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Dylan Cheng

email: dylan@1unitedvolleyball.com

cell: 972.921.3654

Coach Dylan has been a Director and Head Coach for juniors volleyball for the last 12 years in the NTR region. He has coached in the USA High Performance program for 3 years from 2016-2019. Coach Dylan works with players of all ages in club from 8-18 as well as collegiate players.

His goal in working with players is to train technical, fundamentally sound skills as a foundation. Dylan believes every player should learn every skill to proficiency so they can be a well-rounded volleyball player. Players will enjoy the game more if they can be excel in all of the skills. Finally, all training should have elements of fun. After all, it is a game!

Dylan served on the NTR Jr Board of Directors (2016-2020), the NTR Board of Directors (2016-2020), the NTR Competition Committee (2016-2020), and on the Executive Committee as the VP of Coaching Education. His goal in serving was to be a voice in support for players to have a better experience in competition and with their clubs.

As a director and coach for 2 previous clubs in North Texas, he had a reputation for building strong programs and teams capable of competing at the highest level. Both of the clubs grew in prominence during his time there. Opponents knew his players and teams would be well-trained and play disciplined power volleyball.

Dylan has a a beautiful wife and a 4 year old daughter (possible future volleyball player). They enjoy outdoor activities and, of course, singing Disney songs!

Coaching Philosophy

My core philosophy is to empower young athletes to succeed. This simple, encompassing principle begins by creating a positive and safe environment. The primary goal is to create a sense of ownership and accountability within the athlete for her own growth and development – after all, she is the one on the court. The role of the coach can be teacher, mentor, an accountability partner, and/or motivator depending on what is needed by each individual and, collectively, the team.

A culture of positivity from the coach allows the athlete to be open to learning through trial and error and asking questions. A timid player’s ability to learn is capped by fear of being harshly criticised or embarrassed. Challenging the players with positive methods such as goal-setting and rewarding competitive success can push the player to achieve and then exceed.

Training and competing can be and should be hard work, but as a coach I want to also create an atmosphere to have fun!

Values

  • Disciplined Training
  • Hard Work
  • Sportsmanship
“It’s not the will to win that matters—everyone has that. It’s the will to prepare to win that matters.” -Paul “Bear” Bryant


Club Coaching Accomplishments

Qualified for USAV nationals past 10 years.
Bronze Medal (3rd place) and Coach of the Year Runner-Up in 2018.