Finding Mastery with Dr. Michael Gervais - Dawn Staley: On Coaching, Mental Fortitude, and Love | From the FM Archives

Episode Date: April 10, 2024

With every season of sport, we witness various feats of greatness -- and getting to witness a true dynasty (and what it takes to get there) can be once in a generation.That’s why I am super... excited to share a fresh version of our previous conversation with the 2024 National Championship winning basketball coach, Dawn Staley.As you might know, this past Sunday, Dawn led South Carolina to their 3rd national championship in the past 7 years to top off a perfect, undefeated season. Dawn also rightfully earned the 2024 Naismith Coach of the Year Award. What a year.As if that wasn’t enough, South Carolina also became the first team in the past 25 seasons to reach the Final Four (let alone go undefeated) without returning any starting players from last year – an amazing testament to Dawn’s leadership, and the culture she has built.When you listen to this conversation from 2021, it will be no surprise to you how - and why - she is considered one of the best to ever do it.I think we all have a lot to learn from Dawn’s insights – like the qualities needed to build resilience; how to develop psychological agility in the face of adversity; and why relationships are at the center of her coaching philosophy.I hope you enjoy this incredible conversation with 3-time National Champ, 3-time Olympic gold medalist, Hall of Famer, and your 2024 coach of the year, Dawn Staley._________________Subscribe to our Youtube Channel for more powerful conversations at the intersection of high performance, leadership, and meaning: https://www.youtube.com/c/FindingMasteryGet exclusive discounts and support our amazing sponsors! Go to: https://findingmastery.com/sponsors/Subscribe to the Finding Mastery newsletter for weekly high performance insights: https://www.findingmastery.com/newsletter Download Dr. Mike's Morning Mindset Routine! https://www.findingmastery.com/morningmindsetFollow us on Instagram, LinkedIn, and X.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Finding Mastery is brought to you by Remarkable. In a world that's full of distractions, focused thinking is becoming a rare skill and a massive competitive advantage. That's why I've been using the Remarkable Paper Pro, a digital notebook designed to help you think clearly and work deliberately. It's not another device filled with notifications or apps.
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Starting point is 00:00:58 stay present and engaged with my thinking and writing. If you wanna slow down, if you wanna work smarter, I highly encourage you to check them out. Visit remarkable.com to learn more and grab your paper pro today. I'd like to present the 2024 National Championship Trophy to Coach Dawn Staley
Starting point is 00:01:17 and the South Carolina Gamecocks. I think I'm a master in basketball. I think I'm masterful when it comes to knowing certain things on the floor. But that doesn't make me a great coach because I know more than other people. What makes me a great coach is I know how to meet people where they are, to take them where they need to go. Okay. Welcome back or welcome to the Finding Mastery podcast. I'm your host, Dr. Michael Gervais by trade and training a high-performance psychologist. And today I am super excited to share a fresh version of our previous conversation with the 2024 National Championship winning basketball coach, Don Staley.
Starting point is 00:02:10 As you might know, this past Sunday, Don led South Carolina to their third National Championship in the past seven years to top off a, and I don't use this word lightly, perfect undefeated season. Don also rightfully earned the 2024 Naismith Coach of the Year Award. I mean, come on, like what a year. And as if that wasn't enough, South Carolina became the first team in the past 25 seasons to reach the Final Four, let alone go undefeated, without returning any starting players from last year. What an amazing testament to Dawn's leadership and the culture that she has built. When you listen to this conversation, it will be no surprise to you how and why she is considered one of the best ever to do it. I think we all have a lot
Starting point is 00:03:07 to learn from Dawn's insights, like the qualities needed to build resilience, how to develop psychological agility in the face of adversity, and why relationships are at the center of her coaching philosophy. So with that, let's enjoy this incredible conversation with three-time national champ, three-time Olympic gold medalist, Hall of Famer, and your 2024 Coach of the Year, Dawn Staley. Dawn, how are you? I'm doing great. Where are we living right now? Where are you? you i'm in uh columbia south carolina where it's pretty hot pretty humid um but i mean i mean i'm enjoying being home yeah yeah so i know that the intro that i just read is gives a nod to how much you've done and so i just want to start off by saying congratulations on everything.
Starting point is 00:04:07 Like you're one of the rare few that have really blazed the trail. And the rest of the folks that get to look at what you've done to say, ooh, how? And so that's what I want to focus on this conversation. Like you have created something that is hard to get my arms around because you've had so much success so often. And so I can't ask you the question, how it just doesn't,
Starting point is 00:04:33 it's, it just doesn't quite work like that. But if we could just set a little context up quickly, where'd you grow up? What was it like? Well, I grew up in Philadelphia, North Philly, specifically in a housing project called the Raymond Rosen Housing Projects.
Starting point is 00:05:00 And the housing projects was when I grew up, it was comprised of a circular. Like row homes. And in the middle of that circle was a big field where it was big enough for a softball field, a baseball field. We created a track. Um, and then it was a base, I'm sorry, in a basketball court. So it was huge field that, and it was just space. But there was a fence for a baseball field. And then it was just in the basketball court. And then it was just wide open space. And then looking out into the field were the start of some high rises. And if you grew up in the projects and you lived in the row homes,
Starting point is 00:05:51 we thought we lived in suburban America because the high rises were filled with some of everything. You could smell the urine as you get on the elevator to urine as you as you get on the elevator to or walk through the halls or get on the elevator you can encounter anything in the high rises so in the row homes we had three three, you know, our block was the fourth block and we had a block captain that, I mean, she did not let anybody not mow their lawn or plant flower. I mean, it was beautifully done by everybody that lived in that house. Now, her grandchildren used to live in a block, a neighboring block. Like we were the fourth block,
Starting point is 00:06:54 her grandkids lived in the fifth block, and the fifth block did not look as nice as our block. So even her grandchildren were under her wrath when it comes to coming to our block and not treating it like they lived there. So we had that. And the dynamics of living in the projects are so great because we did not know life outside of the projects. And we felt like we had everything that we needed to arm ourselves to be survivors. We knew we were surrounded by a lot of negative, a lot of crime, but we also were protected by the people in our neighborhood that wouldn't allow us to stray off the, you know, straight to the wrong path. And we were just a close-knit group that just really took care of each other.
