Thursday, April 30, 2009

FRESH KICKS - NIKE HUSTLE

The latest Nike hoops shoe is due out in October.

PROUD LIKE A PARENT

Although coaches rarely let their players know it, they are proud of their players, much like a parent would be.  But there are always some players that work so extremely hard to make themselves better that coaches gain a special feeling of joy and satisfaction as they watch them achieve great things. 

Read an article this morning from a coach that was bragging like a proud Dad on one of his players.  “…One such player for me is Sylvia Fowles.  Growing up in the rough part of Miami Sylvia leaned on a strong mother and made herself into a good basketball player.  At LSU she worked extremely hard to become a special player.  She was the first to the gym and the last one to leave.  She was the hardest worker in the weight room.  This past summer she was the one of the leading scorers and rebounders for Team USA as they captured the Gold Medal.  And in two weeks, on May 15, she will walk across the stage and receive her degree…”

- Bob Starkey
Asst. Coach LSU

WHAT WILL THEY REMEMBER ABOUT YOU?

"When people talk about leadership, they often use the word passion.  And when we think about passion we tend to think of emotions like enthusiasm, zeal, energy, exuberance, and intensity.  Well, all these attributions might be true, but when you look up the word passion in any dictionary that includes origins you'll see that it comes from the Latin word for suffering.  Passion is suffering!  

A passionate person is someone who suffers and a compassionate person is someone who suffers with, and shares the suffering of, others -- and wants to take action to alleviate this condition.  Nearly every act of leadership requires suffering -- and often for the leader a choice between one's personal success and safety and the greater welfare of others.  We're asking you to understand that nothing great comes without costs.  Leadership is hard work.  It's not easy despite what we, or others, may write in our attempts to make leadership more accessible.  We will all be remembered for something.  The question is, for what?  What will others say about you when you're no longer around."

From "A Leader's Legacy"
By Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner

When you eventually leave Covenant, what will the younger girls remember about you?  Did you inspire them to be better through your leadership?  Did you show them what being a true team-player means?  Did you patiently work with them to help them become better?  

What will they remember about you?

4:13

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

"The glory of sport comes from dedication, determination, and desire. Achieving success and personal glory has less to do with wins and losses than it does with learning how to prepare yourself so that at the end of the day you know there was nothing more you could have done to reach your ultimate goal."

- Jackie Joyner-Kersey
Olympic Gold Medalist

Monday, April 27, 2009

I am not judged by the number of times I fail, but by the number of times I succeed.  And the number of times I succeed is in direct proportion to the number of times I can fail and keep trying.

4:13

Sunday, April 26, 2009

IF YOU HAVE A BIG ENOUGH WHY . . .

There were two warring tribes in the Andes, one that lived in the lowlands and the other high in the mountains.  The mountain people invaded the lowlanders one day, and as part of their plundering of the people, they kidnapped a baby of one of the lowlander families and took the infant with them back up into the mountains. 

The lowlanders didn’t know how to climb the mountain.  They didn’t know any of the trails that the mountain people used, and they didn’t know where to find the mountain people or how to track them in the steep terrain. 

Even so, they sent out their best party of fighting men to climb the mountain and bring the baby home. 

The men tried first one method of climbing and then another.  They tried one trail and then another.  After several days of effort, however, they had climbed only several hundred feet. Feeling hopeless and helpless, the lowlander men decided that the cause was lost, and they prepared to return to their village below. 

As they were packing their gear for the descent, they saw the baby’s mother walking toward them.  They realized that she was coming down the mountain that they hadn’t figured out how to climb. 

And then they saw that she had the baby strapped to her back.  How could that be? 

One man greeted her and said, “We couldn’t climb this mountain.  How did you do this when we, the strongest and most able men in the village, couldn’t do it?” 

She shrugged her shoulders and said, “It wasn’t your baby.” 

The moral of this story is that if you have a big enough “why” you’ll always find the “how” to get whatever it is that you seek or whatever it is that you want to accomplish.

Are you the player you want to be?  Will you be that player when the season starts?

