tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-214152942008-07-25T11:00:27.687-07:00The Dean of Shooting HoopsIf you want to be a beast at shooting hoops this is the place for you. Look for practical shooting tips, both mechanical and mental, and also tips for winning at the game of life.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comBlogger240125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-45195491994735762162007-10-26T19:42:00.000-07:002007-10-26T19:48:10.816-07:00The Right Way To Be PerfectHave you noticed how people who call<br />themselves perfectionists really aren't?<br /><br />Don't they always look for what's wrong?<br /><br />Wouldn't that make them:<br /><br />IMPERFECTIONISTS?<br /><br />It all depends on your focus.<br /><br />There's nothing wrong with noticing areas<br />where you can improve, as long as you<br />realize it is just good information.<br /><br />That kind of feedback helps you correct<br />course and hit your targets more often. <br />That's precisely what you want.<br /><br />Mistakes only hurt you when you start<br />assigning emotional blame to them and<br />making judgements about yourself. If you<br />feel too bad you'll lose the info that is there<br />to show you a better way. And your<br />performance will suffer too.<br /><br />The best way to be at your best is to focus<br />on what you have going for you and be<br />grateful for that. Then notice your flaws so<br />you can work on them, but don't beat<br />yourself up.<br /><br />What you want to shoot for is excellence, not<br />perfection. Leave that one up to God.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Richard Dean Delker<br /><br />P.S. And one of the best ways to develop body,<br />soul, and spirit is learning how to breathe right. <br />I'm not talking about those reinforced strips<br />you put over your nose. <br /><br />Most westerners don't have a clue what good<br />breathing is, or what an almost unfair<br />advantage it can give them in the game of life. <br />Be a leader and not a follower by finding out<br />today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath.html">http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath.html</a><br /><br />This blog entry is protected by copyright, but<br />you have permission to use it in its entirety as<br />long as the links stay intact.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-42766765016368494682007-10-11T09:53:00.000-07:002007-10-11T10:36:51.900-07:00What's Your ExcuseSimple assignment today, grasshoppers.<br /><br />Watch this video 5 times. Then send me your<br />list of reasons (if you dare) why you think you<br />can't be a great shooter, or fulfill any other<br />dream you have.<br /><br /><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/6mlfTYAaUWc" width="425" height="350" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent"></embed><br /><br />Truth is you are a Superman waiting to happen.<br /><br />Start using your imagination to co-create the<br />future you want, instead of looking at where<br />you are now, or what you messed up in the<br />past.<br /><br />Despite it's name your imagination isn't<br />imaginary. It is your own personal universe<br />which interfaces with the composite one we<br />all share (the physical one).<br /><br />There you can always be a perfect shooter,<br />and that won't change you overnight in the<br />physical world, but it will make a difference<br />over time. In your practice and your<br />performance.<br /><br />Don't ever pass up the opportunity to build<br />the habit of success and winning in your<br />mind. It will always pay off.<br /><br />You'll find yourself discovering corrections to<br />your stroke. You'll notice great shooters and<br />find better ways to emulate them. You'll find<br />the teachers and information you need. Think<br />of it like a puzzle which only you can solve.<br /><br />Quit looking for reasons why you can't do it<br />and start using the tools God has given you.<br /><br />Make Every Shot Count,<br /><br />Coach Dean<br /><br />P.S. Few people realize the value of deep,<br />complete breathing in concert with whatever<br />you are doing. Discover how to make<br />everything you do better and more alive<br />today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html</a><br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Richard Dean Delker<br /><br />But you do have permission to copy and use any<br />complete entry as long as all links are intact.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-37545625860817897982007-10-02T12:52:00.000-07:002007-10-02T13:22:09.470-07:00It's An Inside JobWorking from inside-out especially using<br />visualizations makes a huge difference even in<br />the little things you do.<br /><br />We recently bought a 91 Accord to replace a<br />95 Mustang our 20 year old daughter had<br />totalled. No one was hurt, and we like the<br />replacement better, so it's all good.<br /><br />But it needed a front motor mount, or<br />vibration mount as they call it since it wasn't<br />load bearing. I got the part on eBay for $19,<br />and it looked like an easy job. <br /><br />I don't like to work on cars, and only have<br />basic tools, but this was right up front. It<br />was just two bolts - piece of cake.<br /><br />I got the top bolt out with no problems, but<br />then I noticed there was almost no room to<br />get to bottom one. I could see it fine, but all<br />I could do was get my left hand down there<br />and then only move it about ΒΌ" by flexing<br />my wrist in the direction I had the least<br />amount of leverage and control.<br /><br />It was starting to rain too so I was under<br />even more pressure. I must have tried 25<br />times to get a catch on the bolt head, but<br />every time I'd drop my ratchet or it would<br />slip off. My hand was also bruised and cut<br />in a half-dozen places too from forcing it<br />past sharp metal edges. <br /><br />I was very near cussing time and ready to<br />give up and pay a mechanic to do it on<br />Monday. But then I realized I wasn't<br />practicing what I preached.<br /><br />I stopped, closed my eyes, relaxed my<br />breathing a couple of times, prayed and<br />started visualizing what I wanted to<br />happen - to get a catch on the bolt head<br />and break it loose. <br /><br />Then somewhat to my surprise and to my<br />chagrin I did just that on the first try after<br />relaxing and visualizing. In ten minutes, and<br />I had the part out and back in, tightened up,<br />and I was walking in the house to clean up.<br /><br />You may think that's just a coincidence, and<br />I can't prove any different, but I do know this. <br />I'm glad I took the time to step back and<br />visualize what I wanted.<br /><br />See what happens when you work deliberate<br />visualization like that into your shooting<br />routine. It's not magic. It's a natural<br />phenomenon, probably based on the way<br />the universe works, but from my experience<br />it is ideal for training the the nervous system<br />and thus hand eye coordination<br /><br />Make Every Shot Count,<br /><br />Coach Dean<br /><br />P.S. For over 20 years Coach Stan Kellner has<br />specialized in teaching shooters how to use<br />visualization and other cybernetic techniques<br />to become almost automatic shooting the rock.<br /><br />He can help you take your shooting to the next<br />level too today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html</a><br /><br />P.S.S. Controlling your breathing is another<br />key to being a monster shooter, just as it is<br />in shooting a rifle. It helps keep you both<br />physically and mentally focused like nothing<br />else. Get the edge on your competition today<br />by learning to use your breath as a personal<br />development tool at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html</a><br /><br />This post is protected by copyright, but you<br />have permission to copy and use it in its<br />entirety as long as the links are intact.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Richard Dean DelkerDean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-7754802841050984442007-09-22T11:42:00.000-07:002007-09-24T06:21:05.294-07:00Shots Are Shots"I NEVER hit a shot, not even in practice,<br />without having a very sharp, in-focus picture<br />of it in my head.<br /><br />First I see the ball where I want it to finish,<br />nice and white and sitting up high on the<br />bright green grass. Then the scene quickly<br />changes, and I see the ball going there: its<br />path, trajectory, and shape, even its<br />behavior on landing.<br /><br />Then there is a sort of fade-out, and the next<br />scene shows me making the kind of swing that<br />will turn the previous images into reality."<br /><br />- Jack Nicklaus<br /><br />Sure it's a golfer talking and not a hoopster,<br />but not just any golfer. One of the best ever.<br />So I think you can learn something about<br />shooting hoops from him, and about hitting<br />any goal or target for that matter.<br /><br />First, notice he ALWAYS visualizes before<br />taking action, even in practice. That nugget<br />is priceless. If you can get in the habit of<br />doing that one thing your life can change<br />forever.<br /><br />Of course, you CAN take action WITHOUT<br />visualizing beforehand. You can also do it<br />blindfolded if you want, but why? If the<br />world's most successful people visualize,<br />why not you?<br /><br />Secondly he starts with visualizing his ideal<br />end result. That helps energize, focus and<br />intensify the rest of his visuals.<br /><br />Then he visualizes every aspect of the flight<br />of the ball, i.e. the process leading up to the<br />result. In shooting that would involve the<br />direction and arc of the ball, proper backspin,<br />etc.<br /><br />And lastly he sees himself executing the<br />perfect form to make the rest of his<br />visualization happen.<br /><br />Nothing really hard about that. You just<br />have to take the time to do it.