Beyond Coaching: An Impactful Coaching Project Podcast

Lonely at the Top: Identity, Success, and the Cost of Chasing It with Matt Moberg and Mike Jaderston

47 min · 20 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Lonely at the Top: Identity, Success, and the Cost of Chasing It with Matt Moberg and Mike Jaderston

Descripción

In this episode of Beyond Coaching, Rob sits down with two guests who live at the intersection of faith, sport, and formation: * Matt Moberg – professional artist and chaplain for the Minnesota Timberwolves * Mike Jaderston – Dean of Campus Ministries at Friends University and third-generation coach’s kid. The conversation starts with Matt’s unusual path to becoming an NBA chaplain and why he begins every chapel with the same line: > “Who you are is more important than what you do… even if what you do gets more attention than who you are.” From there, the three dig into identity, loneliness, and the quiet cost of “making it” at the highest level. Matt talks about the hidden sadness he sees in NBA locker rooms, the pressure of short contracts, and the difference between coaches who see players as people versus assets. Mike pulls the lens back to the college context—how injuries, role changes, and family expectations expose identity issues in student-athletes. They explore what it takes to build environments of psychological safety and toughness at the same time: * holding everyone to the same standards (stars included) * pairing authenticity with real competence * creating clear “community rules” so athletes know they can fail and still belong, as long as they live inside the values. The episode closes with practical formation habits: Matt’s AA rhythm and commitment to telling the truth, Mike’s yearly retreat tradition with trusted friends, and why coaches must own their mistakes without abandoning their responsibility to lead. In this episode, we cover: * What an NBA chaplain actually does on game day * Why so many elite athletes feel lonely and disoriented at the “top” * The line Matt repeats to players every chapel * How coaches can build belonging in transient, transactional environments * Authenticity + competence as the non-negotiables for leading this generation * Psychological safety vs. “safe spaces” and why standards still matter * Why formation can’t be rushed—even in six-month windows * Practical habits that sustain coaches and chaplains over the long haul If this podcast is helpful to you, we go deeper in our weekly Substack newsletter. Subscribe at impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com for practical leadership frameworks, insights, and research for coaches, ADs, and leaders who want to build sustainable excellence.

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episode Building Thick Institutions: How Great Coaches Create Programs That Outlast Them with Dr. Hunter Taylor artwork

Building Thick Institutions: How Great Coaches Create Programs That Outlast Them with Dr. Hunter Taylor

What separates a program people remember forever from one they forget the moment they graduate? Dr. Hunter Taylor has spent his career chasing that question — first as a basketball coach, then as a researcher embedded inside a high school football program, and now as a professor running coaching fellowships across three states. In this conversation, Rob and Hunter dig into the idea of "thick institutions," why longevity is the most underrated cheat code in coaching, and what the job demands that no clinic has ever taught. KEY IDEAS -> Thin institutions are transactional. The moment you leave, there's no attachment. Thick ones launch you into the next chapter — and you carry the values with you forever. -> The best high school programs Hunter studied weren't just great at football. They were led by people with a CEO-level mindset: emotional intelligence, external partnerships, and the ability to code-switch across every stakeholder group. -> What causes coaches to fail isn't X's and O's. It's everything surrounding the scheme — and the fellowship is built around exactly those skills. -> The biggest emerging need Hunter sees: storytelling and fundraising. Every coach will eventually need to make the case for their program. The ones who can tell that story well will have an enormous edge. -> Longevity is a cheat code. What coaches think about in year 10 or 20 looks completely different — and far more valuable — than what they focused on in year one. -> Youth sports' biggest problem may not be money. It's time — and the manufactured urgency that tells families there's no path to college without year-round specialization starting at age 10. QUOTABLE "You pick a neighbor and a neighborhood before a vocation. Could you pick a place you'd love to build a life with your family — and then pay attention to what the needs are?" — Dr. Hunter Taylor, quoting his seminary professor BOOKS MENTIONED * My Losing Season — Pat Conroy * The Culture Code — Daniel Coyle * Flourish — Daniel Coyle * "How to Leave a Mark on People" — David Brooks, New York Times (~2017) ABOUT HUNTER TAYLOR Dr. Hunter Taylor is a professor in the School of Education at the University of Mississippi and has spent the last 10 years embedded in coach and leader development. His research on program-building at Oxford High School football resulted in a book on building thick institutions, with a second edition forthcoming. He is co-founder of a coaching fellows program now operating in three states, designed to develop experienced coaches who are already proven in their communities. THE IMPACTFUL COACHING PROJECT Beyond Coaching is part of the Impactful Coaching Project — built for coaches, athletic directors, and leaders who want to develop whole-person athletes and build programs that last. Every Monday, we publish practical frameworks, research, and real-world insights in our Substack newsletter. It's free. Join coaches across the country who are building something thicker than a win streak. Substack Newsletter: impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com Podcast: beyondcoaching.alitu.com

