The greater the team chemistry- the greater the joy from victory! |
Basketball practices start next week. At the start of the
season, there seems to be so many things to try to “get in” before the first
game. As a coach, I think there are three obvious area to focus on during the
first two weeks:
1)
Reviewing basic fundaments and cleaning up some
of the individual skills.
2)
Putting in team offense and defense. This can
mean putting in plays on offense, and developing particular defenses.
3)
Working to try to get into playing shape without
creating injuries in players who may not be in the best of shape.
But the most important area of focus in the first two weeks
is establishing your team culture. It doesn’t matter if you return many of the
players from the year before. It doesn’t matter if you have practiced and
played games in the summer. It is always a NEW team and it is a fresh start. In
the first two weeks as coaches and as players, you establish what your culture
as a team.
·
How will you practice?
·
How do you compete?
·
How do you treat each other?
·
How do you respond to coaching?
Every first-year classroom teacher was told not to smile
until Halloween. The point was that it would always easy to go from having a
tough environment to an easy environment, but not the other way around. This
was old-school advice to establish an environment of discipline and maybe
respect for the teacher.
When I first started coaching, the excitement of starting
the season was to teach the basketball X/O things. As time has gone on, I get
more excited to see what kind of culture we can create. It is very hard to
change the culture in January- you build it at the beginning of the season.
“Culture” is one of the words we use over and over, and
really don’t stop to analyze what we mean. In some ways, we know what it is,
but we really don’t know what it is. Interrelated to the word culture is the
word chemistry. Does a team have good chemistry or bad chemistry? As we head
into the start of our season, I decided to ask 9 former players and managers
about culture, chemistry, and “attitude.”
Sara Wood ’96, Molly Watson Fourdyce ’97, Kennedy Meinert ’16,
Megan Young ’11, Jessica Howard ’11, Rainee Sibley ’13, Casey Williams ’15,
Lexi Daniels ’16, Andie Allison Leibach ’04- we all asked to give me four
adjectives to describe the following:
·
What is good chemistry?
·
What is bad chemistry?
·
What is a good attitude?
·
What is a bad attitude?
As one would guess, while their answers were different,
there were some recurring themes.
Good Chemistry
·
Share Relationships- Cohesive, Bonded, Trust,
Respect, Together, Unselfish, Loyal, United
·
Share Commitment- Hard Working, Disciplined, Whole
Hearted, Resilient
·
Share Motivation- Hungry, Focused, Goal
Oriented, Tenacious, Determined, Driven
·
Work Together- Communicate, Teamwork
·
Exhibit Humility- Accountable, Coachable
·
Positive- Enthusiastic, Compassionate, Enjoyable
Bad Chemistry
The most common adjectives used were:
·
Selfish
·
Cliquish
·
Ego Driven
·
Negative
·
Pessimist
·
Irresponsible
·
Drama
·
Disrespectful
Good “Attitude”
The most common adjectives used were:
·
Committed
·
Selfless
·
Humble
·
Reliable
·
Optimist
·
Accountable
·
Hard Working
Bad Attitude
The most common adjectives used were:
·
Selfish
·
Lazy
·
Unreliable
·
Negative
I really appreciate that these nine took the time to do
this. The following became clear to me as I read their answers:
·
Each of them clearly new what a good culture
involved. It was something they had thought about before.
·
It was obvious being part of a good team culture
was something important to them. They knew the value of a good team culture.
After reading their responses, I
felt like there were several themes that were recurring. My conclusion is that positive
culture and good team chemistry involve the following things:
1-
The group sharing a vision of what they can be.
2-
The group sharing a commitment and willingness
to work toward their goal.
3-
Through communication and actions, developing a
sense of reliability and trust in the group.
4-
Each player being a leader by being positive, enthusiastic,
and giving energy.
5-
Players willing to be accountable.
6-
Most importantly- individuals willing to
sacrifice for the group.
It will be exciting to start fresh on Monday. Positive team
culture just doesn’t happen. It is something that has to be worked on. It is
exciting to see teams who are willing to go from being individuals to become a
cohesive team. It isn't easy- some team succeed in building good chemistry and others aren't quite able to.
This editorial written in GHS Budget clearly is describing a team which established good team chemistry. |
No comments:
Post a Comment