“A primary goal of #teaching anything is the advantage that learning gives to people over their competitors who haven’t been as well taught.”
— Bob Starkey (@CoachBobStarkey) November 2, 2024
-Bob Knight pic.twitter.com/60hXwA1ezv
Coaching edges arise in many domains: (examples)
- Player development
- Managing tempo - practice, games, timeouts
- Winning matchups, creating mismatches
- System implementation - matching skill sets to mission
- "Absolutes" - limiting turnovers and fouls
- Video study and analysis
- Winning close and late
- Motivation
- Low percentage shots
- Undisciplined fouling
- Decision-based turnovers
- Unskilled shooting
- Lack of ball containment and penetration containment
- Execution-based turnovers
Don’t Guard Yourself
— Steve Dagostino (@DagsBasketball) November 1, 2024
So many players guard themselves by either not making good reads or by not having the skill to execute on the read. This makes the game tougher and results in them being less productive and effective.
The game is hard enough, players don’t need to make it… pic.twitter.com/IbWZea65Xr
🏀 Bulls assistant coach Dan Craig explains why screening angles are the most important aspect of forcing defenders over a screen and creating a trigger. pic.twitter.com/mMhtuU5U9z
— Coaching U (@Coaching_U) November 2, 2024
Lagniappe 3. Process and results
“First one to practice, last one to leave, is usually a good indication of who is shooting it well” - Dana Altman
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) October 25, 2024
pic.twitter.com/7lVoPRmLYU