Title: Coaching Support and Monitoring towards the
1Coaching Support and Monitoring towards the
Pursuit of Sporting Excellence
CHUNG, Pak Kwong Acting Chief Executive
2Outline of Presentation
- Coaching Roles
- Coaching Styles
- Athlete-coach Relationship
- Coaching Process Skills
- Job Responsibilities of HKSIs Head Coaches
- Qualities of Coach
- Leadership in Coaching
- Management and Monitoring of Athletes
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3Coaching Roles
Aspiration
Performance Coaching
Development Coaching
Participation Coaching
Coaching Boundary Markers
Preparation Intensity Competitions
Involvement Performance Standard
The relationship between forms of coach and
boundary criteria (Lyle, 2002)
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4PERFORMANCE
Short duration
Intensity high
Limited non-intervention contact
Stable performance group
Short-term objectives
Competition focus
Attempted control of variables
Limited control of variable
Longer-term objectives
Participation focus
Extensive intervention and interpersonal contact
Large, variable numbers
Long duration
Intensity low
PARTICIPATION
A diagrammatic representation of the balance of
performance and participation coaching roles
(Lyle, 2002)
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5Coaching Styles
Autocratic Coaching Practice
Negative
Directive
Coach-led
Task-centred
Performance
Decision taking
Role orientation
Goal orientation
Feedback
Communication
Positive
Interactive
Performer-led
Person-centred
Process
Democratic Coaching Practice
The distinctions between autocratic and
democratic coaching practice (Lyle, 2002)
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6Authoritarian
Power sharing
Humanistic approach
COACH/ATHLETE CONTROL
ATHLETE CONTROL
COACH CONTROL
12 years under
13-15 years
16-17 years
18 years over
- Empowerment
- Athlete independence
- ( accountability)
- Early experiencing
- Coach dependence
- Developing and collaborating
- Athlete/coach dependence
Teaching skills Safety and security Procedure and
routines Guidance in learning
Opportunities self management self
determination Shared decision making and sense
of control
Personal AUTONOMY in Self-responsibility Training
/ competitive intensity Performance
routines Strategies
Partnership
Between coach and athletes
Illustration of a shift in coaching paradigms
(Hogg, 1995)
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7High Performance Sport Winning
Winning isnt everything, but striving to win
is
Winning isnt everything its the only thing
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8ATHLETE
COACH
TALENT
EXPERTISE
QUALITY OF TRAINING
PREPARATION
KNOWLEDGE AND PERSONALITY
PHYSICAL
TECHNICAL
TACTICAL
PSYCHOLOGICAL
The athlete-coach relationship (adpated from
Bompa, 1983)
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9Successful coach needs to mix art with science on
their coaching (Pyke, 1999)
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10H K S I
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12Coaching Process Skills
- Planning
- strategic programming
- scheduling
- goal setting
- competition programming
- Regulation
- crisis management
- contingency management
- threshold decision making
Planning
Coaching Process
- Management
- administration
- information management
- financial management
- resource management
Monitoring
Coaching Practice
Delivery
Implementation
Management
Resources
- Craft
- communication
- teaching
- problem solving
- decision solving
- organization
- interpersonal skills
- competition management
- demonstration
Coaching process skill (Lyle, 2002)
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13H K S I
14Job Responsibilities of HKSIs Head Coaches
- To design, plan and co-ordinate training and
competition programmes for talented and elite
athletes. To liaise with other coaches and the
relevant national sports association to ensure
the programmes are completed accordingly.
- To evaluate progress of the athletes against the
training programmes and defined targets, to take
necessary actions to enable performance
improvement of talented athletes and to raise the
standards of performance of elite athletes in
Hong Kong.
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15Job Responsibilities of HKSIs Head Coaches
- To create opportunities for talent to emerge
through the related programme so that the
development of the respective sport is enhanced.
- To contribute technical information to in-house
and general media publications. To contribute to
the enhancement of the professional image of the
HKSI.
