RonSenBasketball
Basketball education, fundamentals, opinion, video and more
Total Pageviews
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Leadership Principles That Work for Basketball
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
Do "Pep Talks" Work?
The concept of the "pregame speech" is a staple of sports cinema, but in reality, its effectiveness depends heavily on arousal regulation—the science of getting an athlete’s heart rate and focus into the "sweet spot" for performance.
1. The Anatomy of a Great Pep Talk
According to Motivating Language Theory (MLT), an effective talk generally balances three specific types of communication:
Direction-Giving (Uncertainty Reduction): Clarifying the plan. "We focus on the transition game; we stick to the man-to-man defense." This reduces anxiety by providing a sense of control.
Empathetic Language (The "We" Factor): Acknowledging the difficulty of the task and the bond of the team. This builds social cohesion.
Meaning-Making (The "Why"): Connecting the game to a larger purpose or legacy. This is where the "Churchill-esque" rhetoric lives.
2. Is There Evidence It Works?
The short answer is yes, but with a "decay" factor.
The Psychological Boost: Studies in the Journal of Applied Sport Psychology suggest that motivational speeches can increase self-efficacy (the belief that one can succeed). High self-efficacy is one of the strongest predictors of athletic performance.
The Physiological Response: A high-energy speech triggers the sympathetic nervous system, releasing adrenaline and increasing heart rate. For sports requiring explosive power or aggression (like football or sprinting), this "up-regulation" is beneficial.
The Over-Arousal Trap: For sports requiring fine motor skills or high concentration (like golf, archery, or even quarterbacking), an intense pep talk can actually decrease performance by causing "noise" in the nervous system and tightening muscles.
3. Sustainability of "Competitive Fury"
Competitive fury is a high-octane fuel, but it has a very small tank.
Biological Limits: The "adrenaline dump" experienced during a high-intensity speech usually lasts between 15 to 30 minutes. Once the initial surge wears off, athletes often experience a "crash" or a period of emotional exhaustion.
Cognitive Narrowing: Intense fury narrows focus. While great for running through a wall, it is terrible for making complex tactical adjustments. If a team relies solely on "fire," they often struggle in the second half when the game shifts from emotion to execution.
The "Habituation" Problem: If a coach gives a "speech of a lifetime" every Tuesday, the brain stops responding. The most sustainable performance comes from intrinsic motivation and consistent habits, not external emotional spikes.
The Verdict
The best leaders—much like Fergus Connolly might argue—don't rely on "fire and brimstone" to create fury. They use the pregame moment to operationalize wisdom: reducing the chaos of the game into 2-3 actionable cues that the team can execute even when the initial adrenaline fades.
Most people think leadership is about control.
— Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness (@coachajkings) April 24, 2026
But the best leaders know it’s about service.
It means leading with your heart and with a selfless mindset 👇 pic.twitter.com/vQ6s1mrCxk
Lagniappe 2. Chris Oliver shares.
😍 this zone action.
— Chris Oliver (@BBallImmersion) April 17, 2026
Get the ball into the middle of the zone with
✔️ Pass to wing
✔️ Wing balls screen
✔️ Wing to top pass
✔️ Roller cuts into space pic.twitter.com/sg95KkaGyW
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Basketball - "Big Time" and Neighborly Advice
"Make the big time where you are." Don't worry about the next job to the exclusion of doing this one well.
Service separates "theory" from practice. Our "coaching practice" spans a variety of areas - player development, test scores, letters of recommendation, or physical metrics like vertical jump, bench press, or timed mile.
We are judged daily by our character and competence.
Separate ourself with excellence in servant leadership.
Blend Greenleaf's "servant leadership" with core philosophies.
- Serve the community.
- Model excellence.
- Develop new leaders.
As coaches, we are the keepers of the story and an architect for dreams.
That's the same regardless of the venue. Give the kids and the programs our best.
"Don't let what you can't do interfere with what you can."
