Thursday, September 13, 2012

THE COMMITMENT TO "MASTERY"

If your Jerry Rice, the greatest receiver in NFL history and, according to some, the greatest player, you're practicing a slant pass pattern at 6 A.M. over and over with nobody within a mile of you -- not football, no quarterback, nobody but Jerry working to improve, to master his profession.

Why is the NFL's greatest-ever receiver doing this? Jerry Rice understands the connection between preparation and performance; between intelligently applied hard work and results; between mediocrity and mastery of your job.  And Jerry has the skill coupled with the will to do it.

Joe Montana, perhaps the great quarterback in NFL history, in his last season as a professional, when he was playing for the Kansas City, would spend two hours a day every day at the same little practice field at Menlo College near San Francisco.  I would work with him on basic fundamentals that would bore a high schooler to death.  Joe had four Super Bowl rings.  How did he get them? Why was he on that little practice field? Joe Montana understands what master means.

You never stop learning, perfecting, refining -- molding your skills.  You never stop depending on the fundamentals -- sustaining, maintaining, and improving.  Jerry and Joe, maybe the best ever at their positions, at the last stages of their careers were still working very hard on the fundamental things that high school kids won't do because it's too damn dull.

It wasn't dull to Jerry and Joe, because they understood the absolute and direct connection between intelligently directed hard work and achieving your potential.

From "The Score Takes Care of Itself" by Bill Walsh