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The Great Coaches: Leadership & Life

Latest episodes

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Aug 10, 2022 • 8min

On Adversity

On this episode 3 Great Coaches talk about Adversity and how they see it as an opportunity to grow.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Aug 5, 2022 • 28min

Slavomir Lener

Our Great Coach on this episode is Slavomir Lener.Slavomir is presently the director of the Czech National Ice Hockey Team, and the Union Coach who leads the development of all coaches in the Czech Republic.However he is most known as the co- head coach of the teams that won gold at the 1996 World Cup and 1998 Olympic Winter Games in Nagano, this win being one of the greatest sporting successes in the history of the country.He has also coached in the National Hockey League in America, with the Calgary Flames and Florida Panthers, in the Swedish Elite League with Lulea and Linkoping and in Germany with Dusseldorf.Slavomír is a master coach whose insight transcends ice hockey and is applicable in any endeavor where groups of people are trying to come together to produce a better outcome than they can alone.He is self reflective, driven and passionate about using the sport of ice hockey to make a difference in the lives of youth. He has also been involved in coaching long enough to see how the craft has evolved, and how it needs to remain fresh and spontaneous if it is to remain relevant.He is a legend in his own country and so it was a great privilege to interview him, and some of the key points that stayed with me afterwards wereThe role that learning and development plays in his growth as a coach and the story he shares about heart surgeons to illustrate this.How the first task when you are traying to improve a team culture is to set up the guard rails that will shape the atmosphere in the dressing room, and that these rules must be positive and not necessarily strict.And The story he shares about winning the gold medal in 1998 and how the team did not go to the Olympics with the expectation of winning but, rather just playing good hockey and proving to people that they were the best team on the planet.This was a great conversation, and I hope you enjoy it as I did.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 29, 2022 • 38min

Jon Deeble

Our Great Coach on this episode is Baseball Coach Jon Deeble.Jon represented Australia as a Baseball pitcher at the 1988 Olympics. He transitioned into coaching in 1994 in America as a minor league manager and hitting coach with the Florida Marlins and Boston Red Sox.In 2000 he became the Head Coach of the Australian team eventually leading them to the silver medal at the 2004 Olympics. Then in 2011 he led the team to 5th place at the World Baseball classic, the country’s highest ever placing.He became the first Australian to coach in the Majors when he became Boston's first-base coach in 2005. And from 2002 to 2016 he was the Head Scout for the Boston Red Sox in the Pacific Rim. In 2016 he joined the Los Angeles Dodgers' in the same role.Jon was born with a mitt in his hand, thanks to both parents representing Australia at baseball. The sport has taken him all over the world, and allowed him to cross paths with some of the biggest names in baseball.He is passionate about developing young talent; and global enough in his perspective, to know that you have to treat people as individuals if you want to help them succeed.He is honest about his shortcomings as a coach and at the same time proud of his teams achievements, and the role that culture and leadership played in delivering them.The other key parts of the interview were:His use of player psychological profiling to allow him to find the best way to communicate with individuals.How he encourages his teams to focus on the execution of their particular role in service of the greater goal of perfect execution for the team.Hs views on self-doubt, and how has a coach he knows there can be a problem when he expects more from someone than they expect from themselves.And how the great coaches are honest, are excellent communicators and not afraid to make hard decisions.This was a wonderful conversation, and I hope you enjoy it as much as Jim and I did.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 27, 2022 • 37min

On Tough Times

On this episode we discuss the advice the Great Coaches have on dealing with Tough Times, and how it is applicable in the sporting and business world.Join our Patreon community and help us build one of the worlds great leadership libraries at www.patreon.com/GreatCoachesIf you would like to send us any feedback or join us for the next discussion, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at thegreatcoachespodcast@gmail.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 22, 2022 • 39min

Sean Dyche

Our Great Coach on this episode is Sean Dyche.Sean is a former player who most recently managed Premier League club Burnley.Sean made his professional debut in 1990 and played for 6 different clubs until he retired in 2007. He transitioned immediately into coaching eventually becoming the Burnley head coach, or as they say in soccer, their manager in 2012.During his time there Sean guided the club to two promotions to the Premier League in three seasons, and the 2016 Championship League title. As well as their first European qualification in 51 years.In early 2022 Sean left Burnley and at the time was the longest serving manager in the Premier League.Sean is the type of resourceful leader who can find a way to organize and motivate his tribe nomatter what the challenge. He does this by marrying tried and tested values like work ethic and respect, with a communication style that is disarmingly honest and cuts right to the heart of the matter.In this terrific interview some of the key highlights were:His view that leadership is about knowing what to do, when you don’t know what to do.The fascinating difference he describes between winning as a manager versus as a player.And How he used what he referred to as positive realities to help motivate his team to compete with bigger and more resourced competitors, and how this mindset led Pep Guadiola to describe playing Burnley like having to go to the dentist.We were very lucky to get this interview with Sean, and I hope you enjoy it as much as Jim and I did.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 20, 2022 • 13min

