I’ve spent lots of time with some of the world’s most successful coaches. I discovered that many of them think about character a lot, especially traits that are important to winning – like self-discipline, perseverance, resiliency, and courage. They pay less attention to virtues like honesty, integrity, responsibility, compassion, respect, and fairness – aspects of character that make a good person, citizen, spouse, or parent.
The problem is that, even at the amateur level, many coaches are hired and paid to win, not to build character. Unless it interferes with performance, to worry about the kind of person an athlete is off the field is a waste of time.
Coaches who seek to hone the mental and physical skills of winning while ignoring moral virtues of honor and decency too often produce magnificent competitors who are menaces to society.
Perhaps coaches of elite athletes not connected with educational or youth-serving institutions can operate in this moral vacuum, but all others have a responsibility to teach, enforce, advocate, and model all aspects of good character, including trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness, caring, and citizenship.
Whether it’s sports, business or politics, whenever we divorce issues of competence from issues of character, we create a class of amoral professionals who think they’re exempt from common standards of honor and decency. This discredits and demeans the moral standing of everyone involved.
This is Michael Josephson reminding you that character counts.
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Coaches, and that means all of us, remember that trust is the foundation for success in all endeavors. Trust does not guarantee success, nothing does. But, without trust, every relationship is compromised. In order to develop and sustain trust we must consistently demonstrate our competence, character, and commitment. Coaches, all of us, must endeavor to develop each of these qualities in all whom we touch (including ourselves). All the best, Pat
Here is a Sportsmanship news clip for you.
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=164274560391552
Very nice – i will re-post this. Thank you.