Slappin' Glass Podcast

Slappin' Glass

Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches from around the world.

  1. 12小時前

    Johnnie Bryant on the ISO Analytics, Building Decision Makers, and Elite Communication Habits {Cleveland Cavaliers}

    What You’ll Learn  The one stat that should drive every late-clock ISO decision  How NBA staffs use constraints to build decision-makers, not robots Why most teams fail at communication—and how to fix it Episode Summary What actually decides late-clock possessions? And why do most teams break down when it matters most? Cavs Associate Head Coach Johnnie Bryant joins the show to unpack how elite teams think about decision-making, adaptability, and communication at the highest level. We start with constraint-based coaching and ecological design—how creating the right environments allows players to discover solutions, build instincts, and shape your system in real time. Defensively, Bryant flips the script: great teams don’t rely on perfect execution—they prepare for when things go wrong. The edge comes from solving breakdowns, rotations, and chaos better than your opponent. In Start, Sub, or Sit, Bryant identifies off-the-dribble shooting as the most dangerous variable in isolation—because it forces defenses into difficult tradeoffs: stay home, force direction, or commit to a trap. Then, we close on culture—where Bryant explains why vulnerability is the hardest skill to build, and why without it, communication under pressure will always break down. Key Moments 2:30 – Why constraints create better players 4:30 – Letting players shape your system 9:30 – Reading spacing vs forcing structure 13:20 – Defending chaos, not perfection 21:45 – Start, Sub, or Sit: ISO decisions 22:00 – The #1 ISO metric 23:30 – When to trap vs stay home 25:00 – The risk behind every double team 29:10 – Why teams struggle to communicate 33:00 – Training communication in practice 36:45 – Coaching personalities that actually stickTo join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    58 分鐘
  2. 3月13日

    Clare Murphy on Shared Narrative, Connection, and Building Real Team Cohesion

    In this episode of the Slappin’ Glass Podcast, we sit down with master storyteller and communication expert Clare Murphy to explore the powerful role of storytelling, narrative, and communication in building culture within elite sports teams. Drawing on her work with organizations ranging from the Mission Critical Teams Institute to elite sports environments and NASA, Clare breaks down why stories—not information—are the most effective way leaders transmit belief, values, and identity to their teams. Together we dive into how coaches can use storytelling to build trust, strengthen cohesion, communicate under pressure, and shape the narrative of their teams. Clare also explores the neuroscience behind why stories stick in the brain, the difference between leadership and membership, and how rituals, shared narratives, and reflection practices can accelerate team belonging and performance.  What You’ll Learn Why storytelling is the most powerful tool for transmitting culture and belief within a teamHow stories activate emotion, empathy, and long-term learning in athletes’ brainsThe difference between top-down leadership and flexible “membership” within teamsHow coaches can co-create the story of a season with their players to build ownership and accountabilityPractical ways to use rituals, traditions, and storytelling exercises to strengthen team cohesionWhy information overload can sabotage halftime communication and how to simplify your messageHow leaders can transmit belief through presence, voice, and emotional controlWhy coaches must examine the stories they tell themselves about leadership and identityHow building a trusted peer network or coaching tribe can accelerate professional growth and combat isolationKey Topics & Concepts Storytelling in coachingTeam culture and cohesionLeadership communicationMembership vs hierarchical leadershipCo-creating team narrativesHalftime communication strategiesEmotional regulation for coachesRituals and traditions in team cultureCoaching reflection and storytelling practiceSponsors FastModel Sports has been helping coaches diagram plays for years, and now FastDraw, FastScout, and FastRecruit are integrated into Hudl’s full basketball ecosystem—allowing coaches to move seamlessly from play diagrams to film and player insights. Learn more at hudl.com/slappingglass Slappin’ Glass is also proud to partner with the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC). Join thousands of coaches this April at the NABC Convention in Indianapolis, featuring clinics, film sessions, and networking with coaches from around the world. Register at nabc.com/convention To join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    1 小時 4 分鐘
  3. 2月27日

    Andrea Trinchieri Returns! On Defensive Toggles, Developing an In-Game Lens, and Thoughts on Offensive Rebounding