Starting point is 00:07:54 If, you know, during the summer hours, the long days, hot, we would get together at, and it was usually my house. All the parents went to work. we would kind of put our money together and we would go to the store and we would cook cheese steaks for the entire neighborhood and everybody really kind of took turns doing this so it was a cool environment to grow in grow up in it was, you learn a great foundation of discipline because I grew up in a household where my mother, she didn't spare the ride. She's a faithful woman. She was a woman of great character and expected nothing else but that from her kids. And during those days, our parents allowed parents in the neighborhood
Starting point is 00:08:47 to help us grow and learn and stay on the right path. So it was a beautiful environment where you learn how to grow up with great character with being surrounded by 100% 100% black people. I didn't really get an interaction with any white people until my later stages of playing AAU basketball. Then they would marvel. They would want to come in our neighborhood to kind of check it out. Then when they would take me
Starting point is 00:09:24 to the suburbs, you know, these big homes and I, I mean, it was something made out of TV, but they also prepared me for what I was going to see at the university of Virginia, um, because it would have been an eye-opening experience that I'm interacted with someone other than my race. Finding Mastery is brought to you by LinkedIn Sales Solutions. In any high-performing environment that I've been part of, from elite teams to executive boardrooms, one thing holds true. Meaningful relationships are at the center of sustained success. And building those relationships, it takes more than effort.
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Starting point is 00:11:11 at linkedin.com slash deal. That's linkedin.com slash deal. For two full months for free, terms and conditions apply. Finding Mastery is brought to you by David Protein. I'm pretty intentional about what I eat, and the majority of my nutrition comes from whole foods. And when I'm traveling or in between meals, on a demanding day certainly, I need something quick that will support the way that I feel and think and perform.
Starting point is 00:11:39 And that's why I've been leaning on David Protein bars. And so has the team here at Finding Mastery. In fact, our GM, Stuart, he loves them so much. I just want to kind of quickly put them on the spot. Stuart, I know you're listening. I think you might be the reason that we're running out of these bars so quickly. They're incredible, Mike. I love them. One a day, one a day. What do you mean one a day? There's way more than that happening here. Don't tell. Okay. All right. Look, they're incredibly simple. They're effective. 28 grams of protein, just 150 calories and zero grams of sugar. It's rare to find something that fits so
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Starting point is 00:12:40 I know Stuart, you're still listening here. So getting enough protein matters. And that can't be understated, not just for strength, but for energy and focus, recovery, for longevity. And I love that David is making that easier. So if you're trying to hit your daily protein goals with something seamless, I'd love for you to go check them out. Get a free variety pack, a $25 value, and 10% off for life when you head to davidprotein.com slash finding mastery. That's davidprotein.com slash finding mastery. Okay. So you look back at your childhood with great fondness, with a gratitude. You look back as it was a place that you learned first principles, core values,
Starting point is 00:13:27 community, togetherness, have your back, have my back. You learned that. Oftentimes, the projects are associated with crime and gang and violence and poverty and not caring and struggle. And I could going right to describe some of the attributes and you're saying if i get the picture right you're saying yeah okay some of that's in there right but let me tell you the other thing right so what was it was it gang involved was your uh would you say the fourth block was that gang involved or not getting involved the fourth block was not gang involved at all like we there was no crime on my block but if you go across the field um and i and i i'm not trying to shame the high rises, but once you cross the big field, anything could happen.
Starting point is 00:14:29 You could hear shots fired. You could see people running. How did mom keep you from being attracted? What was that scenario about, cause I'll describe my childhood right now. When I saw something that was different and something that was a little risky or whatever, I was interested in it. And, you know, kids are supposed to kind of push up against boundaries and figure that whole thing out. It sounds like you went over to the high rises, you knew, but then you, you didn't stay there if you will. And I don't, I don't know if this is coming off right, but I'm curious, what were the mechanisms in your family unit where they kept you from straying?
Starting point is 00:15:14 Here's the biggest thing that a lot of times that, well, not a lot of times. Here's what's missing in homes today that I had in my home. I was more scared of my mother than anybody on earth. So when you fear your parents, you're not going to stray out. When you're out of their sight, you're not going to stray from the very things that they taught you in that house, that our household, because you don't want to make them look bad. You don't want to beat him. You don't, you don't want to break the sanctity of what the Staley family was all about. Would they use that like at this, in this family, we fill in the blank? No, we, no. No, it wasn't that prescriptive. There were actions.
Starting point is 00:16:09 You know, my mother was a woman of few words. You look at her face, her facial expressions will tell it all. If you do something within her sight, anything that's within reach, a shoe, an iron, an extension cord. She used that. And we were we were well aware of when we knew we've crossed the line in any way. And I just utilize that by being observant and aware of my surroundings and the people. And we're not a very trusting family or neighborhood. We built that. We built that trust with how we grew up and how we treated
Starting point is 00:16:55 each other. And it just wasn't because we lived in the same neighborhood. Okay. So you said we were not trusting, but we built trust. So amongst each other, like, okay, I want to pause that or pin that for a minute. Cause that's really powerful. But you're, you're saying that two things mom would use just about anything, not except for words. And there was a clear line. You knew behavior that was acceptable and unacceptable to the principles of the family.
Starting point is 00:17:26 And when you crossed it, be careful. Right. And then, so you knew that if you went out and did some stuff that was not okay, when you came home, it might be worse than what might've gotten, what might've taken place outside. Yep. Okay. You grew up afraid of mom and mom loved you. Absolutely. Okay. So how did those two work together? Because I know you as a coach of being like, whoo, like a disciplinary, like an authoritarian, like I, listen, if I played for you, I'd be like, you know, like, you know, like you're going to bring something bring something out of me right you actually wouldn't okay so tell me this is the blend between the love the acceptance the getting and then
Starting point is 00:18:12 the discipline the whatever okay so i want to understand that from mom first and then and then i want to understand how you do it um my mom loved hard. Loved hard. Like there was an incredible balance of discipline. And it was that other side of, you know, if you abide by her rules, you live clean. You're good. You live a happy life. You know, she'll love up on you. She'll kiss you. She'll hug you. She'll, you know, she'll take you for ice cream every Sunday. She will she will give you. She'll kiss you. She'll hug you. She'll take you for ice cream every Sunday. She will give you the shirt off her back. All of that. If you just do what she tells you to do and abide by the rules of her house. And that's why I always say, I do have
Starting point is 00:18:59 a reputation as being a very disciplined coach. But people see game day. When you just look at game day and you just take game day as that's who that person is, then you don't really understand the dynamics of team, of teacher, of nurturer, of forging a relationship with your players, that you can outwardly be who you are. And I've been very fortunate that my players allow me to be who I am because they know we've built a relationship to understanding that it is totally out of respect that I coach them the way I need to coach them to move them from where they are. They all aspire to be certain things. And I'll tell you this, I've had a lot of different coaches in my career. Coaches, one who were just strictly positive, just all positive. They see positive in everything. I've been coached by a coach who was method to make mistakes and be creative and taught me through those mistakes. I've been coached by someone who pretty much rolled the ball out and say,
Starting point is 00:20:32 do what you need to do. Create your magic. You're a disciplined player. You're not going to damage the sanctity of a team. So do you. And then I took all of those. And I had coaches who just play head games. Like, had you thinking outside of the, you know, 94 feet. And I've taken all of those experiences. And for me, I think I just take the good from them that works for me. Um, and I'm, I'm, I'm a, I'm a player's coach because I coach like I'm their point guard versus being up here and they're down here. I'm a team member.
