Total Pageviews

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Basketball Coaches Wear Many Hats

There aren't many phrases more insulting than, "Any idiot with a whistle can coach."

Wear our hats well. The chef's 'toque' informs the white, pleated hats. The hundred pleats represent a hundred ways to cook eggs.

More commonly, we think about wearing different hats not pleats. Here are a few.  

  • Life skills teaching 
  • Leadership and mentoring
  • Roster construction
  • Player development
  • Team development
  • Offensive strategy
  • Defensive strategy
  • Situational play
  • Game management
  • Sport-specific IQ development, video study
  • Strength and conditioning
  • Motivation and resilience
  • Mental health
  • Coaching staff development
  • Public relations
  • Liaison with parents, boosters, fundraisers
In this podcast, Coach Earnshaw lumps these together as structure, skillset, and mindset...listen when you have an hour. 

He also looks at energy, resources, and accountability. As a player, it's a breakthrough when you understand how you complete the puzzle. The best players need small amounts of motivation because they have an abundance of intrinsic motivation. 

Invisibles include "connection, trust, confidence." The best coaches see the invisible...and recognize what's important for both the team and an individual player. 

Among leaders, what are your strengths and needs? Captains have to be willing to embrace coaching as the standard and to radiate that over the squad. 

"Gen Z" athletes, because they want to "understand the why," have to embrace the solutions. 

Leadership Types
Medic - cares for people
Warrior - leads by example
Magician - solves problems

Identity. Who are we? What's our story? 

Purpose. Why are we here? What are our values?

Execution. How will we play? How will we win? 

The model is always evolving. "The best coaches are experimenting all the time." The court is our laboratory. 

What does physicality mean to you? A player like Sabine is physical in a different way than Danni, but I consider both "physical players." 

Excellent players think and solve problems, but don't allow thinking to get in the way of executing. They don't get paralysis by analysis

Don't let tactics get in the way of intangibles. There are no "great coaches" who only wage sport via intangibles. Creating advantage includes tactical excellence, too. 


If you have ambition to coach someday, the podcast is worth hearing. Have a "growth process" for each of the elements of the stool (borrowed from my volleyball blog).


Players and teams need to know where they stand...and framing that narrative in the ecosystem of both ego and dependence is a tough job.

Lagniappe. Don't be the Complaint Department. 
Lagniappe 2. Do the work. 








Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Basketball - Defensive Truths

Watching the Thunder-Spurs reminds basketball 'people' that defense is not an afterthought for teams with championship aspirations. 

"We hold these truths to be self-evident:"

Stops Start with Ball Pressure

Players are so good that defense can't allow 'early advantage'. Excellent defenders understand that they will get beaten sometimes.

Attack Mentality

In the words of Dr. Fergus Connolly, "don't bring a gun to a gunfight." Bring more. 

Harder for Longer

Excellence demands winning more possessions. Theory says, "No easy baskets" where reality means "fewer easy baskets." 

Foul Intelligently

Foul strategically. Take away advantage and never convert disadvantage (late clock, off-balance shots, bad shooters, threes) into easy shots from the line.

Power of Negative Thinking

"Basketball is a game of mistakes." Missed assignments are unacceptable as is lack of communication. 

Symmetry

Newell's advice was "get more and better shots than opponents." The corollary is to allow fewer and worse shots than yours.

Shrink Space

Chuck Daly's quote, "Offense is spacing and spacing is offense" means that "Defense shrinks space." Players should drop to the level of the ball and load to the ball. 

"Contestedness"

Billy Donovan tells players to be aware of contestedness. Challenged shots are lower percentage shots. Wemby redefines rim protection with his length.

Reduce Pass Quality Pete Carril shares that the "quality of the shot depends on the quality of the pass." Teams that pressure passers reduce shot quality. 

Talk

You won't find good defenses that don't talk. "Silent teams lose." It starts in practice.

Lagniappe. The "little things are big things." 

Monday, May 18, 2026

Basketball Originality

"Imagination is more important than information." - Einstein

Celebrate your originality. Be different to make a difference. What allows you to create sustainable competitive advantage. 


