Wednesday, February 28, 2018
A Facebook Post About Wilt
The following was a write up from a Facebook post regarding Wilt Chamberlain.
Wow.. where to begin? Here is something I posted on another thread:
My dad ref’d a few of Wilt’s Globetrotter games. He played point guard to show off his ball handling, shooting, & passing skills - never before or since seen by a guy over 7’ tall. They would get a ladder & place a quarter on top of the backboard. Wilt would take one step, jump up & get the quarter. With a 9’6” standing reach, he would have to have at least a 45” vertical to get the quarter. It’s listed many places as 48” which seems very possible. The blocked shot in the photo came off a one step jump. Wilt averaged 8.1 blocks per game in the 112 games in which there are multiple credible sources of verification, video being the best - like the nationally televised Christmas Day 1968 game against Phoenix where he blocked 23 shots. Blocks didn’t become an official NBA stat until the ‘73-‘74 season, and the ‘official’ single game record is 17 by Elmore Smith. Wilt had more than that many times. Mark Eaton holds the ‘official’ NBA career record for blocks per game at 3.5.
Wilt’s HOF teammate, Hal Greer, was considered the fastest guard in the league in his prime, but Hal never beat Wilt, and they raced many times. Wilt loved track & field and excelled in the long jump (22’+), triple jump (50’+), high jump (6’6”), & shot put (56’)
His best track times:
100 yards: 10.0
220: 20.9
440: 48.9
880: 158.3
He led the NBA in assists because he “decided to”. He was the strongest player in the league. He led two different teams to the most regular season wins in NBA history. He led one of them to the most consecutive wins in NBA history. He made 73% of his FG attempts that season. He never fouled out & only had 5 fouls in 30 of 1205 games, so he almost never had to back off on defense due to foul trouble. Or take his offense off the floor. In an era with many more possessions (many more trips up & down the court), he didn’t take games or possessions off. He averaged 45.8 minutes in 1045 regular season games & 47.1 in 160 playoff games.
There’s much more, and again, this doesn’t take anything away from all the other great players. Nothing wrong with any of us having our favorites or our own criteria for greatness. Had Wilt been born in 1986 instead of 1936, but with the same genetics, I think he would have been an even bigger & better player, but different due to the evolution of the game & everything related to it. Just as modern day players, even with their same genetics, wouldn’t play the same as they do today had they been born in 1936.
UConn Women's Basketball 1-on-1 Defense
In season, we
work on guarding the ball 1 on 1 everyday. We do it from
different spots, angles and positions. We switch up between guarding the ball in full
court, half-court and in the post.
We mix up between starting from a closeout position, from a girls coming downhill at us, and from a check-ball situation.
Over time, our athletes get
better both offensively and defensively in 1 on 1 situations this way. Basketball is a team game with full of individual battles. Players have to be able to win their 1 on 1 battles for the team to have success.
The video above
is how we teach 1 on 1. Active hands and active feet, stay square to your
defender to prevent blow-bus, contest the shoot and rebound.
- Arms length
away to provide pressure and to keep the 5 second count going
- Low stance
and square to his body - force baseline, but don't open up and give free driving lanes to the
basket
- Hand up to
contest the pass and the shot
- Active feet
so that you are ready to react and move
- Contest the
shot, box out and rebound
- Use your
length to contest the ball
- Know who you
are guarding - give or take up space as needed
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Geno Auriemma On Sustaining Excellence
Just when it starts to fall, I tell the girls that this is about the time that a normal team starts to fall, and we aren't a normal team ... so let's go.
- Geno Auriemma
When your team experiences playing at a higher level, you have raised the bar for your team and the challenge is to consistently sustain that level of play and to never drop below that new bar that you have set for yourself. The challenge, the purpose, the pursuit of excellence is about identifying what excellence looks like, experiencing it by performing on a level of excellence, and challenging yourself to sustain it as often and for as long as you can.
Wednesday, February 21, 2018
Bob Starkey Game Within The Game Chart
“Game Within The Game” stat sheet was something we come up in the 80’s while I was a men’s assistant at WV State College.
