I love coaching, every year I learn something new. This was a fun season. I was able to coach JV so I got to move up
with some of my girls from last year. I was also able
to sit on the varsity bench and learn from one of the best strategy
coaches. He is also such a positive
person too. Although I coached with him
last season I really felt like I got to know him well this season. And He loved Bennett!
He graduates this semester and I hope he will
be around next season. We also had a new
head coach which is sometimes an adjustment but she did great. Our program is really growing and I feel like
we did good this year but I am so excited about how this group is just on the
verge of greatness, I can feel it coming.
One of the highlights was placing in the Coconino tournament, and my JV
had a winning season ending with a big win over our cross town rivals!
Tess helped me coach about mid-season and she is an amazing
skills coach, we made a great team. Now
she has me roped into coaching with her a 12’s team, which Rianne will be a
part of. It was great to see my girls
get better with each practice and game. I had a great group of girls who were all very different but they worked
hard and had great team unity. Every
season I seem to have one girl who teaches me something that goes beyond the
court. This season I felt like my girls
had fun and wanted to win but I just didn’t see them fight to win.
There are at least 2 elements I don’t know
how you coach, timing and competitiveness.
One girl at the beginning of the season I thought had the
competitive fire but the more I coached I started to notice something. She
wasn’t being competitive, but I couldn’t figure out how I saw these sparks of
competitiveness but it was within herself.
Then I thought I like that inner drive to be better but it was something
else and it was eating at me. One night
it hit me it wasn’t competiveness it was comparative. I watched her for the next few practices and she
was ok making a mistake as long as other girls on the team were too. When she was the one that ended a play or
killed the drill, she was great at finding someone else to blame. When we talked about stats she was interested
in where she was but more on where the other girls fighting for her position
were. She is a smart girl, and a good player but I
felt like it was holding her back somehow.
Because volleyball is (in my humble opionion) one of the greatest team
sports ever, she wasn’t taking on a role on the team. I thought how can I help her and what if I
don’t, maybe I could just leave it alone but then she would just become a good
player but one that is easily replaced, and certainly not a clutch, true team
player, they worry too much.
I did talk
to her and I think it helped but a few weeks before the season ended I came across
this poem, I have read it before.
The
Grade…
God does not grade On the curve,
I'm sure of it.
But we sit around
Like high school students
In an important class,
Whose teacher has drawn
On the blackboard
The tiny wedges
For the A's and E's.
And the great bulge
For the C's.
We sigh in veiled relief
As the person down the row
Messes up,
Because it makes us
Look better
And probably means an E
For him, which is good,
Because while we have
Nothing against him personally
It means an A is more
Available to us.
And we secretly sorrow
When the person in front of us
Does really well,
Although we like her okay,
Because there goes another good grade,
Darn it and we're looking
Worse and worse
And slipping further down the curve.
And God, I think,
Sits at the front of the class
Holding A's enough for all,
Watching us
Working out our salvation
In fear and competition.
-Carol Lynn Pearson
my biggest fan, now 10months! |
That’s when the transition happened. Transition is key to success in volleyball,
it is the movement from defense to offence and in a volley it is the key to who
will win that point. It puts you in
position to score for your team. I laid
in bed thinking about this and realized I am on the defense. Maybe its pride I don’t want to fail, or look
bad. Isn’t it enough that I’m on the
team, I come to practice (go to church etc.) I am watching and hoping we win, but not in
position to help because I am looking at my team (the really good people) and worrying
about myself thinking I have nothing to offer so I hide letting someone else do
it because they will do it better than me, and the other team has me
complacent, just going through the motions.
I’m expecting that the ball won’t come to me, surely He’s not counting on
me. I heard so clearly “whose on the
Lord side who, now is the time to show.”
I know God’s team will win and I want to be in position when the ball will
come to me. Will I make it better for my
team or be so worried about all the ways I don’t handle it as well as someone
else that I let the ball drop? I have
been the coach looking down the bench at all the potential but who will go in
and make the difference. He’ll do the
best with the players he has but does he have me? I need to dig out of this hole I have put
myself in and just do something to put my team in a better position.
Balancing being grateful to be on the team with making sure I have a
spot next season because tryouts (trials) are coming. Being one of the really good players is hard
work.
1 comment:
You always have such great insight!
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