Graphic created using ChatGPT Plus

To get started, think of examples of how coaches made a difference through original thinking. 

Don Meyer had a marvelous website where he shared a wealth of basketball philosophy and knowledge...and took questions. He coached in the public domain. 

John Wooden has his Pyramid of Success. I used to print it out, laminate and distribute to players. One mother shared how her daughter looked at it and brought it to school every day in her gym bag...becoming a three-sport captain in high school. Later she graduated from Annapolis and served as a Naval officer. 

Dean Smith was a mathematics major. He developed his "Passing Game" offense and his 'delay offense', the Four Corners, famously associated with Phil Ford for us old timers. He was into 'analytics' before it became mainstream, emphasizing points per possession. He sometimes ran practices with "shot quality scoring" - assigning different points for layups, open and covered shots, and turnovers. 

Nolan Richardson's Razorbacks established a brand, playing "40 Minutes of Hell" and my kind of basketball. Coaches create legacy when they are able to translate their personality into their team's play. Identity relates the ability of individuals to blend their talents into collective excellence. 


Age conveys few advantages. One is the perspective of time, and the understanding of the values of faith and patience, flanking the peak of Wooden's "pyramid." How do you leverage persistence into performance? Sometimes teams win because they have the will to play "harder for longer." Bill Walsh said that, "Champions behave like champions before they are champions." Does our team do that? 


Lagniappe. Whether it's business, education, or the trades, success follows finding solutions. 

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Basketball - "Identity Crisis"


"Good artists borrow; great artists steal." - Picasso

Coach Steve Collins asks a great question. Everybody says "we're about mental toughness, execution, and identity." But are we? 

When the game is on the line, what behaviors show up? 

  • Quality shots or "me, too" shots 
  • Intensity or submaximal defensive effort 
  • "The ball is gold" or turnovers
  • Locked in mindset or mental mistakes (e.g. missed assignments)
  • Toughness or wilting under pressure
Sustaining Excellence

A more inclusive question is do our teams sustain focus, intensity, and discipline throughout the entirety of practice? 
  • Who's "all in" as "full tilt, full time?" 
  • "Who cheats the drill?"
  • "Who is coachable, working to follow directions?"
  • Who are the alphas dragging everyone higher? 
  • Do we have that "foxhole mentality" that binds us inseparably? 
End State or End of Practice?

In military operations (or ideally in any project), both leaders and followers should have clarity on "how the end will look." Initial operations often are met with resistance or delay ("the enemy gets a vote"). Operators need to have "Commander's Intent" about "intermediate steps." 

Clarity of Vision and Purpose

Teams reflect the personality, teaching, and effectiveness of leadership. 
Clear philosophy is necessary. Belichickian principles are clear:
  1. Know your job.
  2. Do your job. 
  3. Work hard. 
  4. Put the team first. 
Gen Z Asks "Why?" Clarity and Directness 
  • "Win this possession." Each game is a sum of individual actions.
  • "Play harder for longer." Finish stronger than opponents.
  • "Specials" - with players physically and mentally tired, we finished practice with "Specials" also known as "O-D-O" or "Three possession games." Each O-D-O would start with a BOB, SLOB, ATO, or free throw. Players understood that to succeed in highly contested games (close and late), they needed good decisions and execution. 
Lagniappe. "Soft skills" aren't soft. 



Saturday, May 16, 2026

Basketball - Commencement and Basketball Lessons

The bar for what passes as wisdom has fallen. Eric Church shares his philosophy, derived from the six stings on his guitar. 

1. Faith 

"Your faith is the low E of your life." 

John Wooden has "FAITH" flanking the top of his Pyramid of Success. Church encourages us to tend to our beliefs...reminiscent of Voltaire telling readers to "tend to their garden." 

2. Family

"It gives a chord its body."

"Family will rarely demand your time...call your people...let them see you when life is hard."

3. Spouse

"The person you choose to share your life with is the most important decision in your life." 

They amplify the strings or take your instrument apart. "Look for shared values over shared interests."

4. Ambition

"Ambition and resilience live on this string." They pull in opposite directions. 