4:13

Friday, April 24, 2009

41 DAYS LEFT UNTIL SCRIMMAGE

The only thing equal between any two teams that you can compare… are the number of hours in a day.  The one factor that determines which of those two teams will win or lose… is what each has done with those hours. You see, true champions have no off-season. 

Legends are not born ~ they are created.

4:13

Thursday, April 23, 2009

DO YOU FAST-FORWARD?

"I skate to where the puck is going to be."

- Wayne Gretzky
Legendary ice hockey great and NHL Hall of Famer

Even in his prime, Gretzky wasn't very fast, his shot was oddly weak, and he was last in the team in strength training.  He would operate from his "office," the small space in the back of the opponent's goal, anticipating where his team would be well before they got there and feeding them passes so unsuspected he would often surprise them.  

For a cover story in 1985 he told Time, "People talk about skating, puck handling and shooting but the whole sport is angles, forgetting the straight direction the puck is going, calculating where it will be diverted, factoring in all the interruptions." 

What Wayne Gretzky described above is called "fast-forwarding" or the ability to travel forward in time and predict where, after seemingly infinite combinations of ricochets, the puck will emerge-the ability to make his way to the precise spot.

Fast-forwarding in sports involves the ability to anticipate the flow of play and stay ahead of real time.  Athletes who fast-forward, anticipate where teammates and the competition are going to be.  Using this technique provides a competitive advantage and makes other teammates' performances better. 

In all walks of life, "fast-forwarding" is about anticipation, being steps ahead of others in thinking and visioning, and predicting outcomes from one's experience as quickly as possible.  Great performers need talent, but they also need to anticipate effectively.  That is what made Gretzky the best.

4:13

THE ABILITY TO STAY FOCUSED

When asked what his best attribute as a golfer was, Tiger Woods quickly replied,  "My mind."

“I don’t think about my last swing.  I keep my mind focused on the moment I’m in.  I don't look at what the prize money is.  I don’t allow my surroundings, events of the day or minor distractions affect me.  I go out and I play.  And when I play, I play to win, period.  That's how my dad raised me, is you go out there and win.”

- Tiger Woods

THE VALUE OF CRITICISM

I think far too often, criticism, especially when it is intended as constructive, is viewed as a negative slam or taken as a personal attack on the individual.  Unfortunately this is a warped view and it often prevents an athlete from recognizing and accepting their need to improve in a particular area.  
Coaches typically don't dish out cristicism with the cold-hearted ferver that American Idol's Simon Cowell does.  Yet players often feel like they are being ridiculed when a coach points out an area of their game that needs to change.

The goal of true constructive criticism is to help someone be the best they can be.  When criticism is done appropriately, the person who has been criticized will understand what she has done wrong and will feel inspired to make a change for the better.  Not only should we not avoid being criticized, we should embrace criticism because it is the only way we can continue to grow both as a basketball player and personally.

4:13

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Five Attributes of Inspirational Leaders

The Sahara plays tricks on the eyes of its travelers.  As the desert sun beats down on the sand, heat waves rise from the ground. Light bends as it passes through the superheated air, painting illusory pictures on the horizon.  To thirsty travelers moving through the Sahara, it often appears as if an oasis looms in the distance. However, as the voyagers journey on, the oasis proves to be nothing more than a mirage.

Unfortunately, the ranks of leadership are inhabited by a host of mirages: people who look impressive from a distance, but end up being disappointments.  After being fooled by a few mirages, followers become jaded about leadership.  

To restore confidence with those in power, leaders have to be able to inspire.  I'm not talking about inspiring someone to buy into the team vision, to meet certain team goals, or to practice more efficiently.  These aren't bad things, but right now, people are looking for a leader attuned to their personal needs.  They want leaders who will encourage them, believe in their potential, and help them grow.

Five Attributes of an Inspirational Leader

ATTITUDE OF SERVICE
To be an inspirational leader, you must adopt an attitude of service toward those you lead.  This requires laying aside selfish interests to add value to another person.  When you serve, you awaken something magnetic inside of you.  People are drawn to follow you because they know you'll find ways to make them better.

