But
can you coach?
You have graduated with a degree in exercise science, you got you masters in exercise Bioenergetics and were a GA in the weight room at State U working with a leader in the field, Benjamin J. Bicep. You have done three internships with professional teams. You have every certification offered so that you have more letters after your name that letters in the alphabet. You know the Krebs cycle forward and backward, you can tell me the how the fascicle length changes with each exercise.
You have graduated with a degree in exercise science, you got you masters in exercise Bioenergetics and were a GA in the weight room at State U working with a leader in the field, Benjamin J. Bicep. You have done three internships with professional teams. You have every certification offered so that you have more letters after your name that letters in the alphabet. You know the Krebs cycle forward and backward, you can tell me the how the fascicle length changes with each exercise.
Now what? It begs the question can you coach? Have you ever
done any real coaching? Have you ever gotten your hands dirty? This is not some
old man’s fantasy; this is what I am seeing today. Young men and women with no
idea of what coaching is. How to coach people not numbers. How to organize to
teach effectively. Coaching is not an industry; it is a profession. Where are
the professionals? All the theory is important, but it is trumped by practice.
Can you apply it to make the athlete better and give the athlete a good
competitive experience?
From Vern Gambetta
This is yet another great post from coach Vern Gambetta. It
is great food for thought because it goes to the crux of our raison d’etre.
Many coaches approach coaching as a technical practice rather
than human interactions involving communications, empathy, and human
understanding. The tail is wagging the dog in many instances. At the extremely
basic level of coaching, it is all about teaching: teaching technique, teaching
tactics and strategies, teaching mental preparation: teaching life, in all of
its ambiguities and frustrating details. This is the part of coaching that does
not come from books or webinars; yet, as Vern pointed out, this is where the
state of coaching resides presently.
I didn't come from a technical coaching background, I came
as an avid fan of my sports and a former player, a very bad former player at
that, but I love the game. My career education was in engineering and that is
where my career stood and that is educational background.
The volleyball was my escape from my graduate schoolwork, it
was my escape from the rigors of a math and science dominant life. As I said I
was a horrible player: I was either the second setter on the third team or the
third setter on the second team for my university club team, I can't remember
which; basically I was not good enough to play on the best team. I took it upon
myself to better myself. My road to coaching came from my wanting to make myself
play better and in the process, I got sucked into coaching and I've been hooked
ever since.
My playing knowledge when I started coaching was minimal
because I’d never played at a high level, and I never had a coach. We all just
played the game and figured it out on our own. Of course, it took me a dozen
years to figure out all the techniques that would work for me, and I would not
say that they were orthodox techniques.
My coaching experience followed along the usual path of all
beginning coaches. Since I was never formally taught, I became connoisseur of drills.
I collected drills. I did not care what the drills accomplished I just wanted
drills because I felt like I needed a crutch to fill the space of an hour or 90
minutes with drills to keep the players busy and these drills needed to be somewhat
connected to volleyball. It never occurred to me to think about how I was
benefiting my players. I figured that if I gave them enough drills that they
would get better eventually. Effective or efficient practices never occurred to
me. 90 minutes seemed to be a really long time.
I changed my worldview eventually because my team wasn't
winning very much. My players got better but not as good as I had expected. Being
a competitive Type A engineer made me question my knowledge and coaching, I sought
out coaches I respected, I bought books, I watched videos, I stole drills in piecemeal attempts to augment
my volleyball coaching without actually understanding why. I wanted the
extrinsic rewards and I coached for the glories of the wins and the recognition.
Of course, the recognition in club volleyball was as significant in the over
scheme as nothing.
I expanded my repertory to studying sports movement, it was
applied mechanics from engineering, so I had some familiarity with the
nomenclature. I dove into motor learning and I got into physical training, trying
to improve my player’s agility, flexibility, quickness, and strength. I dove
into volleyball statistics in order to get the edge, even though I knew from my
engineering training that the descriptive statistics made all kinds of sense in
sports but the inferential statistics made little sense since there were too
many confounding factors in the sporting arena. Yet I persisted in chasing the
ghosts of inference.
I experimented with anything that were even tangentially
related to volleyball; all done to make my players better. I fell into the trap
that Vern talks about, I was distracted by the bells and whistles, and I took
my eyes off the ball. Coaching became a spinning plates act where I had to
worry about keeping all the plates going without understanding which plate
matters the most.
The epiphany came when I sat one day and realized that I am
friends with most of my players from five, ten, twenty years ago. I watched
them grow up, go play in college, or not play in college. I witnessed them
getting married, having their own children, and then jumping into the vast
coaching pool themselves for the love of their children. Then it dawned on me: Coaching
is more than all the sports science, statistics, technical knowledge,
kinesiology, movement training, motor learning combined. All that means nothing
unless you knew how to coach, unless you knew how to communicate to people.
Communication has a broad meaning in this case because coaching communication
means being empathetic when you need to be empathetic, to be blunt when you
need to be blunt, to be able to speak to all of the athletes who are your responsibilities
under all emotional conditions, both theirs and yours. Coaching is all the
technical stuff AND the communications. As Vern stated, there is no substitute for
coaching because you have to pull the amalgam of skills out of you back pocket
at the drop of a hat in order to be effective.
My thesis advisor once imparted on me sage piece of advice.
He said that it does not matter if you know a piece of information forwards,
backwards, and sideways. The trick is to know that piece of information so well
that you can spin it, flip it, twirl it, make that piece of information dance
and sing in your mind and then have that information flow out of your mouth in
as many ways as there are students, because our job as coaches is to make sure
that understanding occurs, under different psychological circumstances and
different with every single person. This ability is coaching, it comes from having
done it so many times that you are able deal with many different circumstances
and situations as well as understand all the technical details that Vern cites.
The tail is now wagging the dog, but we had been there
before, we can recover from it. I am an example of that recovery.