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16Job Responsibilities of HKSIs Head Coaches
- To present papers for seminars and courses so
that the concept of the HKSI as a centre of
sports excellence can be realised.
- To contribute towards the overall development of
coach education programmes which contribute to
the development of more and better local coaches.
To motivate and train direct reporting coaches to
become high quality international coaches.
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17Job Responsibilities of HKSIs Head Coaches
- To liaise with the Departments of Athlete
Affairs, Sports Science and Medicine, Strength
and Conditioning to ensure that athletes receive
the relevant support, testing, analysis and
feedback required to improve performance.
- To manage the respective Department to ensure
that it operates effectively, efficiently and
within the annual financial budget.
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18Qualities of Coach(Sabock, 1973)
- Coaches should maintain high moral and ethical
values. - Coaches must be completely honest with all those
with whom their deals. - Coaches must maintain a true and lasting concern
for all the athletes with whom their deals.
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19Qualities of Coach(Sabock, 1973)
- Coaches must earn the respect of their athletes,
the school staff and the community. - Coaches must be able to motivate their athletes
as well as other school and community. - Coaches must be dedicated to their athletes, to
the school, and to the community.
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20Qualities of Coach(Sabock, 1973)
- Coaches must be a strong disciplinarian.
- Coaches must have obvious enthusiasm.
- Coaches should possess a strong desire to win.
- Coaches needs to be a good evaluator of talent.
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21Qualities of Coach(Sabock, 1973)
- Coaches must be knowledgeable about their sports.
- Coaches should have a good sense of humor.
- Coaches must be willing to work long hours.
- Coaches must have a working knowledge of their
sport.
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22Leadership in Coaching (Martens, 2004)
- Leaders provide direction they set goals by
having a vision of the future. - Leaders build a psychological and social
environment that is conducive to achieving the
teams goal. - Leaders instill values, in part by sharing their
philosophy of life.
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23Leadership in Coaching (Martens, 2004)
- Leaders motivate members of their group to pursue
the goals of the group. - Leaders confront members of the organization when
problems arise, and they resolve conflicts. - Leaders communicate.
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24Respect may be gained by (Holbrook Barr, 1979)
- Being knowledgeable about your sport.
- Being prepared in all situations.
- Giving respect.
- Treating all team members equally, but not
necessarily the same.
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25Respect may be gained by (Holbrook Barr, 1979)
- Refraining from using excessive profanity.
- Being moral and ethical in all areas of life.
- Showing concern for athletes in and out of the
athletic setting. - Being enthusiastic and showing confidence in team
members and the team itself.
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26Management and Monitoring of Athletes
A. Positive Discipline Athletes are coached
with tolerance, encouragement, praise, fairness,
consistency, and respect, but without criticism,
hostility, ridicule, and shame.
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27B. Preventive Discipline
Step 6 Catch them doing good
Step 5 Conduct exciting practices
Step 3 Develop team rules
Step 4 Create team routines
Step 2 Hold team meetings
Step 1 Create the right team culture
The steps of preventive discipline (Martens, 2004)
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28Guidelines for Handling with Athletes
Misbehaviors (Martens, 2004)
- Be highly predictable in your dealing with
misbehaviour. - Be specific about what you want the athletes to
do or stop doing. - Be succinct. Avoid lecturing, nagging,
interrogating, and moralizing.
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29Guidelines for Handling with Athletes
Misbehaviors (Martens, 2004)
- Be confident when you speak, but if you are not
quite certain about the appropriate consequence,
tell the athletes you need to give it some
thought and will talk later. - Even if you feel angry, remain calm and in
control. - Once you gain compliance, do not keep athlete in
the dog house. Forgive and forget.
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30Conclusion
Successful coaches are those who can learn new
skills, who are flexible enough to change old
ways when change is needed, who can accept
constructive criticism, and who can critically
evaluate themselves.
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31A mediocre coach tells,
A good coach explains,
A superior coach demonstrates,
But the great coach inspires (Martens, 2004)
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