Mick Unplugged - Unstoppable: David Pollack's 50/40/10 Formula for Life
Episode Date: November 28, 2025UGA Game Day Special Release David Pollack is a celebrated former college and NFL football player, twice named SEC Player of the Year and a multi-time All-American. Renowned for his relentless driv...e and leadership both on and off the field, David has become an inspiration through his faith, perseverance, and commitment to excellence. Beyond his impressive athletic accomplishments, David is a devoted husband, father, and man of God, dedicated to helping others ignite their potential through speaking, writing, and coaching. His unique “50, 40, 10” philosophy and personal story of overcoming adversity are at the heart of his message, motivating audiences to embrace standards, work ethic, and purpose in every aspect of life. Key Takeaways Perseverance Through Adversity: David’s story embodies resilience—whether overcoming a career-ending injury or being fired from ESPN, he consistently demonstrates that setbacks are opportunities for growth and deeper trust in God. Leadership Is Influence: David believes everyone is a leader if they influence even one person, highlighting that leadership starts with caring for others and setting a standard by example. The Importance of Standards Over Feelings: David’s “50, 40, 10” concept emphasizes that showing up, having direction, and pushing through discomfort are what separate the truly committed from the rest in sports, business, and life. Sound Bites “You can outdo 50% of the people in this world by showing up more, showing up with a good attitude, showing up ready to rock and roll.” “When we come to faith, we don’t automatically know how to share our testimony, but everyone can invite someone in, and the most important witness is how we live our lives.” “Don’t worry about how you feel every day, because your feelings change every day...that doesn’t change who you are and what you bring to the table every single time.” Connect & Discover David: Instagram: @davidpollack47 X: @davidpollack47 Website: davidpollack.com Podcast: See Ball Get Ball with David Pollack 🔥 Ready to Unleash Your Inner Game-Changer? 🔥 Mick Hunt’s BEST SELLING book, How to Be a Good Leader When You’ve Never Had One: The Blueprint for Modern Leadership, is here to light a fire under your ambition and arm you with the real-talk strategies that only Mick delivers. 👉 Grab your copy now and level up your life → Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books A Million FOLLOW MICK ON: Spotify: MickUnplugged Instagram: @mickunplugged Facebook: @mickunplugged YouTube: @MickUnpluggedPodcast LinkedIn: @mickhunt Website: MickHuntOfficial.com Apple: MickUnplugged Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Two big things happen in my life that I always like to share.
50, 40, 10 by David Pollard.
You can outdo 50% of the people in this world by showing up more, showing up with a good attitude, showing up ready to rock and roll.
40% is the next step. In the right direction, with the right effort, I'm beating 90% of people.
But we got 10% left, Mick. To you, white standards are important.
Don't worry about how you feel every day. Because your feelings change every day.
And what people say change and the task changes. But that doesn't change who you are.
And what you bring to the table every single time, will you succeed all the time? No.
I tell people leadership is a four-letter word, C-A-R-E.
Yeah, I think, first of all, if you have influence over one person, you're a leader.
So everybody got that crazy person in your family that likes you for no reason.
So everybody's a leader.
Dude, I've failed all along the way.
I mean, I have failed so much more than I have succeeded.
And I like to share those because those are real.
The 3-H is hard, it's hot, and it hurts.
Welcome to Mick Unplugged, where we ignite potential and fuel purpose.
Get ready for raw insights, bold moves, and game-changing conversations.
Buckle up, here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged,
and today we're about to get personal with a really good friend of mine.
We're talking about a ton of accolades.
SEC Player of the Year, two times.
We're not talking about one side of the ball.
We're talking about Player of the Year, two times.
Defensive player of the year, one time. All-American, two times, three times. You name it, he is that guy, number one or first-round draft pick. But what's more important to me, he's a man of God, he's an amazing father, and he's an amazing husband. And to me, that solidifies the man of who he is. Ladies and gentlemen, it is my distinct honor to bring my friend, Mr. David Pollock, on to Mick Unploy. David, how you doing, brother?
Mick, what to sell me, dog?
Golly, I'm not worth a million bucks, but I feel like it right now.
Hey, you know, that $5 you sent me, it goes a long way, bro.
$5 still goes a long way in my world.
I appreciate it.
