A Quote by Doug Pederson

I loved coaching. — © Doug Pederson
I loved coaching.

Quote Topics

In the end, it's about the teaching, and what I always loved about coaching was the practices. Not the games, not the tournaments, not the alumni stuff. But teaching the players during practice was what coaching was all about to me.
When you're on TV, you're still coaching, believe it or not. You're just coaching America, you're not coaching one team.
Listen, everything I have in my life is because of the NHL and because of hockey, and I love the game and I loved every minute of being a player, I loved coaching, I loved being involved in the NHL.
I love coaching and not just coaching because it's about winning football games, but coaching because you have an opportunity to impact young men and people and that's what I want to do.
I received my Master's degree from the University of Utah while coaching at Granite High School. I obtained my doctorate from BYU while coaching. I pursued these degrees to prepare myself if coaching didn't work out.
I loved going to the Knicks because we won the Atlantic Division championship. We went from winning 21 games or 19 games to winning 52 games in a short period of time. I loved coaching Patrick Ewing and Charles Oakley and all those guys.
I fell in love with coaching. I loved interacting with young people, having the opportunity to make a tremendous impression on them.
I didn't get into coaching to make money. I got into this for the coaching and teaching part.
Over-coaching can be more harmful than under-coaching. Keep it simple!
On the field, I was probably coaching more, helping players and doing my coaching badges.
I didn't realize the difference between coaching college and coaching the NBA. It's a totally different animal.
How would I coach LeBron and Lonzo? Guess what, less coaching is the best coaching. Let them do what they do.
I think when you have strong leadership at the coaching level and you empower the coach and the coaching staff, you have a lot more stability.
A big part of me has been tied to coaching and I want to get into coaching and make a difference that way.
Coaching 'The Ultimate Fighter' in my weight class, I couldn't do it. I'd basically be coaching people to beat me. I'm going to give you my riddle?
The challenge of coaching a national side like England would be something different. The job is not about coaching every day.
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