Wooden's
Wisdom — Volume 3, Issue 132
July 21, 2021
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This favorite idea of Coach Wooden's was one that he learned from
Abraham Lincoln, who said: I will study and get ready, and
perhaps my chance will come.
In his book Wooden: A Lifetime of Observations and Reflections
on and Off the Court, with Steve Jamison, Coach talked about
using this idea:
"I used to say to an individual player who was unhappy
because he wanted more playing time, "Young man, tell
yourself, ‘I will be prepared and then, perhaps, my chance
will come, because if it does come and I'm not ready,
another chance may not come my way very soon again."'
The time to prepare isn't after you have been given the
opportunity. It's long before that opportunity arises. Once the
opportunity arrives, it's too late to prepare.
In his book The Essential Wooden, Coach described a player
who benefitted from this approach:
"Doug McIntosh, a nonstarter in 1964, heeded my advice to
his advantage, and more importantly, to our team's
advantage.
When opportunity knocked 10 minutes into the 1964
national championship game against Duke University, he was
prepared for his chance to show competitive greatness.
UCLA's starting center, Fred Slaughter, got off to a slow
start, and I signaled down the bench for Doug, who played
the rest of the game and was an important reason UCLA won
its first national championship in basketball.
Even though logic would have suggested that Doug McIntosh
would have little impact in the championship game — probably
not even play in it — he prepared as though he knew he would
be called on, that his chance would come.
When opportunity came knocking, Doug McIntosh was ready."
Doug described what he learned from the experience:
He taught mental readiness: "Be ready and your chance may
come. If you are not ready, it may not come again."
T hus, he made me see there are no small opportunities. Every
opportunity is big. If you only play for two minutes, make it the
best two minutes possible. That's your opportunity, whether in
basketball or in life. Be ready; make the most of it. It may not
come again.
In Wooden on Leadership, Coach summed it up this way:
"Remind those under your leadership that patience is
required, and if they continue to improve, their chance will
come, often when least expected."
Yours in Coaching,
Craig Impelman
woodenswisdom.com
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