After his second year at Michigan, Tom Brady wanted to transfer.
He wasn’t playing in games, and he was so low on the depth chart that he only got 2 reps in practice.
Brady met with his coach to express his frustration, “The other quarterbacks get all the reps.”
Coach replied,
“Brady, I want you to stop worrying about what all the other players on our team are doing. All you do is worry about what the starter is doing, what the second guy is doing, what everyone else is doing. You don’t worry about what you’re doing.”
Coach reminded him, “You came here to be the best. If you’re going to be the best, you have to beat out the best.”
And then he recommended that Brady meet Greg Harden, a counselor who worked in the athletic department.
Brady went to Harden’s office and whined, “I’m never going to get my chance. They’re only giving me 2 reps.”
Harden replied, “Just go out there and focus on doing the best you can with those 2 reps. Make them as perfect as you possibly can.”
“So that’s what I did,” Brady said. “They’d put me in for those 2 reps, man, I’d sprint out there like it was Super Bowl 39. ‘Let’s go boys! Here we go! What play we got?’”
“And I started to do really well with those 2 reps. Because I brought enthusiasm, I brought energy.”
Soon, he was getting 4 reps. Then 10, “and before you knew it,” Brady said, “with this new mindset that Greg had instilled in me—to focus on what you can control, to focus on what you’re getting, not what anyone else is getting, to treat every rep like it’s the Super Bowl—eventually, I became the starter.”
Takeaway 1:
Greg Harden telling Brady to focus on being great during his 2 reps reminded me of a piece of advice from the entrepreneur Mark Cuban.
“People come to me all the time and tell me they’re stuck,” Cuban explained. “They’re stuck in a job they don't like. They’re stuck working for a boss they don’t like. They're stuck on a team they don't like.”
“I just tell them, ‘Be great.’”
“The reality of life is that you can’t just always quit your job. You can’t just always go to your boss and say, ‘Give me the promotion, or I’m out of here.’” You can’t just always go to your coach and say, ‘Give me more reps, or I'm transferring.’
“So when you’re stuck, you’ve gotta find it within yourself to say, ‘Ok, this is where I am. And if I’m going to be here, I’m going to be great.’
Because if you’re great at your job, typically other people and companies find out, so it creates opportunities.”
Takeaway 2:
In the field of strategic management, there is a distinction made between “lead measures” and “lag measures.”
Lag measures are the results you’re trying to achieve: getting a promotion, winning a championship, being the starting quarterback. Lead measures are the actions that predictably drive those results.
The core characteristic of a lead measure, the authors of “The 4 Disciplines of Execution” write, is that “a lead measure can be directly influenced by you.” To achieve your goals, they write (echoing what the Michigan Coach told Brady), “apply a disproportionate energy” to the things that are in your control.
Starting at Michigan and for the rest of his career, that’s what Brady did.
After he was selected by the New England Patriots with the 199th pick in the 2000 draft, Brady was asked: “Are you aware that [along with starting quarterback, Drew Bledsoe] there’s another quarterback here that they drafted last year?”
Brady said he was aware of that, “and I know he’s a heck of a player. But I’ve always concerned myself just with the things I can control. I don’t put a lot of thinking into the other guys because I know I’m not at my best when I’m not just thinking about playing as well as I possibly can.”
- - -
“I never once in my life ever said I wanted to be the best of all time. Ever. I wanted to be the best I could be, period. I learned that in college. It didn’t matter what the other guys were doing. It didn’t. It mattered what I was doing.” — Tom Brady
Nick Saban said, "Everybody talks about leadership, but I think it's also important how many guys on a team need to be led."
The best teams are player-led and have many leaders.
• They own the process.
• They lead the process.
• They hold each other accountable.
Oregon HC Dan Lanning - Teaching Players How to Watch Film
- "Signal Callers" assignments. Gives players specific situations/details to watch & present to the team the night before the game.
- Forces players to watch film relevant to their position & be accountable to the group.
Oregon DEF Bundle = 56% Off https://t.co/CCxcCdJW7C
Oregon HC Dan Lanning - Gameplan Process & Disguise vs Execution
Gameplan Process
- Start with watching 3-4 game films in their entirety/sequence & try to get a feel for the OC. Make notes
- Next watch personnel cutups sorted by formation. ID issues & watch with cumulative DEF call sheet. What answers do I want to have.
- Build rules based on formations.
Disguise vs Execution
- Try to build in certain disguises with certain coverages.
- Always tell players no matter the call, your job is more important than your disguise.
Oregon DEF Bundle = 56% Off https://t.co/CCxcCdKtXa
Maliek Collins (@SavageSevv) throwing Raiders blockers around. Defeats the double team, stays in his gap & makes the tackle. No dance partners in the trenches! #StopTheRun#49ers#FTTB
Nick Saban - How to Reinforce Discipline to Players
- Players define their goals & aspirations for what they want to do.
- HC must confront & demand when you define the expectation of how you want something done
- Make it about them in terms of choices & decisions
Nick Saban Q & A Bundle is 66% off https://t.co/baCV506Xjz
Somehow this clown ends up back on my timeline.
For those of you that don’t know Football, it’s not just random words and remembering flashcards.
Jayden will do just fine remembering things when they actually have meaning and he knows what the protection call means, the concept means, where the receivers lineup in specific formations, etc.
Remembering random shit coaches say while they speak too fast on purpose and laugh about it is irrelevant anyways.
I’d love to see these random fans that shit on players try to remember 10 to 15 random ass words I pull out of my ass in six seconds.