Has the Constraints-Led Approach Created Bad Coaches?
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Has the Constraints-Led Approach (CLA) gone too far?
A recent LinkedIn post argued that too many coaches are hiding behind constraints-led coaching, becoming "robotic organisers" who simply set up games, ask players to "find a way," and stop coaching altogether.
It's a criticism I've heard many times.
And interestingly...
I actually agree with parts of it.
In this episode, I unpack where I think the post raises valid concerns, where I believe it misunderstands the Constraints-Led Approach, and why the real issue isn't ecological dynamics itself—it's how some coaches interpret and apply it.
We discuss:
• Does CLA encourage coaches to stop coaching?
• What is the actual role of the coach in an ecological approach?
• Why "just let them self-organise" is a misunderstanding of skill acquisition
• The difference between designing constraints and coaching behaviour
• Why observation may be the coach's greatest skill
• The place of feedback, questioning and instruction within ecological dynamics
• Why methodology should never become ideology
• What modern coaching really looks like in practice
Ultimately, great coaching isn't about blindly following a methodology.
It's about understanding how people learn, recognising what performers need in the moment, and designing environments that help them adapt, solve problems and perform under pressure.
If you're interested in ecological dynamics, skill acquisition, constraints-led coaching and modern tennis coaching, this episode is for you.
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