Thursday, December 31, 2020
Basketball: Should the Shot Clock Be Universal?
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Basketball: Fun Actually
Spoiler alert! Tonight I'm on a panel discussion about Making Youth Basketball Fun. Does anyone set out to make youth basketball No Fun?
"Are you going out to practice, Susie?" "No, Daddy, I'm going out to win, to beat the other girls into submission, to exert my will and to make them cry." "That's my girl."
Here are just a few of the thoughts I've picked up during half a century of basketball.
Be positive. Kids aren't moved by cynicism, sarcasm, or cruelty. "You catch more flies with honey than vinegar," is what Dad always said.
Before tryouts last season, a little girl came up to me and said, "Hi, Coach. My name is Naomi, and I'm REALLY EXCITED to be here." That's what I'm talking about.
Lagniappe: "Things turn out best for those who make the best of how things turn out." - John Wooden
It won't always go how we planned.
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
Basketball: Redesigning Players, Just Two Things
- First, what do remove - baggage, outdated, or ineffective methods?
- Second, what do we add?
- Redeploy the people.
- Eliminate drills and teaching that don't advance the story.
- Reduce physical errors (e.g. turnovers, fouls, bad shots) and emotional setbacks (e.g. negativity, fear, lack of confidence). Tracking can change behaviors.
Teach players to see the game in terms of geometry not just functional options. Attacking space with skill translates across team sports (soccer "through" pass, backdoor cuts/attacking the front foot, hit-and-run, crossing and delay routes).
- ***Defeat and apply pressure.
- Run and stop transition.
- Score at three levels (we can argue about midrange scoring) and defend it.
- To win in the halfcourt, see what works - exploit or contain it.
- Have a delay game and a plan to fight delay.
- ***Play longer and harder than opponents (implies physical/mental edge).
Sunday, December 27, 2020
Basketball: All Three Point Shots Are Not Created Equal
I thought it was a good decision considering LeBron's angle of attack, the degree of "contestedness," and Green's proficiency. Here's Danny Green's 2019-2020 shot chart. FWIW, Green's three-point percentage from the top of the arc was 21.4% on a small sample size.
Thad Matta's Ohio State used this against us on a foreign tour to Windsor. They ran this cut out and decision-making read to a skip, curl or flex cut. It was hard to guard because of the decision-making. pic.twitter.com/6eDl419dNT
— Chris Oliver (@BBallImmersion) December 23, 2020
Lagniappe 2: Chris Webber on rookies, "You have to show your value by doing the little things."
Lagniappe 3: The end of the Celtics game.
Basketball: Success Begins with Spacing.
Ted Lasso reminds us that player-led teams have power. He uses the example of Meg in A Wrinkle in Time, struggling with the mantle of leadership. Coaches get players to embrace leadership.
“That it has to be me. It can’t be anyone else. I don’t understand Charles, but he understands me. I’m the one who’s closest to him. Father’s been away for so long, since Charles Wallace was a baby. They don’t know each other. And Calvin’s only known Charles for such a little time. If it had been longer then he would have been the one, but—oh, I see, I see, I understand, it has to be me. There isn’t anyone else.” - A Wrinkle in Time.
We can't discuss spacing enough. Spacing doesn't guarantee good offense. Poor spacing guarantees bad offense. Watch any NBA game and learn spacing. Teams fill the corners and make the defense defend the whole court. They use spacing to create driving lanes and passing lanes.
Watch how Michigan uses solid execution via the short roll and spacing. They get dunks off spacing. Commonly in the NBA, teams get open corner threes.
Great spacing confounds doubling and trapping.
What spacing concepts must players own?
- Chuck Daly's "Spacing is offense and offense is spacing."
- "Winners win in space."
- Bigs with perimeter skills add great value (KD, AD).
- Defense use symmetry principles. "Shrink the court." Strong defense compromises spacing...load to the ball, drop to the level of the ball.
- Poor spacing drains energy.
- The ball has energy and cannot move in a crowd.
- Ball and body movement extracts energy from defenses.
- Ball reversal with spacing forces long closeouts.
- Outstanding perimeter shooting enhances spacing.
- Players who "draw 2" create spacing.
- Packed defenses are vulnerable to spacing (UMBC beats Virginia)
A Pakistani doctor shared a fable about his country. A young man was poor and miserable, seeking wisdom from a guru. He walked miles and climbed a mountain to meet him. The guru said, "I see you are poor, miserable, and depressed. I have good news. It will last only another seven years." And the young man replied, "and then I'll be rich and happy?" "No, you'll be used to it."
Don't accept bad basketball. We can't become used to it.
Lagniappe 3. More spacing magic.
The Double Gap Drive concept is taking over college basketball
— Adam Spinella (@Spinella14) December 26, 2020
Down 1, Ohio State went to it as a clearout, with a low-post seal, to try and take the lead. Quality look pic.twitter.com/QAkLucbkXH
Saturday, December 26, 2020
Basketball: 10 for 21, Ideas for Next Season. Copy Success.