We wanted to develop a stat (because kids are driven by stats) that would help give attention to a few areas of the game. We made each situation simply a win or loss situation.
SCORE FIRST EACH HALF: If we scored first we got the W…if we didn’t, our team did.
FIRST TEAM TO SCORE OUT OF A TIMEOUT: Again, whoever scored first got the win.
INBOUNDS: If we scored or got the stop it was our W.
For followup, we shared the stat sheet with our players the next day and at times would show video if these areas.
This would total around 20 possession each game. So while one in-bounds may not seem important to a team, we felt by making it a win-loss situation would give it a sense of urgency. Hard to improve upon things if you don’t measure it.
We knew were making strides early when we heard a kid coming out of our huddle tell his teammates “Let’s win this timeout!”
Thanks for asking Herb – and for all you do to make us better.
What It Takes to Have Success
My end of season thought is that I am better understanding what a program needs from basketball players to have success. Each player that will be a varsity basketball player will need these 2 characteristics:
Heart
- Heart is loving and caring about the game enough to sacrifice for it and to give it everything that you have.
Commitment
- Commitment means being willing to do whatever it takes to achieve success.
Heart
- Heart is loving and caring about the game enough to sacrifice for it and to give it everything that you have.
Commitment
- Commitment means being willing to do whatever it takes to achieve success.
Tuesday, February 20, 2018
2017-2018 Women's Basketball Recruiting Calendar
March 1 – 29 – Contact Period
- During a contact period a college coach may have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents, watch student-athletes compete and visit their high schools, and write or telephone student-athletes or their parents.
March 30 – April 12 –
Dead Period
- During a dead period a college coach may not have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents, and may not watch student-athletes compete or visit their high schools. Coaches may write and telephone student-athletes or their parents during a dead period.
- During a dead period a college coach may not have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents, and may not watch student-athletes compete or visit their high schools. Coaches may write and telephone student-athletes or their parents during a dead period.
April 6 – 8 – Quiet Period
- During a quiet period, a college coach may only have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents on the college’s campus. A coach may not watch student-athletes compete (unless a competition occurs on the college’s campus) or visit their high schools. Coaches may write or telephone college-bound student-athletes or their parents during this time.
- During a quiet period, a college coach may only have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents on the college’s campus. A coach may not watch student-athletes compete (unless a competition occurs on the college’s campus) or visit their high schools. Coaches may write or telephone college-bound student-athletes or their parents during this time.
April 13 – 17 –
Evaluation Period
- During an evaluation period a college coach may watch college-bound student-athletes compete, visit their high schools, and write or telephone student-athletes or their parents. However, a college coach may not have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents off the college’s campus during an evaluation period.
- During an evaluation period a college coach may watch college-bound student-athletes compete, visit their high schools, and write or telephone student-athletes or their parents. However, a college coach may not have face-to-face contact with college-bound student-athletes or their parents off the college’s campus during an evaluation period.
April 18 – July 5 –
Quiet Period
April 20 – 22 –
Evaluation Period
- Evaluations permitted at non-scholastic women’s basketball events only.
- Evaluations permitted at non-scholastic women’s basketball events only.
July 6 – 12 –
Evaluation Period
July 13 – 22 – Dead Period
July 23 – 29 –
Evaluation Period
July 30 – 31 – Dead Period
Additional source: http://www.ncaa.org/student-athletes/resources/recruiting-calendars
Additional source: http://www.ncaa.org/student-athletes/resources/recruiting-calendars
How To Make Players PLAY HARD - By Coach Malecki
1. Practice and games, should be
fun! With fun comes excitement.
2. Make everything competition, grades, weight room, free throws.
3. Reward max effort with max praise!
4. Kids need to learn how to play basketball. Show them fundamentals, skill build, and have them do it over until they get it right. You must crawl before walking, walk before running, etc.