AFFIRMATION
To inspire means to have a positive view of others.  If we're not careful, we become fault-finders, magnifying the flaws in everyone around us.  Instead, leaders should emulate gold prospectors - always on the lookout for potential gold mines.  When they find traces of ore, prospectors assume there's a rich vein to unearth, and they start digging.  In the same fashion, leaders ought to search for the best traits within a person and commit to uncovering them.

One of the best applications of this idea is expressed in what I call the 101 percent principle: Find the one thing that you believe is a person's greatest asset, and then give 100 percent encouragement in that area.  Focusing on a person's strengths inspires them by promoting confidence, growth, and success.

ATTENTIVENESS
Great inspirers know the desires of those they lead.  As much as people respect the knowledge and ability of their leaders, these are secondary concerns for them.  They don't care how much their leaders know until they know how much their leaders care.  When leaders attend to the deeply felt needs of their team, the determination and commitment of each team member skyrockets.

AVAILABILITY
Leaders inspire by intentionally investing time in the people they lead.  They make themselves available.  People cannot be nurtured from a distance or by infrequent spurts of attention.  They need a leader to spend time with them - meaningful time, not just a conversation in passing.

In our fast-paced and demanding world, time is a leader's most precious commodity.  While it feels costly to give up, nothing communicates that you value a person more than the gift of your time. 

AUTHENTICITY
To inspire, leaders have to be genuine.  More than anything else, followers want to believe in and trust their leaders.  However, when leaders break promises or fail to honor commitments, they reveal themselves as being inauthentic, and they lose credibility.  Trust rests upon a foundation of authenticity.  To gain trust, a leader must consistently align words and deeds, while showing a degree of transparency.

Summary

Inspirational leadership can be confused with momentary charisma.  I prefer to think about inspiring as more of a process than an event.  More than a brilliant speech, it's cultivating habits of brilliance that manifest themselves daily.  By modeling the five attributes of an inspiring leader, I trust that you'll win the respect of those you lead and earn the right to influence them.

- Dr. John C. Maxwell
Five Attributes of Inspirational Leaders


DISCIPLINE - DESIRE - DETERMINATION

“The only meaningful kind of discipline there is in the world is the discipline we freely and willingly impose on ourselves.”
- Jess Lair

“Discipline is the refining fire by which talent becomes ability.”
- Roy L. Smith

“There is one quality which one must possess to win, and that is definiteness of purpose, the knowledge of what one wants, and a burning desire to possess it.”
- Napoleon Hill

“The starting point of all achievement is desire.  Keep this constantly in mind. Weak desire brings weak results, just as a small amount of fire makes a small amount of heat.”
- unknown

“If I had to select one quality, one personal characteristic that I regard as being most highly correlated with success, whatever the field, I would pick the trait of persistence.  Determination. The will to endure to the end, to get knocked down seventy times and get up off the floor saying, ‘Here goes number seventy-one!’”
- Richard M. DeVoss

4:13

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

"Do not let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do." 

- John Wooden

Five players working together doing the "wrong" thing have a better chance of winning than five players all doing their own thing because each thinks she knows best.

4:13

Monday, April 20, 2009

SEEKING PERFECTION IN EVERY POSSESSION

With it’s litany of rules about decorum, appearance and respect for others - players are not allowed to have visible tattoos, use iPods in public or wear dresses or skirts without stockings - the Connecticut women's basketball program run by coach Geno Auriemma has been likened to Catholic school.   

But the comparison only goes so far.  In putting together a perfect 39--0 season that ended with a 76--54 win over Louisville in the NCAA title game in St. Louis on April 7, the Huskies showed opponents neither charity nor mercy, going on devastating scoring runs that often put games out of reach by the 25th minute.  "Last year if a game was close, it might have stayed close," says junior guard Kalana Greene.  "This year we took a lead and stretched it.  We had poise, experience, a killer instinct and a take-no-prisoners defense."

The Huskies, who had been upset by Stanford in last year's national semifinals, were the preseason favorites to win a sixth national title, but few foresaw a third perfect season for the program.  The team's Big Three - 6-foot sophomore forward Maya Moore, the consensus player of the year, and All-Americas Renee Montgomery, a 5'7" senior point guard, and Tina Charles, a 6'4" junior center - made the team look strong on paper, but there were difficulties to overcome.

