Posts Tagged ‘leadership’

Automobile University and Success Magazine

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

I am in my car all the time.  Throughout the year I put about 30,000 miles on my car traveling for basketball events and until recently it was a decision between music and phone conversations.

I’ve been doing workouts 30 minutes away from home at which start at 6AM so I’m up at 5 and there is no one awake to speak to.

So one day I decided to download a couple of Kevin Eastman’s free podcasts available on his website.  It was short, but it was so much better than listening to morning talk shows or music.  This led me to download an audio book featuring 15 hours Zig Ziglar and Jim Rohn.  I can’t remember which one of them it was, but they mentioned how much time you spend wasting in your car.  He said everyday he gets in his car and attends automobile university on his way to work, meetings, etc.

The real reason that inspired this blog is that I recently came across a new magazine that I never knew existed.  I have been a subscriber to Entrepreneur for about 4 years now, but the other day was walking past Barnes and Noble where I caught Jim Collins on a cover of a magazine called Success. If you want to read more about the magazine just click through to their website, but the best thing about the subscription is that every magazine comes with a CD with audio interviews. Each month features about an hour with John Maxwell, Jim Rohn and usually 2 to 3 other business leaders who focus on one topic.  So far the 2 topics have been Leadership and Innovation.  If you don’t have time to read books Success magazine is a great resource with short articles, book summaries and of course, the leadership interviews.

If you have an average drive of 30 minutes a day, that’s 150 minutes a week or 2.5 hours that you spend in the car.  That’s 125 hours per year that you can be filling up your mental factory. How are you supposed to face each day with a positive attitude if you are reading the news about the wars, economy and crime?  The way you think is affected by what you put into your mind.  What you read, watch and listen to drastically affects your thinking.

“Our lives are most affected by the way we think they are – not the way they are,” Jim Rohn.

The founder of Mike Lee Basketball Services (formerly Playmakers Basketball), Mike is known throughout the country for individual player skill development.  He has been a speaker at several events and has also recently authored several instructional workout DVDs, which will be released over the next year.  Titles out right now include, 25 Killer Scoring Moves, Secrets of Unstoppable Guard Play Vol. I & 2. and Secrets of Unstoppable Shooting.  Since 2006 Mike Lee Basketball has trained over 5,600 boys and girls through their skill development programs. Dozens of players that Mike has worked with have gone on to play collegiate basketball, some at the NCAA DI level.  In addition to his own basketball services, Mike is a Nike Girls Skills Trainer and a member of the Nike sponsored, Ganon Baker Basketball.

From 2001-2006, Mike participated as a player and assistant coach at the University of Wisconsin-Stout. During the fall of 2006 he was awarded a scholarship to attend the Coach K and Duke University Leadership Conference in Durham, NC.  In December of 2006 he graduated from the University of Wiconsin-Stout with a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology and a self-planned concentration in Basketball Entrepreneurship.

mike@mikeleebasketball.com

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Leadership Part III: Leadership Books, by Luke Meier

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Originally authored by Jeff Janssen.  For more information click the links below!

Sports Books on Leadership

The Champion Within – Lauren Gregg

I Can’t Accept Not Trying – Michael Jordan

Joe Montana’s The Art and Magic of Quaterbacking – Joe Montana

Leading with the Heart – Mike Krzyzewski with Donald Phillips

Five Point Play – Mike Krzyzewski with Donald Phillips

Success Is a Choice – Rick Pitino

Lead to Succeed – Rick Pitino

The Bowden Way – Bobby Bowden and Steve Bowden

High Hopes – Gary Barnett and Vahe Gregorian

Wooden – John Wooden and Steve Jamison

Reach for the Summit – Pat Summit and Sally Jenkins

Joe Torre’s Ground Rules for Winners – Joe Torre and Harry Dreher

Why We Win – Billy Packer and Roland Lazenby

The Seven Secrets of Successful Coaches – Jeff Janssen and Greg Dale

Championship Team Building – Jeff Janssen

Business Books on Leadership

Developing the Leader Within You – John C. Maxwell

Becoming a Person of Influence – John C. Maxwell

The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership – John C. Maxwell

The 2R Manager – Robert Friedes

The Extraordinary Leader – John Zenger and Joseph Folkman

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People – Steven Covey

The Leadership Challenge – Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner

Credibility – Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner

Encouraging the Heart – Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner

Leadership is an Art – Max Dupree

Pour Your Heart Into It – Howard Schultz

Peak Performance – Jon Katzenbach

Winning ‘Em Over – Jay Conger

Prime Leadership – Daniel Goleman, Annie McKee, and Richard Boyatzis

http://www.jeffjanssen.com
http://www.championshipcoachesnetwork.com

Leadership Part II: Vocal Leaders, by Luke Meier

Thursday, April 8th, 2010

Originally authored by Jeff Janssen.  For more information see the links below!

Vocal Leaders

Vocal leaders display the same commitment, confidence, composure, and character of Leaders by Example, but they go a critical step further in that they are willing to step outside of themselves by verbally encouraging, motivating, challenging, and holding their teammates accountable.  They have excellent communication and listening skills.  They know when and how to encourage teammates as well as when and how to get tough and enforce the rules.

1. Commitment
2.
Confidence
3.
Composure
4.
Character
5.
Encourager

Servant: puts needs of team ahead of their own

  • Willingly does the grunt work
  • Takes the younger athletes “under their wing”
  • Listens and supports teammates

Confidence Builder: builds the confidence of teammates

  • Understands each teammate
  • Helps teammates feel good about themselves
  • Reaches out to struggling teammates and provides support and encouragement

Refocuser: helps teammates stay mentally tough when faced with adversity

  • Emotionally intelligent to sense mood of team
  • Refocuses teammates when they are down and distracted
  • Communicates a sense of optimism and hope

Team Builder: unifies team around a common goal

  • Establishes and focuses team on a common goal
  • Helps teammates understand, accept, and feel appreciated for their roles
  • Brings team together and builds team chemistry

6. Enforcer

  • Holds self and teammates accountable to high standards/demanding
  • Constructively confronts undisciplined teammates
  • Handles conflict in a firm, fair, direct, and consistent manner

http://www.jeffjanssen.com
http://www.championshipcoachesnetwork.com

Leadership Part I: Leading by Example, by Luke Meier

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Originally authored by Jeff Jansen.  See the links below for more information on Jeff!

This blog, which will discuss leading by example, is the first part of a three part series on leadership.  Part II will discuss vocal leadership and part III will provide you with several great books on leadership.  The sections on leading by example and vocal leadership are taken from a textbook used in one of the Coaching Theory classes I took as an undergrad.

Leaders by Example

Leaders by Example lead not by what they say but more in how they conduct themselves.  These are the athletes who consistently work hard in every drill, play with pride, keep their cool in pressure situations, and do the right thing on and off the court.  Leading by Example involves four main characteristics:  commitment, confidence, composure, and character.  Because Leaders by Example lead themselves so effectively, their teammates naturally admire, respect, and try to emulate them.

1. Commitment

  • Self-motivated and self-disciplined
  • One of the hardest workers on the team
  • Cares passionately about the team’s success
  • Competitive

2. Confidence

  • Believes in self on and off the court
  • Wants to perform in pressure situations
  • Mentally and emotionally resilient following mistakes

3. Composure

  • Able to keep emotions in check
  • Controls negative emotions

4. Character

  • Does the right thing on and off the court
  • Responsible, accountable, reliable
  • Honest with coaches and teammates/trustworthy
  • Treats people with respect

http://www.jeffjanssen.com
http://www.championshipcoachesnetwork.com

Never Take A Play Off

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Pete Rose is arguably the best baseball player of all-time.  The best hitter in most eyes, but the one thing that separated Pete Rose from the others was his ability to never take a play off.

There’s a story about him playing in the 1970 All-Star game.  Typically these games are fun for the fans and not real serious.  As Pete was rounding third and heading for home plate someone in the outfield tried to gun him down and there was a play at the plate.  Instead of running by or sliding and getting tagged out Pete Rose laid out the catcher and knocked to ball lose to score the run.  Afterwards, his explanation of the play was simple.  “There might have been someone in the stands that had never seen my play, I didn’t want them to think that I ever took a play off.  I wanted to show them how hard I play every time I take the field.”

This kind of attitude is contagious amongst your teammates.  You CANNOT control the score, the refs, or the fans.  But you can control how hard you box out, play defense, chase down lose balls, and get your teammates and yourself good shots.  Just do the simple things that you CAN control and the outcome will be favorable.

