planning an effective practice

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Planning an Effective Practice Sue Doering Colfax School District [email protected] Suedoering @gmail.com

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Planning an Effective Practice. Sue Doering Colfax School District [email protected] Suedoering @gmail.com. Philosophy Daily Plan Elements of a good practice Create a Season Plan Create unity Create adversity. Overview. My Philosophy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Planning an Effective Practice

Planning an Effective Practice

Sue DoeringColfax School District

[email protected] @gmail.com

Page 2: Planning an Effective Practice

Overview

PhilosophyDaily PlanElements of a good practiceCreate a Season PlanCreate unityCreate adversity

Page 3: Planning an Effective Practice

What are you about?

My PhilosophyDon’t have to win every match just have to

win the one that counts.

Be Competitive—never give up, fight to the end

What will make us competitive? Skills Knowledge –strategies Strengths and Weaknesses

minimize our weaknesses and take advantage of our opponent’s

Winning attitudes Out work every team (starts in practice) Play your role—no matter how great or small Want to make the big play Willing to be aggressive and take a risk Want every ball

Page 4: Planning an Effective Practice

Be Consistent (we are not perfect)

Practice makes permanent. Perfect practice makes perfect.

Expect improvement over the season—consistency, not perfection. Mistakes are a part of the game— good teams play through them. The most consistent team usually wins.

Addressing mistakes Volleyball-- Every play ends on a mistake How can you limit yours? How can you make your opponent make more mistakes? Teach kids to play through their mistakes.

Make it a positive experience. Players treat each other in a positive way.

Coaching with love and support vs. coaching with fearEnd on a positive. (they’ll want to come back) Even at the end of a very frustrating practice,

we will either play a fun game or come together and process what is happening.

Try to position them for a championship—skills, strategy, scouting, etc.

They have to win it. I’ll help them, support them, coach them regardless of their performance---no fear, no pressure.

Page 5: Planning an Effective Practice

Put my best athletes in a system that benefits our strengths. Then train them in their position.

First Part of the season: 75% time spent on skills and strategy,

25% on mental toughness and team strategy As the season progresses:

more time is spent on drills that develop mental toughness and team strategy and less on individual skill and strategy. (the adversity piece) Questions I am constantly asking— Who’s my personnel? What system will work best for my personnel– offensively and defensively. What are their strengths? What are their weaknesses? What needs to be done for the season? What can I do for the future? (ex.: Playing time 3rd game) Know your competition. What will it take to win

Never be afraid to change.

Page 6: Planning an Effective Practice

Head Coach— Create a programSkills and strategies at each level (teach kids the

game)

“ If you had control of everything what would it look like? “

Assistant Coach---JV, C, Frosh, Jr. High, lower

Be a team player—support your head coach.Find out what is run at the high school.Skills and strategyDon’t make the head coach reteach.

Page 7: Planning an Effective Practice

The Daily Plan

BASIC PRACTICE

Warm-up and Stretchteam talk, goals for practice

Skills and Conditioning- timed, try to stay on schedule

Team or individual play usually end with scoring:

There is a winner and loser

Teach kids to compete!If we have competed all practice, we will end with

a fun game.

Page 8: Planning an Effective Practice

Elements of an Effective Practice

Time

Start on time, stay on time, finish on time, don’t drag over. If it doesn’t get done, work on it tomorrow.

Organize plans on time, try and stick to amount of minutes given. Having everything on a time keeps things moving

Timed water breaks (1-2 min)

Drills--10-15 minute then change. Helps them stay focused and mentally engaged If you need to work longer on a skill, change drills to work the same skill. Exception: some parts of the

game takes longer chunks of time, i.e. 20-30 min.

Percentage of total time spent on certain skills daily: in volleyball, 30% of time on serve, 30% serve receive, 40% on other things

Vary drills. Alternate the pace, fast and slow. Another example would be to condition then do a slower paced drill.

Page 9: Planning an Effective Practice

Alternate offensive and defensive days: drills on those days are specific to defense or offense.

Certain things are practiced every day. pick 1 or 2 things you have to do to win

games—practice them every day.

Conditioning (mental toughness) 1-2 days of conditioning—ideally Mon and Tues Vary times. Condition at beginning then make them

concentrate on technique when tired. Condition at the end execute skills without

fatigue factor (I do both) Condition using the ball and skills used on

the court or on the field.

Page 10: Planning an Effective Practice

Feed back

praise, correct, praise (Mary Poppins—spoon full of sugar) What are they doing right? Catch them doing it. Coach to the positive—use DO’s not DON’T’s. Try to end practice with positive feeling. Do everything you can to help them want to come to practice.

Coach involvement

bring intensity (moving and talking)Demand and expect their involvement--physically, mentally,

emotionally

Intensity---Should build during the week Jim Rosenbeck theory---1 or 2 perfect performances Move through the week and build in intensity

Learn to coach through your leadership— I add pressure situations and stress starting at the beginning of the season and have kids work through it as a team. Use your captains and leadership in problem solving Why is a drill or skill breaking down? What do we have to do to execute as a team? How do we get our team to execute with or without pressure?

Page 11: Planning an Effective Practice

Social

Kids are social. Allow time to talk, then move on. They have

to learn self discipline. They have to know when to work and when to play. Some kids have to be taught how to get back to work. Play and fun is important for younger players because you want them to love the game and stick with it.

We don’t waste a lot of time but we do talk and laugh during warm-ups.

