Creating a Positive Team Culture: Defining, Reinforcing, and Celebrating Team Values
coach note James Leath coach note James Leath

Creating a Positive Team Culture: Defining, Reinforcing, and Celebrating Team Values

By recognizing and rewarding athletes who embody the team's values, coaches can create a positive team culture where athletes are motivated to uphold the values and support one another. This recognition also reinforces to athletes that their behavior and actions have an impact on the team's success and encourages them to continue to strive towards embodying the team's values. Additionally, recognizing and rewarding athletes who uphold the team's values can foster a sense of pride and ownership in the team's culture, leading to increased commitment and dedication from the athletes.

Read More
coach note James Leath coach note James Leath

Time Out or Pause?

Games are high-stress for everyone—players, coaches, parents, and fans alike experience increased heart rates and crazy emotions throughout the game. I often get asked, “How do I make my athletes more mentally tough?”

Read More
coaching James Leath coaching James Leath

Creating a learning environment

When I get classroom time with athletes, I am very intentional about the atmosphere I create for them to walk into. There is music playing, the board is prepared with whatever we are going over, they know what I expect of them, and I do some fun activities to shift their mindset from the monotony of school to a playful attitude they can bring into practice. 

Read More
Fear and Faith
James Leath James Leath

Fear and Faith

Choose faith. Choose to prepare yourself and believe in your training. It has been said many times and I believe it to be true, “Champions do not rise to the level of competition, instead they drop to their level of training.”

Read More
The Simple Playbook
James Leath James Leath

The Simple Playbook

During warm ups, instead of running a lap or doing sprints, we see how fast we can run from the huddle to the line of scrimmage, run a play for 15 yards, then sprint back to the huddle. They are timed and they want to get faster. We have 8 plays so we do it 8 times. We celebrate shaving seconds off our time. Lining up fast during a game is intimidating to the other team, and parents love it.

Read More