The great UCLA basketball coach John Wooden once said that "Talent is
God-given. Be humble. Fame is man-given. Be grateful. Conceit is
self-given. Be careful." Great words from a legend of coaching - and not
just basketball coaching. Few, if any coaches, have bestrode the coaching
landscape like Wooden. While 10 NCAA National Championships in 12 years
is extraordinary and unrivalled, his dedication to making the young men
he coached better people is how he will be remembered. The many quotes
attributed to Wooden have little to do with basketball but everything to
do with character - "Be more concerned with your character than your
reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your
reputation is merely what others think you are."
I've met and worked with many coaches who quote Wooden and claim his
influence. Meeting the standard he set, however, is more than just
quoting his words. If you accept Wooden's coaching philosophy, you have
to live and operate by it. Success and failure on the training floor has to be framed by
the characteristics Wooden saw as all important. His arguments have
merit in a scientific view of performance. Writing training programmes
and delivering coaching scientifically is not particularly difficult. We
know a great deal about training volumes, intensity and recovery; about
playing systems and game theory. The great coaches, however, go beyond the 'what
to coach'. They have an ability to inspire athletes to go beyond what
they thought possible; to commit years of their life to winning a world
championships; to go where none have gone before. Invariably, their
athletes talk of the personal qualities the coach displayed and lived,
and how they [the athletes] became better people for knowing the coach.
The best of these coaches pay close attention to personal qualities and share their assessments with the athlete. After all, if the athlete doesn't know what the coach is looking for beyond technical skills, how can there be any improvement? Communicating those qualities must integral to training sessions and directly connected to competition performance.
Wooden's Pyramid of Success is well known. Each block of the pyramid
speaks to what it takes to be successful in life by being a better
person. No other coach has a legacy that goes beyond the sporting code
he or she dominated. Wooden's wisdom can make us all better coaches. But
before testing your delivery against the pyramid, the challenge is to
ask yourself how much you are willing to change of yourself to meet
Wooden's standards. In his words "It isn't what you do, but how you do
it".
(photo sources: Goodreads.com, and J R Wooden)
No comments:
Post a Comment