Once practice gets going it is about getting things done. (If something is funny—have fun.)

Be specific about which times are important for concentrating.Certain skills are no talk and total concentration---ex. serving in volleyball, free throws in basketball

The younger the kids are, the more time is spent doing fun drills and mini games.

Page 12: Planning an Effective Practice

The Overall Plan

KNOW WHERE YOU ARE HEADED

GOALS---attainable, observable, measurable

Long Term

season goals both team and individualShort Term

weekly due on Monday 3 skill, 1 attitude, and 1-2 team

goals

Page 13: Planning an Effective Practice

Season starts for me, as my husband says, scouting at state for the following year. I check other teams—offensive and defensive systems, players, tendencies, serve receive patterns. I look at coaching styles, coaching systems and schemes.

Summertime (13 days) Personal Camp Summer League—free, whoever shows up Team Camp 2-3 Tournaments Open gyms, weight lifting Send a letter 3 weeks before the season starts.

This includes a workout with conditioning and ball workout

Page 14: Planning an Effective Practice

Season PlanPreseason and Early Season

Midseason

End of Season

Page 15: Planning an Effective Practice

Preseason/Early Season

Preseason and early season

are centered primarily around developing my individual players, their skills and strategies. Establishing our offensive system and defensive system

Focus on conditioning, basic fundamentals, some team play (depending on team level)

I want individuals to have strong fundamentals and team concepts

Add enough team play to be competitive Establish Roles

—they could change. Where do I see them fitting in? What are their strengths and what do they need to

work on? Where do I need them to improve? What holes do I need someone to fill? Team strengths and weaknesses

Page 16: Planning an Effective Practice

Establish team chemistry-

Only positive comments, leadership, train court leader(s), competitive

thinking

My focus in matches.

Take League 1 match at a time—working on individual skills and offense and defensive system.

Take my best athletes and train them to do what I

want and need them to do. Look at performances —wishes and pluses (What we wish would have happened. What positives did happen.)

How can we get our best performance?

What do we need to work on for the next match?

Page 17: Planning an Effective Practice

Midseason

Midseason Focus on combination drills, complex skills, review

basics-1 skill a day, more team play

Revisit goals. This is the tough part of season. Obstacles such as homecoming, long road trips, midterms provide distractions and can derail a team.

Play certain stretches of points that are giving us problems from each rotation. 0-5, 10-15, 15-20.

Keep reinforcing system—ideal play

Prepare for important league matches—might watch film

Try and add something new. Keeps things fresh. I never want to be the same team at the end of the season

Skills should build upon each other, add something new to prevent boredom.

Page 18: Planning an Effective Practice

End of Season

End of season

Intensity picks up

Team drills, review complex drills, revisit goals, game situations

For playoffs, I set up situations and use score clock

Work on specific substitutions at specific times

Be a perfectionist—Don’t let little things

slide: I demand execution.

Page 19: Planning an Effective Practice

Create UnityDone throughout season Unity is about trust. Unity promotes enthusiasm and communication. Unity helps your team solve problems together Helps them work together more efficiently

Develop your leadership--- I do frustration drills, drills that find breaking

point of team and individuals. The leaders have to figure out how to work through frustrations and adversity. They need to know who can work through it.

Validation---”gold starring” We validate each player’s strengths. Discuss individual roles and what situations we

would use them in. Players tell us (coaches and teammates) what

they need from us in a pressure situation.

Each team member should know what they have to do to help their teammates play

better.

Page 20: Planning an Effective Practice

Create adversityEvery game has moments of adversity.

Adversity teaches me about my players’ attitudes and behaviors. Also I find out

what my players need from me.

It is critical for the team to be tough and able to work through adversity together.

Fight or flight Which players are your fighters ? (Which would rather

flee?) Who are your clutch players? Who do you need on the court or field to make kids

play better? (Chemistry)

Trains them to become risk takers Train all athletes, individual and team, to want to take

the risk. Teaches players to stay aggressive. Usually the

team that stays aggressive and plays strong will win the game. I want them to learn to stay aggressive even when things aren’t going their way.

Page 21: Planning an Effective Practice

Mental practice —visualization—see themselves doing the skill

that wins the game and feeling all those emotions when it happens.

Physical Practice Here coaching with fear and punishment often

makes teams implode—fight among themselves, break emotionally, and physically

Use practices—create pressure so they must focus and concentrate in the pressure situationUse frustration drills in practice where you push them to their limits especially your key players, . Make them start drills over. Call bad calls against them. Make them earn their way out of situations.

Train them to handle stressful times and work through them (individually and as a team)

Try everything during the season—what works, what doesn’t.

Pray we get put in every situation we need to. Ask for feedback—individuals, team, captains, assistant

coaches

Page 22: Planning an Effective Practice

End of the season

The last couple of weeks we do a lot of running laps if balls drop or the team looses. We talk about visualizing –seeing themselves win the game. If you concentrate on the game and talk, your body will relax and you will play smooth.

I should know what I have to do to help my players play their best.

-I know what my players look like when they are playing well. (that might not be reflected by the score at that time)

-At the end of the season, I know if I can yell or have to be soft spoken. I know when I have to sub.

- When it comes down to it, my players know that I will do whatever it takes to win the game.

Page 23: Planning an Effective Practice

Planning an Effective Practice

Sue DoeringColfax School District

[email protected] @gmail.com