Biggest thing I see is shot selection.
The thing I find interesting is the folks that think the "coaching" is a big deal. What I have seen is that the coaching is usually giving terrible advice, and often advising the lesser player to shoot the wrong shot.
My shot making skills are less than they used to be, but I make up for it by shot selection and shooting "2-ways" as often as possible. When I miss, I usually get told I am "lucky". I just scratch my head like Efren and say, "I got lucky".
Ken
I'm not going to doubt what you've seen. I'm the best player on our teams 7/9. There's only so many timeouts available in a match and sometimes you think you'll need it later in a match. With my better players I'll call an early timeout if I think shooting the "correct" ball can get them out. It honestly really depends on the player and where they're at in their game and what goal I'd like to accomplish. If I've tried calling the early timeout and it hasn't worked because some players learn better by failing then I'll let them try it their way (and possibly lose the game) and then set it up afterwards and show them the "correct" way. This is a better learning tool for some players.
Many players will shoot until they're screwed and then call a timeout and we're left with giving trying to give the best advice in a situation with only terrible options. Some people seem unwilling to listen and make the same mistakes over and over and over and ****ing over. It's exhausting and really shows me they have no interest in improving and so I don't call timeouts for them. I'm not going to make them get better, if they don't have any interest in learning then I don't either. I'll do my best to give the best advice I can when they call a timeout.
I'm not the captain of the team and quite honestly I'm not a good teammate as I have way more interest in helping people learn than I do in helping people win.