Bill Belichick
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I mean, it's a full team loss, so a lot of times you can generate a lot of โ
energy towards your opponent by, you know, referencing that, you know, that loss or situation that might have happened in a previous encounter.
Well, again, I think it depends on the stake.
You know, if it's sometimes, you know, something that kind of unexpectedly happens and maybe the player made a bad decision or maybe he did something that, you know, he's caught that pass a hundred times and he's dropped it once and this is the one time, you know.
Some of those are a little easier to handle.
I'd say the ones where, you know, you've told the player 10 times, this is what you need to do when this happens, and then they don't do it.
I'd say the reaction is a little bit different in that situation.
You know, how many times do you have to be told, you know what, maybe you just don't want to do it.
We'll put somebody else in there to do it, because I can see that, you know, you're not...
You just don't care enough to follow your assignment.
So, you know, it kind of depends on those.
I think one of the biggest things in football is correcting mistakes.
And we all make a lot of them.
But when during the game, when time is of the essence and you don't have much time.
And you need to figure out what went wrong pretty quickly and fix it.
So let's say defensively we came off the field and we'd given up a 20-yard run and maybe a 15-yard pass and another third down conversion.
And you say, okay, all right, like what are the issues on these plays?
Well, let's say the 15-yard run would be if one person knows that they messed the play up and just says, hey, it's my fault I messed it up.
We were in good shape.
I was right there.