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Charactistics of Admired Coaches by Steve Horan
Created by admin in 1/20/2010 6:47:55 PM

We talk a lot about what coaches want from their athletes.  This is an important topic because it helps us help our athletes define and develop certain positive values and behaviors. We don't talk as much about what athletes want or need from their coaches. This is an equally important question because athletes who respect and trust their coaches are more likely to give their best to the team.   We haven't found much research on what athletes want from their coaches.  But there is a wealth of research on what people in general admire in their leaders, and it is interesting to examine how these findings might also fit the player-coach relationship.


We talk a lot about what coaches want from their athletes.  This is an important topic because it helps us help our athletes define and develop certain positive values and behaviors. We don't talk as much about what athletes want or need from their coaches. This is an equally important question because athletes who respect and trust their coaches are more likely to give their best to the team.   We haven't found much research on what athletes want from their coaches.  But there is a wealth of research on what people in general admire in their leaders, and it is interesting to examine how these findings might also fit the player-coach relationship.

Take for example the extensive database of research compiled by James Kouzes and Barry Posner in support of their book and training series called The Leadership Challenge.  Over the past 20 years Kouzes and Posner have asked upwards of 100,000 people from the United States and beyond what they most admire in a leader they would voluntarily follow.  Kouzes and Posner identify 20 factors which are consistently named on these surveys. 

These include the following characteristics:

•Honest, forward-looking, competent, inspiring
•Intelligent, fair-minded, broad-minded, supportive
•Straightforward, dependable, cooperative, determined
•Imaginative, ambitious, courageous, caring
•Mature, loyal, self-controlled, independent.
As we scan these characteristics of admired leaders, it is reasonable to assume that athletes admire the same characteristics in the coaches who lead them.  As coaches we can use this information to take stock of own leadership impact on our athletes.  To the extent we demonstrate the characteristics of admired leaders in our relationships with our athletes, we are more likely to infuse them with the trust and motivation they need to give their best to the team and get the most out of their talent.  In the process, we can help our teams elevate their performance and help our athletes learn the positive life skills organized sports are supposed to teach.
 

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Created by Claudia in 4/24/2012 4:47:30 PMThe “yips” do seem to qualify as moerdn sports riddle. Lots of speculation in the midst of some outright mysterious behavior. In The Body Has a Mind of Its Own , medical science writers Blakeslee & Blakeslee, dig into neuroscience for an explanation of this and a whole host of mind-body behaviors. (By the way, reading this will help inform thinking on a host of issues relevant to performance under pressure). They render an opinion on the yips not too different from that in the New York Times article. But to me the underlying conceptual miscue appears to be the idea that behavior is of mind OR body, rather than mind AND body – which inevitably results in a simplified explanation. All things considered, when seeking an explanation it is difficult to look past the compelling situation-specific nature of the yips, and the sense that there is enough of a behavioral component to be modifiable. Overplaying the body/biologic side inadvertently feeds into a self-fulfilling prophecy, as in “my neurons made me do it.” Any psychological behavior is fixable but if you believe it can’t be done, the odds are it won’t be done.
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Created by Vicky in 12/27/2011 10:22:07 PMIt was dark when I woke. This is a ray of snushine.

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