![]() |
How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
This past weekend, my team called on me to be the drive team coach for elimination matches during an invitational. During the matches, I basically communicated with the other coaches by yelling at them and yelled at my own drivers to follow my instructions.
Is this the best way to make sure your drivers and the other teams follow the strategy you have laid out? Or would taking a quieter approach without yelling be better? How do you coach your drivers and communicate with other teams during a match? |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Well, first off, yelling probably isn't the best. During comps everyone's on edge and the last thing other people want is to be yelled at by an emotional teenager. Believe me, I've been there.
From experience, I've found the best possible thing you can do is to speak calmly and concisely. People usually prefer getting information in the easiest way possible, without feeling distrespected. I know that being calm during comps is REALLY hard, but try to make an effort to at least "appear" calm and collected; people will respect you more (and listen to you!). During a match, if you need to talk to another teams coach, walk away from your driver station, trust that your driver will take care of things while you're gone, and just talk to them (usually it ends up being short mumbles like "get them- we're down" or "get them off us"). Remember to be watching the whole field, and not just your robot; this is the point of having a coach. Hope that helps |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
|
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Unfortunately, "yelling" is often necessary because you have to make yourself heard above the ambient noise from the crowd and competition. It's important to learn how to be heard without being aggressive. The other thing to understand is that the on-field portion of drive coaching is only a part of the responsibilities of a drive coach. Working with your partners off the field all the way up to the teleop bell is as important, if not more so, to ensuring success on the field.
In addition to the excellent Simbot Seminar Ether linked above, the next Behind The Lines segment is all about effective team communication, including drive coaching. It's airing live this Wednesday (11/19) at 8pm ET/5pm PT with Andy Baker (WFA and 3940 mentor) and Mike Corsetto (1678 drive coach). The last half of the show is live Q&A, so tune in and ask questions! |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
I have an off question for this main topic. Our student field coach was put in a very hard situation during one of our competitions. What would have been the correct and best way to respond and react? It was a 3 robot full allience, all three teams had a driver, a shooter, and a field coach. Our field coach was a student while the other two field coaches were adults. Our field coach reached out to the other two (adult) coaches before the match and made a strategy. But, once the match started the (adult) coaches saw ways to make their own team look better (by ball hogging ect.) and took those ways instead of following to the plan. As the student field coach how would you react to an adult field coach not listening to you during a match. Obviously yelling at him wouldn't be a correct response but to sit there and let your alliance loose because of another adult intervening too much? Most of the topics that have surfaced have been about students doing this but to talk to person similar to your age versus someone alot older to you is different am I right? What would you do?
|
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
The next item would be to talk it over with my mentor. If this is a repeating pattern, having my mentor just kind of hanging around behind the drivers during strategy discussions can kind of head that off--and later, if they are blowing off the strategy, said mentor can kind of walk over to that coach and mention, mentor to mentor, that their actions are showing a lack of respect for other teams on their alliance, particularly for student coaches. A particularly wise mentor can then lead that discussion into any place it actually needs to go, if needed. Incidentally, my team uses the "extra mentor in the area" strategy for strategy meetings, regardless of who the coach is. It's more of a precaution than anything else--if there's something funny going on, the mentor can step in, but usually doesn't need to. During the match, there is no real remedy. You can ask if there's a reason for the change--say, a broken robot that can't eject the ball--but there's really nothing you can do--same if the situation is going the other way. |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
A strategy is only as good as the scenario it's designed for, when that scenario changes, so must the strategy. |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
I've loved this video since I first saw it, and I think the coach here does a pretty great job on the field.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-jd32B0chAg |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
|
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
|
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
If I were you, I'd bring your student drive coach and one adult mentor and go talk to the other adult drive coaches following the match. Be civil, but if you feel the agreed strategy wasn't followed then get an explanation on why it wasn't. There could be a number of reasons that the alliance strategy had to change mid-match. But at the very least you'll have an opportunity to voice your opinion and get an explanation that could turn into a learning opportunity - on multiple accounts. Learn from your previous match, get feedback from your alliance partners if possible - and move on. Not every match will be positive, but you can't let those matches get your coach or your drive team down. Being a drive coach means having thick skin, adapting quickly and being willing to do what it takes to win. This is the FIRST Robotics Competition and you'll find many take this competition very seriously. But you know, have fun with it too. And as to the original thread topic - Project! Better to have yelled and lost than to have never yelled at all. Communication is key and it's not always pretty during the intense time limitations of an FRC match. Sometimes I will preface our alliance partners that I will probably be yelling, but it's never in angst - it's just to clearly communicate. I always find that shaking hands post-match and talking on the way back to the pits helps emphasize this too. Usually I'll even yell out time reminders for the alliance - a reminder that we're coming up on 30 seconds never hurts. |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
The real key to drive team coaching is to tie your jacket around your waist. Got a couple championship rings that way.
![]() |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
if this happens you don't wast time and you just go and do what would be best for your alliance at that time. |
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
Quote:
|
Re: How do you coach your Drive Team/How to be an Effective Drive Team Coach?
You can read what Adam Freeman had to say over on being a drive coach over on beyondinspection.
If anyone else would like to do a coaches corner, please send me a message. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:32. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi