The five-set match has a mystique to it, even though the premise of the competition format is similar a best 2 out of 3 sets, the best 3 out of 5 set matches are much more than that in our minds. Much of the mystique has to do with how we perceive the numbers. Our numeracy bias makes us think that a 3-0 win is automatically a wipeout, a complete win, even though each of the three sets could be close and either team could have won, the indictment against the losing team is that the losing team just did not have it, whatever “it” is: they were physically mismatched, they did not have the intestinal fortitude to overcome the challenges, they weren’t up to the competition, et. al. The four-set decision is deemed better in our mind, because a 3-1 loss gives the losing team a bit of a cover: at least they put up a fight but just didn’t have “it” at the crucial point, i.e. win that second set to even the set count at two apiece. We unconsciously rate the loser of the four-set match better than the loser of the three-set match because they were assumed to be more competitive, they were thus on a higher level than the loser of the three-set match, even though we are discounting the role that the opponent’s performance plays in the final count.
But we believe that the five-set match gives us a clearer picture
of the two teams as evenly matched because winning two sets out of the first
four gives both teams credentials to lay claim to winning the match outright.
Those two set wins are not considered a fluke as the single set win is
considered a fluke in the four-set match.
The psychology of the five-set match is always interesting,
because we coaches are always curious about how some teams can manage
themselves emotionally and perform physically in the most trying circumstances.
The question is always about sustainability: how the winning team manages to
sustain their competitive edge after losing
two sets, what does the losing team lack as they falter and not able to win
the fifth set after winning two sets?
It is with that curiosity as well as having the time, that I
superficially compiled the information on the five set matches in the recent
NCAA tournament, at least through the first four rounds, up to the end of the
regional finals.
There have been nine five-set matches in the first four
rounds of this year’s COVID adjusted 2020 NCAA D1 tournament. Two in the fourth
round. Two in the third round, Two in the second round, and three in the first
round.
The information is presented in a table below and is sorted according
to the order of how the winning team won their sets.
Round |
Match Winner |
Sets won by the Winner of the Match |
Match Loser |
2 |
Washington |
1, 2, 5 |
Dayton |
1 |
Western Kentucky |
1, 2, 5 |
Washington State |
4 |
Wisconsin |
1, 3, 5 |
Florida |
3 |
Washington |
1, 4, 5 |
Louisville |
2 |
Baylor |
1, 4, 5 |
Pepperdine |
1 |
Morehead State |
2, 3, 5 |
Creighton |
1 |
High Point |
2, 3, 5 |
UCF |
3 |
Pittsburgh |
2, 4, 5 |
Minnesota |
4 |
Washington |
3, 4, 5 |
Pitt |
The question of momentum was at the top of my mind. Given that
the five set winners had to deal with processing losing two sets, I was curious
to see what the limited amount of data can tell us, if anything, whether there
is a pattern to the winning. Note that this exercise does not take into account
all that is important with coaching volleyball: we are not considering the
effects of on whether coaches spin the dial to get better matchups, make substitutions,
change serve receive, change blocking scheme, change defensive systems, in other
word, this exercise just focuses on the
set win sequence.
There are six different ways to win in a five-set match, two
teams won sets 1,2 and 5; two teams won sets 1, 4, and 5; two teams won sets 2,
3, and 5; and one team won sets 2, 4, and 5. One team was able to complete the
come back from being down two sets and winning the last set, that was
Washington in the regional finals, while one team won all the odd number sets: Wisconsin.
So the winning patterns seem to be evenly distributed across all the
possibilities, we had three patterns that had only one team winning that way,
but we only had nine matches that went five-sets and we had six patterns. Not very
significant.
Five teams won the match after winning the first set to lead
off, while three teams won the second set to lead off, and only one team won
the match after losing two sets and winning the third, once again it was
Washington.
In my mind, winning the five-set match while winning sets 3,
4, and 5 may be more difficult, because it is difficult to sustain that elevated
level of play and mental awareness for
three straight sets, an extrapolation of the difficulties of beating the same
opponent three times during a season. In my mind, it takes an extraordinary
effort against an evenly matched opponent who are, we presume, increasingly
motivated if not desperate as they drop the two intervening sets. Barring a complete
collapse by the opponent who is up two sets, which can possibly happen, the
3-4-5 winner is probably a more
difficult scenario for the five-set win. Yet Washington, after playing in only
five-set matches in their journey to the final four managed to do it.
Ironically, it was also Washington who came back from giving up sets 3 and 4 to
Dayton to come back and win the fifth set.
On the other hand, if one were to believe in momentum, one
would imagine that once the teams were able to win two sets back-to-back going
into the fifth set, that their probability of success in set 5 would be greater
than 50%. Yet, there were two matches were the winning teams won sets 1, 2, and
5; meaning that two team that came back to win sets 3 and 4 lost the fifth. Both
Dayton and Washington State were not able to ride that mythical momentum of
winning two sets to a fifth set win.
Further, four out of the nine winning teams had presumably
rode that mythical momentum by winning the fifth after winning the fourth,
while five teams won despite losing the fourth set to win the fifth.
