Cars, televisions, and even air purifiers come with an "Owner's Manual." Basketball players do not.
If we were constructing an owner's manual, how would it look? What absolutes belong and what "options" make our player and program more valuable?
Choose whether to be a lumper or a splitter. Lumpers have broad categories and splitters seek more granular divisions.
1. Character
"Character is job one." - Etorre Messina
"The best predictor of future behavior is past behavior." Coach Nick Saban says players create value for themselves with their choices.
Coachability includes focus which includes the ability to avoid distractions. Is a player about the work or "the life?" Is she committed to making the team better, the people around her better, or "the scorebook?"
The most reliable identification methods (based on research)
1. Scenario-based decision testing
Use video or VR simulations to evaluate decision-making under stress. This method is empirically shown to reveal cognitive flexibility and resilience.
2. Adversity-based drills
Create controlled adversity: bad calls, uneven numbers, fatigue spikes. Observe adaptation speed, communication, and emotional regulation.
3. Resilience questionnaires + behavioral observation
Validated tools from resilience research paired with real-time observation give a fuller picture.
Resilience is multifactorial—motivation, coping, optimism, hope.
4. Coach/peer feedback loops
Players who elevate team resilience (leadership, identity, positivity) are consistently high performers under pressure.
The most comprehensive framework comes from a 2022 systematic review synthesizing 92 studies. It proposes a resilience filter made of biopsychosocial protective factors that determine how strongly adversity impacts an athlete.
Key components researchers evaluate:
Biological factors — Physical conditioning, injury history, recovery capacity. (Belichick's 'ability and durability')
Psychological factors — Self‑belief, emotional regulation, coping strategies, mental skills training. (Confidence and consistency)
Social factors — Coaching quality, mentorship, team culture, family support. (How a player treats her family can predict how they interact with teammates and coaches)
- Resources. Training is expensive.
- Family support (beyond resources)
- Mentoring (the only shortcut to excellence)
- "Competitive character" - intrinsic motivation
- "Paper trail"... training plan, tracking, video, etc. "success leaves fingerprints"
- There's no one pathway to success.
- "Character is job one."
- Coachability is necessary and underrated.
- Resilience is needed and trainable.
- Competitive arcs need planning.
Is your team well-coached?
— CoachLync | Tools & Playbooks (@CoachLync) July 3, 2026
via @coachneighbors pic.twitter.com/B8lXsCAYZq

















