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Speaker BThe Hoop Heads podcast is brought to you by Head Start Basketball.
Speaker BIf we play 31 games in our regular season, if we're really good at these four things, we'll probably win 26.
Speaker BBut if we start trying to be really good at 15 things, then are we really going to be good enough?
Speaker BSo that's the battle constantly.
Speaker BThere are so many things that you can do, but should we Brandon Ubell.
Speaker AWill be entering his fourth season as a men's basketball assistant coach at the University of South Dakota.
Speaker APrior to his time at South Dakota, Ubell was the Director of Scouting at the University of Utah for one season in 202122 Ubell began his coaching career as a graduate assistant coach at Utah State from 2019 to 2021.
Speaker ABrandon was a four year standout at the University of Nebraska from 2009 to 2013.
Speaker AHe played his first three seasons under Doc Sadler and his senior season under Tim Miles.
Speaker AUbell appeared in 125 games and started 89 for the Huskers.
Speaker AIn his senior season as team co Captain, Ubell averaged 11.5 points per game and finished seventh in the Big Ten with 6.7 rebounds per game.
Speaker AIn addition to his success on the court, Yubel was a three time Academic All American, earned the 2012 Nebraska Hero Leadership Award and was a nominee for the Big Ten Sportsmanship Award in 2013.
Speaker AFollowing his collegiate career, Ubell played five seasons overseas in Belgium and France before beginning his coaching career in 2019.
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Speaker AYou want to take some notes as you listen to this episode with Brandon Ubell, men's basketball assistant coach at the University of South Dakota.
Speaker AHello and welcome to the Hoop Heads Podcast.
Speaker AIt's Mike Clemsling here without my co host Jason Sunkel tonight, but I am pleased to be joined by Brandon Ubell, men's basketball assistant coach at the University of South Dakota.
Speaker ABrandon, welcome to the Hooped Pod.
Speaker BThank you very much.
Speaker BHappy to be on.
Speaker AExcited to have you on.
Speaker ALooking forward to diving into all the interesting things that you've been able to do in your career, both as a player and as a coach.
Speaker ALet's start by going back in time to when you were a kid.
Speaker ATell me about some of your first experiences with the game of basketball.
Speaker AWhat made you fall in love with.
Speaker BWas always just into sports in general.
Speaker BMy first basketball memory though, sitting on my grandma's floor watching I believe Game 6 of the NBA Finals, Michael Jordan hits the shot at Utah where people claim he pushed off.
Speaker BBut I mean that's a normal basketball play in my opinion.
Speaker AExactly, exactly.
Speaker BWe could probably argue that one for a little bit, but no, I mean I've just, I've kind of always loved basketball, played a ton of sports growing up, but that was kind of always the one, you know.
Speaker BAnd then I was tall growing up, but then kind of late bloomer, ish.
Speaker BSophomore year, went from 6 foot to about 6 8.
Speaker BAnd then that's kind of when things kind of started to heat up a little bit basketball wise in high school.
Speaker BSo always loved it.
Speaker BBut then, you know, the skill and the size and stuff kind of all started to gel together in high school.
Speaker BAnd I played Blue Valley West High School for Donnie Campbell.
Speaker BSo some people might understand the reference here, but Ted Lasso, if you've ever watched that show, just Jason Sudeikis, he played for Donny Campbell and based his character's like mannerisms and everything on Coach Campbell.
Speaker BAnd so if you ever watch Ted Lasso, like that's, that was my high school coach essentially.
Speaker BBut no, he was a great coach.
Speaker BBobby Knight, traditional motion.
Speaker BSo learned how to play play and read the game under him and was really, really fortunate to play for him.
Speaker BHe's won a Ton of games at the high school level.
Speaker BWe won a state title when I was in high school there and.
Speaker BAnd then played summer ball with the Wedman Pumas.
Speaker BPlayed for Scott Wedman, who played for the Celtics for a long time.
Speaker BPlayed for the Kansas City Kings when they were a thing for two years and back when there weren't shoe circuits or anything like that.
Speaker BSo we're really going back now if you think about the landscape nowad and then, yeah, kind of in that junior year of high school, heading into senior year, recruitment and everything picked up and had had quite a few offers, ended up going to Nebraska.
Speaker BSo I mean, obviously that's a lot to cover in a short amount of time, but yeah, I've always loved the game, but yeah, kind of a late bloomer in terms of things kind of coming together for me.
Speaker AWere you still playing other sports prior to that growth spurt in high school?
Speaker AWere you still playing formally on teams?
Speaker BYeah, I was playing baseball.
Speaker BI was exclusively pitching and to be honest with you, baseball was more about hanging out with my boys, you know, all my good friends, kind of.
Speaker BWe all played a lot of the same sports.
Speaker BSo we went straight from basketball season, then we would play baseball, and then we would play stuff in the summer.
Speaker BAnd then, um.
Speaker BSo I was playing baseball through my sophomore year of high school.
Speaker BAnd then that sophomore year is kind of when, you know, kind of the AAU stuff, the summer stuff and recruitment is really picking up.
Speaker BAnd that got to be a little bit too much in terms of like, you know, I was.
Speaker BWe were on the road, we were playing basketball.
Speaker BI was going straight from baseball practice to basketball practice and so decided that that was kind of the end of it, especially because it was just.
Speaker BI wasn't, to be honest, I wasn't great.
Speaker BSo I was just more.
Speaker BI was on the team, I was chewing seeds, sitting in the dugout, hanging out with my boys.
Speaker BSo there you go.
Speaker BSo, yeah, really focused in on basketball there later on.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AWhat did that focus look like for you as a high school player in terms of getting better?
Speaker AObviously, as you just talked about the way that basketball players develop and the way the youth basketball scene environment looks like today compared to what it was like when you were playing?
Speaker AWhat was your off season look?
Speaker AWhat did that look like?
Speaker AHow'd you try to go about getting better as a player?
Speaker BI was super lucky.
Speaker BYou know, my high school coach, I mentioned Donnie Campbell, you know, he gave me a key to the gym and so I was able to get into the gym, get up shots if they were doing, you know, any camps or any other sport was in there.
Speaker BI would, he would let me go in side gym.
Speaker BAnd so I was always kind of had that, that access.
Speaker BAnd then, and then, you know, when in the summer seasons with the Pumas and in that program, Scott Wedman, you know, I would go basically right from school, I'd go home, I'd get a snack, and then I would drive about 45 minutes north in Kansas City, where I'm originally from, and I would work out with coach Wedman and kind of just one on one workout for about an hour.
Speaker BAnd then after that we would have our team practice and that would go for probably two hours there at night.
Speaker BAnd then I would get home around 9pm so, you know, in our school went later.
Speaker BSo in spring ball, we were traveling in April, so it really started kind of as soon as we could after our high school season.
Speaker BSo that was kind of the routine.
Speaker BThere was, you know, three, four times a week I was right after school, I was driving up and then I was there for about three or four hours.
Speaker BAnd then on the days that I wasn't, I was in, in our high school gym shooting or doing whatever I could there.
Speaker BSo it was a lot.
Speaker BBut it was one of those things where you look back on it and you think, man, that was a big time commitment.
Speaker BBut it was just like, this is what I do.
Speaker BUm, so obviously it didn't end up paying off.
Speaker BUm, but yeah, that was that I was super, super fortunate to have really good coaches and really good individual trainers.
Speaker BProbably in a time before the trainer became a thing, you know, which probably feels like best six or seven years, you know, now everybody's got a trainer now.
Speaker BSo for sure, I, I was going.
Speaker ATo say you were a little bit ahead of your time with having the opportunity to work with Wedman on that individual basis.
Speaker AYou think about, as you said, the way the training business has exploded and the way the kids that you're coaching today, the amount of time that they're spending working with trainers compared to the average person back in the time when you were playing.
Speaker AWhat do you remember about those conversations during the time when you were working with Wedman?
Speaker AForget about like the basketball side of it, the drills and the things you were doing.
Speaker ABut what, what were some of the things that he was talking to you about just in terms of trying to pass along the knowledge that he had, obviously of being an NBA player and playing at a super high level?
Speaker BYeah, you know, when I was in my 16 new year, I played up on a 17U team.
Speaker BAnd I played with a lot of players that ended up going Division 1 at a pretty high level.
Speaker BClint Mann ended up going to Iowa State, Garrett Stutz played at Wichita State, and a couple other guys went Division one on our team.
Speaker BAnd so I was the young guy on that team that was more playing a role.
Speaker BSo then when I came back, I kind of just had that mentality on when I.
Speaker BWhen we came back, and it was like it was going to be my team, I guess you could say.
Speaker BAnd so a lot of it was centered around that being like, you're not just.
Speaker BYou're not passing up shots anymore.
Speaker BYou are hunting them.