Development is hard. Winning is hard. Do hard better.
Lagniappe. Correcting mistakes separates excellent from good. Great advice from Mike Neighbors.
Coaches: This is simply one of the best coaching ( and leadership) articles I have ever read from my friend @Coachneighbors, the newest assistant of the @DallasWings. I am going to read it three more times today. https://t.co/mguGJE9qIQ via @NYTimes
— Fran Fraschilla (@franfraschilla) March 28, 2026
Monday, May 4, 2026
Circular Thinking: The Loop That Kills Learning
We say we want the truth. Most of the time, we settle for something easier, a story that sounds good but explains nothing.
When thinking starts running in circles
You see it when cause and effect get tangled up:
We’re losing because we’re playing badly. We’re playing badly because we’re losing.
That’s not analysis. That’s a loop.
What circular thinking really is
Circular thinking uses the conclusion as the reason. It feels convincing. It sounds strong. But it doesn’t teach you anything.
“He’s a winner because he wins.”
“That’s a good shot because it went in.”
“We didn’t execute because we didn’t execute.”
None of that is cause and effect. It’s not insight. It’s just verbal word salad.
The draft pick trap
Here’s a classic example:
“He’s a first-round pick, so he should be playing.”
That’s a circle.
Why is he playing? Because he was drafted high.
Why was he drafted high? Because he’s good.
How do we know he’s good? Because he’s playing.
High draft picks get more minutes and more chances to fail. Teams want to prove they were right about their choices, so the loop reinforces itself.
A better question is:
What is he doing, on this floor, in these possessions, that actually helps us win?
Now you’re looking at things like:
Shot quality: EFG%
Turnover rate
Defensive assignments held
Rebounding percentage
You’re turning vague labels into concrete behaviors.
Where it hides in basketball language
Circular thinking slips into everyday phrases:
“We lost because they’re better.”
“He’s clutch because he makes big plays.”
“Our defense was bad because they scored a lot.”
Those lines sound fine, but they don’t advance the story.
Swap the loop for cause:
“We can be a lot better.” As Joe Mazzulla put it: “We had 17 turnovers and allowed 13 offensive rebounds.”
“He’s clutch because he creates separation late and consistently gets to his spots.”
“Our defense broke at the point of attack (no containment) so we ended up in constant rotation, always at a disadvantage.”
Coaches hate to hear, "I know, I know." It’s about what you do, not just what you say you know.
Why we slide into circular thinking
Circular thinking is comfortable. It:
Protects ego – If the story sounds fine, we don’t have to change.
Simplifies complexity – Messy problems get reduced to neat slogans.
Ends the conversation – No more questions, no more digging.
But it also:
Kills feedback – There’s nothing specific to improve.
Hides root causes – The real issues stay buried.
Prevents change – If nothing is identified, nothing is fixed.
How to break the loop
Use a simple, Feynman-like discipline:
Name the outcome “We lost.”
Research the mechanism “We had 18 turnovers, which led to 22 transition points.”
Go a layer deeper “We struggled to handle pressure, loose handles, and too many guys standing instead of relocating to open space.”
Prescribe the work “Daily pressure-handling; clear outlet spacing rules; constraint drills that punish standing still.”
Now the story isn’t just what happened. The story is how we’re going to change what we do so the outcome changes.
A better standard
Don’t just describe the result. Diagnose the cause. Circular thinking protects decisions. Clear thinking improves them.
Lagniappe. "Trust but verify." We have to dig deeper and find out what players understand.
Huge teaching point! Never assume!
— Bob Starkey (@CoachBobStarkey) April 27, 2026
"It's not what you tell your players that counts. It's what they hear."
-Red Auerbach pic.twitter.com/SzmMNX5z0Q
Sunday, May 3, 2026
Basketball - More Options May Not Always Mean Better Ones
Change is hard. Most of us stick with the "status quo." Rolf Dobelli in "The Art of Thinking Clearly," argues that relates to "loss aversion." If we change from the standard option and it turns out poorly, then we face regret.
