An "elevator pitch" is a summary, distillation of an idea or process into a one-minute elevator trip. Here's the pitch.
Where does greatness arise? In tennis, it began in a rundown, ancient facility with coaching from a 77 year-old woman with a bad hip. Some from "The Little Group" of 7U with backpacks, stuffies, and racquets became champions.
Some want to be great - exceptional students, exceptional players, exceptional leaders. Coaches don't produce that fire. We add oxygen.
Special isn't born, it's boring. Perfect your attack footwork, your pickup and shooting motion, and deliver passes on time and on target.
Here's the Chat GPT Plus "top three summary" from "The Talent Code"
1. Deep Practice Builds Skill Faster Than Anything Else
Deep Practice means:
Breaking skills into small chunks
Operating at the edge of your ability—where mistakes occur
Slowing down, correcting, refining
Repetitive, mindful reps that strengthen myelin (the literal insulation around neural circuits)
Why it matters: Errors are not setbacks; they are the raw material of growth. The athlete who practices with attention, precision, and purpose accelerates faster than the one who simply “puts in time.”
For coaching: This is the foundation of game-speed drills, blocked-to-random progression, and high-quality feedback loops. It’s where volleyball, basketball, or any pursuit becomes craftsmanship.
2. Ignition: Motivation Is Sparked by Identity and Emotion
A role model (“someone like me did this… so maybe I can too”)
A defining moment (“I want to be part of that”)
A vision of future identity (“this is who I am becoming”)
Why it matters: Without ignition, practice stalls. With ignition, players self-drive improvement with remarkable intensity.
For coaching: This is the heart of culture building—role models, storytelling, reinforcing identity (“We are MVB; we train like champions”), and creating an environment where effort means something.
3. Master Coaching: Great Coaches Are Talent Whisperers
They give clear, concise, actionable feedback
They create a culture of safety and high expectations
They model calm, patient, craftsperson energy
They teach athletes how to practice, not just what to do
Why it matters: Coaching quality is multiplicative. Great coaches create great learners; great learners create great outcomes.
For coaching: This is Brad Stevens’ “be a truth-teller,” Wooden’s “be quick but don’t hurry,” and your own emphasis on clarity, decisiveness, and identity-building. The coach’s job is not just instruction. They shape the environment where deep practice and ignition thrive.
The Talent Code in One Sentence
Skill is built through deep, intentional practice, fueled by emotional ignition, and guided by master coaching.
Suggest sources for 'Coaching Lessons'.
1. Steal something great. Learn from the best.
"Top" is a wicked 2-guard action
— Matt Kramer (@coachk6463) February 5, 2026
Get the ball in the paint and provide shots at the rim pic.twitter.com/wV1tYYvrmg
