AFCA: PJ FLECK ON COACHING YOUR CULTURE

hungan1

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2011
Messages
14,185
Reaction score
4,254
Points
113
I don't know how old this article is from the AFCA Insider. It is worth reading as it shows how the mind of PJ Fleck works in establishing and laying the foundation of a winning culture, always a teacher. IMHO, this can apply elsewhere. To PJ Fleck, it is all about the student athlete in all facets. You can see it in the Gopher football players' eyes and smiles, and how this team is united. The student athletes are becoming more than good/great football players. They are becoming men with good life skills and values when they graduate and go into the world. PJ Fleck is winning the right way.

This is a breath of fresh air when you hear about toxic culture, one that is all about winning at all cost.



PJ FLECK ON COACHING YOUR CULTURE
by Paul Markgraff, managing editor of AFCA Magazine and AFCA Insider.

Long before he led his Western Michigan Broncos against the University of Wisconsin Badgers in the 2017 Cotton Bowl, and long before he accepted the head coaching job at the University of Minnesota, P.J. Fleck was a sixth grade social studies teacher. The concept of culture doesn’t necessarily resonate with sixth graders.

“My background is in elementary education,” says Fleck. “One thing I’ll say about teaching sixth grade is you learn 30 different ways to teach one lesson. I think that’s what has kind of helped me become a head football coach. Especially in 2018, you have to find these ways to continue to stimulate your football team and continue to keep them interested in everything that you’re teaching or talking about.”

Fleck isn’t just talking about football either. He says that he must keep his athletes engaged in the holistic sense of the word, meaning athletically, academically, socially and spiritually.

“Coaching is way different in 2018 than it was in 2008,” says Fleck. “All areas of the student-athletes’ lives are affected by everything they do in college. I have to teach these four areas more than I ever have before.”

RELATED CONTENT: The Game Of Football Matters

As any good football coach knows, teaching and coaching is about so much more than X’s and O’s. Don’t get me wrong. You can never skimp on your understanding of the game. At the same time, understanding your student-athletes goes hand-in-hand with teaching them how to play the game in your system. The common thread that runs through it all is a team’s culture.

CONNECTING WITH CULTURE
The job of a football coach is to teach lifetime lessons in a cultural way, Fleck says. Football itself is a lifetime lesson, but every year, cultural changes take place in a program, whether that’s with your players, coaches, system, processes, recruiting, whether that’s through offense, defense and special teams, or schematics, or whether that’s through relationship-building. All of that has a place in your program’s culture, and each year, coaches must find ways to evolve and improve in each aspect.

This is complicated by the fact that, at the Division I level, nearly all of your players come from somewhere else and don’t know each other. They have no shared history and different backgrounds, and outside of being one of the best players on their high school teams, each student-athlete’s journey to the Big Ten stage is unique.

“Think about it,” says Fleck. “I have kids from all walks of life, from every demographic, a lot of races, a lot of financial backgrounds, a lot of spiritual backgrounds, and all believe different things, and were raised differently and by different people. Now, you put 125 young people in a room and say, ‘Okay, well, we’re all going to be family. We’re going to do all the right things, and we’re going to represent the University of Minnesota in first-class fashion.’ That’s great to talk about, but if you’re not educating players on how you’re going to do that every single day, and you’re not going to invest holistically in their lives every single day, then it’s just coach talk.”


“When you take over a program, all 125 players have to adapt to your culture for at least two years, until you start getting freshman that come in with those who have already bought in.”P.J. Fleck, Head Coach, University Of Minnesota
Fleck points at the difference between sympathy and empathy as a method for showing players you’re not all talk, but rather, you have their best interests at heart.

“I think sympathy – having the exact same experience as someone else – you can put yourself in their shoes,” says Fleck. “That’s a great way to connect, but in college football, it’s more about empathy, where you have an understanding, but you haven’t walked one step in your players’ shoes. As long as you try to understand, and steer resources toward players’ needs, then I think players respect that. Not everyone can say they’ve walked a mile in someone else’s shoes, but if you try to imagine it and start building relationships based on that, that’s where people from all walks of life can still connect.”

Culture And Consistency

Fleck says it takes two or three years to establish a foundational culture within a program because culture is primarily about consistency. When freshmen arrive on campus, they first need to learn what they can and can’t do, and that must be taught through a series of established processes. They have a saying at Minnesota: “Bad teams, nobody leads. Average teams, coaches lead. Elite teams, players lead.” It reflects Fleck’s desire to create a program in which his players assume leadership roles and consistently model the desired culture of the team.

