| On-Court Intimidation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Part 1: Hey High School Girls' Volleyball Coaches! | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
By Tom Houser If you can get your opponents, their parents, their coaches, ... anyone related to the opponents ... to intently watch anything your team is doing, then the intimidation process has begun. If a parent, booster, or player from the other team can be made to say, "Isn't that neat!!" or "Why don't we do that?," then you have made your team more difficult to defeat. This is on-court intimidation and there are dozens of things, from how your gym is decorated to the ritual your team goes through after a match to bring it about. The only kind of investment you and your team will need to make is time. You must make your team believe that all these little things will have an cumulative impact--believe me, they will. But first, a few words of wisdom: Everyone has heard the expression,
"Let a sleeping dog lie." Constantly tell the people in your
program, "How ever you try to make our gym intimidating, never do anything
to motivate our opponents." Wars of words only inspire your opponents
to make greater efforts. So as coaches, we must squash taunts and
insults that will make our opponents take the upcoming match personally.
Keep the match at the level of "It's the Tidal Tigers vs. Lakeshore
Lions," and do not let it escalate to "Terri and her Tiger
teammates are going to give Lakeshore just what they need: a good whuppin'."
In addition, I encourage you to avoid negative, put-down or badgering banners
and chants. Examples of banners that you cannot
Stop! Once again,
I agree that negative banners are more irritating to your opponents.
But there are so many ways that you can help your team win without firing
up your opponents. Here's how!
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