"This is how we've always done it."
"The devil you know...
"Why rock the boat?"
This shows up in a lot of ways, but less so in basketball. When it's not working, coaches and players ask "what's the next option?"
Consider the transfer portal, which effectively created:
- Free agency
- Shorter development windows
- Roster volatility as the norm
- Minutes - playing time
- Role - including shots
- Recognition: $
"...you grow up with this sense of entitlement, as if the whole world revolves around you. And…if I wanted to be a better husband, a better father, a better coach, I had to get rid of that type of entitlement.”
— The Winning Difference (@thewinningdiff1) April 19, 2026
No titles have ever been won with entitlement.
You don't deserve… pic.twitter.com/36whkoJnMz
Saturday, May 2, 2026
Basketball - Share and Navigate Hard Conversations
"Share something great." Find a great recipe, quote, movie, book, life hack, or a great play. Share relentlessly. Don Meyer was a great coach and an amazing sharer. Answered questions online...
Coach Michael Neighbors is a sharer, including many "Things I Have Stolen."
Here's an abbreviated list from Leadership Expert Jeff Janssen.
- Character - Based Credible Coaches are people with great character.
- Competent - know the strategies and skills of their sport
- Caring - real passion for players and coaching
- Confidence Builder - their athletes feel good about themselves
- Communicator - talk and listen well
- Consistent - consistent philosophies and moods
At its core, Radical Candor is the intersection of Caring Personally and Challenging Directly. When a parent approaches a coach about playing time, the "Radical" part is being honest about the child's current skill level, while the "Candor" part is doing so without being a jerk.
Here is how to navigate those high-tension conversations using these principles.
The Radical Candor Approach
In this framework, silence or "sugar-coating" is considered Ruinous Empathy, which ultimately hurts the athlete because they never learn what to improve. Conversely, being blunt without empathy is Obnoxious Aggression.
Three Dos
Do: Focus on the "Future State." Instead of justifying past benching, frame the conversation around the specific growth required to earn more time. This moves the conversation from a complaint to a roadmap.
Do: Schedule a "Cooling Off" Window. Radical candor requires presence of mind. Implement a "24-hour rule" after games so that both parties can move out of an emotional state and into a collaborative one.
Do: Provide Objective Benchmarks. Use data or specific technical milestones. "I care about your child’s development, and right now, their defensive rotation is at a level that limits their safety/efficacy in high-speed play."
Three Don'ts
Don't: Discuss Other Athletes. Radical candor is about the individual relationship. Comparing a child to a teammate is a shortcut to "Obnoxious Aggression" and creates a toxic culture.
Don't: Use the "Feedback Sandwich." (Positive-Negative-Positive). Parents often listen for the "bread" and ignore the "meat." Be direct about the performance gap immediately, then pivot to how you will support the child in closing it.
Don't: Take it Personally. When a parent isn't "listening," they are often in a state of protective bias. Maintain your "Care Personally" stance by staying calm, even if they become confrontational.
Navigating the "Non-Listener"
When a parent is too emotionally invested to hear the truth, the coach must shift from feedback to boundary setting.
If the parent refuses to acknowledge the performance gap, a tactful response looks like this:
"I hear how much you want [Child's Name] to be on the field; I want that for them, too. However, my responsibility to the team and to [Child's Name]’s safety is to play those who have mastered [Specific Skill]. I am happy to keep working with them on this, but my decision on playing time stands for now. Let's touch base in two weeks to see their progress."
Summary Table: Feedback Quadrants
| Quadrant | Coach's Response Style | Outcome |
| Radical Candor | Clear, kind, and evidence-based. | Growth and trust. |
| Ruinous Empathy | Avoids the truth to keep the parent happy. | Stagnation and confusion. |
| Obnoxious Aggression | Blunt, dismissive, or insulting. | Resentment and conflict. |
| Manipulative Insincerity | Passive-aggressive or talking behind backs. | Total culture breakdown. |
Friday, May 1, 2026
Basketball - Find Voices that Resonate
Basketball throws a firehose of information at coaches, players, and fans. NBA coaches filter that into lessons worth sharing and studying.
