Lethal Weapon wrote:
Is the Coach of your team, Gung Haggis, NCCP trained or DBC certified?
Hello LW
Thank you for asking...
Both Coach Bob Brinson and myself were certified by Alan Carlsson for DB technical. We both supported him when he first started offering technical courses. We also were both presenters at the first Dragon Boat Coaching Conference organized by Carlsson. I have also taken NCCP Level 3 theory and Technical for Volleyball + courses in athletics and sport psychology at SFU.
Lethal Weapon wrote: re: NCCP
True enough but that does not take away from their experience and knowledge they have to share. DBC technical level I requries NCCP A as a requirement for certification. DBC is moving in the rigth direction to make DB a recognized sport.
True - but is it the "right and correct" knowledge and experience they are sharing? There are many experienced paddlers out there who are asked to "coach" a team, and they simply pass on the information that they learned from whichever teams they were on. This the traditional "way of coaching," rampant in every sport. But every organized sport now recommends that coaches take both technical and theory NCCP courses. Level 3 is required to coach at the provincial level. Jay Triano, Canadian basketball Hall of Famer, had to take NCCP theory level 4 in order to coach at the National Level.
There are stories about the old FC teams who would do strange little paddling motions, when they knew people were watching them - just to see if the other teams would copy them, and of course they did - without understanding why. All before the days of conferences, internet and web forums.
There are times when I was on the ADBF race committee and we would share "HORROR stories" about what we saw happening on the creek. Everybody still does this in their own networks...
The coaching mentorship program is on the right track. We do need to pass and share information. Paddling and Coaching styles are not static, they evolve as do paddlers. There are styles for beginners and styles for experienced paddlers. There are specific techniques for sprint racing, and long distance, for small and large paddlers, for young and old paddlers.
In an ideal world, we would all have degrees in Human Kinetics, NCCP training, and do coaching workshops with Andrea Dillon, Kamini Jain, Barry Lam, Alan Carlsson and Hugh Fisher. But in the meantime... we take the courses, ask to go out with other coaches, share our information, and know that the Vancouver dragon boat community is evolving slowly but surely.