1 de jun de 202640 min
episode Coaching, Character, and the Hard Parts of Sport with Chad Carlson artwork

Coaching, Character, and the Hard Parts of Sport with Chad Carlson

In this episode of Beyond Coaching, I sit down with Chad Carlson, professor at Hope College, longtime coach, and co-founder of Sport Faith Life. Chad studies sport for a living, but he still lives in the same tension every coach feels — the pull between competition, character, and keeping the right perspective when the stakes feel high. We talk about why coaches carry so much cultural influence, why the hardest seasons often produce the most growth, and how easy it is to lose your footing emotionally in the middle of competition. Chad also shares stories from coaching high school and college athletes, lessons from teaching sport leadership, and what he has learned through years of work at the intersection of sport and faith. Topics include: * Why sport has so much power in shaping character * The danger of putting coaches on a pedestal * Learning through losing, struggle, and conflict * How faith changes the way we see competition * Protecting your heart when you step into the arena * The role of gratitude in leadership and coaching If you want to connect with Chad, you can reach him at ccarlson@hope.edu. To learn more about the Impactful Coaching Project, visit https://impactfulcoachingproject.com [https://impactfulcoachingproject.com] Podcast, articles, and courses available at https://impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com [https://impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com]

18 de may de 202641 min
episode Podcast Short: High Trust Changes Everything artwork

Podcast Short: High Trust Changes Everything

In this Podcast Short, Dustin and Rob explore trust. When trust is high, a coach can misspeak, show emotion, or even put his foot in his mouth—and players give the benefit of the doubt. When trust is low, even neutral comments are filtered negatively. Every word becomes suspect. Every interaction becomes evidence. The difference isn’t charisma. It isn’t quoting John Wooden. It’s the daily work of building trust through consistent, transactional excellence. KEY THEMES 1. High trust changes interpretation. Players don’t just hear what you say. They interpret it through the lens of trust. * Low trust: “Coach meant that negatively.” * High trust: “Coach is competitive. I know what he meant.” 2. Transactional precedes transformational. We often chase transformational impact—life change, influence, legacy. But transformation is built on transaction: * Be on time. * Do what you say. * Communicate clearly. * Own mistakes immediately. * Follow through consistently. You cannot skip the small disciplines and expect large relational impact. 3. Competence builds credibility. If you want to transform lives, dominate your practice. Be organized. Be detailed. Teach the game at a high level. Competence is the foundation of trust. 4. Erosion is subtle. Most broken cultures don’t implode overnight. Trust erodes: * Missed follow-through. * Double standards. * Poor communication. * Non-verbals that contradict words. * Losing seasons without emotional steadiness. Small cracks compound. 5. Ownership resets trust. High-trust coaches: * Apologize quickly. * Admit when they’re wrong. * Hold themselves to the same standards they demand. * Avoid talking at players during conflict. Players can handle intensity. They struggle with inconsistency. PRACTICAL TAKEAWAYS FOR COACHES * Before chasing transformational language, master transactional behavior. * Ask yourself: “Do I respond to players the way I expect them to respond to me?” * Communicate proactively—especially when you’re late, frustrated, or distracted. * When trust erodes to the point where players hang on every word defensively, you may need a reset—not just a speech. High trust isn’t built in emotional speeches. It’s built in the next 90 minutes of practice. Beyond Coaching is produced by the Impactful Coaching Project in partnership with Friends University. Learn more at: impactfulcoachingproject.com Sign Up for our Free Newsletter at impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com

