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"Legs Feed the Wolf" - Coach Herb Brooks

4/29/2020

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To say I am a "big fan" of sports movies would be an understatement!

At the top of my list is the 2004 movie, Miracle, a story about the 1980 U.S. Olympic Men's Hockey Team that beat the odds and won the gold medal.  In the movie legendary coach, Herb Brooks gifts to us one of the often-quoted lines in my house, "Legs feed the Wolf".  Coach Brooks tells his team, "We may not be the best team out there, but we will be the BEST conditioned team."  His hockey players would not win on talent alone - instead, they would win by working harder than everyone else, being better conditioned than everyone else, and playing together and achieving the kind of synergy where 1+1 = more than 2. 

"The legs feed the wolf, gentlemen."  What does this mean?
Let's guess at it - What do wolves do to eat?  They hunt in packs - there is no such thing as a "lone wolf" who can survive in the wilderness.  Wolves live together, hunt together, and eat together.  How does a pack of wolves hunt?  They typically chase their prey until for miles and miles until their prey tires out and drops to the ground out of fatigue.  The wolves outlast their prey.  They don't have to be faster to win - they just have to be able to run farther and longer than the animals that they hunt.  Strong legs can run farther than weak legs, so it is indeed the legs that feed the wolf.

For me, it reminds me to be sure to do these 3 things:
- Be in a Wolf Pack you want to hunt with.
- Condition to run further and longer.
- When one wolf "tires" bring back provisions to sustain them because the pack needs each other, and when I "tire" accept the sustenance to be able to re-join the pack.
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Said No One Ever.

4/29/2020

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"my whole life I've been doing meaningful things and I am tired of it." - said No One Ever

It's in me to want to have some purposeful meaning in life, and chances are it is in you as well.

"The point of purpose is to determine how you will serve others.  If you don't plan to serve you don't need a purpose." - Cheryl Bachelder

A starting point for purpose is perhaps answering - "who am I here for?" 
Or for an organization "who are we here for?"

For me on this day, I want to pay closer attention to what stirs my heart to help clearly answer the question "who am I here for?"

because perhaps - If I can devote to something more than myself, ultimately I may have something more than myself to show for it.
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Shooting a revolver at attack planes.

4/28/2020

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People want to know what to do but they often don't until somebody models it.

During WWII when the Nazi planes would bomb London, Winston Churchill would not go to the shelter, instead he would go to the roof with his revolver and fire at the planes.  Now, he wasn't stupid enough to think he was going to bring down the plane - he was taking symbolic action.

Daring to act, even symbolic action can be essential.  There are times as leaders we have to show there is no fear.  Become the symbol of what you want your people to do - More is caught than is taught.
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Fishing ain't really about fishing.

4/28/2020

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Its about taking the time to just be. Realigning yourself with nature. Practicing patience. It's a chance to center your thoughts.

I don't fish. But, to the same end - I do take aimless rides on my slow - patience inducing, retro-cool, 50cc Honda Metropolitan Scooter, named "where'd justin go?"
​
What's the fishing activity in your daily routine?

​
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Share in it together.

4/27/2020

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you're not alone in this. I see you. I hear you. I feel your pain. I was reminded recently how important and powerful this can be.  In whatever way possible let's find someone to show up for.

As author and "doer" Bob Goff models it for us - 
"Be available. Take it from a guy who had the audacity to put his cell number in the back of his book: there's a huge power in just being present, being available, to those around you. What if you took time for the people in your life? What if you made some audacious plans to rock their lives? Try it and see what happens!"
​
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Don't suck. You got this.

4/27/2020

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"Try not to suck' became the mantra for the 2016 Chicago Cubs.
​
Joe Maddon, fmr. Manager Chicago Cubs put it in these terms for his team - "put the ball in play and pressure the defense to not flub it. And then turn those tables when taking the field: coach drilled down on his ball clubs to make those very defensive plays, so as to not give the opponent a chance to capitalize due by mucking it up on “D.”

See where this is going, Bueller? Convert that routine play, and you’re more than halfway there. In other words, simply 
try not to suck. ​
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Is the juice worth the squeeze?

4/27/2020

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I heard an interesting phrase recently: “Is the juice worth the squeeze". It caught my attention because it could mean so many things. The context in which it was used was attempting to determine if trying to achieve a goal would be worth the effort. Said another way, would the reward outweigh the risk?   
​
Mistakes – Big or small, we all make them; what matters are the lessons we learn. When given the opportunity to measure options, make choices that will make you proud.
​
At the end of the day, you have to decide if the juice was worth the squeeze.
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The aggregation of marginal gains.

4/26/2020

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1% Better Everyday

A concept made famous by British cycling coach Dave Brailsford, who lead the British cycling team to 10 gold medals at the 2008 Beijing Olympics,  He decided that he and his team would focus on improving every aspect of performance and these aggregations would add up.  Prior to this, the team had not managed any significant wins.

Brailsford believed that victory at the Olympics would be achieved by focusing on a 1% margin for improvement in everything they did. He decided that he and his team would focus on improving every aspect of performance and these aggregations would add up. Examples of seemingly insignificant things they focused on, included:
  • Implementing precise food preparation procedures
  • Bringing their our own mattresses and pillows so athletes could sleep in the same posture every night
  • Painting the floor of their bike trailer white so they could more easily identify dust and remove it
​To quote the man himself:
"We searched for small improvements everywhere and found countless opportunities. Taken together, we felt they gave us a competitive advantage."  (Source)
​
He believed that if you improved every area related to cycling by just 1%, those small gains would add up to remarkable improvement. 
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In a crisis shift from playing Chess to Tennis.

4/26/2020

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X to Y by When

4/26/2020

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hmm. Make a Decision.

4/21/2020

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"It’s not hard to make decisions once you know what your values are". - Roy Disney

What are your core values? Are you living your life in relation to the things that are really important to you?

Understanding our values and the things that are truly important helps keep balance in our lives. If we are forced to do something that does not fit with our values then we feel uncomfortable, unhappy or stressed.

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You can't be known for everything, you do need to be known for something.

4/17/2020

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What is that for you?  What do you want to be known for?  

Who do you want to be?
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A dream

4/16/2020

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if you have a dream but not a team.  You either have to give up the dream or build up the team.
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If you can't measure it, you can't grow it.

4/15/2020

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The Scramble Drill shift

4/12/2020

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Embracing challenging circumstance can be a gift.

#1  Go Headfirst.  Literally, Headfirst.  Start with a shift in the six inches between your ears.  Adapt your thinking towards what's possible, what can be done at the moment?
#2 Resist the urge to feel stuck.
     - Name it. whats the challenge? What's at stake?
     - Own it. Admit that its here and that it matters.
     - Use it. Find a subtle joy in the discovery of opportunities that are unveiled.  

In football terms, as a called play breaks down - it becomes a 'scramble drill', in a scramble drill the focus instantaneously shifts to breaking free, buying enough time until the qb can find another option.
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focused quality.

4/1/2020

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​“I’m as proud of what we don’t do as I am of what we do.” Steve Jobs Apple used to brag about how their entire product line could fit onto an office table, versus competitors whose product line would require a warehouse to fit every version, style, and spin-off of their products. Mr. Jobs was focused on quality, not quantity; he was focused on the consumer, not the bottom line (which, of course, turned out to be a pretty healthy approach).
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    a world-class mistake maker, that gets energized by the pursuit of trying not to suck mixed with a desire to use encouragement to help others get pointed in a positive direction.

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