Google

Archives
 
Visitors

You have 14370 hits.



 
Posted By Scott Murray

Who's the best coach you've ever had? If you’re into sports, you’ve probably heard this question. I've satisfied that question in my mind: the answer of course is Mr. Stein.

 Mr. Stein - Halifax, 1996

Mr. Brett Stein was my Juvenile Men’s War Canoe coach in 1995 and 1996. We won a silver medal in 1995 and a gold medal in 1996. Winning is definitely a big reason I associate Mr. Stein as my best coach ever but that’s a far too simplistic reason to identify him as such 12 years later.

 

I met Mr. Stein in the weight training room where 10 strangers (who would soon become close friends) and I were assembled as a training group. My first exchange with him went something like:

Stein (imposing): 'Are you going to be in my war canoe next year?'

Me (sheepish): 'yes'

Stein: 'okay – then you can stay.'

 

I can honestly say that within my first two weeks of being in this training group, I came to hate him; but less than 24 months later I admired him as the best coach ever, and a mentor.

 

In a single word PREPARATION is the reason I associate Stein as the best coach I ever had. Never before, and not since, have I been coached by someone who knew (or at least played a really good game at knowing) everything that was going to happen before it did.

 

Going back to the weight room, I remember walking home with a thick ‘booklet’ of workouts we would complete over the course of the semester. I’m talking a heavy book – seemingly a hundred pages deep each with a series of different styles and varieties of weight training workouts. The entire year was mapped out in that booklet; the pages told me which specific workout we’d be doing on any given day. We all dreaded that book; but despite our fear of it, the book said something to each of us: Do This and You Will Win. And Win we did!

 

For those two years on his team, Mr. Stein was always the first at practice and the last to leave, he knew the phone numbers of every athlete, and he wasn’t afraid to use them (especially when an athlete missed a practice unannounced), and he had a very clear map that he wanted us all to follow. By map I mean a clearly setout plan for each and every day of the process that in his estimation would result in our best possible performance at the right time. It is interesting to note that the only race we won in 1996 was the Canadian Championships.

 

Years later, and a silver and gold medal in between, I earned the position as coach for the RBC Dragon Boat team in Toronto. Not surprisingly my first call for help was to Mr. Stein. He helped provide a well-organized season plan, and offered some of his anecdotes from his years as head coach of the same RBC crew.

 

 A few years later RBC won the Bankers Cup at the Toronto International Festival with me as their coach. It was the first time they had won the cup since they were coached by Mr. Stein.

 

More on coaches I have modeled my coaching ‘style’ after in upcoming blogs.

 

Brett Stein and I now play ‘competitive’ hockey every Friday after work. We are the two goalies so we are pitted against each other in every game. We keep track of wins and losses with a marker on the dressing room wall.


 
0 Comment(s):
No Comments are found for this entry.
Add a new comment using the form below.

 
Leave a Comment:
Name: * Email: *
Home Page URL:
Comment: *
   char left.

re-generate
Enter the text shown in the image on the left: *
 Remember Me?
* fields are requried