"The world breaks everyone." - Hemingway  We all fail. Remember that ambitious givers do best

5. Community

"Temptation to perform for everyone and to belong to no one."  Put down roots and know those around you. "These are my people."

"Generosity...is how you make it." Take your community along.

6. You

The final string is the thinnest and most easily broken. The comments, criticism, or opinion of others should not change you. 

You are an 'original'. Make your story great. 

All strings will drift. Choose to make music not noise. You need to keep your life tuned. 

When I think of Carolina basketball...lots of memories surface.  

  • Dean Smith - pioneer, integrated the ACC, shot quality scoring, run-and-jump, unselfish enough to send Michael Jordan away to the NBA early. "The only man to hold Jordan under 20 points per game. 
  • "Four corners" - the signature delay game but works standalone
  • Phil Ford - the maestro of the Four Corners and architect of "Dean Smith time..." set your watch ahead ten minutes.
  • Charlie Scott...integrated the ACC and played on a Celtics NBA championship team. 
  • Carolina rallied from eight down in the final eighteen seconds to tie Duke and then won in overtime. 
Lagniappe. An underappreciated skill - pivoting. Pivoting helps "the art of separation." 

Lagniappe 2. The experience, not winning, promotes keeping kids in sports. 

View on Threads

Friday, May 15, 2026

Basketball - Lessons from Stockdale

"It matters not how strait the gait,

How charged with punishment the scroll,

I am the master of my fate:

The captain of my soul."

- Ernest Henley, Invictus


Future Admiral James Stockdale was shot down over North Vietnam in 1965 and spent about 7 1/2 years as a POW, much of it in solitary confinement ("cold soaks"). He wrote about his experiences in Courage Under Fire. 

He has a length education in Stoicism while a postgraduate student at Stanford and shared how Stoicism helped him cope with torture and incarceration. 

Many of his lessons came from the slave Epictetus who preached a curriculum "not about revenues or income, or peace or war, but about happiness and unhappiness, success and failure, slavery and freedom." 

The lessons pertain in sports, in which many athletes have adopted Stoicism and "control what you can control." Athletes can't control their opponent, conditions, officiating, injuries and fatigue. 

Jay Wright's emphasis on attitude relate to that approach and broadcast Charlie Jones wrote about control extensively in "That's Outside My Boat, Letting Go of What You Can't Control." 

Stockdale wrote, "You can only be a "victim" of yourself. It's all in how you discipline your mind." He also wrote that "it is those things that are "within his power" and those things that are "beyond his power." 

Athletes control their study, skill development, strength and conditioning, and self-maintenance of disciplined recovery, sleep, nutrition, and hydration. They also control in-game decision-making, communication, effort, and how their play impacts both the game and teammates. 

Epictetus wrote, "Everybody should play the game of life - that the best play it with "skill, form, speed, and grace." He emphasized that although what we control is limited, we have full control of how we respond. Lack of humility, poor sportsmanship, and selfishness are within our domain. He added, "Lameness is an impediment to the leg, but not to the Will." 

Stockdale concludes that, "Controlling your emotions is difficult but can be empowering."

Many key lessons from great coaches reflect Stoic principles:

1. "Basketball is sharing." - Phil Jackson    Sharing is a choice. 

2. "A lion never roars after a kill." - Dean Smith   Humility is a choice. 

3. "It's not your shot; it's our shot." - Jay Bilas    Teamwork is choice. 

Mental toughness decides games. Set the example for our players - mental toughness always and excuses never. 

Lagniappe. Mark Few and his staff invest in "Personal Growth Mondays." 


Thursday, May 14, 2026

It's Basketball Jeopardy...

Almost everyone loves "Jeopardy." Images or answers are used to test or to teach. Remember, your answers should be in the form of a question.  


Lagniappe. Trust the instincts of great leaders. 

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Basketball - Resonant

"Impossible is a word only found in the dictionary of fools." - Young Sherlock Holmes

Coaches have no magic words - only helpful ones that encourage remembering concepts. Find a few to make your own. "It takes patience to elevate the humble but motivated player." 