Thanks for having me all.
Man, I'm honored to have you here.
You know I've got a connection to Georgia.
One of my uncles played football at Georgia in the early to mid-80s
was the running back like right after Herschel.
So shout out to my uncle Tron because I'm a bulldog first, right?
So growing up like all I knew. Tar Hill Second, absolutely. All I knew was Georgia, right? So me and my family, we're talking my Uncle Wayne and my Uncle Randy, my cousins, Torrance. I got to give everybody their shout out now because they'll kill me if I have David Pollock on and I don't talk about Torrance and Randy Jr. and Dexter. So I did my job. Now, David, it's about you. Covered. Cover. Now I guess I'll do mine now.
Yes, sir. But David, man, like we can go so many places. You have an amazing.
journey and amazing story. But for me, it all starts with you being that man of God
first. And I would love for you to just talk about not necessarily your spiritual journey,
but that moment that you knew, God's my everything. Yeah. I didn't grow up with it at all in
the household. And I had two great parents, mom and daddy, Kelly and Norm, and they did everything
for me, loved me, supported my dreams like crazy. But church just wasn't something we did. And two
events happen, two big things happen in my life that I always like to share. One, it started with an
invite. And I think that's what we all have the ability to do. My neighbor across the street,
he was like, hey, man, we're going to the church. And I was like, yeah, okay. And he's like,
we're having this lock in. I was like, double out church. And you're going to lock me in the church.
I'm out, bro. No way. And then he said, this is what got me, Mick. He said, we play sports and
stay up all night. In, right now. Plunch that ticket. And I was like, I get to stay up all night
and do that. So that's the first time I'd ever heard about God. I never heard about God really
and I'm sure there were examples of people that tried, but I wasn't ready for it. And God put this
moment in front of me. So a simple invite got me in the door. And then I had a teacher named Mark
Watson, who was my physics teacher. And Mark was so chill and so even calm, cool, nice.
and he had a Jesus sticker on his computer,
and he played praise and worship music
at a public school in between classes.
And I'll never forget, man,
I had the good ability to annoy just about anyone.
And I had so much energy, and I was all over the place,
and Mark was just like, oh, it's okay, chill.
And just had a really different spirit about it.
And then I was like, this dude's different, man.
So I tell people all the time,
it started with an invitation,
and then a life worth emulating.
A dude that was living out the gospel
that was so crazy and so different and unique
that I said, that's different, I want that.
And then when you spit it four,
going into the summer, so that was my junior year. That summer, we had to read 200 pages for
outside reading for English. And I went to my English teacher and I said, hey, I'd like to pick the
Bible. And she was like, why? And I was like, I don't know. I just, I want to read it. And she was
like, well, I can't because you can't, because I can't sit down with you. I don't know.
And I said, Mr. Watson can. And I went to Mr. Watson. He said, absolutely. And Mr. Watson
sat down with me. He volunteered his time. And he literally sat down and he started to take me through
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, and he was laying out the Gospels for me. And I was like,
holy cow, wait a minute, like go back. What? Like, Matthew did this and this is Mark, this is Luke,
this is John, different accounts of Jesus. And who is Jesus? And started to learn, man, and just
fire questions. And Mark was so patient and so kind and just started to answer my questions. And then
from that point on, man, my life was absolutely never the same. Accepted Christ, started going
the church and then got to go to the University of Georgia where God put more people in my life
to continue my development. I love that, man. And to me, that's what it's about, right? It's how do we
bring others, which you talked about at starting with the invite, but then how do we go deeper
and then begin to share that knowledge, that love, that joy with others? And I commend you for
that. It's one of the things that I've always loved about David Pollock. You know, again, I talked
about the accolades in the opener. Amazing. You are, my Uncle Tran's going to kill me, my favorite
bulldog player of all times, just like many others, right? I'm not the only one, but you are my favorite
bulldog player of all time. But before I got to know, you personally, always understood your journey,
always heard stories about you. And that's just who you are. And that's what I love the most, man,
is that you were genuinely you, but you are passionate about your love for Christ. You're not ashamed
of it. And you know where I'm going with this.
because there are a lot of people that behind closed doors, they're there,
but then they feel like certain opportunities they need to hold back
or certain things you've got to hold back.
I love the fact that you're always David Pollitt.
