Lessons on Leadership and Life from a Football Match

Cardiff City Footbal - LeadershipLosing a game is heartbreaking. Losing your sense of excellence or worth is a tragedy. ” ~ Joe Paterno

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I’m a big football fan, season ticket holder at Cardiff City, my local team in the UK.   We’re a good side, among the best in England’s second tier league.  3 weeks ago we played a national cup final, at Wembley Stadium, against Liverpool Football Club, arguably the most famous team in the world.  They’re pretty close to the top of the Premier League, which we’re battling to get into.  Their team on the day cost £450m, the most expensive player £35m.  Our full team, including seven substitutes, was pieced together for £4 million.

You could have made a lot of money with a winning bet on Cardiff. Every pundit agreed – if Liverpool turned up anywhere near their best, we had virtually no chance.  The game was watched live by 90,000 passionate supporters and broadcasted live across the world.  It was set to be a valediction for Liverpool.

They duly won, we lost.  So why did it mean so much to me that I’ve chosen to tell the blogosphere about it?

A result is just a measure – it doesn’t tell you anything about the game.  And in the game, there were many lessons for life and for anyone, like me, who studies and promotes leadership. As I trudged 4 miles back to my car and spent the next 4 hours driving home on the same road as most of the 35,000 defeated fans, I had plenty of time to reflect on the day.  And what started as a journey into depression ended up as a triumph of inspiration that I thought might be worthy of sharing.

Lesson 1 – When you win, do it with class

The match was lost in the most dramatic, heartbreaking way possible.  After full time and extra time finished all square, there was a penalty shoot-out and we lost 3-2. When we missed the critical penalty, in the pandemonium of victory celebrations, 3 of the Liverpool players went straight to our side to commiserate the guy who missed and congratulate the entire Cardiff team on the way they played the game.  Classy winners who stayed humble in the hubris of victory, they recognized how fine the line is between winning and losing

Lesson 2 – You can lose, and still win

Every single Cardiff player gave his last drop for the shirt. In the last 10 minutes of extra time, when many of them were going down with cramps, they somehow found the strength and belief to equalize with two minutes to go.   They must have been completely dispirited to lose having given so much and been so close.  But their manager talked to the world about losing with dignity, giving credit to the winners, and learning lessons to draw from in their next battle.  And with these words he re-framed losing into something much more meaningful which resonated with millions across the world who could reflect on their own battles.

Lesson 3 – The team is the most powerful vehicle that we have as human beings

Last year we had a team with a few stars who were capable of great things, but when the chips were down, they put themselves first.  This year, under a new manager, we have a team with no acknowledged stars, but whose spirit and willingness to fight for their colleagues means that they regularly exceed the sum of their parts.  And very quickly, the fans spotted the difference and became an even more passionate ‘twelfth man’.  The ‘one for all’ attitude they can see on the pitch transmits itself far beyond the white lines to inspire greater support for the cause they can see the players so obviously believing in.

Lesson 4 – We all need role models

Our new manager has quickly, by example, fashioned a group in his image through what he demands of and rewards in others.  When asked about how he would console the poor guy who missed the critical penalty, he replied that the team was more important than individuals and they would all take care of that.  You can see the way he behaves transmitting itself to his players.  And you can see examples of his leadership values all over the pitch.  This year we have leaders throughout the team – people who take responsibility not just for what they do, but for challenging each other to dig deeper.  Resilience is so much easier if you know others will give you all they have, while demanding everything you have got. And a leader has to somehow convey values that are demonstrated especially when he has no immediate control.

Lesson 5 – Moments of small, quiet heroism happen all the time

From the defender who literally put his body on the line in front of a certain goal, to the cramping midfielder who played the last 15 minutes on one leg, there were moments of heroism all over the pitch.  Each one seemed to inspire another – acts of courage were contagious and the more one player gave for the team, the more the team as a whole responded. It struck me that I should register these moments more often in other areas of my life and let people know that I have noticed.

