Tuesday, July 24, 2018

#77 Problem or Solution

The definition of insanity is doing the exact same thing over and over again while expecting different results.  --Albert Einstein

About 10 years ago a young man (we will call him Eddie) came to visit one of my practices.  He was a friend of one of our star players (we will call him Tim), and he was visiting us during our season because he had decided to quit playing at the the college he was presently attending.  He and his family had gone through the necessary NCAA paperwork to allow him to actually visit other schools and start talking to other college coaches.

Tim had given me some background before Eddie's visit, so I had an idea of what he was going through.  In all honesty, it sounded very similar to what I went through as a college player, so my level of empathy and sympathy was pretty high.

When I sat down with Eddie the first time, it was obvious to me that he was very intelligent, but I could tell that he could be the type of kid who could get bored quickly.  He loved to play, but he talked with very little emotion and was a little too laid back for my taste.  Although I empathized, I was already wondering if he was a good fit for me.

As a D3 coach at the time, I never got too excited about transfers no matter how much I liked them or we needed them because the decision always came down to money.  Our financial aid packages were not great, and they were even worse for transfers.  So, when Eddie's family got their package and Eddie called me and told me that he was all in, I was a little surprised, a little excited, and a little concerned all at the same time.

Nevertheless, it wasn't long that next fall when the returning players started talking about his talent with me and how he could help us.  He was a top tier high school player, so I started to get very excited and a little relieved that maybe we had something very special land in our lap.

When our official practices began that October, it wasn't long before my initial thoughts about Eddie after our first meeting started to rear their ugly head.  As talented as Eddie was, he was not disciplined in his game.  He simply did not play the game the way I wanted and expected it to be played.  He was sometimes lazy on defense, especially off the ball.  He took shots outside of the flow of the offense, and when he drove to the basket, he would often throw up erratic shots when he had a simple pass available to an open teammate.  Very quickly, two hard-headed people began to clash, and I began to understand why his last coach pushed him closer and closer to the end of the bench before giving up on him altogether.

My problem was that I needed his talent because we were lacking any depth of high level ability or skill on the roster at that point.  So, I did what any "serious" college basketball coach would do with an undisciplined kid, I pushed him harder and harder and started taking playing time and reps away from him.  Boy was I bright!

If you haven't guessed yet, I quickly turned Eddie into a blob of insecurity, depression and doubt.  He had lost all faith in me and me in him...at least that is the way it looked.  Luckily for me, Eddie is much smarter than me and much more determined than me.  He wasn't going to let the same story of his basketball career repeat itself.

 About 10 games into the season, he came into my office and asked to talk.  I don't remember the exact conversation, but I know that he wanted me to know that he had lost all confidence in his abilities, but it was very clear that he had not lost confidence in me (at least not completely).  He told me that although he wasn't as disciplined as I expected him to be, he understood everything we were doing and believed that we had enough talent with the system we were using to win more games and win the conference. He explained how he saw the game and why although he might look slow to close out or rotate back to the rim-line at times, he really was thinking and re-acting 2-3 plays ahead of what was happening.  He also let me know that he understood my frustration that he sometimes did not swing the ball to an open man quickly enough or throw to that open man at all because he knew he had a better chance of scoring than making that extra pass or decision. 

We continued to talk about my experience in college and how depressed and sad I was that "my game" had been taken away from me, and I was not allowed the skills that had made me a half-decent high schooler.  I told him that I would watch film and work harder on practice and game planning to integrate his strengths into our game plan and focus less on the perceived weaknesses I was seeing.  In short, I decided to give him more rope and work to give him more isolated opportunities to help us put more points on the board.

It may not have happened over night, but it didn't take more than 2-3 games before he was not only consistently our leading scorer, but he began leading our team in steals, turnovers created, all while frustrating the hell out of the other team's best player and defender.  Within the first 4-5 games of conference play, it was clear that he was a legit All-Conference player if not the best player in the conference.

He went on to have two dynamic years with us, and he became not only a great leader in our program, but to this day, a young man whose life I envy and his friendship I cherish.  He has traveled the world, made great, life-long friends wherever he has been, and he has consistently lived his life to the fullest without boundaries or prejudice and with an astounding respect for all people, cultures and walks of life.

I decided to tell this story today because I am presently having some problems with people attempting to coach me, and it has made me think a lot lately about how I initially coached Eddie.

If you are going to take anything away from this blog, please let it be the difference between a great coach and a great player.

A great player can take a game plan and consistently execute that plan.  If a great player begins to struggle with the execution (for instance his jumper stops falling), that player will begin to address the problem.  He or she may ask "what do I have to do to fix those missed shots?"

A great coach will NOT look at the problem and ask "How do I fix that?"  A great coach will ask "Why is that happening?" or "Why is that a problem at all?" or "What am I doing to create that problem?"

