The first step of developing
team culture is about developing vision. But for the vision to be reached, a
player needs commitment. All of us have heard the phrase, “talk is cheap.”
Vision can be the “talk part”, while commitment is the “action part.” Coaches
often say, “Don’t tell me, show me.”
The first season I was
coaching girls basketball, in the fall I chaperoned a fan bus to Danville. We
stopped in Champaign (where the girls tourney was at that time) to eat. One of
the future players said to me, “We’re going to be playing in Champaign this
year.” Obviously the player had a vision, but I had no confidence in the vision
because they really had not at that point had an off-season commitment.
Stephen Covey in his book “First
Things First,” deals with this idea. His message is:
1-
Determine your
priorities.
2-
Let your
priorities determine your actions.
3-
Your actions
should be showing your priorities.
Kevin Eastman in his book, “Why
The Best Are The Best” breaks commitment down into four types of commitment a
player makes:
1-
Spare Time- “I’ll
do it when I get to it.”
2-
Part Time- “I’ll
do it every now and then.”
3-
Full Time- “I’ll
do it when and only when it’s required, but I will do it.”
4-
All The Time- “I
will do what it takes, and more, every time you need me regardless of the
circumstances.”
According to Eastman, teams
have no chance if they are Spare Time and Part Time players. Championships are
won with All the Time players. There is no such thing as being committed on
certain days- it is all in or not in.
The biggest concept Eastman
discusses in relation to commitment is “unrequired work.” “Champion workers are the ones who are consistently willing to do that unrequired
work. They put in the extra reps, study the scouting report one more time, help
a struggling teammate after practice. They define commitment.”
As I look back at Galesburg
teams, our championship teams were filled with players did “unrequired work.”
· Shanell Jackson quietly going to the YMCA night after
night to work on her shot whether in the fall during her volleyball season or
in the winter during her basketball season.
· Andie Allison and Jenna Bicego who played softball but
since softball didn’t start practice until 3:30, they came into lift on their
own after school.
· Molly Watson being told by a college coach that the
college players shot 100 threes per day, so Molly shot 200 threes per day.
· Amanda Gunther developing her own shooting routine to
do after tennis practice each day.
· Sara Wood staying after practice every night for 30-45
minutes working on ball handling. And doing this every practice of her soph,
junior and senior seasons.
· Brenna Saline in the spring before her senior year,
never shooting a three because she wanted to clean up her form.
· Jessica Howard shooting 10,000 threes in the
off-season, shooting so much that she developed tennis elbow.
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