Starting point is 00:21:21 Yeah. You know what I have a sense of, Let me use a, like a military analogy for a minute is that if, if we got to get into a foxhole, God, I'd love you to be in the foxhole. I'm your girl. What emotions have you felt while we've been talking? Um, I, I mean, I, I enjoy reminiscing on the very thing that continues to ground me and the very thing that is my foundation. Because that's my rock. I've never strayed from living in the projects in North Philly. Never strayed from the discipline that's required to be successful.
Starting point is 00:22:06 And it's very simple. Discipline is being able to, in the moment, not do things that you want to do, do things that created the habit for you to have the temptation not to. And I just, it's a simple math, life equation that I just try to teach our players to, if you have a certain level of discipline, and that's my favorite quote, and a quote that I live by is the disciplined person can do anything. And a lot of times people don't understand that you can be disciplined in something that's positive and that can help you in your life. You can also be disciplined in something that's negative and be as good that's having a negative impact on your life. So I do have to be specific when I say those things, because there's a big difference that will take your life and your
Starting point is 00:23:06 career one way or the other. Yeah. You hear the phrase like if that person was half as creative on cheating and getting over and just do the work, they become president, CEO of whatever, whatever. Yeah. You know, okay. I would love to learn discipline from you. I believe that that is the first principle that you
Starting point is 00:23:26 own. You've got your arms around it. I don't know if I could learn... I don't know this yet, so maybe this is going to be fighting words. I don't know if I could learn coming from a place of abundance. And so these might be fighting words. And so I don't want to fight about it, but okay. I want to tell you a story here is if you're trying to shape an athlete from scarcity, desperation, or from abundance and yeah, let's go abundance, abundance or desperation, like one of those two. I think you came from scarcity. Mom came from a place of fear. I don't know if you do or not. That's why I'm not sure if I would be able to learn that from you because you've experienced so much. You have abundance. I believe that you have love, deep love in your heart.
Starting point is 00:24:25 When I look at your track record of the decisions you made to go back to be around mom, to go back to be around dad, right? To name your house after mom. I believe love is big for you. So I don't know if I'm touching a nerve, but I would love to know if I could also learn the approach from abundance. It's a great question. It's a really great question. And I don't know the answer to that question because that really hasn't been my experience. And it's the very thing that shapes you. Now, I will say this. I think over the years, I have an abundance of things that have shaped me because of my successes. And I don't put the cart before the horse when it comes to thinking that I don't rely on my successes at all.
Starting point is 00:25:24 At all. I get that. I totally get that for you. Yeah. So every, everything that I go into, I go into wanting it to be as simple as possible, as simple, teach simple. I mean, and I, I think I'm a, I think I'm a master in basketball. For the time that I've put in, I think I'm masterful when it comes to knowing certain things on the floor. But that doesn't make me a great coach because I know more than other people. What makes me a great coach is I know how to meet people where they they are to take them where they need to go
Starting point is 00:26:12 so that means if a player let's just say a player had a learning disability but they're a great player like i'm i'm watching our freshman class um trying to figure out all the newness of how we teach basketball and we teach teach basketball. We start the simplest form. We go to a basketball stance. How elementary is that? How campish is that? But every single year from year one to year, I'm starting 22, we start the same exact way from a defensive standpoint, the same way
Starting point is 00:26:48 from a defensive standpoint. And by the time someone's a junior or senior, they're bored with it. And you get bored with being disciplined. It's a boring place to do something over and over and over. The same thing, the simplest thing, over and over and over the same thing, the simplest thing over and over and over again, I see the spectrum of the newbies who have no idea what we're talking about, to the juniors who look like they've done it all their lives. And then the seniors who are just completely bored with it because this is their fourth or fifth year that they have to do this. And depending on how quickly the youngsters grasp it, we can move forward. Finding Mastery is brought to you by Momentous.
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Starting point is 00:30:13 Again, that's Felix Gray. You spell it F-E-L-I-X-G-R-A-Y.com and use the code FindingMastery20 at FelixGray.com for 20% off. Okay, so from discipline, if we're not careful, we become rigid. Use the code FindingMastery20 at FelixGray.com for 20% off. Okay. So from discipline, if we're not careful, we become rigid, right? There's like over-discipline is like we just get, this is me speaking about me and my life. Like if there's too much discipline, there's a monotony to it. There's a boredom to it.
Starting point is 00:30:41 There is a, I get kind of beat down and I get where I'm, what my teachers are trying to do is be disciplined to groove the behaviors and to become familiar with the best thoughts, right? So we're eliminating variance by trying to, you know, stay true to one thing. So it becomes, that thing becomes masterful and then we build on it. How do you help people express the creative part? Cause I heard it earlier where you're just like, hey, some coaches just rolled the ball out and said, do your thing because you've earned the right, because you've been so disciplined that they trust you. This is the art of coaching now from discipline to creative. And maybe you say, hey, listen, there's no space for creative. Just do the blueprint. No, there's always space for creative. And I'll take our freshman class.
Starting point is 00:31:29 One of our players is super special. Like she can do things that no one else on our team as a freshman can do. Her basketball IQ was off the roof. Her court vision is incredible. Her movements are so natural. So when we slow her down and say, this is how we want to play for right now, she is half the athlete that she is. She's in full. She's thinking.
Starting point is 00:32:02 She's slow. She's in thought. She stops. So you have to communicate. This is this is very new for you. You know, you're going to you're going to go through thought process and she's a perfectionist. So she's trying to get it right. So discipline is just keep her on that path. Well, just kind of explain to her that this is going to help you eventually. It doesn't feel like it right now, but it's going to help you. But so here's what I need you to do. I need you to play through it because we need to get to your greatness.
