“Everything Plays a Part Doesn’t It?’’: A Contemporary Model of Lifelong Coach Development in Elite Sport
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Data Collection
…the story a person chooses to tell about the life he or she has lived, told as completely and honestly as possible, what the person wants to remember of it and what he or she wants others to know of it, usually as a result of a guided interview by another. The resulting life story is the narrative essence of what has happened to the person. It can cover the time from birth to the present or before and beyond. It includes the important events, experiences, and feelings of a lifetime…A life story gives us a vantage point from which to see how one person experiences and understands life, his or her own especially, over time.(pp. 125–126)
2.4. Data Analysis
The strength of grounded theory methods lie in its focus and flexibility and that one must engage the method to make this strength real. Researchers can draw on the flexibility of grounded theory without transforming it into rigid prescriptions concerning data collection, analysis, theoretical leaning, and epistemological positions.
2.5. Quality and Rigour
3. Results
3.1. Childhood Experiences
My father played rugby league. He ended up going to the city and played down there. He went on to represent the city and our state. My cousin went also to the city and played there. He represented the state and national team. My brother was also a rugby player, he went on to captain the state and played in the city. So we all played, all eventually went to the city and played for the same club.We’d go and watch him (my dad) play and my mother would take us into the tea room before the game. Obviously, she’d have a cup of tea or whatever she was drinking with the rest of the wives. We’d play with the other kids. We’d take a ball. If we didn’t have a ball we’d get an old beer can and after the game we’d go on the pitch and kick the cans over the sticks (meaning goalposts).
In the town, there’s a miner’s welfare facility where there’s a cricket field, a rugby field, a soccer field, which was a ten-minute walk away. We’d walk up there in the summer holidays and we’d play rugby games, and I’m talking for an hour/two hours on end. We’d take our Australian kits up and our Great Britain kits, so it would be Australia versus Great Britain, and we’d take the Vaseline up, tape our heads up, put our boots on, and we’d knock seven bells out of each other! But I’m certain…well, I know that a lot of my skills were picked up then, you know… It’s probably no coincidence that a lot of the guys that played with me then were creative players in the teams they went on to play (professionally) with.It was a competitive upbringing. My brother and I were competitive. Good memories really. We didn’t fight too often. We did some ridiculous games, but they were always games where there was a winner. They weren’t friendlies, they were competitive. While we didn’t fight over it too much, we understood we didn’t want to lose.
I felt more mature (compared to my peers) from a game perspective, not just in rugby league but in any game that we played. That was because I was such an avid fan of it and also...I like to think I was reasonably bright, so I could understand it as well, and I mean... I always was either captain or vice-captain of the school team going right the way through. You just … you were the boss or the leader, you know, in that little group.
I went to school just around the corner (from my local club) and when we played rugby league, which they did then as 13-a-side even at junior school, we played on the club’s training field, so there’s a link there. They (the professional club) used to train Tuesday and Thursdays, and I used to always go down and watch them, and play touch and pass behind the posts, and see them. I mean... it was just... my whole life has been steeped in it (the club and rugby league).…where I lived it was very…you were out all the time…. like school holidays, first thing in the morning. ‘Cos I never slept (great), I’d be out all day ‘til last thing at night…I used to get them Rothmans (rugby league) yearbooks and I was obsessed with it and the first year we (the team I watched as a child) played at Wembley, I knew the players and what score it was and what the crowd was. So, I knew all the details. I was obsessed with reading it…best presents I ever had were those books. Every annual I got I was in awe. Going to watch matches and going on the pitch and being near a player. You know I was obsessed with it…I was obsessed. Like now in my job…I feel like it’s not a job…it’s an obsession…I never stopped doing it.
