You're Allowing the Problems You Hate
Every season, I hear coaches vent about the same things:
“My team won’t rebound.”
“They don’t communicate.”
“No one cuts hard.”
“They keep making the same mistakes.”
And look — I get it. Heck, I’ve even said those same things over my 20+ year coaching career.
Coaching is emotional. When players aren’t doing what you’ve taught, frustration builds. But there’s a truth that every great coach eventually confronts:
You either accept it… or you correct it. There is no gray area.
If you keep seeing the same mistakes but nothing changes, it means one of two things:
You’re allowing it.
You’re not addressing it effectively.
Hard truth? Yes. But it’s also empowering, because it gives you control. Instead of getting stuck in the cycle of complaining, you can take ownership and fix what needs fixing.
The Mirror Comes First - 5 Questions For Self-Reflection
Before you point the finger at your team, point it at yourself. Ask questions like:
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Have I taught this clearly?
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Have I reinforced it consistently?
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Have I created drills that actually build this behavior?
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Have I corrected the issue every time it happens?
Have I held every player accountable—every day?
Far too often, coaches assume that teaching something once means players “should know it.” But youth and high school players don’t work that way.
They’re still learning, processing, and forming habits. If you accept sloppy footwork on Monday, you’ve guaranteed sloppy footwork on Friday.
Complaining Changes Nothing
You can yell about turnovers. You can throw your hands up about poor defense. You can mumble to your assistants about how “this group just doesn’t get it.”
But none of that corrects anything.
Players don’t change because you’re frustrated. They change because you're intentional.
They change because expectations are clear.
They change because the consequences are consistent.
They change because you’ve created an environment where improvement is non-negotiable.
Are You Afraid To Confront What Needs Addressing?
The coaches who struggle most are those who avoid uncomfortable conversations. They sidestep problems instead of confronting them. They hope things will magically fix themselves.
But the best coaches? They run toward the fire. They have courageous conversations, knowing that avoiding the problem only allows it to grow.
If a player isn’t boxing out, they stop practice and correct it.
If cutters are jogging, they reset the drill until it’s done right.
If communication drops, they demand it improves.
They don’t accept behaviors they don’t want. They correct them — every time — until they become habits.
Every time is the key. Why? Because it’s draining to do it every time. That’s another reason most coaches don’t. But, if you want the issue to change, you must confront the issue unceasingly.
Keep This In Mind Before You Complain - Your Team Reflects You
This might be hard to hear… but it’s true:
Your team becomes what you allow.
If you permit careless passes, you’ll get turnovers.
If you ignore poor spacing, you’ll get stalled on offense.
If you let players coast, you’ll get an inconsistent team.
Your standards become their standards.
Your Challenge Going Forward
So here’s my challenge to you:
The next time you start to complain about your team, stop. Pause. Look in the mirror.
Ask yourself: Am I accepting this… or am I correcting it?
If you commit to correcting it — consistently, intentionally, and without excuses — your team will change. And so will your coaching.
Because great teams don’t happen by accident. They happen when great coaches refuse to accept anything less.
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