Lessons from Matthew Syed's "Black Box Thinking" can help us discover, correct, and prevent errors. Errors lead to inefficiency in all aspects of preparation and playing games.
Syed contrasts aviation which has rigorous error detection and global sharing with medicine where errors are less identified and corrected.
His observations mesh well with Coach Knight's "The Power of Negative Thinking." Games are like tests in school, providing feedback on strengths and weakness.
1. Failure Is Information
- Mistakes occur during both wins and losses.
- Understanding failure (shot selection, turnovers, missed assignments allows targeting of problems)
2. The Goal Is Error Detection
- Favor accountability not blame.
- Chase excellence not perfection.
3. Error Detection Is Integral to Better Process
- Correcting mistakes applies solutions for everyone.
- Quality control can only follow quality measurement.
4. Small Errors Multiply
- Poor passing leads to poor quality shots.
- Poor transition defense means more easy baskets for oppoents.
- Inconsistency creates frustration leading to negative plays.
5. Detection Allows Adaptation
- Adaptability is competitive advantage.
- This isn't news; it's Darwinism.
6. Ego Impairs Learning
- Players saying, "I know, I know" is a barrier to learning.
- Coachability means openness to correction.
7. Players Need "Psychological Safety"
- Trust must precede hard coaching.
- Tuning out criticism is a basic human defense mechanism.
8. Outcome and Process Differ
- Process control is possible; outcome control is less so.
- Don't mistake success with efficiency.
9. Success Can Mask Problems
- "Bad wins" with poor play vs bad teams can allow bad habits to fester (e.g. fouling, lowered intensity, complacency)
- "Be demanding without demeaning" means attention to standards
- Black box thinking is a process
- Get buy-in to improvement with self-assessment (e.g. discussion, game video). Assistant coach and team participation is vital.
Great for players to hear. @dallasmavs coach Jared Dudley how to impact winning in a world that is obsessed with scoring:
— Josh Chambers (@JoshChambers) May 28, 2026
🔒 Defend Multiple Positions
🛞 Drive and Kick Decision Making
🎯 What's Your One Outlier Trait?
Social media glorifies the 20+ point per game scorer. But… pic.twitter.com/etaMOWliqg