On Motivation

On this episode 8 Great Coaches talk about Motivation and how and how they nurture and inspire it in others.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 15, 2022 • 34min

Cori Close

Our Great Coach on this episode is Basketball coach Cori Close.Cori is presently the head coach of the UCLA Womens Basketball team where she has just completed her 10th year.Before UCLA, Cori spent time as an assistant coach at Florida State University and her alma mater, UC Santa Barbara.In total she has worked as a coach on teams that have advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 16 seasons, won at least 20 games in 16 of the previous 18 seasons and won or shared a total of 11 conference championships.She has also helped the USA to a gold medal as an Assistant coach at the 2019 U19 World Cup and the 2018 FIBA Americas U18 Championship,In addition she was voted Pac-12 Coach of the Year in 2019Cori is passionate and energetic coach who is on a mission to, in her words, lead an uncommon transformation in the players she leads.She believes in the power of gratitude, of making the lifestyle choice to be consummate learner and of looking at the world through the lens of what I can give, not; what can I get.Cori is a force for change, who thinks deeply and strategically about the specifics of the program she leads.There were many key points in this interview that I reflected on afterwards;How the great coaches invest in the lives of their athletes from the inside out, as this allows the athlete to find gears that they didn’t even know they had.The focus she has on people's response, which she describes as their R , being stronger than the E, the event, and the story she shares about one of her injured athletes to illustrate this.And how your actions as a coach must be consistent with your own unique personality and principles. And how from this she talks about her choice to coach hearts, which lead to deeper character, better team work and ultimately better habits.This was an energizing conversation for me; at the end of a long week, and I hope you get the same sense of energy from it that I did.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 13, 2022 • 26min

On Commitment

On this episode 18 Great Coaches talk about Commitment and how and how it connects passion with your goals. If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 8, 2022 • 28min

Simon Jones

Our Great Coach on this episode is Simon Jones.Simon is a cycling coach who started working with British cycling in the mid 1990’s.In 1998 he was appointed the British National Track Endurance Coach and then in 2003 he was promoted to the Head Coach role of British Cycling. During this period he coached Sir Bradley Wiggins and Mark Cavendish. And in 2004, 2005 and 2007 the team came top of the medal tally at the Track Cycling World Championships.In 2007 he moved to the Western Australian Institute of Sport in coaching roles for racing sports.This then led him to a coaching and innovation role with Team Sky under Sir David Brailsford in 2014, and 2 victories in the Tour De France, in 2015 and 2016.And from there to the top role at Australian Cycling as the Performance Director from 2017 to 2021.Simon puts athletes at the very centre of his coaching approach. He believes that attention to detail and a focus on, in his words, planning not the plan, help the cyclist unlock their potential and adjust accordingly in a complex world.He believes in the human ability to synthesize information, summarize, find patterns and adjust and in this this interview, recorded before the Tokyo Olympic Games, you will hear him talk about:His description of working with Sir David Brailsford at team sky, and how they applied a focus on marginal gains to win the tour de France.How on race day you have to be mindful of not having a negative impact as a coach, and so you need to stand back and give the athlete space.And his view that legacy is for your ego, and so he doesn’t focus on it, but instead tries to just do his job and enjoy the role.This was an enjoyable interview with a coach who believes in empowerment and I hope you enjoy it as much as Jim and I did.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Jul 1, 2022 • 48min

Jon Rudd

Our Great Coach on this episode is Jon Rudd.Jon started coaching swimmers in 1989 and is presently the National Performance Director for Swim Ireland.Along the way he has coached on international teams for seven different nations - Great Britain, England, Ireland, Netherlands, Lithuania, Turkey & Kenya at World and Continental Championships events.He is also the first and only swimming coach worldwide to achieve the International Coaching ‘Grand Slam’; which coaching at least one athlete to all 14 major international gold medals at both senior and junior levels.He has also helped over 30 different athletes break 100 British and English Senior, Junior & Youth records.Jon is one of those rare breed of coaches who is able to bring both the science and art of high performance into his philosophy in equal measure. He is passionate about success, and yet pragmatic enough to know that, in his words,coach with integrity knows that they have a duty to protect and honor an athlete's future in the sport.Some of the key highlights from our discussion included:His philosophy that the journey is always more honorable than the outcome of the journey.How athletes have to allow all pieces of their jigsaw to be put on the table before you can help them.And The F1 car analogy he uses to describe the difference with high performance athletes, and how they are human beings with an angel on one shoulder and a devil on the other, and not just simply human doings.This was a wonderful conversation, that had me smiling all the way through and I hope you enjoy it as much as we did.If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a great coach, who has a unique story to share, then we would love to hear from you, please contact us at paul@thegreatcoachespodcast.com or contact us through our website thegreatcoachespodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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