One practice at a time but making that practice a perfect practice (doing to best of our ability) every time your practice. With that practice or session the aim is to improve, the aim is to get better. When we think about practice how many of us are improving each and every-time. How many of us just go through the motions, like arriving at training, participating but not doing it intentionally, not doing it with the conscious mind?
‘Perfect Practice Makes Permanent, so make sure you strive to Practice Perfect’
Practicing has to become a habit for you to be successful. No athlete or coach ever got to the top without practicing and improving every-time he/she trained. The great late John Wooden always stressed, to do your best because that is one thing you can control and doing it each time (well) will give you success and satisfaction. Nothing is more important or satisfying then preparation for the game. Preparation is really where success truly lies. So when you practice, make sure you practice well and intentionally.
How many of us set training goals or targets each and every time we train and that includes making mistakes?
25 Lessons Learned from John Wooden
Here is a collection of lessons learned from John Wooden from ‘sources of insight.com’:
- A doer makes mistakes. If you’re not doing, you’re not learning. Everybody makes mistakes. It’s what you do with them that counts.
- Academics are enduring. Getting an education is a #1 priority. Wooden made it a point to his players that they were first and foremost a student (the student part of “student athlete”). Wooden said, “If you let social activity take precedence over the other two (education and sports), then you’re not going to have any for very long.” Wooden also said, “Sports are kind of like passion and that’s temporary in many cases, but academics — that’s like true love and that’s enduring.”
- Agree to disagree, but don’t be disagreeable. According to Wooden, “We can agree to disagree, but we don’t need to be disagreeable.”
- Be on time, no profanity, and don’t criticize. Wooden learned this from his Dad. He had three rules for the students he coached: 1) never be late (start on time and close on time), 2) not one word of profanity, and 3) never criticize a teammate.
- It’s not whether you won or lost, it’s if you played your best game. If you won, but didn’t play your best, then you didn’t really win. If you lost, but you played your best, then you didn’t really lose. Wooden said, “Never mention winning. My idea is that you can lose when you outscore somebody in a game, and you can win when you’re outscored.”
- Coach for life, not just the game. Wooden promoted the idea of a “teacher coach.” Wooden said that as a coach, you “teach” sports. However, according to Wooden, a coach has to be more concerned about the overall learning, than just the sport or just winning the game. Wooden said, “It can be done in a way that’s also helping them develop in other ways that will be meaningful forever.” It’s about building habits and practices that support students for life. Wooden credits the fact he was a teacher before he became a coach, helped him organize his time better and learn that he has to work with each individual a little differently.
- Don’t let your limits limit you. Don’t let limits get in the way. Wooden — “Don’t let what you cannot do, interfere with what you can do.”
- Don’t whine, don’t complain, and don’t make excuses. This is another trio of rules Wooden learned from his Dad — “Don’t whine, don’t complain, and don’t make excuses — you get out there and whatever you’re doing do it to the best of your ability. No one can do more than that.”
- Everybody is unique. As a teacher, Wooden learned early on the importance of paying attention to each individual. He learned that he had to work with each individual a little differently, and that no two are identical. They can be alike in many respects, but they aren’t identical. He learned that each student or player would have different strengths and weaknesses and that he would have to vary his approach to help them unleash their best.
- Failure is not fatal. Keep going. Don’t let setbacks stop you. Carry your lessons forward, and change your approach. Wooden said, “Failure is not fatal, but failure to change might be.”
- Focus on character over reputation. Your reputation may vary. It’s your character that counts and it’s what you can control. Wooden said, “If you make the effort to do the best of which you’re capable, trying to improve the situation that exists for you, I think that’s success and I don’t think others can judge that, and I think that’s like character and reputation. Your reputation is what you are perceived to be, and your character is what you actually are, and I think the character is much more important than what you are perceived to be.”
