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Saturday, December 6, 2025

Checking Personal Boxes of Winners

Checklists help in many domains - construction, air travel, healthcare, finance, restaurants, and more. 

What do you have on your checklist for "Lead without a Title?" I wrote a blog post with bullet points and asked Chat GPT Plus to convert it to a checklist. 

Use this daily. Leadership is not occasional. It’s habitual.

Team & Teammates

☐ I encouraged at least one teammate today
☐ I communicated clearly and positively
☐ I brought energy to practice or matches
☐ I celebrated teammates’ success
☐ I helped a teammate without being asked

Effort & Competitiveness

☐ I gave my best effort on every drill
☐ I sprinted in transitions (on and off the court)
☐ I competed without complaining
☐ I stayed engaged, even when I wasn’t in the spotlight

Coachability & Growth

☐ I listened fully when coached
☐ I responded to feedback with action, not excuses
☐ I asked at least one thoughtful question
☐ I focused on improvement, not comparison

Culture & Standards

☐ I was on time and prepared
☐ I was never a distraction
☐ I modeled positive body language
☐ I upheld team values when no one was watching

Service & Ownership

☐ I did a “dirty job” (balls, cleanup, help)
☐ I asked, “How can I help?”
☐ I put the team’s needs ahead of my own
☐ I left the gym better than I found it

Off the Court

☐ I represented the program with class
☐ I handled academics responsibly
☐ I took care of my body (sleep, nutrition, recovery)

Lagniappe. Coach Hacks shares 'scorer development' drills. 

Lagniappe 2. Want students to get better grades? Research from Professor Adam Grant... 

It's time to remove laptops from classrooms.24 experiments: Students learn more and get better grades after taking notes by hand than typing. It's not just because they're less distracted—writing enables deeper processing and more images.The pen is mightier than the keyboard. 
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The researchers estimate that over a semester, students who take notes by hand will be 58% more likely to earn As—while those who type will be 75% more likely to fail. (The obvious exception is students with disabilities that require a digital device.)


Friday, December 5, 2025

Basketball - Mental Model - "Gray Thinking"

For many, the world is black and white. It's comforting to adopt our "truth." Unfortunately, life exposes us when the world turns gray. 

If there were one "best way," everyone should do that - teaching basketball, coaching basketball, practicing basketball. If the Princeton Offense were the best, shouldn't every NBA team run it? If it's all about the three, shouldn't everyone think like Joe Mazzulla?  

Gray thinking is a mental model (discussed in Super Thinking) that rejects black-and-white, all-or-nothing judgments. It’s the discipline of holding multiple possibilities at once, tolerating uncertainty, updating beliefs, and avoiding premature conclusions.

It’s a cognitive skill closely tied to:

  • nuance

  • probability

  • adaptability

  • learning

  • emotional regulation

It’s what high-level decision-makers and elite athletes need.

Below is a clean explanation of gray thinking and then a translation into basketball coaching, player development, and in-game decision-making.

What Is “Gray Thinking”?

Gray thinking shares several characteristics:

1. Avoiding absolute categories

Not everything is “good or bad,” “smart or dumb,” “success or failure.”
Most things fall along a continuum. 


Michael Mauboussin presented a Skill-Luck continuum with certain casino games pure luck and chess nearly pure skill. 

2. Holding competing ideas simultaneously

Believe:

  • “Our defense needs work.”

  • “Our defense is trending upward.”
    Both can be true.

3. Emphasizing probabilities, not certainties

Great decisions live in the world of likelihood, not guarantees. When Steve Kerr started Andre Iguodala over Andrew Bogut in The Finals to help beat the Cavs, he exercised probabilities based on film study. 

4. Remaining flexible and update-friendly

When the environment changes, gray thinkers adjust quickly - put ego on the back burners. 

5. Resisting emotional oversimplification

Fear and pressure push us toward black-and-white conclusions. Gray thinking slows the emotional brain and activates the analytical brain.

In short: Gray thinkers don’t lock in too quickly or too tightly. They think in a spectrum of possibilities.

How Gray Thinking Applies to Basketball

Basketball harmonizes this mental model because the sport is filled with noise, randomness, small samples, and partial truths. Players who see in shades-not absolutes-manage complexity better.

Here are five examples tied to coaching.

1. Evaluating Players: Avoiding “Always” and “Never”

Black-and-white thinking:

  • “She’s a bad shooter.”

  • “He's a turnover machine.”

Gray thinking:

  • “She’s an inconsistent shooter who improves when her base is stable.”

  • “He struggles with left-hand pressure but reads ball screens well.”

Why it matters:

  • Gray evaluation leads to specific, trainable improvement plans.

  • Players feel seen, not judged, leading to better buy-in.

2. In-Game Decision Making: Choosing the Best Probability, Not a “Perfect” Option

Black-and-white thinking wants:

  • The perfect shot

  • The perfect possession

  • Zero turnovers or mistakes

That doesn’t exist.

