Don't judge a book by its cover. Don't judge coaches by their books. Character, coaching and writing ability aren't closely related.
Urban Meyer, Aaron Hernandez's coach, wrote a terrific book, Above the Line.
Here are some "priority" thoughts I recall and some notes:
1) Crossing the red line. When you cross that line around the court, be fully engaged and ready to go.
2) E + R = O (event plus response = outcome)
3) 10-80-10 players sort themselves into top and bottom ten percent and the 'middle eighty percent'. Meyer required players in the top ten percent to bring a middle class teammate to 'drag them upward'.
4) It takes a lot to achieve "escape velocity" from mediocrity.
5) "Below the line" behaviors include blame and complaining. As players, we decide to live "above the line" or "below the line."
Here are a few quotes:
“Average leaders have quotes. Good leaders have a plan. Exceptional leaders have a system.” (habits stack into process and systems)“We grade our players on every measure of performance possible at Ohio State. We grade their performances in games, practices, weight room, conditioning, nutrition, rehab, and especially, in the classroom and tutor sessions." (at the University of North Carolina, women's soccer coach Anson Dorrance provides the 'competitive cauldron' to get 'continual ascension' from players...and over twenty national championships)
Lagniappe. Pop-balance-stop-fluidity. Coleman Ayers shares.