May 2, 2003 Vol.5 No.5   Conference/Workshop Calendar
 Editorial

Welcome to the May 2003 Coaching & Sports section! As always, we continue to bring you original articles written by a diverse group of professionals in coaching and sport psychology. We start with Coaching Scientist, Dr. Wade Gilbert who contributed a short discussion on motivating athletes via positive coaching. Check out the links to ESPN's website which featured several interviews with successful coaches as well as Dr. Gilbert's empirical support.
With the warm weather approaching, thoughts turn to springtime sports such as track and field and baseball or softball. Our next two articles featured in this month's issue are written by coaches with extensive experience in these sports.

In the second article, Joe and Dovey Herzog, two highly-respected and successful coaches, share their philosophy and approach to coaching the middle and high school athlete. Over their combined 50+ years of coaching, they have won numerous awards for their work including the California Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance (CAHPERD) Boys and Mens Athletic Division Honor Award for Middle School Athletics and Physical Education and the California High School Coach of the Year for Women's Track and Field. Don't miss an opportunity to hear what these talented educators have to say about coaching from a holistic perspective.

Brian Cain, a baseball coach and graduate student in sport psychology at California State University, Fullerton, is the author of our third article this month. In his article, Brian describes techniques that coaches can use before, during and after practice to get optimal results from themselves and their athletes. This article is based on his work in the Robur'58 Baseball Club in Holland, but the techniques outlined are applicable to any coach striving to create successful practice environments.
We hope you enjoy these feature articles. Please don't hesitate to contact us if you would like to comment on these articles or submit your own ideas for publication.

Jenelle N. Gilbert and Wade Gilbert
Coaching & Sports Section Editor


Speed Stacks

 The Sponsor of Sportsmanship Day
The Institute for International Sport. Includes a wide variety of resources. Has links to other sites, quotes, research, relevant articles. National Sportsmanship Day Informational Packet: includes a variety of educational materials- most useful might be the "Discussion Questions" aimed at various age groups.


TWU

Motivation through Positive Coaching

Wade Gilbert, California State University, Fresno

All coaches have their own personal approach to coaching. A quick glimpse of the nightly college and professional games reveals a wide range of coaching styles, from hard-nosed autocrats (Bobby Knight and John Gruden) to more democratic laid-back approaches (Phil Jackson and Tony Dungie). Evidently no one style is the holy grail of coaching, as coaches from both ends of the spectrum - and everywhere in between - have achieved success. The key to understanding what drives athletes is to realize that optimal performance is highly dependent on athletes' belief in themselves (self-efficacy) and their personality (which is mostly genetic). You can't change their personality, but you certainly can influence their self-efficacy.

Surprisingly very little research has been done on the relationship between coaching styles and athlete or team success. Most coaches adopt a style that fits their own personality based on how they were coached, or through observation of high profile coaches in college and professional sports. This can be problematic because a style that may work for Pat Riley with professional athletes will not have the same effect with a group of 12 year-old youth league participants.

Many people in the field of sport psychology have advocated for a positive coaching approach, particularly with youth sport and amateur athletes. Recently Jim Thompson and the Positive Coaching Alliance have taken this message to the masses through their clinics and newsletters. They stress a 5-1 positive to negative feedback ratio for coaching. Although not scientifically validated, the key is to emphasize the positive while also providing error feedback.

ESPN recently completed a series of articles and a television special (Outside the Lines, March 23, 2003) on the positive coaching approach. The series includes material from elite coaches, the Positive Coaching Alliance, and research conducted with coaches. Click on the link below to read the articles on ESPN.com:

The power to motivate positively

Chat wrap: Jim Thompson

Positive coaching tips


Phi Epsilon Kappa
 Quality Practice - Getting the Most Out of Today:
Techniques Coaches and Players Can Use to Maximize Baseball Practice

Brian M. Cain
California State University, Fullerton

There are many different philosophies on the strategic and mechanical aspects of baseball. However, there is one concept that all baseball coaches will agree on regardless of competitive level: quality practice is essential for any team to have the best chance for success.

Today + Today + Today = Career

In Heads-Up Baseball (Ravizza & Hanson, 1995), it is written that one's career is the sum of all todays. This being true, there is quite possibly no other factor as paramount in the pursuit of success as practice. Coaches and athletes spend many more hours on the practice field than in competition. Practice does not make perfect, practice makes permanent, and quality practice gives you the best chance for quality performance. The purpose of this article is to share some of the techniques that we used at The Robur'58 Baseball Club in Apeldoorn, Holland to help improve the quality of our practice sessions. These techniques can be modified and used by coaches at all levels to help improve their practice.

Before Practice

Failing To Prepare, Is Preparing To Fail

Legendary UCLA Basketball coach John Wooden has written that many times it would take him twice as long to prepare for a practice as it actually did to conduct it (Wooden & Jamison, 1997). In keeping with this, we feel that the most important aspect of quality practice is the time and energy put into its preparation by the coach. Remember that by failing to prepare for a quality practice, we are preparing for a quality failure.

The fist step in preparing for a quality practice is assessing the needs of your team either through previous practice or performance. After the assessment is made, it becomes critical to establish goals for each practice. Next, a detailed practice plan needs to be developed. Spending the time before practice on these elements will minimize your stress levels because you will know what you want to accomplish and when you will do it. Preparing for practice ahead of time also increases motivation, intensity, direction, and time management. Incorporating activities in practice that are in accordance with your pre-practice goals and objectives will help set the stage for quality practice.

