Saturday, May 9, 2009

The Championship Mindset

There are literally hundreds of different ways to dissect a championship team. We can look at overall speed, agility, quickness and raw athletic power, defensive ability, game time offensive and defensive execution, shooting ability, passing, rebounding, ability to perform in the clutch, and the list goes on and on. I believe in stripping things down to basketball most basic form, and as important as each of the aforementioned elements are in their contribution to a championship season, there is a basic question that must first be answered by each athlete individually, and by each team collectively.

1. Are you willing to emotionally commit to a championship run?

At first glance, this question appears so basic and so easy to answer as to appear almost laughable. Many coaches are much more interested in discussing the need to commit the necessary practice intensity, time, blood, sweat and tears in individual and team practice sessions to give them the right to play for a championship, but as we will discuss, this is not nearly as important or difficult as truly committing to a championship run emotionally. Well what's the difference?

The primary goal of our mind is to preserve life. Put someone in a room that is on fire, and all of a sudden the need to eat, brush your hair, wash, play basketball, expand your knowledge through education, or anything else, becomes relatively unimportant. And so in this instance, the mind makes it a primary priority to get the heck out of that room. For the mind, a close second to life preservation, is preserving the self-esteem. Unlike the body, which can at times heal itself, the mind's self-esteem has no such function when damaged, and damaged self-esteem left unchecked leads to depression and ultimately total dysfunction. So what's my point? To emotionally commit to something is to put our self-esteem on the line, feeling the potential for damage and emotional pain if we do not succeed and come up short, suffering the anguish of realizing we are not all we thought we were. Many athletes will give you 100% practice and game intensity and yet you will never know that they have not emotionally committed to a goal of a championship, and this is one of the most misunderstood concepts in sports and our overall understanding of how the mediocre mind vs. the mind of a champion operates.

Many coaches will just be pleased with athletes that will physically commit close to 100%, because truth be told, just that type of commitment alone is not always common. But intensity alone does not win championships. Athletes who have decided that they TRULY care about playing for a championship will also take care of the INTANGIBLES that are critical for championships. These athletes lead better, they hold each other accountable in practice and in games vs. always relying on the coach to make corrections, they ask more questions about the offensive plays and defensive sets, they flat out care more, and they flat out find more ways to win. Do you see how different this is from just mere practice and game intensity? But here is the downside. In my years of working with countless teams and programs, many athletes find it easy to verbalize this emotional commitment vs. truly making the emotional commitment. Why? The reason relates to not wanting to risk the emotional pain of coming up short and the damage to the self-esteem - of not being all you thought you were. One of the axioms I use often is that the pain of not achieving your goals will always be greater than the pain it takes to achieve them. Forgive the poor grammar that I am about to use for emphasis, but 'truly caring aint easy,' yet it is critical to win a championship. How do you know your athletes have emotionally committed to the task of winning a championship, and not just verbally committed? You will see it in their eyes after every loss, you will see them with a desire to put someone in the 7th row with a legal, ethical, but extremely powerful and determined box-out in the game following that loss because it was a must have rebound. And you will see it on the practice floor, when you basketball into the gym and hideout just to observe your team practice for a few minutes without you around; and you will see a team practicing with the intensity, energy and focus of a team that wants to win a championship, treating every play like a life or death possession.

However, the thing that is truly amazing about an athlete's self-esteem is that truly 'putting it on the line' emotionally, and truly caring about playing for a championship, only creates a fear and 'faade' of damage to the self-esteem. True, the pain of defeat (if it occurs) is real enough, but the real result of truly committing to something on this level is ultimately a heroic rise in self-respect and self-esteem that few things in life will ever equal. I tell athletes to be a 'hero to themselves.' And yes, they can be and will be if they ever have the courage to commit to something in life on this level. As a result, their self-respect and self-esteem can only be improved, regardless of the end result. And there are so very few things in life as sacred, pure and inspirational as emotional commitment on this level. The great Bill Russell, one of the greatest winners in the history of all sports - winning 11 NBA Championships in 13 years - once said that "the heart of a champion has to do with the depth of our Commitment."