There are no more powerful lessons than losses. 

Turnovers kill dreams.
— recurring basketball principle emphasizing possession value. 
An extension of one of the Four Factors. Excellent teams do not give away games. 

Scores and stops.
concise framing of winning possessions and productive players. Another phrase encompasses, "Stops make runs." Still another version uses 3-7-2, three consecutive stops (a kill), seven times per half, for two halves. You can't succeed by playing "one end" of the court. 
 
Every day is player development day.” - Dave Smart
— encapsulates core developmental philosophy. Talent is king. Don Meyer's question was, "Do you want two better plays or two better plays?" Every excellent player needs individual attention. 
 
The Standard is the Standard.
— cultural expectation independent of roster/year. "Legacy programs" leave the organization in a better place. Without values and standards, sustained success is impossible. 

Coaches don’t set lineups. Players do.
— Seek socially portable lines. Players conveniently hold coaches responsible for shortcomings. Reality is Bill Parcells' "Coaches are the most selfish people in the world, wanting players that make us look good." Charles Barkley asked, "What is your NBA skill?" What gets you minutes, role, and recognition? 

Discipline determines destiny.
— What is our foul-discipline?. Fouls often convert opponent possessions to high points per possession chances. Don't convert a bad opponent possession into free throws. 

Don’t give away points.
— Possession efficiency is king. So many games reveal themselves as one team scoring "easily" and the opponent struggling. There is but one outcome to these. 

The game reveals itself to those who study.
— A teaching/scouting ethos shows up on the court. The teams that do not learn from mistakes are consigned to the scrapheap of history. When players have little "situational experience" they make hesitant or poor decisions.
Production is the scorecard.
— Meritocracy/performance show up on the scoreboard. Making others around a player better won't always in the scorebook. Screening, blocking out, getting 50-50 balls, help and recover defense, communication, and other vital skills only matter to winning. 
The best players make the team.
— This is not a union job. “There is no seniority system.” Who is most hurt by politics? Players. 
Basketball is sharing.” - Phil Jackson
— This integrates into every coach's teaching language and framing. Wooden said, "Happiness begins where selfishness ends." It dovetails with the "Deadly S's" that destroy teams - selfishness, softness, and sloth (laziness). 
Put people in position to succeed.
— Leaders create leaders" and "Results reflect leadership. An old quote says, "An army of asses led by a lion can defeat an army of lions led by an ass." 
Leading isn’t about getting our way, but finding the best way.
— This reflects principles of many coaches, especially Bill Walsh. Finding better ways often accompanies excavation - reading, study, watching clinics, or attending another coach's practice. 

If it looks like a foul, officials will call it."
- Certain actions don't always foul but will get called. Reaching in, hacking down (especially blocking shots), and bodying opponents gets attention - not in a good way. 

Players may say, "I know, I know" after making mistakes. If they know, then why continually repeat them - bad shots, missed assignments, driving or passing into traffic? This saying applies - "One mistake, bad play. Two mistakes, bad player. Three mistakes, bad coaching." 

Lagniappe. "Pain is pain." 

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Basketball - The Science of Connection*

*Information adapted from Amir Levine's MasterClass on connection. Although designed for "relationships," there's obvious overlap with coaching.  

"Never be a child's last coach." 

Everyone wants safety and security in life. 

Coping strategies impact our physical and mental performance. And it's not a plea for equal playing time, but attention to psychology. 

Some readers will just say, "BS, I'm out." Others seeking higher performance teams, read on. 

Connection Strategies

Connection begins before we're verbal...as studies have shown parent-child interactions vary greatly during early life.  

Major strategies are:

  • Security (about half of people)
  • Avoidance (a quarter)
  • Anxiety (another quarter) 
Science: Brain volume versus energy

The brain comprises about two percent of our mass but consumes 20 percent of our energy. The brain isn't good at shifting from "vigilance" (safety) energy use to "creativity and performance" in the prefrontal cortex. 

Scientists learned that test subjects perform better (consume less energy) when performing hard tasks with trusted contacts than with strangers. 

Sports application: Teamwork saves energy.

