Thursday, January 10, 2008

Middelfart + Momentum

Well, last night was certainly a kick in the teeth. Sometimes, stats and scores don't tell the whole story about a match, in this case, the scores are VERY representative of how well we played. We didn't do anything well and Middelfart took full advantage of our inability to get any momentum going. They dominated the net, blocking with high efficiency and played solid defense behind it.

Excuses from our side: We were missing several important players. We had a bad day. We are saving ourselves for the pokal finals on the 20th. Blah, blah, blah...

In truth, we did have problems dealing with the absence of a strong opposite presence. For one, we didn't pass well enough to have enough variation in our offense and two, I didn't do a good enough job distributing the ball when I had the chance. Otherwise, there is absolutely no excuse for playing as poorly as we did. I think that the last time I was on the losing side of such a one sided beating was two years ago in the pokal semi finals in Gentofte. That was also a beating for the ages. Luckily, this one didn't mean as much in the overall scheme of things. We still have a decent lead in the standings and, more importantly, we have a chance for revenge in ten days in the pokal finals. Hopefully, by then we'll have some answers for our lack of players.

Last night's game got me thinking about team spirit. I think we've all had the experience of playing against a team that fed off of energy. In other words, a team that was ten times better when they were emotional and energetic. You could catch them on a day where they didn't have that energy and beat them easily, but once they got going it was difficult to reverse that momentum. Some of the HIK Aalborg teams from three and four years ago were like this. You could go up on them 2-0 and still not feel very safe because one or two blocks and all of a sudden the whole team would catch fire.

I mention this because I've often wondered where that comes from. Is it from certain individuals? Is it team chemistry? Is it a particular style of play? Is it based on performance? Volleyball is a peculiar sport in that each set is a whole new opportunity and therefore momentum can swing wildly at any point. Last night, I kept waiting for our team to rebound and to put some pressure on Middelfart and it never happened. It seemed that for every point we got, they got three and we were always behind. How can a team ever get momentum when the game unfolds like this? It's kind of a chicken and the egg debate, how can you get momentum without playing well? Does momentum come from good play or does good play come from getting excited and playing emotionally?

I think about the game last night and I think there are twenty things I could have done differently. I should have been more vocal, I should have been more positive and I should have tried to slow down the bad runs. But my question is, how does one stay positive when everyone is playing terribly, not the least of which, yourself? How do you create and sustain momentum when you are doing nothing right physically? I've never been able to do so, and I would like to get better at it. Anyone got any suggestions?

5 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Jordan

In many cases body language is the key. Hide your weeknesses and shown your strenghts. It is like smiling: Try to do it and you instantly feel better. That is how the connection in our body/mind and nervous system and body/muscles are attuned.

I work a lot with this in my team, where we have the same problems.

The key is also to be a winner in a looser situation. The other way around is way to easy.

Good luck

Olaf

Anonymous said...

Hove,


Sorry to hear about the shit kicking but I will give you a little tidbit from my coach in Belgium...you remember him, 6'9" about 260 with a crew cut and fransk hotdog fingers..."If I'm playing and things are going down I will try anything, get mad at them, get mad at my own team, I will start a goddamn fight if I have to if that's what it takes to win."
Now I haven't ever been much for starting fights or yelling at my own team but I got his point, if things are going down whatever you're doing obviously isn't working. Stir the pot until you find something that sparks a fire somewhere. Finding that thing that sparks the fire is hard though because it will obviously be different for every individual, team, and situation. Hope all is good in Odense, things here are good and I am looking forward to school being done. Hey, now that I'm finished I can go back to the old life of practicing and icing
;-) Hope all is good bro, ses on the ses.


Chad

Anonymous said...

Hi Jordan

It is a very interesting subject you are bringing up, and as I have been a part of the HIK teams you mention I thought I would make a comment.

In the period that you describe I think our team consistet of people that had the ability to get the "fire going" over a block, spike or a referee call ;) We also had Mikkel as captain and he had a way of getting some fire into the team. I was actually thinking the same thing as you after our game against Gentofte this weekend. I believe that was the difference in the sets we played.

The interesting thing is then how do you make a player ignite. Maybe it starts at practice to make this a part of it to yell and screem to intensify the trainings and maybe it results in some training situatins with a "bad" mood, but I know that is hard because on a team you want a good mood.

Let me know if you find a golden solution! ;)

Flev

Anonymous said...

"But my question is, how does one stay positive when everyone is playing terribly, not the least of which, yourself?"

The answer to the first part of this question I find is not that hard.

If everyone is playing terrible then you have to be positive cause there are no one else to take on this role.

Stemming from the fact that most people like to be needed - so if your team needs you - you will rise to the challenge.

Its more difficult if you yourself play bad and that leads me to the other question that you put

"How do you create and sustain momentum when you are doing nothing right physically?"

I don't completely agree with Olafsen, but then again never have done completely even though often very close to.

Rather I think it is about showing "overskud" - sorry don't know any equivalent word in english with the same meaning -.

Olafsen suggest to hide your weekness and show your strengths. But having just poped 3 passes in a row its a fact that you are receiving poorly.

In this case I think the trick is to show that you have "overskud". This by keeping up appearences even though that means that you might give a shout as long as your body language stills signals there is nothing unusually in this situation for me and that you are just longing to get the next ball or that you don't mind taking yourself out of the passing.

That shows that you have the mental strength to temperarily fail (miserably) but play on and this to some extend decreases the chance that the other team might gain momentum.

In a team sport you ideally need the whole team to keep their positiv body language which then - if we allow ourselves a small leap of faith - brings us back to the answer to first question and why YOU are needed in your team and why YOU cna't let yourself be overwhelmed by negativity brought ud by a (short) bad spell.

Thats my dime on the matter in any case.

And yes - it is easier to write it than to carry it out on the court, but I feel that this is what works best for me.

Teis

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