Remember there might be someone in the stands that has never seen you play.  Make sure they see the player that never takes a play off.

No Guarantee, by Alan Stein

Friday, January 15th, 2010

The word on the street is Mark McGuire read the second half of my blog post from last week (“Random Thoughts”) and finally decided to admit he took steroids.  Thanks Big Red, it only took you 10 years.  And it wasn’t the slightest bit obvious (insert sarcasm). All joking aside, the year he broke the home run record, the measured circumference of his right forearm was an inch and half bigger than my neck! How in the hell could that be natural?!

OK, back on topic.

One of the toughest things to deal with as an adult is the concept that nothing in life is guaranteed.  Except for death and taxes.  And while I certainly despise paying taxes, my gut feeling is I would like death even less.

This concept of “nothing being guaranteed” is so evident in sports. Jim Valvano, the late coach of NC State and one of my favorite motivational speakers, once said something to the effect of:

“Just because you work hard doesn’t guarantee you will be successful.  But not working hard guarantees you won’t be.”

Reigning NCAA National Champion coach Roy Williams said something similar:

“Working hard doesn’t guarantee success, but without it, you have no chance.”

Have you ever spent hours upon hours studying for a test… and still gotten a poor grade? Has your team ever spent hours upon hours practicing all week… and still lost the big game?

Of course you have; it happens to the best of us. Working hard and not achieving success is a tough pill to swallow.  It is hard in basketball and it is hard in life. But it is fact.  And it is something every player and coach needs to come to terms with… because no one is immune.  And when a minor setback (or failure) occurs, you have to learn from it, move past it, and get back to working hard again!

A young lady I had been working with for over a year, and who is a very accomplished high school player, tore her ACL a few weeks ago in a holiday tournament.  She was having a phenomenal season (team was 7-2) and a stellar game (had already hit five 3’s) up to that point. Then, early in the second half on a drive to the basket, she landed awkwardly while being fouled.  BAM! Just like that, she tore her ACL and her season was over.

Her father called me to tell me the bad news and told me she was devastated. As a senior, she was being recruited by several Division I schools, but unfortunately was waiting until the spring to sign… and she was distraught with thoughts that “no one would want her now.”

Personally, I was crushed by the news.  I couldn’t sleep for two days.  I really care about all the kids I work with and I felt terrible she was going through this.  She is such an impressive young lady, both on and off the court.

Unable to sleep, all I kept thinking was, how could this have happened?  She worked so hard this pre-season.  She did everything I asked of her and did it to best of her ability. After a couple hours of staring at the ceiling, I went down to my office and reviewed my notes from our sessions. I took solace in knowing we did everything possible to try to reduce the occurrence of this happening.  We incorporated numerous exercises and drills, every single workout, to reduce the likelihood of an ACL injury. We worked on proper landing. We worked on proper cutting.  We properly strengthened every muscle and joint in her lower body.  Honestly, I wouldn’t have done anything different. So thankfully, I don’t have to live with the woulda, coulda, shoulda’s.  We worked hard all pre-season and literally did everything we could have done to prevent this. Yet unfortunately, it still occurred.

I went to one of her team’s games last week to say hello, offer my support, and to speak to her father.  We had a wonderful conversation and I promised him I would help her with every step of her recovery. I also told him I was confident she would still play college basketball. The road will be tough, and it is (obviously) not guaranteed, but my advice to her was to stay positive, get ready to get back to work… and things will work out for the best.

Now, I am a strength & conditioning coach… not a psychologist by any means.  But I really believe after her short grieving period is over, she will need to re-focus and get back to working as hard as possible. I understand she is entitled to a period of time of feeling disappointed and depressed… but what’s done is done.  She tore her ACL; it’s a fact. Nothing can be done to undo that now.  Just like an errant pass or a missed shot, it is time to move on to the next play!

The most influential factor in her future success on the court will be how she responds to this setback.  This will be a real test of her character. I have full confidence she will come back better than ever because she has a tremendous attitude, relentless work ethic, and the mindset of a champion.

I am proud and thankful to claim an exemplary record over the past 10 years, with a particularly high rate of success for both injury prevention and performance enhancement.  And even though I can say, with full confidence, we did everything “right” in regards to her pre-season preparation… an injury still occurred.  We worked hard… and as we learned… success was not guaranteed (at least success in this particular instance). Fortunately, this is not the final chapter in her playing career.

