This reminds me of what Lincoln was alleged to say, "I learn something from everyone I meet, usually what not to do."
- Charlie Scott and Smith broke the color barrier.
- Shot-quality scoring during scrimmaging helped build habits that tended to make UNC the best 'percentage shooters' in the ACC.
- Coming from behind eight points in 18 seconds to tie Duke and beat them in overtime. Never give up.
- Humility. "A lion never roars after the kill."
- "Four corners" with Phil Ford. It still works. Ford set his watch ten minutes fast to be on Dean Smith Time.
- His teams beat Wooden's in their final eight meetings.
- A coach's primary task was teaching players to "see the game."
- "Footwork, balance, maneuvering speed."
- Big man moves. Teach 'em in the post and translate to the perimeter.
- Scorer, facilitator, screener. You have to have a skill.
- "Make every day your masterpiece."
- The Pyramid of Success. Coach Sonny Lane introduced it to us in our 'team room' over fifty years ago. The room reeked of sweat, Tuf-Skin, and orange peels.
- "Little things make big things happen."
- "Never confuse activity with achievement."
- Wooden said that Walton was great because "he never tired of the attention to detail in doing the small things." Watch the win over Memphis State.
- "The Smart Take from the Strong." Do the mental work.
- "Lightbulbs." Get players who light up the court.
- "The quality of the shot relates to the quality of the pass."
- Condition within drills.
- Beating UCLA 1996. The video never gets old.
- People forget that like Wooden, she was a great player.
- Her "Four Corners" was something entirely different.
- Emphasis that playing was a privilege not an entitlement.
- Filming the bench. You had better be in the game.
- The "Definite Dozen"