Slappin' Glass Podcast

Scott Wylie Returns! Anticipation, System Fit & the Cognitive Edge of Elite Decision-Making {S2 Cognition}

Slappin' Glass

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0:00 | 1:06:35

Scott Wylie, co-founder of S2 Cognition, returns to Slappin’ Glass for a deeper look at how athletes process the game at speed — and how coaches can use that information to better teach, train, and build around their players.

The conversation moves from theory into application: matching systems to cognitive profiles, understanding the trade-off between decision speed and accuracy, and designing practices that help players make better decisions under pressure. Scott also breaks down how stress, fatigue, spatial awareness, distraction control, and improvisation shape performance in real game environments.

In this week’s Start, Sub, or Sit, Scott discusses what elite players do differently: seeing things earlier, processing faster, and controlling impulses and distractions when the game speeds up.

What You’ll Learn

How S2 Cognition evaluates decision-making
Scott explains the nine systems S2 measures, including visual processing, spatial awareness, decision complexity, instinctive learning, impulse control, distraction control, and improvisation.

Why cognitive fit matters
Not every player processes the game the same way. Scott discusses why some players thrive in open, read-based systems while others fit better in more structured environments.

The speed-accuracy trade-off
Playing faster does not automatically mean playing better. Scott explains how coaches can help players toggle between speed and control.

How pressure changes processing
The conversation explores how fatigue, stress, anxiety, and game environment can affect a player’s decision-making.

Why spatial awareness matters
Scott and Dan discuss how spatial awareness can influence shot selection, positioning, passing windows, and a player’s sense of being open.

How to train adaptability
Scott introduces “VEX drills” — practice designs that violate expectations and force players to adapt when the normal solution disappears.

What separates elite players
The best players are not simply faster reactors. They anticipate earlier, control impulses, block out distractions, and stay flexible in chaos.

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