seize initiative.
- Excellent teams find in-game solutions.
Over-coached teams hesitate. Decisiveness shows up as initiative. Practice should create players who act decisively, not players waiting to be told.
Lesson: Consider Drake Maye's game-clinching bootleg to send the Patriots to the Super Bowl. Trained spontaneity...
2. Speed Creates Advantage
Movement confuses opponents more than strength.
Rommel prized rapid movement to dislocate defenders mentally before overwhelming them physically.
In basketball:
- Transition beats disorganized defense
- Transition creates easy shots
- Tempo forces defensive mistakes
Speed creates advantage. It’s pressure applied before the opponent is ready. Teams that play faster than opponents think gain free points without superior talent.
Quote: "Speed kills."
3. Surprise Is a Force Multiplier
Predictability invites resistance.
Rommel repeatedly attacked where he wasn’t expected - not where doctrine suggested.
Basketball equivalents:
- Use hard to defend actions (simple and complex screens, urgent cutting)
- Find opponent weaknesses
- Unexpected drives
Surprise isn’t trickery. It creates the unexpected. Once a team relaxes into pattern recognition, it’s already late.
Lesson: "Utilize strengths, attack weaknesses." - Sun Tzu
4. Reconnaissance Is Continuous
Observation never stops.
Rommel constantly gathered information - terrain, morale, reactions -during action, not before it.
Great basketball teams scout while playing:
- Which players succumb to pressure?
- Which players turn the ball over?
- Which players take undisciplined shots?
Great teams find edges by attacking weaker opponents.
Quote: "Find the fish."
5. Exploit Weakness, Don’t Argue with Strength
Attack where resistance is lightest.
Rommel avoided frontal assaults whenever possible. He looked for gaps.
In basketball:
- Attack poor defenders
- Take advantage of poor rebounders
- Create edges in high stakes situations
This isn’t unfair. It’s efficiency.
Winning teams are superior as they apply pressure where it works.
6. Decentralized Leadership Wins
The front line knows more than headquarters. Rommel trusted subordinates to adapt in an early version of Commander's Intent.
Basketball principles worth understanding:
- Point guards (or point forwards) initiate the attack
- Shutdown defenders create advantage
- Captains set the emotional tone
A coach cannot dictate each possession. Teams succeed when leadership is distributed, not concentrated.
7. Morale Is Tactical
Psychology shapes outcomes.
Rommel understood that confidence, fear, and momentum mattered as much as positioning.
In basketball:
- More possessions create an edge for talented teams.
- Physical play intimidates many teams.
- Body language demonstrates a team's attitude.
Morale and "soft skills" build edges and illustrate a competitive variable.
Teams that protect each other emotionally last longer under stress.
8. Simple Plans, Executed Aggressively
Complexity collapses under pressure.
Rommel favored clear objectives and direct execution.
Basketball agrees:
- Some teams collapse under pressure.
- Varying defenses can create momentary confusion.
- Better options, not more options, often carries the day.
Clarity frees players to play hard. Under pressure, athletes revert to habits and sink to the level of their training.
Summary:
Infantry Attacks is not about war. It’s about human performance when uncertainty is high and time is short.
Teams need:
- Initiative
- Speed
- Observation
- Simplicity
- Emotional stability
Rommel reminds us that advantage often comes not from power, but from clarity applied early.
Lagniappe. The NBA is losing credibility.
this honestly fryin me bruh Barnes stood completely stillπ https://t.co/78br58Qt6h
— π΅π· (@HOFS0T0) May 21, 2026
Lagniappe 2. As a player, what do you want?
The details always tell the truth - whether you’re chasing greatness or just pretending to. pic.twitter.com/eZfIdTJOGK
— Coach AJ π― Mental Fitness (@coachajkings) May 22, 2026





