The Continuing Education of a Coach - Geoff Macdonald episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 21, 2020 · 53 MIN

The Continuing Education of a Coach - Geoff Macdonald

from Intercollegiate Tennis Association · host Intercollegiate Tennis Association

It would take several podcasting hours to learn all we could from Geoff Macdonald. He has coached at LSU and Duke and has spent the last 26 years as the head women’s coach at Vanderbilt. He has won a lot of college dual matches and an NCAA team title and has also seen several players go on to see success on the WTA tour.   He has long been considered one of the brightest and most interesting coaches we have in the college game and always has some interesting insights every time we speak with him.  In this episode, we cover what coaches should consider when moving from one head coaching position to another, his views on player development, and the skills the next generation of college coaches will need to be successful.   This conversation took place before he changed roles with long time assistant coach Aleke Tsoubanos. This type of role change may seem surprising to some but those that know Geoff well know that he looks at things a little differently than many of the rest of us.     Key parts of this conversation have been minute-marked for your listening convenience: 02:15 - Why did it make sense for you to move on from successful programs? 04:24 - What factors do you think coaches should consider when moving from one program to another? 05:36 - What qualities and skillset did you bring to the table that facilitate program success? 07:30 - Why college tennis? Why not stay in the private sector or work with professional players? 10:16 - What are some of the elements of your coaching style that have remained with you wherever you've coached? 12:37 - Were your coaching techniques a quick switch or did it progress over time? 14:40 - Where do you think your initial coaching methodology developed? 19:03 - What are some of the things you wish you had applied to your program sooner? 21:37 - How do you assist with player development and processes? 23:44 - When you are recruiting players, do you have a system for player development? 28:22 - How do you think your teams continue to get better and believe they are capable as they progress? 32:52 - What has changed for you as a college coach or the college coaching industry and what changes do you anticipate to see in the future? 36:29 - What skills do you think coaches should be learning to move them forward in their careers? 39:28 - How would you encourage coaches to start thinking and developing their own coaching principles? Rapid Fire Questions: 42:58 - Is there a book that made a major impact on you as a coach? 44:27 - Do you have a favorite drill? 47:41 - Is there one thing you've changed your mind on in recent years? 48:16 - Do you have a favorite quote? 51:43 - What is one lesson you hope your players have learned by the time they leave your program?

It would take several podcasting hours to learn all we could from Geoff Macdonald. He has coached at LSU and Duke and has spent the last 26 years as the head women’s coach at Vanderbilt. He has won a lot of college dual matches and an NCAA team title and has also seen several players go on to see success on the WTA tour.   He has long been considered one of the brightest and most interesting coaches we have in the college game and always has some interesting insights every time we speak with him.  In this episode, we cover what coaches should consider when moving from one head coaching position to another, his views on player development, and the skills the next generation of college coaches will need to be successful.   This conversation took place before he changed roles with long time assistant coach Aleke Tsoubanos. This type of role change may seem surprising to some but those that know Geoff well know that he looks at things a little differently than many of the rest of us.     Key parts of this conversation have been minute-marked for your listening convenience: 02:15 - Why did it make sense for you to move on from successful programs? 04:24 - What factors do you think coaches should consider when moving from one program to another? 05:36 - What qualities and skillset did you bring to the table that facilitate program success? 07:30 - Why college tennis? Why not stay in the private sector or work with professional players? 10:16 - What are some of the elements of your coaching style that have remained with you wherever you've coached? 12:37 - Were your coaching techniques a quick switch or did it progress over time? 14:40 - Where do you think your initial coaching methodology developed? 19:03 - What are some of the things you wish you had applied to your program sooner? 21:37 - How do you assist with player development and processes? 23:44 - When you are recruiting players, do you have a system for player development? 28:22 - How do you think your teams continue to get better and believe they are capable as they progress? 32:52 - What has changed for you as a college coach or the college coaching industry and what changes do you anticipate to see in the future? 36:29 - What skills do you think coaches should be learning to move them forward in their careers? 39:28 - How would you encourage coaches to start thinking and developing their own coaching principles? Rapid Fire Questions: 42:58 - Is there a book that made a major impact on you as a coach? 44:27 - Do you have a favorite drill? 47:41 - Is there one thing you've changed your mind on in recent years? 48:16 - Do you have a favorite quote? 51:43 - What is one lesson you hope your players have learned by the time they leave your program?

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This episode was published on August 21, 2020.

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It would take several podcasting hours to learn all we could from Geoff Macdonald. He has coached at LSU and Duke and has spent the last 26 years as the head women’s coach at Vanderbilt. He has won a lot of college dual matches and an NCAA team...

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