Starting point is 00:32:39 Because our greatness is on the other side of it, but she's trying to figure it out. And we need to take our minds through figuring things out. Because if you just play off of what you do in your greatness, that's all you're going to rely on. If somebody else is greater in that, you don't have anything to fall back on. So it's teaching her mental strength. It's teaching her to train her thoughts and her body. Because once that becomes one, she's going to be able to do some more incredible things. I like to teach our players not to these things, because if you learn them, you can play for anybody. Like you can play for, not just for us and our coaching staff, but when it's time for you to get to the next level and the next level after that,
Starting point is 00:33:38 it's a matter of just semantics. And if you have an understanding of it, but the, you know, the, the terminology is a little bit different. You're going to fit in and you're going to have ultimately longevity in basketball. I asked a similar type question to a world, a multiple world champion in wrestling. And it's definitely an alpha competitive sport. And I said, how, you know, like trying to oversimplify it, like, how are you so good? And he goes, you know, like trying to oversimplify it, like, how are you so good? And he goes, you know, I don't want to sound arrogant, but I just know the alphabet. I know the full alphabet. So now I'm just putting words together that are fun to play with. And I think, you know, the alphabet, is that right? You know,
Starting point is 00:34:21 the alphabet of basketball. Yes. You know, the alphabet of basketball. Yes. You know, the alphabet. Okay. So you're playing now. Okay. So let's go back to this, this really eloquent thing that you just said, which is like helping them blend. Gosh, that's not how you said it. Put together their body and their, their mind. How did you say that? Is something to that effect? Yeah. There's a, there's not a whole lot of opportunity to strengthen someone's mentality without failure. So when their minds and bodies match up, it will take them a lot further than just their bodies because everybody gets tired and fatigued. So what happens when you get tired and fatigued? Something else has to kick in and that's your habits and your mentality. Like you have to be mentally, I'm a firm believer in this and a coach taught me this and a coach taught her this, which is, and I think it's a Bobby Knight quote. And I believe Bobby Knight said, mental is the physical as four is to one.
Starting point is 00:35:29 And it took me a while to really understand that. Just as an adult, it took me to understand that because for so long growing up, I was better physically and skill wise. I was better than everybody else. But when it was time for me to try out for the 1992 Olympic team and some other more experienced players had something that I didn't have and I get cut. That's when you start realizing it's more than just a physical part of it. And you get cut. You can't be physical anymore. It's mental. It's mental to get over, you know, not being able to do something that you work so hard for.
Starting point is 00:36:17 How about that? Is that, yeah, if you really want to do something special, you're going to face challenges. Those challenges are not physical. At all. How about it? At all. Right? Yeah. And those challenges happen on the court. They happen off the court.
Starting point is 00:36:33 And the same internal strategies and skills will hopefully be available both on the court and off the court. So four to one, how do you go about this four to one ratio? I don't get a sense that this is going to hook back around trust, right? Like I think, I think if you're going to bring somebody into your team, you're, you're probably going to start with like, well, let's see what you got, you know, like a professional, like another coach or whatever, or a sports psych and that, that you got to earn trust with you because that's a strong framework that you come from. So do you, do you bring anyone in onto your team to help with, let's call it mental imagery, meditation, goal setting, self-talk, you know, do you do it? Do you bring anyone in or are you a couple of steps ahead and you are teaching your athletes? I don't in that regards.
Starting point is 00:37:26 I do in team building, life skills. I do believe that you have to have different voices because your players can tire of your voice. And that's probably why I don't talk a whole lot. Like I don't, I'm not a i'm not a talking coach like i talk when i i feel like what i say will penetrate our players i mean there's there's mom right what's up mom you know she's coming through yeah like i the older I get, the more, the more mom, I'm mom like. My hair stands up when I talk to you.
Starting point is 00:38:08 Like, it's just the truth of it. Like, I believe you, like you get right to the truth. So how do you, this is not related to this conversation right now, because that's not, what I'm about to say is not happening right here. But how did you develop from mom? I'm imagining the ability to speak the truth and probably the truth to power, you know, like I believe that you would stand up for anybody. So how did you learn to speak the truth? I learned to speak the truth when I, when you really start listening to your heart,
Starting point is 00:38:41 because it's, it's heart driven. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. That's so big. That's right. Because it's not like, Hey, these are the right thoughts to have. It's go and understand within what is true from your feeling, from your belief system, from, and then the words will just happen. That is so true. And I don't think I'm a great public speaker like me if I'm judging myself. But everybody I seem to talk to or when I'm giving a public speech, they walk away with thinking I'm, you know, I get a lot of standing ovations and I don't really get it. But in some ways I do, because I am I am speaking like me. I am unapologetic. I speak what I think my truth is.
Starting point is 00:39:42 And I don't I don't I'm not judgmental. I just let people be who they are. And again, I meet them where they are, whether I'm giving a speech or not. And I, and that's who my mother is. Bless her soul. Like, you know, in heaven. But let, let, let me, let me just give you a. Wait, wait, you can't run over these feelings that you're feeling right now.
Starting point is 00:40:06 What just happened? Yeah, what just happened? Yeah. I mean, I don't know, because I was shy, like uncomfortably shy when I went from the Projects of North Philly to Virginia.
Starting point is 00:40:30 I was good around my teammates, bad media. Like I would get one word answers. And as I reflect on it, it was because I didn't trust. Like I didn't trust the people who were asking me the questions. I didn't know them. And I don't give myself, I wasn't back then, I didn't give myself to people without having a certain level of trust. So, and I look at myself now and you really can't shut me up, but I don't say more than the words that are needed. So it was a kind of a delicate balance, but I didn't, I learned that from my, I learned it from my mother. Like I truly learned all of it from my mother because I watched her, you know, she was the person in my household that, that allowed me the range of emotions that, you you know that taught me through her example
Starting point is 00:41:27 it was a pretty cool dynamic although there were some days where you know i felt her wrath yeah and she was just guiding though she was just guiding guiding guiding to where she knew when i left her household, I was going to be okay. Even when I, you know, sometimes I watch our student, my players come here and they get from under their parents and then they just do things. They go and get tattoos, you know, on the first day that they're here because they're not under the guise of their parents anymore. But I was never that way. I carried, and my father had something to do with this too,
Starting point is 00:42:15 but my mother was the strongest figure in my life because she was the one that was administering the discipline. And my father was a quiet man and just allowed, everybody had a role. He was the discipline. And my father was a quiet man and just allowed, everybody had a role. He was the provider. You know, she was the disciplinarian. And we just, we just knew growing up in our household.
