Welcome to The Basketball Academy. ποΈ
Hereβs what weβre serving up:
π Prepare for your job
π Must Add Action
π Culture is contagious
π The real joy in life
LETβS DIVE IN β¬οΈ
π Coaching Interviews
The #1 Interview Question We Think Every Coach Should Be Asking
And no, itβs not βWhatβs your biggest weakness?β
Ask that, and youβll just get something polished and rehearsed.
Instead, try this gem from Simon Sinek:
π βI donβt like surprises. Whatβs something that could go wrong if we worked together, so Iβm not caught off guard?β
Why this hits different:
Youβre talking about your own preferences, not calling out their flaws
It sets the tone for honesty and safety right away
It makes vulnerability feel useful, not risky
Translation? Youβll get real answers, not interview theater.
Some of the best responses Iβve heard:
β€ βIβm introverted and donβt always speak up in big group meetings. Iβm much better sharing ideas in writing or in smaller settings.β
β€ βI do way better when I understand the βwhyβ behind decisions. A little context goes a long way in helping me do great work.β
β€ βI tend to underestimate how long things will takeβIβm an optimist like that. Building in a buffer would help us both stay aligned.β
Every single one of those folks got hired.
Self-awareness builds better teams. Period.
Whatβs the best interview question youβve ever asked? Drop it belowβweβre curious.
π Must Add Action
Great counter to teams that switch the Spain pick and roll from Guangzhou of China's CBA.
They use a ram screen to set up the stack, and then slip out the shooter to create an angle for the short action.
These are what we call MUST ADD (short)
More from Slappin' Glass
France: Miami Short π«π·
CULTURE HABIT: Huddle & Communication π¦
A player-led team is greater than a coach-led team.
Watch Matthew Dellavedova lead here!
Gets his team into a huddle immediately.
βThe best revenge is to not be like your enemy.β
Marcus Aurelius | Meditations
π Play Stupid Games, Win Stupid Prizes π
The Cold, Hard Truth: Not Every Game Is Worth Winning.
In sports and in life, weβre told to chase certain βwinsββ¦
β
The D1 scholarship
β
The pro contract
β
The six-figure job
β
The blue check and big following
But before you go all-in on chasing that gameβpause.
π Ask yourself:
Whatβs life like for the people whoβve already won it?
Are they fulfilled?
Are they still passionate?
Or are they broken down, burned out, and stuck living a life they donβt even enjoy?
Some careers are like eating contestsβthe better you get, the more of what drains you becomes the reward.
Too many athletes win the game... but lose themselves.
Hereβs the play:
Before you commit to the grind, study the lives of those already living the βdream.β
Make sure the prize is actually worth playing for.
Because winning isnβt really winning if it costs your joy, peace, or purpose.