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Old Thu Oct 30, 2003, 08:07pm
rainmaker rainmaker is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Hawks Coach
I don't ref, but I think you need the same mentality as the player that just turned the ball over. You can't allow one bad decision to take you out of a game mentally, as a coach, player or ref. You need to be aware enough of the issue that it doesn't occur again, but able to focus on the next play because that play is over. And you need to remain aware that can't fix the bad call - and you don't want to try. You can only deal with the calls ahead of you to ensure that they are the best calls you can make.

I think the hardest thing to deal with is when it isn't one call, but an entire night that is going bad. Players and teams have these nights, and it is the hardest thing for a coach or a player to address at the time it is all going bad on the floor. What I do with my players is try to get them back to basics - when it's going bad, keep it as simple as possible.
This is a very good post, and really answers the question. The part that's the hardest is to deal with the bad evening. I've had plenty of these, here's how I've gotten out of a few of them. I choose one aspect of the game that I need to focus on, and just really let the rest go. Really concentrate on just one thing, such as a consistent count, or looking off-ball when it's appropriate, or moving strong-side, or whatever. Often this helps me block out distractions, and in other areas that need reffing, I find that often some good instincts take over. Sometimes, if I start into this fairly early in the game, I can work on it for a few minutes, and then step back and try to see things more over all.

When nothing works, and things go from bad to worse, I alert my partner (as if she didn't notice!!) and stick to the all-powerful mantra from mick, "get in, get done, get out."
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