Why Are You Trying Out for the High School Team?

In High School Basketball by Brock Bourgase

Not to criticize daily physical activity, nor playing for fun, nor a lifetime of good health. Not to demean those who shoot hoops in the school yard or play pick-up with friends, nor those who swim run, or play another sport to keep fit. Seeking instead to address those wishing to tryout for the next level (high school, Ontario Basketball, AAU, university or college) and excel. Anyone considering that step should ask themselves one question:

Why am I doing this? Anyone can see the fans at the game more clearly than the name on the jersey.  Anyone can play for individual glory. Anyone can take unlimited shots. Anyone can quit when it starts to hurt. But nobody should play at the next level if they can’t play:

  • For the Name on the Front of the Jersey: To make four years in high school mean something more. To represent your teammates and your peers with pride. To play team defence. To create memories. To participate in something greater than oneself.
  • For Teammates: To make friends for life. To be the first to pick a teammate up off the floor. To make a pass as the clock winds down because it was the right thing to do. To achieve something together that was impossible individually. To help defensively. To take charges. To set screens. To be positive.  To encourage.
  • For Improvement: To set goals and accomplish them. To improve. To encounter obstacles and overcome them. To avenge earlier defeats in the playoffs. To practice hard daily. To acquire skills, both physical and mental, and use them on and off the court. To train.
  • For Self-Actualization: To be the best. To think. To anticipate the next play. To focus. To stay calm under pressure. To challenge the opponent’s best player. To stop the ball. To be tough. To fight through screens. To rebound. To hit the floor.  To compete.

It is a privilege to play for any team. Canadians like Jermaine Anderson love to play for their country. Sometimes the twelfth man is the staunchest teammate. Players have dreamt for years about being on the court when it matters. Even those on the bench are essential to making any good team better.

It matters whenever any team plays, any collection of players selected because of their skill, strength, speed, and – most significantly – their soul. That team and those players are important. Anyone can be one-dimensional but elite teams and elite players are those who develop all aspects of the game.

Even if this is not the year that you are playing varsity or it is not the month when the season officially begins, it can still be the day to start training. The day to set personal standards. What will you accept from yourself? Everyday, student-athletes can make a difference. Anyone who can’t meet that challenge doesn’t belong on an elite team.
 
Michael Jordan was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame yesterday and chose David Thompson to introduce him. He didn’t chose Dean Smith, Scottie Pippen, Magic Johnson, or Phil Jackson but a player who inspired him when he was younger. Jordan saw Thompson succeed in college and as a professional but he also saw him fail. It was the manner than Thompson overcame his drug addiction and knee injuries that inspired Jordan to become so determined.

This entire entry may seem clichéd but the crux of the message is this: elite players separate themselves from the masses not because of athletic gifts or a single event but by the choices and habits they display on a daily basis.