3.2. Developmental and/or Elite Athletic Experience
As a full back, because you are the captain of the defensive side, you’ve got to organise where your defence is going and what I learnt pretty early was that you have to be loud as a full back to push people around. When I came to England as a young lad, Barry, who was captain and an international player…every game we used to fall out with each other because I used to abuse the shit out of him because he was a lazy bastard. I shouted at him to move and what have you. So, I’ve never been shy as a player, and people in front of me just become pawns in what I’m trying to achieve defensively, and that’s where the leadership came from, loud to get people in position and what have you.I’d always been a main player in a team… I needed the support around me, but I could help everybody else. If I had good players around me, I could really help them, put them into position, tell them what to do, (be the) eyes and ears for them.
His blinkered attitude to winning…I think I’ve got that. Nothing else really matters. I know every rule in rugby league and I try to…not break them…bend them to my advantage (as a coach). We’ll work on things and get the maximum out of everything to give my team every opportunity to win. And he had that attitude. I don’t know if I’ve got it off him, or it’s in me, or if he brought it out of me. I definitely got it off him … the will to win.
I think every coach helps build the type of coach you are…whether it be your perceived good things they do or the bad things. You just know what you think is right and what’s not, and what you think is a good idea and what’s not. It’s not just the good things; it’s the bad things.(From the Head Coach)…it was just a desire to win and the fact he’d leave nothing unturned in order to win. From the Reserve Coach, I got very much tactical expertise. He was really clever… I mean you just got different things from different people.He was a lovely guy, but he wasn’t my type of coach…he was crazy, just fucking crazy! I was a bloke that wanted to understand about the game, wanted to be coached. He was just a mental case. Yes, bullying and intimidating. He was embarrassing really. He just wasn’t a coach. He just didn’t know the game. Fundamentally he was quite a nice guy, but I’ve seen him lay his hands on players. He was just all about intimidation and fear.
He was the one. And he’s said things to me which I use to this day. And he was very much into repetition. And I’m very much into repetition. And it’s not about doing it, it’s about doing it right … perfect practice makes perfect. Repetition but not only that … but breaking them down. So like…it’s that bit… doing that bit…doing that bit and all of a sudden you put it all together and you get it. That’s the way I’ve done things for years and years. He’s the one.I value his view on things. He gets me as well. He understands me. He’s a deep thinker. I think about things a bit differently than a lot of other people and I feel he understands that. He understands what works for me and what doesn’t work for me. So I lean on him quite a bit and I speak to him quite a lot. That was him on the phone just then... I speak to him about six times a day!
3.3. Coaching Experiences
He said to me “Will you help me do some sessions for England students?” And I’d done bits and bobs for him. I’d gone down and helped him take sessions, but this was really the start of it all. I went down and I helped him coach the England students. So I was taking sessions and I was genuinely hands on coaching then, and that was… I wanted to have a go. I wanted to test myself and see what it was like.I helped him (the head coach), sat next to him every game, spoke to him about different players, what I saw during the game. And we stayed in contact, and he offered me the job (as his assistant coach) a few years later. I was finished as a player… I was only 29, maybe 30. And that was it.
You got the nitty gritty that it isn’t just about coaching and education (of players). There’s also a bigger picture about finance, and resources, and facilities, and that really did come to me, first of all as a reserve team coach at the club I played at, but more so at the lower league club where they hadn’t got two halfpennies to rub together.I look back when I got that job (at a lower league club)...it was all my way… I didn’t have the understanding of technicalities…of principles like the very top coaches had at that point. But what I was doing…I was gaining tremendous on-field experience of managing, recognising when a session or a drill wasn’t particularly working.
He was a huge influence on me. I worked with him for nine years… and I suspect a lot of his mentoring and his philosophy… I think I’ve probably taken on board as well. Massive influence on my career, very caring man, always taught me to get the office in order first, get the staff organised and the players will follow after that. I guess it was the early 90s where I thought “maybe I do want to be a coach” and he was giving me more and more leeway, he was more flexible, he was involving me more…I was being ‘groomed’ (to be a head coach) and I probably didn’t realise it.What I really learnt from him was to sit down at the end of each day and review what we’d done and discuss what we were going to do the next day...its planning...as a team…what we’ve done, what we’ve got out of it…if that was any good or was it shit? How the players were…were they intense or were they not intense? But also, we’d go onto organising what we were doing the next day, so when we came in the next morning and we’d have our 10 min meeting in the morning, everything is planned out…”You’re doing this, you’re doing this and you’re doing this…” Sorted!