Exclusion - The Cyberball Experiment

Serious adverse effects also occur with social exclusion. 


Screenshot from MasterClass (highly recommended)

When one player becomes excluded, brain imaging shows enhanced areas related to pain, distress, and self-scrutiny light up. People sense loss of control and reduced self-esteem. "Why aren't they passing to me?" You're not sensitive, you're human. 

Examples

It shows up with relationship changes with a new pet, a new baby, or in sports, with new teammates and role changes. Being consistent, available, and responsive reduce those feelings.

Sports: minutes or role reduction can result in players acting out.  

Still Face Experiment

You can have exclusion with only two people. If a mother and baby are filmed and interacting normal, there's attention and smiling. When the mother is asked to turn around and turn back with a still face...there is a dramatic change. Distress occurs, agitation, and then crying. When the mother repeats the sequence and re-engages, distress resolves.  

When coaches stop coaching a player, "putting her in the doghouse," taking away reps or playing time, the same psychological response occurs. This is the coaching version of "ghosting." The "relationship homeostasis" gets disrupted.

Sports application: Secure people do not usually "ghost." Coaches with big doghouses usually have their own issues. 

The Need for Closure

This is a form of the brain trying to maintain connection. The "Need for Closure" is in a sense, a trick of our brain trying to keep a relationship alive. T. Swift sang about this: 

Maintaining and Improving Connection

Author Amir Levine advises 'hyperinclusion'. Small interactions, availability, and "coaching" re-establish safety. He advises CAARP - 


Levine advises forming a "Secure Village," because it's unreasonable to expect one person to meet all our emotional needs. Within a team, assistants, captains, and teammates all fill valuable roles. 

Sports: Create a culture of inclusion

Practical Strategies

  • Greet every player daily. Small but inclusive. This helps 'dial down' the detachment alarm system. 
  • Explain that playing time is not equal to value. The reserve player who works to improve, competes at all times, and is never a distraction adds value. 
  • Avoid figurative or literal 'ghosting'. Close the doghouse. 
  • Team building activities like group reading.
  • Open communication lines. Reminders about networking (don't hesitate to ask for letters of recommendation).
  • Recognize reserves. Dean Smith made it a point to credit role players who impacted winning. Stars always get noticed.     

The "safety bubble" coaches create helps our physical, immune, and emotional status by stress reduction. 

As coaches, we want to either "turn off" or "turn down" the alarm system that changes in player status or relationships can project. Fear consumes bandwidth and connection frees it.

Players play best when correction does not threaten connection.

Summary: 

  • Relationships are complex. We seek safety and security and can fall short with avoidance or anxiety. 
  • Experiments validate this with either the Cyberball Experiment or Still Face Experiment, where figurative "ghosting" occurs. 
  • Exclusion produces predictable angst and loss of self-esteem.
  • Healthier connections result in better physical and emotional health.
  • Relationship awareness and CARRP can "tone down" emotional alarms. 
Lagniappe. (Via AI)

Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment: First published in 2010 and translated into over 42 languages, the book has sold more than 3 million copies and offers a framework for understanding why relationships succeed or fail based on three distinct attachment styles:

  • Secure: Individuals who are comfortable with intimacy, warm, and loving. 

  • Anxious: Individuals who are often preoccupied with their relationships and worry about their partner’s ability to love them back. 
  • Avoidant: Individuals who equate intimacy with a loss of independence and constantly try to minimize closeness. 
Lagniappe 2. Set the example. 

Lagniappe 3. Dean Smith on 1-on-1 meetings with players. 

 

Monday, May 11, 2026

Basketball- Boss or Leader?

"People by and large become what they think about themselves." = Dr. Bob Rotella in Golf Is Not a Game of Perfect

As many readers are young people, choose to become the person you want to become. Do you want to become a boss or a leader? Answering that question escapes some in leadership roles. 

Overlap can occur, but what separates leaders from bosses?


Leaders inspire as they prioritize team development. They make every decision with the best interest of the team as their "North Star." Brad Stevens says, "What does our team need now?"