RELATED CONTENT: Kimberly’s Jones Explains Keys To Sustained Success

“I think it takes two or three years when you first get into a program,” says Fleck. “There’s a new personality, and it takes two or three years until everyone begins wearing that personality. Once you start getting into year three and year four, it’s really just incoming freshmen that are adapting.”

For Fleck, with time, consistency and a focus on cultural values, his players mature in ways they don’t necessarily expect to.

“We define maturity as, ‘When doing what you have to do becomes doing what you want to do,'” he says. “If our guys don’t know what they have to do because it’s a new program, that takes a couple of years for this maturity to take place. Once the expectations are laid out for them, they know what they ‘have to do.’ Once they want to do it, they also know every reason why they want to do it. That shows a very mature football team. That’s when you start seeing players lead elite football teams. ”


 
Last edited:

Good read. I'd like to see the days return when former Gopher football players were regularly coaching at all different levels of football out and about, high school, college, all divisions, the CFL and the NFL, too.

UMn has been the REAL Cradle of Coaches over the years, but I have been hearing about/reading about fewer and fewer UMn alum out there doing well in coaching.
 

Good read. I'd like to see the days return when former Gopher football players were regularly coaching at all different levels of football out and about, high school, college, all divisions, the CFL and the NFL, too.

UMn has been the REAL Cradle of Coaches over the years, but I have been hearing about/reading about fewer and fewer UMn alum out there doing well in coaching.

And hopefully, these player alums who become HS coaches will funnel players to the U. That will be one giant pipeline.
 

Bottom line: PJ is obviously a great football coach, considering what he did at W Michigan and now the Gophers.
 



And hopefully, these player alums who become HS coaches will funnel players to the U. That will be one giant pipeline.
Like brooks bollinger does for the badgers at hil murray?
 

There certainly is a group of Auburn fans who would take our coach in a heartbeat. They literally go into a Pavlovian drool at the thought of him coaching their "superior" talent. Gus may join the list of coaches that get dropped (sooner or later) after getting beat by Minnesota. At a minimum he's on double-secret probation after this one. For most the loss totally obliterates the win over Bama,
 

I reading Hayden Fry's obituary I discovered he was a Psychology major in college. I imagine he used that education to change the culture when he was at Iowa and it probably wasn't that different from what Fleck is doing here.
 

Kudos to Prez Kaler for starting the cultural shift and thinking by backing Gopher athletics and for rehiring Mark Coyle back to the U. And Kudos to Mark Coyle for hiring PJ Fleck. Mark and PJ are transformative hires of a lifetime. This dynamic duo will change Gopher athletics culture forever.

Now, it seems everybody is connected from the Gopher staff all the way up to the BOR.

What it took is a transformative positive change agent to flip the switches to become a winning culture. It was so refreshing to hear PJ Fleck lay out the vision for Gopher Football - win championships. He aimed high - National Championships. I thought he was out of his mind when I heard it.

It will take time to accomplish all these flipping of perceptions and culture in Gopherland in general and building leadership at all levels. I am amaze at the speed of transformation that PJ Fleck and Mark Coyle has done so far.

We definitely need to keep PJ Fleck and Mark Coyle for the long haul whatever it takes. There is a lot of positive energy floating around Gopher Athletics this days.

PJ Fleck no doubt is a visionary, a great communicator, and a master psychologist.

He is genuinely a good person who wants to change people's lives for the better. It is not all about winning on the football field. He has the innate and rare ability to see things clearly, motivate to the nth degree, and connect people together. We are so blessed to have him as head coach.

I am reminded of a Saint Francis of Assisi quote: "Start by doing what's necessary; then do what's possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible".

It is possible to dream the impossible dream...
 
Last edited:




PJ Fleck no doubt is a visionary, a great communicator, and a master psychologist.

He is genuinely a good person who wants to change people's lives for the better. It is not all about winning on the football field. He has the innate and rare ability to see things clearly, motivate to the nth degree, and connect people together. We are so blessed to have him as head coach.

It is possible to dream the impossible dream...

But ... but ... but he told us it was Year Zero; and, thank goodness, we had a couple of guys on GH smart enough to figure out he was lying to us.
 


Hill Murray is awful at football if I’m not mistaken

When Brooks Bollinger was HC at Hill Murray, they were decent. However, Brooks Bollinger then moved to CDH. He left to take a job in corporate america somewhere.
 



There's quite a contrast between PJ Fleck and DJ Durkin. The only thing they have in common is their middle initial.
 




Top Bottom