And I get that, Mick.
I understand why, and I'll be honest, like, I've also failed in some opportunities
that I think I could have done better with sharing my faith and being more bold.
But, like, I remember I got invited to the Playboy Mansion.
You know, I was an All-American as a junior.
And I remember I turned it down because that's not like what I wanted to.
to be known for or in alignment with.
And I remember, like, that all of a sudden it went crazy.
And I had so many opportunities to talk about it.
And I was like, holy cow.
And then I started to go and to do.
But like, again, there's a process, man, that I think when we come to faith,
we don't automatically know how to share, you know, our testimony and articulately put
certain things.
But if we go back to my last story and how I came to faith, everybody can invite somebody
to church.
Everybody can do that.
It's the preacher's job done to deliver the word or bring them to someone that they
know. And everybody, the most important witness that we have is living our lives, is living out the
gospel. I don't care if you know scripture inside and out, if you don't treat people with respect
and you don't love others. Like, if you don't do those things, nobody's going to go, man, I want to
emulate that. Mark Watson, like, he was so different and so unique and so, and he lived the fruit
to the spirit so much that I'm like, I want more of that in my life. And so we have an awesome
opportunity to turn people on and we have a awesome or a bad opportunity a lot of times to turn
people off by the way we live our lives and the way we treat them totally agree brother totally
agree so let's go into some of these accolades but not the accolades but more of how you got
there because these are the words of mick and mick only and because we're not face-to-face you can't
like slap me or anything you were not supposed to be there bro i'm just going to be honest like you
you were not supposed to be there. It takes a lot of hard work, a lot of consistency, because I tell
people this all the time, especially in the business world, talent's great, right? It's going to get you
so far. And, you know, people always say hard work outworks talent when talent doesn't show up and
I always say, that's great, but when talent does show up and it's mixed with hard work, you have
David Pollock. And to me, that's what it's about, right? Like, you've got the talent and the hard
work. And when you and I were face to face, we got to me, you talked to me about this
50, 40, 10. And I'm not going to lie to you. I don't think I've slept since because I've been
so invigorated by that. And I know that is your message. And so I'm trying to, like,
contain myself. I've been waiting for this moment to share the world, the 50, 40, 10, because I think
that makes you who you are. And I know that there are other people that are like you, again,
whether it's sports, whether it's business, whether it's entrepreneurship,
that have that same thing, and you've given it a label, and I love it.
So 50, 40, 10 by David Pollard.
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If you're going to be great
and you have big dreams and big goals,
it's going to come with sacrifice.
And, like, I had a mindset.
Now, listen, I don't know, God gave me this.
Like, God gave me physicality
and a mindset and a work ethic.
Like, that was God given.
And then I slowly started to learn to hone it.
And I'll never forget when I was in eighth grade
watching the World Cup.
It's the one when Brandy Chastain, the famous one when they won gold.
And I'll never forget, the semifinal game, they're talking on the broadcast.
And they said, the girls stopped drinking carbonation because it hurts their conditioning.
I'm in eighth grade, Mick.
I'm 14 years old.
So last time I've ever touched a carbonated beverage in my life.
Because I was like, dude, if I want to get here, like, I got to give that up.
And so I started to learn at a young age, like I got to do things that are different.
I got to outwork people.
And I do it with my daughter.
and I love it because my daughter, me and my daughter had this little thing where she loves to work
and she's starting to really embrace it. And I always say, baby girl, I said, we're working in the dark.
We're working the dark. Like, we're working the dark. Don't worry about anything else. It will come to light.
Like, but you just keep working the dark and it's kind of our own, you know, little thing that we've been
able to do. But 50, 40, 10, you can outdo 50% of the people in this world by showing up more,
showing up with a good attitude, showing up ready to rock and roll. Like every time you're there,
Be where your feet are.
There is no elevators to the penthouse, bro.
We take in the steps.
We are taking the steps.
We are going to be here and we are going to do it.
Every single day, I don't care about your feelings.
I care about where you are.
Okay, so there is a standard that we meet.
It's standard over feelings.
Like, you're going to be here.
This is who you are.
This is what you are.
And I compare that with football.
Like, when I walk in, like at practice, I'm not always going to be 100%.