Gray thinking embraces:

  • “This is a good decision in this context.”

  • “A 36% catch-and-shoot 3 by our best shooter is worth more than a highly contested layup.”

  • “Our press is working 70% of the time, worth it.”

This leverages probability.

3. Handling Shooting Slumps: Multiple Causes and Solutions

Black-and-white:

  • “I can’t shoot.”

  • “My shot is broken.”

Gray thinking:

  • “My arc is good, but my balance is inconsistent.”

  • “I can improve my shot selection.”

A gray-thinking athlete:

  • Breaks down performance into components

  • Adjusts and believes improvement is stepwise and available

This aligns with Don Meyer’s idea: “Fix the misses, don’t fix the make.”

4. Conflict and Leadership: Understanding Multiple Truths

Black-and-white team culture reacts like this:

  • “She’s wrong.”

  • “He’s selfish.”

Gray leadership says:

  • “She’s frustrated despite trying her best.”

  • “He wants more minutes and cares about winning.”

This improves:

  • Communication

  • Empathy

  • Buy-in

5. Strategy and Adjustments: Nothing Works All the Time

Black-and-white thinking wants:

  • One defense

  • One ball screen coverage

  • One lineup

Gray thinking understands:

  • Matchups matter

  • Game flow matters

  • Fouls, fatigue, momentum matter

A gray-thinking coach:

  • Changes defenses

  • Uses dynamic lineup combinations

  • Teaches “If/Then” thinking:

    • “If they ice ball screens, we go to Spain action.”

    • “If they overplay, use more screens and back cuts."

This is optionality, dynamic choice, high-level basketball.

Much of life is nuanced not absolute. Basketball is no different.

Lagniappe. Cool action, a weave into a backscreen.   


Thursday, December 4, 2025

Organizing Basketball Practice with a Generic Example

Everyone 'runs' practice differently. There's no Holy Grail, although there are principles.

  • Warmup
  • Fundamentals
  • Teaching Segments
  • Team offense
  • Team defense
  • Applying and managing pressure
  • Conditioning
  • Scrimmaging
  • Special situations
Goals:
  • Maximize efficiency
  • Competition 
  • Involve everyone 
  • Coaching without overcoaching 
  • Solve current problems
  • Implementation of offense/defense/specials
  • Simplification
Young coaches can benefit from having examples while they identify what works for their program. As LA Rams Coach Sean McVay says, "Everyone benefits from coaching." 

Spreadsheet of Possible considerations


Sample practice spreadsheet (conditioning in yellow)
Free throws are mixed into water breaks



Speed layups: 
Racehorse: We called this Racehorse and ran it harder
Get 50

Warmup - Warm up your shot early in practice. The Jay Wright, "Get 50" approach does that. 


3 x 3 x 3 Shooting

Condition within drills. Full court, full press scrimmaging, transition drills, "Argentina Passing," and others keep players running and practicing with a ball. 3 x 3 x 3 shooting gets both high volumes of shots and running. 





















Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Incremental Thinking Is OK in an Exponential World

Society is awash in information. We can barely process a fraction of it. Keep it simple. 

1) What do I (or my team) need NOW? What's the priority? What needs to be added or eliminated? 

2) What one, two, or three things can I focus on today?

3) How will I know if it works?

In the podcast above, the discussants share that "we pretend everything is okay" when it's not.

Ratchet up intensity while maintaining empathy. Be demanding while thanking our team for their efforts and sacrifice. 

For (1) diagnose "needs" objectively. If we're not scoring enough - is it skill, shot selection, turnovers, or something else? 

For (2), discipline ourselves to refocus on "the main thing" or a couple. For example, if we have seventy possessions and 20 turnovers, then we "really" have fifty possessions. Worse, live-ball turnovers translate into opponents' points. How do we reduce turnovers? 

For (3) measure. Measure what impacts outcomes. Embrace the Four Factors. 

  • Don't presume that NBA statistics (apples) relate to your high school stats (oranges). If you want to take 50 percent three-point shots, how many are you making? Are you anchoring on the wrong data? If you're at the league bottom of team offense, your plan needs work. 
  • Turnovers. Mistakes matter. That's partly how Bob Knight ("The Power of Negative Thinking") and Porter Moser (foul less) succeeded. 
  • Rebounding rate. The Celtics remain in the bottom half on NBA rebounding rate but are no longer at the bottom. It's still not good enough as they are near the bottom on defensive rebounding

It's not realistic to expect global transformation overnight. 

1. Have a written plan.

2. Track progress (e.g. EFG%, turnovers, rebounding, assists, free throws attempted)

3. Stay focused on fundamentals. 

4. Intangibles - attitude, communication, effort - always need attention.

5. Add continual value with positivity and teaching. 

Lagniappe. Develop player leadership.   

