> SOUTHERN INDIANA —
“The road to Hell is paved with good intentions” is a proverb that has been around for many years.
With the New Year upon us, it is often a time that we make resolutions to be different, to be better, and we do so with good intentions.
However, within weeks, if not days, our good intentions falter and we fall back to what we were before.
At the mid-season point in basketball, every team is in the midst of a journey. If that team is winning, its resolution is to continue doing what they have done so far. If that team is not winning, its resolution may be to get on the right track or stay on the right track and compete for some success when the games get started again.
By the end of January, those good intentions will have been played out ... or not. What causes these good intentions to falter or succeed? Mental toughness. If you are faltering by the end of December, it is going to take a monumental effort to not be faltering after January — but it can be done.
I would be willing to bet that not too many resolutions have been kept for the New Year throughout humankind. Why? Because, those who are motivated or disciplined do not need a new resolution, they are already living the life they need to be successful.
However, a little reminder doesn’t hurt for coaches or players, so here is a “Basketball Resolution” for the New Year:
• I will take responsibility for myself, my team and work to improve each day.
• I will love my team, understanding that even though we have differences, we are together in this.
• I will be faithful to my team, teammates and coaches by saying nothing negatively in public or online.
• I will help to improve myself, my teammates, and be an example for those younger than I.
• I will compete fearing no one and respecting everyone.
• I will forgive those who have wronged me to focus on improving our team.
• I will learn from my mistakes and walk with integrity in positive and negative situations.
• I will seek to honor my parents, my school, my community, my teammates and my coaches with my play and effort.
• I will work every day to fulfill this Resolution by stopping to reflect each day after practice or games.
By executing this Resolution, I can not guarantee any more wins for your team, but I can guarantee that you will be a team that is fun to watch and one that is respected by not just your fan base, but those surrounding communities on your schedule.
I think you can do these thing and still be a competitor, because it is more about respecting the game than it is about being soft.
There is nothing soft about this “Resolution.” In fact, it takes a lot of toughness to do these things every day.
Sports
HUNTER: Basketball Resolutions
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CLASS 4A, JEFF SECTIONAL: Highlanders, Stars to meet in semfinals
FC blows out Seymour , 16-3; Red Devils blow one-run lead in seventh to lose to BNL, 6-3
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CLASS A LANESVILLE SECTIONAL: Morris leads New Wash past Borden
Mustangs will face Lanesville in tonight’s championship
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CLASS 2A EASTERN SECTIONAL: Providence advances to face Paoli
Pioneers let lead slip away, win it in ninth; Clarksville falls to Rams, 13-3
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COLLEGE NOTEBOOK: May 21, 2013
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK
• Jeff Thompson (Louisville baseball, Floyd Central graduate, Jr.) — top performance: winning pitcher in a starting role in the Cardinals’ 12-4 home victory over Pittsburgh on Friday, seven innings pitched, three runs allowed (all earned), three hits, seven strikeouts, three walks; notes: Thompson became the sixth pitcher in U of L history to earn 10 or more victories in a season on Friday; he is one win away from tying the school record for most victories in a season; Friday’s win clinched the Cardinals a share of the Big East Conference championship; they claimed the outright conference title on Saturday with a 7-4 home triumph over the Panthers; team records: 46-10 overall, 20-4 Big East; Thompson’s record: 10-1. -
HUNTER: In one household
Schroeders have combined 505 wins, 17 conference titles, 10 sectional championships and one regional crown
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H.S. BASEBALL: Bulldogs beat Providence to win Sajko Invitational
New Albany’s 8-5 win gives Bulldogs 10th consecutive title
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H.S. BOYS' GOLF: Hornets, Highlanders take conference crowns
Davidson, three Borden players earn All-SAC honors
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H.S. SOFTBALL: Pursuit of sectional championships begin tonight
Jeff, Charlestown and Providence are Greg’s picks to win titles
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H.S. ROUNDUP: No. 1 Floyd goes 1-1, Jeff loses pair of one-run games
Pirates fall short in Charlestown Softball Invitational
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INDY 500: Hometown Carpenter wins pole for 97th Indianapolis 500
Rookie Munoz, Andretti fill out front row
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