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Post by Deleted on May 6, 2016 9:41:18 GMT -5
From The Coaches Toolbox email I received today: We have established four fundamental reasons for team building: • First, we want the experience of participating on the team to be the most satisfying and enjoyable experience it can possibly be for every individual member of the team. • Secondly, we want each individual member of our team to experience as much personal growth as possible in the context of being a member of our team. • Thirdly, participating on a team affords the members of that team to form meaningful and lasting relationships. The relationships we develop while participating on teams can be wonderful and life-long. • The fourth reason for team building is to ensure that our team is as competitive as it can possibly be; that we play the absolute best that we are capable of playing, win as many games as we can, compete for championships and advance as far as we are capable of in post season play. We promote the concept of “cause over self" and profess that individual achievement will be accomplished through the giving of one’s self to the goals and welfare of the team. Therefore, unselfishness and self sacrifice are two of our program’s core values. As coaches we see our primary responsibility as that of helping our players establish realistic goals and expectations, then doing everything in our power to help them achieve those goals and expectations. This is rich coming from a former player who would NOT have made the men's national team under the same "four fundamental reasons for team building" that have guided his decision to exclude Destinee Hooker. Karch was a bigger diva than Destinee ever was as a player and teammate, and it is clear that he still craves to be the center of attention. His tantrums on the court alone are well documented, and it is no secret that he was despised by most of his teammates. These four principles seem more appropriate for choosing whom to take to a deserted island to live out the rest of one's life with rather than winning gold on the world's largest stage. This group mentality bullsh!t for keeping Destinee off the team is just a scapegoat for a self-centered narcissist and master manipulator to never get upstaged or challenged by a single individual player - even now as a coach. If Team USA wins gold in Rio with Destinee, who could grab MVP honors, then the triumphant victory will be written in history as the "Gold that Destinee won" with - if he's lucky - a single mention that the coach happened to be Karch Kiraly. Without the world's best opposite attacker on Team USA's roster - but with a possible silver or bronze finish - Karch would take center stage in the 2016 history books and all the credit for the team's likely canned success, similar to the way he did after the team's narrow victory at the World Championships. This is not from Karch. This is from The Coaches Toolbox.
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Post by vb2202 on May 11, 2016 17:03:26 GMT -5
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Post by nativevolley on May 11, 2016 17:18:36 GMT -5
Let it burn out...
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Post by ballervolley on May 11, 2016 19:15:33 GMT -5
This is rich coming from a former player who would NOT have made the men's national team under the same "four fundamental reasons for team building" that have guided his decision to exclude Destinee Hooker. Karch was a bigger diva than Destinee ever was as a player and teammate, and it is clear that he still craves to be the center of attention. His tantrums on the court alone are well documented, and it is no secret that he was despised by most of his teammates. These four principles seem more appropriate for choosing whom to take to a deserted island to live out the rest of one's life with rather than winning gold on the world's largest stage. This group mentality bullsh!t for keeping Destinee off the team is just a scapegoat for a self-centered narcissist and master manipulator to never get upstaged or challenged by a single individual player - even now as a coach. If Team USA wins gold in Rio with Destinee, who could grab MVP honors, then the triumphant victory will be written in history as the "Gold that Destinee won" with - if he's lucky - a single mention that the coach happened to be Karch Kiraly. Without the world's best opposite attacker on Team USA's roster - but with a possible silver or bronze finish - Karch would take center stage in the 2016 history books and all the credit for the team's likely canned success, similar to the way he did after the team's narrow victory at the World Championships. This is not from Karch. This is from The Coaches Toolbox. wtf is wrong with you
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Post by ballervolley on May 11, 2016 19:43:30 GMT -5
From The Coaches Toolbox email I received today: We have established four fundamental reasons for team building: • First, we want the experience of participating on the team to be the most satisfying and enjoyable experience it can possibly be for every individual member of the team. • Secondly, we want each individual member of our team to experience as much personal growth as possible in the context of being a member of our team. • Thirdly, participating on a team affords the members of that team to form meaningful and lasting relationships. The relationships we develop while participating on teams can be wonderful and life-long. • The fourth reason for team building is to ensure that our team is as competitive as it can possibly be; that we play the absolute best that we are capable of playing, win as many games as we can, compete for championships and advance as far as we are capable of in post season play. We promote the concept of “cause over self" and profess that individual achievement will be accomplished through the giving of one’s self to the goals and welfare of the team. Therefore, unselfishness and self sacrifice are two of our program’s core values. As coaches we see our primary responsibility as that of helping our players establish realistic goals and expectations, then doing everything in our power to help them achieve those goals and expectations. This is rich coming from a former player who would NOT have made the men's national team under the same "four fundamental reasons for team building" that have guided his decision to exclude Destinee Hooker. Karch was a bigger diva than Destinee ever was as a player and teammate, and it is clear that he still craves to be the center of attention. His tantrums on the court alone are well documented, and it is no secret that he was despised by most of his teammates. These four principles seem more appropriate for choosing whom to take to a deserted island to live out the rest of one's life with rather than winning gold on the world's largest stage. This group mentality bullsh!t for keeping Destinee off the team is just a scapegoat for a self-centered narcissist and master manipulator to never get upstaged or challenged by a single individual player - even now as a coach. If Team USA wins gold in Rio with Destinee, who could grab MVP honors, then the triumphant victory will be written in history as the "Gold that Destinee won" with - if he's lucky - a single mention that the coach happened to be Karch Kiraly. Without the world's best opposite attacker on Team USA's roster - but with a possible silver or bronze finish - Karch would take center stage in the 2016 history books and all the credit for the team's likely canned success, similar to the way he did after the team's narrow victory at the World Championships. Correction watered down world championships
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 11, 2016 19:44:30 GMT -5
This is not from Karch. This is from The Coaches Toolbox. wtf is wrong with you A lot of stuff. Why do you ask?
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