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Thursday, April 30, 2026

Leadership, Keeping a Basketball Leadership Journal, and More

Leadership is like a muscle. When we don't exercise it, it atrophies. Develop a strategy to maintain and expand leadership. 

What Do Leaders Do?

  • Facilitate execution within organizations.
  • Coordinate people, strategy, and operations.
  • Identify and solve problems
  • Carry out missions assigned by higher authorities. 
  • "Make future leaders."  

Basketball example: Coach Krzyzewski - five fingers become a fist, far stronger than any individual finger.  

Growing Leadership 

As coaches, how do we train leaders? Intentional and distributed leadership exposes players to leadership. 

  • Model excellence
  • Teach communication skills 
  • Be positive
  • Assign leadership opportunities (lead drills, explore short topics)
  • Provide feedback  
Basketball example: Dean Smith taught principles with a quote of the day and concepts of the day. "A lion never roars after a kill." 

Leadership Culture

Everyone can lead. Cal rugby coach Jack Clark expects all players to lead with leadership traits - punctuality, hard work, no distractions. 

Create the expectation that leadership comes with the job. Remove the requirement that you need titles to lead. 

Basketball example: Teach servant leadership in the mold of Don Meyer and Dick Bennett. 

Leadership Journal 

Leadership journals don't have to be elaborate. Write down opportunities for leadership, how they carried out leadership, and the results. 

Adam Grant doesn't explicitly create a template for a leadership journal in his Organizational Psychology books. If he did, it might include:

  • The leadership opportunity (situation)
  • What did I do? (Take a timeout, let them figure it out)
  • How did it turn out? 
  • Would I do something different next time? 
  • What's the NBA - "next best action?"  
Basketball example: Group reading and study... e.g. Jay Bilas's "Toughness," James Kerr's "Legacy" or Michael Useem's "The Leadership Moment" are examples. 

Share Examples and Outcomes

In a game against a strong opponent, a team had a solid lead (high teens) with about four minutes left. Opted to substitute in reserves and the lead rapidly dissipated although we still won. Decision intent - good, allow players to get experience against better players. Decision outcome - poor, resulted in confidence loss not growth. A more limited approach would be better. 

Basketball-adjacent: Jocko Willink shared the experiences of a SEAL Team leader in "Extreme Ownership." An operation in Iraq went FUBAR including deaths because of communications problems. Willink took full accountability and offered to resign. He was kept on. 

Study Excellence

The books below share experiences in sport and society based on leadership inputs. 

Key New Zealand All-Blacks rugby lessons:

  • "Leave the jersey in a better place." Legacy ownership. 
  • "Sweep the sheds." No job is below you. 
  • "Old men plant trees in whose shade they will never sit." You have a responsibility to your community.
  • "Better people make better All-Blacks." Character matters.
San Francisco 49ers under Bill Walsh:
  • Be accountable to the "Standard of Performance" in all jobs.
  • Coaches are expected to teach and monitor attention to detail. 
  • Champions behave like champions before they are.
  • "The process creates the outcome." Teach. 
  • Leadership includes emotional discipline. Do it right all the time.
Presidential Leadership (Lincoln, the Roosevelts, Lyndon Johnson)
  • Hard work accompanies leadership. 
  • Personal challenges forge the best leaders. 
  • Big themes (Preserve the Union, Preserve Democracy, the New Deal)
  • Collaboration is necessary to achieve greatness

Reading List:

  • Legacy by James Kerr
  • The Score Takes Care of Itself by Bill Walsh
  • Leadership in Turbulent Times by Doris Kearns Goodwin  
  • Extreme Ownership by Jocko Willink and Leif Babin
Lagniappe. Do the impossible with less than ideal conditions in the least time available to the satisfaction of everyone.