They consider how planning, preparation, practice, and decisions impact both the well-being of the team and the development of individuals. 

When done well, leadership creates something that people want to become a part of. The whole becomes greater than the sum of the parts. Training and decisions become "force multipliers." 

In ancient Rome, a position existed called "anteambulo," literally meaning "walking in front of." They helped smooth the path for those who followed. Another expression relates to "finding canvases for others to paint on." Coaches put players and teams in a position to succeed in sport and later in life. 

In Adam Grant's book, Give and Take, he describes personal styles as givers, matchers, and takers. If you only give, you will exhaust yourselves. The people who do best are "ambitious givers." 

It's not all sunshine and roses as leaders must make difficult decisions, "Sophie's Choice" and navigate hard conversations. 

Developing leadership is a choice. 

Lagniappe. Conceptual teaching. 

Lagniappe 2. There’s a Korean proverb involving a parrotbill and a stork:

If the parrotbill tries to walk like the stork, it will tear its legs.”

The bird is usually the Parrotbill (a “sparrow-sized bird”), contrasted with the long-legged Stork.

The meaning is:

  • Don’t imitate someone whose circumstances, abilities, or nature are very different from yours.

  • Trying to copy people with advantages you don’t have can hurt you.

  • Know your own scale and strengths.

Another analogy is, "...keeping up with the Joneses." Practically speaking, don't apply NBA statistics to young players. Track your own. 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

"Courage Is Contagious"

We are more sheeplike than we want to believe. Experiments prove this when people are shown different colored cards. Four observers are shown four blue cards and we call them blue. But then if we're shown a red card and the first three (planted) subjects call it "orange", we have a high likelihood of caving and calling it orange.

It's not "bullying" in the classic sense but "going along." 

As coaches, some seek "a better way" realizing there may not be a best way, while others grasp "my way or the highway." 

If ten coaches tell us that preteens should spend most of their time on three point shooting, do we go along or dissent? 

Controversy appears on other matters - shot clocks, zone defense for youth, traditional drills versus innovative, block practice versus random practice, the amount of scrimmaging, and so on. Courage won't always apply to an argument or a behavior. If the majority in Missouri say, "show me" about shot clocks, that's a matter of taste. 


There's change. As of today, 32 states use a shot clock in high school basketball in some form or fashion, according to the NFHS (National Federation of State High School Associations)

There's cognitive bias working, too. We fall victim to the fundamental attribution error when we blame others based on character or competence where in a similar circumstance we argue that decisions or results followed the situation. "He's not that good a coach" becomes "nobody could win with my players." 

Courage is personal. Our coaching role, mentors, and approach depend on circumstances. 

Lagniappe. Do our people may match our pace. 







Saturday, May 9, 2026

Basketball - Apply "Operational Wisdom" Forced by Failure

"The only way to move ahead becomes to leave the past behind."

Everyone has practices or games beset with failure. In soccer, you feel as though you have "two left feet" or in baseball you're "wild in the strike zone" (throwing fat pitches) or "overmatched" at bat.

Excellent players learn from losses and move on, applying operational wisdom forced by failure. Bad shots, turnovers, and fouls are part of everyone's history. Move on

Three Primary Tests 

  • "Always do your best."
  • "Make everyone around you better."
  • "Impact the game." (Give the game what it needs.)
The latter two are the most important metrics of success. Complementary players are often integral to success by defending, limiting mistakes, and facilitating teammates' success with communication and good decisions. 

Passing the Tests

  • Attention to detail in preparation and play
  • Play in the moment. "Next play."
  • Serve the team. Do what is in the best interest of others.
Sweating the Small Stuff

  • Ask "What does our team need now?"
  • Learn to refocus or 'reset' (key words - this play, or "take a breath.")
  • Communicate to inform and energize teammates. 
Some players have the character and competence to dominate play for stretches. Others "recruit" teammates in the moment to raise the level of team play...the "mouth in the house." Being a vocal leader is a superpower, too. 

A player doesn't need double digit scoring, reams of rebounds, or armies of assists to earn trust and get on the floor. But they have to contribute something positive. Impact the team. Impact winning. 