As coaches, teachers, parents, etc., we often get so focused on the problem that we forget to look inward and realize that the problem may actually be us.  Have I been engaged enough?  Have I been overly critical and not supportive enough?  Are my "problems" (i.e. fear, depression, concern, self-doubt, sadness) bleeding into those I love and care about?

We are all human.  We all have amazing flaws.  Even when a person externally looks and acts with such joy and composure, his or her flaws and concerns are never too far away.

Give yourself a day, a week (a month if you can) and try to start looking more at the good and much less at the bad.  Be a bigger cheerleader today for those around you and far less their biggest critic.

Change your personal narrative, and don't be surprised if your story doesn't have a much happier ending than you expected when you first started to write your book.

Coach Matt Rogers

Email: coachrogers12@gmail.com
Twitter: @madcoachdiary
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/rogersmatt16
Blog: madcoachdiary.blogspot.com
Phone: (312) 610-6045


Matt Rogers is a 20-year high school and college coach veteran.  He has led two teams to the NCAA National Tournament and one team to a High School State Championship.  His teams hold numerous school and one NCAA record. He has mentored and coached players at every collegiate level while serving as an athletics administrator at the high school and NCAA levels. He currently is the Senior Recruiting Specialist for NCSA - Next College Student Athlete where he has helped thousands of young men and women from around the world achieve their dreams of playing at the college level.  Coach presently lives in the Denver, CO area with his wife of 20 years and his two children. 

To request Coach Rogers to speak at your school or event, you can reach him through any of his contact information above.

Thursday, January 4, 2018

#76 Distinguishing Between Committed and Focused

Focus on your strengths, not your weaknesses.
Focus on your character, not your reputation.
Focus on your blessings, not your misfortunes.
― Roy T. BennettThe Light in the Heart


As I have written a lot about lately, I am back coaching high school aged young men.  I very much enjoy coaching this age group because they are so hungry to get better and have the most to gain by being coached the right way.

Unfortunately, with that desire to get better comes some "fun" baggage:  teenage hormones and insecurity.  It is literally like trying to coach a flock of hummingbirds.  They cannot sit still for more than 2 seconds, and their little brains never stop churning or settling on one thought at a time.

I have 12 young men on my team this year, and I hand-picked each one for very different reasons.  They all have the ability to be very good role players or better on the varsity in the next year or two, but each has a defining characteristic that I was immediately drawn to.  For some, it is their humility and respect for the game, their teammates, and me.  For others, it is their hunger to find out the true depth of their potential.  And for the rest, they have a special talent.  The game comes easy to them if they can continue to find discipline in their abilities and skills.

With that said, they are all genuinely committed to our team, our philosophies and the direction I've laid out for them.  The problem is that they all struggle with understanding the difference between committed and focused.  A dog can be really committed to getting a bone buried in the ground.  They will dig for hours trying to extricate that bone, but if a rabbit were to run through the lawn, that dog will quickly shift their attention from the bone to that rabbit in an instance.  That's a pretty crass analogy, but that basically defines a teenage boy in a lot of ways.

So, as coaches and teachers, how do we help the committed develop an unbreakable focus?

I have to admit that this is one of my major weaknesses as a coach and as a parent, so I'm writing today's blog as research and therapy as much as helping you solve your own problems.  I just hope through what I figure out, it helps you with some solutions of your own...and maybe you can throw me a bone and help me get better.  Here are the 3 things that I've come up with to help move the needle from committed to focused:

1.  Keep It Simple
As a System coach, I can focus our practice plan on shooting drills, running and passing drills, rebounding transition drills, and transition press drills, and I can see growth in who we are each and every day.  The more we do simple drills that accomplish 2-3 goals within that one drill, the better we get at them and the better the System gets.  I make sure that we have foundation principles that transcend from drill to drill and philosophy to philosophy.  For example, we do a lot of shell drill (i.e. man-to-man, press run and jump) in the half court almost every day.  One of our foundation principles is "up and on the line defense".  No matter what defense we are in, we want to be on and up the passing lane one pass away, and we want to be on the rim-line two passes away.  No matter what defense we are in, that principle will always put us in a position to protect the basket, be aggressive in the passing lanes, and be in a fantastic position to rebound.  That principle never changes.

2.  Teach in Context (more)
I grew up in a high school program where we would spend the first 90 minutes of every 2 hour practice doing drills (see Hoosiers movie).  We might get the last 30 minutes to scrimmage and put the pieces together.  It is extremely hard for me to let the idea of drill, drill, drill, drill, play out of my existence because I know how better it made me as a player.  Things are different now...yes, I choked on those words a little as I wrote them.  You can't do the things to kids that my coaches did to us (i.e. locked gym doors and put trash cans in each corner...I'll let you fill in the blanks.)  What I am trying to get better at is letting kids play and then fixing things that are broken instead of making every kid work on things that may not be broken for them.

