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| Perfection: the 17-0 1972 Dolphins | 
The NFL Network
just did a great piece on Don Shula, the NFL's winningest coach with 347 wins, Don Shula on the 40th anniversary of the 1973 Super Bowl that capped off the 1972 perfect
season.  One of the biggest thrills of my
coaching career was from my second year in 2002 when we played at St. Thomas
Aquinas and I went up in the booth and saw Don Shula and got to shake his
hand.  Here are some of the notes from
Shula's book with Ken Blanchard, Everyone's a Coach: Five Business Secrets for High Performance Coaching
 which I highly recommend.  I haven't
looked at these notes in years, and I forgot how good the content was.
- When I took over the Dolphins in
     1970, the press wanted to know what my three- or five-year plan was.  I told them my plan was day-to-day.
 - We had four workouts a day during
     my first Dolphins training camp. 
     The players complained, but then stopped after we won a few
     pre-season games.  They attributed
     the turnaround to the hard work they’d done.  The things they complained the most
     about, they later credited for the change in the football team.
 - KB: Don made me realize that if
     you’re going to compete today and be the best, you have to push yourself
     and others—hard.
 - If you allow sloppy practice and
     don’t push your team to continually improve, sloppiness becomes a habit.
 - The best way to continue to
     improve is to practice hard all the time.
 - Mean Joe Greene: “You have to
     respect Coach Shula’s thirty years of excellence.  That’s no accident.  You’re a fool if you think so.”  
 - The five secrets of effective
     coaching can be organized into a simple acronym: C.O.A.C.H.
 
- Conviction-Driven
 - Effective leaders stand for
       something
 - Overlearning
 - Effective leaders help their
       teams achieve practice perfection
 - Audible-Ready
 - Effective leaders, and the
       people and teams they coach, are ready to change their game plan when
       the situation demands it.
 - Consistency
 - Effective leaders are
       predictable in their response to performance
 - Honesty-Based
 - Effective Leaders have high
       integrity and are clear and straightforward in their interactions with
       others.
 
- Conviction-Driven
 
- My coaching beliefs in a nutshell
     are these:
 - Keep winning and losing in
      perspective
 - Lead by example
 - Go for respect over popularity
 - Value character as well as
      ability
 - Work hard but enjoy what you do
 - “Without vision, the people perish.”
     (Proverbs 29:18)
 - Max DePree, on what the leader’s
     role was in terms of vision: “You have to act like a third-grade
     teacher.  You have to repeat the
     vision over and over again until people get it right.”
 - You need to develop a clear
     vision of perfection in your own mind. 
     Know what a perfect practice or weight workout should look
     like.  Go watch how the best teams
     do it to know what it is supposed to look like.
 - I’m not a real pleasant person
     after losing a football game, but I’d be a lot worse if I didn’t realize
     something far bigger than football exists.
 - Norman Vincent Peale always
     believed that faith leads to positive thinking and patience.  When things aren’t going right, patience
     is an energized belief that things will eventually go your way.  As a result, you don’t give up and start
     to cheat or lose control or begin to take uncalled-for risks to get the
     results you want right now.  While
     Don Shula does not consider himself a patient man, his faith does not let
     adversity consume him or let his ego take over.
 - “Success is not forever, and
     failure isn’t fatal.”—Don Shula’s favorite saying
 - You just can’t afford to let
     yourself become overconfident through victory or consumed by failure.  It tends to divert attention from the
     business at hand—preparing for the next game.
 - One of the marks of real success
     in life is to believe that there’s a reason for everything.  We can’t control every event, but we can
     control our response to it.  We need
     to transform bad events into opportunities to learn.
 - Dean Smith: “If you make every
     game a life-and-death proposition…you’ll be dead a lot.”
 - Respect comes from players
     recognizing that your actions are motivated not by your ego, but by your
     desire to have them be the best. 
     Players don’t have to like you to respect you.  If what you’re after is being liked,
     that’s going to dictate how hard you’ll push.  As soon as that happens, there goes your
     effectiveness and your respect.
 - As long as you have credibility,
     you have leadership.
 - If ever you make a mistake or
     don’t make the right call, and you don’t acknowledge that it was your
     mistake, that’ll eat away at your credibility.
 - Some coaches are described as
     player’s coaches, they want their team to love them.  Don doesn’t care if they like him.  That is not his job.  His concern is that players be their
     best.
 - If you worry too much about being
     liked, you might back off from decisions that would push people to be
     their best.
 - I don’t know any other way, but
     to lead by example.  My example is
     in things like my high standards of performance, my attention to detail,
     and—above all—how hard I work.  In
     these respects, I never ask my players to do more than I am willing to do.
 - One of the critical leadership
     issues in our country today is lack of respect and credibility.  The rule is, “Don’t ask people to do
     what you’re unwilling to do.”
 - If you miss your assignment and
     hurt your team, you can’t ask to do it over.  In life and in football, you don’t get
     two chances.
 
