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The Language of Basketball Coaches -
Terminology 101
By Coach Randy Brown
Basketball is full of terminology that sounds
fancy and seems to qualify the person verbalizing these terms as a coach.
This is a point worth examining if you are a coach to take inventory on
the words you do use and what they really mean. Communication is probably
the number one attribute that all successful coaches have making our words
worth gold. Take a look at your own words as a coach and you'll be
surprised at what you see.
During a drill as a high school coach I stopped the action to point out a
mistake being made in screening. As I made my point, this young man became
visibly frustrated. I continued on when suddenly he burst out, "I don't
get it, one time you call it a pick and other times you call it a screen.
Which one is it?" This became a moment of clarity for me and was a major
learning success in my coaching.
One of the problems with our use of terminology as coaches is our
perspective. We get so used to "knowing what we know" that we expect our
players to think, talk , and act as we do. This is the #1 mistake made by
young coaches in our game. When you assume your players know exactly what
you are talking about, you are half beaten.
Here are a few guidelines to be challenged on in regards to using
terminology:
1. Use words as if you are the player, not the coach. Come at it from the
players perspective.
2. Write down your system of terminology and be consistent with their
usage. Define each and apply them to an exact coaching example. For
example, do you call it a pick or a screen? Is it a block out or a box
out? Is it the post or the pivot?
Coach, do you have your terminology written down and described?
3. Only use terms that you know exactly what their meaning is and how it
applies to teaching basketball.
4. Teach your players the terms and how they are properly used on the
floor. This will enhance your communication with players immensely.
5. Let players come up with their own terminology. It will foster
ownership by the players and they will respond better to a made up term
like "Gonzo" than the terms you have used for years.
6. Share your terminology and the importance of it with your entire
coaching staff and feeder system staff. Encourage they to know it as well
as their own name!
Proper terminology and its use are the conduit to healthy communication in
team sports. If nothing else, I hope this article helps you take a serious
look at your own terminology and ways you can improve it for next year and
the years to come.
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