Top 1200 Good Coaches Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Good Coaches quotes.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Great coaches are visionaries. Great coaches instill, nurture, and encourage vision, then model and motivate surrender to it.
A long time ago I learned how to shut my mouth, listen to my coaches and put trust in my coaches.
Coaches understand that pressure is part of the rush of coaching. The challenge of trying to outplay your opponent is part of the fun, the adrenaline, the preparation, seeing your team evolve. It's why coaches become coaches.
I had a lot of trouble with my coaches. Your coaches are father figures - you look to what they say. Well, the reality of it is, they are just shmucks. — © Ed O'Neill
I had a lot of trouble with my coaches. Your coaches are father figures - you look to what they say. Well, the reality of it is, they are just shmucks.
College coaches measure success in championships. High School coaches measure success to titles. Youth coaches measure success in smiles.
I don't hire good coaches, I hire good people. If they turn out to be good coaches, too, that's a plus.
Bayern fulfilled every wish, no matter what Guardiola wanted: the players, the coaches, and even the doctors. He caused much disturbance off the field. But he is one of the best coaches on the planet.
True basketball coaches are great teachers and you do not humiliate, you do not physically go after, you do not push or shove, you do not berate, if you are a true coach. If you humiliate or curse them, that won't do it. Coaches like that are not coaches.
I've been in the league a lot of years, and I'll know a majority of the coaches, not only in the college ranks but in the professional ranks, both as head coaches, position.
I think it's hard for one coach to do all the formats all the time, and there are a limited number of coaches who have done the hard yards already. You can have head and assistant coaches for each squad.
Coaches who have been players in the league, they get so attuned to playing how they were successful, and who their coaches were.
We coaches have to learn how to deal with that: How do I get to each one best - with a talk, with video analysis? And what sort of tone? We need our own coaches for that. The sports psychologist coaches me too.
Coach Coughlin, he's one of the best coaches I've ever had. He's one of the best coaches in the NFL, hands down.
I just took the good and the bad from all of the coaches I've been around. — © Charles Haley
I just took the good and the bad from all of the coaches I've been around.
It's hard to get opportunities anywhere. There are a lot of coaches out there and a lot of talented coaches too. It's not easy. Quite often there's no perfect situation that emerges.
I've lost count of all my assistant coaches who have been made head coaches.
Good coaches, as we all know, can have amazing influences on boys.
I had multiple high school coaches who looked out for me. Multiple college coaches. Deacons. Pastors. Aunties. Uncles. Friends.
I remember when I used to go to coaches' meetings and stuff like that and I would never say anything - I would just sit in a corner and sometimes coaches wouldn't even shake my hand.
I'm hungry, but I have a good team around me. Good coaches and good sparring partners.
If you win all the time, it's not good for the coaches or the kids.
I'm very good friends with my former coaches. We speak on the phone a lot.
There are a lot of good coaches in this league, and there are a lot of good coaches out there.
I could sum it up in one thing: A guy has to be what he is. He's got to coach and have a philosophy based on his own personality. You see too many coaches trying to imitate other coaches, trying to be someone else. It's all right to emulate the qualities of good coaches but I don't think you should imitate. You've got to be yourself.
I respect coaches; I respect what good coaches do. I know that you don't learn to be a coach in an hour and a half.
I put myself around good people, including my assistant coaches. A lot of head coaches are intimidated by their assistant coaches, they'd rather get people that are far less talented than them because it's not threatening.
I don't think coaches should have to wear mic's. It is an invasion of privacy. We are trying to accomplish things, and wearing microphones may hinder development by straining the nature of relationships coaches and players have.
High school coaches sometimes are better coaches than I am.
I went to many coaching clinics, talked to other coaches, read articles, books, etc. Anything I could do that would help me prepare to be the best coach possible. Fortunately, the coaches I had as a player were good men and were excellent role models in setting priorities and relating to the team members and coaching staff.
That image is now associated with the Portuguese coaches: the ability to adapt, to arrive and win, to assemble good teams and good structures is undoubtedly one of our brands and I think that's the main fact for which we are most respected around the world.
There's no evidence that coaches with a conservative bent are better coaches or more likely to get jobs.
Good coaching is about leadership and instilling respect in your players. Dictators lead through fear - good coaches do not.
Dictators lead through fear; good coaches do not.
A lot of these coaches, they're almost like military leaders, and the media is the enemy. Football coaches are just wired tight.
I respect Bielsa a lot. For me, he is a special coach. I think the best coaches in the world work in different things, and a lot of coaches, we cannot train like Bielsa. It's difficult to train like Bielsa. But every coach can learn from different coaches. But with Bielsa, I think all coaches learn something from him.
While there are many good courts in the country, we need to have good coaches for more players to come up. Not everyone can go to Gopichand Academy, and everyone cannot afford international tournaments.
You need good coaches with a good gym that teach you the essentials, like boxing, kickboxing, wrestling, and pretty much all the stuff that you need to be successful in MMA.
Coaches who have been players in the league, they get so attuned to playing how they were successful and who their coaches were.
I was at Marseille and had four coaches in four seasons. Changing coaches is nothing new. — © Samir Nasri
I was at Marseille and had four coaches in four seasons. Changing coaches is nothing new.
Different coaches have different schemes, so for me, it's about learning and being able to adjust and adapt to these coaches. It fills your toolbox.
In the NBA, you have a better diet and strength coaches to make you better physically. And the number of coaches, it makes me feel like there's more of them than us players.
Versatility, quality, good passing... I think all that catches coaches' eyes.
Everyone wrote our obituary but us and the coaches and the kids who stayed with us. The obit was, 'Vanderbilt will have to leave the Southeastern Conference. All the coaches are leaving, and all the students are transferring.'
It's a market economy. Apparently the demand for great coaches exceeds the supply, so of course the price of good coaches is going to be high.
I think I'm a pretty good coach, but there are a lot of good coaches, a lot of young coaches.
To point the finger at one guy, at each other or at the coaches, won't do any good. It's not supposed to be the coach. It's our team. The coaches can do a phenomenal job preparing you, but it has to come from within.
Favre is smarter than the coaches. Most of those coaches have never played pro football, and they're second-guessing him?
Fortunately, I had some very good coaches.
My coaching staff gets to go to the World Series. From a financial perspective that's great for coaches because baseball coaches in the Major League level don't really make that much money. People don't realize that.
Yeah, there are good facilities in Japan and good coaches, but the toughest thing is you need to play a lot of tournaments in Europe or U.S., because they have more good players.
You got to worry about getting good damn coaches. — © Frank Vogel
You got to worry about getting good damn coaches.
I spent a lot of my career fighting coaches. When coaches told me don't shoot, I'd shoot anyway.
People always get confused. They talk about coaches. The reality is, these coaches and managers that everybody thinks are in so much control, they work for us. They're our employees.
I had other coaches when I was younger but my father was there, following all my training. He has seen as much tennis as many coaches on tour.
There's a lot of coaches around this league like, 'Everything is good,' and it's not.
I always tell people, good coaches are a dime a dozen. Good coaches that are good people, good husbands, good fathers, that love their players and are passionate about doing things in a way that I believe is important, that pool gets real small.
I think coaches are very much guilty of trying to implement players into their schemes as opposed as trying to fit schemes into players. That's the thing that can separate good coaches from bad.
A lot is expected from athletes but we need good coaches as well.
Coaches are basically schizophrenic. We are pessimistic to the press and among fellow coaches, but to our team, we are the eternal optimists.
At Team U.S.A., I've worked with Doc Rivers, Jeff Van Gundy, Brendan Malone, not just great head coaches but assistants and great college coaches.
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