EPISODE · Apr 8, 2026 · 18 MIN
Ep 398 Can You Lead With Class After a Heartbreaking Loss?
from High School Hoops (Coaching High School Basketball) · host Teachhoops.com
https://teachhoops.com/ When losing hurts… what do your players learn from YOU? This episode breaks down leadership in three layers: Sportsmanship isn’t about being “nice.” It’s about having standards when your emotions are loud. A simple truth: if your postgame behavior is based on feelings, it will eventually break. That’s why great programs have a postgame routine that never changes — win or lose. The apology matters because it models something players rarely see: A leader saying, “I didn’t handle that the right way.” That’s not weakness. That’s accountability. And accountability is contagious. We turn this into something every coach can apply: Your 5-minute plan after a brutal loss What you do in the handshake line What you say to captains first How you get your team off the floor with class What NOT to do (no ref talk, no fan talk, no extra drama) Your 24-hour rule First day: breathe, protect the program, don’t rewrite history Next day: tip your hat, own what you control, build the fix You can be disappointed without being disrespectful Routines protect you when emotions spike Owning mistakes fast is leadership, not PR The way you lose becomes a permanent lesson for your players What does “class” look like when we’re hurting? What’s our standard in the handshake line? How do we respond when we feel we were wronged? What do we control after the final buzzer? “We hurt, but we have class.” “No extra drama. Represent us.” “We tip our hat, then we get better.” “We don’t blame. We build.” 1) The moment2) The response3) The culture toolTakeaways for CoachesQuestions to Discuss With Your TeamPractical Coaching Language You Can Steal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What this episode covers
https://teachhoops.com/ When losing hurts… what do your players learn from YOU? This episode breaks down leadership in three layers: Sportsmanship isn’t about being “nice.” It’s about having standards when your emotions are loud. A simple truth: if your postgame behavior is based on feelings, it will eventually break. That’s why great programs have a postgame routine that never changes — win or lose. The apology matters because it models something players rarely see: A leader saying, “I didn’t handle that the right way.” That’s not weakness. That’s accountability. And accountability is contagious. We turn this into something every coach can apply: Your 5-minute plan after a brutal loss What you do in the handshake line What you say to captains first How you get your team off the floor with class What NOT to do (no ref talk, no fan talk, no extra drama) Your 24-hour rule First day: breathe, protect the program, don’t rewrite history Next day: tip your hat, own what you control, build the fix You can be disappointed without being disrespectful Routines protect you when emotions spike Owning mistakes fast is leadership, not PR The way you lose becomes a permanent lesson for your players What does “class” look like when we’re hurting? What’s our standard in the handshake line? How do we respond when we feel we were wronged? What do we control after the final buzzer? “We hurt, but we have class.” “No extra drama. Represent us.” “We tip our hat, then we get better.” “We don’t blame. We build.” 1) The moment2) The response3) The culture toolTakeaways for CoachesQuestions to Discuss With Your TeamPractical Coaching Language You Can Steal Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Ep 398 Can You Lead With Class After a Heartbreaking Loss?
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