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Some final priorities as we wind
down the season
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Develop teenagers into men. Hands down the number one priority
each season is to further the evolution of teenagers becoming
young men. It is by far the single most rewarding aspect to each
season. To witness the transformation and share in some small
part of this is a privilege.
-
Enjoy the process of becoming a team. Each season the process of
building a team takes on different areas of emphasis. The
differences range from the personality of the team to how and what
is emphasized in training. Some years the team’s liability is due
to a lack of discipline, other years our fitness levels might be
an issue. The process of becoming a team that reaches its
potential isn’t always pretty, nor does it travel in a straight
line.
- Work
to play your best rugby at the end of the season. As simplistic
as it sounds, it is difficult to achieve. In the 2007 North
East’s, we were horrible. Our performance was not anywhere near
what we had been working toward the entire season. It was all
together different this season, where will were able to put
together a performance that we can be proud of in the finals.
- Set
performance-based goals. Each year we set performance based goals
and work hard to try and achieve them throughout the season. This
is different from results-based goals, which can make for a very
hollow experience. Performing to our abilities and putting our
guts into those performances is vastly more rewarding.
- Be
in the skill acquisition business. Over the duration of the
season, right up to the final hour of the final day of the season,
it is a priority to be in the skill acquisition business. To be
constantly trying to acquire more skills as a rugby team whether
they are the skills to pass or catch more effectively or the
mental skills required to understand what the opposition is trying
to technically accomplish and how we can try to take those things
away from them.
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Represent Kenmore West well. This means doing those very things
that you don’t want to do, and forcing yourself to not do the
things that you want to do. Much like putting the team first, it
is much easier to say then to actually do.
-
Graduate 100% of our student athletes. This is accomplished by
the athletes being fully committed to earning a diploma from high
school and becoming a productive member of society. It is one
thing to compete and compete well on the field, and yet another
challenge altogether to excel in the classroom against fellow
students who are not competing in athletics. “Eat, sleep, and
procrastinate” is the mantra of the non athlete student body
population.
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Forge life long memories. The best memories are ones that come
from experiences where you weren’t ever sure of the final
outcome. To fully invest yourself into becoming as good of a
student athlete as possible means you are going to work brutally
hard, day in and day out. It is through this level of effort that
the memories become everlasting.
- Win
a State championship. It is on the list, but well down the list
of priorities in the big picture. If we are successful in
achieving the aforementioned we can live with the final outcome.
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