Untold Secret to Being Aggressive in Girls Basketball
Basketball is not for the passive or weak. And Girls Basketball is not either. When you look at Candace Parker of Tennessee, Candice Wiggins of Stanford, Sylvia Fowles of LSU, do you consider their play passive or aggressive? Candace Parker is dunking. Candice Wiggins is throwing down 44 point games. And Sylvia Fowles is pulling down 20 rebounds. I ask you again, do you consider their play passive or aggressive? So what is the secret to their aggressiveness?
Mindset
Here is part of a story in the USATODAY about University of Memphis' point guard, Derrick Rose:
And so, when the Memphis basketball coach finished a story two weeks ago on Tiger Woods and his quest to make the near-perfect golf game better, he handed it to point guard Derrick Rose and instructed: Read it.
"This is who I want you to be in the world of basketball, this guy right here," Calipari recalls telling his gifted freshman.
Not just a good player but a great one. Not a star but the star. A singular, take-the-sport-by-the-throat talent.
You see just like Coach Calipari wanted his star to develop the mindset of not being a star but THE STAR. In girls basketball, in order to be aggressive you have to have an aggressive mindset. A mindset that you are unstoppable and undeniable. You will not be stopped from getting the basketball. You will not be denied getting to the basket. A mindset that you are not just a girls basketball player but THE GIRLS BASKETBALL PLAYER.
-PatohsaJeffery,Ez-Articles
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