We do a lot of 1-minute scrimmages.  Some days the goal is the first team to 7 points in 1-minute.  Other days, we are looking to get a team to 7 possessions in that minute (encouraging faster pace and steals to create more possessions).  And then we have days where I get creative in context with points only for offensive rebounds or forcing the other team to take a mid-range jumper..  The more my guys can learn to accomplish in 1-minute of play, the more that translates to bigger positive differences on the scoreboard.  If I see that we are doing a poor job of defensive block-outs in transition, I will put a drill in that mocks that concept, so we can work on it repeatedly in a 7-10 minute drill.

In other words, let the kids performance dictate the drills you teach and work on.  I am basically flipping the plan that my HS coach used.  Let them play, and then teach where it is needed.

3.  Position Kids to Their Strengths
I'll be honest.  This a cop-out answer. It is still significant, and I will explain why in a bit, but I'm still working on this one.  I need to figure out how to get that kid who, no matter how much drilling in context we do, can still not remember to block out or at least get to the rim-line every single time they are supposed to.

Offensively, putting a really good shooter who cannot dribble or defend in the 2-hole where it is their only job to run the right-side of the floor, catch, and shoot the ball off the pass, is a simple way to keep them on the floor and help them be productive.  Teaching a big whose only strength is their length to be in a position to only focus on screening and offensive rebounding and telling them that they get to shoot every offensive rebound they get is another great way to hide a kid, but very much keep them productive.

The problem is that both of those kids still have to turn around and defend and rebound.  Well, you can say, put him on the worst shooter on the other team.  That still doesn't help us if that "worst shooter" never gets blocked out by our worst rebounder, or that "worst shooter" goes by my "worst defender" every time for a lay-up and/or puts my big in foul trouble.

The true problem is that I know the old "lock the doors and put trash cans in the corner" philosophy fixes the focus problem.  I just like my job and these kids too much to go there.  I have to find a happy medium where drilling that weakness and having consistent punishment over and over again until the weakness becomes a strength.

With that said, I would love your comments and ideas, so we can make this blog what it should be.  I'm all ears, and I look forward to hearing what you are doing to improve your team's focus issues.

Coach Matt Rogers

Email: coachrogers12@gmail.com
Twitter: @madcoachdiary
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/rogersmatt16
Blog: madcoachdiary.blogspot.com
Phone: (312) 610-6045


Matt Rogers is a 20-year high school and college coach veteran.  He has led two teams to the NCAA National Tournament and one team to a High School State Championship.  His teams hold numerous school and one NCAA record. He has mentored and coached players at every collegiate level while serving as an athletics administrator at the high school and NCAA levels. He currently is the Head National Scout/Recruiting Specialist for NCSA - Next College Student Athlete where he has helped thousands of young men and women from around the world achieve their dreams of playing at the college level.  Coach presently lives in the Denver, CO area with his wife of 20 years and his two children. 

To request Coach Rogers to speak at your school or event, you can reach him through any of his contact information above.

Monday, January 1, 2018

#75 A New Year's Wish

I'm finally holding what I've been hoping for.  --Charlie Worsham


Happy New Year!  As we start fresh in 2018, I thought I would write about MY wish for all of you rather than drone on about some obligatory New Year's resolution that most won't follow.

Outside of my wife and kids, coaching, and my scouting responsibilities, my free time is usually consumed with my three favorite hobbies:  books, movies and music.  I would consider my library for all three extensive, and I hope to pass down all three of my hobbies (obsessions :-) to my kids.  All three media genres have inspired and motivated me throughout my life.  My writing has often been the result of that inspiration and motivation.

With that said, I decided to use quotes from one of those three mediums to express my hopes for 2018 for specific groups of people who I think need a wish or two to come their way this next calendar year.

For the Young, Lost and Lonely
My wish for you comes from country singer, Mr. Charlie Worsham (and the quote above)

My family had a challenging year in which some things were thrown at us that we were not prepared for.  We had to make some changes and sacrifices as a family, so we could continue to stay in a home we love and be near great friends and family.  The inspiration for today's blog came from me thinking not about those obstacles and challenges we have faced, but for the things that I was blessed to have this year.  

The best part of my day is when these two little, giggling "monkeys" (as I call them) crawl into our bed each morning to snuggle.  For about 10 minutes everyday,  I realize that my whole life is in my arms.  Whether or not I wished for it years ago, every day I am blessed to be "holding what I [was] hoping for."

My wish for the young, lost and lonely is that you remember all of those blessings are out there waiting for you, too.  My challenge to you is to not complain about not holding your hopes and dreams at this moment, but to put yourself out there in the world and be seen and be heard.  A job, a career, a mate, or love isn't going to just fall in your lap.  Be open to new things.  Challenge yourself to get out of your comfort zone.  Take a chance every day.  Surprise yourself with gumption, determination and make it joyful.  Whatever happens in the result of that chance, laugh about it when you are done and make a decision right then and there that you will take another chance tomorrow.  The world is your oyster.  Don't let the ocean ever make you feel small.

