An analogy is a comparison between two different things that highlights meaningful similarities between them, often to explain or clarify a complex concept by relating it to something more familiar. (Claude.ai)
Medical expressions find their way into common language.
Under the microscope. Everyone gets scrutiny - administrators, coaches, players, officials. Performance is measurable with both analytics and 'the eyeball test'. There's the view from afar, the 'bird's-eye view' and up close and personal.
Ripping the Band-Aid off. Coaches face hard decisions on minutes and roles. The hard conversations generate the pain.
Can't put the toothpaste back into the tube. Sometimes decisions are irretrievable. Cutting or trading players can't be walked back.
Rock in the shoe. Some relationships are constant sources of irritation. They may force "ripping the band-aid off.
Cancer in the locker room. Few players have issues of being such a negative influence that they have to be 'surgically removed'. Some argue that a recent Heat-Golden State Warriors trade was an example.
DNA of the organization. Teams need talent, positive culture, and a clear identity to succeed. Organizational DNA could be defense first, exceptional unselfishness, or something unique. Erik Spoelstra preaches, "Be the toughest, nastiest, best-conditioned, most professional, least-liked team."
Death by 1000 cuts. The best teams pay attention to details. Failure to do so exposes the "historic" torture of slow, painful death by injuries that individually are not fatal. The accumulation of bad decisions, ill-advised shots, missed assignments, failed blockouts, missed free throws, and more add up.
Hemorrhage. Small mistakes may result in an avalanche of blood loss. Teams have to stop the bleeding both physically and mentally.
Heart of the team. Many expressions exist for key components - the engine, straw that stirs the drink, catalyst, a monolith, or the heart, the center of the circulatory system.
Brain trust. The 'critical mass' of decision-making usually resides in a small group of administrators. For the championship Spurs, one might argue that was Duncan, Ginobili, and Parker.
Allergic to hard work. When a player or team resists the discipline and commitment needed to succeed, some describe them as 'allergic'.
Lagniappe. Everyone loves a good BLOB.
I like simple BLOBs. Tennessee forces you to chase a shooter around the stagger. Defense is susceptible to a slip by the 4 or 5. pic.twitter.com/rIiuG6xkEn
— Coach Tony Miller (@tonywmiller) February 8, 2025
Lagniappe 2. Can terminology change mentality?
One REALLY POWERFUL way for HS coaches to maximize offense that is built around ball screens:
— Chris Steed (@steeder10) February 8, 2025
SCREEN AND HUNT
This verbiage change alone will help create a shift in bigs from REDUNDANT to ATTACKING.
The language is great, but what does this mean?
Big men need to be… pic.twitter.com/UjjtWTtShk
Lagniappe 3. Durant teaches elite offense.
Kevin Durant teaching the “Zipper Jab”
— The Courtside Vault (@CourtsideVault) February 7, 2025
Step through the defender’s legs to create space, and work off that space to shoot or drive the ball pic.twitter.com/gjhs8v8EBk