Speaker BYou're like, we almost want you to take bad shots.
Speaker BAnd so that, that was kind of the mentality flip of rather than always making the right play, you know, what the team might have needed at the time was for me to go make something happen.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, that was, that was an interesting flip, but it was also kind of, what to your point?
Speaker BThose conversations during our workouts and then also during practice were just preparing me to, to showcase what I could do to then get to the next level and continue that way.
Speaker BAnd that wasn't easy, you know, just to switch your mindset, I guess.
Speaker BBut it obviously, it really, really helped.
Speaker BAnd that was a huge, huge part of my development for sure, was the mental side with him.
Speaker AAll right, I'll ask you a personal question.
Speaker ASo my daughter was a freshman on her high school team this year that was kind of a senior dominated team.
Speaker AShe basically was.
Speaker AHer role was to come in and defend and move the ball to the next person.
Speaker AI've spent since last off season until right now having those same conversations.
Speaker AIt sounds like that Scott Wedman was having with you in terms of getting you to kind of shift.
Speaker AHey, you gotta do stuff.
Speaker AYou're no longer just a person.
Speaker AStand there.
Speaker ASo if you gave me one piece of advice that you remember something that stuck with you or how you turn the corner.
Speaker BWhat.
Speaker AWhat is it?
Speaker AWhat can I.
Speaker AWhat can I tell my daughter?
Speaker BIf it was funny?
Speaker BI went, I went one game.
Speaker BI was, I was six for six from the field.
Speaker BAnd he was like, that's an issue.
Speaker BHe said, he said that that means you're only taking unbelievably, perfectly great shots.
Speaker BLike, if it's a, if it's a decent shot, take the decent shot.
Speaker BLike, you just have to, like, it was, it was even like, if you take a bad shot, I'm gonna clap.
Speaker BIf you pass up anything.
Speaker BLike, we're Gonna run, you know, so it was.
Speaker BIt wasn't even necessarily one thing.
Speaker BIt was just chopping wood a little bit to kind of one thing after another.
Speaker BLike every time he saw something, it was like, boom, boom.
Speaker BNo, like, no, no, no.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BSo, yeah, I can't say it was necessarily one thing.
Speaker BUh, but yeah, it was definitely.
Speaker BIt was a process for sure.
Speaker AYou down.
Speaker AIt sounds like that's what it was.
Speaker AWearing you down.
Speaker BWearing you down.
Speaker BTo build you up.
Speaker BThat.
Speaker BThat was.
Speaker BThat was the way.
Speaker AAll right, tell me a little bit about the recruiting process, what that was like for you.
Speaker AAnd then ultimately the decision to attend Nebraska.
Speaker BYeah, recruiting was a little bit different then than it is now.
Speaker BYou weren't allowed to text, and I think calls were limited to one call a week.
Speaker BAnd then there was like, certain periods where you could get up to two calls a week.
Speaker BAnd so that sophomore to junior year was a few people just calling, sending things.
Speaker BYou would get mail way more because you couldn't send a graphic through text.
Speaker BSo much less like direct conversations than it was, you know, just receiving different things in the mail.
Speaker BAnd then that junior to senior spring and summer is when things really took off.
Speaker BYou know, just.
Speaker BI was a 6 foot 9, 6, 10, 4, 5.
Speaker BI could shoot a little bit, I could handle a little bit.
Speaker BI wasn't like an amazing athlete, but I wasn't a bad athlete.
Speaker BSo, you know, just started to kind of get the attention.
Speaker BAnd then once the first offer came in, I believe it was Drake that offered me.
Speaker BMark Phelps was the head coach at the time.
Speaker BKareem Richardson was the assistant recruiting me.
Speaker BAnd once that one came in, it was almost like a.
Speaker BThe floodgates open up a little bit.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, the.
Speaker BThe live periods, the recruiting periods, there were more of them and they were longer.
Speaker BSo there was just way more opportunities for coaches to.
Speaker BTo be in the gym and see.
Speaker BSee us play.
Speaker BAnd so my sister actually ran track at Nebraska, so I was familiar with it.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, was starting to take some, like, unofficial visits and seeing campuses and things and.
Speaker BAnd all those, you know, kind of during the end of that summer before school year started and was narrowing in and, you know, I.
Speaker BNebraska was definitely in the.
Speaker BThey were in the Big 12 at the time.
Speaker BSo I had grown up in Big 12 country in Kansas, and so that was super intriguing to me.
Speaker BI had some offers out at Stanford and Cal and Marquette and some things in different areas of the country, but the opportunity to play at Kansas and to play at Iowa State and at Texas and The teams I grew up watching, you know, was, was awesome.
Speaker BPlus the familiarity, having my sister there.
Speaker BIt was far enough away from home, about three hour drive, but not too far away.
Speaker BA lot of things came into it.
Speaker BBut then, you know, it's.
Speaker BI believe it was August or so when people could start calling two times a week.
Speaker BAnd then it was your, you were on your cell phone and the home phone would ring and so then you'd call the person back on the home phone and then your cell phone would ring and, and that was.
Speaker BIt was like all day, every day there for a little while and it was just like, all right, I think I know where I want to go.
Speaker BAnd at this point I'm just spending my day on the phone and I think I know what I want to do here.
Speaker BAnd the coach at the time was Doc Sadler and they did an awesome job recruiting me and building a great relationship, the assistants and everybody and had been to campus a few times and so finally kind of shut everything down probably earlier than, than most would have, you know, before taking official visits and all that good stuff was the most difficult.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BThat'S a really good question.
Speaker BProbably Greg Marshall at Wichita State, like I mentioned, a friend of mine that played AAU with me that was a year older had gone there and was having a good experience and they were, you know, they were still in the Valley at the time and winning 28 to 30 games and, and Coach Marshall's an intense dude obviously.
Speaker BAnd they, and coach Jans, Chris Jans was the assistant recruiting me at the time.
Speaker BSo obviously they had a heck of a staff there that, that was just doing a great job and that was probably the toughest one for me and it was, you know, in state and all that fun stuff.
Speaker BBut I think at the end of the day I knew, I knew I was making the right choice for me.
Speaker AAnd into your freshman year, what are you thinking about academically, career wise?
Speaker AAre you the typical 18 year old that you kind of have no idea what you're going to do and you're kind of focused on playing hoops, obviously mentioning Cal and Stanford, obviously you're really good student.
Speaker ABut just where was your mindset at as you were, as you were entering school?
Speaker BYeah, so I actually knew what I wanted to study.
Speaker BI was a broadcast journalism major.
Speaker BFunny enough being on a podcast now, you know, so I, I enjoyed everything with whether they, the behind the camera stuff, producing, putting, putting edits together, you know, the weatherman stuff.
Speaker BLike we were doing all that stuff for our high school TV show.
Speaker BAnd so I, I kind of fell in love with that.
Speaker BSo I knew exactly what I wanted to do that way and that, that actually helped obviously with some of the, the college stuff was that I, that's what I wanted to study.
Speaker BSo kind of going in, I had, I had an idea of what I wanted to do and you know, it was a pretty unique deal.
Speaker BNot everybody's just, yeah, broadcast journalism, but, but yeah, that I way which yeah, made me probably a little bit more unique, especially at, at the higher levels.
Speaker AAt all on your radar at this point or.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BProbably not right away as like going into college.
Speaker BThat probably developed later on.
Speaker BI knew even with the broadcast journalism stuff, I wanted to be around basketball.
Speaker BYou know, like if I were in broadcast journalism, my, my golden dream or whatever would have been like being on college game day, you know, and doing that type of stuff or being a play by play or color commentator or something like that.
Speaker BI think would have been the dream job that way.
Speaker BBut I knew I wanted to be around basketball so that the coaching piece definitely developed later on in college.
Speaker BBut yeah, that was more so my junior senior year where I started to kind of have those thoughts about it.
Speaker AWhat's your favorite memory on or off the court from your time at Nebraska?
Speaker BOh, wait, I, I loved my time in Nebraska every, every year, every second.
Speaker BThere was a lot of, a lot of change there when I was there.
Speaker BAfter my sophomore year we switched to the Big Ten so, you know, the opportunity to play at one university and kind of develop at one university and, but still also have the opportunity to play at all of those cool places in the Big 12 and in the Big 10.
Speaker BI mean you're talking about some of the, the most historic places in the country and without transferring, I, I was able to do that.
Speaker BI think that was pretty cool, especially looking back at the landscape now, you know, on the court, for sure, we beat, on my sophomore year, we beat Texas when they were ranked number one.
Speaker BThey had an awesome team.
Speaker BI think it was Avery Bradley and Jordan Hamilton and Tristan Thompson.
Speaker BLike they were loaded and they were ranked number one and we beat them at home and rushed the court and all that.
Speaker BYou know, that was, that was pretty cool.