So it was a good grounding for me. I got to do some of the stuff. The head coach, Paul, was good… he had plenty of time for me. So the time I had with him was a real good grounding for me…And as time got on and I got better he gave me more reign. Eventually at the end, I did my stuff, he did his stuff and there wasn’t too much looking over anyone’s shoulder. It worked really smoothly… I speak to Paul a lot still. Paul had a big one (influence). He’s the only bloke I’ve been under as an assistant coach.
I think understanding the player was a big thing for me…understanding what makes a player tick… understanding what their needs are and what they want. It wasn’t just about tactics and strategies and about periodization, planning and about nutrition and biomechanics and sports medicine. It was about understanding how to manage the player…managing people. What I learnt very quickly was that the higher the level of the player, the more that person wanted off you …the more they demanded off you and that’s an interesting thing a lot of people don’t think about that. If you think about some of those Australian internationals (that he worked with)… the greats of that era, you just think they went about their business without…it was naturally gifted. But it’s not… they actually worked harder than most, they wanted to be challenged and they wanted to you to challenge them and at the same time, they were challenging you.
3.4. Intentional Learning
There’s obviously Paul…I speak to Paul a lot still. Sharpie’s (one of the most successful SL coaches in recent years) been good to me. I’ve got those coaches in Australia, obviously my brother (also a professional coach). There’s plenty of people to talk about different ideas and how things are going. When I was in France a guy, Danny, he’s like a psychologist, so the mental side of the game. He’s done some good books on things, worked in Premier League football and different places. He was good. Jamie (a leadership expert), who used to work with us and he’s in Australia, I speak to him now and then, he’s been good.
I’ve been in the game so long, so you build up many, many, many contacts, and you get lots of anecdotal evidence, and you read books and you go and visit people as well. So there’s that ongoing professional development as well. I’m a firm believer, just as you rightly pointed out, you learn more with the informal sit down and have a chat, you know, like Craig (former Australian head coach). I spoke to Craig the last time he was over here with the Australian team. I went and spent an afternoon with him and it isn’t so much going watching them train. It’s more a matter of sitting with him over a cup of coffee and seeing what he thinks about…because you build up contacts over such a long period of time, you can ring people up or visit people without any problem at all.
When I coached at my first club we pumped a top SL club in a pre-season friendly and Sharpie came to after and said he was really impressed with how we played and “Here’s my phone number.” I rang him up that weekend and said, “Thanks for that.” He said, “Any time you want to come up to our training ground, come up.” So I went. I was there at 6.00 a.m. when Sharpie gets there and I went to a game and then another game. To be fair, we’re great mates now. I kept in touch with him ever since. I wasn’t afraid to ring him if I felt “Mate, I’m struggling to get my team to do this. What do you think?” And he’d just talk through the processes he’d go through and been a real help. Still do it today…I’m not afraid to say I wouldn’t hesitate to ring Sharpie up about owt. I speak to … Three or four of them I’m really good mates with, but if I’ve got some issues, serious issues, Sharpie is the one I talk to.
It’s on-going…you’re never the complete coach. I don’t think you could say that. I think you’ve always got to be striving to be better than your opposition. I think you’ve always got to be striving to find the Holy Grail that improves your team, improves your players, improves you as a coach. It’s never out there. You can never find it, so that’s probably something I’d always say is that you’re always in search for the Holy Grail as a coach. In searching for that Holy Grail, you’re going to find a whole lot of different things that you can use.
I’d rather pick and choose what I want to do. I’d rather do my own thing. My experience of previous courses is I’ve got nothing out of it. If I’m gonna spend five weekends doing a course, I want to get something out of it. If I do a speech to a group, they have to get something out of it. It’s (formal coach education) just a tick-box bullshit thing! I can’t do with that. I would never miss an opportunity of having somebody come in and not asking…when I first met you… I asked you why you were doing what you’re doing. And me? I need to get something out of it. I wanna learn and try and get better…. You’ve said a couple of things about me you’ve noticed but I’ve not thought about that (before) and it has got me thinking about it.