Lagniappe 2. Prioritize process. Test players on philosophy, program, and expectations.  

Lagniappe 3. Mazzulla breaks down video.  

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Basketball - Symmetry and Advantage

Pete Newell expressed basketball advantage best, "get more and better shots than our opponents."

Offense works to create advantage via spacing, player, and ball movement.

Defense works to limit advantage via 'shrinking' space, and limiting player and ball movement. 

Spacing - "Offense is spacing and spacing is offense." Simplify

  • Teach the three-point line as the spacing line
  • Spacing increases driving and passing lanes
  • Caveat - "Do not cut to an occupied area."
Player movement - "Movement kills defense"
  • Transition creates numerical advantage
  • Screening creates positional advantage
  • Caveat - if the passer can't see you, there is no edge created
Ball movement - "The ball has energy." 
  • Dribble penetration draws help and sets up 2-on-1s
  • Passing creates long closeouts and basket attacks
  • "The ball is a camera - you must be seen." 
  • Caveat - Must be on time and on target
Why offense fails
  • Too much isolation without enough talent 
  • Lack of urgent cutting or setting up cuts
  • Poor passing
  • Poor spacing
  • Bad shot selection
  • Turnovers
  • Lack of "multiple actions"
Conceptually sound offenses have "hard to defend actions." Take advantage of AI in our coaching. 

What would an AI consult say? 
ChatGPT said:

Here are five high-leverage, hard-to-defend offensive actions that fit your philosophy: multiple actions from one formation and one action from multiple formations. These are actions that travel well across levels—HS, college, pro—and punish poor communication, slow defenders, or switching indecision.

Each suggestion includes why it’s hard to guard and how to mask it within multiple looks.

1. Spain Pick-and-Roll (Back-Screen the Screener)

Why it’s hard to defend

  • Creates two simultaneous threats: the roller and the back-screened big.

  • Forces the defense to communicate perfectly through traffic—rare at the HS level.

  • Invites confusion on “switch-or-stay” moments, creating slips, lobs, and open threes.

How to disguise it

  • Run it out of:

    • Horns (both elbows occupied)

    • 5-out (big setting a ghost screen, then Spain)

    • Stack/Floppy entry → into Spain PnR

  • Run the same action with different personnel: guard screens big, big screens guard, etc.

2. Zoom/Chicago Action (Pin-Down → Into DHO)

Why it’s hard to defend

  • Forces defenders to navigate a downscreen and immediately a handoff.

  • If the defense trails, it’s an automatic downhill drive.

  • If they switch late, the screener can slip to the rim.

How to disguise it

  • Start in 5-out, box, or 1-4 high and sprint the guard off the pin-down.

  • Use your best shooter, or flip it and run your best driver off it.

  • Variation: false motion before the action to change the help-side responsibilities.

3. Veer Action (PnR + Simultaneous Flare Screen)

Why it’s hard to defend

  • While the ball-handler is coming off a ball screen, the screener’s defender is distracted by a flare screen on a shooter.

  • Help defenders get stuck choosing between stopping the penetration and contesting the flare.

How to disguise it

  • Run it from spread PnR, horns, Pistol (21), or 5-out delay.

  • Use “ghost flare”—no contact screen—to punish switching defenders.

  • Can also invert it: flare the roller instead of the shooter.

4. Pistol (21 Series): Pitch-Ahead → DHO → Ball Screen

Why it’s hard to defend

  • The ball moves faster than the defense.

  • Three actions in under three seconds stresses weak-side positioning.

  • If the D switches, the initiator can duck-in; if they chase, the downhill drive has space.

How to disguise it

  • Run 21 from:

    • A drag screen in transition

    • A slot-to-slot reversal into an automatic pitch

    • A zipper cut into pitch DHO

  • Run the same Pistol 21 action with different personnel groupings—big initiating, guard screening, etc.

5. Iverson Action → Backdoor or Reject

Why it’s hard to defend

  • Defenders get accustomed to fighting over the top of the double Iverson screens.

  • Once they cheat high, the reject route (backdoor or curl) is wide open.

  • Creates a built-in counter; the defense can’t be right twice.

How to disguise it

  • Use Iverson into:

    • Clear out backdoor

    • Elbow isolation

    • Post entry for a mismatched guard

    • Spain PnR (“Iverson Spain”)

  • Run the same two-cut look out of box, horns, or diamond.

Summary Table

ActionStress Points on DefenseWhy It’s Hard
Spain PnRCommunication, switchingMultiple simultaneous threats
Chicago ActionScreen navigation + handoff timingPuts trailing defenders in jail
Veer ActionHelp positioning, flare readDivergent options—drive or flare
Pistol (21 Series)Early offense, paceFast, sequential actions
Iverson Reject/BackdoorOverplaying cuttersBuilt-in counterpunish

Lagniappe. BOB screen the middle of the zone