<br /><br />And I'm serious about using this with<br />anything. Little things even. More about<br />that next time.<br /><br />Make Every Shot Count,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. In golf you have the luxury of taking<br />your time before every shot. You can do that<br />on free throws, but for game speed shots<br />you'll need to develop a shorthand<br />visualization sequence.<br /><br />In his "Primetime Shooting" DVD Coach<br />Stan Kellner teaches a quick 3 count<br />visualization very similar to what Jack<br />Nicklaus does.<br /><br />Get the step-by-step on that and a half-<br />dozen other powerful visualization drills<br />for shooting today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html</a><br /><br />P.S.S. Learning how to control your<br />breathing is also a huge factor in generating<br />powerful, charged, confident visualizations.<br /><br />If you're not doing this already, don't worry.<br />Not many people teach this. If you want to<br />make your actions more effective and easier<br />though you'll do well to learn:<br /><br />'Miracle Of The Complete Breath'<br /><br />I've even made it easy for you to get started<br />in minutes today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html</a><br /><br />Copyright, Delker Enterprises, Inc. 2006,2007<br /><br />This post is protected by copyright, but you have<br />permission to copy and use it in its entirety as long<br />as the links are intact.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-42988987676204963782007-09-18T07:20:00.000-07:002007-09-18T07:36:26.592-07:00The Ultimate VitaminFor anybody in athletics, or anybody wanting<br />health and fitness for that matter, nutrition is<br />a hot topic.<br /><br />What would you say though is the world's most<br />important nutrient?<br /><br />What about . . . <br /><br />Air<br /><br />Get out your stopwatch and see how well you<br />perform without it.<br /><br />In my research on concentration and focus for<br />shooting hoops I found a classic document<br />explaining an ancient breathing technique<br />called the complete breath. <br /><br />I'd heard of abdominal breathing before and<br />assumed that's what the book was about. I<br />already did that, so I didn't get around to<br />reading it right away.<br /><br />When I did though I found something that<br />goes way beyond belly breathing. And there<br />were dozens of different techniques to use it<br />to affect body and soul in wonderful ways. <br /><br />Do you see where breathing better could<br />improve almost every aspect of your life? I<br />believe most people can. <br /><br />So please consider this then:<br /><br />What else do you know that can be both<br />under the control of your will or happen<br />automatically? And switch back and forth<br />between the two effortlessly. <br /><br />That's because it involves both the conscious<br />and subconscious mind or the sympathetic<br />and autonomic nervous systems if you<br />please.<br /><br />That means it can work as a bridge between<br />the two and has a unique power to affect both<br />systems. I can't explain how all that works in<br />a short post like this, but after reading the<br />book and practicing the exercises I know it<br />does.<br /><br />The writing was pretty stiff and archaic<br />though so I took the time to go through, edit it,<br />modernize the language, and add some of my<br />own thoughts.<br /><br />Now I'm making it available to you. It's so<br />powerful it's almost miraculous, and it may only<br />be limited by your willingness to use your<br />imagination and belief. To practice the simple<br />techniques and incorporate them into your life.<br /><br />I've found it a big help in doing cybernetic<br />visualizations for athletics and life in general,<br />doing affirmations, concentration and focus<br />practice, energy work, etc.<br /><br />A myriad of ways for using mind and body. <br /><br />And I've found many physical benefits too. It<br />adds another gear to exercise and helps with<br />metabolism and fat loss. I also used to get a<br />couple of colds a year.<br /><br />Since I've started on the complete breathing I<br />haven't even had congestion to speak of.<br /><br />So if you see how valuable it is to get more<br />power and energy out of your breathing you<br />can order<br /><br />'The Miracle Of The Complete Breath' today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/complete_breath_order.html</a><br /><br />Make Every Shot Count,<br /><br />Coach Dean<br /><br />P.S. For a limited time I'm going to price this<br />high powered e-report at $17.77. Get yours now<br />and start on the road to greater performance and<br />well-being in minutes.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-44543666934839120332007-08-23T09:40:00.000-07:002007-08-24T16:56:59.068-07:00Get It Out Of ReverseHave you ever put your car in reverse, backed<br />up, and gotten interrupted with a question or a<br />cell phone call?<br /><br />What usually happens next? You put your<br />foot on the brake and shift your attention to<br />whatever's going on, right?<br /><br />Then what?<br /><br />If you're anything like me whenever you're<br />finished and ready to take off again you might<br />have forgotten the car was still in reverse.<br /><br />Oops.<br /><br />Hopefully you haven't ever floored it and<br />crashed into something before you figured<br />it out, but if you have, it really helps to<br />remember never to do that again.<br /><br />Have you noticed we do the same thing in<br />our daily lives too?<br /><br />We stay in reverse. We live in the past. We<br />dwell on what happened to us, or what the<br />president did or didn't do, or what somebody<br />said. I don't care if you were in the right or<br />not, any time you're focused on something<br />that's already happened you are driving in<br />reverse.<br /><br />And it's hard to make any progress when<br />you're going backwards.<br /><br />You're always missing the present moment<br />because you're rehashing what happened<br />minutes, hours, days,or even years before.<br />Sure there are things to be learned from the<br />past, but absorb the lesson and get back to<br />living in the present. That's where the<br />action is.<br /><br />As a shooter you know where I'm going with<br />this. It's necessary to pay attention and be<br />able to correct your shooting flaws. That's<br />what feedback and learning are all about.<br /><br />But you can't dwell on your misses and your<br />failures. If you do for too long I promise<br />you'll find yourself sitting on the bench.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean<br /><br />P.S. The best teacher of the mental side of<br />shooting I know is Coach Stan Kellner.<br />I confess I don't know what percentage of<br />shooting is mental. I've heard as much as<br />90% and I believe it is high, but even if it's<br />only 50% you probably want to find out<br />what Stan can do for you today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html</a><br /><br />Copyright, Delker Enterprises, Inc. 2006,2007<br /><br />This blog is protected by copyright with all rights<br />reserved, but you do have permission to copy and<br />use any complete entry as long as all links are intact.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607 USA<br />352-333-0374 Phone<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">http://www.deandelker.com/</a><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-54851977293006894002007-05-10T09:26:00.000-07:002007-05-10T09:43:42.123-07:00It's Easier Than You ThinkHave you ever played the party game,<br /><br />'He Who Knows, And Knows He Knows'?<br /><br />It's a bit of a mysterious game and has to be<br />done in a quiet room. The ringleader starts it<br />off without much explanation and announces:<br /><br />'He who knows, and knows he knows, please<br />leave the room!'<br /><br />Before long someone who is in on it gets up and<br />leaves the room. The moderator then singles<br />out one person. Usually someone left in the<br />room but it could be the guesser too. The<br />missing person is expected to come back and<br />and pick out the person who was singled out. <br /><br />Those in the 'know' can get it right 100% of the<br />time. The others sit there frustrated, trying to<br />figure out the trick - what signal is being sent,<br />what the triggering event is, or what the heck<br />is going on, period.<br /><br />People will think they have it figured out and<br />volunteer to leave the room, come back and try<br />out their ideas. Usually without success, till<br />suddenly they figure it out, and after that<br />they're in on it forever.<br /><br />I won't tell you the trick in case you ever get<br />to play the game, but I will tell you once you<br />figure it out, it's so incredibly simple you have<br />to laugh.<br /><br />Shooting is that way too. <br /><br />Ed Palubinskas originally from Australia who<br />played at LSU is one of the greatest shooters<br />and shooting coaches in the world.<br /><br />He missed three freethrows in shooting<br />competitions over a 15 year period once, holds<br />several Guinness world records, and averages<br />over 99% from the line and 92% from the<br />3-point arc still today.<br /><br />Ed talks about 'Mastering The Shooting<br />Moment'. I talk a lot about concentration, and<br />from the feedback I've gotten some people are<br />misunderstanding the concept. They think it's<br />something like being in a trance for a half hour. <br />Or it's racheting up your willpower to crazy<br />levels.<br /><br />It's not at all. Concentration is a relaxation<br />which lets things that lets everything that<br />doesn't matter to your current task fall away. <br />It's the opposite of trying too hard. It's trying<br />easy.