Anyway, as an assistant, I was someone who really only put in my input when asked or permitted. (My 2nd year I inserted an offense before the championship game, at the request of the head coach).
Anyway, this year, the school has decided to hand me the entire boys program (JV & Varsity) for this season and into the future.
But, last year, I did JV alone, with no assistant, and I've always said that I never want an assistant. But, the chairman of the board appointed his son my assistant. I had played in high school with his son and let me say, he doesn't have a good grasp on the game and how to manage it as a player, coach, anything..
The problem I'm having with him so far, in pre-season workouts is that he is having a tough time accepting that it's MY program. He constantly talks over me, undermines me, disagrees with me in front of MY players. He treats it as though I'm his assistant.
Also, I knew this would be the case, but we've discussed our ideas for the program, and he differs with me on everything (and as far as I'm concerned, he has the worst ideas. He has his mind made up on what he wants to do, and his mindset is..."we're running this, regardless of the personnel." As I know (and anyone who has ever known anything about teaching basketball), you can't do that..you have to adjust your system to what you have.
Since it's just pre-season conditioning, I have no issue letting him just control workouts; I just make sure he's doing the workouts I want to do.
Once the season starts, I fully intend to put my foot down and let him and the players know that this is MY program, we do things MY way, etc.
Basically, I'm asking if anyone has any advice for me on how to hand it.
My dad coached for 40+ years, and said that what I need to do is make sure it's known to the players that I'm the head, not him. He also said that I need make sure that we go into practice with everything planned out to the minute so that he can't try to do his own thing.
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