Rule number 4. "It can be done."
Colin Powell's 13 Rules
"I try to be an optimist, but I try not to be stupid." - Colin Powell
"Stupid" is a harsh word and seldom reflects well on either the source or the target. Warren Buffett's late partner Charlie Munger explained that it's easier not to be stupid than to be a genius. Use these lessons to make a difference and to avoid regret.
With rare exceptions (Russia in the 1972 Olympics) do-overs and unicorns travel together.
All of us have seen and made sport decisions that we'd rather have back. I don't mean a missed free throw or well-intended errant pass. I mean in the Ron Howard sense, "What idiot directed that scene?" (He did.)
1. Looking for early momentum, I instructed our team to press. We were down 6-0 in a minute and the ref literally looked at me for the timeout. He wasn't disappointed. We fell behind by double digits, rallied within six late and lost. I apologized to the eighth graders. "I own this loss. I didn't put us in a position to succeed."
Lesson - Don't rush to succeed. "Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.
2. Champion skier Lindsey Vonn injured her ACL two weeks ahead of the Olympics. She competed anyway and suffered a catastrophic injury. Author Nassim Taleb of The Black Swan might say that was neither unsurprising or shocking. Knee biomechanics don't permit microadjustments with underlying severe injury.
Lesson - Don't confuse "want to" and "get to."
3. Legendary coach Gregg Popovich faced massive criticism for sitting Tim Duncan late in a catastrophic Game 6 loss to the Heat in 2013. We can always rationalize our decisions. Here's his insight.
Lesson - "Don't bring a gun to a gunfight; bring a tank." - Fergus Connolly in 59 Lessons
4. Games often come down to a "Gotta Have It" moment. Everyone needs to be aware of and understand the implications of a situation. The basketball gods corrected a missed call allowing the fateful Webber Timeout in 1993. Webber went on to a Hall of Fame NBA career.
Lesson - "Get everyone on the same page."
5. Games and fortunes turn on a single moment - skill, luck, Act of God. Kawhi Leonard's prayer from the corner did not go unanswered. What's the likelihood of a heavily contested buzzer beater falling in that situation? Reality says it's either 100 percent or zero.
Lesson - "Make them beat you with your best pitch."
Lagniappe. Strengthen our arguments with a logical framework:
- Claim
- Evidence
- Explanation
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