This post originally appeared at the Fort Worth Weekly's website. To view it there : https://www.fwweekly.com/2016/12/07/sports-rush-where-sports-takes-you/
When you scored a touchdown for your peewee football team or
converted a penalty in the high school soccer playoffs or legged out an
infield single in beer league softball, you helped your sports team win.
But how did that sport help you?
My entire family has long held a belief, shared by many in the
athletic profession and beyond, that playing sports confers benefits far
beyond the enjoyment one receives during the game itself. A recent
speech by a sports professional reminded me why.
Regular readers of this blog, such as there are, may have noticed that I sometimes write about sports industry events
at which I work, many of them charity-related. When I do, it is usually
because Carla Rosenberg brought me in to assist her through her
company, Matchpoint.
Ms.
Rosenberg is a superstar in the charity event field. I keep working for
her because she is one of those rare people who can see the big picture
while also remaining mindful of the thousands of details executing a
substantial gathering requires. Plus, she’s a genuinely nice person who
can apparently put up with me.
She also knows the sports business, which makes sense when you know
her background. She and I met when we both worked for the Texas Rangers.
Before that, she played collegiate tennis for the University of
Illinois after emigrating from South Africa where she was a top-flight
junior player. Following the Rangers, she went on to a successful stint
running the Dallas Stars Foundation. Now she organizes events and/or
operates foundations for the likes of Marty Turco, Nancy Lieberman, Dirk
Nowitzki, and others.
Something got Rosenberg to the point where she is this successful,
and it was clearly either in spite of sports or because of them. In a
recent talk she gave to employees at the North Texas Food Bank, she
explained the role sports, and especially tennis, played in her
development as an executive.
“The tangibles that come through playing athletics stay with you,”
she said. She turned those tangibles into a series of philosophies she
finds crucial to success.
She started with “Understanding winning & losing,” with an emphasis on the latter.
“The biggest lesson that I’ve actually learned is not from winning.
It’s from losing. I’ve lost tennis matches. I’ve made mistakes at events
and I just realized I can’t stay down.”
Her point was that losing happens in life as well as sports, and experiences on the field or court teach one to deal with it.
One thing I enjoy about working with Ms. Rosenberg is that she aims
to leave as little to chance as possible. Rosenberg says she prepares
for every meeting, conference call, and event because it causes her to
feel the same assuredness she did when she played.
“When I used to step out on the court, I felt very confident. I felt
like that was my safe haven. I felt very secure and I think it was
because of all the practice and all the training and all the repetition
that allowed me to feel that way.”
It’s nice to go into an event feeling comfortable, thinking we’ve got
everything ready to go. Live events, however, sometimes take detours one
could never anticipate. Technical issues, no-show celebrities,
last-minute auction additions – one has to know how to deal with the
unpredictable.
“Playing tennis in real time, under high-pressure situations, you have to make decisions,” she said.
We hear analysts talk about “going for shots.” One has to be decisive
and execute with confidence, relying on the technique one has refined
in practice. It works the same way in events, where having a clear idea
of what is supposed to happen and why helps you find alternative
solutions when reality doesn’t follow the script.
Not that such situations don’t make one uneasy. But one of
Rosenberg’s topic headings suggested “You grow the most when you are
uncomfortable.”
“I’ll use tennis as the metaphor. When I had an injury, it wasn’t
that I failed. I had an injury. It forced me to step back. When I got
back out on the court, again, I was rejuvenated. I had a different
perspective,” she noted. “Sometimes when you’re uncomfortable, it’s OK.
It’s the growing time.”
Sports and business both have their bottom lines. One must grow to
the point where one can win some games, sets, and matches. Rosenberg
learned that lesson when she vacationed in South Africa during Illinois’
winter break her senior year instead of training. When she returned,
her coach dropped her several slots in the team’s ranking, suggesting he
would play her in the line 6 singles position. After a lengthy rant to
her father, Mr. Rosenberg asked her if she were finished.
“He goes ‘win your matches and you’ll play number one again,’ and I
learned that very quickly. Produce results and you don’t have to do the
talking.”
Results matter in tennis, sales, and all other walks of life. It
turns out style matters, too. I don’t mean fashion sense or decorating
acumen, although Rosenberg has a flair for both. An organizer who
manages live events must keep her cool when circumstances rejigger
themselves without asking. Ms. Rosenberg always does. Her junior tennis
coach taught her that lesson one day when she played less than her best
and let it show. He told her “when I look over at your court, I
shouldn’t know if you’re winning or losing. It’s called poise.”
A lot of times, a good coach makes the difference in how well sports’ lessons take root.
“I was very lucky,” Rosenberg said. “I had an incredible tennis
coach. It wasn’t about being a champion tennis player. It was about what
kind of person are you going to be.”
The North Texas Food Bank isn’t a sports organization, but they
sought out a sports person to speak with them – to coach them. They did
it because her athletic background had given her far more than knowledge
of odd-man rushes and forehand technique. It had provided tools she
could use to succeed in many areas of business and life. Sports does
that.
Rush Olson has spent two decades directing creative
efforts for sports teams and broadcasters. He currently creates ad
campaigns, television programs, and related creative projects for sports
entities through Rush Olson Creative & Sports and FourNine
Productions.
RushOlson.com
Linkedin.com/company/rush-olson-creative-&-sports
Facebook.com/RushOlsonCreativeandSports
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