Their insight often flows across sports and into daily life. Look for messages that harmonize and expand upon our own. Allow theirs to add value to players willing to buy in.
"I liked our competitiveness."
Players and coaches value being considered competitors
Things to improve - turnovers, allowing offensive rebounding
When losing, see 'silver linings'. When winning, 'sliver linings'?
"Guys care about winning."
Desired outcomes can drive the process.
"...made some plays"
As Mickey Mantle said, it's what you do when you're not striking out.
"...communicated, kept them off the free throw line, out of transition"
"Distills to no easy baskets."
"Anybody who doubts D. White doesn't care about winning..."
In addition to competing, be known as a winning player, giving the game what it needs.
"...impact winning in so many different ways."
Coaches look beyond the box score for contributions.
"Competitive character..." a lot goes into this 'ferocity'
- Focus
- Energy
- Resilience
- Optimism
- Consistency of communication
- Intensity
- Toughness
- YOU - making you (the other guy) better
"...be at our best as much as we can...be the best version of ourselves"
Only compare ourselves to whom we were yesterday.
"...great communication, great body language..."
Much of our communication is nonverbal. Do that better.
"Experience shows up in...poise on a day-to-day basis"
Honor the process. Progress is cumulative.
...tomorrow's a big day, we have to get better..."
Champions disallow complacency in search of better ways.
"...physicality at the point of attack was good..."
"...a series is going to take on a life of its own..."
"This is what you sign up for..."
"do what we have to do for however long it takes..."
The best teams play harder for longer - Dave Smart
Lagniappe. Chuck Daly reminds us to find advantage - numbers, creating two on ones, forcing scramble.
"Always play against a team that's in recovery"
— Coach Mac 🏀 (@BballCoachMac) April 27, 2026
- Chuck Daly pic.twitter.com/kWEjNufnix
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Leadership, Keeping a Basketball Leadership Journal, and More
Leadership is like a muscle. When we don't exercise it, it atrophies. Develop a strategy to maintain and expand leadership.
What Do Leaders Do?
- Facilitate execution within organizations.
- Coordinate people, strategy, and operations.
- Identify and solve problems.
- Carry out missions assigned by higher authorities.
- "Make future leaders."
Basketball example: Coach Krzyzewski - five fingers become a fist, far stronger than any individual finger.
Growing Leadership
As coaches, how do we train leaders? Intentional and distributed leadership exposes players to leadership.
- Model excellence
- Teach communication skills
- Be positive
- Assign leadership opportunities (lead drills, explore short topics)
- Provide feedback
Leadership Culture
Everyone can lead. Cal rugby coach Jack Clark expects all players to lead with leadership traits - punctuality, hard work, no distractions.
Create the expectation that leadership comes with the job. Remove the requirement that you need titles to lead.
Basketball example: Teach servant leadership in the mold of Don Meyer and Dick Bennett.
Leadership Journal
Leadership journals don't have to be elaborate. Write down opportunities for leadership, how they carried out leadership, and the results.
Adam Grant doesn't explicitly create a template for a leadership journal in his Organizational Psychology books. If he did, it might include:
- The leadership opportunity (situation)
- What did I do? (Take a timeout, let them figure it out)
- How did it turn out?
- Would I do something different next time?
- What's the NBA - "next best action?"
Share Examples and Outcomes
In a game against a strong opponent, a team had a solid lead (high teens) with about four minutes left. Opted to substitute in reserves and the lead rapidly dissipated although we still won. Decision intent - good, allow players to get experience against better players. Decision outcome - poor, resulted in confidence loss not growth. A more limited approach would be better.
