High Performance Students Do Not Make You A High Performance Coach

June 8, 2023 | By Steven Kaplan
GettyImages-680511908_crop

 

It’s an implied truth in coaching, and an inferred truth by many parents, that a coach with great students must be a great coach.

I admit that I use the marketing tactic of, “Who I coach and have coached”, because it is a powerful sell, but here’s a dirty little secret: “Great player results do not necessitate great coaching efforts.”

“Garbage In” can produce 14 Karat Gold results. We will never really know the opportunity lost because, without the omniscience of a multiverse, how can we understand if a superior coaching experience would have produced 24 Karat Gold results? Maybe the three players that were coached to 98, 99, and 100 in the world, could have been multiple major champions if coached by someone else.

About 12 years ago, I was invited to the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center In Flushing to talk to eight USTA High Performance coaches about coaching techniques. One of the coaches gave feedback to a question about volley methods with what I observe as a common outlook in tennis coaching:

“This is how I teach, this is how I was taught and I get results!”

In response, I asked, “what do Vince Lombardi, one of the most successful coaches in pro football history, Red Auerbach, one of the most successful pro basketball coaches in history, Angelo Dundee, one of the most successful coaches in pro boxing history and Harry Hopman  one of the most successful tennis coaches in history have in common?” Well, my answer would be the things that they  passed on to their athletes were the former traditional idea’s to take salt pills because we sweat a lot during exercise, as well as to not drink water during play because liquids would cause cramps. We know now that such practices are so unsafe that they might even be criminal if performed today, and yet despite these horrific protocols all of these coaches got results!

Now don’t get me wrong, these coaches were excellent despite these poor practices, but surely we cannot claim as a coach that a procedure is sound just because the outcome is, because the stellar reputation of the coach is ironically based on such outcomes.

For those who say that numbers don’t lie, the truth is, that they lie all the time, from small sample sizes, correlation, selection bias and arbitrary presentation

Coaching high performance students alone, does not make you a high performance coach, and being the parent of a high performance player alone, does not make you a better tennis parent. I have coached well over 1,500 nationally ranked players, but it is arrogant to believe that this fact alone makes me a better coach than someone who has only coached beginners. Highly-skilled, highly-motivated and highly-talented athletes can make even a subpar coach look like an expert, and teaching beginners to improve and love the sport is every bit as noble and difficult (maybe more so) as coaching the very best players. 

I have published many articles on the qualities that make a great coach in Long Island and New York Tennis Magazines, and I write this as a reminder to myself about what I teach to students:

“Being on the court with great players does not make you great by inference or osmosis.”

 


Steven Kaplan
Owner and Managing Director of Bethpage Park Tennis Center

Steve Kaplan is the owner and managing director of Bethpage Park Tennis Center, as well as director emeritus of Lacoste Academy for New York City Parks Foundation, and executive director and founder of Serve &Return Inc. Steve has coached more than 1,100 nationally- ranked junior players, 16 New York State high school champions, two NCAA Division 1 Singles Champions, and numerous highly-ranked touring professionals. Many of the students Steve has closely mentored have gone to achieve great success as prominent members of the New York financial community, and in other prestigious professions. In 2017, Steve was awarded the Hy Zausner Lifetime Achievement Award by the USTA. He may be reached by e-mail at StevenJKaplan@aol.com.

Century
Century

March/April 2024 Digital Edition