<br /><br />Once you know the trick to shooting - Once<br />you've figured it out. Once you've found that<br />groove, shooting almost becomes easy. Where<br />that place is there's a natural relaxation and it<br />feels right.<br /><br />Now get this. Ed told me you really only need<br />to concentrate for about 5/100's of a second.<br /><br />The 5/100's of a second during the release of<br />the basketball.<br /><br />That's how a good shooter can come down the<br />court with chaos all around him and still get<br />off a sweet shot. He doesn't need to concentrate<br />for 20 seconds. He just has to find that rim, be<br />in balance, relaxed, and concentrate for the split<br />second of the release.<br /><br />Of course learning the best mechanics will give<br />you a way to achieve that concentrated<br />relaxation at the right time. Put it together<br />and it is well within your power to get into the<br />90th percentile from the free throw stripe.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. Stan Kellner teaches much the same idea<br />in his shooting cybernetics DVD when he has<br />you focus on the word 'Feel'. That means both<br />the release feels right, and you also already<br />feel the ball going into the hoop.<br /><br />Learn how to let your mind become a<br />targeting machine today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html</a><br /><br />P.S.S. Ed has his wonderful shooting program on<br />VHS tape which is a classic. I hope he'd re-issues<br />it in DVD soon and gives me permission to carry it. <br />Till then you can find it all at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.freethrowmaster.com/Freethrow/">http://www.freethrowmaster.com/Freethrow/</a><br /><br />Note: This entry is protected by copyright, but<br />I encourage you copy and share it freely. <br />Please just include the whole message including<br />links and my contact information. Thanks a ton.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-30710470877586190592007-05-03T18:24:00.000-07:002007-05-03T18:38:08.420-07:00Dittos RushIf you're working to make the playing field fair<br />and level you're working for the wrong reasons.<br />Work to take the opportunities that arise and<br />use your individual talents to excel at those<br />opportunities.<br /><br /> - Rush Limbaugh<br /><br />Success leaves clues, and if you are smart you<br />listen to successful people wherever you find<br />them. Regardless of what you might think of<br />his politics there's no denying Rush Limbaugh<br />is one of the most successful people ever in<br />radio, and Rush is a huge sports fan.<br /><br />Don't be a bigot on this one. Listen to what he<br />has to say about what it takes to be a winner.<br /><br />'Before away games, the great Boston Celtic<br />Larry Bird used to arrive exceptionally early at<br />the other team's home stadium ... to study the<br />floor. <br /><br />Hours ahead of the Celtics' practice and warm-<br />up sessions, Bird would do an inch-by-inch<br />survey of the wood on the court. This involved<br />getting down on his hands and knees to check<br />out individual boards, dribbling over every<br />square foot at various speeds and angles,<br />analyzing the floor's effect on the basketball. <br /><br />He scrutinized the lighting, familiarized himself<br />with the arena's atmosphere, learned the<br />idiosyncrasies of the court. He knew that the<br />knowledge advantage he had over the other<br />players could make the crucial difference at key<br />moments -- and could, in fact, determine the<br />outcome of the game.<br /><br />This was a boring thing to do. In fact, it was so<br />boring no one else bothered to do it. But Larry<br />Bird's unparalleled record proves his approach<br />was right. It was his attention to detail, this<br />willingness to immerse himself in the nuts and<br />bolts of his profession when everyone else was<br />relaxing or doing something more enjoyable<br />that created his success. <br /><br />Discipline is the hardest part of this process,<br />because it demands your time. It is not sexy,<br />it is not the part that gets you the limelight. <br />Discipline has no pizzazz. <br /><br />Discipline is private -- it is the internal decision<br /> to work on your skills no matter what. It's<br />what makes you get up in the morning to do it<br />all over again.<br /><br />You do things you don't feel like doing when you<br />don't feel like doing them. Discipline is what you<br />do in spite of your desires. It is also what<br />separates the pros from the amateurs, and the<br />successful from everybody else.'<br /><br />Larry Bird was also one of the great clutch<br />shooters of all time, and his discipline served him<br />well in that area too. <br /><br />All it takes is a quality decision on your part. How<br />far are you willing to go to be a great shooter?<br /><br />Only you can answer that.<br /> <br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. Another area where discipline plays a huge<br />role is conditioning. If you have the desire Coach<br />Tony Alfonso has all the information you'll ever<br />need to stay in tip-top basketball shape. His<br />'CompleteBasketball Strength And Speed<br />Program" can be yours right now at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html</a><br /><br />Note: This entry is protected by copyright, but I<br />encourage you copy and share it freely. Please<br />just include the whole message including links and<br />my contact information. Thanks a ton.Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-63847176664460809232007-05-01T16:49:00.000-07:002007-05-01T16:55:15.587-07:00A Call To ArmsI just found another shooting enthusiast today.<br />Coach Herb Welling from Omaha, Nebraska<br />who's Central High team won the Class A State<br />Basketball Championship last month. <br /><br />He sure needed some timely shooting when 4 out<br />of his top 6 players fouled out, and his team found<br />itself depending on 3 rarely used sophmores in a<br />hotly contested overtime. Not only that, but they<br />had to overcome a 39 point effort by the other<br />team's star player.<br /><br />In his blog at:<br /><br /><a href="http://herbwellingbasketball.blogspot.com/">http://herbwellingbasketball.blogspot.com/</a><br /><br />Coach Welling also had this to say about Florida's<br />recent national championship team:<br /><br />'Billy Donovan should get credit for his defense,<br />but his team's ability to hit open shots is attributed<br />to his great individual skill [development] program.<br />His team was really balanced offensively.<br /><br />We as coaches have to stress and teach shooting.<br />There are plenty of good shooting DVD's [out there]<br />such as [those by] Dave Hopla, Hal Wissel, Andy<br />Enfield, Tom Nordland, Ed Palubinskas, and Duane<br />Lewis. Please teach and work on shooting.'<br /><br />Thanks, Coach. That's exactly what I'm doing.<br /><br />Football has it's position coaches, baseball it's<br />hitting coaches, and golf it's swing coaches, but<br />basketball has been slow to embrace shooting<br />coaches.<br /><br />There are a host of good one's out there to learn<br />from.<br /><br />And it's time to take up arms and start teaching<br />the next generation how to shoot like experts. <br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. Many coaches are hesitant to change a<br />player's stroke. I understand the sentiment, but<br />I don't agree. It's true you have to do it with tact,<br />grace, and encouragement, but good shooting feels<br />good in the same way hitting the sweet spot on a<br />baseball bat or a tennis racket does. <br /><br />Your players will get on board when you can show<br />them results.<br /><br />P.S.S. Remind them Tiger Woods has reworked his<br />golf swing at least twice after people were already<br />calling him one of the greatest golfers ever. If<br />change is not too good for him, your players shouldn't<br />have a problem with it.<br /><br />If you don't feel qualified to teach you can get up to<br />speed in a hurry. A good place to start is with my<br />product list at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/products.html">http://www.deandelker.com/products.html</a><br /><br />Note: This email is protected by copyright, but I<br />encourage you copy and share it freely. Please just<br />include the whole message including links and my<br />contact information. Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-17817807401507686722007-04-29T13:24:00.000-07:002007-04-29T13:34:20.105-07:00But Can You Dance To ItIf you are old enough to have seen American<br />Bandstand on television, and you know Dick<br />Clark is more than just Mr. New Year's Eve. <br />He was Mr. Pop Music for years broadcasting out<br />of Philadelphia every afternoon in the beginning,<br />then Saturday mornings on ABC later.<br /><br />One of the always popular segments of the show<br />was always when he'd take two volunteers from<br />the audience and have them listen to several<br />brand new records and rate them for all the<br />world to hear.<br /><br />Like a "Hot or Not" for new music. <br /><br />Inevitably though when they didn't like a tune,<br />the biggest complaint was what?<br /><br />'You can't dance to it'<br /><br />Like most good things in life it had to have that<br />swing or it wasn't worth a thing.<br /><br />Your shooting has to have a rhythm too or it<br />won't be worth a hoot. There's an obvious beat<br />to the dribble, but the same is true of a good<br />jump shot, reverse layup, dunk, runner, and<br />baby hook. It's your job is to find that rhythm<br />in practice and be able to find it again in<br />warmups and during your games. <br /><br />Defenses will do their best to create chaos and<br />knock you out of rhythm, but if you lock into it<br />like a great drummer and not let it go you can<br />become almost unstoppable.