This morning, I was listening to discussions about Jimmy Butler wanting to be traded from the Minnesota Timberwolves. I don't know the rumors are true or untrue, but the discussion about the possible trade or move in free agency were interesting.
Multiple "experts" on ESPN kept coming back to similar reasons for Butler's apparent unhappiness with the Wolves. The common theme was that Butler did not like the attitude or behavior of teammates on the Wolves. One player was described as having a "lack of passion," he was just playing for the money according to a source. And another significant player was described as "poor priorities." The feeling was that this player was much more invested in personal stats than in winning games. The conclusion was that Butler saw these players who were significant to the team and the teams success, but who had major character flaws. And the experts went onto say that Butler felt, "you can't win championships with players who lack passion (heart) or who have selfish priorities." The point was that no matter what the talent level of a team- the team's culture will determine their ceiling!
After listening to this, I was reminded about a book about North Carolina women's soccer program. The soccer program may be the most successful program in NCAA history. In the book, Coach Dorrance talked about building team culture. Here is part of his thoughts:
North Carolina Women's Soccer Team's Core Values
by Anson Dorrance, Head Coach
There are certain principles of behavior that
produce extraordinary results. People who make a
living from studying what makes organizations excellent usually boil their
consistent success down to the group living a powerful set of core values.
Every year
when I meet with the rising seniors each week in the spring our discussions
center around our core values and what they can do to live them and how they
can help drive everyone within the culture to live them as well. Human nature being
what it is, some leaders embrace the personal and public challenge of our
discussions and some don't; just like some people within the culture live the
core values and some just don't have the strength.
We need them to embrace and live what
we have collected below because our culture and core values are only as strong
as our leaders and what they endorse and drive as acceptable behavior. So over the past 25 years, since our program
began in 1979, what are the best elements of our tradition? What are our core
values?