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SIP 102: Consistent Dedication to the Mundane

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Manage episode 387550868 series 78857
Content provided by Swimming Ideas, Jeffrey Napolski, Swimming Ideas, and Jeffrey Napolski. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Swimming Ideas, Jeffrey Napolski, Swimming Ideas, and Jeffrey Napolski or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

  • Consistent dedication to the mundane like streamline
  • Everyone has excellent streamline habit (all the time without thought). That to NOT do a streamline would make the swimmer physically uncomfortable.
  • A feeling that excellence is expected with allowance for failure, improvement, and progress.
  • Swimmers feel watched, celebrated, and encouraged to improve through feedback, attention, and coaching.

See "Finding Deliberate Practice," "SIP 052: Swimming is a Habit," and "SIP 067: Deliberate Practice."

Your framework and routine should reinforce the key things you want to accomplish with your swimmers.

My number one goals:

  • Everyone has excellent streamline habit (all the time without thought). That to NOT do a streamline would make the swimmer physically uncomfortable.
  • A feeling that excellence is expected with allowance for failure, improvement, and progress.
  • Swimmers feel watched, celebrated, and encouraged to improve through feedback, attention, and coaching.

Coach behavior on deck:

If you see something to fix, you must say sometime.

Avoid socializing and standing in one spot; unless resting.

If you are expecting excellence, then excellence is expected OF you too.

Enforce what you want done; non-enforcement = acceptable behavior.

Know when to back off; you can still say something without demining or making someone feel bad.

"You didn't streamline. Next time streamline."

"You forgot the streamline." They nod and agree. "next time." You and they smile.

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/swimmingideas/support

  continue reading

102 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 387550868 series 78857
Content provided by Swimming Ideas, Jeffrey Napolski, Swimming Ideas, and Jeffrey Napolski. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Swimming Ideas, Jeffrey Napolski, Swimming Ideas, and Jeffrey Napolski or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

  • Consistent dedication to the mundane like streamline
  • Everyone has excellent streamline habit (all the time without thought). That to NOT do a streamline would make the swimmer physically uncomfortable.
  • A feeling that excellence is expected with allowance for failure, improvement, and progress.
  • Swimmers feel watched, celebrated, and encouraged to improve through feedback, attention, and coaching.

See "Finding Deliberate Practice," "SIP 052: Swimming is a Habit," and "SIP 067: Deliberate Practice."

Your framework and routine should reinforce the key things you want to accomplish with your swimmers.

My number one goals:

  • Everyone has excellent streamline habit (all the time without thought). That to NOT do a streamline would make the swimmer physically uncomfortable.
  • A feeling that excellence is expected with allowance for failure, improvement, and progress.
  • Swimmers feel watched, celebrated, and encouraged to improve through feedback, attention, and coaching.

Coach behavior on deck:

If you see something to fix, you must say sometime.

Avoid socializing and standing in one spot; unless resting.

If you are expecting excellence, then excellence is expected OF you too.

Enforce what you want done; non-enforcement = acceptable behavior.

Know when to back off; you can still say something without demining or making someone feel bad.

"You didn't streamline. Next time streamline."

"You forgot the streamline." They nod and agree. "next time." You and they smile.

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/swimmingideas/support

  continue reading

102 episodes

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