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Published byTyler Strickland Modified over 9 years ago
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Coaching the Entire Squash Shot Cycle USSRA Coaching Conference September 2000 Tim Bacon,Smith College Gail Ramsay, Princeton University
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Ice-Breaker! Turn to the person next to you and briefly tell each other (less than 15 sec.): based on your past coaching experience what is the MOST important thing to teach to that C/B player (or young junior/or no. 7 player on your team ladder)
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Overview Shot-cycle Open skill process Global Approach to Error Correction 3 Coaching Principles Example Coaching Topics
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The Shot Cycle Watching-Ready-Position (Perception = anticipation + ball judgement) Movement to the ball Stroke Recovery
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The Open Skill Process Perception Decision Action Feedback
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Global Approach to Error Correction Appropriatediagnosis is critical for accurate training « prescription » Technical Error? 4 possibilities…
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Examples of « Technical » Errors
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Global Approach to Error Correction
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Examples of Perceptual/Decision Errors Pays attention to wrong cues Focused on too small an area Focused on too broad an area misjudges path, speed, direction of ball miscalculates time/place of arrival of ball selects wrong movement to ball selects wrong instance of correct movement
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The Psychological is Important too! Attention=concentration Nideffer ’s model of concentration attentional errors « choking »
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Four Types of Attentional Focus WIDTH DIRECTION Broad Narrow ExternalInternal
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Attentional Problems Attending to past events (e.g., what was?) Internal distractions Attending to future events (e.g., what if?) Choking under pressure Overanalysis of body mechanics Fatigue
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Choking An Attentional Problem
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Three Teaching Principles Progression not correction Respect learning styles - especially kinesthetic Integration - bridge the gap between practice and match play
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Example « Shot-Cycle » Topics Watching - Anticipation Watching - ball judgement Movement - split-step Hitting: Decision-Making - drop or boast? Hitting - kinesthetic approach to teaching the grip
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Anticipation in Racquet Sports Abernethy: « A » players initiate movement before the ball is struck - « D » players do not! Expert players rely on shoulder and racquet head cues - novices don ’t Differences between world-class and national-level players
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Progression for Anticipation Identify pre-impact cues train the perception train the decision train skill 1 train skill 2 alternate skills randomize skills competitive-conditioned game evaluate in match play
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Brainstorm Other Anticipation Examples Groups of 3-4 coaches 2 minutes to find other examples (hint: most common situations, easiest to teach, beginner-intermediate-advanced topics) take up 1 example from several groups turn in examples - we will distribute
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Teaching Ball Judgement Train the perception: straight or cross Train the decision: « fore » or « back » Train skill 1: forehand Train skill 2 Alternate execution of skills Randomize execution of skills Competitive game Evaluate in match play
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Brainstorm Other Ball Judgment Examples Groups of 3-4 coaches 2 minutes to find other examples (hint: most common situations, easiest to teach, beginner-intermediate-advanced topics) take up 1 example from several groups turn in examples - we will distribute
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Teaching the Basic Split-Step by Progression Verify split-step split to shadow stimulus split to coach self-rally split on coach feed - return to coach split during rotating rails split in game situation evaluate in match play
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Decision-Making (Tactics) Progression Choose a topic: select two skills where player must differentiate “Sell” the decision Train the perception Train the decision Train skill 1 Train skill 2 etc.
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Brainstorm Other Decision- Making Examples Groups of 3-4 coaches 2 minutes to find other examples (hint: most common situations, easiest to teach, beginner-intermediate-advanced topics) take up 1 example from several groups turn in examples - we will distribute
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Kinesthetic Grip Progression Rally program from 6 ’: forehand, backhand, alternate, with and without a bounce, finish with short (easy) game « top » & « side » cues to « feel » the grip « méthodes de contraintes » - catch and send, contact behind, COLFing, etc.
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3-min. Group Discussion How have you successfully changed/taught « poor » learners grips? What cues do you use? What progressions do you use? How can we get every U.S. junior to start with the correct grip?
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Summary Shot-cycle Open skill process Global Approach to Error Correction 3 Coaching Principles Questions? Discussion? www.science.smith.edu/exersci/tbacon/ home.html
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