"Anyway, the point is it’s a long piece, maybe fifteen minutes or so, and it starts off slow with just a few quiet instruments and then it gathers momentum and builds and builds into a crescendo, a big finish with all the instruments in the orchestra coming in together. And at the same time, the emotions of the listeners build and come together at the same moment." - Michael Connelly in The Fifth Witness (Lincoln Lawyer, Book 4)
How do you bring along a team to peak headed into the postseason?
Timing matters.
Apply that across domains - art, philosophy, math and science, music, sports. Van Gogh sold one painting during his life. Only after his death was the extent of his craft excavated.
'The Lincoln Lawyer', Michael Haller discusses the prosecution's plan to build a symphony of evidence against his client, unleashing into a crescendo of proof.
Readers know that in "The Bear," Carmen Berzatto learned from his mentors that "Every Second Counts." That's true. But they don't count equally. Exceptional teams improve, gather momentum and become "tough outs" down the stretch.
Continual improvement
"Love our losses." Learning from mistakes means not repeating the same ones. The plan is to improve every day.
Team ownership drives results
Excellent teams have team leadership that drives the work ethic and accountability. Russell, Magic, Jordan, Bird, Kobe, Duncan and others had outsized influence in their team narrative. "Follow me" works with both talent and mental toughness.
Build to a crescendo (input from AI)
Boléro is the perfect postseason metaphor: one rhythm, one theme, relentless patience—then an overwhelming finish. Here are three ways great teams build that same crescendo on the way to tournament time.
1) Relentless repetition → mastery under pressure
Boléro never changes its rhythmic spine. The magic is repetition without boredom.
Team version:
Elite teams resist the urge to “install more” late in the season. Instead, they:
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Re-run core actions (or defensive rules) daily
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Add constraints, not concepts (shot clock, disadvantage starts, no-dribble segments)
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Demand cleaner execution each week, not new ideas
Why it crescendos:
Repetition lowers cognitive load. Under playoff stress, players don’t think—they recognize. Like the snare drum in Boléro, the pulse never wavers.
Postseason edge = fewer decisions, better decisions.
Been there, done that:
Deeper into the post-season, more advantage-disadvantage (5 vs 7 pressure) and more free throw practice.
2) Incremental load → rising intensity
Ravel doesn’t jump from piano to fortissimo. He adds one instrument at a time.
Team version:
Coaches layer stress progressively:
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Early: technical precision at moderate pace
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Mid: game speed + physical contact
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Late: emotional pressure (crowd noise, consequences, score scenarios)
The work feels manageable daily—but accumulates.
Why it crescendos:
Players adapt without panic. By the time postseason arrives, the intensity feels familiar, not threatening.
You don’t “turn it on” in March. You arrive there already acclimated.
Been there, done that:
You don't play the early rounds of the tournament in 'high visibility' venues. But when the stakes are higher and you're playing in Boston Garden, focus is automatic.
3) Role clarity → collective power
In Boléro, each instrument enters knowing exactly when and how to contribute. No freelancing.
Team version:
Late-season teams sharpen role definition:
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Who closes?
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Who stabilizes?
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Who brings chaos?
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Who communicates?
Stars get freedom within structure. Role players get permission to be great at one thing.
Why it crescendos:
Clarity eliminates friction. Energy goes outward, not inward. The group sounds louder than the sum of its parts—like the full orchestra hitting at once.
Been there, done that:
Under the bright lights, "dance with the one that brung you." Asking players who have not done it to do it is a big ask, regardless of their parents' hopes and dreams.
The shared principle
Boléro teaches restraint. Teams that peak don’t chase novelty or hype. They trust:
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Process over variety
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Load over shock
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Roles over ego
Listen to the start of Ravel’s Bolero, then jump ahead to around 11:30. That’s a crescendo - exactly what Haller meant. Bring your basketball season to a crescendo the same way: through steady, deliberate, daily improvement.