Starting point is 00:42:36 Brothers and sisters? Yes, you do. Three brothers. Yes. Yeah, that's right. You've had, you've experienced quite a bit of,
Starting point is 00:43:05 let's call it death and disease in your family. Right. And so I want to get to the grief part, like, because you've got some experience here. So I want to get to how, what insights you have going through the grief process before we go there. I'd like to know, like great explorers. They're trying to figure something out. I see you as an explorer. What, what are you trying to figure out? For, for, for me, I'm trying to,
Starting point is 00:43:15 I, I owe basketball a great deal. Like I feel like I'm forever indebted to the game for all the things that it's given me. And I want to figure out each of my players. I want to figure out what's inside of them. And I want to help them find their niche in life. And I hope it's basketball because I'm pretty good at it. I've dedicated my entire life to it. But I also know that there's more to life than basketball. I mean, it's a big part of it. And it's been a big part of my life.
Starting point is 00:43:57 So I understand that part of it. But I know that there's only a certain percentage of women that's going to be able to be pros. So I have to balance, you know, and I'm guilty of being a coach that coaches from the worst case scenario. Worst case. I try to put our players in a worst case scenario, whether it's life or whether it's on the court, because anything outside of that creates advantages. So if they can fight their way out of being in the worst situation, everything else is going to be quite simple to navigate. What is a compromise worst case scenario situation that you create in practice? So in practice, if we're going over a press breaker, right? I'll put them in the corner, the corner furthest away from the basket, right?
Starting point is 00:45:02 And they're double teamed, right? You get out of the corner, you're going to create a transitional advantage. But getting out of that corner is hard to navigate. Whether it's, you know, pass fakes, whether it's pivoting, whether it's jump passing. There is a lot of skill set and thought that goes into how do i get myself out of this situation and once they do they'll they'll appreciate getting out because the you know the reward is at the other end of the back the other end of the court where we're scoring with these there's an app metaphor for life, which is to put yourself mentally in scenarios that you know are going to be difficult and work through those. You know, first, maybe it's on paper, maybe it's role playing, maybe it's practice in a boardroom or whatever, you know. but to at least have an idea about how things could go wrong and not just stay there,
Starting point is 00:46:06 but have the idea of what could go wrong or what could be hard. And then to practice inside of that, to sort it out. There's an apt metaphor for life there. Yeah. But for, for, for me, I, I, um, I'm, I'm my very best when things aren't going well like I'm I'm I don't like when everything's comfortable I I don't I don't like being in that being in that place because you you tend to let your guard down so how do you let go of control that's where I was going to go with you because I see that you you've got a command of yourself.
Starting point is 00:46:54 And what you're just describing here is like when it's unfolding and unpredictable and it's a bit chaotic, I'm at my best. But you keep your guard up. Tell me about that because there's a vulnerability required to take risk. So how do you – and listen, your track record speaks for itself. Like you go for it. So how do you do that and, your, your track record speaks for itself. Like you go for it. So how do you do that? And not like lose control, if you will. Cause I think that's what people are afraid of is that if they take a shot, they take a risk, they do something that is kind of breaking the rules or whatever to sort it out. And it doesn't go right that they won't be able to handle the downstream effects from it. I think my approach is I'm in the space of operating. What would you do
Starting point is 00:47:30 if you knew you wouldn't fail? It's really powerful. I get confused with it. So help me. I understand it. I understand it. But I get caught in a loop there. I don't get rattled. Oh, that's where you take that. Okay. Yes. I don't flinch. I don't flinch. I don't. In games, if our opponent goes on a 10-0 run, most coaches are like, quick, quick, quick, quick. But you have to assess because a 10-0 run doesn't mean that you're, you're not taking good shots. It doesn't mean that you aren't defending the 10-0 run. It's just, they made, they made a better play. You made it hard for them, but they just made a play. And if you're taking good shots, they're going to eventually fall. It's going to balance itself out.
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Starting point is 00:50:27 If you're looking for high-quality personal care products that elevate your routine without complicating it, I'd love for you to check them out. Head to calderalab.com slash findingmastery and use the code findingmastery at checkout for 20% off your first order. That's calderalab, C-A-L-D-E-R-L-A-B.com slash finding mastery. All right. So you're looking below a level. You're not getting caught up in the scoreboard. You're like, are we taking good shots? Are we in our right defensive posture? You know, are we making good decisions? If we are, it's going to work out because what else can we do? Right. Is that where you come from? Like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:05 What else can we, so I've seen that you really like the concept, the framework control what you can. Yeah. Like, so you focus most of your efforts on controllables. Is that fair to say? Yes. Yeah. I think you've mastered them.
Starting point is 00:51:21 I go a step further than just for you. Like when I, when I listen and I watch that, you're not just trying to mastered them. I go a step further than just for you. Like when I, when I listen and I watch that, you're not just trying to control them. You're actually trying to master the things that are in your control. And I think you're probably trying to teach that to the athletes you're coaching. So what are the things let's be super academic here. What are the things that you focus on that are in your control? Attitude. That's one. 100%. Communication is huge. Top of my list is to be able to communicate.
Starting point is 00:51:53 And for me, communication is that. Some young people really don't know how to communicate appropriately in different situations. I don't know how to communicate appropriately in different situations i don't care about that you're talking about like like a frown a cut with an eye you know the cut yeah the cut with the eye you know it says so much i was talking to an athlete this was up at the seahawks and um he suffers no fools this is an alpha okay suffers no fools i said is an alpha, okay? Suffers no fools. I said, how do you sort out who you trust?
Starting point is 00:52:29 He goes, I just watch. If they can cut somebody with their eyes and do it to their face, I'm going to trust them. And so, you know what I mean about cut with the eyes, right? Like, it's just like a little look. Like, hey, we're going to drop our shoulders and we're going to look at each other. And like, if I give you that nod, like, are you real? And the other person flinches. So that is so good okay so that's what you're talking about too sometimes it's just it's a way you carry yourself not necessarily the words that you choose it is nice when they both line up though yeah it's it's good um i i I like for people to express themselves and not hold back.
Starting point is 00:53:09 You know, I would say I do. I do. The caveat is you really can't do it in front of a team. I don't do it in front of a team. If you really have something to say, you know, come speak to me one on one. Curse, scream, cry. Do whatever you need to do. We can work out appropriate delivery. We can work that out. That's not an issue. We can't
Starting point is 00:53:33 always get to the young person expressing themselves and saying what's on their minds and hearts. So I have an open mouth policy to say what you need to say, even sometimes in a team setting, because we'll use it as a lesson. We'll use it like I was big on. I don't know. I haven't had to deal with this in quite a long time in that when we had players who just flat out were disrespectful in a practice, I used to send them home, like, get out. Like, I don't anymore. I don't deal with it anymore. But when I got over that part of it, I made them stay in the gym and maybe get on the bike or get on the treadmill
Starting point is 00:54:19 so they can be in this environment so they can learn. Leaving them and letting them go, that's what they want to do, be on their own terms and go back and get it on FaceTime. No, let's stay here. Let's learn. Let's see what other people are doing so you can see what the appropriate behavior is and how we need to act in a team setting. So I really think that's a evolution in coaching because sometimes you just,
Starting point is 00:54:48 you want to just separate yourself from the bad behavior or something. That's not even, that's not helping the person. They need examples of what, how to do it the right way. That's cool. Because sometimes when, if I reach that place and it's that type of thing, like, okay, get out of here. That's actually a relief for me, which is not, that's not what I'm trying to sort out either, you know? So yeah, I love that insight. That's a powerful insight.