UConn lost its top recruit, national high school player of the year Elena Delle Donne, last summer before she'd even played a game at UConn.  She enrolled at Delaware, citing basketball burnout, and played volleyball last fall instead of hoops.  The Huskies also lost starting shooting guard Caroline Doty, a freshman, to a torn left ACL in mid-January.

Even with a shallower bench than usual - only eight players averaged more than 11 minutes per game - UConn found a way to beat every opponent by double digits, something no previous Division I team had done.

The Huskies ran the table not because they pursued perfection in the win-loss column, but because they sought it in every possession.  As with all of Auriemma's teams the players were constantly reminded of their weaknesses.  Even after blowouts he'd show his players a "low-light" tape before practice the next day that featured all the little things they didn't do well.  After a subpar defensive effort in a 76--63 win over LSU in January the Huskies had to endure 2½ hours of defensive drills.  "It was terrible, but he got his point across," says Montgomery.  "Even though we can outscore most teams, we don't want to be a team that just does that."

For Auriemma, who is now 6--0 in NCAA title games, winning isn't the point.  "The NBA is all about winning, but at this level winning doesn't make you happy," he says.  "You can win, play lousy, and in my program, feel lousy.   To me it's about:  How good can we be?"

YOU MUST ALWAYS BE READY

Jordan Farmar told a story recently about "scarfing down a burger at halftime" of a mid-season game against Seattle in his rookie season.

Besides being hungry, Farmar figured that because "he hadn't played in weeks" it wouldn't make much of a difference.

Coach Phil Jackson caught him eating the burger and used that moment as a teaching tool, not only fining him but also inserting him into the game in the second half to show the dangers of expecting not to play.

"He put me in and said, 'I hope you throw up," Farmar said. "It was just to show that you have to always be ready. No matter what the situation, no matter what the circumstances."

Although a humorous story, it is the perfect illustration of being totally prepared for your moment when your moment arrives.  Being prepared doesn't mean when the game starts.  It starts in the days leading up to the game - in your practices.  It starts in the amount of sleep you get the night before the game.  It starts in the meal you eat on the morning of the game.  It starts with the mindset you have on the way to the gym.  The mindset you have when you step out onto the court.

It's not about showing up and playing, it's about being ready...

4:13

LOOKING FOR PEOPLE WITH CONVICTIONS

Every coach wants athletes with convictions who can influence their peers competitively on the court, as well as in the way they behave off the court.

Came across a great quote from Joe Paterno in the book "The Competitive Edge" by Dr. Jeffrey Brown, a sports psychologist and instructor at Harvard Medical School.

"We need people who influence their peers and who cannot be detoured from their convictions by peers who do not have the courage to have any convictions."

4:13

Sunday, April 19, 2009

"Setting goals for your game is an art.  The trick is in setting them at the right level -- neither too low nor too high.  A good goal should be lofty enough to inspire hard work, yet realistic enough to provide solid hope of attainment."

- Greg Norman

"It's great to win, but it's also great fun just to be in the thick of any truly well-and hard-fought contest against opponents you respect, whatever the outcome."

- Jack Nicklaus

6 Minutes - 50 Years

Came across a good article last night that, although deals with football, certainly applies to hoops as well.  It’s a pre-game speech Alabama coach Bear Bryant gave to his team before a game back in 1974:

"Most of you will live another fifty years or more.  I hope it's seventy, but if it's fifty that's still a good life, and what happens today you'll have to live with the rest of the way.  You can't get it back if you don't win.  It's sixty minutes and over.  The losers are the ones who say, 'Oh I wish I could play it again.'

You can't play it again.

Well, you're not really going to have to play sixty minutes.  None of you.  The longest play in a game is six and a half seconds.  The shortest play is less than two seconds.  That's barely a wink of the eye.  You'll average five seconds a play.  Five seconds of total effort, going all out, giving a hundred percent.  You oughta be able to hold your hand in a fire that long.

