The drones are causing it I betMan I tried clicking on theX post and all it does is flash. Weird
Same. Even after numerous tries.Man I tried clicking on theX post and all it does is flash. Weird
CliffsREALLY BAD take. Especially when you consider he is getting bunch of women to work together and gel as a team. That ain't easy.
Sam said that Cook can coach from a chair because he has so many good players.Cliffs
Is it white knight’ing to say thats a horrible take? He’s one of the most successful college coaches of all time and our own reporters are shitting on him.Is this w
Sam said that Cook can coach from a chair because he has so many good players.
The "White Knight" crew came out in full force to attack Sam and "protect" the girls.
nobody has ever accused Sam of having any brains. And I also don’t agree on the coaching not making a difference. But as for his example I would tend to agree with him on the Nebraska-Creighton roster . Cook coaching Creighton would not be enough for them to beat Nebraska.He basically suggested that Cook's players are so good and the program is so powerful that he can just sit back on his folding chair during games and his team will win. Also suggested that coaching didn't make a big difference in VB and if he and the Creighton coach swapped rosters the results if they played would be the same.
Damon was really taken aback by his perspective and pushed back on it hard.
More than a few high school coaches have said something similar in regards to Cook.
I tend to think Cook is from the John Wooden school of coaching that says if your team isn't prepared when the game tips off, no amount of arm-waving and yelling and drawing on a white board is going to save them. So it probably does appear that Cook's not very doing much once the first set begins. But about 95% of the time, he's doing (or has already done) everything that's needed to win.
Sounds a bit like TO’s approach tooArguably the greatest college basketball coach of all time, John Wooden's in-game coaching philosophy (sounds a lot like John Cook):
- Stay calm and composed:
Wooden emphasized the importance of not letting emotions dictate coaching decisions during a game, maintaining a level head to make sound adjustments.
- Trust the players' preparation:
Since Wooden focused on thorough practice drills and skill development, he believed in trusting his players to execute the game plan without excessive on-court direction.
- Read the game and make adjustments:
While trusting the system, Wooden would observe the flow of the game and make strategic adjustments when necessary, such as changing defensive schemes or offensive sets based on the opponent's strategy.
- Positive reinforcement and encouragement:
Instead of criticizing mistakes, Wooden focused on encouraging players to learn from errors and emphasizing their strengths.
- Empower players to make decisions:
Wooden believed in giving players the freedom to make decisions on the court within the framework of the team strategy, fostering ownership and accountability.
How about Pelini?Sounds a bit like TO’s approach too
Arguably the greatest college basketball coach of all time, John Wooden's in-game coaching philosophy (sounds a lot like John Cook):
- Stay calm and composed:
Wooden emphasized the importance of not letting emotions dictate coaching decisions during a game, maintaining a level head to make sound adjustments.
- Trust the players' preparation:
Since Wooden focused on thorough practice drills and skill development, he believed in trusting his players to execute the game plan without excessive on-court direction.
- Read the game and make adjustments:
While trusting the system, Wooden would observe the flow of the game and make strategic adjustments when necessary, such as changing defensive schemes or offensive sets based on the opponent's strategy.
- Positive reinforcement and encouragement:
Instead of criticizing mistakes, Wooden focused on encouraging players to learn from errors and emphasizing their strengths.
- Empower players to make decisions:
Wooden believed in giving players the freedom to make decisions on the court within the framework of the team strategy, fostering ownership and accountability.
It's a lot easier to coach this way when you are able to pay for the best players.
Depends what they are ripping on him for.Is it white knight’ing to say thats a horrible take? He’s one of the most successful college coaches of all time and our own reporters are shitting on him.
**** bitch tits Mckewon.
I think of Phil Jackson. And I would not think "Phil coaches from his chair" as a negative thing about Phil and his coaching.Good grief questioning the GOAT. He doesn't get animated or vocal until he needs to.
1) Has great players
2) Has great assistant coaches that know what he wants and let's them coach and get better during timeouts etc
3) Steps in when needs to
Sign of a great coach
This!Terrible take but Sam said it was and is a terrible take. He owned it. I have a policy not to kick someone who is kicking themself.
John Cook is a preeminent volleyball coach. He is the head coach who does his coaching before the game. To use the football analogy, you do not see the head coach at the bench with the white board in game; you see coordinators and position coaches doing the active coaching. Head coach keeps the 30,000 foot view. Plus Cook's coaching tree is highly indicative that he cultivates not merely great players but great coaches.
That used to bother me about Cook, but I've noticed other VB HC's coaching in the same manner. And even in football.
He may be in danger of losing his job over that monumental stupidity.Takes a man to admit when he’s wrong well done, Sam
Arguably the greatest college basketball coach of all time, John Wooden's in-game coaching philosophy (sounds a lot like John Cook):
- Stay calm and composed:
Wooden emphasized the importance of not letting emotions dictate coaching decisions during a game, maintaining a level head to make sound adjustments.
- Trust the players' preparation:
Since Wooden focused on thorough practice drills and skill development, he believed in trusting his players to execute the game plan without excessive on-court direction.
- Read the game and make adjustments:
While trusting the system, Wooden would observe the flow of the game and make strategic adjustments when necessary, such as changing defensive schemes or offensive sets based on the opponent's strategy.
- Positive reinforcement and encouragement:
Instead of criticizing mistakes, Wooden focused on encouraging players to learn from errors and emphasizing their strengths.
- Empower players to make decisions:
Wooden believed in giving players the freedom to make decisions on the court within the framework of the team strategy, fostering ownership and accountability.
You can’t be serious. My point stands it takes a man to admit when he’s wrong. I wonder how many people on this board can do the same.He may be in danger of losing his job over that monumental stupidity.
Yep the SMU game was a prime example. We weren’t prepared and got smoked. Nothing Cook or any coach could’ve did during the game that was going to change the outcome that night.I tend to think Cook is from the John Wooden school of coaching that says if your team isn't prepared when the game tips off, no amount of arm-waving and yelling and drawing on a white board is going to save them. So it probably does appear that Cook's not very doing much once the first set begins. But about 95% of the time, he's doing (or has already done) everything that's needed to win.