But there's also times that I stepped in Stanford Stadium,
Sanford Stadium where I was 70%, but that's where I'm at, so I got to find it,
and I got to give what I got.
And so I had to learn that on the practice field by showing up continuously.
40% is the next step.
40% of people, man, you can outthink, you can out prepare, you can out organize.
It's amazing to have a work ethic.
That is a great thing.
That is not a bad thing.
But if we're climbing this mountain feveriously and we're getting to the top, like I'm going to get to the top,
matter what. And you get to the top and you go, oh, crap, I climbed the wrong mountain. Like,
you did a lot of hard work and you grinded, but you're in the wrong spot, right? Like, I went
the wrong direction. So getting organized and realizing, like, with the direction I go every single
day matters. So watching tape in football was so huge because you build instincts, you build
mental reps, you understand the game, you see things faster. So that was a big part of my
success was, I think I built more reps in my head and more success by thinking the game. And then
when I got in it, it was slow. It was still. It was easy. Now I could be crazy. And I could give
in the right direction with the right effort. I'm beating 90% of people. All right. I'm not a math
major. I played defense and I'm not the smartest in the world. But we got 10% left, Mick.
And the 10% left is you are left with those people that work their tail off. You are left with those
people that have direction, that have guidance, that use nutrition, diet, and in my field,
whatever it took to get to there, now is who's got this, man? Like, you're left with a bunch of
dogs. Who's going to eat your heart with a spoon? Like, who's going to stab until, who's going to
give in? Who's going to keep fighting? Like, it's going to suck. You're going to lose a lot of battles,
but you better get your butt back up and you better get ready to roll because there's another
one coming and another one coming. So that's how I define 50, 40, 10.
And so you can't see it.
But just like when I was at your house, I have chills, bro.
Like the leader in me connects with that so well on a business level and an entrepreneur level because that is it.
You're going to outwork 50% of the people, right?
You can outthink, you can out prepare, you can out organize 40% of the people.
Is that last 10 to me that separates who really is committed to it, who can I identify?
depend on and who can I count on, but more importantly, how can I deliver when no one else does?
And, bro, so the business side of me, that night when I got home, man, if you could see my wall,
it is nothing but I have 50, 40, 10 everywhere, and I circle 10. And when I wake up, this is no
lot. When I wake up, I circle the 10 and I say, what's the dog going to do today? What's the
dog going to do that no one else is committed? I can influence the great Nick. I, that's
I mean, that's great.
Thank you, brother.
Bro, I love that, man.
And I know that there's a big story behind that.
There's a big message behind that.
And I don't want to tease the world with that yet today.
But when David starts going in on that, you're going to feel just like I feel.
I'm sure there are listeners and viewers right now that just got cold chills, too,
because that is literally the most powerful concept I think that I've heard.
And if you haven't started it yet, there's a book about 50, 40, 10, brother.
Well, in the works, it's definitely something that's swirling and we're working on.
But, you know, it's amazing.
Like, we all have different gifts and blessings.
And, man, I am ADD, and you can tell probably, like, I'm high energy all over the place.
And one thing that's been a struggle for me is, like, can you get still enough and can you sit down and can you do the things that need to get done?
And I'm really learning that challenge.
Like, that's a challenge for me that I've done more of embracing, more reading.
Like, that's something that doesn't come natural.
Like, I'd rather work and be physical and go do something and be interactive.
And, you know, just with my kids, like, circling them up and making intentional time to pray,
an intentional time to read, an intentional time to talk about things and stuff.
So, like, that's something for me that's always a work in progress that's an area in my life
that I've got to continue to grow and get better at.
I love it, man. I love it, and I know you're going to do it because of who you are.
I want to tackle, no pun intended, one of the things that you said, standards over feelings.
I'm a big believer in standards, right?
Like, I personally am not into goals as much as I am standards, because to me, you can't set a goal until you have a standard, right?
You know, Mike Tomlin, I said this in a previous podcast.
One of the things I love most about him, I'm not a Steelers fan, but he said the tradition in Pittsburgh is the standard is the standard is the standard.
standard. And I immediately connected with that. And I know you being the person that you are
truly connect and not only connect, but embody that. So I love to talk a little bit about to you
why standards are important. And if you have a story around that, that'll be awesome too.
