
FROM THE BLEACHERS-771
BY DR. JACK WELCH
Championships Begin Long Before Opening Night
Fall sports are right around the corner, and while fans are counting down the days until the lights come on and the bands start playing, coaches and athletes know one thing, the most important part of the season is happening right now. Preseason preparation.
Preseason is the time when championships quietly begin to take shape. For coaches, the work is never-ending. Playbooks are reviewed and updated. Practice schedules are fine-tuned. Rules and regulations are studied to ensure everything is done the right way. Coaches evaluate talent, organize the summer workouts allowed by their governing associations, and begin figuring out how all the pieces fit together. The wins everyone celebrates in October and November often have their roots in the planning that takes place in June, July and August.
For players, the responsibility is just as great.
This is when they prepare their bodies and minds for the long grind of a season. Football, volleyball, cross country, soccer, and every other fall sport demand endurance, discipline, and toughness. Those who put in the work now will be ready to compete when the whistle blows. Those who don’t may find themselves dreaming about playing instead of actually competing.
Natural talent can take a team only so far. Preparation is what separates good from great. Time and again, we’ve seen less talented teams outperform more gifted opponents because they were better prepared. They were more disciplined. They trusted one another because they had invested the time together. Likewise, good athletes become great athletes because they refuse to rely solely on ability. They prepare. They improve. They sacrifice. That’s really what this season is all about. Sacrifice.
Success in sports isn’t much different than success in life. Whether you’re building a football program, running a business, or leading a company, the people willing to sacrifice their time and energy for a common goal are usually the ones standing at the finish line with something to celebrate.
When it’s fourth-and-one with the game on the line, I want the players on the field who have earned that moment. I want the ones who stayed after practice for extra reps, lifted weights when no one was watching, and chose discipline over convenience. They’ve sacrificed for that yard.
The same principle applies in the workplace. When the pressure is on and an important decision has to be made, I want the employee who consistently puts in the effort, accepts responsibility, and does the little things right. Not the one looking for the quickest way out the door or the easiest path through the day.
Preparation creates confidence. Sacrifice builds character and character is what carries people through the biggest moments.
As another fall sports season approaches, remember this: the scoreboard may tell us who won the game, but preparation usually determines the outcome long before kickoff.
Thought for the Week, “The harvest is never determined on game day, it is determined by the work, sacrifice, and preparation that took place long before anyone was watching.” Jack Welch
Dr. Jack Welch serves as President of Fort Scott Community College. With a career spanning professional sports, public education, and rural community development, he brings a servant-leader mindset and a passion for building trust-driven cultures that empower people to thrive in the classroom, on the field, and in life. He is also the author of Foundations of Coaching: The Total Coaching Manual.
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