- It’s the company you keep. Wooden enjoyed being a teacher and a coach because he felt he was in great company and he was shaping the future. Wooden would say, “those under your supervision are the future.” According to Wooden, “A coach is like the teacher who once was asked why she taught; they asked me why I teach and I replied, where could I find such splendid company …” They aren’t just students or players, they are future doctors, etc.
- It’s the journey. It’s the getting there that’s fun. Wooden said, “Cervantes said, ‘The journey is better than the end.’ And I like that. I think that is — it’s getting there. Sometimes when you get there, there’s almost a letdown, but it’s the getting there that’s fun.” Wooden would say, ““I liked our practices to be the journey, and the game would be the end … the end result.”
- Journal for reflection and growth. According to Wooden, he journaled for all his players, and this is a difference that made the difference. The journal is how he could focus on little distinctions and really fine tune the practices and drills to be more specific and relevant for each player. It’s how he personalized the practices. It’s this personalization and paying attention to strengths and weaknesses that really helped him bring out the best in each player.
- It’s courage that counts. Courage is what keeps you going. Wooden said, “Success is never final, failure is never fatal. It’s courage that counts.”
- Keep your emotions in check. Wooden was strict about keeping his players’ emotions in check. He didn’t want anybody to be able to tell whether his team had won or lost, just by looking at them. He didn’t want his team to get overly emotional about their wins, or overly emotional about their losses. Instead, he wanted a focus on whether they played their best and that only each person would know whether they really gave their best for the situation.
- Make each day your masterpiece. Wooden made the most of each day, by design. Wooden – “Make everyday your masterpiece.”
- Make the effort to be the best you can on a regular basis. According to Wooden, “If you make your effort to do the best you can regularly, the results will be about what they should be, not necessarily what you’d want them to be, but they’ll be about what they should, and only you will know whether you could do that … and that’s what I wanted from them more than anything else.”
- Never try to be better than someone else. This is another lesson Wooden learned from his Dad – “You should never try to be better than someone else. Always learn from others and never cease trying to be the best you can be. That’s under your control. If you get too engrossed and involved and concerned in regard to things over which you have no control, it will adversely affect the things over which you have control.”
- Patience is a part of progress. Success comes slowly. Expect change to happen slowly and to have patience along the way. Wooden said, “Whatever you’re doing, you must have patience” and “there is no progress without change, so you must have patience.”
- The score is a by-product. The score is hopefully a by-product of doing the right things. Don’t focus on the score, focus on what you’re doing and give your best. Wooden said, “I wanted the score of a game to be a by-product of these other things, and not the end itself.”
- The best player is the one who gets closest to reaching their full potential. According to Wooden, whoever gets the closest to reaching their full potential is the best player.
- Success is “peace of mind.” Wooden had a simple measure of success – peace of mind. According to Wooden, “Success is peace of mind which is a direct result of self-satisfaction in knowing you did your best to become the best that you are capable of becoming.”
- Lead by example. Wooden said that way back, during his early years of teaching, a specific saying made a great impression on him – “No written word, no spoken plea, can teach our youth what they should be, nor all the books on all the shelves, it’s what the teachers are themselves.”
- You’re part of a team. Wooden truly believed that the sum of the whole is more than the parts. Wooden would say, “A player who makes a team great is more valuable than a great player.”
I’ve started to read a great book called Perfect Practice teach like a champion, the first few pages already have me hooked and inspired me to write this post today. In this video Doug Lemov talks about what they do:
In Practice Perfect, Doug, Erica, and Katie articulate 42 rules for designing practice that produces excellence. What are the goals that matter most to you? As Dan Heath writes in his foreword to the book, “To practice is to declare, I can be better.”
The message here is not to neglect the journey (training and preparing) in our anxiety to get better. As John Wooden also said, ‘Success and attention to details, the smallest details usually go hand in hand in sport and in life’
-End
I always like to hear your opinions and views. If you feel you have something to say, please comment below or email me info@thecoachdiary.com If, you don’t have anything to add then please forward this on to a friend. As always, thanks for reading.
I’m also on twitter @Coachdiary