5. You must not be afraid to cut your BEST PLAYER!
6. Some players need an Atta boy, some need a challenge, some need extra TLC. As coaches becoming a “reader” of your players attitudes is super important.
7. Ask players to become stewards of effort. The locker room and team is the best when your best players are your hardest workers.
8. Ask Parents to trust you with playing decisions. Give them examples of player/teams work ethic and how these are life skills that reach far beyond the hardwood. Played 10 players one year and it really helped us reach our potential.
9. I treat every player the same, yet everyone is different. Discipline is instilled over time. You might be the first person to demand them to be on time, work super hard, don’t make excuses.
10. When they know you Love them, they trust you, now you can inch up the intensity and truly coach them to your personality.
2. Make everything competition, grades, weight room, free throws.
3. Reward max effort with max praise!
4. Kids need to learn how to play basketball. Show them fundamentals, skill build, and have them do it over until they get it right. You must crawl before walking, walk before running, etc.
5. You must not be afraid to cut your BEST PLAYER!
6. Some players need an Atta boy, some need a challenge, some need extra TLC. As coaches becoming a “reader” of your players attitudes is super important.
7. Ask players to become stewards of effort. The locker room and team is the best when your best players are your hardest workers.
8. Ask Parents to trust you with playing decisions. Give them examples of player/teams work ethic and how these are life skills that reach far beyond the hardwood. Played 10 players one year and it really helped us reach our potential.
9. I treat every player the same, yet everyone is different. Discipline is instilled over time. You might be the first person to demand them to be on time, work super hard, don’t make excuses.
10. When they know you Love them, they trust you, now you can inch up the intensity and truly coach them to your personality.
Development >>> Record
Youth sports is about fun, creating an active life-style, and teaching lessons through games.
It is important to teach competition and to teach early on that there is a winner and a loser, but its important to do that within context. Teach winning and losing in terms of strengths and weaknesses, in terms of work ethic and commitment, and in terms of how to humbly deal with success and how to appropriately bounce back from defeat.
As long as a kid keeps playing, as long as a kid keeps improving, and most importantly, as long as a kid keeps having fun, then good things will happen.
It is important to teach competition and to teach early on that there is a winner and a loser, but its important to do that within context. Teach winning and losing in terms of strengths and weaknesses, in terms of work ethic and commitment, and in terms of how to humbly deal with success and how to appropriately bounce back from defeat.
As long as a kid keeps playing, as long as a kid keeps improving, and most importantly, as long as a kid keeps having fun, then good things will happen.
Pappy - The Play After The Play
I'm always looking for actions and a system for the 'play after the play.' The play after the play is what your team does when the play called breaks down. What is their default offense?
Some coaches run motion, some run Dribble Drive, some run flex, and some run side ball-screens. I would love to be a motion coach whose athletes knew how to read and react the defense without some set and predictable pattern.
'Pappy' is an offensive system and philosophy that I received from the Twin Rivers girls basketball team. Its based on driving the ball and how the athletes can read and react to the defense off the drive. I like it a lot because its simple and practical and just basketball. Its a natural way to create consistency in your team's reaction to how to move together.
Read about PAPPY by clicking the link below:
Wednesday, February 14, 2018
The 4 Keys To a Successful Youth League
1 – Have Fun
The number 1 goal for a youth league should be that the kids have so much fun that they want to play again next year. The league, the referees, each coach, and each parent should understand their role in making sure that their kid has a great experience. While keeping score is important, and understanding early that there is a winner and a loser is important, the most important thing is just having fun playing the game and learning to love the game, learning to love being active, and learning how to play with their friends. A big part of that is helping them learn how to handle both success and failure. We have to teach the kids how to accept success in a way that is gracious and humble and in a way that encourages continued hard work to continue to have that success. We have to teach and model for them how to accept failure and adversity as teaching tools for life, and to use setbacks to teach them the importance of working hard in practice and on their own to get better.