If you're lucky enough to play seventy plays, that amounts to about six minutes.  Six minutes of your time.  Out of fifty years, six minutes doesn't seem like much.  But a loser will regret it the rest of his life.

You've worked a long time for this.  You've been playing since you were in the seventh grade.  You go out there in front of all those people and don't give a hundred percent every play then you're cheating yourself, and your recruiters, and your parents, and your high school coach, and everybody whoever helped you.  This is what you have been working toward.

In any big game there are five or six or seven key plays that will decide the outcome.  If you put out for five seconds on every play, you'll get your share of those key plays.  You never know when they'll come, so you have to go all out every time.

If you're reckless, and give that extra effort, and every play try a little harder, you'll see in the films on Monday that it was you who made those five or six plays that win.  Play 'em jaw to jaw, and you'll win in the fourth quarter."

4:13

Saturday, April 18, 2009

"It is one of the strange ironies of this strange life that those who work the hardest, who subject themselves to the strictest discipline, who give up certain pleasurable things in order to achieve a goal, are the happiest because they achieve the most."

- Brutus Hamilton

Champions have no off-season.  They realize they will never improve unless they set goals to some standard or example higher and better than where they are now.

4:13
"Pain is temporary.  Quitting lasts forever."

- Lance Armstrong

Friday, April 17, 2009

HYPERDUNK iD

Looks like Nike realized that when they offer teams a chance to design the color-scheme that they want in a poplular shoe... they sell more shoes.

Nike has just added the Hyperdunk to their list of iD shoes.  And... the Hyperdunk is also now available in Youth size 6 and up.

"The championship trail leads right to the point guard or certainly to a guard who can control the game."

- Geno Auriemma
UCONN Women's Coach
6-time NCAA Champions

WITH A SENSE OF PURPOSE

"I don't just come to the gym and shoot.  Every drill I do, I do with game-like movement.  I don't stand still and shoot."

- Rip Hamilton
Detroit Pistons

Practicing with a sense of purpose means you are targeting a specific area of your game in order to improve it.  But your goal of improvement should be tied to being able to perform the way you want to in a game.  You should be practicing the skill at the same speed, tempo and movements that you will likely have to use during a real game.  

Through constant repetition, you are preparing for the moment (in a game) that you can shake your defender and execute the skill.

4:13

ACT AS IF...

Any decent athlete can put on a good game face.  But to be truly successful, it has to start in the mind… you have to mentally “act as if.”   

That means you have to go much deeper than mere swagger or theatrics.  It’s a method of thinking - a learned skill for convincing your mind that you already are what you want to become.  The body follows where the mind leads.

Act as if you’re a great shooter.  Act as if you love the drill.  Act as if when you hit the deck it doesn’t hurt.  Negativity, even in the form of body language (drooping), cannot be tolerated.

The only thing able to prevent you from becoming what you want to become… is you.

4:13

Thursday, April 16, 2009

NEW THREADS

Both teams (BV & GV) will be sporting some new pre-game threads for next season.  

The BV went with a silver, royal & black design... which by the way makes me wonder if Coach Moss is finally starting to "warm up" (bad pun huh?) to the idea of incorporating more black into the BV uni's...

The GV will be going with a black & royal Duke-style look and adding a two-color school name to the bottom (back) of the shooting shirt (ala Lakeside).

4:13

NEW THREADS


The GV shooting shirts will have a stand up collar and a short zipper and the material for both the shirts & pants will be TriFit (picture baseball uniform type of material).




KICKS FOR YA DOGS!

I know it's early... VERY early to be looking for some team kicks for next season, but for the next few months, I will occasionally drop some info on here for those that are interested.  

This LINK is to a recent review on the new Chris Paul CP3.II which appears to be a sweet hoops shoe.

Priced at $117 for adult sizes (sz 7.5+) and $89 (youth sz 5.0-7.0) they are right in-line with what we've paid in the past.

4:13

THE MOST IMPORTANT KEY

"Words can never adequately convey the incredible impact of our attitude toward life.  The longer I live the more convinced I become that life is 10 percent what happens to us and 90 percent how we respond to it.  I believe the single most significant decision I can make on a day-to-day basis is my choice of an attitude. 

