I'm sure at some point I will get back into coaching, but right now I need to focus completely on my kids.
I've been an assistant for seven years now and I haven't had one head coaching interview. I'm doing something wrong.
In-N-Out is incredible, but don't tell coach I've been going there. He would flip out and put some curse on me.
No parent or coach can be true to any child and say he's ready for the N.F.L. out of high school.
Coaches give you too much information. I've been allowed to develop that intuitive ability in my career and lifetime.
A coach's greatest asset is his sense of responsibility - the reliance placed on him by his players.
No one knows who they are more than someone who changes their identity (before I became a farmer, I was a leadership coach).
Being a conductor is kind of a hybrid profession because most fundamentally, it is being someone who is a coach, a trainer, an editor, a director.
There's an adage that a lot of coaches have, that I completely disagree with, is if you make the Olympic team too early you become complacent.
The further I get away from coaching, the more I know I made the right decision. You almost forget how wonderful family life is.
When I was trying out for my first Olympics at 16, my family and coaches tried to regulate what I ate. But the stricter they got, the more I rebelled.
I look at Syracuse and I love the way that the coaches say they'll use me in their offense. I really like the family atmosphere there and I feel really comfortable there.
I'm a Christian first. I'm a family guy second. As much as I like coaching, as much as I like basketball, it's third, fourth, or fifth down the line.
I think there's a lot of things that need fixing at Manchester United apart from David Moyes, but in this business, you also realize the head coach is always going to be the first to go, unfortunately.
In my school, people liked the gym teachers because they were the football or soccer coaches. But look, if they're cool, they get respect.
People look at me and see a calm, cool guy on the sidelines and I want them to know that my Christian faith affects my coaching and everything I do.
I never thought in my wildest dreams that I would have my very own school - no way. And I had no idea I'd be coaching girls. It's wild.
I feel that a great coach is one that has a vision, sets a plan in place, has the right people in place to execute that plan and then accepts the responsibility if that plan is not carried out.
'How' is a great thing to know. 'Why' is the ultimate. I'm the 'why' coach. Why are we doing this? Why are we not doing that? Why is this not working? Those are the things I want to know.
My father was never around. But I glorified my father, and I was always daddy's little girl. He was my first soccer coach.
Everyone needs a coach. It doesn't matter whether you're a basketball player, a tennis player, a gymnast or a bridge player.