Jay
8.2K posts

Jay
@YesThatJay
Liverpool #LFC ⚽️ supporter. Distance runner 👟, New York Knicks #knicks 🏀fan. NY Cosmos #nycosmos ⚽️ supporter
Katılım Temmuz 2020
728 Takip Edilen185 Takipçiler

@stevemagness @bballbreakdown This is an isolated moment in his relationship with this player.
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@bballbreakdown Also, most of the time a coach yells it’s mainly to make them feel better, release anger. Which research shows is then contagious and makes players more likely to mess up because they press or get uncontrolled aggression.
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@YesThatJay And yet it is a thing that has happened lol
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@bballbreakdown @CoachKurzawski The thing is, you don't know the relationship between this specific coach and this specific player. So cute a study that draws a generalizable conclusion but that doesn't mean you're right about, as I said, this specific coach and player.
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Absolutely, that is spot on! In this conversation, we're focused on the most *optimal* way to unlock true potential in a game setting. We've learned quite a lot in the recent past about communication, and the science shows that using anger and disgust is suboptimal. Make no mistake, I'm not saying coaches can't be passionate. They need to be. In games specifically, where the goal should be to get the players to play as well as they possibly can, using anger and disgust isn't the best way to do that. Hope that makes sense.
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If you want to learn how to coach, study the greats - guys like Rick Pitino - not “Coach Nick.”
In the real world, people get challenged. Not every interaction is designed to make you feel comfortable - and that’s often where the real growth happens.
BBALLBREAKDOWN@bballbreakdown
It's always a good idea for the coach to have a goal with every interaction they have with their players. Whatever Pitino wants from his player, do you think this is the **best** way to get him to change the way he's playing?
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@Mappy6984 Still hurts after you drain it. But the weird part is you can hear it coming out.
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@the_mel_jar @jordanticus Can you give an example of very limited and basic?
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@jordanticus This is why the compromise of having very limited and basic and boring notes seems reasonable and correct to me.
No notes at all is a little risky, and not even necessarily just for people who we might otherwise associate with this sort of risk.
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