Originally posted by Unregistered
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The pool of great coaches come from a vast pool of all people that want to be coaches, so the success rate of become a great coach is very small.
When you start with a small pool of great players, then whittle that pool down by they fact that most of them are well off and thus don't "need" to coach, there aren't many people in that group left willing to put in the work needed to become a great coach.
Also, many of these great players start at (near?) the top where there is much less room for error. So they "fail" to become great when they never really had the chance to learn.
I will conceed the point that it is often hard for experts to know how they do something, but I'm not sure that's any different for "low skilled" players. The lower skilled are just more used to sitting down and figuring out the mechanics of a skill.
The one thing I will say that high level players have is that they are more likely to have been exposed to high level coaches. If the player is paying attention to the process of coaching that is taking place while he is being coached, that experience can be useful when he starts coaching.
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