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. I've been reading a new book by Scott<br />Jaimet called "The Perfect Jumpshot" and it<br />definitely lives up to it's name. The picture<br />perfect jumpshot feels good to your body. In<br />the best of senses it is addictive, and there's<br />no reason you can't learn it with the help of<br />this book.<br /><br />Keep tuned. I'll be sharing tidbits from the<br />book and show you where you can get it soon.<br /><br />P.S.S. I'm still editing the report on the<br />Complete Breath, and it's coming along nicely.<br />If you're impatient though you could go ahead<br />and read Patrick Chylinski's tricks-of-the-trade<br />bestseller on "How To Average 20 Points A<br />Game".<br /><br />One of his secrets is to show your teeth from<br />the tipoff. Let your defender know he's in for<br />a long night because you know what you're<br />doing.<br /><br />You can't be passive. So here let me toss the<br />ball up, and, oh look, it's tipped to you. Now<br />run out and order Patrick's book today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Note: This entry is protected by copyright,<br />but I encourage you copy and share it freely. <br />Please just include the whole message<br />including links and my contact information. <br />Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-44383434759266476522007-04-26T09:36:00.000-07:002007-04-26T09:55:28.214-07:00Just Win TodayYou don't have to save the world. <br /><br />You just have to win today.<br /><br />It's no secret I listen to John Wood on matters<br />of strength and training. He is one of the most<br />diligent students of the strength game you'll<br />find on the planet. He's also a student of what<br />it takes to be a winner. <br /><br />I hope he's still not mad the University of<br />Florida beat out his Wolverines for the right<br />to play Ohio State for the national title in<br />football back in January. <br /><br />I met John at an explosive Matthew Furey<br />seminar in Tampa about a year and a half<br />ago and knew right off he had the goods. <br />John exuded a confident enthusiasm that<br />was well-grounded and solid as a rock. <br /><br />And with John there's no hype. Just results,<br />and what you see is what you get. John's<br />gone and written something recently I think<br />you'll want to hear.<br /><br />And rather than put it in my own words, I<br />want you to be able to get the full effect of<br />John's wisdom. If you want to be a winner<br />on the court and off pay attention to this:<br /><br />'In NCAA Division I College football, The<br />University of Michigan is #1 in all time<br />winning percentage and overall wins --<br />and its not by accident.<br /><br />Much of that success is unquestionably due<br />to talent, but lots of places have just as much,<br />if not more, talent. The thing is, the other<br />part is of that success is due to a specific<br />process, parts of which you can implement<br />into your own life and that's what I'm going<br />to let you in on today.<br /><br />See, we used to have a saying 'Win today', and<br />it was always used when the going got really<br />tough - usually during summer 2-a-day practice<br />sessions, or after a tough loss, or late in the<br />season when the Big 10 Championship was on<br />the line, when we were all sore, tired and wanted<br />to be doing anything else but be there practicing<br />football.<br /><br />Win today - It was an attitude thing. If you can<br />come out and practice with enthusiasm especially<br />when you dont feel like it, you'll be tough to beat<br />since every practice is an opportunity to improve.<br /><br />And thats what its all about - improvement.<br /><br />So, in order to 'Win The Day' we also had goals<br />for each practice. They were not particularly<br />difficult goals to reach, but if we could meet those,<br />day in and day out, we would win everything in<br />sight. <br /><br />These were the little things that always made<br />the difference in big games like no false-start<br />penalties or getting at least 2 interceptions per<br />practice.<br /><br />Again, very achievable, just have to do them day<br />in and day out.<br /><br />As far as your training, or your life, you can do<br />the very same thing and it will make a<br />tremendous difference. Before you go to bed at<br />night, make a list of 3 things you want to<br />accomplish the next day.<br /><br />Make them simple and very doable - take out<br />the trash, put the bills in the mail, etc. You can,<br />and should, accomplish more than that during<br />the course of the day, but just be sure those 3<br />things get done.<br /><br />Plus, they carry over but don't increase, so if<br />you did 2 today, tomorrow you would still have<br />3 - the one you missed and 2 new ones.<br /><br />You'll be surprised at just how much of a<br />challenge it can be to do 3 simple tasks each<br />day but that's why its so effective.<br /><br />Over and over and over again - a few simple<br />things, done correctly, always make the<br />difference.'<br /><br /> So go figure out what will 'Win Today' in your<br />quest to become a great shooter then go out<br />and ...<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. John's forte is building hand, wrist, forearm<br />and grip strength. All things you need to control<br />a critical rebound, whip out an ankle breaking<br />crossover, and shoot with a relaxed, consistent<br />stroke. See what goodies John has to help you out<br />today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.functionalhandstrength.com/">http://www.functionalhandstrength.com/</a><br /><br />P.S.S. Your season is probably over unless you<br />play in the NBA, and now is the time to ramp up<br />your training and see gains in strength, stamina,<br />quickness, and speed. <br /><br />I'm sure you're busy like me though and don't<br />have all day to train. You want to make the most<br />of your time, and believe it or not you can do<br />exactly that. And at the same time you can be<br />confident you are training right with Coach Tony<br />Alfonso's guide to basketball-specific training<br />and conditioning.<br /><br />Don't waste any more of your time. Get Tony's<br />e-book ASAP at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html</a><br /><br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-13691095450892669652007-04-25T08:49:00.000-07:002007-04-25T09:13:55.307-07:00Video Killed The Radio StarI like a good story on TV, DVD, or at the movies<br />as much as anybody, but we do pay a price for<br />media like that which does almost all the work<br />for us.<br /><br />And worst of all I believe it speeds up the<br />process of our kids abandoning their own<br />precious imaginations.<br /><br />In college I was program director of our<br />campus radio station for a couple of years. <br />While my first love and passion was<br />programming music we also ran classic radio<br />shows on Sunday night. <br /><br />Now that's one place you can really grow an<br />imagination, following a good story on the<br />radio. And the same with reading books, of<br />course especially good fiction.<br /><br />Unless you're a total newbie to this site you<br />know how much I believe in mental rehearsal,<br />visualization, and purposely using your<br />imagination to enpower yourself.<br /><br />Most of the great players do it in practice,<br />game prep, warmups and even during games.<br /><br />During games, you say Coach?<br /><br />Yes. Where do you think creativity in a<br />dribble drive or in passing comes from?<br /><br />Imagination. It can work split-seconds<br />ahead of the actual action you take.<br /><br />Most coaches rely heavily on drills, and it's<br />great to do that, but I think coaches do a<br />disservice when they try to overprogram<br />their players. <br /><br />Yes, you want them reacting instinctively.<br />That's the whole purpose of the drills, but<br />remember you don't want them pigeon-<br />holed, mechanical, and lacking creativity. <br />It is a delicate balance.<br /><br />The answer is to use drills have options,<br />decision making, and flexibility built in. <br />Look for those. Even with simple rote drills<br />though you can encourage players to<br />imagine defenders coming at them, and how<br />they would react and adapt.<br /><br />There's a big difference between a static<br />shooting drill, and full speed drills where<br />imaginarydefenders can come flying at<br />you trying to steal the ball, deflect passes,<br />etc.<br /><br />Learn to use your imagination fluently, and<br />it will become a powerful tool for you. <br />Remember not to let it dwell on the dark<br />side though through worries and fears like<br />missing shots at the free throw line. <br /><br />That can become self-fulfilling prophecy, and<br />you will end up rehearsing and planning how<br />you will fail instead of how you can succeed.<br /><br />Coach Dean - Shoot For the Stars<br /><br />P.S. There's an art to putting up big scoring<br />numbers, and Patrick Chylinski can teach you<br />the inside scoop on increasing your scoring<br />average.<br /><br />What would it be worth to you to add 4, 6, or<br />even 10 points a game to your scoring stats?<br /><br />Get your copy of his best-selling e-book any<br />time of day or night at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Note: This email is protected by copyright,<br />but I encourage you copy and share it freely. <br />Please just include the whole message<br />including links and my contact information. <br />Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-35602958241237216202007-04-22T11:36:00.000-07:002007-04-22T11:47:21.818-07:00People Get ReadyPeople get ready, there's a train a'comin'<br />Pickin' up passengers from coast to coast.<br /><br /> - Curtis Mayfield (1964)<br /><br />The tragedy in Blacksburg recently has brought<br />a soberness to most of us. Sports lost it's<br />significance at Virginia Tech for awhile as it<br />should, but now we should recognize it can also<br />be part of the healing process.