"The culture of your program is established and reinforced in the weight room.
Tough teams win. Tough people win in this game.
But it's also about shared sacrifice, building confidence, details, and accountability.
All of those things are what wins."
“Be responsible for your own self determination.
You’ve gotta earn it.
Don’t look at somebody else.
Don’t blame somebody else.
You be responsible and have accountability for what your job is and what you need to do.”
If you don’t own it, you will never earn it.
Student-athletes who skip class, hide in the weight room, disrespect teachers, and make excuses are bad teammates. How you do one thing, is how you’ll do everything. You can’t flip the switch. Being a winner is about being consistently good.
~ via @CoachMongero
An important message for parents.
Negativity at home always finds its way to the locker room.
Parents have the power to help build a positive culture…or poison it.
What if we told you that this 5A Texas high school had COLLEGE LEVEL athletic facilities? 🤯
Walk with us through Melissa High School, which includes a $35 MILLION football stadium, a putting & chipping green, plus more!
“The most important thing to me was our mindset. We believed, expected, prepared to make it happen and could handle the ups and downs of the game without flinching, showing frustration, anxiety. We passed that test,” Curt Cignetti
Winners practice being winners.
Your culture doesn't automatically change because you do a book study, a team-building activity, bring in different players, paint the locker room, get new uniforms, or put a slogan on a t-shirt. Culture changes when the standards are lived out and reinforced EVERY DAY.
A wise coach once said, "If you have to beg them to play, you will have to beg them to stay." You don't beg a Wolf to hunt... The Standard is the standard.
Self-awareness defines @oregonfootball. For Coach Lanning, growth starts long before the film session. After every game, players write down their reflections — what they did well, what needs to improve, and where they can level up.
It’s not about being told what went wrong — it’s about recognizing it yourself before anyone else does. That builds stronger players, and even stronger teams.
🎧 Click the link in bio to hear the full conversation of The Process @yoptionfb between Yogi Roth, @RhettNFL, and @CoachDanLanning.
Each episode is fueled by our founding sponsor @76 — keeping you on the GO GO GO so you never miss a beat.
Watch Here: https://t.co/L5kpbBpvL3
#YOptionPodcast #TheProcess #OregonFootball #DanLanning #CollegeFootball #HowGreatIsBall
Dan Campbell said, " You can’t just say we’re going to believe and not put the work in."
"I think the belief comes from the work you put in and doing all the little things right."
Your self-belief comes from action.
It comes from doing the work.
"Poor teams, bad teams, mediocre teams - even good teams allow conditions to dictate how they perform or how they show up.
But, great teams, they show up consistently, constantly, and continuously regardless of the circumstances."
A team will rise or fall on accountability. When standards are high, commitment is strong. When accountability is weak, cracks show—excuses, finger-pointing, inconsistencies. The culture you build determines the buy-in you get. Accountability isn’t optional; it’s the foundation.
Tony Dungy said, "If you only coach that person on the field and you only make them a better player, you've really missed a great opportunity."
Great coaches coach character.
They focus on developing people.
Because character outlasts talent, stats, and wins.
Talent is overhyped.
Championship teams are built on:
1. Showing up on time
2. Working hard
3. Being coachable
4. Earning trust
5. Embracing roles
6. Making winning plays
7. Positive energy
8. Clear communication
9. Tough under pressure
10. Team first
The little things win.
“The standard is the standard.” – Mike Tomlin
1. No excuses.
2. No shortcuts.
3. No compromise.
The standard doesn’t adjust to you; you rise to meet it.
Championship teams don’t just set standards.
They live them, every day.