It is imperative you understand you can’t second guess the importance of working hard and of doing what is right just because things don’t turn out the way you want. You still need to make the conscious choice to consistently work hard in every aspect of your life (especially in your training).  While the possibility of not achieving success is always looming, it is nothing to be feared, and certainly nothing to give in too.  If you make a daily commitment to excellence… you will absolutely “win” more than you “lose.” And I am not talking about the scoreboard.

If you read my recent blog post, “What We Do”, you can see the lengths the Montrose Christian basketball program goes to in order to be successful.  And yet we still (occasionally) lose games.  Do you think losing a game causes us to second guess “What We Do?”  No way!  And when you have a setback it shouldn’t cause you to second guess yourself either.

If you have any questions about ACL injury prevention (or recovery), or if I can ever be of service to you or your team, please don’t hesitate to email me at Alan@StrongerTeam.com. I promise to respond as quickly as possible.

If you haven’t done so, please check out (and subscribe) to www.YouTube.com/StrongerTeamDotCom.  I just posted two videos of the Montrose Basketball Pre-Game Warm-up (one before we take the court and one on-court).  Next week, I will post clips from a recent in-season strength training workout.

Also, for those of you who follow me at www.Twitter.com/AlanStein, or are my “friend” at www.Facebook.com/AlanSteinJr, I will be holding weekly trivia questions for folks to win some HOT prizes – like Nike and Jordan gear!  All of the questions will come from my blog archive… so make sure you read past posts and study up.

Play hard. Have fun.

Alan Stein

www.StrongerTeam.com

Self Made Players, by Luke Meier

Monday, January 11th, 2010

You often hear Coaches or T.V. announcers refer to players as “self made.”  How else are players made?  Coaches and trainers can provide all the tools for players to improve, but it is up to the player to put in the time and effort.

The book “When the Game was Ours” by Jackie MacMullen tells about the lives of Magic Johnson and Larry Bird and their relationship with one another. Here are two of the many stories about the legendary work ethics of two of the greatest players ever.

During his summers with the Celtics Larry Bird would get up at 7am and run 5 miles uphill.  Then he would ride his bike through the Indiana country for 20 miles.  This was followed by 500 jump shots and 500 free throws.  It was only the start of his workout and it was all done before noon.

When Magic Johnson was in high school, Dick Vitale, who was coaching in Detroit at the time, showed up at the Johnson household one winter morning shortly after 6am.  When Vitale asked for Magic, his mother told Vitale that he had already left for the day.  He was at the park shooting jumpers before school in the blistering cold of a Lansing winter morning.

You can make excuses about how you don’t have time or you don’t have a gym or whatever else you can think of.  The truth is that is that’s all garbage.  If you really want to be great you find the time, you find the space, and you make it happen.

Marquette Speech Part III: Second to None Work Ethic, by Mike Lee

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Marquette Speech Part III:  Second to None Work Ethic

There is no substitute for having a work ethic and working smart. You Must Deserve Success.  There is no reason that you should achieve something other than the fact that you have truly outworked the next person.  Hard work doesn’t guarantee success, but not working hard guarantees failure.

What are you willing to sacrifice?

When I first started Playmakers Basketball (AAU teams, personal training and camps), I was also coaching at a NCAA DIII school and finishing up 15 credits of school.  Needless to say I didn’t have a life.  There would be nights I’d be up until 1AM, sleep on my office floor and be up at 5:30AM for practice.  In the summers I’d drive 18 hours from Wisconsin to Pennsylvania just to work Five-Star and sleep in my car.  You have to sacrifice what you want in the future for what you want at that moment.

The founder of Mike Lee Basketball Services (formerly Playmakers Basketball), Mike is known throughout the country for individual player skill development.  He has been a speaker at several events and has also recently authored several instructional workout DVDs, which will be released over the next year.  Titles out right now include, 25 Killer Scoring Moves, Secrets of Unstoppable Guard Play and Secrets of Unstoppable Shooting.  Since 2006 Mike Lee Basketball has trained over 3,600 boys and girls through their skill development programs. Dozens of  players that Mike has worked with have gone on to play collegiate basketball, some at the NCAA DI level.  In addition to his own basketball services, Mike is a Nike Girls Skills Trainer and a member of the Nike sponsored, Ganon Baker Basketball.

