I’d just got the weight room set up when one player comes up to tell me E:60 is coming in to shoot a documentary on him. Now.
Boom! The crew bursts into the room – six cameramen plus sound and lighting technicians.
“Can we turn the music down?” the producer says.
What in the hell?
I address the players as the crew sets up around us. “Uh, guys, obviously a bit of a distraction. We got a new program today. Just pay attention, we’re going to go through technique first.”
I show them a different phase of the clean progression, but do you think any of them pays attention?
One player starts lifting with terrible technique.
“Hey, man, rack the bar! Take some weight off!” I say, then show him the right way.
“Man, shut up!” he erupts.
He shoots me a look of frustration. And goes straight back to lifting the wrong way again.
My frustration is building too, and I can see the rest of the players are totally distracted by the cameras. My head’s pounding and I have a growing sense that things could get out of control.
Very quietly I say, “Look, I know the camera’s right behind me. Let me help you do this. You’ve got to do it with good technique.”
He doesn’t care. Boom! he does it again. And boom! again.
Now I’m pissed. I stop the music. “Guys, you make millions of dollars. It is my job to keep you healthy. Can you please not get distracted by the cameras?”
As I turn around to put the music back on, the player yells, “You got something to say to me, you say it.”
I have a split-second decision to make. If I try to be Tommy Tough Guy, the player’s going to be even more pissed. Yet I can’t be seen as a doormat. Especially now that 30 other players are watching to see what happens next. I have to come up with a way to defuse this situation. And I’m sweating bullets.
Let me be clear, every single coach runs into problems like this. However, the way we respond to these situations, or stop them from happening in the first place, is what separates good coaches from great. Yet many of us never receive any formal education in these matters.