It is more important than my past, my education, my bankroll, my successes or failures, fame or pain, what other people think of me or say about me, my circumstances or my position.  Attitude keeps me going or cripples my progress.  It alone fuels my fire or assaults my hope.  When my attitudes are right, there’s no barrier too high, no valley too deep, no dream too extreme, no challenge too great for me."

-Pastor Chuck Swindoll

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

READY FOR THE GAME & LECRAE 6/26

The Grace girls will be in town on June 26th for the Ready For The Game Camp.  Their coach was talking about maybe having the two teams hang out on Friday night and do something together.  

Well... it just so happens that Lecrae will be in PC for a show on that same day.  Hmmmm..... wonder what the two teams can find to do together?

4:13

TAKE CHARGE OF YOUR TEAM

Key #1: Disown Your Helplessness
Can-do people aggressively pursue solutions, and in the process, uncover creative solutions others never even try to find.  Can-do people take responsibility for the future, whereas lesser people blame circumstances or other people when facing roadblocks. Rather than wallowing in helplessness, can-do people search diligently to overcome the obstacles in front of them.

Key #2: Take the Bull By the Horns.
Can-do people are fearless.  They go straight to the source of their solution.  Their very effort commands attention as they wrestle a problem to the ground with expediency. People with a can-do attitude have an aggressiveness about them.  They take the bull by the horns.  When they enter into the arena of action, they don’t wait, they initiate.

Key #3: Enter the No Whining Zone.
Can-do people rarely complain.  They recognize its futility and guard their minds and mouths
against indulging in this time-wasting activity.  As George Washington Carver observed, “Ninety-nine percent of failures come from people who have a habit of making excuses.”

Key #4: Put On Another’s Pair of Shoes.
Can-do people empathize with others.  They attempt to see any predicament from the other person’s perspective in order to make the best decisions.  Can-do people see the world from their perspective and others’ perspectives.  They use their own perspective to give direction, and they use others’ perspectives to forge relational connections.  Both direction and connection are indispensable to taking the team on a successful journey.

Key #5: Nurture Your Passion.
Can-do people are immune to burnout.  They love what they do because they’ve learned how to fuel the fire that keeps them moving.  In leadership, the prize is not given to the person who’s the smartest, nor to the person with the advantages in resources and position, but the prize goes to the person with passion.

Key #6: Walk the Second Mile.
Can-do people exceed expectations.  While others settle for an acceptable solution, they aren’t satisfied until they have achieved the unimagined.  They set expectations for themselves higher than what is dictated by the people or situations around them.

Key #7: Quit Stewing and Start Doing.
Can-do people take action.  While others are crippled by worry, fear, and anxiety, they have the fortitude to press forward.  The perfect moment when all is safe and assured may never arrive, so why wait for it?  Can-do people take risks.

Key #8: Go With the Flow.
Can-do people can adjust to change.  They don’t get caught griping about an unexpected curve in the road.  They accept transition with an optimistic outlook.  They realize it’s less important what happens TO them, than it is what happens IN them.

Key #9: Follow Through to the End.
Can-do people not only initiate, they finish.  They are self-starters with the capacity to achieve their goal.

Key #10: Expect a Return as a Result of Your Commitment.
If you make an all out commitment with a can-do attitude, expect to succeed.  Passionate commitment is contagious, and resources follow resolve.  Committed people will reap rewards and find open doors as others are drawn to the excitement and energy emanating from them.

4:13

A PERFECT SEASON 39-0

Geno Auriemma and thewomen of the University of Connecticut's basketball team are used to dream seasons.  But when the Lady Huskies captured their sixth NCAA title last week, they achieved perfection -- capping off a historic season with 39 wins.

"At Connecticut, there is no next time, there's only this time, there's only this time," Auriemma said.  "Every single game was won by double digits.  That's never been done before in the history of college basketball, men's or women's."