<br /><br />What we know to be darkness can always lead<br />us to a deeper appreciation of the light. In fact,<br />it's almost impossible to know success without<br />tasting adversity, and often failure, first. I think<br />that's what Coach John Wooden had in mind<br />when he said the following:<br /><br />'Webster indicates that success is the accumulation<br />of material possessions. I don't think so. I think<br />success is a peace of mind which can only be<br />attained through self-satisfaction...knowing you've<br />made the effort to do the best of which you're<br />capable.<br /><br />We have no control over an opponent, but we<br />should have control over ourselves. All we can<br />do is live up to our potential.<br /><br />It takes hard work and enthusiasm. You need to<br />be conditioned and know what you're doing. You<br />need good skills. You must have consideration for<br />others and lastly, You need a competitive spirit.<br /><br />You can't be afraid of a tough situation.<br /><br />You must enjoy it.<br /><br />And realize the most difficult tasks bring the most<br />satisfaction.'<br /><br />Maybe the Rolling Stones 'Can't Get No Satisfaction',<br />but you CAN, if you learn how to handle adversity.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. I met a new friend last week in Vick Sfera. Vick<br />says he doesn't like my Gators, but you can tell he<br />does respect them :)<br /><br />If you want a wealth of information about basketball,<br />leadership, character, and the game of life become a<br />reader of Vick's 'Triple Threat Basketball' blog. Vick<br />is a real giver, and you will always be able to find<br />something that will help you grow as a shooter and a<br />person at:<br /><br /><a href="http://triplethreatbball.blogspot.com/">http://triplethreatbball.blogspot.com</a><br /><br />P.S.S. In training and conditioning you put your<br />body and mind through adversity on purpose so<br />you can get stronger, quicker, faster, more<br />explosive, and better able to endure the rigors of<br />competition and come out a winner.<br /><br />As the old commercial about changing your oil<br />used to say, 'Pay me now or pay me later'. Train<br />now, and your body won't give out on you later.<br /><br />But to get the most out of your training you need<br />to know how to do it right. Too much, too little, or<br />the wrong kind of training will put your progress<br />in reverse.<br /><br />Coach Tony Alfonso had all that in mind when he<br />created 'The Complete Basketball Strength and<br />Speed Program'.<br /><br />If you want to be sure you're getting the most<br />out of your conditioning grab up Tony's revealing<br />ebook today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html</a><br /><br />Note: This email is protected by copyright, but I<br />encourage you copy and share it freely. Please<br />just include the whole message including links and<br />my contact information. Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-1108450602166439552007-04-21T13:44:00.000-07:002007-04-21T13:59:47.280-07:00Through The Looking Glass'There's no use trying. One can't believe<br />impossible things.'<br /><br /> - Alice (In Wonderland)<br /><br />'I daresay you haven't had much practice.<br />When I was your age, I always did a half-<br />an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I've<br />believed as many as six impossible things<br />before breakfast.'<br /><br /> - The Queen (In Wonderland)<br /><br /><br />Do you think that might be one reason she<br />became the Queen? Believing she could do<br />'impossible' things.<br /><br />And you notice Alice had to quit looking AT<br />the mirror.<br /><br />She had to stop seeing herself as she was,<br />with all her failures and limitations. She<br />had to look through the mirror to see what<br />she could become. It took awhile to sort it<br />all out, but her life changed permanently<br />when she entered that new world of<br />possibility.<br /><br />My mentor Matthew Furey pointed out in<br />a recent blog you can see yourself anyway<br />you want. No reason you can't see yourself<br />as a doctor discovering the cure for cancer,<br />President of the United States, 35 pounds<br />slimmer, loving to exercise, driving a<br />Hummer, successful in business or coaching,<br />or shooting 98% from the freethrow line.<br /><br />Yes, I know there's a difference between<br />fantasy and imagination, but how you see<br />yourself, your self-image, and the grace<br />of God determine what you are able to<br />accomplish and become in your life.<br /><br />Whatever you believe on the inside (good,<br />bad, or indifferent) sets the tone for what<br />you'll manifest in the outside world.<br /><br />And you don't even have to take my word<br />for it. You can prove it yourself.<br /><br />Every day for the next 21 days, mentally<br />pretend you are shooting like you want to<br />shoot in some area. Freethrows, the mid-<br />range jumpshot, 3-point shots, the hook<br />shot, with the off hand, etc.<br /><br />Don't change your actions though. Don't<br />practice any more than you already have<br />been.<br /><br />Just take 15 - 30 minutes extra a day to<br />vividly imagine yourself making picture<br />perfect shots over and over and over in<br />the face of fierce defensive pressure. And<br />don't forget to add as much sensory<br />information as you can like the roar of the<br />crowd, thesmells, squeeking sneakers, etc. <br />And make it extremely enjoyable.<br /><br />If you're willing to do this, I think you're<br />going to discover something unusual.<br />Without an extra ounce of will power -<br />you'll naturally be drawn to change.<br /><br />You'll seek out the best coaching you can<br />find, be more teachible, and start practicing<br />better.<br /><br />You'll start wanting to do what it takes to<br />be a great shooter. You'll have a burning<br />desire to excel, and before too long you'll<br />start thinking and shooting like a superstar.<br /><br />First you have to get the vision and use<br />your creative imagination. Then watch as<br />change begins to manifest as you adapt<br />your activity till you have a new reality.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. The best way I know to see yourself as<br />a top notch scorer with dangerous offensive<br />game is to soak up the power-packed ideas<br />in Coach Patrick Chylinski's ebook on 'How<br />To Average 20 Points A Game'.<br /><br />Find out how to get where you want to be<br />today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />P.S.S. Please read Matthew Furey's original<br />post at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.mattfurey.com/mattfurey_uncensored/2007/04/10/#000513">www.mattfurey.com/mattfurey_uncensored/2007/04/10/#000513</a><br /><br />The thought experiment was his. I just<br />adapted it for shooting. And I encourage<br />you to read his blog and sign up for his<br />enpowering daily email messages.<br /><br />Note: This email is protected by copyright,<br />but I encourage you copy and share it freely. <br />Please just include the whole message<br />including links and my contact information. <br /><br />Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-14368318921738934362007-04-18T10:01:00.000-07:002007-04-18T10:26:54.182-07:00It's All In His HeadLet me publicly add my condolences to all the<br />good people associated with Virginia Tech this<br />week. My prayers are with you.<br /><br />There's a little section in 'Pistol' a book about<br />Pete Maravich by Mark Kriegel that jumped<br />out at me recently.<br /><br />Here's how it reads:<br /><br />Every so often, Pete would do something he<br />had never done before. On those occasions,<br />Bud would ask,<br /><br />'Hey, Pete, how come I never saw you<br />practice that one?'<br /><br />'Oh yes I have,' Pete would say. 'Many<br />times.'<br /><br />'When?', Bud would retort.<br /><br />'In my head.', Pete answered.<br /><br />In his head. All in his head.<br /><br />Think about it. Imagination can be the<br />laboratory where new skills are<br />developed.<br /><br />I'll show you a practical way to experiment<br />with your imagination next time, but you<br />don't have to wait for me. Create your own<br />future today.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. The more you learn the basics of doing<br />something the easier it is to picture yourself<br />pulling it off.<br /><br />Like how when Roger Bannister broke the<br />4 minute mile barrier in track, 20 or 30<br />people also broke the mark the next year<br />or so.<br /><br />The same thing can happen when you let<br />Coach Patrick Chylinski guide you through<br />how to score 20 points a game (without<br />being a ball-hog, BTW.) When you<br />understand how to do it you'll be able to<br />see yourself doing it, and pretty soon you<br />will be doing it.<br /><br />Get started today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Note: This email is protected by copyright,<br />but I encourage you copy and share it freely.<br />Please just include the whole message<br />including links and my contact information.<br />Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br />dean@deandelker.com<br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-4840616795623925112007-04-17T10:23:00.000-07:002007-04-17T11:01:14.502-07:00He's A True GentlemanWhat do Ohio State athletes need for all<br />their exams?<br /><br />Number 2 pencils, of course.<br /><br />My youngest son told me that. <br /><br />I'm not so much of a woofer as he is though<br />so apologies to our Buckeye fans. I've liked<br />Ohio State hoops through the years to tell<br />the truth. <br /><br />My uncle lived in Portsmouth Ohio, and one<br />Christmas when we visited he and I listened<br />to a high school basketball game together on<br />the radio because of this wunderkid named<br />Jerry Lucas. After leading his team to back<br />to back state championships he went on to<br />star at Ohio State with John Havlicek and<br />brought them several Final Fours and a<br />national championship. Like many others I<br />was a Jerry Lucas fan.