Building Good Teammates: The Story of My Mount Rushmore, a Coaching Epiphany, and That Nun by Lance Loya Paperback Book

Details

Rent Building Good Teammates: The Story of My Mount Rushmore, a Coaching Epiphany, and That Nun

Author: Lance Loya

Format: Quality Paperback

Publisher: Jetlaunch

Published: Feb 2016

Genre: Sports & Recreation - Coaching - Basketball

Pages: 198

Synopsis

Participation leagues, where every kid gets a trophy, lead to disillusionment. Not everyone wins in the real world. Yet, coaching kids to be ultra-competitive guarantees no greater probability of players becoming successful, well-adjusted members of society when their playing days have ended. Building Good Teammates is the story of how a "Mary Poppins-ish" nun inspires Lance Loya to discover an alternative approach to coaching and to explore how his coaching methods were influenced by his unusual childhood and his personal Mount Rushmore—the four men who had the biggest impact on his life. Loya grew up in the iconic Ship Hotel and his adventures in the historic building and the aftermath of the business's failure caused him to become very calloused and scoped his early coaching style. Through the examination of the virtue of trust, a key component to being a good teammate, he explains how the coaches who impacted his life demonstrated how to have, build, and earn trust. Those three elements coincide with Loya's three components of a good teammate—care, share, and listen. While teaching kids to be competitive can be beneficial, it is an endeavor that should take a back seat to teaching kids to be good teammates, a more valuable life skill. Everybody is part of a team in some capacity, and the world cannot have too many good teammates. When Sr. Eric Marie, a nearly 80-year old nun, joins Loya's quest to build good teammates, the practices of the unassuming woman become the basis for the coach's system. Loya explains how the Sisters of Mercy values of mercy, justice, hospitality, and service can be applied to using sports to teach kids to be good teammates. This book is not an advertisement for organized religion. It is a blueprint for using organized sports to teach kids a viable and sustainable skill that will serve them well for the rest of their lives.

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