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Sunday, August 30, 2009
Dodgers' Juan Pierre playing, and acting, like a pro
Cards' Fitzgerald left hungry, aims to add killer instinct in '09
Arizona Cardinals all-pro wideout Larry Fitzgerald is always brainstorming new ways to chase greatness.
Then he reached out to Rice, who agreed to join the camp for a week.
And Rice showed Fitzgerald.
Friday, August 28, 2009
Billy Donovan's Attitude Plan
Thursday, August 27, 2009
A positive attitude through adversity
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Championship Communication
We all want our teams to talk on defense, but do we really get them to understand how important it is and what it does for us and to the opponent? Defensive communication is so important because it:
• Intimidates: especially when the opponent knows that you know everything they're running -- because your players are calling out the plays and coverages as soon as they hear the call!
• Gives your defense a head start: alerting a teammate of the action before it happens is critical to successful defense.
• Gives the man on the ball more confidence: if he knows he has help and protection behind him, he'll be much more confident and aggressive.
• Wakes up a disengaged defender: talking to a player who's not paying attention on defense can alert him to get back and re-engaged.
• Catches a mistake before it happens: so many times we have alerted a player to an offensive action before it caught him and that kept us from dealing with a mistake
• Energizes your teammates: talking teams always seem to play with more energy – it’s a fact of basketball!
Monday, August 24, 2009
Playing time based on defense
Tex Winter's seven principles of a sound offense
1. The offense must penetrate the defense.
2. The offense must involve a full-court game.
3. The offense must provide proper spacing.
4. The offense must ensure player and ball movement with a purpose.
5. The offense must provide strong rebounding position and good defense balance on all shots.
6. The offense must give the player with the ball an opportunity to pass the ball to any of his teammates.
7. The offense must utilize the players' individual skills
Friday, August 21, 2009
Notes from Jerry West
Two things matter: Humility and Giving/ Hard Work and Dedication
Three things he looks for in a player: Character, Competitiveness, Toughness
Need one special skill- shooting, rebounding, defender, best players can play multiple positions= Invaluable
One player in any program can make a significant difference but people around him are what makes great teams.
What can I do to play more?
1. Bust it in practice
2. No mental mistakes
3. Communicate with Coach after practice
Monday, August 17, 2009
Going all out
Sunday, August 16, 2009
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
All about the team
'This camp ain't for everybody:' Sparano, Dolphins turn up heat
"If you're going to find out, you want to find out now," the linebacker says. "I've never been to a camp where so many people quit. But this camp ain't for everybody. Camp is the hardest part of football. The two-a-days and the way we work around here, with the heat and what we do, it can get to people."
Sparano, starting his second season at the helm after ushering a turnaround that matched the greatest improvement in NFL history — Miami went from an NFL-worst 1-15 in 2007 to 11-5 and an AFC East crown last season — is building a foundation on grunt work.
Friday, August 7, 2009
Talent is not enough
Being Honest
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Total culture change the fix for Chiefs
Monday, August 3, 2009
Ryan, Gonzalez feed off each other's intuitions
Says Gonzalez:
"He knows exactly where everybody's going," Gonzalez said. "He knows where to put that ball, and he works hard. I think that's really the difference in what a great player is. Somebody that works hard. That's what separates some guys like Peyton Manning and Tom Brady. Those guys are constantly in the (film) room trying to get better, on the field and off the field."
The article goes on to talk about the specfics in how Ryan & Gonzalez want to get better in the offseason. It is impressive that they understand they can always get better even with the success they have had thus far in the league:
Though coach Mike Smith kept all of his primary assistants on staff after their first season together with Atlanta, he decided to make one subtle change in evaluating personnel.
Position coaches had every returning player write an evaluation of himself and turn it in before the start of camp. For Ryan, the focus became film study that wasn't necessarily more intense, just more specific.
Ryan's primary concern now is giving receivers better chances for big gains downfield. Even more enticing is the opportunity to dip further into coordinator Mike Mularkey's playbook.
"If I make better decisions throughout the game, it's going to cause less mistakes," Ryan said. "You certainly can be more accurate with it and give your receivers a better chance to make plays after they have the ball in their hands. So that's the focus, and I'm going to continue to work on it."
For Gonzalez, his mantra of "getting better" seemingly hasn't changed since Kansas City drafted him 13th overall in 1997. Now that Ryan is his quarterback, Gonzalez intends to stay as committed to his workout regimen, film study and practice habits as he's ever been, but a chance to finally win a playoff game is still his top goal.
"I don't think anything in life — I don't care how good you are — there's always more to learn and always thing to know," Gonzalez said. "I want to make sure I know that playbook front to back and side to side."