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- Jan 30, 2012
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Given this is a college football board, I expect at least some of the posters on here would find research on leadership approaches to be relevant to Mario and this team's identity crisis. So I thought I'd share an article published today by McKinsey on "Deliberate Calm".
If you guys think Mario doesn't want to go fire Gattis, that he didn't want to fire him right after A&M and MTSU, or didn't want to grab that backstabbing WR's helmet and scream at him like Lou Holtz used to do, you aren't recognizing Mario's naturally aggressive personality. To me at least, it's obvious he's restraining himself in order to be deliberate and professional about how he tackles these challenges. And that's what wise and winning leaders do.
I know he's not a gameday coach, and I am sure Lane Kiffin would have gotten this team to perform better this season. But if we want to rebuild this program to become a championship team again, I still think we have our guy in Mario.
www.mckinsey.com
If you guys think Mario doesn't want to go fire Gattis, that he didn't want to fire him right after A&M and MTSU, or didn't want to grab that backstabbing WR's helmet and scream at him like Lou Holtz used to do, you aren't recognizing Mario's naturally aggressive personality. To me at least, it's obvious he's restraining himself in order to be deliberate and professional about how he tackles these challenges. And that's what wise and winning leaders do.
I know he's not a gameday coach, and I am sure Lane Kiffin would have gotten this team to perform better this season. But if we want to rebuild this program to become a championship team again, I still think we have our guy in Mario.
When things get rocky, practice deliberate calm
When it comes to business stress management, most leaders spring into action. But wait--here’s why it’s better for those in charge to pause instead of pounce.