- Overlearning
 
- The essence of coaching is the
     attention to details and the monitoring of results.  This is what Shula calls
     overlearning.  His overlearning
     system is:
 
1.     To
limit the number of goals and things players work on, 
2.     Eliminating
players’ practice errors, 
3.     Making
players master assignments,
4.     Continuous
improvement.  
- Don Shula believes in practice
     perfection.  Perfection only happens
     when the mechanics are automatic, so I insist on overlearning.  Overlearning means that the players are
     so well-prepared that they thrive on pressure.  They have the skill and confidence to
     make the big play.
 - A blown play is caused by a
     player thinking too hard about what he was supposed to do.  He’s still wondering, when he should
     just react.  The players must
     operate on autopilot.  Overlearning
     lets your players operate on autopilot.
 - Goal setting is overrated.  What’s often more important than these
     goals is the follow-up—the attention to detail, demand for practice
     perfection, and all the things that separate the teams that win from the
     teams that don’t.
 - It seems the American way is to
     set goals, file them away, and then look back at them months later and
     wonder why they didn’t get accomplished.
 - Goals begin the accomplishment
     process.  But it’s the
     coaching—observing and monitoring, day in and day out—that makes the
     critical difference.
 - “The destination is marvelous,
     but the real joy is the journey.”—Bob Small
 - “Football is a game of
     errors.  The team that makes the
     fewest errors in a game usually wins.”—Paul Brown
 - Our goal each and every week as
     we prepare to play the next opponent is to cut down on practice
     errors.  Affirming and redirecting
     is where we outstrip the competition. 
     I think every mistake should be noticed and corrected on the spot.  There’s no such thing as a small error
     or flaw that can be overlooked.
 - An event isn’t over until after
     you’ve learned from it.  People in
     organizations today should develop a fascination with what doesn’t work.
 - KB: My five-step plan for
     coaching people is:
 
1.    Tell
people what you want them to do
2.    Show
them what good performance looks like
3.    Let
them do it
4.    Observe
their performance
5.    Praise
progress and/or redirect
- Step 4 is the most important: to
     observe is to catch them doing things right, or redirect their efforts.
 
- The Miami Herald’s Dave Barry
     once labeled this as a nightmare scenario: You’re in the express checkout
     lane, limit ten items.  You have
     eleven items.  Running the cash
     register is Don Shula.
 
- Audible-Ready
 
- Audibles are well thought out and
     choreographed ahead of time.  Shula
     is always asking, “What if…?” so that he is prepared for any contingency.
 - Have a gameplan of what your
     back-up QB can do.
 - “Shula listens to advice, then
     makes a decision and moves forward to implement it, without looking
     back.  The coaches who burn
     themselves out are the ones who are always second-guessing themselves.  The players respect a coach who’s not
     wishy-washy.”—Joe Greene
 - Shula has always been able to adjust well because the moment when the need arose was not the first time he’d thought about it.
 
 Consistency
- If performance is going well,
     Shula is ready to praise.  If the
     team or a player isn’t living up to his high expectations, he’s ready to
     redirect or reprimand.  Shula
     behaves the same way in similar circumstances.  It’s not the mood he’s in but people’s
     performance that dictates his response.
 - If you are consistent, your team
     will soon learn what your standards are and perform accordingly.
 - Correcting and redirecting
     performance is strategically important— it’s where we outstrip the
     competition.  Some coaches will let
     little things go.  Right there is
     where the difference is made.  It
     doesn’t matter how many times we’ve done it or how late it is or how tired
     the players are.  We’ll do it until
     we get it right.
 - No matter what the reason, you
     can’t let poor performance go unnoticed—even from a superstar.  The same goes for good performance.  Never let your mood determine how you
     respond to a person.
 - There are four kinds of
     consequences that can follow a person’s performance:
 