Speaker BBut yeah, I mean I just, I really enjoyed my time in Nebraska overall.
Speaker BI mean there's good people, I had a lot of good coaches.
Speaker BI, you know, went through coaching changes even during my time and you know, just that whole environment was, was great for me and, and was awesome for my development on and off the court.
Speaker ATell me about something from one of your college coaches that you took with you that you still feel like is a part of who you are today as a coach.
Speaker AWhether it's a personal characteristic, whether it's just the way they went about their business, whether it's something that they specifically taught you that you still think about and share with guys that you're coaching today, just what's something that stands out to you that you still carry with you from your time as a player at Nebraska?
Speaker BYeah, that's an awesome question.
Speaker BI'll give you a couple answers because I played for a couple different guys.
Speaker BDoc Sadler, he, he was, we were a very defensive minded team.
Speaker BWe were an extremely tough team.
Speaker BWe, we grounded out at times offensively, but you knew what we were going to do.
Speaker BYou know, we were going to guard you, we were going to be tough, we were going to be physical.
Speaker BAnd I was not that coming in.
Speaker BI was, some could say I was soft.
Speaker BYou know, I was the skilled shooting big, you know, stereotypical that guy.
Speaker BSo just the, you know, it's, you probably don't appreciate it as much while you're in it.
Speaker BBut then when you look back now, especially as a coach taking that, you know, his principles and just getting us to buy into exactly what we were going to do and be flying around and committed to it and we did not budge on our, on our system like we were going to do what we were going to do and we were going to do it better than anybody else.
Speaker BAnd, and so that I think, you know, you look back on that now as a coach and you're just like, man, we played really hard for that dude.
Speaker BAnd I think a lot of that went into, he was really tough on us on the court, but he had built these relationships and you knew he cared about you, you know, off the court.
Speaker BAnd as soon as, as soon as that, that four hours was done at times, which was a long day or two hours or hour and a half, whatever we went, you, you knew like he was able to do such a good job of, of switching that, flipping that switch to then you know, check in with you and make sure everything's good.
Speaker BYou know, you knew he cared.
Speaker BAnd that made you play even harder for him with, with coach Miles.
Speaker BI think Tim Miles, who I played for my senior year, he, when he came in, it was a very similar thing with Scott Wedman was just the, the power of belief, right Is what he gave me saying that no, you can be, you can be one of our best players, you can be a go to guy.
Speaker BWe're Gonna put the ball in your hands.
Speaker BYou can do these things.
Speaker BSo kind of that evolution of being one of the guys to one of, like a guy on the team again, I think then that really propelled me to be a pro and be in, like, be given an opportunity to play in Europe.
Speaker BAnd I've always remembered that, you know, that his.
Speaker BThe power of just one coach.
Speaker BIt can be an assistant, it can be a head coach, can be anybody.
Speaker BTo truly and fully believe in a player and give that to them, I mean, that's special.
Speaker BSo I think that's definitely something that I've taken from him, is to always make sure I remember.
Speaker BI'm telling the guys that I'm working with and the guys on the team like, nah, man, like, you are awesome.
Speaker BYou are a really good player.
Speaker BYou can do X, Y and Z for us and making sure that they know that every day.
Speaker BAnd I think that's something I really took from him.
Speaker AIt's really an important lesson to remember, and it's sort of an offshoot of something that I've talked about with lots of different coaches on the podcast, Brandon, and that is that when you think about yourself as a coach and the interactions that you have with players, you have things that when you think about your time as a player that coaches said to you that you remember that you're going to carry with you for the rest of your life, that had an impact, are probably continuing to have an impact, and are going to have an impact on you for the rest of your life.
Speaker AAnd yet, probably if you went back and you asked one of those coaches, hey, do you remember when you said X to me, Chances are that coach has no recollection of that particular interaction.
Speaker AAnd I think sometimes as coaches or my day job as a teacher, I think sometimes you forget that your words do have that kind of power that you just described, where here's a guy who just believed in you, told you you could do it, said, hey, you're capable of doing this.
Speaker AAnd that gave you the strength, the mentality, the ability to then go out and do those things.
Speaker AAnd it speaks to the power of our words as coaches, as teachers that we sometimes forget.
Speaker ANow, kids don't remember everything we say, obviously, we wish.
Speaker AWe certainly wish they did, but they certainly pick and choose.
Speaker AAnd there's things that, again, may seem innocuous to us that they end up taking with them that has an impact on them for the rest of their lives.
Speaker AAnd it's always one of the things that I try to keep in mind whenever I'M interacting with, whether it's players or students, is that somebody I could be talking to, someone who 20 years from now, 30 years from now is going to be having a conversation just like this and saying, hey, I remember when Coach Cleansing said this to me.
Speaker AAnd, man, that really had an impact on me in the moment, and it's continuing to have an impact on me.
Speaker AAnd I think sometimes we forget how powerful those words can be as a coach.
Speaker BNo question.
Speaker BI mean, that's nailed it on the head right there.
Speaker BI mean, it's.
Speaker BYeah, I've heard it from a few different people, but when you get it, when you experience it or you see it firsthand, it can kind of change your view on some of those things and on what sticks with you.
Speaker BLike you said, it can be something that, like you said, it's just we might forget it or not even remember that we said that or did that for somebody, but it meant something.
Speaker BAnd, and that's, it's.
Speaker BYou try to remember to that that can happen, you know, because I know, like, you know, you know, you know how it is in the season.
Speaker BYou can just kind of get into this malaise and this, this routine of scouts practice shots up, scouts practice shots, like all those things.
Speaker BAnd, and you can forget to just like, have a real conversation with somebody, you know, about, like, hey, how's your family doing?
Speaker BLike, you know, and just, do you want to go, you know, grab a bite to eat quick?
Speaker BYou know, and just something small like that that might feel small is really big for some guys.
Speaker BAnd trying to remember that through winning games, you know, is difficult at times, but the more we can do that, I think those two things are very, very correlated.
Speaker AThat's 100% right.
Speaker AAnd as you said, it's sometimes difficult to see through the haze of winning and losing and the grind of what a season involves and the amount of time that everybody's putting in to try to win as many games as possible.
Speaker AAnd it's important to sometimes step back, right?
Speaker ATo remember that that human touch of everybody's, everybody needs something.
Speaker AEverybody needs that kind of human connection in that relationship.
Speaker AAnd when you can step back and remember that, I think everybody ends up in a better place.
Speaker AAnd more often than not, you win more games.
Speaker AWhen you build better relationships, right?
Speaker AWhen you have, whether that's player, coach relationships, whether that's coach, coach relationships, whether it's player to player relationships, when you have a team that is strong in all those areas, you end up, I think, with a better record on the floor, wins and Losses.
Speaker AAnd you also end up with a better experience when you have all those kinds of positive relationships.
Speaker AWhen you finish at Nebraska, obviously you get an opportunity to go and play overseas.
Speaker ASo walk me through from the time your season ends as a senior at Nebraska, how do you go about taking those steps that were necessary to get yourself that opportunity to play overseas?
Speaker BYeah, kind of during the season, probably pretty similar to how it is now.
Speaker BThere's agents that start hitting you up, maybe for different reasons, but yeah.
Speaker BSo, you know, some, some agents had just said, you know, we'd love to talk to you after the season and you know, about representation and those types of things.
Speaker BAnd coach Miles had.
Speaker BHas had quite a few guys that went overseas and, and played at a pretty high level in Europe.
Speaker BAnd so he, he had some connections there and knew some people that, you know, he could kind of help guide me or at least say, like, yeah, I know that person and I know they do a good job or I don't know them at all, which is almost just as good of advice.
Speaker BSo started to kind of have those conversations and then fairly quickly, you know, had found, you know, representation signed with Adam and Ben Pensack.
Speaker BThey have kind of their own.
Speaker BIt's a smaller, at the time, a smaller agency, more so focused on Europe.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSome of the bigger agencies are.
Speaker BThey can be humongous, you know, and they've got their NBA sector and they've got their Asia and Europe and all that stuff.
Speaker BAnd I kind of knew my game and those types of things would really fit well and fit best in Europe.
Speaker BAnd so I knew that, you know, somebody that was really dialed in there, you know, would probably be the best thing for me.
Speaker BAnd then from there it was, you know, kind of just, hey, here's a, here's a few opportunities.
Speaker BWhat do you think of this?
Speaker BAnd I mean, it's a little bit like recruiting process, you know, maybe a little less relationship based and more.
Speaker BSo here's the money, here's the opportunity, here's the country, here's what I think.
Speaker BWhat do you think?
Speaker BAnd then in the next four or five days, you're either saying yes or no.
Speaker BSo a little bit like, like the transfer portal probably for a lot of people now, that little bit like speed dating.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BBut yeah, it was, it was a little bit like that.