A detailed practice plan should consist of clock time, as well as the time it will take to complete the activity (i.e., 5:00 - 5:45 p.m. [45min]). This will allow players and coaches to know how much time they will have to practice in that area and will help them to be the most efficient with their time. The activity should also have a specific name (e.g., front toss or quick hands), so players and coaches will recognize the activity and be on the same page. Having a diagram of the facility with an outline of where the different drills or stations will take place, and a chart with the players' names and specific rotations of where they should be at a given time will help in time management. Also each player will be accounted for and will be held responsible for knowing where he (or she) should be at all times.

Writing down the specific equipment requirements (e.g., number of balls and bats needed, pitching machine speed, etc.) will also help to eliminate confusion or last minute scrambling. Remember also to build in time for equipment set up and take down, transitions between activities, and water breaks.

Posting the practice plan as soon as possible, so that the players can see what is expected of them, can help them to get mentally prepared. For example, they can start to use their visualization skills to see themselves performing the way they want to that day in practice. Sticking to the practice plan and keeping practice to the specified time can also help players stay focused and minimize undue stress they may feel about being able to respect academic or social commitments scheduled for after practice.

Click here for full article

  Quotes from the Experts

A coach is someone who always makes you do what you don't want to do, so you can be who you've always wanted to be.
C. Leeman Bennett

You are a direct reflection of me. When you lose, I am a loser. When you fight, I am a fighter. When you win, I am a winner. When you and I work together, we are a team.
Anonymous H.S. Coach

If you're not making mistakes, then you're not doing anything. I'm positive that a doer makes mistakes.
John Wooden

When you want to win a game, you have to teach. When you lose a game, you have to learn.
Tom Landry

The test of a good coach is that when they leave, others will carry on successfully.
Author Unknown


Sporttime


 Contribute Your Ideas
If you have ideas, comments, letters to share, or questions about particular topics, please email one of the following Coaching Section Editors:

Nutripoints


 Coaching the Middle School and High School Athlete: A Holistic Approach

Joe Herzog, President of the Fresno Alliance for Physical Education and Athletics

Dovey Herzog, Yosemite Middle School

For an educator/athletics coach, there is no more daunting task than the guiding and shaping of young lives. Coaches are charged with teaching athletes new skills, advancing skills they already posses, and teaching the inherent value of competition. They may come to us with the bluff and bluster not uncommon to the 13-18 year old age group, or they may come to us completely unsure of their worth to an athletic team. Some have competed in youth sports from as early as five years of age and some have never stepped into the athletic area.

So it falls to us, the coaches, to meld these ultimately varied personalities and skills into functioning units. As the authors of this work, we admit to having cut our coaching teeth primarily on the "trial and error" method of athletics coaching. Having begun our coaching careers in the 60's and early 70's we were exposed only minimally to the formal process of understanding the psychology of the adolescent/athletic mind. Why is it then that we were able to achieve a modicum of success over three decades of coaching? We believe it is because we gave full consideration to the student-athlete as a person first and as an athlete second. The following will provide an overview of our holistic approach to the teenage student-athlete. We hope we can give you cause to ponder the role of the teenager as a student-athlete, as well as the role that athletic participation plays in the life of each child entrusted to you.

Overall Coaching Philosophy

In order to bring out the best in their athletes, coaches must first consider their philosophy and how it will guide their practice. For example, is capturing a championship a desirable goal or an all-consuming need? Are you content with developing your athletes as best you can, trying to bring them to the knife's edge of competitive readiness and then letting the chips fall where they may? Our philosophy was the latter as we believed that a well-trained, confident athlete supported by teammates, coaches and parents was most likely to be successful.

In keeping with this, we attempted to set multiple goals with each athlete and we were never timid about challenging our athletes to step beyond their comfort zone. Our belief is that self-confidence and self-esteem are necessary qualities to successful and enjoyable performance. We tried to instill the belief in our athletes that a poor performance was simply a stepping stone to increased understanding of their own abilities, their own adaptation to a given competitive situation and was a valuable tool in their learning. We attempted to provide a multi-tiered foundation as a means to help our athletes with this process. First came the emotional support. This was accomplished by us as coaches always being present and positive regardless of the performance outcome. Secondly, we made it clear that we would bring the best of our knowledge and experience to each and every one of them, regardless of their skill level or position on the team. Thus every individual committed to success received the best of what we had to offer. This leads to another important component of the coaching process, namely commitment.


Commitment

Obviously coaches must be committed to the athletes and their learning. They must be at hand to guide practice, to work with individuals and to teach strategies, techniques, values and sportsmanship - every day, rain or shine. The coaches' commitment is just one piece of the puzzle though, as the athletes' commitment is equally important to success.

As coaches, we establish a set of parameters to guide our athletes and to help them with their commitment. We impart those rules to our athletes so that they understand that not only have they become part of something larger than themselves, but, that those guidelines are necessary for them to have the opportunity to progress and achieve higher levels of personal success. Our expectation of our athletes was for them to be at hand, every day to participate in those sessions, in order to learn and develop and not to be absent, as Thomas Jefferson said, "for light and transient causes." That being said, we were well aware that student-athletes had other callings in their lives. They are members of student government, various clubs, had academic responsibilities and most importantly, had family responsibilities. Not to recognize these circumstances is to deny the student-athlete as a person.

Regardless, our need as coaches is to have control over the time frame proscribed for each athlete. From 3:00pm to 5:30pm, or whatever the time frame might be, we need to have the athletes on hand and task oriented, otherwise we are unable to fulfill our responsibility and commitment. We expect, require, and even demand that. We are not however, so rigid that we cannot make exception to the rule, under acceptable circumstances. Our expectation was that such an exception required a further statement of commitment on their part. Extra time at the next practice, a morning session or a weekend workout could fulfill that requirement, but that requirement was never to be ignored or dispensed with.

Click here for full article

Digiwalker

 

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