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Harvey Mackay
Column for the week of October
5, 2009
Lessons from
John Wooden: Build a Pyramid of Success |
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If I could come back in a second
life, I'd be a high school or college basketball coach. First
off, I love basketball, and secondly, few can have a greater
influence on young people than a coach, or teacher for that matter.
I've long admired John Wooden,
the legendary UCLA basketball coach who won 10 NCAA championships
in a 12-year period. He has won countless awards and even received
our nation's highest civilian honor, the Medal of Freedom. Wooden
was in the news again this summer when he was named the Greatest
Coach Ever by Sporting News.
Coach Wooden was a masterful
molder of young men. Bill Walton, a member of the National Basketball
Association's Hall of Fame, wrote, "After my father, Coach
Wooden has had the most profound influence on me of anyone in
my entire life."
Coach Wooden, in turn, credits
his father for grounding him in the principles on which he has
based his life and career. |
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"When I graduated from our
little three-room grade school in Centerton, Indiana," says
Wooden, "my father gave me a little card on which he had
written out his creed." At the top of the card was written,
"Seven Things to Do." They are:
- Be true to yourself.
- Help others.
- Make each day your masterpiece.
- Drink deeply from good books,
especially the Bible.
- Make friendship a fine art.
- Build a shelter against a rainy
day.
- Pray for guidance and count
and give thanks for your blessings every day.
Wooden remembers that all his
father said to him when he handed him the card was, "Son,
try and live up to these things." Wooden certainly did.
Coach Wooden might be best known
for his Pyramid of Success. He drilled it into his players over
and over.
Basketball great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar,
who played his college years under Wooden, once told a reporter
he thought the Pyramid was kind of corny when he first saw it,
but he later came to the conclusion that it had a great effect
on his career and later life.
You can construct a visual picture
of Coach Wooden's Pyramid. On the bottom layer, draw five rectangular
blocks and label them: industriousness, friendship, loyalty,
cooperation and enthusiasm. On the next layer above, fill in
four blocks with these labels: self-control, alertness, initiative
and intentness. On the third layer toward the top of the pyramid,
place three blocks and label them: condition, skill and team
spirit. On the fourth layer, place two building blocks and label
them: poise and confidence. The fifth and next to last layer
has only one block. It bears the label: competitive greatness.
Finally, the triangular crown of the pyramid is divided into
two halves with the labels: faith and patience.
Wooden always maintained that
the order and placement of each block was essential to the pyramid's
success. Considering his success with this teaching tool, who
can contradict him?
What a lot of people might not
know is that John Wooden was a three-time All-American at Purdue
University. "My coach at Purdue, Piggy Lambert, constantly
reminded us: 'The team that makes the most mistakes will probably
win.' That may sound a bit odd, but there is a great deal of
truth in it. The doer makes mistakes. Coach Lambert taught me
that mistakes come from doing, but so does success. The individual
who is mistake-free is also probably sitting around doing nothing.
And that's a very big mistake."
Like all great coaches and teachers,
Wooden did not teach basketball. He taught life. If you learned
a little basketball on the side, well, so much the better.
Among my favorite Wooden quotes:
- "Too often we get distracted
by what is outside our control. You can't do anything about yesterday.
The door to the past has been shut and the key thrown away. You
can do nothing about tomorrow. It is yet to come. However, tomorrow
is in large part determined by what you do today. You have control
over that."
- "Develop a love for details.
They usually accompany success."
- "Failure is not fatal,
but failure to change may be."
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Mackay's Moral: |
(courtesy of John Wooden) "Talent
is God-given, be humble. Fame is man-given, be thankful. Conceit
is self-given, be careful." |
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The Author  |
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Harvey Mackay is a nationally
syndicated columnist for United Feature Syndicate. His weekly
articles appear in 52 newspapers around the country, including
the Chicago Sun Times, Rocky Mountain News, Orange County Register,
Minneapolis Star Tribune and Arizona Republic.
http://www.mackay.com/
Copyright, Harvey Mackay. All rights reserved. |
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