Speaker BAnd so actually pretty quick, I had signed with a team in Belgium, in Brussels, and had, you know, kind of had locked that in before I think school was even done, which is pretty unique.
Speaker BOnce you get into the Europe world, typically you're signing your contract June or July or agreeing to your, your deals later in the summer.
Speaker BAnd so had kind of locked that up pretty quickly and, and so then I could really just focus on staying in shape, working out, making sure I was ready when I got over there.
Speaker AAny concerns, worries?
Speaker AAs a 22 year old guy going overseas by yourself to a new country, just what was your thought process in terms of, hey, I'm, this is my, this is my quote, first real job.
Speaker AIt's still basketball, but you're going overseas to a new country that I assume you hadn't been to before.
Speaker ASo what was the thought process in that?
Speaker AForget about the basketball side of it.
Speaker AJust culturally going to Europe and playing in a new place.
Speaker BI think you're crazy if you say you're not nervous going over there your first time or even anytime for that matter, because a lot of it, you're having a phone conversation, maybe a zoom or Skype back then, but you know, you're, you're going over and you're going to be playing with, playing for, living it like with people you don't know and have never met.
Speaker BSo that obviously there's some hesitations there that, you know, you just are in the back of your mind.
Speaker BBut also I think a big part of it that people forget is like, you know, just going to the grocery store and trying to figure out is this milk or is this buttermilk that I'm gonna put on my cereal?
Speaker BAnd buttermilk is bad on cereal if anybody's wondering.
Speaker BSo, you know, there's definitely some things there that you know, you're nervous about and you're wondering like, well, what's, where am I gonna go get new basketball shoes?
Speaker BWhere am I gonna do all these things?
Speaker BAnd you're just gonna have to figure it out.
Speaker BAnd I was definitely more excited than I was nervous.
Speaker BThere's no question about that.
Speaker BBut yeah, there's some things that are in the back of your head.
Speaker BBut I, you know, I was fortunate enough that my, my dad growing up, his work had taken him overseas quite a bit for travel.
Speaker BSo that was.
Speaker BWhile I hadn't done that a ton, that was something that was just an as an idea was familiar.
Speaker BAnd so I knew there were good people everywhere.
Speaker BYou know, just from that having my dad do that.
Speaker BSo, you know, had just known that there's good people everywhere and you can figure it out.
Speaker BYou just got to go do it and you got to go figure it out.
Speaker BAnd so, so yeah, I mean it was, I was two feet in that's for sure.
Speaker BAnd just, just went for it.
Speaker AYour favorite city that you got a chance to visit while you were there.
Speaker BGot a chance to visit.
Speaker BOh, boy.
Speaker BSo what I did, I tried.
Speaker BThere's like a two week period or a week and a half period every, I think February or so where the national teams get together and they're playing, you know, either qualifying events or something of the sort.
Speaker BSo I would try during that, like week and a half, we would get four or five days off or so, and I would try and go somewhere that I hadn't been.
Speaker BAnd then after the season, I think a lot of people, it's like a 10 or 11 month season sometimes, so your first thought is, I'm going home.
Speaker BAnd I would always make it a point to take a week and try and go somewhere.
Speaker BSo I have been, I was fortunate enough and blessed, you know, in every way to be able to do it.
Speaker BBut I've been a lot of really cool places.
Speaker BMy favorite probably is Greece.
Speaker BGoing to Athens to visit, that was, I mean, very, very cool.
Speaker BJust the history, the food, the beaches, the, the islands, every.
Speaker BI mean, how can you, how can you say no to that?
Speaker AAll right, this is the question.
Speaker AI prepped you for your craziest European basketball story, the best one we've ever had on the podcast.
Speaker AI don't know if you're going to be able to top it, Brandon, because it was, it was pretty crazy.
Speaker ABut I'm, I'm, I'm waiting to hear yours.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSo I, and mine might be a little bit different that way.
Speaker BYou know, I told my agent pretty early on in my career after hearing probably a lot of the similar crazy horror stories like keep me in Western Europe, keep me where they're.
Speaker BThey pay on time and keep me where nothing's screwy and I'll be right.
Speaker ASounds right.
Speaker BSo I don't have any experiences like that, but insane deal less related to basketball.
Speaker BBut I was living in Brussels, I don't know if you remember.
Speaker BSo the, there was the shootings in Paris, right?
Speaker BAnd so there was.
Speaker BThat had happened and they fled to Brussels.
Speaker BThe shooters did.
Speaker BSo for about four or five days, the city shut down, right?
Speaker BAnd they were on like a manhunt in the city and there were tanks going through the streets.
Speaker BThey're banging on doors.
Speaker BThey're coming into your apartment searching, like, and, and so wondering what's going on.
Speaker BI'm living in a foreign country.
Speaker BThey're looking for these guys.
Speaker BAre they next door?
Speaker BI mean, and then.
Speaker BSo that was crazy.
Speaker BCity shuts down for however long.
Speaker BBad situation.
Speaker BBut okay.
Speaker BSo then I think four or five months later, the airport and the train and the tram stop is bombed in Brussels.
Speaker BAnd so at the time, my sister and her husband were visiting me, and so we had morning practice.
Speaker BSo I drive to morning practice, and as soon as I get there, it's 8am and we get there and everybody's huddled up and they tell us what happened.
Speaker BAirport, tram stop, train station.
Speaker BI call my sister because they don't have a phone.
Speaker BAnd their plan was, we're walking down to the tram, we're going to take it into the city, and we're going to do a couple things today while I was at practice.
Speaker BAnd so I'm like, they're not answering, they're not answering, they're not answering.
Speaker BFinally get a hold of them.
Speaker BThey hadn't left yet, thank God, because two stops down was the tram stop that had gotten bombed.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BSo, you know, talking about, like, literally down the street from me, and.
Speaker BAnd so in terms of a panic and family was in town visiting, and, you know, just then you're wondering, like, okay, is this over?
Speaker BAre we safe?
Speaker BAre we good?
Speaker BLike, should my.
Speaker BShould they fly?
Speaker BShould they leave?
Speaker BShould they stay for two more weeks?
Speaker BYou know, it was just.
Speaker BThat was insane, obviously.
Speaker BSo very scary situation.
Speaker BSo that's probably a little different than you might have been expecting, but going through that.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, two days after that happened, we were playing a game in our arena.
Speaker BAnd so going there, you're thinking, like, all right, like, this is a large gathering of people.
Speaker BLike, this is a sporting event, you know, and so there was definitely, for a couple weeks there, you know, there was a lot of, you know, just.
Speaker BThat was kind of in the back of your mind, even as you're, like, warming up for a game, which is, you know, probably not the headspace that you need to be in, but.
Speaker BBut, yeah, that was.
Speaker BThat was definitely crazy.
Speaker AIt takes, I think, a while to be able to, I would imagine, put that behind you.
Speaker AAnd even, as you said, for a long, long time, I'm sure that it was in the back of your head.
Speaker AI mean, I know, remember after even 9, 11.
Speaker AAnd you just.
Speaker AIt took a long time for you to be able to see a plane or hear a plane and not have your first immediate thought, go to September 11th.
Speaker AAnd so I'm sure for you to be in a place where you obviously had spent a lot of time, and I'm sure been to those very places where that occurred, and then to have that.
Speaker ATo have that happen and then double it with your sister being in town.
Speaker AAnd it just, Yeah, I can only imagine how.
Speaker ATrying to then put that behind you and, and focus on basketball.
Speaker AAs you said, when you go into a, a big public gathering and, you know, looking around and saying, oh, boy, that's, you know, hopefully, hopefully this is about, this is behind us.
Speaker ASo, yeah, that's a, that's a, that's definitely a.
Speaker ADefinitely a crazy story for sure.
Speaker AAll right, let's transition into the coaching profession.
Speaker ASo tell me about how you go from.
Speaker AHow's the playing career sort of wraps up and what's the thought process as.
Speaker AAs the playing career is coming to an end?
Speaker AGetting into coaching.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo my fifth season overseas, I was playing in France.
Speaker BYou know, I was fortunate enough.
Speaker BYou know, I was playing really well and playing at a high level and France is one of the, the best leagues in the world.
Speaker BIt was a ton of fun.
Speaker BAnd about two weeks left in the season, you know, third quarter screen and roll, go up to catch the ball.
Speaker BYou know, you land and you're going to finish and right knee, just boom.
Speaker BAnd acl, mcl, meniscus, patella and broke my leg.
Speaker BI mean, you talk about what else, what else could happen?
Speaker BNothing.
Speaker BIt was all done.
Speaker BAnd so honestly, at that moment, I had no intentions of not playing.
Speaker BYou know, I was going to continue to play.
Speaker BYou know, I was going to come back from this or whatever and rehab, recover and.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, I was going through the.
