Russ Gregg

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Russ Gregg

Russ Gregg

@CoachRussGregg

Head Boy's Basketball Coach @ Greenwood High School. Former NCAA Div II women’s basketball coach.I have a son Ross! My Mom passed away from ALS in June 2019.

Commerce, GA Katılım Nisan 2009
3K Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
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Greg Berge
Greg Berge@GregBerge·
Your best player is either raising your standard or lowering it. There is no middle. Leadership matters.
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Matt Lisle
Matt Lisle@CoachLisle·
One thing great players have in common: They all sacrifice their free time to work at their passion. Team practices only take you so far.
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Russ Gregg
Russ Gregg@CoachRussGregg·
💯! Showing up isn’t enough tone the beat you can be.
Coach AJ 🎯 Mental Fitness@coachajkings

Geno Auriemma shares how he explains success to his players and why showing up isn't enough. "If you go to class and you do average work, you're gonna get a C. That's why it's called average." "If you want a B, you have to do more work. If you want an A, you have to do even more work and you have to give up stuff." You get what you earn in life. "You have to sacrifice. Maybe you can't do all the things that everybody else does." It means if you want more then you have to be willing to do more. "If you're just happy getting Bs all your life, there's nothing wrong with that either. But you're never gonna get the satisfaction of what it feels like to get an A." Then he connected it to basketball: "If you just wanna be average, then you do average work. If you wanna be a little bit above average then you do a little more work." "If you wanna get As in basketball, then you gotta do stuff that other people aren't willing to do - especially if you have the talent like we do. We have talent." It means bring a mindset of excellence to everything that you do. Excellence isn't the goal - it's the standard you set. Then he called out the entitlement problem: "Some of these younger guys coming out of high school, man, they wanna show up and go, 'I'm here. Where's my 3.7?'" "Like my father used to say, 'I got your 3.7 right here.'" Showing up doesn't earn you anything. Doing the work does. You get the grade you earn - in school, in basketball, and in life. It's easy to be average...successful people look to compete in everything they do. (🎥UCTV Sports )

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Matt Lisle
Matt Lisle@CoachLisle·
A great teammate connects with team members by personally investing in each one. They form strong relationships allowing them to lead, demand accountability, and keep the team moving in the right direction. - JP Clark
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Reid Ouse
Reid Ouse@reidouse·
A player who complains about their role is telling you that their personal stats are more important than the team's success. Address it immediately.
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Russ Gregg
Russ Gregg@CoachRussGregg·
This might be the best thing I have ever read on X. Thanks @ClintHurdle13
Clint Hurdle@ClintHurdle13

During one of the worst losing streaks of my career, our team president walked into my office. Keli McGregor. One of the best men I've ever known. He could have come to vent. To question my decisions. To ask hard questions. Instead, he said: "Cut to the chase, Clint. What's next?" I looked him in the eye and gave him two words: "Shower well." The Colorado Rockies were struggling badly that year. Pregame preparation was solid. Scout meetings, early work, attention to detail. All of it was there. But at game time, the tires were flat. I told Keli: the game did everything it could to us today. We just couldn't meet its demands. Now it was time to reset. "Shower well" means exactly this: • Watch the frustration circle down the drain • Shampoo, rinse, repeat and get the grime of today completely off your mind • Walk out clean, go home, and actually rest Leave it at the ballpark. The game is over. There's nothing left to solve tonight. Keli nodded. Asked if he could share it with the whole organization. I said sure. And then it hit me. This isn't just for baseball. Bad day at the office. Grumpy boss. Missed deadline. Traffic on the way home. You can carry all of that through your front door. Or you can shower well. I've never seen a single problem get better because someone dragged it home with them. The reset is a discipline. Same as preparation. Same as showing up. Either we win. Or we learn. The only real loss? When you don't take a single thing out of a hard day. So tonight, whatever kind of day it was, shower well. Tomorrow is a new at-bat. What does your reset look like? I'd love to hear it.

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James Light
James Light@JamesALight·
Houston HC Kelvin Sampson - Why Coaches Fail - "I think the coaches that fail at every level, are the coaches that are passive aggressive. Passing aggressive coaches are usually afraid to hold kids accountable, they rationalize." - "If you're going to build a culture, the first thing you have to come to grips with, you're going to have confrontation." - Consistency - Competence - Confidence - Confrontation
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Hoop Herald
Hoop Herald@TheHoopHerald·
Brad Underwood on people not liking his coaching style “I’m never going to apologize for coaching with passion"
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Sam Block
Sam Block@theblockspot·
Florida won by 59. Tennessee won by 22. Alabama won by 20. Arkansas won by 19. Texas A&M won by 13. Vandy won by 10. Texas won by 8. Kentucky won by 5. Texas won by 2. But Georgia lost by 25 to Saint Louis.
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Matt Lisle
Matt Lisle@CoachLisle·
GREAT PLAYERS will put the extra time in. GREAT TEAMMATES will bring other teammates with them. GREAT FRIENDS wont accept excuses. - Proactive Coaching
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