2 – Learn the game
Teach the game, the right way, to each kid. Educate the coaches and parents on what the goal should be for each kid so that everybody has a plan for growth and development of the kid. It starts with the coaches understanding how to meet each individual kid, who all have different levels of experience, and teaching and developing them each week to meet certain weekly and end of year goals. It is also important that the referees are teaching the game by being consistent and fair at all times. The athletes learn as much about what they can and cannot do from referees as they do their coaches. They will continue to do what is allowed and they will stop doing what is not allowed. Referees should be teaching the game by the way they call the game and communicate with the kids.
The number 1 goal for a youth league should be that the kids have so much fun that they want to play again next year. The league, the referees, each coach, and each parent should understand their role in making sure that their kid has a great experience. While keeping score is important, and understanding early that there is a winner and a loser is important, the most important thing is just having fun playing the game and learning to love the game, learning to love being active, and learning how to play with their friends. A big part of that is helping them learn how to handle both success and failure. We have to teach the kids how to accept success in a way that is gracious and humble and in a way that encourages continued hard work to continue to have that success. We have to teach and model for them how to accept failure and adversity as teaching tools for life, and to use setbacks to teach them the importance of working hard in practice and on their own to get better.
2 – Learn the game
Teach the game, the right way, to each kid. Educate the coaches and parents on what the goal should be for each kid so that everybody has a plan for growth and development of the kid. It starts with the coaches understanding how to meet each individual kid, who all have different levels of experience, and teaching and developing them each week to meet certain weekly and end of year goals. It is also important that the referees are teaching the game by being consistent and fair at all times. The athletes learn as much about what they can and cannot do from referees as they do their coaches. They will continue to do what is allowed and they will stop doing what is not allowed. Referees should be teaching the game by the way they call the game and communicate with the kids.
3 – Player safety
Player safety should always be taken into account. Everybody has to understand that the kids are growing a different rates and have different levels of experience, but it is the job of the coaches to constantly monitor the physicality of the players and it is important for the referees to do the same on the court. Anytime that there is pushing, elbowing, kicking, tripping, etc, it needs to be called, addressed, and the proper way to play should be taught. It should be a zero tolerance policy and a policy of teaching from day one of practice for each team and from day one of games for each team.
4 – Great environment
Everybody should enjoy coming to the game to watch these kids play each week. It should be fun, exciting, and the highlight of everybody’s week. From the referees, to the coaches, to the parents, to the kids on the court, the goal should be to have fun and enjoy the games. The referees should be excited to help serve these kids, the coaches should be excited to teach the kids, the parents should be excited to watch their babies play, and the kids should just be excited to be there. Sport is competition, and the competition piece should not be lost in the enjoyment. The kids should be taught to compete to be your best, but it should be taught in a way that keeps the game fun, in a way that develops the kid appropriately, in a way that keeps all kids’ safety first, and done so in a great environment.
Player safety should always be taken into account. Everybody has to understand that the kids are growing a different rates and have different levels of experience, but it is the job of the coaches to constantly monitor the physicality of the players and it is important for the referees to do the same on the court. Anytime that there is pushing, elbowing, kicking, tripping, etc, it needs to be called, addressed, and the proper way to play should be taught. It should be a zero tolerance policy and a policy of teaching from day one of practice for each team and from day one of games for each team.
4 – Great environment
Everybody should enjoy coming to the game to watch these kids play each week. It should be fun, exciting, and the highlight of everybody’s week. From the referees, to the coaches, to the parents, to the kids on the court, the goal should be to have fun and enjoy the games. The referees should be excited to help serve these kids, the coaches should be excited to teach the kids, the parents should be excited to watch their babies play, and the kids should just be excited to be there. Sport is competition, and the competition piece should not be lost in the enjoyment. The kids should be taught to compete to be your best, but it should be taught in a way that keeps the game fun, in a way that develops the kid appropriately, in a way that keeps all kids’ safety first, and done so in a great environment.
Everybody has to be on board for
a league to be great. Everybody has to
know their roles in creating a fun, learning experience for the kids.
