Wooden's Wisdom - Volume 3 | Issue 124 |
Craig Impelman Speaking | Championship Coaches | Champion's Leadership Library Login | |
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR HARD WORK AND CAREFUL PLANNING
This quote from Coach Wooden represents the cornerstone of his approach to coaching and life.
In his book The Essential Wooden, with Steve Jamison, Coach listed three of his assets and three of his liabilities:
Three of my Assets
Three of my liabilities
Coach recognized he had to balance his attention to detail, hard work and careful planning with patience.
In his book with Steve Jamison, Wooden: A Lifetime of Observations and Reflections on and Off the Court, Coach describes his planning process for practice:
I would spend almost as much time planning a practice as conducting it. Everything was listed on three-by-five cards down to the very last detail.
Everything was planned out each day. In fact, in my later years at UCLA, I would spend two hours every morning with my assistants, organizing that day's practice session (even though the practice itself might be less than two hours long).
I kept a record of every practice session in a loose leaf notebook for future reference. I kept notes with the specifics of every minute of every hour of every practice we ever had at UCLA.
When I planned a day's practice, I looked back to see what we'd done on the corresponding day the previous year and the year before that.
By doing that, I could track the practice routines of every single player for every single practice session he participated in while I was coaching him.
Coach recognized that while he had great attention to detail and careful planning as part of his DNA, he needed to make things simple for his players and not stifle their initiative.
In his book Wooden on Leadership, Coach discussed a change he made in his approach to NCAA tournament play after the 1962 season, that he felt was important to his later success:
My notes showed that in preparation for the NCAA tournament, I added new plays and piled on more information. Instead of staying with what had worked during the regular season—a clear and uncomplicated strategy—I unintentionally made things complicated.
I resolved that in the future I would keep it simple going into postseason play, just as I did during the regular season.
The change was effective. As Coach liked to say:
It all began with attention to, and perfection of, details. Details. Details. Develop a love for details. They usually accompany success.
Yours in Coaching, Craig Impelman
Twitter: @woodenswisdom
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Be Strong
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