Speaker BHad surgery, going through PT and Coach Miles was still at Nebraska and so spent, you know, went up there after.
Speaker BOnce I was kind of cleared to start doing some basketball, things kind of went up there and he was, I mean, he's been my, probably one of my closest mentors friends ever since I graduated.
Speaker BAnd you know, he just, he let me come to practice every day.
Speaker BHe let me be in the office, he let me be in film.
Speaker BHe let me do, I mean, what not many people would let you do.
Speaker BAnd so my intent, right, was I'm going to rehab, I'm going to practice, I'm going to get back in shape and then I'm going to sign and I'm going to go back overseas.
Speaker BAnd I think it was maybe January, February time, and I'm thinking about things and like, you know, I'm on the phone with my girlfriend at the time, my wife now, and you know, we're talking about, hey, what, you know, how did today go?
Speaker BAnd I would say two or three minutes about, you know, oh, Yeah, I got some shots up and then we practiced and then I would go for 30 or 40 minutes about.
Speaker BI was talking with Coach Miles about this thing for scheme wise, and then I was watching film with this assistant, and then we were, you know, going over their playing for the game and.
Speaker BAnd that was 30 to 40 minutes of the conversation.
Speaker BAnd it was funny, you know, one day she was just like, do you, like, do you hear yourself right now?
Speaker BLike, you know, you're clearly more invested, more excited, more, more into the.
Speaker BThis other side of the game than you are about playing.
Speaker BAnd it was like one of those realizations of, like, you are 100% right.
Speaker BI am.
Speaker BAnd it wasn't even a physical thing, right, that I wasn't able to come back.
Speaker BIt was just there, you know, that mentality shift of like, man, I'm more excited about that.
Speaker BAnd so kind of made the decision that I wanted to get into coaching.
Speaker BAnd Craig Smith was an assistant of mine in Nebraska my senior year, and after that had gotten the head coaching job at South Dakota, was there for four years, and then at the time, he was at Utah State, right when I'm.
Speaker BWhen I'm rehabbing and all that.
Speaker BAnd so he, he ended up having a spot open up as a GA for him at Utah State.
Speaker BAnd he was like, well, would you be interested?
Speaker BAnd I was like, yeah.
Speaker BHe was like, well, scale of 1 to 10, like, if, you know, are you.
Speaker BAre you like a nine?
Speaker BI was like a ten.
Speaker BLike, I'm doing this.
Speaker BAnd he was like, all right, like, let's do it.
Speaker BLet's.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, less than a month later, I'm moving out to Logan, Utah, which, you know, for me, I flew over and lived in Belgium and France and different cities.
Speaker BAnd like, this was the simplest move that I'd ever made in my life.
Speaker BLike, I'm just going to go out to Utah.
Speaker BThat's easy.
Speaker BSo, yeah, that was kind of the main transition was just, you know, I, I finally realized came, you know, fortunately, my wife had that conversation with me of just like, that's where my passion was now, you know, and it was with.
Speaker BWith playing and hooping and doing that for the longest time, but things had changed and.
Speaker BAnd that's where I was now.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, kind of dove right in, you know, what she was.
Speaker AGetting into with the life of a coach's wife.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BI don't know if either of us knew exactly, but they.
Speaker BWe definitely had a lot of those conversations right before we even got engaged.
Speaker BWas just like, this is what I want to do.
Speaker BAnd you know, she is the, she's the absolute best.
Speaker BI mean everything, you know, we've moved.
Speaker BI think there was a stretch there where we moved to three different houses within a calendar year and, and we're just, you know, rolling with it.
Speaker BAnd she's been awesome through the whole deal and my biggest supporter by far.
Speaker BSo that, that has been awesome through everything obviously.
Speaker BBut to say we knew exactly what we were getting into, probably I don't think anybody knows, but as close as we could understood.
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Speaker AWhat was it about coaching at the very beginning in that first experience at Utah State, when you think back to that first year, what was it about coaching that if you could pinpoint it down to one or two things that really hooked you, that you're like, yeah, this is what I want to do, this is why I want to do it.
Speaker AWhat were those things?
Speaker BYeah, I think there's a few, there's a few things that really clicked.
Speaker BAnd I think, you know, as a player you, you get better yourself and you start to notice things or whatever.
Speaker BBut then when you're on the other side of it and you're helping, you're working somebody out and you're working on these one or two things for the longest time and then they do it in a game and it works and then they kind of look over at you like, hey, like, remember that.
Speaker BAnd I'm like, yeah, like, that's what we've been doing.
Speaker BThat's why we do this and that.
Speaker BI think, you know, the first time that that happened, you know, and, And.
Speaker BAnd those guys at Utah State, I was able to, you know, be on the pad with them and work those guys out and get in the gym with them as a G A.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, just the first time that I was able to say, like, hey, you know, like, catch it a little bit higher.
Speaker BAnd then you can.
Speaker BYou got more room to spin back.
Speaker BYou know, he's playing you on the high side.
Speaker BSo then the next time down, he does it and he kind of looks over and it's like, okay, that right there, like, that is.
Speaker BYou get this rush of like, man, I just helped him out, you know, and that.
Speaker BI think the.
Speaker BThat has been the biggest thing in terms of the light bulb.
Speaker BIt was just like when you're working with somebody and it's the long game for sure, but then you start to see things click for.
Speaker BFor a kid and they're starting to.
Speaker BTo make those steps and to add things into their game and start to have more and more success and more belief in themselves.
Speaker BI think that's been the biggest thing to see.
Speaker BAnd to.
Speaker BYou kind of get that joy out of that, for sure.
Speaker AI think that when you talk about.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's that light bulb coming on where players.
Speaker AOr again, I equate it back to being a teacher, students, you're teaching them something, you're showing them something, you're trying to explain to them why it's valuable.
Speaker AThey don't necessarily see it right away.
Speaker AAnd then that moment where suddenly it clicks and they're like, oh, yeah, now I get it.
Speaker AAnd yeah, I think as.
Speaker AAs a coach, that's one of.
Speaker AFor sure.
Speaker AWhen you talk about from an individual standpoint, right, of impacting somebody on the floor, I think that's one of the things that a lot of coaches would say is.
Speaker AIs a high for them, right?
Speaker AThat the player getting that thing that you've been working on over and over and over again, and then finally it clicks for them in a game situation.
Speaker AThat's definitely one of those things that, you know, just lights you up as a coach.
Speaker ABut also, again, the player starts to look and I think looks at you in a different way as a coach, too.
Speaker AThey're like, hey, maybe this guy's not as dumb as I thought he was.
Speaker AHe really does.
Speaker AHe really does know something.
Speaker AHe is able to add some.
Speaker AAdd some value to what they're doing.
Speaker AWhat about from an X's and O standpoint, Brandon?
Speaker AThinking about how you thought the game as a player versus how you have to think the game as a coach?
Speaker AI guess my question is, while you were playing, did you think about the game and try to process it from a coaching perspective?
Speaker AIn other words, maybe trying to understand what all five guys on the floor are doing and how the scheme fit into the overall plan or philosophy of what you were trying to do?
Speaker AOr were you more just like, hey, here's my job, I've got to do that as a player and then just talk about maybe the shift from understanding the schemes and the X's and O's philosophy from how you thought about it as a player to how you had to think about it as a coach?
Speaker BYeah, you know, I think the longer that I played, the more those types of things kind of click for you.
Speaker BSo I would say probably more so.
Speaker BWhen I was playing in Europe, you start to really understand, you know, not just what I'm doing all the time, but like what, everything, what's happening, you know, what's happening behind you, what happened in front of you, you know, and you, you start to see how everything is connected and then that even trickles into like practice, right?
Speaker BYou start to understand, like, okay, well, you know, we had three really light practices leading up to this game and we did not play well.
Speaker BWe were soft.
Speaker BAnd you start to like, kind of correlate things like that the longer that you play.
Speaker BAnd the one thing, you know, as a player myself, I was never this unbelievable athlete.
Speaker BI was never like just a dead eye shooter, you know, So I had, I was solid in a lot of things, but I wasn't elite at any one thing.
Speaker BSo I had to find those other advantages, you know, and, and so I kind of craved and needed the, the scouting, the, those little like, advantage type things that, that coaches provide.
Speaker BAnd so even as a player, I really value those things because that's where I could potentially beat some of these guys that were naturally more gifted than I was.
Speaker BAnd so kind of knowing that, like, that's where I got a lot of my success from.
Speaker BThen, you know, stepping into coaching from that X's and O standpoint to see, you know, where you can get your advantages.
Speaker BI think that's, you know, as I played that that really kind of transitioned really well into that, that coaching and understanding and valuing just the minute detail that can get you two points, right?
Speaker BThat can just.
Speaker BOr take away two points of theirs that can help you win the game.