For My Present and Former Players
My wish is for you to never forget You've Got a Friend in Me by Randy Newman

I'll keep this short.  I love you all, and I could not be more proud to know you and to call you family.  Whether we talk once every 10 years or once per week or you played for me for one season or four, know that I am always a phone call away to talk, help, laugh or cry when you need it most.  I am impressed with how each of you are making the world a better place to live.  Trust me when I tell you that I'm watching and cheering loudly!  Please keep the pictures of your precious babies coming my way!

For Our President and Government Leaders
My wish is for all of our "leaders" is to embrace the definition of humility by the great writer C.S. Lewis
True humility is not thinking less of yourself; it is thinking of yourself less.  
From the book Mere Christianity

You can call me naive.  It won't faze me.  You can call me ignorant.  It won't make a dent.  No matter the naysayers, I will never stop seeing our world, our children, our people and our nature as one big family we are all responsible for protecting.  I hope that 2017 triggered a renaissance of hope, generosity and (as another President once said) audacity in our world where leaders will stand up and say:

"We can do better, and it starts with me TODAY.  This is who I am going to be from here on out, and it is our World and our People that I will fight for before everything else.  Populism?  Nationalism?  Those words mean nothing to me.  If you meet me in the street...if you are reading my words...if you are in need of help...you are my friend...no matter your color, race, religion, creed, nationality or sexual preference...you have something positive to give to this world, so I have something positive to give to you."


For My Mom and Dad
My wish to you comes from the band Blues Traveler
The Mountains Win Again

I woke up yesterday morning and there was a thick blanket of clouds engulfing our community, yet the Rocky Mountains floated above the clouds like a Castle in a sea of blue and majestic sunshine.  It felt, like it does most days in Colorado, like we were given our own little piece of heaven.  This wish explains itself.  :-)

For My Nieces and Nephews
My wish to you comes from one my all-time favorite comedians/actors, Robin Williams, from the movie Good Will Hunting
Some people can’t believe in themselves until someone else believes in them first.

I don't get to see any of you enough, but the pride I have for all of you consumes me.  How impressive you all are in your own way.  The gifts you have given all of us who love you are innumerable.  Whether it is the way you have chosen to live your life or the partners you have chosen or the 11 beautiful babies you have brought into our family, I am so thankful to have the opportunity to be your uncle...and mentor...friend...confidant...or whatever you need me to be...ANY TIME.  I believe in you!

For My Babies
My wish for you comes from one of the great leaders of the cinema, Gandalf the White, from Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.

Your mom and I pepper you with love, challenges, wisdom, direction and discipline every day.  When it is all said in done, it is that quote above that means the most.  

How you choose to live your life each and every day will define you.  Don't ever let the definition of YOU be the days you wasted to do something good.  You have two stone walls of love, passion, and unbreakable truth behind you.  We will always be there to protect you and make sure that you never give up on the path to your dreams.  Whatever that path may be!

For The Love of My Life
My wish for you comes from my all-time favorite band, The Beatles
"I Will" from the White Album [I recommend that you all take some time to re-visit what I think is the greatest album of all-time]

"Who knows how long I've loved you..."  I know for sure that it has been a lot longer than the 20 years you've been my bride.  You've made all of my wishes come true.  It would be terribly selfish to wish for anything more for myself.  So, for you, my love, I wish that the next 20 years are defined by you finding your path in this world outside of being the best mother and wife we could imagine.  Whatever you want to do, we've got your back every step of the way.  I can't wait to see all that you will do and become.

...and For The Rest of You
My wish for you is, of course, from Dory and Finding Nemo

“Just keep swimming. Just keep swimming. Just keep swimming, swimming, swimming. What do we do? We swim, swim.”



Coach Matt Rogers

Email: coachrogers12@gmail.com
Twitter: @madcoachdiary
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/rogersmatt16
Blog: madcoachdiary.blogspot.com
Phone: (312) 610-6045


Matt Rogers is a 20-year high school and college coach veteran.  He has led two teams to the NCAA National Tournament and one team to a High School State Championship.  His teams hold numerous school and one NCAA record. He has mentored and coached players at every collegiate level while serving as an athletics administrator at the high school and NCAA levels. He currently is the Head National Scout/Recruiting Specialist for NCSA - Next College Student Athlete where he has helped thousands of young men and women from around the world achieve their dreams of playing at the college level.  Coach presently lives in the Denver, CO area with his wife of 20 years and his two children. 

To request Coach Rogers to speak at your school or event, you can reach him through any of his contact information above.