Mike and Tomlin, by the way, there are a few guys in professional sports that when they talk,
I listen. And he's one of them. I mean, just he is liquid gold. I mean, that dude is just in
the way he says things, I'm just like, yeah, like I'll run through a wall for that. I can't imagine
being a player every day and being called out and being held to that standard. But, you know,
I saw so much of it making in my life. And I just, I see so many people. And I started to like,
see, okay, well, this is a person that I want to work. And then I would see other people that
would come in and I'd be like, all right, they complain all the time, but they work. And then
I saw people that came in and they always worked and they didn't talk and they didn't complain.
And so you're like, what are the keys? Like, how do we bring this together and understand this?
And so we started talking with our football team, man. Like, it's nothing that happened today,
nothing that happened yesterday, changes where you are right now. And where you are right now is at
football. And if you're at football, I need to be my best. If I'm in school, I need to be my best.
And I am going to adhere to this standard that whatever I do, I'm going to run the race.
And I'm going to be consistent. And I'm going to be consistent. And I'm going to be.
to do it in a manner in which to get the prize, right? Like, I'm not just here to participate.
I'm not here just to show up. There's such a big difference in life in showing up into something,
like showing up and being there, like showing up and being present, just like with the football
players, being able to tell them when they started their first day this year. When you walk in,
you go to your teacher, I'm here to be a leader, I'm going to sit in the front row,
I'm going to pay attention to the whole class. Like, I'm setting a standard. Like, this is who I am,
This is what I am.
This is what I'm going to be.
And I think that takes some thought sometimes.
And that takes some.
I'm going to run and I'm going to go, well, oh, okay, this happens and it kind of knocks me down.
Man, this stinks.
I'm where I'm at.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Uh-uh.
We ain't staying here, though.
That's not who we are.
That's not what we are.
When we show up, we show up with excellence.
When we show up, we're going to punch that clock and we're going to make sure we fit the standard.
So, you know, don't worry about how you feel every day.
Because your feelings change every day.
And what people say change and the task changes.
But that doesn't change who you are.
And what you bring to the table every single time, will you succeed all the time?
No.
But I know you're going to bring your best effort.
I know you're going to compete.
I know you're going to fight.
I know it's going to be important to you because you have a standard that you're going to actually hold yourself to.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
So when you got to Georgia, right, you were a fullback.
What was the switch to defense?
and then what was that initial moment like when it's like,
yeah, Dave, we appreciate all this fullback stuff.
We need you on the dumb side of the ball.
I like that you put it that way because you're right.
So when I got to Georgia, we started conditioning in the summertime.
And I went in early so I could condition all through that summer.
And Coach Van Gorder was my defensive coordinator.
And he was always like, hey, Polack, come to the dark side.
And my coach, it's Pollock.
He was like, hey, Polack, come to the dark side.
I'm like, all right, forget it.
Like, he knows my name.
Like, he's calling me that on purpose, obviously.
But he was like, he said he watched me in conditioning in the summer.
And he just, like, he said, you were looking and trying to beat everybody.
And he was like, I just love the competitiveness.
And so our defensive tackle room gets decimated with injuries.
And I played defensive tackle in high school and running back.
So I played both.
So coach was like, hey, man, we need some defensive tackles.
And so they throw me a defensive tackle.
And I started playing defensive tackle.
And it was awesome.
It was great.
It was a new challenge.
It was hard.
There was a lot coming at you fast.
And so I started at fullback, moved to defensive tackling camp,
and then had a pretty decent freshman year.
And then, Mick, before my sophomore year, like, I moved the defensive team.
So you're talking about three positions in less than a year on campus.
And so it was a lot that came at you.
But Coach Van Gorder saw me in kind of my attitude.
And he was like, I think we can work with that.
He was like, he always said, like, you're more of a defensive.
a player. Like your mindset and your mentality,
you need to be over here with us.
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Yeah.
What he was saying was you're a little crazy, right?
Yeah.
You try to be politically correct there.
He was saying you're a little crazy.
You're a little crazy to play football.
Like, you can be a little crazy to, like, beating people up and banging your head against other people to, and enjoy it.
Like, yeah, 100%.
Yeah.
An amazing career, Georgia.
All the accolades that I mentioned aren't even a tenth of all the things that you accomplished at, Georgia.