The Connecticut Huskies may be the greatest college team ever, and with Auriemma on the court, they're unstoppable.  He's won 32 Big East championships and six NCAA titles -- five since 2000.  So, what's his coaching secret? Respect and focus behind a tough exterior.

Auriemma said he doesn't treat the team like girls, but like players -- or perhaps something akin to soldiers at a boot camp.

"I don't think people feel a sense of urgency when you have someone sugar coating, and patting your back and giving you lollipops every day," said Kalana Greene, a Huskies guard.

Tina Charles, the Huskies' starting center, was chosen as 2009's most outstanding player in the Final Four this year.  But even this star athlete has faced the brunt of Auriemma's criticism for her inconsistent play.

When the Huskies lost to Stanford last year, knocking the team out of the semifinals, Auriemma came right out and said they had no "inside game," singling out Charles' performance.

"I felt kind of distraught," she said.  "I take a lot of things personal that coach says, because I know what he wants from me and he knows what I want from this game."

But Auriemma said it's easy to see the method behind his tough-love approach when watching Charles' growth on the court.

"That's not criticism.  That's a fact.  So, if Tina says, 'Well, I take that personally?'  You should, that's part of the plan here," Auriemma said.  "It's not, you know, anything other than the cold stone truth.  And now Tina understands."

The irritable Auriemma may be mellowing -- something the team takes credit for.

"He's transformed into a different coach than I've seen.  And I think the reason he's transformed is because he has 13 committed girls," Greene said.  "It's down the line on the roster, one to 13.  Everyone has the same goals, the same commitment and giving the same effort every day."

Maybe that’s why they went 39-0.

4:13

PLAYING WITHOUT FEAR

Read an interesting article recently about why some high school football players are so successful in basketball – even though few have well-developed basketball skills.  The over-all thought was that they played with an aggressive, football-like mentality.

High school success depends less on skill and more on athleticism and attitude or mindset, and oftentimes football players have the aggressive mindset that leads to high school success.  Coaches often favor the aggressive player regardless of success, often violating John Wooden’s popular phrase, “Don’t mistake activity with achievement.”

What can a non-football player learn from the football players?  First, from a playing time perspective, it is important to understand the different things that the coach values. Often, he values different things than those that he says that he values.  Actions speak louder than words.  What things do the players who play the most bring to the team?  How do they play?  Does the coach play the smart players who do not turn over the ball or the aggressive players who make things happen – good or bad?  Does he prefer the skilled players or the stronger, more athletic players?

Second, football players playing basketball often play with a lack of fear.  They are not 100% invested in basketball, so they do not fear failure.  Many players develop a fear of failure.  The Achievement Goal Theory states that people are motivated by one of two things: (1) the desire for success or (2) the fear of failure.  Players motivated by a desire for success have a better opportunity to play well because they focus on the positive result rather than trying to avoid a negative result.

When a player shoots, he can make the shot or miss it.  A player motivated by a fear of failure hopes that he does not miss the shot; a player motivated by a desire for success wants to make the shot.  The positive approach leads to better performance because the player focuses on his goal (making the shot).

Players motivated by the desire to succeed often play more aggressively because they want to make plays. Their goal is to make something happen.  Players motivated by the fear of failure often try to avoid mistakes.  However, by avoiding mistakes, they are less likely to make positive plays.  2009 Hall of Fame inductee John Stockton is the NBA’s all-time leader in assists and turnovers; future Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre is the NFL’s all-time leader in touchdown passes and interceptions.

Sure, Favre and Stockton would probably like a redo on some of their bad passes.  However, they also know that they never would have made all the positive plays without risking failure. Rather than play it safe, they went for it, which resulted in the good and the bad.  Fortunately for them, they had far more success than failure, but even when they made a mistake, they did not allow it to affect their approach. They maintained a positive approach.

It is important for players to develop this approach.  If a player is afraid to shoot because she wants to avoid a mistake, can she ever really become a good shooter?  

4:13

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

SEEMING BUSY vs. BEING BUSY

“Being busy does not always mean real work.  The object of all work is production or accomplishment and to either of these ends there must be forethought, system, planning, intelligence, and honest purpose, as well as perspiration.  Seeming to do is not doing.”

