Today we celebrated Martin Luther King day. He once famously
said “I have a dream that my four children will one day live in a nation
where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character”.
It has often been said that sports build character. Sports allow
people to learn many lessons. The games themselves, though, don’t
necessarily build character. Instead, they reveal character. Just like a
test that you might take in school doesn’t build your knowledge base,
but it reveals what you already know. The homework that you’ve done or
not done is revealed when you take a test.In the same way, what you’ve
done in practice and your workouts is revealed during the games. Your
habits can make or break you.
I often told my players that bad players remember the good things
that they do. Good players remember the bad things that they do. A good
player will remember the time that they didn’t dive for a loose ball. A
bad player will make a big deal about that time that they blocked out.
Good or bad habits can lead to success or failure. A person’s habits
oftentimes come down to their motivation. What is most important to a
person? What makes them tick? Most players and teams that I talk with
will tell me that they want to win a championship. However, their
actions do not always back up this claim. Many players do not act as if
winning a championship is the most important thing to them.
One of my favorite quotes is “Obstacles are what you see when you
take your eyes off the goal.” There is a reason that race horses wear
blinders. Race horses need to stay focused on the goal. They need to
keep looking straight ahead to the finish line. Teams need to take the
same approach. Distractions and obstacles can cause teams to fall short
in their goals. Players say that they want to win championships but how
many players get off track and distracted by other things. Hanging out
with the wrong people, getting mad at coaches, jealousy of other
players, drinking, smoking, complaining, arguing with officials … all of
these things take a player’s focus away from what it takes to win. Many
times, these things are selfish. Players are more concerned about their
ego, pride or feelings than accomplishing their goal.
Just a couple of weeks ago, the Cincinnati Bengals were on the verge
of winning a NFL playoff game against the Pittsburgh Steelers when they
had two unsportsmanlike penalties on the same play that allowed the
Steelers to move the 30 yards they needed to be in field goal range.
Pittsburgh won the game and advanced in the playoffs because of two
undisciplined plays by the Bengals. The second penalty, especially, was
truly a breakdown in Adam “Pacman” Jones and what his goals were. He
lost focus. What was most important to him was getting his way and being
right. He argued with the official and lost his cool. That cost him and
his team a potential chance to go to the Super Bowl. He took his eyes
off the goal.
Recently, the Indiana High School Athletic Association, suspended Ben
Davis and Pike’s women’s basketball teams for the remainder of the
season because a bench clearing brawl that occurred during a game. Those
players involved lost their focus. They were more concerned with
reacting and responding to others than they were about staying locked in
on their goal to win a sectional, regional or even state championship.
Could this happen to you or your team? Both school’s administrators and
coaches said that they never thought this could happen to them. These
teams didn’t go from having fun playing a game to a bench clearing
brawl. Lots of little distractions got in the way of these players. If
players don’t stay focused on doing what is right, then there is no
guarantee that something like this couldn’t happen with your team. To a
lesser degree, what about the yellow cards or technical fouls that
players get? Those can have an impact on a game’s outcome. Remember the
Steelers and Bengals example?
What are you doing today to make sure that this doesn’t happen to
you? What are you doing in practice today to make sure that this doesn’t
happen to you? Do you get upset when you don’t get your way? Are you
rolling your eyes at something your coach says? Are you coachable? Are
you getting mad a teammate when they shoot the ball even though you were
open? Are you wanting to fight or push back when someone elbows you?
The habits that you establish today will ultimately decide what your
behaviors are tomorrow. You have been building your character
day-by-day. What will your next game reveal about the character you’ve
been building?
Jamy Bechler is the executive director of U-Leadership and a John Maxwell Certified Leadership Speaker and Coach. Contact him at CoachBechler@CoachBechler.com to find out how you or your team can be more successful. Click here to signup for THE ENCOURAGING NEWSLETTER
Jamy Bechler is the executive director of U-Leadership and a John Maxwell Certified Leadership Speaker and Coach. Contact him at CoachBechler@CoachBechler.com to find out how you or your team can be more successful. Click here to signup for THE ENCOURAGING NEWSLETTER
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