So, what does all that mean?
The clustering of the numbers from the very small data space
I chose means absolutely nothing. I was just piqued by the possibilities and succumbed
to the natural human need to see rational patterns. Many people who are coaches are also seduced by the need to find
logic where there seemingly isn’t any logic. Part of the reason for coaches’ desire
to find a pattern is to explain game results so that they can gain an edge.
Unfortunately, that logic is erroneous, it is backwards. The
thinking employed is using the results of the experiment, the five set matches
that have been played, to create a theory that is deliberately manipulated to
fit the data. Science works the other way: proffer a theory and then collect
data to prove or disprove the theory.
Indeed, the coaching mind leads us to the next paradigm: conjectures
about the intangible and qualitative factors which could affect the way the
players play, which intangibles would give the team an edge? In due course, the
conversation turns naturally to the most intangible, immeasurable, and barely
controllable factors which are recognizable from a coaching standpoint: the
human mind, our ability to process situations which are wicked and not kind. The words “mental toughness” is inevitably invoked,
and the overused buzzwords starts getting thrown around: grit,
resilience, mental strength, and the usual cliché of the moment regarding human
behavior while under competitive stress.
While I am a firm believer in those concepts, I also believe
that they are concepts, they are not roadmaps to solutions. The difference is
that the definitions for these concepts are often amorphous and multifaceted
because the concepts are so broad and all encompassing. Indeed, most people use
these words with casual and partial understanding of the concepts. Coaches are an eager and captive audience when
it comes to any concept that would help them get the edge, they are all eager
to either jump on the latest bandwagon
without understanding because it shows an inkling of a solution to their
perceived problems, it matters not whether the solutions are feasible or based
in reality.
Indeed, the problems are so difficult to define in tangible
terms that most casual observers are
incapable of identifying, defining, or explicating them clearly. Most people see
sports psychology and mental training as Justice Potter Stewart saw obscenity: “I
know it when I see it”; but knowing it when you see it does not translate into
actionable plans to train the players so that they are resilient, gritty, and being
able to perform flowingly to win that fifth set.
The disconnect is that people cannot translate the words into
action. Most coaches are familiar with
training the body for playing the game, they are usually not familiar with how
to train the mind for the game. Their familiarity and their ease in being able
to execute the necessary pedagogy in prescribing a solution to the physical
training made them believe that they can do the same thing with the mental
training. Most will apply the pedagogy of repeating the words often enough the
athletes will automatically translate
those words/concepts into beliefs, motivation, and results. Of course, we believe
in that short cut from the words to action is a valid response because we believe
that it should be that simple. If you only believed, then we will triumph. Of
course, it doesn’t explain the scenario where both teams believe, what then?
Who wins?
It is a cultural habit, we deeply internalize the belief
from The Field of Dreams: “if we build it, they will come.” Well, not
necessarily. We believe that hopes and dreams are all we need to succeed in the
face of adversity. Hopes and dreams bolsters us psychologically, it makes us
optimistic, it enables us to extend ourselves physically and mentally, but hopes
and dreams doesn’t consider the opponent’s response, the bounce of the ball,
and all the other intangibles; hopes and dreams does not directly affect the
players’ mental capabilities enough so that they are prepared for the five-set
match.
This is not to denigrate the arts of sports psychology. On
the contrary, a strong and systematically built culture centered around the
development of the mental skills to achieve those words by patiently changing
human habits is what it takes: to create the environment and ethos for successes
in winning that five-set match.
Many coaches will subscribe to the program of the week and to
short term solutions. At best, the impatient coaches will use the latest books, seminars, and workshops which
promises a do-it-yourself mental toughness kit, usually promising results in
days or weeks rather than in months and years. At worst, the impatient coach
may try their hands at the autodidactic route, sampling the popular literature
which also promises quick solutions and inadequate fundamental understanding of
the art of mental training. These same coaches would recoil in horror if a rank
amateur were given the task of training their teams for volleyball, but they
think nothing of undertaking the mental training aspects of their team on their
own.
In order to achieve success that everyone desires: taking
the players, indeed the entire program, to the heights of succeeding in the
five-set match, a culture needs to be cultivated and built from the bottom up
by those who are knowledgeable and well versed in the methods of mental
training.
In the aftermath of the five-set matches of this year’s NCAA
tournament, many of the student athletes and coaches from the winning teams were
interviewed by the announcers. In my uneven sampling of the interviews, they
very rarely talk about the usual clichés, but they do talk in terms of process,
environment, space to learn, learning to deal with their own inner voices, and
chances to make mistakes. All of what they talk about is the culture. Establishing
the right culture puts the program on the right track to potentially winning
those five-set matches, but it doesn’t guarantee success, your program is just better
positioned to succeed. Establishing the wrong culture will however, guarantee
that your program will have difficulties overcoming the challenges presented by
the five-set match.
In the end, this was a fun exercise, it laid out in a
limited scale, the information and it proved to my mind that we need to play in
the moment while relying on our training, both physical and mental.
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