I went back to University shitting myself! It was all electronic learning… It was a different world and you’d got to master that in order to progress and go on. Again, like I was saying, I was out of my comfort zone but that’s part of my comfort zone (in regularly challenging himself). But it wouldn’t have been if I wouldn’t have accepted that challenge of learning in a different manner, in a different way, at a different place. It was linked with other sports. I watched numerous hockey sessions and...(I was) really impressed with their coaching philosophy down there, and how they were very much “you learn through doing”, and again, they did lots of scenarios within games for them to …
They had a period where they had a thing called bridging… they had to get you to change from the old system (of coaching qualifications) to the new. I did hundreds of them (supporting coaches through that process). I would go maybe to one place one night and do maybe ten people. I didn’t know these people from anything. I’d sit there, watch what they did. I had to be able to give feedback, which helped me, to be able to sit there and say “listen, this is what I think” and being able to do it in a way which was constructive without being threatening to them.
4. Discussion
The combination of processes throughout a lifetime whereby the whole person—body (genetic, physical and biological) and mind (knowledge, skills, attitudes, values, emotions, meaning, beliefs and senses)—experiences social situations, the perceived content of which is then transformed cognitively, emotively or practically (or through any combination) and integrated into the individual person’s biography resulting in a continually changing (or more experienced) person.
His coaching purpose was formed early in life, perhaps even as young as 6 years old when he eagerly helped his father, a college football coach at the time, analyze game film. His coaching purpose is rooted deeply in the pursuit of excellence and a love of football. The single core value that has long served as the guiding principle for all the teams he has coached is summed up in the simple mantra “Do your job!” Unwavering commitment to this core value is demonstrated through relentless preparation, incredible attention to details, a team-first attitude, and an intense work ethic.
I speak to people and well…it’s just what we do isn’t it (meaning how he coaches). But it’s not is it? It’s not just what you do… it’s come from somewhere.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Author Note
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Pseudonym | Background |
---|---|
Bob | An Australian coach with a successful playing career who spent most of his playing and coaching career in England. |
Mike | A successful Australian coach who had a limited playing career due to injury. Mike has coached at a number of English clubs, won major trophies and coached with a number of international teams. |
Steve | An experienced English coach who had a lengthy career as a player. Steve has won major trophies as a coach and worked with a number of international teams. |
Paul | An experienced English coach, who has also coached in the National Rugby League (NRL) in Australia and won major trophies. Paul had a lengthy playing career and has also coached internationally. |
Dave | A successful English coach who also had a lengthy and successful playing career. Dave has coached at multiple levels of rugby and won major trophies as both a player and coach. He has also coached at international level. |
John | The youngest and least experienced of the six coaches, John, an Australian, had a lengthy career as a player in England prior to becoming a coach. |
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Holmes, P.; Light, R.L.; Sparkes, A.C. “Everything Plays a Part Doesn’t It?’’: A Contemporary Model of Lifelong Coach Development in Elite Sport. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 932. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070932
Holmes P, Light RL, Sparkes AC. “Everything Plays a Part Doesn’t It?’’: A Contemporary Model of Lifelong Coach Development in Elite Sport. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(7):932. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070932
Chicago/Turabian StyleHolmes, Pete, Richard L. Light, and Andrew C. Sparkes. 2025. "“Everything Plays a Part Doesn’t It?’’: A Contemporary Model of Lifelong Coach Development in Elite Sport" Education Sciences 15, no. 7: 932. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070932
APA StyleHolmes, P., Light, R. L., & Sparkes, A. C. (2025). “Everything Plays a Part Doesn’t It?’’: A Contemporary Model of Lifelong Coach Development in Elite Sport. Education Sciences, 15(7), 932. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15070932