Houston Cougars men’s basketball coach Kelvin Sampson isn’t one to shy away from an argument.
Sampson, 69, has helmed the University of Houston men’s basketball program since 2014, leading the team to six Sweet Sixteen berths, three Elite Eight appearances, and two Final Four placements at the NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Tournament — heights unseen for Houston since the early 1980s.
The Cougars will play the Florida Gators on Monday night for the chance to win their first basketball national championship in school history.
Sampson built his team’s culture of winning around four leadership tenets, he said in a lecture in July 2022: consistency, competence, confidence and confrontation.
“I think the coaches that fail at every level are the coaches that are passive-aggressive. Passive-aggressive coaches are usually afraid to hold kids accountable. You rationalize,” Sampson said. “If you’re going to build a culture, the first thing you have to come to grips with is: You’re going to have confrontation … There are certain things that can be done democratic, but most things that are difficult [have] to be your way.”
If you’re running a drill and a player doesn’t quite put their full effort into it, be strict and make the player repeat the drill, Sampson suggested — otherwise, they may never do it correctly again.