<br /><br />I've always been a huge Kentucky Wildcat<br />fan too though. When I moved to Gainesville<br />25 years ago I didn't have to worry about my<br />loyalties much. The Gators were likable but<br />never used to compete for championships. <br /><br />Now I'm in big trouble. I love both teams.<br /><br />I'm really glad the Wildcats snagged Billie<br />Gillespie instead of Billy Donovan as their<br />new coach though even though I believe<br />the Bluegrass State is getting a real keeper<br />too.<br /><br />Coach Duane Silver is a retired basketball<br />coach in Texas who loves the game as<br />much as anybody around, and here's what<br />he thinks of the man:<br /><br />'Last Saturday morning before the Texas<br />A&M vs Texas Tech football game I was<br />waiting for a table outside IHOP in College<br />Station. While I waited, a headline in The<br />Dallas Morning News caught my eye, and<br />I tried to buy a paper, but the dispenser<br />wouldn't open. <br /><br />As I tried several times unsuccessfully, a<br />man drove up to IHOP, got out of his<br />vehicle and bought a copy of The Eagle<br />[the local paper].<br /><br />He then came over to the Dallas Morning<br />News dispenser, saw I was having no luck<br />opening it, smiled, and left. I gave up on<br />the paper, sat down on a bench outside,<br />and continued to wait for a table.<br /><br />Several minutes later the man returned,<br />got out of his vehicle, handed me a copy<br />of The Dallas Morning News, and again<br />smiled and left. I managed to get out a<br />'Thank you,' but sat there in shock<br />someone would be so thoughtful and<br />take the time to do that for a perfect<br />stranger.<br /><br />After he drove off, a couple sitting next<br />to me asked if I knew who the man was.<br />When I said no, they told me it was Billy<br />Gillespie, the [then] new head coach of<br />the Texas A&M men's basketball team.<br /><br />I was floored that anyone would take<br />the time to do what he did, especially<br />someone in his position, where egos<br />can sometimes get in the way of good<br />manners. He must have had 100<br />things to do on an Aggie game day and<br />might have had recruits in town he<br />needed to give attention to.<br /><br />I just want to thank him again publicly<br />and let the College Station area and<br />Texas A&M know how fortunate they<br />are to have him in their community.<br />He is a true gentleman.'<br /><br />And he has proven to be just as good a<br />coach too as this year's tournament bears<br />out. So I believe the people in Lexington<br />and all over the great Commonwealth of<br />Kentucky are the fortunate ones now.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. You can be a real gentleman and be<br />as competitive as anybody. Legendary<br />Coach John Wooden is the ultimate<br />example. In fact, I believe like him if your<br />foundation is lacking it will eventually show<br />in your play.<br /><br />Character and fundamentals count.<br /><br />And if you want to get a solid foundation as<br />an offensive player you'd do well to listen<br />to Coach Patrick Chylinski teach how a<br />scorer needs to think and act.<br /><br />It's all there in his high-powered ebook on<br />'How To Average 20 Points A Game' which<br />coincidentally you can just happen to find at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Note: This email is protected by copyright,<br />but I encourage you to copy and share it<br />freely. Please just make sure you include<br />the whole message including links and my<br />contact information. Thanks a ton.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-17740469840735374532007-04-13T08:46:00.000-07:002007-04-13T09:02:01.619-07:00What's The BuzzWhat's the buzz,<br />Tell me what's a happenin'<br />What's the buzz,<br />Tell me what's a happenin'<br /><br /> - Jesus Christ Superstar<br /><br />If you are a fitness trainer, or are being<br />trained, or just have a membership at<br />the local chrome and fern gym you could<br />probably tell me the training buzzword<br />of the 21st century.<br /><br />Functional.<br /><br />As in functional training, functional<br />exercise, functional strength, and even<br />in my friend John Wood's website -<br /><a href="http://www.functionalhandstrength.com/">www.functionalhandstrength.com</a><br /><br />And functional means the movement<br />you are training is something you will<br />actually use in real life or in sport. I'm<br />sorry but it doesn't mean doing situps<br />on a stability ball or whatever other<br />new age apparatus the gimmick gods<br />come up with.<br /><br />Too many trainers though still use the<br />body building approach which isolates<br />and builds up individual body parts.<br /><br />That may be good for standing in front<br />of a mirror, but it doesn't help much on<br />the basketball floor.<br /><br />How many times playing hoops are you<br />asked to lay on your stomach and curl<br />your legs slowly up to your butt? Or<br />how often are you called on to sit down,<br />prop your elbows on a pad, and slowly<br />curl your arms up to your shoulders?<br /><br />Never. The muscles built that way are<br />mostly for show. And there's no way<br />training like that will give you any<br />greater coordination and body control.<br /><br />In his book 'Movement That Matters'<br />Paul Chek points out 6 basic movements<br />you need to do your work and be athletic.<br /><br />The squat, lunge, bend, twist, push and<br />pull. <br /><br />Any exercise that trains these movements,<br />especially in combinations involving major<br />muscle groups is functional.<br /><br />For playing hoops and shooting those could<br />be movements like a lunge and medicine<br />ball throw (lunge, twist), a clean and jerk<br />(bend, pull, push) and a front squat (squat).<br /><br />Most of these develop explosiveness and<br />core strength, balance, and the ability to<br />transfer force from the lower to the upper<br />body.<br /><br />If you're getting your workout<br />information from a trainer who<br />emphasizes bodybuilding you are short<br />changing yourself and probably limiting<br />your athletic ability.<br /><br />And this is especially true the younger<br />you are.<br /><br />So please find yourself an athletic trainer<br />who knows his stuff and/or order Coach<br />Tony Alfonso's ebook for real basketball<br />training:<br /><br />The Complete Basketball Strength and<br />Speed Training Program - 1st Edition<br /><br />It's available for your convenience now at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html</a><br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. They aren't very sexy, but bodyweight<br />exercises are probably the most functional<br />movements you can do with your body.<br /><br />Even strongman afficianado John Wood<br />himself and 5-time national bench press<br />champion Brooks Kubik extol the virtues<br />of bodyweight exercise for.<br /><br />And you can't help become a better shooter<br />when your body and mind are developing<br />together.<br /><br />You have to learn how to do them right<br />and control your breathing though so for<br />that I recommend any and all of the<br />following:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.mattfurey.com/">http://www.mattfurey.com/</a><br /><a href="http://www.bodyweightbasics.com/">http://www.bodyweightbasics.com/</a><br /><a href="http://www.brookskubik.com/">http://www.brookskubik.com/</a><br /><a href="http://www.eddiebaran.com/">http://www.eddiebaran.com/</a> (for lady shooters)<br /><br />Make Every Shot CountDean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-30654704664797493632007-04-10T11:27:00.000-07:002007-04-10T11:53:55.460-07:00What Is A Buckeye AnywayWith all the hoopla over UF playing Ohio<br />State in both football and basketball for<br />championships this year my wife asked<br />a simple question the other day.<br /><br />What is a Buckeye?<br /><br />Having grown up in the Ohio Valley I knew<br />the answer. It's a type of tree and the shiny,<br />dark brown, 1 - 2 inch round nuts it drops. <br />There were some in my neighbor's yard in<br />Henderson, Kentucky. <br /><br />You can't eat the nuts, but they're good for<br />throwing at people. Light enough so no<br />damage is done, but heavy enough to chuck.<br />They have a smaller light brown circle on<br />them which makes them look like an eyeball. <br /><br />I guess somebody along the way thought<br />they looked like the eyes of a big buck.<br /><br />What that has to do with college sports and<br />why a major university would want its<br />teams named that I have no idea. There<br />are worse team names though, and I think<br />the buckeye may be poison. But it still<br />doesn't seem they would strike much fear<br />into the heart of an opponent, does it? <br /><br />There is one Buckeye who strikes fear into<br />his opponents this year though, and<br />especially after the title game - Mr. Greg<br />Oden. <br /><br />If you watched him play you got a clinic on<br />how to be a big-time player. And it doesn't<br />even matter what position you play. You<br />could learn a lot from this kid. He may turn<br />pro next year. I haven't heard yet. <br /><br />He could though. He's that good, and only<br />going to get better. He sure showed his<br />mettle against the 3 or 4 good defenders<br />Florida threw at him during the<br />championship game.<br /><br />Here's what made him so good:<br /><br /> 1. He played big in a huge, high-pressure<br />game. <br /><br /> 2. He attacked his defender and the basket<br />without hesitation.<br /><br /> 3. His in great shape. Even though he tired<br />late in the game can you blame him? He<br />banged with 4 different defenders with at<br />least 16 fouls to give for 38 minutes at both<br />ends of the court.