Sunday, February 11, 2018
Geno Auriemma - Be So Good That People Will Pay So Much Money To Come Watch You Play
"Be so good that people will pay so much money to come watch you play. And not just win, but play at such a way that everybody who was at the game goes back and says, “You’re not going to believe this. You have to go watch these women play."
Geno
Auriemma talks about:
-
How he got into coaching
-
Lying in the interview process at UCONN
-
The lack of resources at UCONN when they got there
-
Selling the kids on trust and the fact that they will build something
-
Getting Rebecca Lobo
-
6 high school Americans by the 3rd year
-
The frenzy behind UCONN
-
The level of awareness it placed on women’s basketball and women’s sports
-
$1 million budget to over $23 million dollar budget
-
Be so good that people will pay so much money to come watch you play. And not just win, but play at such a way that
everybody who was at the game goes back and says, “You’re not going to believe
this. You have to go watch these women
play.
Doc Rivers- Sacrifice
"Do you want to choose winning over standing out?
It's a choice every player on every championship team has to do"
- Doc Rivers
Hubie Brown - No One Is Bigger Than The Team
No one is bigger than the team. You're going to be on time, you're going play hard, you're going to know your job and you're going to know when to pass and shoot. If you can't do those four things you're not getting time here and we don't care who you are.
– Hubie Brown
The Person Who is More Disciplined is the Person Who Creates Options for Himself.
The following is an
excerpt on the importance of discipline from Dean Smith and his book, A Coach’s Life.
If a head
coach has conviction, the most naturally disciplined group on any campus will
be his athletic team because team members are used to sacrificing a certain
amount of peer acceptance in seeking excellence. I’m convinced that our work habits and tough
practices instilled a certain mind-set and mental toughness in our players, and
that why we avoided problems. From 1967
to 1969 we had so many close games – and generally won them in the last minute –
that our players developed a deep pride in the program. They were committed, they worked awfully
hard, and they had high expectations. I
think it prevented a lot of dissension.
“The really free person in
society is the one who is disciplined,” I told our players. What I meant was, true freedom results from
having choices.”
The person who is more disciplined is the person who creates options for himself.
The person who
is more disciplined is the person who creates options for himself. An example: Suppose there were two players
who like to indulge themselves off the court.
Both players were told that to make it with their NBA teams, they need
to lose 20 pounds. One player didn’t
bother to lose the weight and got cut.
The other player didn’t just lost 20 pounds, he lost 25, and made the
team. So which of them was more
free? The disciplined player had a
choice – to gain or lose the weight.
I believe the
disciplined person can do anything, although in many way I didn’t have a great
deal of self-discipline. He can exercise
restraint and make sacrifices, or he can choose to stay up late and smoke 10
packs of cigarettes.
I Have To Be Improving - Mike Neighbors
“If I’m asking my players to
improve, I have to be improving” - Mike Neighbors
Even us coaches, especially
us coaches, have to find ways to get better every day and every year for our
players. It’s important to take a step
back at the end of each season to self-assess your performance. It’s important to assess your strengths and
your weaknesses. It’s important to have
a plan on how to grow your strengths to a level of mastery, while growing your
weaknesses.
Each off-season find at
least one area that you want to grow in as a coach - set plays, zone defense, a
new press, new 1 on 1 drills etc. Master
something new this off-season, learn something new this off-season, and bring something
new because your kids and your teams need you to.
We ask our kids to improve, and each NBA great talks about how they come back with something new each year; so should we as coaches. Invest in yourself and in your craft.
Thursday, February 8, 2018
Spring Off-Season Basketball Offense
Offense
Some notes on what we want to accomplish this
off-season from an offensive standpoint. I want our philosophy for the spring
to be that nobody can guard you 1 on 1. You have to be able to get to the
paint off the catch or the dribble, or use screens to create and advantage to
get to the basket.