Lesson 6 – It won’t take the recession to end to give people back their pride

Wales had 3 big sporting moments that weekend.  Our rugby team won an acclaimed prize by beating the national nemesis (England) away from home. Our champion boxer and Britain’s only world champion retained his title. And Cardiff City lost – with pride, courage and dignity.  Yet in many ways, theirs was to my mind the most inspirational achievement of all.  People where I live were walking slightly taller that morning after the game – somehow they found a common inspiration, even from those who don’t follow the team every week.  Glorious failure has ignited a common sense of civic pride, and when the hangovers cleared, productivity wilrose again.  How many opportunities do we have to engender that pride (in a smaller and less public way) every day?

Final lesson – Disaster, like triumph, is an opportunity if we chose to see it that way

The regular season has 11 games left, all against teams less endowed than Liverpool.  If Cardiff can harness the spirit generated at Wembley, promotion to the Premier League and untold riches can really be ours.  If the players believe in what they did, recreate the resilience formula and inspire generate even 80% of Wembley’s support from fans, they can truly achieve the ultimate goal.  The manager knows that and has already begun to refocus the team and the Cardiff public on the next game, using glorious failure as inspiration for eventual triumph.  Isn’t that just like life?

A legendary Liverpool manager voiced the quote below.  I realized yesterday that I’ve always undervalued it.  Today, as a leader and being in the business of inspiring leadership in others, it means more than ever.

“Some people think football is a matter of life and death. I assure you, it’s much more serious than that.” ~ Bill Shankly 

 Connect with David Hain: WebsiteTwitter | LinkedIn

About David Hain

#People and #Change consultant, 20 years experience in #Organisation #Development. #Executive #coach. Very experienced #facilitator and #team #developer.

Comments

  1. Cheers Pippa, that means a lot! thanks for taking the time to look! :-))

  2. What a fab combo this blog is of your passion and what you know about professionally – love it!

  3. Nicely done!

    We can always learn from those executing from passion. Your post draws on the passion of the footballers to teach lessons applicable for fan or non-fan. Although it’s a great way to grab the interest of a particular demographic & share valuable insights.

    • Thanks Scott, in some ways I think the sport is irrelevant, because people can draw inspiration from all sports, indeed from life in general. Hopefully the insights are valid across life. I really appreciate your interest and taking the time to reply.

  4. Thanks John. I think in a way it doesn’t matter what attracts your attention, it’s as you say, the lessons that we extract from it that are critical. Finding time to notice and to do something about it is the key to growth, I think.

  5. David, not being a football fan, this match was completely off my radar. What you have distilled from it, however, is priceless. One of the things that seems the most pointless about football (excuse this philistine) is the excessive pay given to ‘boys in men’s bodies’ to kick a ball around for a little while. Didn’t matter than Liverpool had spent nearly half a million quid, they only scraped by. Your point about the team is striking. Your team did so well through their joint efforts; “the whole greater than sum of parts” sort of thing. In business, similarly, it’s the team that wins, not the stars. Thank you for making football seem just a little less pointless David.
    With tongue in cheek (and also appreciating these leadership lessons thoroughly), John

  6. David, I had to be the first to grace your wonderfully written post. As a football fan (Manchester United of course!), I naturally learn a lot from watching the good game as well as the styles of leadership and lessons therein.

    As leaders, we should take time to celebrate small wins as we do big ones. This is what keeps the team going, the constant “fuel” top-ups. When everyone takes responsibility of that which is entrusted to them, then they become leaders that ensure the right outcomes are delivered. Everyone wins. Who would have thought that Cardiff City would cause such apprehension to a well-endowed opponent?

    I feel “joined-at-the-hip” with you as I wrote a blog on a different match that took place on the same day. In it, I outline four “Leadership lessons from football” http://wp.me/p28gFh-1J

    Thank you for sharing with us, and for the insights you bring forth.

    • Can’t think of a better person to be joined at the hip with! Thanks for your comments and your willingness to share the lessons from life that are all around us if only we made time to look!

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