Things We Have to Learn Every Yearby Don Meyer
You Can Pick Captains But You
Cannot Pick Leaders (The Foxhole Test)
When we think our team is ready each year, we have our
players take the foxhole test. They draw
a circle to represent their foxhole. They
write their name at the front of the foxhole.
They draw a line at their rear, their left, and their right. On each of those lines they write the names
of teammates they would want in their foxhole if they were fighting a life and
death battle. The position to their rear is worth three points and is awarded
to their most trusted, courageous, and tough teammate. The position to their
left is worth two points and is awarded to the second most trusted, etc.
teammate, and the position to their right is awarded to the third teammate they
would pick and is given a value of one point.
This test cuts through all the friendships, cliques, and is the truest
measure of what players really think of their teammates. It might be a good
idea for each coach on the staff to do this with his/her coaching staff,
administrators, teach associates, and of course your team. There are many people who you would love to
have around on the golf course or in a duck blind but deep down you know that
defeat is assured if they are in your foxhole.
Your Team Is Never As Tough As They Can Be And You Can Never
Assume They Are Tough Enough
When looking in the dictionary you see descriptions for
toughness such as: hard to break but not necessarily hard to bend, difficult to
get the better of, apt to be aggressive, able to resist, etc. When we think of
toughness we immediately think of mental toughness and then physical
toughness. LET ME SAY AT THE OUTSET THAT
A TEAM WILL NEVER BE TOUGH WHEN THEY ARE COACHED BY A STAFF OF COACHES WHO ARE
NOT. The hardest thing we have to do
each day as coaches is saddle up and face the day with the attitude we want our
players and team to adopt. WE CANNOT
SELL THEM SOMETHING THAT WE DO NOT OWN.
My most difficult task as coach is to be tougher on myself and more
demanding than I was the day before.
THIS IS ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT WHEN YOUR PROGRAM IS WINNING GAMES. For every 100 who can handle failure, there
is but one who can handle success. Winning can weaken the resolve of those who
worship winning and do not plan, practice, play and
coach to a higher standard. THE BEHAVIOR OF YOUR PLAYERS IN THEIR ACCEPTANCE OF
FATIGUE, BAD CALLS, TURNOVERS, MISSED SHOTS, BEING OPEN AND NOT GETTING THE
BALL, HARRASSMENT FROM THE OPPOSING FANS, TRASH TALK FROM OPPONENTS, AND THEIR
TEAMMATES' FAILURES AND SUCCESSES will tell you all you need to know about how
well you are teaching the life long lessons of toughness.
Players And Coaches, Everyone In
Your Program Must Be Willing To Change When It Is For Their Improvement And The
Betterment Of The Team
This is the thing that always concerns us in our recruiting
of players. We are not for every player.
The solid programs will have attrition because there is a standard, a
level of excellence, a desire for learning and improvement on and off the court
that is demanding and is therefore character building in nature rather than a
look the other way. That is probably why
we have not had many transfers in our program from four year schools or junior
colleges in our 30 years of head coaching.
The few that we have had were outstanding kids and developed into great
team players. As a coach you are constantly studying to find a new and better
way to teach the game and YOU USUALLY FIND THAT THE OLD SCHOOL WAYS ARE STILL
THE BEST. The TEST OF TIME is the master teacher and is cruel but the fairest
of all teachers. You will never have a
team if the best athlete on your team is not someone willing to be molded and
taught to play the game and conduct them self in the proper manner. If your leader is of suspect character, the
fabric of your team will be torn apart when the first negative winds attack
from outside the program. If your best
athlete is a great leader, no amount of negativity will rip the team apart.
Thinking As A Team, Becoming A Team, And Always Remaining A
Team Is the Single Best Thing That You Can Teach Your Players For The Present
Time And For Their Life After They Leave The Program
When you play a game, travel on the road games, register for
classes waiting in long lines, eat in a restaurant, befriend or ignore a young
child after a game, respect or taunt an opponent, deal with winning and losing,
you are making a statement about what the core values are in your program. Coaches, players, and teams are teaching lessons
in every encounter along life's way. We hope it can be said of our program that
EVEN WHEN THEY LOSE THEY WIN. The way you accept the hand life has dealt you
vividly tells everyone else what your true character is. The great boxer Sugar Ray Robinson said,
"You can tell the most about a man when he is getting whipped". That is oh so true in a basketball game and
life. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO WIN A
CHAMPIONSHIP TO BE A CHAMPION. As a
coach, you are responsible for the actions of your players and team. You are
not a coach if you look the other way and ignore bad behavior. It must be dealt
with or you are harming your players for a lifetime. Philippians 2:1-8 gives a description of
what a team attitude should be like for coaches and players.
Transition Defense, Intensity On Defense, Rebounding On Both
Ends Of The Floor, And Turnovers Are Key Factors You Can Help Your Team Become
Aware Of In Practices And Games
Transition Defense---Try to develop a philosophy of
transition defense that fits your style of play on both ends of the floor. It
might vary some each year depending on your personnel. Stick with it in every shooting drill, all
break down drills, 5/0 work, and 5/5 scrimmage.
This will be a key to not giving the game away.
Intensity on Defense---Too many ways to defend a
particular offensive move means no way to defend it because players think too
much. It has to be instinctive
quickness. If a player lacks quickness, then
this is even more vital. As Jerry Tarkanian said, "The more they think, the slower their
feet get". Keep it simple on
defense and lean to the aggressive way of doing things and your team will make
more plays defensively.
Rebounding on Both Ends of The Floor---You
must chart effort in order to see if players really value possession of the
ball and realize that rebounding is most often the way you gain possession of
the ball. Turnovers---We got a great idea from Porter Moser, the head coach at
the University of Arkansas-Little Rock.
He puts so many basketballs in the ball rack and removes one for each
turnover. When all the balls are out of
the rack it means that there will be morning running. We have modified it some because our coaching
staff does not like to run in the early mornings. Porter is a very young coach. We put two balls in the rack and when we have
turned the ball over three times the offending team will run or do whatever
consequence we think is best. We like
it, it is simple. It drives home a point.
BALLS IN THE RACK makes our players realize that everything they do in
practice will effect what they do in a game.
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