- Thomas Edison

Mr. Edison's words apply to basketball as well.  Practicing with a sense of purpose means that you have identified what it is you need improvement on and have formulated a plan on how to achieve the result you seek.

Too often athletes spend valuable practice time just going through the motions of casually shooting around rather than practicing for a particular scenario they will likely face in a game.  You should always practice at game-like speed and take game-like shots in order to be adequately prepared once you find yourself under defensive pressure in a game.

4:13

Monday, April 13, 2009

STOP WASTING TIME

“The longer you wait to decide what you want to do, the more time you’re wasting.  It’s up to you to want something so badly that your passion shows through.  Your actions, not your words, will do the shouting for you.”

- Derek Jeter
Future Hall of Fame
Baseball Player

DON'T BE AFRAID TO DREAM

For thousands of years, mankind traveled along the ground: by foot, by horse & buggy, by locomotive, and eventually by automobile.  Thanks to the dreams of Orville and Wilbur Wright, we now hop across oceans in a matter of hours.  The imaginative brothers overcame ridicule and doubt to pioneer human flight, and the world has never been the same.

Many of us play small because we do not allow ourselves to dream.  We trap ourselves in reality and never dare to go beyond what we can see with our eyes.

Imagination lifts us beyond average by giving us a vision of life that surpasses what we are experiencing currently.  Dreams infuse our spirit with energy and spur us on to greatness.

Don't be content with being average.  What you can imagine... you can accomplish.

4:13

"I promise to keep on living as though I expect to live forever.  Nobody grows old by merely living a number of years.  People grow old by deserting their ideals.  Years may wrinkle the skin, but to give up.... that wrinkles the soul."

- Douglas MacArthur

JUNE SCRIMMAGE

As I have already mentioned in a previous email, a team from Knoxville, TN (Webb School) will be in town the first week of June to play a game against Arnold and Rutherford, and they have asked to play us on Thursday June 4th at our gym.  

I have told the coach that we will gladly play them if we have enough to put a team together.  He doesn’t care if we pick up a couple of players from other schools, use former players (graduates), or even dress out in uniforms.

He is a first-year coach at the school and wants to put his team in game-like situations to see what he has to work with next season and what areas need improvement before the season starts.  Sounds like a smart coach.

I’ve only heard from four of you that are interested in participating in the scrimmage.  Please confirm that you either will…or will not be participating in the scrimmage.  If I can get a head count, I’ll know how many other players I’ll need to contact to fill our roster.

4:13

Sunday, April 12, 2009

L stands for something other than lucky...

It’s a safe bet to assume that I never-ever want to participate in another all-star game.  On paper, the East should have had a distinct advantage being that the News Herald writers are able to select players from an eight County region (versus the West’s three Counties) yet once again… the West dominated the East (in every facet of the game).  

They looked like a team that had played together all season long.  

Friday, April 10, 2009

2009 READY FOR THE GAME CAMP

Feel free to pass along the Camp link to any of your friends that may be interested in attending.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

2009 FREEDOM ALL-STAR CLASSIC

From a coaches point of view, the past few weeks leading up to Saturday's Freedom Classic game have been filled with total chaos. Trying to get 12 athletes living across the Panhandle (Chipley, Bonifay, Cottondale, Graceville, Port St. Joe, Panama City, Marianna) together for practices has been next to impossible.

But as shown in the pictures, they are having a great time.  Tara from Bethlehem has been a total riot!  (as shown in the picture... she's sending the West All-Stars a message).

The News herald was kind enough to give us SIX point guards and only ONE post player.  So Haley will have a chance to play down low on Saturday.  The West has a much bigger team and they appear to be far more aggressive than the East girls... keep your fingers crossed!
4:13
"The gem cannot be polished without friction."
- Chinese Proverb

"May there be enough clouds in your 
life to make a beautiful sunset."
- Rebecca Gregory

"Birds sing after a storm. 
Why shouldn't we?"
- Rose Kennedy

"Wherever we look upon this earth, 
the opportunities take shape within the problems."
- Nelson A. Rockefeller