<br /><br /> 4. He shot and scored with either hand.<br /><br /> 5. He stayed calm and focused all night. He<br />played like a veteran, not a college<br />freshman.<br /><br />That's how big-time players and big-time<br />scorers do it, and if you paid attention<br />during the game you learned a lot.<br /><br />But if you want to learn tons more about<br />how to become a prime-time scorer make<br />sure you digest Patrick Chylinski's best-<br />selling e-book on how to dominate a<br />defender and be top-notch scorer.<br /><br />Order it today, and you can get an almost<br />unfair advantage on your competition this<br />summer. They won't know what got into<br />you. So zip right on over to:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />Note: This blog entry is protected by<br />copyright, but you have permission to<br />copy and use it in its entirety as long<br />as the links are intact and the contact<br />information is included.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-78427674662248505802007-04-06T11:39:00.000-07:002007-04-06T11:54:10.523-07:00How 'Bout Dem Gator BoysAt University of Florida home football games<br />all the fans stand up and sing 'We Are The<br />Boys From Ole Florida' between the 3rd<br />and 4th quarters . <br /><br />It's like how Cubs fans sing 'Take Me Out<br />To The Ballgame' during the 7th inning<br />stretch at Wrigley Field in Chicago. In<br />fact, the two even have very similar, sing-<br />song melodies.<br /><br />And I think that's where Joakim Noah got<br />his knickname for the University of Florida<br />basketball team. 'Gator Boys'. As in 'The<br />Gator Boys are hot'.<br /><br />Sorry, but I can't let a repeat National<br />Championship go by without honoring this<br />team. Not so I can crow, because all I did<br />was watch and yell a lot, but just because<br />they're such a special group of young men. <br /><br />And they can all shoot pretty darn well<br />when they need to if you saw the<br />championship game Monday night.<br /><br />The best assessment of this team I've read<br />this year is from Ron McBay, who does a<br />weekly on-line column on men's college<br />basketball. You can find his Hook, Line, &<br />Sinker analysis during hoops season at:<br /><a href="http://www.ronmcbay.us/HLS">http://www.RonMcBay.us/HLS</a><br /><br />Here are Ron's thoughts:<br /><br />'The beauty of this team was always how<br />well the individual pieces fit together.<br /><br />Unlike [the early 90's] Duke 'Universal<br />Replacements' team in which the<br />individual versatility of several players<br />made them capable of stepping up and<br />playing different roles as the situation<br />dictated, this starting five had very<br />specific skills/talents, each bringing<br />something to the table that the others<br />couldn't.<br /><br />A center who's agile enough to be the point<br />on the full-court press; a power forward<br />who can harass three-point shooters on the<br />perimeter; a 'tweener who can shoot threes,<br />drive the lane, get tough rebounds, and shut<br />down the opposing team's best scorer; a<br />point guard who can distribute and get his<br />own shot when the need arises; and a<br />designated shooter who defends well to boot.<br /><br />That's everything you want a team to be<br />able to do with no wasted duplication.<br /><br />Could they pull off the Three-Peat if the<br />core actually decided to return next<br />year? Maybe. Probably. But it wouldn't be<br />nearly as easy without the back-breaking<br />three-pointers they get from senior guard<br />Lee Humphrey. He's option # 5, yet if you<br />remove him from the equation, you can<br />see how imbalanced their attack becomes.'<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. Not only did this team fit together<br />talent-wise, but they were inseparable<br />mentally and emotionally too. Like<br />brothers in arms they fought for one<br />another. If one struggled, no problem.<br />The rest of the guys always had his back.<br />I know every team that excels has<br />teamwork, but the 'Gator Boys' have it in<br />an abundance that is rare these days.<br /><br />P.S.S. The Gator Boys learned how to win,<br />but they also learned how to lose like<br />winners. Instead of getting off track they<br />knew losing gave them valuable feedback<br />that would made them better. Coach Stan<br />Kellner teaches that very same principle in<br />shooting hoops.<br /><br />If you want to learn how to miss shots<br />like a winner you want Stan's DVD on<br />'How To Be A Prime-Time Shooter'.<br /><br />It's just what you need to energize your<br />mental game for summer ball or to come<br />back next fall as a shooting wizard. Get<br />started today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/kellner_order.html</a><br /><br />Note: This blog entry is protected by<br />copyright, but you have permission to<br />copy and use it in its entirety as long as<br />the links are intact and the contact<br />information is included.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-78969811212819778912007-04-04T13:14:00.000-07:002007-04-04T13:19:55.974-07:00Tag You're ItHow long has it been since you played tag?<br /><br />In an interview recently Boston Celtics<br />Strength Coach Walter Norton, Jr. talked<br />about how many kids these days work on<br />their individual skills, their technical<br />abilities, but they sorely lack general<br />movement skills.<br /><br />What is the hoops mantra?<br /><br />'He's got skills (or skillz).'<br /><br />Norton though distinguishes between kids<br />who have 'drill skills', and those who can<br />get past defenders because they have the<br />ability to evade. They have agility and<br />quickness. They are mobile.<br /><br />And one reason many kids can't do that is<br />they don't play games like tag anymore.<br /><br />If you're a coach stopping practice to play<br />tag may seem like a waste of time or too<br />much fun and games and not enough work,<br />but is it? <br /><br />Isn't evading a defender a critical skill in<br />basketball? Isn't it a prelude to almost<br />every shot? No matter how good your<br />stroke you're not going to be a very<br />effective scorer without it.<br /><br />And is there a better way to teach the raw<br />skill than by playing tag?<br /><br />Try it and let me know.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. You can learn at least 50 more ways<br />to make yourself a better scorer from<br />Coach Patrick Chylinski in his special<br />insider report on<br /><br />'How To Average 20 Points A Game'.<br /><br />Don't spin your wheels practicing. Learn<br />what to focus on to produce results today<br />at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />P.S.S. Also if you want to find out how to<br />take your agility and quickness to new<br />levels while adding strength, flexibility<br />and endurance you can't afford not to<br />check out Coach Tony Alfonso's 137 page<br /><br />'Complete Basketball Strength and Speed<br />Training Program'<br /><br />It's available for immediate download<br />today at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html">http://www.deandelker.com/alfonso_order.html</a><br /><br />Note: This blog entry is protected by<br />copyright, but you have permission to<br />copy and use it in its entirety as long<br />as the links are intact and the contact<br />information is included.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-89002622199217962822007-04-02T07:09:00.000-07:002007-04-02T09:40:37.312-07:00I Have A DreamBy midnight tonight we'll know whether<br />my team of Gator Boys have fulfilled their<br />dream of a second straight national title or<br />not.<br /><br />Last year they were a refreshing surprise<br />to the college basketball world. This year<br />with the starting five back so many expected<br />them to win. They've had the pressure and<br />that proverbial target on their back all season<br />so teams have given them their best shot.<br />Much harder to repeat than win the first one,<br />but not if you hold on to your dream.<br /><br />Dreams are a wonderful things. They are<br />what inspires us to reach for the best. And<br />with apologies to Dr. Martin Luther King for<br />whom I have the tremendous respect,<br /><br />I have a dream.<br /><br />Dreams really, but the one I'm thinking of<br />is not political in the least. Neither is it one<br />of those big heroic 'Save the cheerleader,<br />save the world' kind of dreams.<br /><br />I've had it for awhile in my heart, but didn't<br />know it until recently . As you might guess I<br />love to shoot baskets in my own driveway.<br />There's nothing more satisfying than sinking<br />shots, even if I'm just by myself.<br /><br />It charges me up, gives me confidence, and<br />relieves stress, but I've discovered now I<br />want to feel like I'm shooting in Madison<br />Square Garden, the old Boston Gardens,<br />Rupp Arena, or tonight's Georgia Dome.<br /><br />I want the look and feel and sound and<br />smell of a top quality backboard and rim.<br /><br />What I have now works fine, and I do<br />appreciate it. It's much better than a rim<br />nailed to the side of a sagging barn, but<br />mine is one of those old ones with a sand-<br />filled base I bought from a neighbor who<br />was moving.<br /><br />I know the rim is too forgiving though, and<br />it has this annoying feature that when you<br />swish a shot from the side the ball hits the<br />stupid base right on it's front curve and<br />bounces wildly out into the street.<br /><br />A couple of weeks ago though a guy named<br />Ryan Tate from Pro Dunk Hoops found my<br />blog, and asked if I'd consider putting a link<br />to their website which carries basketball<br />goals.<br /><br />My first, second, and third reactions were<br />no, no, and no - I don't do that.<br /><br />But I was curious enough to look anyway.