Monday, March 13, 2023

Another story

 After taking over the WHS program, I had my share of assistants. All well meaning, trying to learn. One of them took the head job at a high school near my home after I resigned my position in the late ‘90s. I would talk to him at times about his team. He kept using terms like “I won this match,” or “I’m doing this at practice.” (He used the word “I” way too much, but I digress) He wanted me to stop by and see one of his practices. So I went.

He had a lot of enthusiastic girls who worked hard. It was the end of July, so it was hot.  The team looked strong and athletic.  After watching the team run through some warmup stuff for 15 minutes or so, he wanted to show me this new drill he had come up with or seen somewhere.

First problem in my opinion, all of his drills were timed drills. Second problem, too many players no involved. Let’s get back to problem 1. He had his players (all varsity players) run a digging drill.  One player on a box on one side of the net who hit balls at a defensive player on the other side.  The defensive player started at the left back, dug a ball, ran back to the middle back, dug a ball, moved to the right side, dug a ball, an then played a tip.  She would then begin the process again. The scoreboard was set to 1 minute. Her objective was to see how many times she could go around the circuit.  

After all of his defensive players had gone through, he walked over to me and something like, “I love that drill.” I told him it was a great conditioning drill, (I lied, anything related to a volleyball skill must be done properly, so as a conditioning drill, it was also terrible.)but that was it. He wanted me to explain.  I said, “Of all the players who went through that drill, not one did anything correctly. They need to learn the skill of digging a ball before you do something like that.” By the way, there was no corrective encouragement, only encouragement to go faster. I did not mention to him to inefficiency of the drill. One player hitting balls at another while the others screamed encouragement and shagged balls is another immense waste of time.

The players should go as fast as they can and as slowly as they need to while perfecting a skill. 


No comments:

Post a Comment

Focus on focus

 I have coached some pretty good players and some pretty good teams over the years. I have had some unbelievable athletes (One player won 13...