Lagniappe. Department of redundancy department. Award yourself athleticism. When you walk onto the court at tryouts, two abilities stand out - skill and athleticism. They're the "wow factor." 

 Lagniappe 2. When completing the sentence, "Basketball is a game of ________ , what first comes to mind? Understanding the implied symmetry, "Basketball is a game of separating and finishing. Defenses seek to prevent separating and finishing. Add to your toolbox. 

Friday, May 8, 2026

Basketball - Reinventing Ourselves

Fragility is real. Nassim Taleb wrote Antifragility, which discusses systems that improve under stress.

Teams struggle with fragility - fatigue, injury, mismatched parts. The long season exposes most. Ray Dalio compares it to evolution


Evolution is 'antifragile' because it "rewards" organisms able to adapt to their environments.

Basketball is literally not the same game created by Naismith. Rules changes, player development, strength and conditioning, injury and load management - everything changes.

Arguments exist that even postseason basketball is not the same as regular season basketball. The intensity is high and the game is officiated differently

AI can provide some clarity:

“Price makes news” a market term applied to officiating

Fans say:

“Refs are letting them play”

But what’s actually happening:

  • Players play more physically
  • Contact increases
  • Fouls stay similar
  • Marginal calls feel different

The narrative becomes:

“Playoff whistle is different”

Clean synthesis

Officiating doesn’t change as much as the environment around it.

The best way to make our teams "antifragile" is creating depth, in which "redundancy" allows for more rest, better performance at the margins, and a smaller dropoff with fouls, fatigue, injury. The best teams and coaches "evolve" during the second season. 

Lagniappe. Learn to use different AI engines for different work. ChatGPT does well (in my experience) with systems, analogy, and philosophy. Gemini and Pilot (products from Google and Microsoft) work especially well with components of their ecosystems. Claude.ai (from Anthropic) has a reputation for superior writing and editing. 

What we "get" from AI (a 'hallucination') isn't always correct and varies widely with the "prompt" - our request for AI information. Here's a three paragraph take on fragility and playoff basketball from Claude.ai. 

Taleb's central insight in Antifragile is that some systems don't merely withstand stress and volatility — they actually improve because of it. Basketball, particularly playoff basketball, is a near-perfect laboratory for this idea. Teams that have been battle-tested through adversity during the regular season — injuries forcing role players into expanded roles, losing streaks demanding tactical adjustments, close games requiring late-game execution — often arrive at the playoffs more antifragile than teams that cruised through an easy schedule. The chaos didn't just not break them; it made them better. The 2016 Golden State Warriors, for all their regular-season dominance, were arguably less antifragile than the Cavaliers that year — Cleveland had been forged in difficulty, and when the series got genuinely hard, they had the adaptive capacity to come back from 3-1.

The playoff format itself is an antifragility engine. A seven-game series is specifically designed to introduce enough variance and stress that the more resilient team — not just the more talented one — tends to emerge. Stochastic shocks (a star getting hurt, a referee call shifting momentum, a hostile road crowd) separate teams that respond and adapt from teams that crack. Coaches who are antifragile thinkers — Doc Rivers in his prime, Gregg Popovich, Erik Spoelstra — actually use adversity as information, adjusting schemes mid-series in ways that make their team progressively harder to beat as a series extends. Teams that rely on a single system or a single star are, in Taleb's framework, fragile — one disruption and the whole structure collapses.

At the player level, antifragility distinguishes good players from great ones. Michael Jordan, LeBron James, and Nikola Jokić share the quality of playing better when the game is hardest — when defenses load up, when the moment is biggest, when fatigue accumulates. Taleb would call this the opposite of a "turkey" — an entity that mistakes an absence of visible stress for permanent safety. Fragile players have great regular seasons and disappear in the playoffs (see: countless "regular season All-Stars"). Antifragile players treat the increased pressure of playoff basketball not as a burden but as the very condition that unlocks a higher level of their game. The playoffs don't reveal character so much as they reveal structure — and Taleb's framework gives us a precise vocabulary for what we're actually watching when we see who rises and who wilts.