Starting point is 00:55:16 What, how do you speak to yourself? Like, I'd love to know the language that you use inside. How do you speak to yourself when you are, it's good to be you now when it's real good in there? How are you, how do you speak to yourself? I don't know if I do speak to myself. Oh my God. Of course you do. You've got a whole narrative in there. You got a whole, well, well, well, I don't, I don't know if I'm speaking to myself or if I'm just assessing situations. Maybe I do. Let me just give you this example.
Starting point is 00:55:50 Because I do speak to myself. I interviewed for the Portland Trailblazers, right? Yes. It was like when they first expressed that they had interest and before they expressed that I really had no interest in coaching NBA, WNBA, anything, none, like no ounce of me. And maybe it's because nobody really had interest in me. But the moment they had interest in me, I had interest in it for and I think mainly because of the challenge, because it was something different, something new, something that not very many college coaches have had success right away anyway. So leading up to the, and it was probably five or six days between, you know, when I talked to them and when the interview was. So it occupied my mind a lot.
Starting point is 00:56:52 Like, I visualized me being in the locker room. There were NBA playoff games going on. So I would just kind of put myself in those situations. What would you do? How would you react? You know, I'm a Sixers fan. So I'm looking at the Sixers and I'm watching Ben Simmons, you know, just lose confidence. He's one of the focal points of our team and he just lost confidence. I'm like, what would I say to him? What would I do to him? All while looking
Starting point is 00:57:25 at this interview that I'll have in a few days and saying, how do I prepare for this? I'm asking myself, how do you prepare? I really don't know anything about coaching in the NBA, but here's what I do know. I know people. I know my separation and coaching has a lot to do with my interaction and me forging relationships with people. So that's what I'm going to expound on. The X and an O-ing is X and an O-ing. You can learn that. I think I have things that coaches can't learn at this point of their careers because it is the very thing that I've built my career on, which is the person and figuring out how to deal with them and all the things that they're thinking about and all the things that they want to achieve while not compromising the sanctity of the team. And I think that's what's missing in the NBA. I think you're right. And I want to go two ways on this. One is the way you speak to yourself
Starting point is 00:58:40 is that you create images about what something in the future could look like and then you're working your way through it how could i how would i what would be a solution and and then underneath that i think you've got this fundamental belief that probably isn't evident to you but this fundamental belief that i can do hard things i know people put me in a situation. I can do hard things and I know people, people, those two combined. And yes, I can learn all the X's and O's. And I listen,
Starting point is 00:59:10 I know a lot of them. I can learn all that. It's the foxhole. That's the foxhole thing. Yeah. It's a foxhole thing, but, but it's the,
Starting point is 00:59:17 your two kind of crown jewels right now. That seems to me are, are, you know, people and, you know, virtues and values and how to bring those out of people, but you understand humanness. And then the other is that you can do hard things.
Starting point is 00:59:32 You've been through hard times. Uh, the most hard times is losing loved ones, but you've been through hard times and you understand that you how to stay intact during them. Are those your two of your crown jewels and discipline is the way that you bring that out well said i i couldn't say that i i couldn't i couldn't uh eloquently say that um we got there together we got there together yeah yeah we got there together on it thank you okay so all right i here's what i think you and the NBA. The only thing I get tripped up on is that the reputation of like the coaches don't have as much power as players. I don't know if I don't know if you could manage that. You know, like you're going to have a command.
Starting point is 01:00:17 You're like they'd be in it for a shocker. How about that? Here's what I think about NBA players. I think they want something they can believe in when they can look good in it and they have an impact on it. Like the stars are the stars. And there's a pecking order when it comes to NBA teams. Where I think I'm really good at is,
Starting point is 01:00:53 I certainly would let the stars be the stars, but as the other people, the people that sit in, at the end of the bench, you have to bring value to them. You have to allow them to see value in themselves and the team without playing as many minutes as they want to play, but still bring value to them. And that's a role that, you know, from the outside looking in
Starting point is 01:01:22 and then talking to the Portland trailblazers is a big part of how do you, how do you discipline the superstars? How do you keep the culture of a team while holding them accountable to, uh, behaviors that are detrimental to the team? Yeah, I'm, I'm right there with you. And what practices do you have? It's really simple. It's, it's, simple. You have to forge that relationship with each and every player. And you have to manage that. And again, I go back to my point guard skills. I know I'm the coach. I know I'm the coach. They know they're the superstars. They know they're the role players. So what I would do is I would, it's just communicating. It's frank conversations. You'll figure out how they like to take an information because ultimately you want them to be who they are while respecting the whole sanctity of the team. If you look at the whole evolution of a basketball, like a basketball season.
Starting point is 01:02:35 The more you win, the tighter you get. It is like look at the Phoenix Suns. They they're tight. They're playing for a purpose. And that purpose is their coach. And the tragedy that he went through, they're playing for a point guard who's never been to an NBA finals and never won a championship. And they got a young star who is having the best playoff series of his career and comparable to other ones the best in probably a long time being a young player um so you look at that dynamic then everybody else you see all the players who don't even play they're in it they're in it how do you create that in the preseason and then during this and hold on to it during the season and create the momentum you
Starting point is 01:03:26 need to to win a championship you you do it by communicating and creating a togetherness and and addressing when things occur like i i believe that success has a certain look a certain sound and a certain sound, and a certain feel. And if something doesn't look, sound, or feel right, you got to address it. You can't not address it because you're just allowing it to grow. And when you allow it to grow, it starts seeping in. It becomes a bigger problem to overcome in a season. And you'll go through things that would take a five-minute conversation. But yet it's grown to a month, to two months. And now you're not only just trying to win basketball games, you're trying to dig yourself
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Starting point is 01:07:14 Sometimes people will sell a virtue or a principle for a short-term win or they'll sell it for avoidance of uncomfortableness right it's it's those two things yeah and I'm like I'm on the record saying that um values and virtues and all character traits whatever you want to call them are um they're cheap until you have to pay for them and then they get really expensive and they're not yours until you have to pay for them. And then they get really expensive. And they're not yours until you pay for them. They're not yours. You know, so, you know, you are relationship-based, developmentally-minded, and completely authentic.
