Encourage players to make memories. Emotion helps encode enduring memories. The more intense, good or bad, the emotion, the stronger the memory. And sport rewards and punishes us with indelible memories.
Memories are uniquely personal, uniquely meaningful. Yours may be similar and hopefully as significant for you. They're not in special order.
1) "Havlicek stole the ball."
I was only ten and in the Boston suburbs, we had the Celtics, Bill Russell, Havlicek, and my favorite, Sam Jones.
2) Garden of delights. I got to play twice in the old Garden, the shrine of Boston basketball. Three decades later, my daughters also got to play there twice in the Eastern Massachusetts championship games. I can't say that watching was more thrilling than playing.
Old, grainy video keeps memories alive if not fresh.
3) "I love it when a plan comes together." The sequence starts with a BOB, ATO with a slipped cross-screen. The defense collapse on our star player and Sadie (a future All-State volleyballer) gets a layup. A big win over a strong area program.
THE NUMBERS ARE BLACK AND WHITE :
— Chris Steed (@steeder10) September 13, 2024
From 6 feet - 25 feet players shoot ~ the same FG%.
This is true from Varsity level HS to the NBA.
Aside from EOC/EOG situations, there is no reason to shoot mid range shots.
You can't sustainably win basketball games unless your EFG%… pic.twitter.com/lK1BfN3sLI
Lagniappe 3. Roll and Replace has been huge for Villanova. It's spreading.
A Roll/Replace Ball Screen is a lethal action in basketball
— Matt Hackenberg (@CoachHackGO) September 12, 2024
NBA and college teams use it extensively, and it's making its way to high school basketball
Here’s 5 reasons why you should add some roll/replace to your offensive package: pic.twitter.com/viLoC3wOYp