Speaker BAnd so, yeah, I think it definitely clicked for me a little bit the longer I played.
Speaker BBut then once you really to the coaching side, then you really are like, oh, you know, your, your eyes are broadened out.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ATrying to figure out how to win on the margins.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AI think a lot of times the player you're seeing, maybe if you're thinking about the big picture, you're thinking about it really from a 360 degree view.
Speaker AYou're, you're high up, it's a 30,000 foot looking down.
Speaker AWhereas in the coaching profession, right, you're looking for every single little edge.
Speaker AMaybe as a player you're doing that again, but you're doing it more for yourself.
Speaker AYou're not necessarily thinking about how you can do that for the other four guys on the floor.
Speaker ABut once you get to coaching now, you're talking about all those little margins that if you can win all the margins, a lot of times that translates in the difference between losing a game by two and winning a game by two.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd I think too kind of remembering what you, what, what you saw and what you felt as a player, trying not to forget that piece too, because it's really easy on film to say, see, that guy's open, right?
Speaker BBut we're able to pause, we're able to see this window, but that happens so fast.
Speaker BAnd to just keep that in mind of like, all right, I've been asked to do this before.
Speaker BI know how hard this is, but I know it can be done.
Speaker BBut I also understand, like, if I'm asking you to do something that's really difficult, I do need to keep that in mind because I know I've been asked to do this before.
Speaker BAnd it's a 50, 50 shot here, just if we're being honest, because there are some things that we're going to do as a coach that, you know, I hope this works.
Speaker BSo, you know, just, I, I do think trying to keep that, that mentality in the back of my mind has been really, really useful to be able to then talk to the players, to tell them, like, listen, I know this is difficult.
Speaker BI know this is hard, but I also know that this can be done.
Speaker BI know that if we do this right, it's going to work and then, okay, then they're, then they can buy into it and, and understand rather than just, you know, militarism all the time.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd I think that's being able to have that understanding I could think back to again.
Speaker AI played a long, long Long time ago.
Speaker ABut I can think back to moments like listening to you just describ situation of talking about the window and knowing as a player like you're watching it on film.
Speaker AAnd I can remember sitting on my stool in the locker room watching VHS tapes, being, trying to be rewound back to plays and just whatever, but.
Speaker AAnd thinking and seeing it on film, just being like, yeah, like I know it's there in that split second that we paused the tape, but the reality is, is that almost what you're asking me to do in that situation, there's so many different things going on that like you can't.
Speaker AAnd it's interesting when you think about decision making, right, that nobody's going to make a decision correctly 100% of the time.
Speaker AAnd even if they did, what you might think is the right decision as a coach on the sideline might not actually be the right decision for the player in that particular moment with their skill set or with what they see and whatever else it could be.
Speaker AAnd I think that when you talk about decisions, it's more like the cumulative effect of all the decisions.
Speaker ADo they get us to the outcome that we're trying to get to?
Speaker AAnd I think sometimes it is easy, as you said as a coach to forget what players see and how fast the game is moving when they make a decision.
Speaker AAnd so that's where I think, right, the learning process and talking about the margins and the things that you can show a player that are going to help them to make the correct decision more frequently, but with the understanding that a hundred percent correct decisions are probably A impossible and B, we probably don't even agree on what that, on what that correct decision is every single time.
Speaker ASo yeah, it is interesting to think about it from that perspective in terms of trying to teach and help your players and ultimately your team to, to get to whatever it is the outcome that you want, whether it's offensively or defensively, however that may, however that may go.
Speaker ASo tell me about going to Utah.
Speaker BYeah, so two awesome years at Utah State.
Speaker BUnique years.
Speaker BOur first one won the, won the Mountain west tournament championship.
Speaker BSam Merrill hits the shot at the buzzer to beat San Diego State.
Speaker BThen the tournament gets canceled.
Speaker BYou know, that was, that was a special group that probably could have, could have done something in the, in the NCAA tournament.
Speaker BThen the next year being Covid year, another great year and a great team.
Speaker BDefinitely a different looking team, but we made the tournament as an at large.
Speaker BSo, you know, and the year before I had gotten there, they had made The NCAA tournament as well.
Speaker BSo three straight NCAA tournaments for Craig.
Speaker BTwo that I was able to be a part of.
Speaker BAnd so then he, he got the job at Utah.
Speaker BAnd you know, I was obviously fortunate enough to, to be hired there.
Speaker BI was the director of scouting.
Speaker BThat was a brief time that I was there.
Speaker BI was only there for, I think it was like seven months or something crazy.
Speaker BBut I mean, it was, it was definitely a learning experience because, you know, you're just all right now, you're, now your expectations are through the roof, you know, and now we're recruiting a different caliber of player, we're playing against a different caliber of player and coach, and it's night in, night out.
Speaker BYou know, there were no, the biggest difference that, that we saw was, you know, not that there were nights off, but I mean, if you came with your B plus game, you were probably going to lose versus, you know, at Utah State, we had some really, really talented teams and there were nights maybe we didn't play our best, but we could still win.
Speaker BAnd so getting up to that level, I mean, it's just, you know, it's a, it's a brutal grind for sure.
Speaker BBut in terms of that opportunity, I mean, it was awesome.
Speaker BI mean, that was my first full time gig and so I was able to work in a lot of different aspects.
Speaker BYou know, as a ga, I was doing a lot of operation stuff.
Speaker BSo then as the director of scouting at Utah, I was taking on more of a role of helping with some scouts and helping with recruiting.
Speaker BYou know, I wasn't on the road, I wasn't calling kids and doing that stuff, but I, I was helping out with the process.
Speaker BSo I was kind of expanding my roles and what I, what I could do there and all.
Speaker BWorking obviously for an awesome coach, an awesome person.
Speaker BSo, so that was great.
Speaker BOur team that first year wasn't awesome, but it was a really fun group to be around.
Speaker BThat's the one thing about Craig Smith that, that I've always loved is like the people that he attracts and the, the practice and the environment that he, he provides.
Speaker BEvery day is a joy to be around, a joy to be a part of literally every day.
Speaker BI don't know how he does it.
Speaker BIt could be the, could be the cups of coffee he has.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BHe has a couple every day.
Speaker BAnd so I've probably taken after him a little bit that way, but.
Speaker BBut no, I, I loved, loved being there.
Speaker BWe loved living in Salt Lake.
Speaker BIt's an awesome city, it's an awesome town.
Speaker BSo wish we could have been there longer, but obviously a great opportunity came up for me to be an assistant coach and on the road recruiting and, you know, being hands, hands on for the first time at South Dakota.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ATalk about just being able to take on that full time role and be able to be on the floor, be able to recruit, to be able to do all the things.
Speaker AWhen somebody thinks about the role that an assistant coach has, you're stepping up into all of those different opportunities to be able to grow yourself and, and really work on your craft.
Speaker ASo just talk about how that's impacted you, just your own growth as a coach to be able to have that more responsibility that you've had at South Dakota.
Speaker BYeah, I mean, I think when you're not, when you're not on the, on the floor, you're not presenting the scout, you're not in, you haven't watched all the games and you haven't cut it all yourself.
Speaker BI think it's easy to have an opinion of what you think.
Speaker BLike, man, we should have done this, right?
Speaker BBut then when, when you are, when it's yours, right?
Speaker BIt's, you know, you're the one recruiting the, the kid.
Speaker BYou're the one that's, you know, you've watched all this stuff or you're, you, you have the scout.
Speaker BIt's just like you, you understand things way more fully to, to see the broader picture and fully grasp the, you know, the amount of work.
Speaker BBut also, you know, there's, there's decisions that go into all of this stuff and you have to think things through fully and you got to really cover all your bases and make sure you're, you're really doing the work.
Speaker BAnd, and I think that was a little bit eye opening, but also like exciting because it was like, that's what I wanted to do.
Speaker BI wanted to like, be the one to, to make a decision there to, to say, this is the guy I believe in and, and here's his number or, you know, I think we should change our ball screen coverage for this and here is why, you know, and then let's do it.
Speaker BLet's execute it.
Speaker BLet's, let's work on it here in the next couple of days and then we're going to do it.
Speaker BSo that, that was, that was an awesome opportunity, but also kind of to your point, you know that there's, there's a lot, there's a big world that you're stepping into.
Speaker BYou're not just helping someone with the decision.
Speaker BYou are the, you're making that decision now.
Speaker BSo taking on that responsibility and having the confidence in yourself and having the confidence in the work that you're putting in that, that.
Speaker BYep, I, I've got this.
Speaker BYou know, I might not be right all the time, but, you know, I think the process, at least I'm, I'm gonna, I'm gonna believe in that.
Speaker ASo how do you guys delegate roles there?
Speaker ALet's just say on the practice floor, in terms of, do you go offensive, defensive coordinators, everybody kind of coaching everything.