    In this episode Slappin’ Glass welcomes back one of Europe’s most thoughtful and dynamic coaching voices, Andrea Trinchieri. Coach Trinchieri returns for a wide-ranging conversation on defensive identity, in-game coaching, leadership evolution, and the modern coach–player relationship. With most teams deep into the season, the discussion begins around identity — and whether it’s ever truly fixed. Coach Trinchieri frames the basketball season as evolution, requiring adaptability, clarity of core values, and defensive systems that can toggle aggression without overhauling structure. From simplifying coverage to managing player psychology, this episode dives into the balance between tactical precision and human connection. Throughout the conversation, Coach Trinchieri shares his philosophy on: Why simplicity — not complexity — often produces the best defensive resultsHow to “upgrade” or “downgrade” a base coverage without disrupting rotationsThe psychological reality that players find rhythm through offense before committing defensivelyThe importance of situational awareness in managing substitutions and early-game momentumLayered rebounding principles and how to incentivize “no man’s land” effort playsWhen and why to implement tagging concepts on the offensive glassThe evolving coach–player dynamic in an era shaped by NIL and social mediaThe episode also features a compelling round of Start, Sub, or Sit, where Coach Trinchieri breaks down what he prioritizes at the start of games, which statistical margins matter most (rebounding, free throws, turnovers), and how in-game evaluation must remain fluid and situational. At its core, this episode centers on a driving question: How can coaches evolve tactically while strengthening the relationships that ultimately define success? For coaches seeking insight into defensive structure, in-game management, leadership philosophy, and sustainable team identity, this conversation delivers a masterclass in both strategy and humanity. What You’ll Learn How to build a defensive identity that can toggle aggression without sacrificing clarityWhy offensive involvement fuels defensive commitmentA framework for balancing scouting preparation with non-negotiable core valuesHow to address early-game energy issues without overreactingA layered approach to rebounding: one-on-one battles, neutral rebounds, and effort incentivesWhen tagging principles are most effective — and when they are notHow defining roles creates hierarchy, chemistry, and clarityWhy long-term coaching success should be measured by player evolution, not public opinionThis Episode is Sponsored By: NABC Convention Join coaches from across the country April 2–6 in Indianapolis for five days of X’s & O’s clinics, educational sessions, networking, and championship-week access. Slappin’ Glass will be hosting a classroom-style film session breaking down the game’s best global trends. Register at nabc.com/convention. Hudl — FastDraw, FastScout & FastRecruit The tools coaches trust are now fully integrated into Hudl’s complete basketball ecosystem — moving seamlessly from play diagrams to film to player tracking. Learn more at hudl.com/slappinglass. For more coaching resources, breakdowns, and the free weekly newsletter, visit slappinglass.com. To join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    1 小時
  4. 2月13日

    Matt Majkrzak on Scripting Offensive Play Calls, Fixing Bad Starts, and Tenants of the "Lock-Left" Defense {Northern Michigan}

    Northern Michigan Head Coach Matt Majkrzak joins Slappin’ Glass for a deep dive into how structure can actually create freedom. Coach Majkrzak walks through Northern Michigan’s unique approach to scripting games in four-minute segments, pairing substitution patterns with offensive play calls to give players clarity, confidence, and rhythm. Rather than scripting to control players, the goal is to simplify decisions early, allowing creativity, reads, and flow to emerge naturally as possessions unfold. The conversation explores how layered offense evolves from simple foundations—like cross-screen/down-screen—into modern blends of Princeton concepts, ball screens, staggers, and motion, all while ending in familiar spacing that helps players play fast and free. Majkrzak also shares insights on fixing flat starts, teaching lock-left defense, crashing the offensive glass with five, and why celebrating “play busts” accelerates player growth more than perfect execution ever could. A practical, thought-provoking episode on teaching players how to think, not just where to stand. What You’ll Learn How to script games in four-minute segments that align lineups, substitutions, and play callsWhy scripting can reduce pressure on players while increasing confidence and decision-makingHow layered offense evolves from simple actions into flow, reads, and freedomPractical ways to fix flat starts without panic or over-adjustingWhy celebrating “play busts” can accelerate offensive growthTo join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    1 小時 23 分鐘
  5. 1月30日

    Philipp Humm on Storytelling Frameworks, Player Resistance, and Behavior Change

    In this episode of Slappin' Glass, we’re joined by storytelling and communication expert Philipp Humm for a deep, practical conversation on how coaches can communicate more clearly, persuasively, and memorably—especially under pressure. Philip breaks down why how you communicate often matters more than what you say, and why stories—when used intentionally—can cut through resistance, build trust, and create lasting behavioral change. He introduces his simple but powerful P.A.S.T. framework (Place, Action, Speech, Thoughts), giving coaches a repeatable structure for telling stories that actually stick rather than drifting into vague summaries or over-contextualized explanations. The conversation explores when storytelling is the right tool (and when it isn’t), how elite leaders stay concise without losing emotional impact, and why vulnerability—not polish—is the engine of connection. Philip also shares why great communicators think in frameworks, limit takeaways to one clear action, and start with structure rather than circling toward a point. We then put theory into practice with live improv exercises, showing how improvisation builds communication confidence and clarity in time-compressed moments like timeouts and huddles. The episode closes with a thoughtful Start–Sub–Sit on locker-room culture tools (quotes, visuals, and physical objects), plus Philip’s best investment in his own career—and why movement, presence, and emotional regulation matter for leaders navigating constant pressure. This is a must-listen for coaches looking to sharpen their communication edge, strengthen buy-in, and lead with greater clarity and intention beyond the Xs and Os. What You’ll Learn How to use the P.A.S.T. storytelling framework to make messages vivid, emotional, and memorableWhen storytelling creates more impact than direct instruction—and when it doesn’tWhy elite communicators lead with structure, simplicity, and one clear takeawayHow vulnerability and emotional honesty increase trust and retentionPractical improv techniques to improve clarity and confidence under pressureThe role of physical objects, visuals, and stories in reinforcing culture (and why quotes often fall flat) To join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    50 分鐘
  6. 1月16日