"If you're lucky, you can imagine the truth." - Salman Rushdie
Ascendant results demand novel approaches. 2020-2021 is my "couch coach" season as youth basketball is shut down. Time is opportunity for reading and study. I'm reading The Playmaker's Advantage, which is highly geeked up science for performance enhancement. You're warned.
Here are ten ideas, many shamelessly stolen from other coaches.
1. Warmup efficiently. "Lithuania Layups" / speed layups.
Speed layups for warm-up via the Lithuania team at the #JonesCup. I like it because most of warm-up IMO is about getting shots as we shoot more than we get layups in games...the other part is a short burst of energy & enthusiasm so this would take care of that. pic.twitter.com/UQXy7w1Ozg
— Chris Oliver (@BBallImmersion) July 29, 2018
2. Model what you want to see. "Leave the best version of yourself" on the floor every day. Children don't feed off sarcasm, putdowns, and cynicism. Frustration is our companion but not our friend. When it arrives, resort to "always do your best." Don't feed the monsters.
3. Improve timeout organization. Doug Brotherton lines up the players in the game 1 through 5 left to right. With youth teams and everyone getting minutes, sometimes in different spots, it can get confusing. Simplify.
4. Listen to Helen Mirren. In her MasterClass, she explains career success.
- "Show up on time."
- "Don't be an a*hole."
Friday, December 25, 2020
Basketball: Christmas Wishes Under the Tree and A Bit of What Works
Motivational posters make good gifts when matched to individuals. Help players develop a culture of teamwork, excellence, and accountability.
It's fifty years since Bouton's masterpiece. He wraps it up, "You see, you spend a good piece of your life gripping a baseball, and in the end it turns out that it was the other way around all the time.”
I'm not sure how this kept working for Villanova tonight against Marquette, but it did. Screen the inside of the top of the zone, then overload it. I would guess most of you do something like this already. If not, super simple. #XsOs pic.twitter.com/TW1wftdCnN
— Coach Tony Miller (@tonywmiller) December 24, 2020
Thursday, December 24, 2020
Basketball: Fast Five, Thoughts from Five Great Books for Basketball Coaches and Holiday Shoppers
"It's what you learn after you know it all that counts." - John Wooden
"The differences between the person we are today and whom we become in five years are the people we meet and the books we read."
The death of expertise should terrify us. Twenty-five percent of Americans never read a book. If we get all our content from Fox or MSNBC, we're missing out. I can't force players I coach to read; I want to inspire them to read.
Readers unearth new worlds and unimagined possibilities. Excellent coaches like George Raveling, Gregg Popovich, Steve Kerr, Kevin Eastman, and Mike Neighbors are voracious readers.
What we don't know literally can kill us. I hope to whet your appetite with a few suggestions, chosen for content and writing quality.
The Positive Dog by Jon Gordon. Gordon extols the virtue of positivity via a heartwarming story. “Being positive won’t guarantee you’ll succeed. But being negative will guarantee you won’t.”-- Jon Gordon It's appropriate for ten-year-olds and octogenarians.
The Compound Effect by Darren Hardy. Hardy informs us how productive habits, like study or saving, become magnified by compounding. "Small choices + consistency + time = significant results." The one sentence I remember from the book is, "winners are trackers."
Deep Survival by Laurence Gonzales. Gonzales shares the many dangers that can befall even modestly adventuresome people. I didn't think snorkeling in the Caribbean would put me face to face with a shark. And mountaineers who rope themselves together for safety are more likely to die. Did you expect that hiking could put you face-to-face with a bear? In the heat of battle, tunnel vision can kill us or someone we love. The information transfers to basketball. The strongest swimmers are more likely to drown because of overconfidence. "Winners win in space."
Give and Take by Adam Grant. Be a giver. Phil Jackson could sum up the book with his quote, "Basketball is sharing."
I'd be shocked if Jaylen Brown hasn't read Grant's book.
Jaylen Brown: "Marcus Smart may not get the credit, but he kept us together. The pace he played with, the control of the game. I'm looking forward to him in that role."
— Keith Smith (@KeithSmithNBA) December 24, 2020
The Boys in the Boat by Daniel Brown. Brown weaves three great stories together, the suffering of the Great Depression, the rise of fascism in Nazi Germany in the early 1930s, and the origins of the US Olympic crew team which competed in 1936.
Brown shares our finest and basest portions of humanity and how we can triumph together.
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
Basketball: Microaggressions, "Racism without Racists"
"I didn't mean it like that." What we say, what we do, and what we ask all leave an impression.
Microaggressions are the everyday slights, indignities, putdowns, and insults that people of color, women...and those who are marginalized experience." They occur because "they are outside the level of conscious awareness of the perpetrator." Some have called this "racism without racists."
