Congrats to @MakennaMudd for earning 2nd Team All-Conference! Kenna was a perfect jack of all trades:
Led team in assists
Timely shooting
Excellent Defense
Strong leader
She hit the go ahead 3 & had a late steal to clinch the STATE CHAMPIONSHIP for our team. Clips ⬇️
🟣⚪️🏆🏀
Transactional vs. Transformational Coaching…
Dan Hurley shared a story about asking Geno Auriemma for advice after a rough start last season. Geno didn’t mince words:
“Listen, if the only gratification and the only part of coaching that excites you is winning the national championship, then you’ve lost your way, buddy! Where’s the joy in the things that you’ve always been about as a coach before you went on the championship run, like relationships with your players, like helping people get better, like making your team the best it can be. Be a coach, man. This is when you really need to be a leader. This team isn’t as good as last year’s, so what the hell are you going to do about it? Are you going home? Are you going to let this thing unravel?”
That’s the tension every coach feels:
Transactional vs. Transformational.
Transactional coaching is outcome-obsessed. It’s about the wins, the losses, the trophies. The problem? When results don’t come, your purpose crumbles with them.
Transformational coaching is different. It’s about people. It’s about growth. It’s about building something that lasts, whether the scoreboard agrees with you or not.
And this is why mentorship matters so much in coaching.
Left on our own, it’s easy to drift into a transactional mode without even realizing it.
A trusted mentor can pull us back to center and remind us why we started coaching in the first place.
To build relationships.
To develop players as people.
To make teams the best they can be.
Wins matter. But they’re not the why.
The why is impact.
The why is growth.
The why is leaving your players better than you found them.
The process is the prize. Stay grounded. Stay on the path.
Always remember your why.
I am excited to announce my commitment to play basketball at the next level at Grove City College. I’m so thankful for my family, my parents, all of my coaches, Kelsey and Jeff at Synergy, and all of my teammates who have supported me throughout my career. Go Wolverines!
The Lions hosted a program meeting followed by “parents in practice” on Saturday—Thanks to all the parents who participated! Building our team AND our culture! @LHSparkerSports@JpNerbun@CHSCA
The best players are intentional because they want to succeed. When it comes to preparation, are you a GET TO or GOT TO player? Practice/weights/conditioning/working out are privileges, not punishments. Serious athletes don’t think they’ve GOT TO work; rather they GET TO improve!
Leadership is the great process of winning each moment, each possession, each practice, each film session.
Champions understand that you win games by improving your practice.
~ via @TylerCoston
@9Preps@TRidgeGrizzlies @ThunderRidge_AD @MooreAshleyE Coach Ortiz! Does things right— cares about kids— cares about coaches! Leader who never stops learning. Congratulations on #500!!!
🏀 Make practice messy 🏀
Don’t expect non-messy practices to transfer skills into the chaos of games. They won’t. The messy reality of games demands a level of chaos in practice.
How to be more messy...
Sports Parents, this is for you.
How you talk to your child matters.
Here are 10 Phrases that All Athletes Need to Hear...
1: “I LOVE WATCHING YOU PLAY"
This is a powerful statement to a child. There is no judgment or criticism. Ultimately, this is all you really need to say.
2: “I BELIEVE IN YOU”
Do you want to build confidence in your child? Tell them you believe in them. They need to hear this from adults.
3: "DO YOUR BEST"
We are all different. We all have different skill sets. All we can ever do is our best.
4: "BE GREAT AT WHAT YOU ARE GOOD AT"
This encourages athletes to focus on their strengths. It helps kids define their role on the team.
5: "LOVE YOUR TEAMMATES"
The joy of team sports comes from the commitment to your teammates. Athletes need to care about their teammates.
6: "NEXT PLAY"
This is a move-on mindset. Don't dwell on a mistake and make another. Don’t celebrate after a great play so much that you lose your focus. This teaches athletes composure and poise.
7: "MAKE MEMORIES"
Live in the moment. A season goes fast. Your high school career goes fast. Appreciate the moments and cherish the memories.
8: “PASS THE MIRROR TEST"
Can you look in the mirror each night? And tell yourself that you did your best, left it on the field or court, were a good teammate, etc.
9: "LEAD BY EXAMPLE"
This is the first step to leadership. Be on time, and have a high character. Bring positive energy. Be one of the hardest workers. Be committed.
10: “LEAD OUT LOUD"
Lead by Example, then Lead Out Loud. Be a Vocal Leader. Be an Encourager. Be willing to hold teammates accountable.
_____
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Season starts tomorrow! Kicking off the new year by going to see @DukeWBB Vs team USA at Cameron (first time!) today. 💙 @karalawson20@sabrina_i20 💙. Let’s goooo! Ready to go with @LHSparkerSports GBB!!!