1.    A
positive consequence- if praise is given for a correct
action, the person is likely to repeat the action.
2.    Redirection-
if performance is stopped and the correct procedure is shown, the person is
likely to repeat the correct procedure.
3.    A
negative consequence- if a reprimand or punishment is
given for an incorrect action, the person is likely to avoid repeating the
incorrect action.
4.    No
response- nothing is said or done following the
action.  This is the worst response.  Good actions that receive no recognition are
likely to be discarded, and bad actions will continue unchanged.
- 25 percent of what impacts performance
     comes from setting goals, and 75 percent comes from what happens after
     goals are set.
 - One thing I never want to be
     accused of is not noticing.
 - In an organization, the most
     frequent response that employees receive about their performance is no response.
 - “The key to developing people is
     to catch them doing something right.”—Ken Blanchard
 - I like to recognize our players
     in front of their peers.  I have the
     entire team view the game film that focuses on the special teams.  It makes the special teams players feel
     they are an important part of the team when a star like Dan Marino says,
     “Hey, that was a great hit!”
 - When our staff is teaching
     something new in training camp, we give the players a lot of support and
     are more patient.  Later, when the
     season starts, we expect more; therefore we praise less.
 - KB: “People often ask me, ‘What
     is the one most significant thing you’ve learned about managing and
     motivating others?  I tell them
     that, without question, it’s the concept of catching people doing
     something right.’”
 - Managers often think that the way
     to motivate associates is with money and promotions.  The highest incentives found, in study
     after study, had to do with praise and recognition.
 - If I see somebody doing something
     casually that I don’t think should be done casually, I don’t hesitate to
     correct it on the spot.  I can’t let
     this creep into my football.
 - When I get upset with a player or
     the team, it is always focused on performance.  Respect for my players is a given.
 - I try to fit my feedback to a
     player’s personality.  Bob Griese
     was a very quiet, thoughtful person. 
     He did not respond well to emotional reprimands.  It was better to take him aside and talk
     to him quietly and in private.  Dan
     Marino is an emotional player and has to be treated in a completely
     different way.
 - Redirecting is the way to correct
     a mistake when an individual or team has not yet learned to do what you
     want them to do.  It is incorrect to
     punish when someone is learning something. 
     When a learner makes a mistake, be sure the person knows that the
     behavior was incorrect, but take the blame upon yourself (“Maybe I didn’t
     make it clear enough”) and go back and give redirection.
 - A reprimand is an example of a
     negative consequence.  Use a
     reprimand only when an individual or team has already proven that they can
     do it, but they aren’t doing it correctly now.  Use a reprimand when the problem is a
     lack of effort.
 - After delivering a reprimand, it’s important for people to understand that you still value them. Make sure they know that you are upset because you expect more from him (“You’re better than that!).
 
5.  Honesty-Based
- Effective leaders are clear and
     straightforward in their interactions with others.
 - “I had a tough decision to make
     before the 1972 Super Bowl of whether to start Earl Morrall or Bob Griese,
     who had just come back from injury. 
     I chose to start Griese and had to tell Morrall.  Softening a blow is not one of my
     gifts.  I approached things in a
     straightforward manner—I sat down and looked him in the eye and said,
     ‘This is what I think.  You may not
     agree with it.  But this is the way
     I feel, and this is why I am doing it. 
     I know it’s tough to swallow, but I just want you to try to
     understand what I’m thinking and what my purpose is.’”  The decision hurt Morrall, but he
     appreciated the way I handled it.
 - In a competitive environment,
     ethical considerations are often the first to be abandoned.  The reason this doesn’t work is that the
     number characteristic people are looking for in a leader is
     integrity.  Integrity is the only
     way to be successful in the long-term.
 - Dealing with others in a
     leadership role will test your character, especially if your role is a
     visible one.  You should expect the
     pressures and be ready for them.
 - There is often a big gap or
     difference between what managers say they stand for and how they actually
     treat people.  Gaps are also a
     problem in our personal lives.  We
     say our families and our health are important, but we don’t invest enough
     time into our families and exercising as we should.  All of us must find ways of bridging the
     gaps between what we say and what we do.
 - Feedback is the breakfast of
     champions, but it can only be given effectively in an environment where
     people aren’t uptight and feel like they always have to defend
     themselves.  Humor can help to keep
     the environment from being too tense so feedback can be effective.
 - The real difference in coaching
     is not about talent.  Or personality.  Or pride.  Or ambition.  It’s about you believing in
     someone.  And then doing whatever it
     takes to help that person be his or her very best.
 
Also, tremendous article on Shula from MMQB's Jenny Vrentas here.






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