Thursday, September 26, 2013

The Best Trait an Athlete Can Ever Have...


Being a coach is one of the greatest feelings in the world. The only thing that seems to out-do coaching, is playing. However, there is still a sense of competitiveness amongst coaches in live games where you get that, “it is you vs. me” type of feeling. Your ability to have the most prepared team in competition is what drives you. The fact of the matter is this however—you need players that fit the mold. It is not necessary that you to go out and find a particular type of player. It all boils down to one specific characteristic that determines how good your team can be and how well your players develop individually. This one characteristic is probably the most understated, intangible, underrated, but most important distinctive trait for any player to have. What is it? Coachability.
Coachability is an athlete’s capacity to listen, decipher, and regurgitate the message of a coach in its physical form. A player’s aptitude in sports directly correlates to how well players listen-- and listening is the first step to being coachable. What makes being coachable so hard for some players, most typically for high school athletes, is the humility that comes along with it. To admit to being coachable is to admit that you are not omniscient or “all-knowing” of your sport. However, once you can accept this fact, then that aptitude will in turn determine your altitude as a player.
There is a lot coachablilty can do for you. It can help you win over your teammates, and more importantly, win over your coaches. It can turn a less talented player into tremendous prospect. But even with that, I think most importantly, the negative effects of what not being coachable can do to you should be considered here, most importantly. It can tear team chemistry apart because a player has his or her own agenda. It can hinder player development for other teammates because too much time is being focused on one player that refuses to take heed to coaching advice. Probably the most detrimental thing it can do is leave an athlete “black-balled” where no coach wants to deal with him or her. Teammates will not associate with the player, and ultimately no coach or team is willing to accept you on their team any longer.
In closing, as coaches, we need to do a better job at showing our athletes how important it is to be coachable and how fun the game can be when our athletes listen. They should be rewarded when doing so, and reprimanded when not. As coaches, we need to do a better job of humbling ourselves, so that in turn we can help humble our players. Let us become better examples, so that we can foster better pupils. And at the end of the day; athletes, you must be coachable because your career depends on it.

No comments:

Post a Comment