Social Foundations of Coaching student Jeremy Riche provides insight of one of college basketball's greatest motivators.
Being a practice
player for the women’s basketball team here at Notre Dame, I am able to see
firsthand the effective coaching style of one of the best women’s college
basketball coaches of all time. National Champions in 2001, National Runner-Ups
in 2011 and 2012, 100% graduation rate since 2007, and induction into the Hall
of Fame in 2011 are just some of the many achievements that Coach McGraw has
been able to accomplish in her twenty-six years at this university. As seen by
the 100% graduation rate, she holds her players to high standards off the court
just as much as she does on the court. Effective coaching is more about the X’s
and O’s, it is about developing your players into well-rounded individuals who,
as it says on a statue fixed between the football stadium and the JACC, "leave the field a better player
and leave Notre Dame a better person."
Basketball is always
a team game and never has that fact been so clear than when during their practice.
Leadership starts at the top with the head coach, then flows through the
assistant coaches, then through the upperclassmen, and finally through the
underclassmen—even the youngest or least experienced person has a leadership
role in some form on the team. One of the interesting things that I have
noticed during practice occasionally is the opportunity Coach McGraw gives the
players to coach each other. For example, when a player is asking her what
should the play look like or what type of movement should there be on the weak
side of the defense, Coach McGraw will coach that player but allow her, in
turn, to explain it to her teammates. She empowers her players with leadership
and responsibility, which helps with the feeling of team ownership for each player.
A challenging, yet
exciting aspect of college coaching as opposed to professional coaching is the
fact that each year schools graduate to their veterans, their leaders. So, the
process of developing relationships and maximizing each players talent is a
continuing process that Coach McGraw has mastered, as evident by the continual
success of her teams on and off the court. With each new basketball season
comes a new team, but for the past twenty-six years here at Notre Dame, each of
those new teams has had the privilege of being coached by one of the most
effective and successful coaches in all of women’s college basketball—Coach
McGraw.