Coaching U LIVE 2012!

Date and site to be announced in early February! As many of you know, the NCAA has changed the recruiting calendar, and we are now waiting for all of the tournaments to pick their dates and sites. We will then announce COACHING U LIVE 2012 details.

We have already lined up a great staff and will have more information on that soon. The quality and amount of content you will get by attending this year’s CU Live will be off the charts! We pride ourselves on being the best when it comes to the speakers we get and their willingness to share EVERYTHING on their topic. Check back again that first week of February! Click for more about previous Coaching U LIVE events.

Understand the Process

As college basketball gets into full swing, one truth exists for all teams: no team will stay the same as the year goes on.

That means some will get better and some won’t. Whether a team improves will depend how players approach the “process.” Improvement is a process; success is a process; becoming the best is a process.

The outcome is based on the mindset the players have as they approach the process. Some will give in to fatigue and boredom through the course of a long season. Others will believe in the power of the process and almost have a team mantra that they will “never get bored with the process.” These are the teams that will put themselves in a position to be successful.

Three things about success: (1) it does not exist in a vacuum…championship teams believe in teamwork (2) it takes time and (3) it’s hard!

Play “as” a team and “through” the team.
Be mentally prepared to grind your success out.
Get past hard.

Let the process begin!

Practice

What a great time of year! College practices have started, with the high Schools soon to follow. Everyone is excited to be in the gym sweating, learning, and getting better. But no matter what the level, practices can seem to go on forever before that first game rolls around. So what makes some teams able to get more out of their pre-season practices than others? I’ve thought about this one a lot.

Doc has a great statement about the pre-season that is so simple, yet it hits home with our staff and our team. He says, “Guys, this time of year is about getting it right.” It’s about coming in everyday and working to make things better, make things right, make things even more right.

We want our players to “get from” practice not just “get through” practice. Losing teams come in with no energy, no enthusiasm, and no commitment to improve. They just want to come in and get the practice over with. We want no part of that!

We want them to learn what we need to do. That’s our responsibility as coaches. Then we want them to “get it right,” which is their responsibility. They need to listen to what we want done and how we want it done. Then they need to have a commitment to executing this to perfection in each and every practice session we have. That’s how they “get from” practice.

The key piece to the puzzle is that they collectively understand this and hold each other accountable for doing it. That’s what separates the great teams from the rest. They understand the importance of practice and the importance of repetition and how it relates to success. They make sure they attack each day with tremendous focus so they know that each day they’ve made an investment in their future success. They got something “from” the practice!

Bullet Basketball

An ongoing exercise for me is to find ways to “tighten up” my thoughts on the game. I call it “bullet basketball.” It’s a process I use to try to put everything that I would ever teach into 3 or 4 bullet points that are easy for the player to digest and remember.

For example, when teaching screening I use three key bullets:

  • take your screen to the cutter’s defender
  • can’t get low enough or wide enough
  • put your back to the area of attack

For shooting, I use:

  • be ready on the catch
  • 10 toes to the rim
  • perfect follow through – up and over front of rim

There are so many ways to teach this game, but I have found the best way to get points across to players today is to be simple and direct. Of course, within each of these “bullet points” are explanations that need to be made to the player. Once these are made and understood, I have a quick and easy vocabulary to use when working with the player or team.

I encourage you to put some thought to this as you have time during your day. It’s a great exercise, and not quite as easy as you would think. I know this: players like things simple!

Jay Bilas on Coaching U LIVE 2011

Coaching U Live is the brainchild of NBA assistant coaches Kevin Eastman and Brendan Suhr, two of the best teachers in basketball. The clinic was two days, and the quality content of teaching techniques, strategies and concepts was staggering. Speakers included Eastman and Suhr, Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers, former college head coach George Raveling, St. John’s assistant coach Mike Dunlap, Orlando Magic coach Stan Van Gundy and Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra….

…sitting in the stands at Coaching U Live taking notes and sharing information were current and former NBA head coaches, NBA assistant coaches, college coaches, high school coaches, NBA front office personnel, NBA scouts and college and pro administrators. NBA head coaches were taking notes when college coaches spoke, and when NBA assistants spoke. The voice and opinion of a high school coach was valued as much as any coach in attendance. The clinic wasn’t about levels; it was about knowledge and substance.
Click here to read the entire blog.

Garnett

Kevin Garnett – Success