<br />What I found was, not basketball goals, but<br />dreams. Calling what they sell basketball<br />goals is like calling a tricked out Cadillac<br />Escalade, transportation.<br /><br />Yeah, it's true, but sooo inadequate.<br /><br />These guys create tempered glass, pier<br />mounted, premium, professional grade,<br />in-ground, adjustable basketball goal<br />systems for driveway and backyard court<br />use. Now I've got to have one. I don't know<br />how yet, but the desire has been planted,<br />and it's not going away anytime soon.<br /><br />If you are serious about your hoops and<br />want to have the court that's the envy of<br />all your buddies this is your ticket to ride.<br />They are not cheap, but they are worth<br />every penny, and you can find a way to<br />afford them.<br /><br />I might even be able to help, but first<br />see what you think for yourself at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.produnkhoops.com/">http://www.produnkhoops.com/</a><br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. One way you can justify the cost of a<br />beast like this is to realize it can be a great<br />home improvement. These units are so nice<br />they're going to add value to your home,<br />and for sure that's what you want to tell<br />your wife.<br /><br />P.S.S. This reminds me I've had a number<br />of people say they'd like to buy more of my<br />stuff too, but they don't have the budget for<br />it.<br /><br />Believe me I know tight budgets. Some of<br />you are volunteer coaches like I've been, or<br />work more for the love of the game and the<br />kids than for the money. That's one of the<br />biggest draws of amateur sports.<br /><br />Maybe I can help with that, and you can<br />even work up to buying a Pro Dunk top of<br />the line goal system for your home. Living<br />in abundance is something you can grow<br />and develop in no matter where you are<br />starting. And for you to win, somebody<br />else doesn't have to lose. You just have to<br />learn the rules of the game and practice<br />the fundamentals.<br /><br />Would you be interested in me writing<br />more about how to win the money game<br />in this blog? It's a big part of success and<br />character in general, and there are<br />specific laws of abundance and prosperity<br />God has laid out for all.<br /><br />I'm not talking about being greedy or<br />idolizing the big green, but having enough<br />to provide well for your family, fulfill the<br />wholesome dreams in your heart, and to<br />be able to bless other people.<br /><br />Let me know.<br /><br />Note: This blog entry is protected by<br />copyright, but you have permission to<br />copy and use it in its entirety as long<br />as the links are intact and the contact<br />information is included.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">http://www.deandelker.com/</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-52771688278507032502007-03-30T19:28:00.000-07:002007-03-30T19:36:52.712-07:00Are You A PinballAre you a pinball or a bowling ball?<br /><br />A pinball is what people are like who live<br />without purpose. Bouncing around from<br />one bright light to the next, getting<br />bumpered and flippered around by chance. <br />They might occasionally score big, but they<br />never really go anywhere and more often<br />than not they end up lost down a dark hole.<br /><br />If you're a bowling ball though you have<br />purpose, direction, and power. You might<br />end up in the gutter occasionally, but you'll<br />always come back for another try. And<br />you have the satisfaction of always working<br />toward that perfect game.<br /><br /> Congrats to the Final Four teams and all<br />the teams in the NCAA tournament. The<br />media will talk about winners and losers,<br />but really they're all winners because<br />they're in the fight. They have purpose,<br />and if they pay attention to the lessons<br />they learn they'll all be better off in life<br />for it.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. Just because I have deep respect for<br />every competitor doesn't mean I don't<br />want to see Florida hoisting the National<br />Trophy again this year because these are<br />such a very special group of kids who've<br />worked their butts off, but I recognize<br />they're not the only ones by any means.<br /><br />Ain't it grand to be a hoops fanatic. Ain't<br />it grand.<br /><br />P.S.S. I still want to keep giving props to<br />Patrick Chylinski and his ebook on 'How<br />To Score 20 Points A Game'. It's an<br />insider's look at how to become a powerful<br />scorer and help your team be a big winner.<br />If you think you can't learn something like<br />this from a book you are flat wrong.<br /><br />There's nothing else like it on the market,<br />and if you want a competitive edge for next<br />season or summer ball now's the time to get<br />started at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Note: This blog entry is protected by<br />copyright, but you have permission to copy<br />and use it in its entirety as long as the links<br />are intact and the contact information is<br />included.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007<br />Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-66270770170890400902007-03-29T09:32:00.000-07:002007-03-29T14:00:49.157-07:00How To Beat A BullyRound 3 of the NCAA tournament resumes<br />tonight, and I'm chompin' at the bit. That's<br />the Gator chomp by the way even through<br />Florida doesn't play till tomorrow night.<br /><br />I felt like Florida was standing up to a bully<br />in their 2nd round game against Purdue.<br />Nothing wrong with that style of play. The<br />Boilermakers did a super job of almost<br />pulling it off. Hats off to a valiant opponent. <br /><br />It took Florida 2/3rds of the game, but<br />they eventually showed enough toughness<br />to catch up to and pass the engineers from<br />West Lafayette with Al Horford in the post<br />and their secret weapon.<br /><br />Free throw shooting.<br /><br />Even though the Gators season free throw<br />percentage isn't all that great this year<br />(Low 70's I think) they knocked in around<br />85% for the Purdue game, and Purdue was<br />fouling a lot.<br /><br />I'm not sure what Florida did to be that<br />much better. Probably just made the<br />decision to concentrate and make free<br />throws a priority because they knew<br />they'd need them. <br /><br />Winners find a way.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />Coach Dean - The Dean of Shooting Hoops<br /><br />P.S. One thing that will help your free<br />throw shooting is to cultivate a ritual<br />and do it the same way every single<br />time.<br /><br />Remember how Kyle Macy of Kentucky<br />used to always touch his socks. Other<br />people dribble a certain way, the same<br />number of times, spin the ball, etc. <br />Whatever helps you focus and get into<br />your confidence groove. <br /><br /> If you don't have a ritual yet come up<br />with one that works for you, and start<br />knocking down more and more free<br />throws.<br /><br />P.S.S. Free throws are also critical to<br />you becoming a double digit scorer. <br />Coach Patrick Chylinski explains it all<br />in his powerful ebook 'How To Average<br />20 Points A Game' available now at:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html">http://www.deandelker.com/20ppg.html</a><br /><br />Note: This blog entry is protected by<br />copyright, but you have permission to<br />copy and use it in its entirety as long<br />as the links are intact and the contact<br />information is included.<br /><br />Copyright 2006,2007 Delker Enterprises, Inc.<br /><br />Coach Dean Delker<br />8413 SW 4th Place<br />Gainesville, FL 32607<br />352-494-6572<br /><br /><a href="mailto:dean@deandelker.com">dean@deandelker.com</a><br /><a href="http://www.deandelker.com/">www.deandelker.com</a>Dean Delkerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01007204896358693510noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21415294.post-4592197391150395622007-03-27T15:49:00.000-07:002007-03-27T15:57:23.408-07:00When Does Your Practice StopWhen do you stop practicing?<br /><br />When you die?<br /><br />I bet by now you're getting conditioned to<br />think this is a trick question. It's not.<br /><br />There is a time when more practice gives<br />you fewer results. In economics it's called<br />the law of diminishing returns. It's that<br />place where more and more work yields<br />less and less productivity.<br /><br />As an example from the NCAA tournament<br />look at John Calipari's Memphis Tigers.<br />This season they shot 61% from the free<br />throw line. Not so great. And I don't have<br />to tell you that can be a big Achilles heal in<br />a one-and-done tournament.<br /><br />All you need is a big physical team that<br />forces a deliberate half-court game and is<br />deep enough to foul you often, and you<br />can be in trouble.<br /><br />Undoubtedly Coach C. has worked on free<br />throw shooting till everybody was blue in<br />the face, but it didn't seem to make a<br />difference.<br /><br />Fortunately though he took the crazy<br />advice of a sports psychologist and had<br />his team stop practicing free throws,<br />period. Instead he had every one of them<br />go home and visualize making ten straight<br />or more every night with feeling.<br /><br />Do you want to guess what they shot their<br />last game? It didn't always look pretty,<br />but 82%.<br /><br />Coincidence. I think not. They just needed<br />to believe and visualization helped. I'm not<br />saying to quit practicing free throws, but<br />you might need to if you're frustrated, and<br />I'd at least try adding in the visualizations<br />if I were you.<br /><br />Shoot For The Stars,<br /><br />P.S. This whole idea was floated to me by<br />my friend Coach Tim Kauppinen in his<br />daily email newsletter.<br /><br />Tim specializes in training athletes to run<br />their fastest and be their quickest. He also<br />te