Beat Your Man 1 on 1
- You can’t let one person guard you
- Beat your man to get in the paint to score
- If you get in the paint and can’t get a clean shot, jump stop, pivot, and find cutters and shooters
- If you can’t get in the paint, drive to make somebody have to help to get a teammate an open shot
One on One Moves
Triple Threat
- Rip
- Jab
- Shot fake
Off The Dribble
- In and out
- Hesitation
- Stutter step
- Counters
- You can’t let one person guard you
- Beat your man to get in the paint to score
- If you get in the paint and can’t get a clean shot, jump stop, pivot, and find cutters and shooters
- If you can’t get in the paint, drive to make somebody have to help to get a teammate an open shot
One on One Moves
Triple Threat
- Rip
- Jab
- Shot fake
Off The Dribble
- In and out
- Hesitation
- Stutter step
- Counters
Get Your Teammates Open
- Help your teammates create an advantage
- Set a screen for them to get them open
- Drive at their man to make her help to get them open
- Help your teammates create an advantage
- Set a screen for them to get them open
- Drive at their man to make her help to get them open
Use Your Teammates to Get Open
- Know how to turn the corner on a ball-screen
- Know how to create an advantage when your teammate sets a screen for you
- Know when to back-cut to score, especially when the ball is in the paint after a pass or a drive
- Know how to turn the corner on a ball-screen
- Know how to create an advantage when your teammate sets a screen for you
- Know when to back-cut to score, especially when the ball is in the paint after a pass or a drive
Be In Rebounding Position
- Need somebody on both blocks and the middle of the paint
- Get around your man to get the rebound
- Grab with two hands
- Need somebody on both blocks and the middle of the paint
- Get around your man to get the rebound
- Grab with two hands
Wednesday, February 7, 2018
Be Consistent, Be Firm, Be Fair, but Most Importantly – Be Clear!
Geno Auriemma was asked why players don't do what coaches ask. Here was his response:
I
had a conversation with the parent of an incoming 9th grade student
last week, and it was centered around him coming to meet his new teachers and
his lack of wanting to speak with them.
He is a shy and quiet kid who just does not like casual
conversation. I told him that
communication is an important skill to grow and learn for so many ways.
Communication
is the key to everything as a coach and a leader. Nobody knows what is going on in your head –
you have to communicate in a way that they understand fully what you expect and
in a way that they can do fully what you expect. A lack of clear communication of expectations is one of the quickest and biggest ways to create a disconnect between player
and coach.
I
heard Geno Auriemma once say that a kid either can’t do what you want her to do
or just won’t do what you want her to do.
I think that is very true, but it is also important to make sure that
you are communicating clearly what exactly what you want them to do to give
them the best chance to have success.
Know
what your expectations are and communicate them. Know what your vision is and then communicate
it. Know what your plan is and then
communicate it. Communicate what you
need your athletes to do, how to do it, and when to do it. There should be no secrets and no surprises
to anyone. They should know what to expect
from you, what you expect from them, the rewards of a job well done, and the
consequences for not doing what they were expected to do.
From
there, we have to measure and observe if what you have communicated is getting
done to the level that you have communicated.
Not to the level that you want and expected, but to the level that you
communicate. If it is not getting done
to the level at which you would like or expect, self-assess whether or not you
have clearly communicated and modeled your expectations, whether your kids
have the skill level to complete what you have asked them to do, or whether
they are just not doing it. Again, they
should know the rewards of a job well-done and the consequences of not doing
their part.
Be
consistent, be firm, be fair, but most importantly – be clear!
Sunday, February 4, 2018
Know Your Why As a Coach/Teacher
The part that hit me the most was the last part - the
ones who are messed up the most may have the deepest treasure.
We all have that one player who is tough to deal with; or
that one student who just wont do what we need him to do. That person is
the one who needs us the most. That is the person who we need the
most. That is the person who we need to speak success, hardwork,
confidence and prosperity into the most. They struggle because they need
us. We struggle because we need them.
Find the treasure in all people and help them find the
treasure within themselves. And it starts one little step at a
time. Tell them you believe in them. Tell them you care about
them. Tell them you see the treasure in them. Then start telling
and showing them how they can bring that treasure out.
They need you. And, you need them.