The River Tiger Podcast from Dynamics Coaching
Our mission is to bring evidence-based research, theory, and practice to life in an engaging, enjoyable, and practical manner. We aim to foster a vibrant community where knowledge meets application in the realms of adventure, lifestyle, and equestrian sports.
Join us as we delve into spontaneous and insightful conversations with practitioners and researchers across the fields of learning, skill acquisition, movement sciences, ethics, and philosophy, particularly in relation to adventure and equestrian sports. Our focus is on sports that embrace fluidity and lack rigid boundaries or rules, inherently involving risks that cannot be completely eliminated. We believe that these sports present unique challenges and opportunities that differ from those found in many traditional sports. However, we aspire for our podcasts to resonate with coaches and participants across a diverse spectrum of sports and activities.
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The River Tiger Podcast from Dynamics Coaching
Coaching Falling with Style: Affordances, safety, and skill adaptation with Danny Hatcher
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In this episode of the River Tiger Podcast, host Marianne Davies speaks with Danny Hatcher, whose work sits at the intersection of sports coaching, ecological psychology, Deaf awareness, and technology/AI.
Danny introduces his background in strength and conditioning and sports coaching and explains how a seemingly simple example about a table having “affordances” drew him into ecological psychology. He shares his lived experience of being half deaf and half blind, his journey into British Sign Language (BSL), and his growing involvement in the Deaf community, where he now volunteers and advocates for Deaf awareness in “hearing world” environments such as sport.
A major thread of the conversation is Danny’s ecological approach to coach development and skill learning at his trampoline club. He describes how most of trampolining is really about “safe crashing” and “falling with style,” and how traditional coaching models, focused on a single “correct” technique, can create fear and hesitation in parents, helpers, and newcomers. Instead, he designs open, exploratory environments where participants (including adults and parents) learn by exploring movement, making mistakes, and discovering multiple solutions to motor problems, rather than trying to reproduce one ideal model.
Marianne and Danny unpack common safety concerns in sport, contrasting the perceived danger of “doing it wrong” with the actual reality of well-managed, exploratory practice in maintained, supervised environments. They highlight how changing the environment (e.g., adding or removing mats) changes perception and action, and how being skilled often means being good at adapting and recovering from errors, not just performing a perfect form. Throughout, Danny links these ideas back to ecological psychology, disability, and how we can shift coaches’ and parents’ questions from “How do I correct this?” to “What motor problem is this person solving, and how can I help them explore more solutions?”