Don't find fifty ways to lose games.
Every game coaches see and lament 'unforced errors'. Often, they arise not from lack of skill but lack of focus.
In The Bear, Uncle Jimmy explains how Steve Bartman didn't lose the game for the Cubs, but a cascade of errors starting with Alex Gonzalez. "You don't want to be unfocused. You wan't to be the guy, be the #$%*ing guy. Unforced errors are contagious."
The best teams don't give games away. You have to beat them because they don't give games away.
What causes unforced errors and what are some of them?
1. Everyone is not on the same page. This shows up in a variety of ways, like miscommunication about defenses/assignments. Blown assignments allowing one or more easy baskets leave indelible pain, especially in the postseason. "Readback" diminishes mistakes. Give and get feedback.
2. Mental mistakes. Turnovers come in two flavors, decision-making and execution. Great players and teams win in space. Poorer ones fail to space and drive and pass into traffic. "Your parents early lessons include 'do not play in traffic'.
3. Lack of discipline. Undisciplined play shows up in many ways.
- Poor shot selection (I like Doc Rivers' term shot turnovers)
- Bad fouling like reaching in, fouling perimeter shots, swatting down on shot blocking, and fouling low percentage shots...
- Bad transition defense often stems from lack of awareness combined with insufficient effort.
Love this baseline out of bounds play to steal a lay up that Coach Jaume Ponsarnau ran with Valencia. pic.twitter.com/YWqY6KmjI2
— Ryan Pannone (@RyanPannone) November 17, 2023
Lagniappe 2. Sports rewards explosiveness.
8 ways to add some diversity to your box jumps
— Gerry DeFilippo (@Challenger_ST) November 16, 2023
1. Quadruple pogo to box jump
2. Half-kneel to SL landing
3. Lateral half kneel to bilateral landing
4. Pulse to box jump
5. Forward to lateral to box jump
6. Reverse pogo to rotational jump
7. Lateral to box jump
8. Skater to box… pic.twitter.com/TCaDnMx0HO