Melissa Hyndman is an international netball coach who has travelled the World coaching the sport she loves. Originally from New Zealand, Melissa has had many netball coaching roles including being Head Coach for the New Zealand Maoris team,Fiji national team and most recently the Welsh National team. In her interview below, we hear how New Zealands passion for sport has rubbed off on Melissa and how her coaching philosophy brought Team Wales up the World rankings from 19th to 8th.
You can read more from Melissa in our blogs section as she shares more of her experience and passion for netball.
Can you tell us about the culture of sport (particularly Netball) in New Zealand where you grew up? Is sport a big part of school life and is taking part in sport the norm for girls?
The culture in NZ is pretty amazing. It has been ingrained in us that to win is something to strive for. Striving for success is something to be proud of and winning is the Ultimate. I have grown up in a family that is super competitive, even monopoly can get pretty ugly in our household. Christmas time is awesome because it?s a massive sporting event with our family we compete in Tennis, swimming, netball, cricket, P?anque (for my Nanny), puzzles and over the last few years lawn bowls has been introduced. Usually names must be drawn from a hat as well, not that we are all competitive or anything.
Sport within schools in NZ is paramount. It is symbolic to all schools and means so much to the students to compete and represent their school. It?s a matter of pride and ?mana? which means prestige, power and effectiveness in Maori. Most schools now have very strict rules in place for the attendance of certain schools due to not just the academic side but the sporting performance side. So strict guidelines and barriers of where you must live within the school location are in force now. Which proves the importance of sport in the schools in NZ. The competition within the secondary school sector is immense. I can say that now after living in the UK for the last five years. I think it is something that must be addressed, soon, as the future talent for all sports are living and breathing within the schools. The future sporting heroes and heroines, role models for the future are all in our schools. The reason the southern hemisphere are so strong in sport and seem to have athletes being produced like robots is because every children plays some type of sport in school and the competition is fierce, regular and pathways are clear and concise to the top. Netball is very popular with most girls within NZ and there are hundreds of children, young girls and older women that crowd most courts during the week and on the weekends. It is just the norm and is a great way of life.
How did you become a netball coach?
What is your coaching philosophy and how do you ensure your teams reflect this?
My coaching philosophy is:
Motivate, Inspire, Mentor and Coach leading Principals and Beliefs within a Team to be Successful, On and Off the court but ultimately for Life
I am a straight talking, honest no frills Coach, Fair but hard. I am respectful of each and every player and understand that respect must be gained and earned. I treat people how I would like to be treated and am so passionate and love my job and this reflects in my coaching. I smile and have loads of fun doing it. Ultimately the holistic approach is the most important to me. Understanding the whole athlete is important and vital to inspiring and getting them to fly as I always say. People and Team are important to me and I love making athletes believe they can Do It, and Do It well there is nothing better for a coach to see people achieve nothing!! I know this type of philosophy that I have has helped the relationship between Coach and player, player to player, parents to coaches and players to parents. it has formed a great relationship which helps the athlete to learn how to communicate, self-reflect as well as feel comfortable enough to reflect within the team as a team. This is so important to create honesty and trust which develops Believe. So important within a team.
As well as Welsh Head Coach, you were also coach to the Celtic Dragons, a Netball Super-league side; how does coaching a club side differ from coaching a national team and what was your experience of the grand final like?
To me it was no different, as coaching is coaching but I think it was a lot different in the fact that I was the National coach for Wales who was coaching within a domestic competition in an England competition. Where other coaches were coaching for their area or NSL franchise, I was coaching for Celtic Dragons to strengthen our National team. This was only because we were, and still are, the only team outside of England in this competition. Although I used the ?import? card I think it was a great experience for the players to work with other players from different cultures. The import players brought a different flair and style to the team which I feel gave the players a different view of the game, it opened there eyes to a different way to play the game. The NSL competition is very good for Wales and it is, without a doubt, the most contributing factor to why Wales climbed the rankings as quickly as we did. I suppose this is a great example of how and why competition is so, vitally, important.
Being part of the Grand Final was amazing. The crowd was blood bubbling exciting, that year the Celtic Dragons fan base grew over 100%. We had so much green in the crowd that travelled up to watch and support and the noise was crazy. The best thing about that game was not only was it goal for goal all the way until the last 2 minutes of the game but my Mother travelled all the way from NZ to watch it, so it have her in the audience was thrilling for me.
As you mentioned in your blog we published regarding the number of NZ Head Coaches in the Netball World Cup, NZ have a really strong netball set up including plenty of courts, strong club connections and a great ethos - what can the rest of the World learn from the NZ set up to ensure the growth and development of female coaches?
Netball actually has a lack of male coaches as it is such a female dominated sport; do you think it is important to increase the number of male coaches in the sport, or is this simply not something the sport considers important?
@MelissaCoachBsr
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