Fairfield_1st
Sitting on this Barstool talking like a damn fool
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2012
- Messages
- 2,851
- Reaction Score
- 9,084
What I said was they need game time for it to "slow down" for them. I didn't assume it's the only place for them to develop, I'm not that stupid. I know there's all sort of development that goes on in practice, but I wasn't addressing that. I didn't play sports past high school and didn't coach, so it's just my uneducated feeling. I feel like there's something to be said for real game speed against players you don't see every day in practice. There's also a level of pressure being in the game in front of a crowd and TV audiences that doesn't happen in practice.This assumes a game is the only place players can develop whereas a far bigger percentage of player development, coaching & improvement takes place in practice. We see 40 minutes of a guy sitting & that's our total context of his progression. Coach can run players in various scenarios for hours in practices to try and get them ready for games. Yes there is almost nothing like game conditions, but you can get darn close and develop & gauge how ready players are to step out under the brightest lights. Plus you can start & stop scrimmages on the spot to correct errors live - that teaching is often better for development than trial & error on the bigger stage where people like myself unfairly judge Diggins for 2 minutes.