Speaker AIs it bigs versus bigs and wings and guards?
Speaker AHow do you guys divide up the responsibility on your staff?
Speaker BYeah, so we do, we do position groups.
Speaker BSo I was a big, you know, so I coach the bigs.
Speaker BWe do big, big wings, guards.
Speaker BI'm sure that's pretty standard across the board.
Speaker BAnd then we do split up offensive coordinator and defensive.
Speaker BAnd then we play pretty unique style.
Speaker BWe press.
Speaker BWe're.
Speaker BWe're number two tempo team in the country.
Speaker BAnd we pressed on every makes, misses, everything.
Speaker BSo we had a guy that was in charge of the press portion of our defense.
Speaker BSo I did, I did the, the half court defense.
Speaker BI did a lot of that stuff in the scouting reports and, and things that way.
Speaker BSo that's kind of how we divide it up.
Speaker BBut as you know, everything is connected, so, you know, you can't make a decision over here that won't affect a decision over here.
Speaker BSo the way that we played offense, the way that we pressed, we kind of all had to collaborate on those things to make sure.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAre these things making sense for us?
Speaker BYou know, are these things the same to where our guys are going to be able to execute and do this every possession?
Speaker AGo along with that.
Speaker AWhen you guys are talking through and having meetings about how you're going to design your practices, what does that look like in terms of how much input do you as an assistant coach have into what goes on?
Speaker AAre you guys watching the film from the previous day's practice and then thinking, hey, we got to work on this.
Speaker AObviously, during the season, you're looking at game film and trying to figure out, hey, what do we need to work on between now and the next game?
Speaker ABut just what's the practice planning process like for you guys and staff?
Speaker BYeah, our head coach definitely kind of has a, an outline of and kind of a general plan of what he wants to get done in that day.
Speaker BAnd then, you know, we kind of send.
Speaker BWhether it's a few thoughts or a few things that we think we need to get done, and then we'll all Meet and talk about, like, how can we get these things done?
Speaker BWhat, what can we tweak?
Speaker BWhere can we.
Speaker BShould we do this?
Speaker BShould we break this down into a half court thing first?
Speaker BOr should we just throw it and see what happens?
Speaker BYou know?
Speaker BAnd so I would say there's definitely.
Speaker BThere's a lot of ideas that come in.
Speaker BOur head coach has an idea of what he wants to get done that day, too.
Speaker BAnd then we kind of all talk things through and maybe make some tweaks to everything here and there.
Speaker BJust.
Speaker BBut yeah, I think in terms of.
Speaker BWe do watch the practices from the day before.
Speaker BWe do a version of the analytics stuff that the guys at Stanford, previously Washington State and San Francisco, and that whole, you know, where we're charting certain things and have certain values for, you know, defensive execution errors and deflections and steals and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker BSo then we're able to see, like, all right, we had 17 screen and roll errors.
Speaker BTomorrow we need to.
Speaker BWe need to dial in on our screen and roll defense.
Speaker BSo I think there's.
Speaker BThere's a little bit of both of those things going on all at once.
Speaker BI think the biggest thing, the biggest challenge, I guess, with that is trying not to skip steps, you know, and understanding, like, we don't have everything in, but it'll come if we, if we start from the bottom.
Speaker BWe build up.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker BBecause, I mean, there's just so many things you want to do, and it's hard to, to rein yourself back in and just say, okay, like, we'll get there eventually, but let's, let's work on, let's work on guarding the ball first.
Speaker AThat is so funny, Brandon, because I think that, that sentiment that you just shared, I think you could talk to any coach at any level of basketball.
Speaker AAnd I think about when I've coached my own kids, whether it's their travel team or AAU team and going back to third, fourth, fifth grade and just being like, man, if we could only get this in or we could only do that, and man, if we could have three practices a week instead of two, imagine how much could we could get done.
Speaker AAnd even now, like, I have.
Speaker AMy.
Speaker AMy daughter is, you know, who I told you about before.
Speaker AShe's in.
Speaker AShe's in ninth grade and coaching her AE team.
Speaker AAnd I just help out with the team and the number of times that we'll.
Speaker AOur head coach will say to me, he's like, man, if I was a high school coach, I had the girls five days a week for an hour and A half or two hours.
Speaker ACould you imagine all the stuff that we could do?
Speaker AAnd I'm like, you just would want to do more.
Speaker AYou would never, you would never feel like you had enough time.
Speaker AYou'd always want to do more.
Speaker AAnd I think that's just endemic to the coaching profession.
Speaker AAnd to your point, that goes to, obviously I asked you about the day to day planning, but what you're talking about goes to the bigger.
Speaker AI'm sure that's kind of what you guys are doing now, right?
Speaker AIs almost mapping out, knowing what the rhythm is from season to season of, hey, we know it's going to take again, every team is probably a little bit different, but we know it's going to take 10 days to be able to get in X.
Speaker AAnd then once we have that down, then we can add on Y and so forth.
Speaker AAnd so it's kind of the, the daily practice planning is one thing, but then sort of the, the bigger picture of curriculum, for lack of a better way of saying it, of kind of what that rhythm is going to be like.
Speaker AI'm sure that's what you guys are partly doing in the off season, is trying to plan out, hey, what does that look like over the summer in terms of the player development, then as we get into the fall and then obviously into the, the real meat of the preseason to be able to practice, to get your team ready to play a game.
Speaker AI'm sure that's all a piece of it.
Speaker BFor sure.
Speaker BI mean, and that's you, you want to know what, what are we getting done today?
Speaker BBut also what are we building to?
Speaker BAnd it's just, man, we, you can't forget that in January when we're getting ready to play South Dakota State and we're playing them in two days.
Speaker BAnd you know, we want to, we want to add this thing and we want to take this away, but we also, like, we gotta keep, we gotta keep making sure we're really good at what we do, you know, and that's, that's the thing that's like, you kind of got to always remind yourself is like, especially nowadays where I think you have so many teams that are going to have so many new guys every year, it's really, it's rare that you're going to see a kid that's like, okay, I've been here for three years or four years and so I know, I just know what's going on so you can get to all those things.
Speaker BYou know, it's just, it's rare that we're Going to, you're going to see that now.
Speaker BSo just trying to keep it as simple as possible while also being able to add where you need and to have your change up, have the curveball thing that can win you a game, because those things do win you games.
Speaker BBut also understanding, like, all right, if we play 31 games in our regular season, if we're really good at these four things, we'll probably win 26, you know, but if we start trying to be really good at 15 things, you know, then.
Speaker BThen are we, are we really going to be good enough?
Speaker BSo that's, you know, that's, that's the battle constantly is just, you know, there are so many things that you can do, but should we, you know, and that's, that's the, that's the thought.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AEspecially in today's world where you can go and you can find, hey, check out this cool clip on Twitter.
Speaker AHey, check out this thing that somebody's doing on YouTube or, man, we could really start looking at that.
Speaker AAnd again, I'm sure that you.
Speaker AOver the course of your career, I've talked to so many assistant coaches that again, they're just grabbing stuff and trying to build.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AYour portfolio of things that you're thinking about that maybe at some point, if you would were to get an opportunity to be a head coach, you're kind of building, hey, I like this, I like that.
Speaker AAnd there's, there's a million things that I can go through and scroll on Twitter for 15 minutes and be like, wow, I love that.
Speaker AThat's cool.
Speaker AAnd let's try.
Speaker ALet's try this.
Speaker ABut to your point, you got to put the base in first and make sure that you're able to do the things that, you know, you need to do in order to be able to have the kind of success that you're talking about.
Speaker AIf you can't do the four things that are the most important to you as a program, if you're just okay at thing 22, it's probably not.
Speaker AIt's probably not going to help you win very many games.
Speaker AAs opposed to being good at the, the baseline things that you really, that you really need to be good at.
Speaker ATo me, that always seems like it's clearly the most important thing.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBefore that, our, Our, the way we play with our press now has really cleared that up because there are things that are, they're all great, and these are, these are great things to do, but they don't fit with how we're playing, you know, and so that's been awesome to just be like, man, that was a.
Speaker BThat was a really cool thing that they did defensively.
Speaker BBut, like, we just.
Speaker BWe're not going to do that because.
Speaker ARight, exactly.
Speaker BWe're going to be pressing and we're going to be doing these things.
Speaker BWe're going to be creating more chaos.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo it's been.
Speaker BIt's been nice to be able to then, like, have that thought of, like, okay, regardless of what style of play you're playing, the things got to make sense.
Speaker BYou know, they gotta.
Speaker BThey gotta make sense together, whether that's offensively, defensively, or, you know, you're.
Speaker BWe call them special teams.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BOur end outs, side outs, things like that.
Speaker BThey just.