Starting point is 01:07:57 I think you go into any room, any coaching environment, and be an absolute agent for mastery, for brilliance. And you had said that one of your missions in life, that's my word, not yours, is to help unlock the greatness in others. I think you do it by having a true, authentic commitment to development and relationships, those two, how do you help people see what's possible? Or do they show it to you and you just play it back to them? I just have a real insatiable desire for the process, desire to help people through their process. So do I see it?
Starting point is 01:08:50 I don't see it in all of them. They don't show me. Everyone doesn't show me it. But everybody has something inside of them. So I don't go in with preconceived. Again, I meet people where they are. That's something that a lot of people don't do. Like if I think somebody can be great, I don't expect greatness like today. It's a journey. gotta you gotta lead them to the greatness you tell them how good they are and how good they can be but but where are you today okay and then you you have to stop
Starting point is 01:09:34 where are you tomorrow where are you the next day and how does it measure up to where you're trying to go yeah you got to be real i was going the same place about honesty is that I think you're creating honest humans. They don't always like it though. They, they, they learn to like it and respect it because they see the growth. That's hard when they don't see growth. It's really hard when a young person doesn't see themselves getting better. Um, but then you have to act, you have to show them like yeah sit down with them hey this is what you were doing like two weeks ago you're not doing that anymore even you know even a little a little bit or or you're not doing it you're not doing you're doing the same thing you get worse so let's figure out how we how we get skin better.
Starting point is 01:10:25 And and they there's buy into that. There's buy. There's this huge buy in. And I also think that creating an environment where others are on that same mission to be great. Because if they're not, the synergies are somebody is going to to pull somebody away from their growth and their path to be great. And for you, is greatness measured externally or internally? Or is there some sort of hybrid between the two? Because you have all of the accolades, three-time Olympian, gold medalist. You've got fill in the blanks. It keeps going. But when you think about greatness and then a togetherness of greatness, I don't want to sound Pollyannish when I say this because I've experienced this.
Starting point is 01:11:14 And we won everything at the Super Bowl through this method at the Seahawks, which was it was a full commitment for people to operate at their upper limits on a consistent basis. And we thought we might win, but it was almost like an afterthought. It was really the commitment was to work at our very best collectively together towards our upper reaches day in and day out, recover as if it was the thing that mattered most. So you could go do the other thing that mattered most, which is work your ass off the next day together. So it really, when I say this and not be Pollyannish is, are you committed to people working towards their very best? Or are you committed is greatness building a dynasty where you win over and over and over again? Um, for, for me, it's the people.
Starting point is 01:12:07 It really is. Shocker. Yeah, shocker. Yeah. Yeah, it's like you have to build a culture first. Culture of? You have to build a culture of players having the synergy to be great every day and to compete every day and i say this because we're in a we're in a position that not a whole lot of
Starting point is 01:12:36 programs have been in like we've we we got 16 players I believe 11 of them are like all American high school players, 11, 11. And then the other players are great in their own right. So I'm thinking, how are we going to how are they going to differentiate? How are they going to edge each other out when it when it comes to playing time and divvying up the playing time? It's an incredible competitive environment that some of them are going to sing or swim. But we're going to arm them with whatever they need to be successful. And we're not going to let them off the hook because this is what they signed up for and it is it's much like a WNBA team and I'm so happy because these players have they believed in this environment they want this now I know we're we're we're you know we're six
Starting point is 01:13:41 months removed from being in the middle of the season. But right now they have a a a there's a cool innocence and purity about where they are at this stage of our season. lineup and getting substitution patterns, we know and we hope there isn't issues. There's going to be some issues, but it's cool for me as a coach to work through them during the process. So when it happens to them, if they don't get the plan time that they want, they've already been through it. So they already know how to react to it, even though they don't like it. Even though it's something that, you know, they didn't envision in their minds, them sitting for 20 minutes of a game or 30 minutes of a game, we're playing only 10 minutes. It's such a cool dynamic that I'm so looking forward to, because again, it's a challenge. It's a huge challenge for us to get them to believe in each other and, and, and still believe in themselves,
Starting point is 01:14:53 even though they're not getting what they want. So, I mean, it's, I'm looking forward to it because it's much different than I've ever coached in 22 years. It really is like an all-star team that you're pulling together. Yeah. Yeah. Not just for one weekend, but for months. Okay. Is there a decision or an experience that changed everything for you?
Starting point is 01:15:17 I was, I have to go back with, go back to when I got cut from the 1992 Olympic team. It was a, a huge lesson life lesson for me because i had never failed that bad meaning i mean the the only thing growing up the only thing i wanted to do being in that house that row home and housing. I didn't see women play, but twice on TV. That was Olympic games and national championship. So when I got cut in 1992, that was just like me, you know, there was a goal. There was a goal. And I reached the crossroad of, do I think
Starting point is 01:16:02 because I got cut as a political thing thing so I'm not going to go back or I'm going to put myself in a position where I'm going to be an asset the next time that I try off on the Olympic team they're not going to leave me off the roster so I chose the latter and and worked my butt off they said when I got cut, there were two reasons. I was too short and I didn't have enough international experience. So I couldn't do anything about my height, but I surely can arm myself with international experience. So I packed up and played for three years. And when that rolled around in 1995, you know, three Olympic gold medals later, if I didn't, if I chose to go the other route and not hurdle that, I would not be a three-time Olympian. I would not be a two-time
Starting point is 01:16:58 assistant coach, gold medal Olympian, and I wouldn't be the head coach of an Olympic team today. So I chose to go the hardest route and not the easiest route. And I got to the other side and it's been plentiful. Where were you when you got the information or the news that you didn't make the team? We were there at the, at the Olympic training center. You were there. And so were you with others or did you walk up by yourself to a board and see who was on the cut line no that no they brought you in one by one one by one one by one the committee members and and they they tell you whether you made it or not and how old were you i was 20 22 years old 1992 i was college player of the year that's right
Starting point is 01:17:49 um the best player in american basketball you know for college and so when you were walking in did you have a sense that you didn't make it or did you think like oh yeah i'm aware well enough to make it right okay and then so they brought you in and how did that what do you remember what you were wearing i don't i was probably wearing some usa basketball gear okay and then when you came in you sat down i would imagine one coach or two coaches were in there there were two people not coaches committee members committee members and however they delivered it. What was your experience when you heard the news and they said, I'm unfortunate, I'm sorry, or whatever they said?