And being a leader, and that's, again, one of the many things I love about you is that you are a leader as well, too.
And not only that, but you take pride in being a leader.
You take pride in, hey, the buck stops with me or everyone's counting on me, right?
Can you talk about how that shaped your career professionally outside of sport and your family as well?
because I think that's something that a lot of people
don't spend enough time embodying is you're a leader
and there are people that count on you
and there are moments where it's you
and you've got to rise to the occasion.
Again, I'm not just talking sports there.
Can you talk a little bit about that?
Yeah, I think, first of all,
if you have influence over one person, you're a leader.
So everybody got that crazy person in your family
that likes you for no reason.
So everybody's a leader, okay?
And everybody has influence and opportunity to use it.
And I would say this, when I was younger, I did it by example, 100%.
And I didn't know how to communicate with people.
It wasn't a strength of mine.
And my definition of how I led was a direct reflection of how I like to be led and how I responded
to how I was led.
So I was firing brimstone.
And I was, get your butt to the ball.
I didn't use those language because I wasn't a believer when I was younger a lot
of times.
And so I used a lot worse.
But it was by challenging.
It was by insults.
You know, that was what I thought was leadership.
That's what I saw from my coaches.
And so that's what I kind of emulated.
As I've gotten older, I've really learned the value of understanding who you are leading
because not everybody's going to respond the same way.
And it took me to having kids, Mick, to figure that out.
I had a son who was totally different than me.
He's my wife's personality to a T.
Nothing bothers Nicholas.
Nothing.
And he's just chill.
And everything's fine.
and it's going to be okay.
And I'm like, what is this alien?
Sweet baby Jesus, what am I doing?
Like, God, what did you give me?
And so really, like, coaching kids
and six-year-old kids with football
and seven-year-old kids
and starting to see the different personalities
and really what makes people tick
and then pour into them individually.
And then you realize, oh, man, you can get to know.
And now I think more than ever,
like understanding, they've got to know you care about them.
They have to know you care about them.
them. When they know you care about them, you really have a position of authority with people
and you can speak to them. And then nowadays, I think with kids especially, just they got to know the
why. Back in the day, Mick, back in our day, back in your day, daddy said dig a hole, you
freaking dug a hole. Like, you didn't dug a hole. Yeah. Now, like, if I said that to my 16 year
old son and be like, why? Why am I digging a hole? I'm like, man, I said go do a hole. You know,
I mean, so I think teaching them, first of all, showing up, being an example, understanding who
you're leading, leading with humility, leading with character, and leading with standards over
feelings, like knowing that I got a guy that, like, when that dude checks in, man, he's the
same. If everything's raised to a 10 right now, he's still the same. If it's at a 1, he's the
same. So those are things that I've learned along the way. I wish I'd have learned him when I was
younger, and I think I'd have been a lot more effective, but I think God's still teaching me
things in my journey of learning how to lead kids to middle schoolers, to high school kids,
to grown-ups. Yeah, I love that parallel that you talked about. Us growing up, dad, mom,
whoever tells you to go do something, you just go do it. Probably going to do it wrong,
but you're going to figure it out. And I think our parents expected us to just kind of figure it out,
right? Now, and I can say this with my sons, and they'll laugh at me. I'm not talking bad about
to Jake Kamen, but you tell them to go do something, you get the why, then you get the how,
and then it's like a whole bunch of questions, and then they go to YouTube, I'm like,
dude, just figure it out.
Then they go to YouTube.
Look at it and then just figure it out.
But like, it's different, man.
And so you're right.
As a leader, you have to understand those things, and you hit it on the head.
I tell people leadership is a four-letter word, C-A-R-E.
And if you start there, if you start with care, everything manifests the way that it's supposed to be.
Because it's a new era of life.
To me, it's about humans showing humans that you care and then everything else will follow.
But if they don't believe in you that you care for them, their best interest, and their journey, like nothing else will happen.
Nope, they're not going to give you their best.
No, no.
You know, Dave, I could talk to you forever.
I feel like there's a lot that we haven't uncovered yet.
And I don't want to hold your time because I know you are a very busy human being.
But I do want to talk about another thing I admire about you is your ability to overcome, right?
Because life is never easy.