Speaker BThey got to be all connected.
Speaker BAnd that's been.
Speaker BThat's been one really clarifying thing, and it's been great for us.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, I can imagine that.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThat the style of play kind of dictates.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AIf we're going to do anything, it's got to be within the confines of this style of play, and it eliminates a lot of the shiny new toys that you might peek at over here.
Speaker AAnd you're like, yeah, that doesn't really fit what we're trying to do.
Speaker AAnd obviously, as you're going up and down the floor, both offensively and defensively, you're playing a style of play that everybody.
Speaker AWhen.
Speaker AWhen you ask coaches, right, or when you ask players, how do you want to play, everybody says, right, we want to run.
Speaker AWe want to play at a fast pace.
Speaker AThat's what everybody says.
Speaker AAnd yet not everybody.
Speaker ANot every.
Speaker ANot everybody plays that way.
Speaker AAnd it takes a certain mentality.
Speaker AAnd I'm always really impressed when I see teams that just get the ball down the floor offensively and teams that immediately can transition that.
Speaker AThat quick transition from offense to defense or from defense to offense.
Speaker AWhen you're talking about a team that's playing the style like you guys, to me, that first half.
Speaker ASecond, when there's a transition, whether it's a rebound, a steal, a made basket, going either direction, to me, that.
Speaker AWhatever.
Speaker AHalf.
Speaker ASecond.
Speaker ASecond in that transition is really, I'm sure, where you guys make your money.
Speaker AHow do you teach that?
Speaker BIt's.
Speaker BIt's not easy.
Speaker BI think a lot of it starts this summer, and.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWe got to get in shape because if you're playing that way, you're playing really hard and you're putting a lot of effort into both sides of the basketball.
Speaker BYou know, pressing 94ft every possession takes it out of you.
Speaker BSo I think that's the first thing.
Speaker BBut it's, it is a mentality, right, where there's going to be sloppiness, there's going to be.
Speaker BThey're going to get a layup, right?
Speaker BThey're going to get an open 3 on the back end of our press.
Speaker BIt's going to happen.
Speaker BWe hope it doesn't happen very much, but if it does, we like move on, right?
Speaker BIt's got to be next play.
Speaker BLike we have to take the ball out of the net and go.
Speaker BBecause how many teams do you watch that hit a three and they're all celebrating or whatever.
Speaker BAnd if we have the right mentality, right, they're.
Speaker BOh, and now they're two steps behind, right?
Speaker BSo just, you know, and it starts in practice and it starts literally day one in practice of offensively, right.
Speaker BIn a skill workout, guy misses a shot, hangs his head.
Speaker BNope.
Speaker BYou know, you gotta nip that in the bud right away because not only for that player's self confidence, but for how we're gonna play.
Speaker BLike no, man, you gotta move on, right?
Speaker BWe're going to have turnovers because we're playing so fast, right?
Speaker BWe might, we might dribble it off our foot one time, like, and you got to move on, right?
Speaker BThat's part of it.
Speaker BAnd so half of that is on our end of understanding, like mistakes are going to happen.
Speaker BWe're going to give up a layup and that's okay.
Speaker BWhich is really hard to do as a coach, but then to instill that in the players and you know, it is fun once it's instilled because then the, you see their minds free up, you know, to where, okay, like I can make a mistake and, and it's not the end of the world.
Speaker BThey can score and it's not the end of the world.
Speaker BI can miss a shot.
Speaker BIt's not the end of the world.
Speaker BAnd so they're never going to look over their shoulder.
Speaker BThey're never going to wonder am I going to come out because I didn't do whatever, you know, now we have our non negotiables, of course, like anybody does.
Speaker BBut I think once it clicks, you know, then your mind is freed to just play and play really hard and, and that's where, that's where we've kind of made our hay this last year.
Speaker AAnd that's really important as a player to not have to look over your shoulder.
Speaker AI think you talk to any player who's played the game at any kind of a level and if you have to look over your shoulder because you think that buzzer is going to hit anytime you make a mistake.
Speaker AYou and I both know that there's no way to play at your best when that's the way that you're playing the game.
Speaker ALooking over your shoulder, it just, it just doesn't work.
Speaker AAnd if you can get that mentality out of your players and allow them to play free and loose and I think playing at a fast tempo, once you get them to, as you said, to train them to be able to, to make sure that that's, they all know what's expected of them, that then you have the best chance of getting the most out of them.
Speaker AAll right, I want to ask you one final two part question before we get out of here.
Speaker APart one, when you think about the next year or two, what do you see as being your biggest challenge?
Speaker ASecond part of the question, when you think about what you get to do every day, what brings you the most joy?
Speaker ASo your biggest challenge and then your biggest joy.
Speaker BYeah, biggest challenge.
Speaker BThat's an awesome question.
Speaker BYou know, I think the biggest challenge we've over, especially the next year or two, we've built over the last three years, started to build this, this culture and you know, building up to winning and we won 19 games last year and, and that was a great step forward.
Speaker BAnd now it's, now it's maintaining, it's making, making that a program.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BGetting over the hump, getting to, you know, we want to win a championship, but we don't, we don't want to just win one time.
Speaker BYou know, we want to sustain it.
Speaker BWe want to build to where we're winning year in, year out.
Speaker BAnd you, we all know who those programs are, you know, and you could look at a league and pick them out too.
Speaker BAnd that's, I think that's, it's the biggest challenge.
Speaker BIt's exciting because that's, I think we're in position to do it and we've brought guys back and we have, we have retained a ton over the last three years and including this season, you know, we haven't lost too much into the portal, which has been great.
Speaker BBut I think that's the biggest challenges, is not just having success, but sustaining it year in, year out and continuing to bring in the right type of guys, the right people.
Speaker BAnd then I would say the biggest joy is, is when we are able to do that.
Speaker BThe guys that have come in and maybe they red shirted or maybe they transferred in because they didn't have an opportunity somewhere else.
Speaker BAnd to see them go from this in here and just blossom and getting that opportunity and them realizing it themselves, like, man, I'm getting way better, man, I have an opportunity.
Speaker BI have somebody that believes in me.
Speaker BThat has been the biggest joy for me, you know, and just a couple specific examples like Caleb Stewart, you know, he's kid from Houston.
Speaker BWe recruited him out of the portal.
Speaker BCame from Louisiana Tech and just had a spot role, you know, was kind of in and out of the lineup.
Speaker BCame in and averaged almost 20 points a game for us.
Speaker BAnd it took him a little while to kind of be like, oh, like, I can, I can do that, I can shoot, I can.
Speaker BYou want me to attack like that?
Speaker BOh, okay.
Speaker BAnd then just to see him like become not just a leading scorer, our leader and a voice on the team, and now he's going to go overseas and play professionally, like, that's awesome, you know, and then we have some freshmen that red shirted for us and, and now we're playing 20 plus minutes a game, you know, and it's, it's just, just seeing those guys, whatever their circumstance, has been to come in one way and grow on and off the court in so many different ways and blossom, that's been by far the, the biggest joy for me.
Speaker ABeing able to use the game of basketball to impact those kids not only in terms of what they're able to do on the basketball floor, but as you said, to be able to grow as people off the court.
Speaker AIt's one of the best things about being a coach is being able to use basketball to be able to, to be able to do that.
Speaker AAll right, before we wrap up, I want to give you a chance to share.
Speaker AHow can people connect with you?
Speaker AFind out more about your program, share, email, social media, website, whatever you feel comfortable with.
Speaker AAnd then after you do that, I'll jump back in and wrap things up.
Speaker BYeah, I guess my social media is just all at Brandon Ubell.
Speaker BI kept it pretty simple.
Speaker BU B E L is my last name.
Speaker BAnd yeah, I mean, just our, our website, brandon ubellsd.edu.
Speaker Bi think if, if you want to watch a very unique but very fun brand of basketball, goyotes.com is our, is our site.
Speaker BI think some of them are streamed on there.
Speaker BI think Midco does an awesome job.
Speaker BBut if you ever see us on national tv, tune in because it's, it is a ton of fun, you know, and would love to hear anything or anybody to connect and ask questions or whatever or just share any thoughts because you know what we are doing is very unique.
Speaker BBut also we know there's room to grow and room to improve and all kinds of things.
Speaker BAnd even if it's just to talk shop or connect or whatever, I'm always open to that.
Speaker BSo yeah, anything and everything.
Speaker BWould love for people to watch us play play, but also would love for people to connect with me if they want to do that as well.
Speaker ABrandon, cannot thank you enough for taking the time out of your schedule tonight to join us.
Speaker AReally appreciate it.
Speaker AAnd to everyone out there, thanks for listening and we will catch you on our next episode.
Speaker AThanks.
Speaker BThanks for listening to the Hoop Heads podcast presented by Head Start Basketball.
Speaker ASam.