There's a lot of blood, sweat, and guts between dreams and success.
Never quit. It is the easiest cop-out in the world. Set a goal and don't quit until you attain it. When you do attain it, set another goal, and don't quit until you reach it. Never quit.
Set goals - high goals for you and your organization. When your organization has a goal to shoot for, you create teamwork, people working for a common good.
The old lessons (work, self-discipline, sacrifice, teamwork, fighting to achieve) aren't being taught by many people other than football coaches these days. The football coach has a captive audience and can teach these lessons because the communication lines between himself and his players are more wide open than between kids and parents. We better teach these lessons or else the country's future population will be made up of a majority of crooks, drug addicts, or people on relief.
You must learn how to hold a team together. You must lift some men up, calm others down, until finally they've got one heartbeat. Then you've got yourself a team.
I told them my system was based on the "ant plan," that I'd gotten the idea watching a colony of ants in Africa during the war. A whole bunch of ants working toward a common goal.
Mama wanted me to be a preacher. I told her coachin' and preachin' were a lot alike.
If there is one thing that has helped me as a coach, it's my ability to recognize winners, or good people who can become winners by paying the price.
No coach has ever won a game by what he knows; it's what his players know that counts.
People who are in it for their own good are individualists. They don't share the same heartbeat that makes a team so great. A great unit, whether it be football or any organization, shares the same heartbeat.
You take those little rascals, talk to them good, pat them on the back, let them think they are good, and they will go out and beat the biguns.
Don't overwork your squad. If you're going to make a mistake, under-work them.
If I miss coaching that much, I could go to some little school where they didn't recruit, where all the kids wanted to go. I believe I could find somewhere to coach.
Three rules for coaching: 1.) Surround yourself with people who can't live without football. 2.) Recognize winners. They come in all forms. 3.) Have a plan for everything.
Get the winners into the game.
There is no sin in not liking to play; it's a mistake for a boy to be there if he doesn't want to.
We can't have two standards, one set for the dedicated young men who want to do something ambitious and one set for those who don't.
Sacrifice. Work. Self-discipline. I teach these things, and my boys don't forget them when they leave.
If you whoop and holler all the time, the players just get used to it.
Don't ever give up on ability. Don't give up on a player who has it.
I'll never give up on a player regardless of his ability as long as he never gives up on himself. In time he will develop.
If you want to coach you have three rules to follow to win. One, surround yourself with people who can't live without football. I've had a lot of them. Two, be able to recognize winners. They come in all forms. And, three, have a plan for everything. A plan for practice, a plan for the game. A plan for being ahead, and a plan for being behind 20-0 at half, with your quarterback hurt and the phones dead, with it raining cats and dogs and no rain gear because the equipment man left it at home.
I always want my players to show class, knock'em down, pat on the back, and run back to the huddle.
I'm no miracle man. I guarantee nothing but hard work.
Don't talk too much. Don't pop off. Don't talk after the game until you cool off.
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