Starting point is 01:18:33 I mean, when I reacted like most young people, which was this bullshit and it's political. You said that right away? No, I mean my bubble. Your bubble. See, you do talk to yourself. Yeah, look at you. Okay, so you said bullshit and political. And then interesting that you blamed the circumstances.
Starting point is 01:19:01 You didn't, but then you changed your internal approach so you didn't just get stuck blaming yeah it was something that i wanted and and i like to prove people wrong i do i like to prove them wrong i like to i like to be an odds beater because um it's the very thing that fuels me. Do you have a chip still? Yes, I coach with a chip. Yes. You do? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:32 Okay. So look, how do you do that? Because you've won everything. What else is there to win? I mean, there are haters and detractors out there. I know. I was hoping you'd go there. I was being silly with that because you've got lots of press on you like favorite amazingly favorable press but then you've got like press that is i would imagine hard to read but maybe you don't read it maybe you don't
Starting point is 01:19:55 read some of that stuff i read it all okay so how do you deal with which what is one of the ones i don't want to give any power to any particular writer but give me a theme that shows up that you go well it it may not be a theme that's directed to it's indirectly it's indirectly impacting me and our team so go back to 2020. Women's basketball, the decision makers of women's basketball decided that they were going to push Sabrina Unescu the whole season. Which, don't get me wrong, probably one of the greatest college players ever to play the game. And deserving of the greatest college players ever to play the game and deserving of the spotlight beginning of the year she's coming in they went to the final four the previous year she's got triple doubles on triple doubles on triple doubles um there's room for her to be
Starting point is 01:20:59 to be celebrated right same year um, we lose a game in November, and then we never lost a game since. And we ended up somehow, they lost, and it was kind of swept under the rug. But we were winning, and we kept getting this momentum to compete for a national championship. Now, at this time, you have to understand that we're a predominantly Black team coached by a Black coach. And the narrative never shifted. They never pivoted. They continued on with this narrative. And I'm wondering why.
Starting point is 01:21:48 And I didn't really say a whole lot during that time because I didn't want to be a distraction to our team. But I'm reading, I'm looking, I'm keeping notes. And then the bottom falls out right yeah so and i when the bottom fell out they continue with the narrative of sabrina which i know was her last year and all all of that room for her to be reveled in that but then you don't speak on who was the number one team for the past nine weeks of the season you never really give us the pub publicity because you're sticking with that narrative now I don't know if it's a race thing or what but I did have a few choice words to some to a decision maker and And was I wrong? No, I don't think I was wrong. But I told them how I felt and I told them how it looked, not not just for South Carolina, but for the rest of women's basketball, because there were there were a lot of great stories that weren't covered and we missed the mark and the bottom fell out. So the only thing that people are going to hear about is the one narrative
Starting point is 01:23:06 when maybe they said they were going to do these stories during the NCAA tournament, but we never had an NCAA tournament because the bottom fell out, pandemic hit, and now we're left with not these untold stories. I mean, they ended up doing a feature, an hour feature on us during that time. But I'm still, I was still talking about the other stories that we missed. And I don't think it will change. I think they're going to go to the hottest thing.
Starting point is 01:23:41 And honestly, if it's a white student's a, if it's a, a white student athlete player that is good and deservingly so, if they're good, great, but let's not, let's not, let's not lose all the other powerful stories in our game, because that's what our game has been built on is the, the stories, the great athletes, the great teams. And let's not lose sight of that. So I just feel like that's a chip. That's a huge chip that I coach with. Who are some of the, if you could sit with a master of craft, somebody that is alive or not with us anymore,
Starting point is 01:24:23 and you could sit at their knee for a little bit, who would you want to learn from? Who would you want to have that conversation with? Just any craft? Yeah, for sure. You know, this is a weird one and not out of left field, but this is one person that i grew up watching from afar um it's princess diana i've always had a yeah yeah i know i always had a i always had something
Starting point is 01:24:57 hearing about what she does um what she what she did for young people and underprivileged. I just really found her fascinating. And if you had one question, I don't like being a reductionist, but there's something fun about it sometimes. But like, if you had one question. If I had one question, I would ask her what she would do differently to impact a mass of people. Because one person can really change how a mass of people think and operate. And when you can impact lots and lots of people, I think that's the most powerful thing in a positive way now, because we got somebody that can impact a mass of people in a negative way and find ourselves where we are today. Not to be political. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:26:01 Okay. How do you finish this thought? It all comes down to. Beating the odds. My vision is. Is to help as many people as possible. I believe that. There is a God.
Starting point is 01:26:18 Mastery is having an understanding of the good, the bad, the ugly of a craft and being able to explain it to anyone. I am. My mother's child. Love is. i am my mother's child love is um exceptional you feel all that don't you i do yep don i've loved this conversation same here Same here. Very different than the podcast I've been on. I've learned a whole lot. And I appreciate you just sharing your expertise and helping me realize really the power of me.
Starting point is 01:27:20 Because sometimes I just don't stop. I don't stop i don't i don't stop to to figure things out i just continue to go and try to you know try to help people as much as possible well you know i thank you uh this has been fun and meaningful and a joy and um it's everything i hope for you know in this conversation and i don't know what this is worth, but so I spent about a decade inside the NFL working with a team, the Seahawks, as I mentioned earlier, you could run that team. You could run a team. Coach Carroll's doing a great job. I'm not saying it like that. And I think about like that alpha male environment, you know, and like, how tall are you? Five, six.
Starting point is 01:28:02 Yeah. You're running that team. Like,, I'd love to do that with you. Like, can you imagine? And I bet you don't know much about football, but that is so secondary because you get a great offensive coordinator. You get a great defensive coordinator on the X's and O's and you pick it up quickly. It's not, you know, you understand the language of humans and you understand the language of high performance. Like what a thought experiment that is for me right now to imagine you doing that. Hey, listen, thank you. If there's anything I can do to ever help you along your path,
Starting point is 01:28:35 I'm honored to have this brief time that we've shared. So I'm grateful for it. And honestly, thank you very much. Thank you. Appreciate it. Appreciate it. And honestly, thank you very much. Thank you. Appreciate it. Appreciate it. All right. Thank you so much for diving into another episode of Finding Mastery with us. Our team loves creating this podcast and sharing these conversations with you. We really appreciate you being part of this community. And if you're enjoying the show, the easiest no cost way to support is to hit the subscribe or follow button wherever you're listening. Also, if you haven't already, please consider dropping us a review on Apple or Spotify.
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