4 de may de 20269 min
episode Lonely at the Top: Identity, Success, and the Cost of Chasing It with Matt Moberg and Mike Jaderston artwork

Lonely at the Top: Identity, Success, and the Cost of Chasing It with Matt Moberg and Mike Jaderston

In this episode of Beyond Coaching, Rob sits down with two guests who live at the intersection of faith, sport, and formation: * Matt Moberg – professional artist and chaplain for the Minnesota Timberwolves * Mike Jaderston – Dean of Campus Ministries at Friends University and third-generation coach’s kid. The conversation starts with Matt’s unusual path to becoming an NBA chaplain and why he begins every chapel with the same line: > “Who you are is more important than what you do… even if what you do gets more attention than who you are.” From there, the three dig into identity, loneliness, and the quiet cost of “making it” at the highest level. Matt talks about the hidden sadness he sees in NBA locker rooms, the pressure of short contracts, and the difference between coaches who see players as people versus assets. Mike pulls the lens back to the college context—how injuries, role changes, and family expectations expose identity issues in student-athletes. They explore what it takes to build environments of psychological safety and toughness at the same time: * holding everyone to the same standards (stars included) * pairing authenticity with real competence * creating clear “community rules” so athletes know they can fail and still belong, as long as they live inside the values. The episode closes with practical formation habits: Matt’s AA rhythm and commitment to telling the truth, Mike’s yearly retreat tradition with trusted friends, and why coaches must own their mistakes without abandoning their responsibility to lead. In this episode, we cover: * What an NBA chaplain actually does on game day * Why so many elite athletes feel lonely and disoriented at the “top” * The line Matt repeats to players every chapel * How coaches can build belonging in transient, transactional environments * Authenticity + competence as the non-negotiables for leading this generation * Psychological safety vs. “safe spaces” and why standards still matter * Why formation can’t be rushed—even in six-month windows * Practical habits that sustain coaches and chaplains over the long haul If this podcast is helpful to you, we go deeper in our weekly Substack newsletter. Subscribe at impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com for practical leadership frameworks, insights, and research for coaches, ADs, and leaders who want to build sustainable excellence.

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episode Podcast Short: Holding Two Truths artwork

Podcast Short: Holding Two Truths

In this short episode of Beyond Coaching, Rob and Dustin sit in a tension that every competitive leader feels but few articulate clearly. Winning matters. It always has. The time, preparation, and emotional investment are real. Losses still sting—even years removed from the sideline. Rob admits that as an Athletic Director, he still goes home frustrated after tough losses. Caring deeply about outcomes doesn’t disappear just because your role changes. At the same time, some of the most meaningful growth in athletics happens in seasons of struggle. Hard years often expose blind spots. They reveal leadership gaps. They force clarity around culture, accountability, and fit. Dustin reflects on a season that felt like a train wreck—high talent, poor retention, misalignment—and how that year shaped him more than the historic season that followed. The conversation explores several key questions: * Can you pursue winning relentlessly while still recognizing that growth often comes through losing? * How do you avoid “loser talk” while still naming real progress? * What’s the difference between adversity that builds a program and dysfunction that erodes it? * Why do younger coaches sometimes struggle to bounce back from hard seasons? * How does emotional constancy become a competitive advantage? They discuss the discipline of perspective—remembering you are never as good or as bad as you think you are—and why leadership in the valley often matters more than leadership on the mountaintop. This episode doesn’t offer easy answers. Instead, it offers a framework: hold both truths. Compete to win. Lead for growth. And in the middle of hard seasons, choose constancy over emotional volatility. Sign up for our FREE newsletter at https://impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com [https://impactfulcoachingproject.substack.com].

13 de abr de 202610 min