|
Post by ag87 on Jan 24, 2024 8:18:37 GMT -8
"In the past few games there has been a lot of intervention on the part of coach while our PGs are operating with competitors in their grill."
I noticed this too. IMO, it really disrupted the flow at the time and doesn't seem to be a real confidence builder. Tending to be a kind of over control. You coach 'em and let 'em play and see what happens. During a game, timeouts and other breaks are for coaching, rather than stopping the PG at mid-court for a conversation (as happened with Hunter in the Stanford game). I think it was Ralph Miller who said something like practices are for coaching. Games are like a test. A test to see if the players learned and if the coach taught.
|
|
|
Post by Werebeaver on Jan 24, 2024 10:49:37 GMT -8
"In the past few games there has been a lot of intervention on the part of coach while our PGs are operating with competitors in their grill."
I noticed this too. IMO, it really disrupted the flow at the time and doesn't seem to be a real confidence builder. Tending to be a kind of over control. You coach 'em and let 'em play and see what happens. During a game, timeouts and other breaks are for coaching, rather than stopping the PG at mid-court for a conversation (as happened with Hunter in the Stanford game). Its the way Rueck’s coached his teams for 14 seasons at OSU. It’s not going to change.
|
|