From 2001-2006, Mike participated as a player and assistant coach at the University of Wisconsin-Stout. During the fall of 2006 he was awarded a scholarship to attend the Coach K and Duke University Leadership Conference in Durham, NC.  In December of 2006 he graduated from the University of Wiconsin-Stout with a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology and a self-planned concentration in Basketball Entrepreneurship.

mike@mikeleebasketball.com

Check Out More Videos, Add me as a friend on Facebook or Get Updates on Twitter!

www.mikeleebasketball.com

http://www.youtube.com/mikeleebasketball

http://www.facebook.com/mikeleebasketball

http://www.twitter.com/mikeleehoops

Marquette Speech, Part II: Be A First Class Learner, by Mike Lee

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

For me, learning inspires and motivates me.  I try to read a couple books a month on personal and professional development.  A great way to bypass a lot of potential mistakes is to “seek wisdom of those who came before you”.

In 2006 I was at the Coach K Leadership Conference at Duke University and was talking with a guy twice my age that owned an investment firm.  I said, a lot of the things these people are talking about I have already read or know.  He said, I think a lot of us are in the same boat, but the difficulty is actually implementing and practicing them.  Always be willing to learn and absorb new information, but stick to your core philosophy.

There is a rumor that Kobe refers to his workout regimen as the “Devil Workout” because he does it 6 hours a day, 6 days a week and 6 months out of the year.  Have the confidence to know that you deserve success, but the understanding and humbleness that you have not yet arrived.

Bounce Back, by Mike Lee

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

I am currently reading John Calipari’s book, Bounce Back, and despite what Bobby Knight recently said, it has some great stuff in it for “Overcoming Setbacks to Succeed in Business and in Life”.  A recurring theme in the book is that “someone else almost always has it worse off than you.”  If you have access to the Internet and are reading this blog, chances are that you have life’s basic needs taken care of.  What about those who don’t?  Is your situation really that bad?

Maybe you have gone through something like this before.  Is it a relationship that recently ended, a big game that you just lost or maybe a loved one has passed away?  If it’s a recurring situation figure out why it keeps happening and make a change to how you approach it.  If it’s something out of your control, try as best you can to, step back and look at the big picture.  Whatever happened it has surely happened to someone before, it’s happening to you now and it will happen again in the future.  I would be ignorant to suggest that whatever event has happened does not hurt you deeply and that it should be easy to move on with your life.

With most people having the opportunity to spend time with their family in the next few days, please take the time to let them know that you care.  People who truly love you don’t come around that often.  Don’t take them for granted.  Sometimes the best gift you can give someone for Christmas is letting them know how much you care.

I have actually being going through a personal setback and it’s a coincidence that I am reading his book at this very same time.  I have tried to make changes that I thought I could, but have finally realized that it is out of my control.  It’s now time to take a step back and look at the big picture.  To not dwell on what has happened, but to learn from the past and prepare for my future.  I challenge you to do the same if you have recently experienced a setback in your life.  Like Coach Cal says, “Enough Already!  You’ve Wasted Enough Time Under Those Covers!”

The founder of Mike Lee Basketball Services (formerly Playmakers Basketball), Mike is known throughout the country for individual player skill development.  He has been a speaker at several events and has also recently authored several instructional workout DVDs, which will be released over the next year.  Titles out right now include, 25 Killer Scoring Moves, Secrets of Unstoppable Guard Play and Secrets of Unstoppable Shooting.  Since 2006 Mike Lee Basketball has trained over 3,600 boys and girls through their skill development programs. Dozens of  players that Mike has worked with have gone on to play collegiate basketball, some at the NCAA DI level.  In addition to his own basketball services, Mike is a Nike Girls Skills Trainer and a member of the Nike sponsored, Ganon Baker Basketball.

From 2001-2006, Mike participated as a player and assistant coach at the University of Wisconsin-Stout. During the fall of 2006 he was awarded a scholarship to attend the Coach K and Duke University Leadership Conference in Durham, NC.  In December of 2006 he graduated from the University of Wiconsin-Stout with a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology and a self-planned concentration in Basketball Entrepreneurship.

mike@mikeleebasketball.com

Check Out More Videos, Add me as a friend on Facebook or Get Updates on Twitter!

www.mikeleebasketball.com

http://www.youtube.com/mikeleebasketball

http://www.facebook.com/mikeleebasketball

http://www.twitter.com/mikeleehoops