Life never goes the way that we plan it.
We can plan out the most amazing tomorrow.
And in about 10 minutes, we got to reshift, right?
But you've had to do that with a few things, right?
So we're talking about football career.
We're talking about how did you say it?
What happened at ESPN?
you were let go.
Fired.
Say that again?
Fired.
My mom, my mama, Nick knows this.
My mama be like, man, you were let go.
I was like, stop, she goes, stop telling people you were fired.
I was like, Mama, they told me to go away and not come back.
So you can spin it however you want, Mama, like, fired, let go.
Whatever, they say, go away.
We don't want you anymore.
So, yeah.
Unfortunately, Mick, I got a lot of experience with that.
I think sometimes people, just like you introduced me, with so many accolades and things that I've
been successful at, dude, I've failed all along the way. I mean, I have failed so much more than I have
succeeded. And I like to share those because those are real. And I think God has used every single one of
them. Like, you don't have the success without the failure. And so for us learning how to deal with
failure, learning how to deal with adversity is huge, kid, teenager, adult, senior citizen,
like we have to understand if you're not in a storm if you're not in adversity it's coming it's not
if it's when and so you know for me i got it in high school when i was a sophomore in high school
i didn't play varsity i didn't play jv because i was kind of stuck between two worlds i had a dream
i told you mick i had a dream of playing in the NFL i was giving up all these things got frustrated
got ticked off in a moment then i quit just drop i quit and guess what i had a coach eddie shattacks
who believed in me and saw something in me before I did.
And he's like, hey man, just come work out.
We'll do some curls and we'll get pretty for the girls.
I'm like, deal, cool, I'm in.
And then all of a sudden I grow.
And then all of a sudden I get stronger and stronger and stronger.
And now football's really fun when you're the hammer, not the nail.
And so, like, he believed in me, but I had to face that adversity to learn to work
and to grow and to get bigger and stronger.
And then I knew it was like to succeed, but I also knew it was like to fail.
And, you know, same thing at Georgia, switch.
searching three positions in three years or in one year, one counter year. I think nowadays it's
easy and some of us are like, no, I'm this. I think my goal is this. I think I'm that. You have
no clue. Like there are going to be things that change along the way. Are you willing to see it
adapt and adjust and be great where you're at? Like if you're in a job right now and your job
is to get coffee, do it to the best of your ability. Like crush it. Do it to a point where somebody
looks at you in the company like, man, they do that with joy. They do that with something a little bit
different man like that's how we've got to approach those things because when we hit that adversity
when it comes to you how do i respond what does my response look like because here's what i've learned
from adversity every single dagum time 17th pick in the NFL draft i'm making my NFL dream come true
that i dreamed about since i was six years old i'm doing it like exactly what i wanted to do one play
bam broken neck done gone like you know what i learned
in that one moment, I learned that that one moment led to two years of rehab and two years of
recovery and a lot of grind. And I went from a healthy body that was strong as crud that could
do anything I wanted to do to a guy that could do very little with a halo in my skull and
couldn't lift weights. I benched 455 in college. When I got out of my neck brace and I got cleared
to lift, I benched 135 twice. And it looked like this, shaking like this. What's inside of you?
What's next? Am I going to quit? Am I going to roll over? No, every day. What can I do today to get me better?
What are my goals today? And really that's when it started developing for me for everyday counts.
That was my mantra. And I started texting myself the night before. And I started just say,
I will not go to bed without these three things done. Like this is going to get done. And that was,
most of those, by the way, then were physical because I was trying to get my body back to some assortments of normalcy.
And then it turned into spiritual.
And then it turned into like family related.
As simple as like, hey, I'm going to tell my baby girl today three times that I love her.
And it's a small goal, but like I had to start developing those systems and those small
goals so I could get wins.
So now, man, here's the thing.
We serve a God that is so big and so great.
And a God that tells us in the scripture that he is for us.