And they leave scars or open wounds that we don't know exist.
What words trigger us? When I was in the Navy making rounds at Bethesda Naval Hospital, a few patients asked, "what country are you from?" Nowadays, I might answer, "The People's Republic of Massachusetts" but then it was just "Massachusetts." Everyone makes assumptions that may have no factual basis.
When people call me, "Mister" Sen, that's no problem. In fact, many patients call me "Ron," except for people who knew me as a youngster, who might say, "Ronnie." The opposite of a microaggression occurs, too. One parent, who played professionally overseas, always called me, "Coach."
Minorities and women have faced microaggressions since...forever. When I hear someone called "articulate" then I think that presumes they shouldn't be. Microaggressions happen in multiple settings.
Here are excerpts from a paper on classroom microaggressions:
- Failing to learn to pronounce or continuing to mispronounce the names of students after they have corrected you.
- Scheduling tests and project due dates on religious or cultural holidays.
- Setting low expectations for students from particular groups, neighborhoods, or feeder patterns.
- Assigning student tasks or roles that reinforce particular gender roles or don’t allow all students flexibility across roles and responses.
- "I don't see color."
- "I have black friends."
- Blacks being followed by security in stores (presuming criminal intent).
- "All lives matter" has become a recent example.
- At a postseason game over a decade ago, opposing fans chanted "you can't read" at a black girl on our team.
- An assertive female manager is labeled "bitch," while her male counterpart is described as "a forceful leader."
- Whistles or catcalls are heard from men as a woman walks down the street.
- A young person uses the term "gay" to describe a movie she didn't like (Being gay is associated with negative and undesirable characteristics.
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Basketball: "Enduring" Lessons from Cartoons to Champions
Cartoons are not children's stories. They reveal innovation and choices, our heroic and baser nature. Comedy imprints truths.
Monday, December 21, 2020
Basketball: Chris Oliver/Dennis Gates Podcast Notes, Teaching and Learning
Coaches shape events. As a player, fashion your game via your habits and learning. Do not become a victim. Be present and engaged, leaving an impression, depth.
Education changes behavior. Chris Oliver hosts Cleveland State Coach Dennis Gates discussing education methods. Coach Gates has a Masters in Adult Education. I share excerpts below.
"You have to have a learning primer" to absorb information. It's the "ability of the young people to absorb" that matters. The Coursera course, "Learning How to Learn" shares worthwhile exercises.
"Learning is permanent change." - Chris Oliver
Coach Gates advocates for finding solutions...
No one way to learn. "Visual learning" through social media drowns out basketball teaching. Players may grasp a concept via a clip more than on a board. (Youtubetrimmer.com allows us to extract clips as short as five seconds from a YouTube video.)
Players make us better coaches by showing us what they do or don't understand. Either I lacked the ability to teach run and jump to middle school girls or they couldn't grasp "trap and go."
"Come to me with a solution." - Chris
Coach Gates says, "H.O.T." meaning higher order thinking, analogous to a quarterback's progressions. (Young people must learn how to learn, how to grow, how to resolve conflict, how to overcome disappointment. Not all adults have these skills.)
"Inquiry-based learning" expects players to learn by exploring. Knowledge builds instincts.
Gates says, "you are a participant in your own rescue." The danger is being on the bench.
"Discussions can motivate athletes to be prepared..." Coach Gates hopes that players will apply lessons learned on the court throughout their lives.
Not enough to understand but to understand why...
Reflective learning. Relate learning from your lives into the game. Reflective learning prevents recurrent errors...learn from other's mistakes. Coaches have reflective learning as we rewatch games finding what we can do better.
Film study. Translate what you see into future actions. (UNC soccer coach Anson Dorrance shows positive clips because he believes negative clips hurt his players.)
Player-led learning. Assign players to supervise the learning/self-teaching. Mistakes in practice are valuable, replacing mistakes in games.
Develop leadership. Program has a sports psychologist. They have a "Freshman Captain," and teach conflict resolution and other skills.
Freedom. Learn through experience. "We don't experiment in games."
Affirmations. Hard for young men to trust. Positivity helps confidence. He touches players (e.g. on the shoulder) while building trust. Chris mentions wording, "why are you late" can become, "I'm happy you're here."
Correction. Feedback is necessary. It can't always be positive. But we can frame an action as a better choice or action.
Fixing body language. Do you choose, "bad shot" or "how can we do it better?" There is a growth expectation to overcome bad body language. (Pat Summitt and other coaches filmed the bench to measure engagement and body language.)
Observation. Note how actions impact situations and help the team succeed. It might be learning from models.
Discipline. Coach Gates sees it as a branch of knowledge. Discipline is also behavior choice for the benefit of the individual and the team.
Lagniappe. From the Knicks to the 2019 Champion Raptors with Scout with Bryan