For the athletes who are able to give this type of emotional commitment to you, the physical follow through in practice intensity and game intensity will be a formality. These athletes will show up to EVERY practice, and their games will be a mere extension of the way they practice. They take pride in themselves, and pride in their team. It is a type of commitment and mindset that few discuss, yet it is a type of commitment and mindset that wins championships.

Spencer Wood M.S., C.S.C.S., P.E.S., Member A.A.S.P., is an internationally renowned speaker, author and trainer of athletes and coaches in the area of Winning Mental Skills and Toughness Training.

3 Girls Basketball Dribbling Drills For All Positions

Being able to dribble basketball basketball is a great skill to have, even if you are tall and considered a post player. In the past, tall players were automatically placed in the post position. Now, you have girls over 6 feet handling the ball and playing point guard. Every player should consider adding dribbling skills to their game.

Drill 1: Finger Tip Drill

1. Pass the ball from hand to hand in front of your body with the finger tips only.
2. Move the basketball from a low position to well over your head as you tip the ball from hand to hand.

Drill 2: Side to Side Dribble Drill (Two Hands)

1. Dribble the basketball in front of your body from hand to hand without watching the dribble.
2. Dribble the basketball behind your body from hand to hand without watching the dribble.
3. As you advance, walk down the floor dribbling the ball from side to side in front of your body without watching the dribble.
4. As you advance, walk down the floor dribbling the ball from side to side behind your body without watching the dribble.

Drill 3: Figure 8 Dribble Drill

1. Dibble a basketball very low around the right leg basketball the finger tips of your right hand.
2. Dibble a basketball very low around the left leg using the finger tips of your left hand.
3. As you advance, begin dribbling in front of the right leg with the right hand, then dribble through the legs, picking the ball up with the left hand behind the left leg. Then dribble the ball in front of the left leg and back through the legs to behind the right leg, where the right hand picks up the dibble. You are dribbling in a figure 8 pattern.

Visit http://www.girlsbasketballdrills.com to get your copy of 20 Free Girls Basketball Drills!

Athens 1896-London 2012 - Olympic Surprises

Australia & Oceania

Did you know... From 1960 to 1971, Ron Clarke (Australia) set 19 world records in the 5000m, 10,000m and other long-distance races. Unfortunately, Ron has never won an Olympic gold medal. In the mid-1960s, he said, "The effort is not continuous as it has to be in a race. By running fast lap times and then allowing himself time to recover, an athlete is deceiving himself as to his fitness". He is author of two books: "The Unforgiving Minute" (1966) and "The Lonely Breed" (1967).

The United States of America

Did you know... The state of Hawaii has won ten gold basketball at the Summer Olympics(1896-2008). It has more Olympic gold medals than Thailand, Venezuela, and Lithuania. The Olympic champions are: Tommy Kono ( weightlifting/ two golds,1952 & 1956), Warren Kealoha (swimming/two golds,1920 & 1924 ), Duke Paoa Kahanamouku (aquatics/ basketball golds, 1912 & 1920), Bryan Ezra Tsumoru Clay (track & field/ one gold medal, 2008), Buster Crabbe (swimming/ one gold medal, 1932), Herman Ronald Frazier (athletics/ one gold medal, 1976).

At the Winter Olympic Games in New York in 1980, the United States men's ice hockey team won the gold medal. During the final match, the U.S. team scored a major upset over the Soviet Union (or USSR), which had won the gold medal in Austria '64, France '68, Japan '72 and Austria'76.

American boxer Muhammad Ali -formerly known as Cassius Clay- failed in the Pan American Games trials in 1959, but he won the gold medal in the light heavyweight (81kg/178 lbs) category at the Games of the XVII Olympiad in Italy in 1960.

South America

Did you know... The Uruguayan men's basketball team qualified to represent the Western Hemisphere in the Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad in Los Angeles in 1984. A year ago, Uruguay did not compete at the Pan American Games in Venezuela.

At the 1976 Montreal Games, Brazil won only two bronze medals. Joao Carlos de Oliveira, a world-class sportsman, could not win the gold medal in the triple jump. The South American men's soccer team finished 4th place-Brazil won the FIFA World Cup in 1958, 1962 and 1970.

