The Fundamentals Make You Great

Today is the saddest day of the year. March Madness is over. My wife and I gobbled up many of the girls’ and boys’ basketball games. Last night the finals were on. (Don’t tell me who won. I recorded it because bedtime is 9:00 p.m., 10 at the latest. The game didn’t start till 9.)

We’ll start watching it during breakfast today. It’s better than the news.

The fundamentals of rebounding include boxing out. Image of basketball players boxing out an opponent.

The fundamentals:

Athletes who excel practice the fundamentals – the things you do so you can be great at something else.

The “box out” commercial for Buffalo Wild Wings capitalizes on the fundamentals.

In the commercial, a buffalo with wings stands at the bar complaining about young players. “Oh! Come on! You gotta box out. That’s the problem with kids these days, no fundamentals.”

Getting rebounds in basketball is about getting in front of your opponent. Success is more about position than jumping (usually). The fundamentals hold for bowling too.

I subscribe to my friend Bob Burg’s Daily Impact email (click to subscribe). The other day he shared a delightful story from his youth. I share it with his permission.

I (Bob) was about 12 years old, watching 16-year-old Greg nail strike after strike at the local ten-pin bowling alley.

“Wow!” said very-impressed young Bob. “You must really practice getting those strikes!”

“Not at all,” said the Zen-like teen. “I don’t concern myself with the strikes. I practice nailing those spares. When I do that, the strikes come by themselves.”

12-year-old mind…blown…! 🙂

Makes total sense though, doesn’t it?

Fundamentals are so key to success.

Key Point: Master the spares…and the strikes will come by themselves.

What are some of the fundamentals – the skill behind the skill – of leadership? For example, pausing before speaking or succuss is about solutions, not problems.

Still curious:

The Principle of the Rope

Four Essentials For Developing Your Leadership

Five Heart Habits of Uncommon Leaders