The right call What sports teaches us about work and life

Sally Jenkins

Book - 2023

"Sportswriter and columnist Sally Jenkins spent her whole life literally stamping great coaches and athletes down in letters. But somewhere along the line, she realized, they had begun to write her. Their example could shape her into something better if she paid attention. What she learned from great athletes and coaches is that champions are the product of their own work. This book is an effort to catalog the inner qualities that allow ordinary people to overcome pressure, elevate their performances and find champion identities. THE RIGHT CALL uses breath-takingly dramatic sports anecdotes featuring the elite coaches and play-makers Steve Kerr, Bill Belichick, Pat Summit, Peyton Manning, and Jill Ellis, Michael Phelps, and Andre Agass...i, among others, to illustrate 7 principles which underlie great decision-making. The seven principles (conditioning, practice, discipline, candor, culture, resilience, intention) are each broken down and explored in their own chapters through long-form sports stories. This book is the one stop shop for anyone wanting to learn how to effectively lead and achieve. From sports fans to businesspeople and everyone in between, there is something for any reader ready to elevate their greatness practices"--

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Subjects
Genres
Sports writing
Published
New York, N.Y. : Gallery Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Sally Jenkins (author)
Edition
First Gallery Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
xvii, 253 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781982122553
  • Prologue: Getting Serious about Greatness
  • 1. The "Right" Call: Decisions under Pressure
  • 2. Conditioning: The Body
  • 3. Practice: The Mind
  • 4. Discipline: The Framework
  • 5. Candor: The Language
  • 6. Culture: The Environment
  • 7. Failure: The Teacher
  • 8. Intention: The Motive
  • Epilogue: The Heart of Greatness
  • Acknowledgements
  • Endnotes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Wide-ranging psychological inspiration from a veteran Washington Post sportswriter and columnist. "Champions are essentially the product of their own work," writes Jenkins, author of The Real All Americans. This may seem self-evident, but on closer examination, it has depth: We can train and be coached, but striving in the right spirit comes from within. In conversation with Charles Barkley, for instance, Jenkins pulls out the observation, "I don't want mistakes to be part of my life." That's all well and good, though it would seem to contradict, at least somewhat, the author's assertion that failure is part of the process, without which nothing can be learned. At heart, this book is about applying the lessons of professional athletics to everyday life--e.g., the idea that whether we want to or not, we sometimes have to make difficult decisions, just as a quarterback caught in a make-or-break play has to decide what to do. How does that happen? As Jenkins, who seems at home in every sport, writes, we should consider NFL Hall of Fame coach Bill Walsh's advice: "The less thinking people have to do under adverse circumstances, the better." The best professional athletes game out just about every possible permutation beforehand to know what to do without thinking about it moment by moment. Along the way, Jenkins draws useful lessons in leadership, self-discipline ("it's a form of self-rule"), the aspiration to win, and, perhaps most important, the way in which the love of a game is transformational--especially "when circumstances seem overwhelming," as they so often do. Though confined to running, John Jerome's long-forgotten book The Elements of Effort is superior in many respects, but Jenkins' book is more than serviceable. A pleasure for self-help aficionados and buffs with an interest in the mental aspects of a variety of sports. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.