MasterClass professors share life lessons acquired over decades. Their wisdom applies to basketball.
"May I have your complete attention?" - Ken Burns
The first price of progress is to pay attention. Some have that gift or hone it through techniques like mindfulness that sharpens attention, even for elementary school-aged children.
Werner Herzog: Focus (squirrels don't become great directors by collecting acorns). One great scene won't make a movie.
Great films aren't compilations of anecdotes. Winners develop a rigorous process to build comprehensive skill.
Spike Lee: Theory versus practice, practice matters. "You have to feed your people." Successful coaches add value. I was thinking about free throw shooting tips. James Pauley says, "never leave a free throw short." In A Sense of Where You Are, John McPhee shared a tip to aim for the middle of the four bolts that attach the rim to the backboard (now it often is the name of the rim manufacturer).
Ken Burns: "Storytelling is about conflict" and finding out what happens. Every game won't be art. The Bucks-Nets and Hawks-Sixers were grinders about surviving great performances.
Story is the arc of the narrative, the beginning, the middle, and the end. I've often told middle school parents that the experience is just one leg of a journey filled with starts and stops. The "trend" is away from basketball, fewer "basketball players" and more soccer, volleyball, and lacrosse players playing basketball.
Ken Burns remarks, "Process says, "not done.""
- Pay attention.
- Develop a great process.
- Have confidence because of your substance.
- Add value.
- Improve your process.
- Build skill across the arc of the game.