Basketball-adjacent: Jocko Willink shared the experiences of a SEAL Team leader in "Extreme Ownership." An operation in Iraq went FUBAR including deaths because of communications problems. Willink took full accountability and offered to resign. He was kept on.
Study Excellence
The books below share experiences in sport and society based on leadership inputs.
Key New Zealand All-Blacks rugby lessons:
- "Leave the jersey in a better place." Legacy ownership.
- "Sweep the sheds." No job is below you.
- "Old men plant trees in whose shade they will never sit." You have a responsibility to your community.
- "Better people make better All-Blacks." Character matters.
- Be accountable to the "Standard of Performance" in all jobs.
- Coaches are expected to teach and monitor attention to detail.
- Champions behave like champions before they are.
- "The process creates the outcome." Teach.
- Leadership includes emotional discipline. Do it right all the time.
- Hard work accompanies leadership.
- Personal challenges forge the best leaders.
- Big themes (Preserve the Union, Preserve Democracy, the New Deal)
- Collaboration is necessary to achieve greatness
Reading List:
- Legacy by James Kerr
- The Score Takes Care of Itself by Bill Walsh
- Leadership in Turbulent Times by Doris Kearns Goodwin
- Extreme Ownership by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin
This may be the best (most important 🤷♂️) paragraph I have written in 25 years. pic.twitter.com/YOAjw6Zi8S
— Brian McCormick, PhD (@brianmccormick) April 16, 2026
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Basketball - The Udonis Haslem in the Room
Every team has talent. But the teams that endure, teams that stand up when things get hard, almost always have one other thing. They have a Udonis Haslem.
Udonis Haslem didn’t define himself by minutes or points. Late in his career, he barely played.
He was the standard. Who is the archetype in our program, the institutional memory and unimpeachable character? Quiet. Ethical.
Authority without titles
Haslem didn’t need a starting spot. Other "literary characters" played similar roles - Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird, Watson in Sherlock Holmes, Samwise Gamgee in The Hobbit.
They aren't attention seekers. They aren't the leads or primary drivers of action. They understand the room.
Standards over slogans
Culture grabs a lot of space nowadays. Some put it on a wall or print T-shirts. The Haslem-types enforce culture when it matters.
They keep everyone focused. They don't let the discipline of identity and performance stray.They make a difference without filling up the stat sheet.
Timing matters
The loudest voice doesn't always carry the most weight. The quiet person who says the right things at the right moment changes the room.
Haslem kept one message of "this is who we are and that is how we play" alive. That’s discipline and leadership.
Institutional memory
Teams evolve through ownership, coaches, and certainly players. Constants matter. "That's an interesting idea. We tried that. It was a disaster."
Some voices connect the past to the present. They prevent repetitive mistakes already paid for. Ernie Adams, "Belichick's Belichick" was another 'voice' that stayed silent until it was needed. He kept a sign on his desk, "Stamp out bad football."
"Drive for show; putt for dough."
This archetype doesn’t chase credit. They're often nearly invisible in an analytical and technological world.
But they show up where it counts:
- in practice
- in huddles
- in the moments when standards slip
They don’t need recognition. They need the process to be maintained, the "Standard of Performance" upheld.
Coaching translation
Recruiting character and intangibles is 'slippery. Sometimes the voice belongs to a senior who grew up in the system. Sometimes it’s a role player with clarity and maturity. Sometimes it’s someone who can't stay silent when the ship needs stability.
Empower that voice if we're fortunate enough to have it.
Bottom line
Exceptional teams need exceptional leaders. Even legendary programs can struggle during organizational change and style drift. People like Haslem make sure integrity stays when it matters.
The best teams don’t rely solely on coaches to enforce standards. They have a voice inside the room that preserves them.Transition game baskets are ignited by 1) poised ball decisions by passers/dribblers 2) wings sprinting wide 3) Bigs rim running or floor spacing 4) range shooters free flowing. Fast break scores are collective.
— Gordon Chiesa (@gchiesaohmy) April 24, 2026
