I was thinking about what I have focused on in the past that did not help me in terms of a successful season. I started making a list and it was growing quickly ... instead I decided what is the one constant, regardless of ability, that helps a team win. "Team Chemisty" immediately came to mind.
The one thing that I always strive for is good team chemistry. I feel that if the team plays well together, as a team they can make up for the individual inconsistencies that will always plague players. I know you are saying to yourself, duh, this is obvious and it is. I am not a ground breaking coach. It is important to point out these things for the why it is important, not just the statement of its importance.
I have seen plenty of coaches look for the tallest players or the quickest players only to not win ... and I am not saying these players are not desirable. I am of the opinion that if you have 1 star, the others will at times rise in ability, unfortunately not all the time. Players will tend to fall back into the relying upon the star to get them out of a jam and soon feed the ball through only that player. There is no real coaching in "give it to the big guy" or telling the players to idly stand by while they let that player 'just drive and shoot" ...
It seems to me that if you are going to go through the effort of coaching a team, why not have the players learn something about themselves as well each other, therefore it is paramount to build good team chemistry. The players learn to depend on each other as well as gain confidence of being the one relied upon. the role of the coach is not only strategy and victories over losses, it is our responsibility to teach the players more than that. It is our responsibility to give them lessons that can be applied outside of the lines. Team chemistry helps with that. Bad chemistry can be very destructive to an individual player or groups of players and turn them off to the game.