Players are fortunate to learn under great coaches, directly as a player or assistant, or indirectly from reading, clinics, video, and more.
Relationships flow from communication, listening, respect, and trust
Basketball - It's an earned privilege to maintain lifelong relationships with former coaches, teammates, and players. "Be a mentor, not a tormentor."
Lifelong learning offers a "Be a learn it all mindset." Then be an editor - think about what you have learned and rewrite it in a journal or blog. Use AI in your journey.
Basketball - Name, define, research, and refine the problem. That's the Feynman Technique.
Humility allows us to learn from everyone and to learn from defeats. Share credit and be open to new information.
Basketball - Be gracious in victory and humble in defeat. What goes around comes around.
"Make friends with the dead" as only about seven percent of all humans born are living.
Basketball - Study great coaches from the past - Wooden, Newell, Knight, McLendon, Wilkens, Carril, Summitt, and more.
Get everyone on the same page as many of the most painful losses arise from mental mistakes that compromise execution. Attention to detail separates success from failure.
Basketball - "Fall in love with easy." It's not enough to trust that players understand. "Trust but verify."
Studying mental models and cognitive biases - embrace the Buffett-Munger approach - work to avoid mistakes.
Basketball - 1) Avoid judgment errors from small sample size. 2) Don't make 'attribution errors' of blaming officiating, bad luck, or conditions. 3) Stay within your "Circle of Competence." Teach what you know.
Write it down. An ancient Chinese proverb says, "The faintest ink is more powerful than the strongest memory."
Basketball - Practice schedules, drills, game plans, playbook, leadership opportunities all matter. When it's important, it's worth keeping a record.
Diagnose and treat. You are a teacher and a problem solver. Distill problems objectively and explore a variety of solutions.
Basketball - Remember Kevin Eastman's advice, "Do it harder, do it better, change personnel, and change when, "$#!& it's not working."
Lagniappe. When bad spacing clears a side...
Mark Pope’s triple screen decoy
— Matt Hackenberg (@CoachHackGO) January 26, 2026
An isolation hiding in plain sight pic.twitter.com/FmZvlFrw4d