    Jumping on the Pickup, "Total Basketball", and Finding Flow | A Coaches’ Mailbag on Modern Advantages

    What were the ideas from 2025 that coaches couldn’t stop thinking about—the ones that kept showing up in practice plans, film sessions, and staff rooms? In this Slappin’ Glass Mailbag Episode, Dan Krikorian, Patrick Carney, and Eric Fawcett revisit the most compelling concepts covered by Slappin' Glass in 2025 as well as questions sent in by coaches around the world, unpacking how modern teams are creating advantages on both sides of the ball—and why the best programs are increasingly focused on flow, disruption, and continuity rather than isolated actions. The conversation begins with a deep dive into “jumping on the pickup” in pick-and-roll defense—a subtle but powerful technique for shrinking passing windows, generating deflections, and creating turnovers without abandoning base coverage. From there, the discussion expands into broader defensive trends around smart aggression, including selective hitting, late-clock doubles, ATO disruption, and how elite teams steal possessions without gambling. Offensively, the group explores the growing influence of Total Basketball—a philosophy rooted in eliminating pauses between offense and defense, tagging up on the glass, arriving “already playing” in the half court, and flowing seamlessly from one advantage to the next. Coaches will hear how leading programs are emphasizing shape over spacing, simplifying actions to increase pace, and using familiar structures to unlock better decision-making under pressure. Beyond tactics, this episode also weaves in insights from some of Slappin’ Glass’ most impactful off-court and analytics conversations of the year, including: Guiding teams into flow statesMeasuring and developing decision-makingUnderstanding kill shots, runs, and game-swing momentsUsing analytics that actually help during games—not just on TwitterThis mailbag isn’t about trends for trend’s sake. It’s about how elite coaches are thinking, teaching, and designing environments that allow players to play faster, freer, and more connected—and what those ideas suggest about where the game is heading next. 🎥 This episode is also available on YouTube, with embedded video clips that bring the concepts to life. To join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    41 分鐘
  7. 1月2日

    John Andrzejek on Scrambling vs. Anti-Scrambling Defensive Systems, Doubling the Post, and PNR Cutting Actions {Campbell}

    In this episode of Slappin’ Glass, we’re joined by John Andrzejek, Head Coach at Campbell and former defensive coordinator for Florida’s national championship team, for a deep dive into the real trade-offs that shape elite defensive systems. Coach Andrzejek walks us through how his defensive philosophy has evolved across stops at St. Mary’s, Columbia, Washington State, Florida, and now Campbell—highlighting the tension every staff must navigate between precision and pragmatism, technique and energy, and staying out of trouble versus thriving inside the scramble. We explore the decision-making behind scrambling vs. anti-scrambling defenses, how and why he blends principles from St. Mary’s, Houston, and Iowa State, and what it truly takes to guard the modern, spacing-driven game. The conversation gets deep into the weeds on no-middle principles, switching high and low, tagging schemes in middle pick-and-roll, and organizing rotations when things inevitably break down. Offensively, Coach Andrzejek shares how he teaches cutting around the pick-and-roll through a mix of rules and reads, why simplicity drives better decision-making, and how repetition of core situations builds true situational awareness. We also tackle post-doubling philosophies, personnel adjustments, practice design, and the balance between scouting detail and playing fast. As always, we close with a Start, Sub, or Sit that dives into cutting around the pick-and-roll and post-doubling strategies, plus Coach Andrzejek’s thoughts on the best investment he’s made in his coaching career. This is a clinic-level conversation on defensive problem-solving, offensive clarity, and building systems that hold up against elite talent. What You’ll Learn The strategic trade-offs between scrambling vs. anti-scrambling defensive systemsHow elite programs blend no-middle principles with modern spacing realitiesWhy playing really hard often matters more than perfect techniqueHow to organize rotations and tags when the ball gets to the middleSwitching high and low to keep the ball out of the paintTeaching cutting around the pick-and-roll using rules that unlock readsWhy offensive simplicity leads to better decision-makingDifferent philosophies for doubling the post and protecting the rimHow practice design, film, and repetition build defensive awarenessThe long-term value of film study and coaching mentorshipTo join coaches and championship winning staffs from the NBA to High School from over 60 different countries taking advantage of an SG Plus membership, visit HERE!

    1 小時 1 分鐘

關於

Exploring basketball's best ideas, strategies, and coaches from around the world.

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