2650 Plus wrote:First , I believe a coach can be .a valuable asset to the shooter and is most valuable if he has shot the scores the shooter is striving toward. This increases his credability when he makes a sugestion for a change in technique or motivation for the shooter. Good Shooting Bill Horton
Yeah right and we shouldnt trust a doctor who tells us how to treat our cancer unless the doctor can demonstrate he also had cancer.
A coach who must point to his own past scores to persuade or motivate an athlete or to try a different technique, has a huge problem which all the medals in the world wont fix
While a coach who prattles on about his own personal accomplishments may initially spark interest, that interest is fleeting and vaporizes when this “coach”:
1.Dismisses as “nonsense” tried and tested alternative approaches to training on the basis that he himself never needed them in his own meteoric rise to shooting fame
2. Fails to put aside what he needs as a coach in favor of giving the athlete the unique and individual attention needed by that particular shooter.
My concern with using a coach who rests on his laurels is that he is so married to his own way that the only other one he knows is the highway.
In the end, I would rather know who my coach has successfully COACHED rather than what scores he personally shot during his own career. If I am to depend on someone as a coach, I would be much more impressed by his accomplishments as a COACH than I would be from his incessant reminders of what a good shooter he is or was.
But then again, I would also trust a doctor who tells me I have a broken arm without asking if he ever had one or my optometrist who tell me I need glasses even though he doesnt.