The basketball coach at Princeton University shares the secrets of his successful twenty-nine-year career at Princeton, explaining how attitude, discipline, and intelligence can lead to overachievement, both on and off the basketball court. 25,000 first printing.
You don't have to be a motion offense proponent to learn from what is quite possibly the most important book a basketball coach can read--not about x's and o's, but the philosophy of teaching and coaching. Pete Carril is my basketball idol, so I'm more than a little biased, but reading this book is like getting a chance to sit down with one of the greats and just listen.
his ideals are now outdated now - the book was written in 1997 when he retired after 25 years at Princeton University and amassing 525 wins but never the big one. I watched several Princeton games on TV - it was a time when I had joined the coaching staff at Cardinal Leger Secondary and this was the offense that was being used there at the time - high schools had no shot clock and that was what made his philosophy at the time so adaptable - we had our share of upsets of teams - a great read for basketball coaches of high school players - excellent tips on adapting
I'm a basketball fanatic, so I didn't need much convincing to read this. Great lessons from a coach who managed to overachieve with the little he had (no basketball scholarships, full fee paying students with a full Princeton workload only). Constantly overmatched, he built disciplined teams that played to their strengths and took away the opposition's options. Sprinkled amongst the basketball insights is a lot of life wisdom -- not surprising, because so much about success in sports translates to success in life.
A collection of stream-of-consciousness remarks about basketball and life, in that order. The hoops wisdom is highly technical, but still enjoyable for the knowledgeable fan. The more general life lessons are strict and severe and seem taken from a much earlier age. I would be very surprised to learn that Carril uses any kind of data analysis (or even email).
Still, though, you get some insight into the way the great coach thinks and the way he constructed his many teams. The reflections are easy to read and revealing from the very first page.
Apparently a cleaned up transcription of Pete Carril speaking into a pocket recorder, this book has some interesting ideas on how teams with smaller, slower players can still compete by working hard and playing smart. Too bad nobody edited it or organized it into a real book.
Probably my favourite coaching book ever. Not for the flowing prose, because Pete isn’t flowery. He just tells it like it is and pulls no punches. His teams over achieved throughout his coaching tenure at Princeton. This is the 3rd or 4th time I have read this classic. It won’t be the last.
Great book. Super insightful coming from a great coach, teacher and mentor that led the Princeton Tigers to one of the greatest college basketball upsets of all time over the UCLA Bruins.