Venezuela's Rafael Vidal -who spent several years as a student in the United States and was graduated from Florida University- earned the bronze medal in the men's 200m butterfly at the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles, California.

Europe

Did you know... Kosovo -it is the youngest country on earth- will compete in London 2008. For political reasons, Kosovo could not participate in the 2008 Olympic Games in China. This new nation could participate in at least ten sports: athletics, boxing, Kayak/canoeing, gymnastics, shooting, swimming, table tennis, tennis, weightlifting, wrestling...

The British basketball teams have qualified for the London 2012. Since 1952, the United Kingdom has never played in the Olympic Games, European tournaments, world championships.The British men's basketball team finished 20th place at the London Summer Olympic Games in 1948.

In Athens 1896, Paul Neumann became the first swimmer from Austria to win a gold medal.

Three Swiss sportswomen participated in the Olympic Games in 1924. It was the first time Switzerland sent sportswomen to the Summer Olympics...

At the 1896 Olympic Games, Greece -host country- won 10 gold medals and took second place in the unofficial team championships.

Central America

Did you know... Guatemala -an anti-Communist state in the 20th century- did not decline to send an Olympic team to the Olympic Games in the USSR (currently Russia) in 1980. Honduras, Belize and El Salvador -the other anti-Communist nations in Central America- boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics...

North America

Did you know... During the 1904 Olympic Games, the Canadian men's soccer team won the global title. The Olympic winners were: Ernest Linton, John Gourley, Albert Johnston, Thomas Taylor, Alexander Hall, William Twaits, Georges Ducker, Robert Lane, John Fraser, Frederick Steep, Gordon McDonald, Albert Henderson.

Caribbean

Did you know... At the Summer Olympic Games in 1904 in Missouri(USA), Cuba finished third in the unofficial team standings, behind the United States and Germany. Ramn Fonst earned three gold medals in fencing events.

In 1975, Hasely Crawford -a sprinter from Trinidad & Tobago- earned silver in the 100m at the Pan American Games in Mexico City. Nine months, at the Games of the XXI Olympiad in Montreal (Canada), Hasely won the 100m event.

Africa

Did you know... Cameroon -a tropical country on the African continent- sent one competitor to the Winter Games in Salt Lake City, Utah. Isaac Menyoli said, "Everything is wonderful. It's like being in a fantasy. I'm happy to represent my country".

In Athens 2004, Kirsty Coventry, a practically unknown swimmer from Zimbabwe, won the gold medal in the women's 200m backstroke. Curiously, she is an American-educated athlete.
Women's 200m backstroke final:
1.Coventry, Kirsty ( Zimbabwe ) gold medal
2.Hoelzer, Margaret ( USA ) silver medal
3.Nakamura, Rieko ( Japan ) bronze medal
4.Zueva, Anastasia ( Russia )
5.Beisel, Elisabeth ( USA )
6.Simmonds, Elizabeth ( United Kingdom )
7.Nay, Meagen ( Australia )
8.Hocking, Belinda ( Australia )

Alejandro Guevara Onofre: He is a freelance writer. Alejandro is of Italian, African and Peruvian ancestry. He has published more than seventy-five research paper in English, and more than twenty in Spanish, concerning the world issues, olympic sports, countries, and tourism. His next essay is called "The Dictator and Alicia Alonso". He is an expert on foreign affairs. Alejandro is the first author who has published a world-book encyclopedia in Latin America.

He admires Frida Kahlo (Mexican painter), Jos Gamarra (former president of the Bolivian Olympic Committee ,1970- 1982), Hillary Clinton (ex-First Lady of the USA), and Jimmy Carter (former President of the USA). Alejandro said: "The person who I admire the most is Jos Gamarra . He devoted his professional and personal life to sport. Jos played an important role in the promotion of Olympism in Bolivia -it is one of the Third World`s poorest countries- and Latin America. His biography is interesting". The sportspeople he most admire is Olympic volleyball player Flo Hyman. "This African-American sportswoman is my idol... "