He didn't say he's for us when you're getting a race or he's for us when things are going
the way you want him to go. He's for us all the time. He wants good things for us. And so
when I go through a challenged man and something's hard, good. What is God going to teach me in this
moment? There's something that I need to learn in this moment. There's something that's coming my
way. Like my NFL career gone, college game day. Fantastic. This is awesome. Got to travel the
country and go see all the different schools and got to do things that I never thought I would get
to do. I got to do that. Gone. I'm not crying because it's over. Now, I'm smiling because it
happened. Like, I'm so thankful that that happened. I got to do that. I can't imagine what God
has for me next. Like, whatever it is, I know it's good. And all those situations, man, I can take
all those different individual adversity moments. And I can tell you, like with my neck. And I'll
close with that, like with my neck. I'm a better dad right now because I broke my neck. I'm a better
husband because I broke my neck. I'm a better, I'm a better friend. I'm a better son. Like,
because God said, slow down, be still. And my relationship with God was one way when I had time.
Like, I'll talk to you. Yeah. Yeah, I got a little bit of time between team meetings.
Got a little bit of time I'm running here, running there. I got a little bit of time to talk to you.
It's really hard to hear from God when you don't sit still and listen to them. Like, a relationship
requires talking back and forth and communication back and forth.
Show me your girlfriend that you have when you don't communicate with her.
I would argue they don't exist.
It doesn't happen.
So I really, the Bible says be still and know that I am God.
And I got to do that in those situations.
And then God's taking me to the next step and the next step and the next step and the next step
and teaching me all these different things about me, about my family, those in my life
who are in my life for the right reasons.
And it's really got me ready to be a dad, man.
and to be able to handle some of those moments with my kids with adversity
and to show them and to teach them what it looks like
and how we've used those things in a positive way
and how God brings those trials and those tribulations
for us to grow, for us to learn and to depend on him
and he will get us through every single situation.
Brother, I could do this all day.
I could literally be inspired and moved by David Pollock all day.
So I just want to thank you, number one, for taking the time.
but like I said earlier, man, just thank you for being the dude that you are.
Well, thank you, man, for having me on.
Thank you for you drove all the way to me, you know, not too long ago and spent some time
with me helping me on the speaking stuff.
So I'm getting my organized Mick plan on, okay?
Like Mick has a schedule and he's helping the ADD dude kind of, all right, let's streamline
this, let's think about this, think about this.
So I appreciate you, Big Dog.
And I love the message, man.
Just keep, we're keeping this spread in the good news, man.
the good news of Jesus, the good news of leadership and plugging in and helping our communities
get better.
Amen to that.
Amen to that.
And before we wrap up, what do you have coming up next?
I know you're getting out on the speaker circuit so people can get access to you, but where can
people find you, follow you, and what do you have going on?
Yeah, man, we got a good bit going on right now.
It's crazy what God does, again, with different turns.
I wrote a children's book.
Like, we already talked about the dumb people are on defense, so dumb people don't.
So sat down and got still and wrote a children's book about the whole message you just heard, by the way, it was very much in that vein. Like life is hard. That's what I use in the book. The 3H is hard. It's hot and it hurts. Football does. Life does. And so it's the won't quit kid. And so it's literally a story of perseverance and teaching parents like, how do we help them when they say it's hard, like structure the next day and let's go attack today and let's build these little goals. So it's kind of very similar to my lifestyle. But the speaking,
you know, you can hit me on any of my social stuff with X or with Instagram or whatever they are,
whatever those fun socials are. And I have my website now, David Pollock.com. And the speaking is
fun, Mick, you know, I've talked to you about that. And I just love being able to share my message
and my failures and adversity and successes and some of those ways to get in touch with people
because I love being around them. So I think no matter what I do, whether it's coaching and
commentating or whatever, speaking is something that will always be a big part.
of my life. You got it, man. I'll make sure we have links to all of that in the description
and show notes. And for all the organizations, the nonprofits, your next speaker needs to be
David Pollitt. I put my stamp on that for sure. Like I said, I know a lot of you listening and
watching have got chills through various moments of this conversation. That is how he leaves every
audience. And he leaves you on fire with action plans. So he's not just going to talk to you
about a story, he's going to give you things that you can start doing that moment to have a better
life, to have better structure, to create standards. And David, that's why I love you, brother. So
thank you so much for having me on. And thanks you all for all your help as well.
You got it. For all the listeners and viewers, remember, your because is your superpower. Go unleash it.
Thank you for tuning in to Mick Unplugged. Keep pushing your limits, embracing your purpose.
and chasing greatness.
Until next time, stay unstoppable.
