Posts Tagged ‘2010 FIFA World Cup’

Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

As the World Cup fades from memory (mine anyway) fans of all but the winners, Spain, will have been reflecting on what might have been.

Another 4 years of build-up to the 2010 World Cup, promises of success, and fanatical support, came to nothing on the playing fields of South Africa. Crushing disappointment remains for all but those with just a passing interest and of course the winners.

The good news is that it was only a football tournament. Nobody got hurt and we all live to fight another day. I have sympathy for those that paid large sums of money to see a team underperform on the world stage but as with all things, there really are no guarantees. You pay your money and you take your chance, as the saying goes.

Speaking of sayings, one of my favourites, and one extremely annoying to the few burdened people that I play golf with, is ‘Coulda, woulda, shoulda’. I could have played a better shot. I would have made the green. I should have used a more appropriate club. They come thick and fast after every dud shot. Never after a great one! As a relatively new player, I still hit my fair share of bad shots, but my mind set has changed. I realise I can only affect the the shot I am playing right now. Not the ones I’ve already played. They are history and I have to learn from what I did wrong. Not the ones I’m going to play. Other than having the correct kit such as waterproofs if it rains (it is truly miserable playing golf whilst soaked to the skin) and a drink or a snack, there’s not much you can you do.

No, it’s just that one shot. Right here, right now….

As I view the position of the ball, the distance ahead and take into account wind strength and direction, it is this shot and this shot only that I am able to influence. My club selection done, I approach the ball and, stopping short, I take a couple of practice swings. I then address the ball, assuming my stance, softening my knees, moving my weight onto the balls of my feet whilst keeping my heels grounded. Club head square to the ball, breathing regular, I start my backswing, keeping my head still and looking at the ball and only the ball. I bring the club head through the ball at an even tempo, still continuing to look only at the ball. Only as I complete the follow through with the club do I move my eyes away from where the ball once stood….

Great shot or terrible, that shot is now consigned to history and the next one demands my undivided attention. There’s nothing that a ‘coulda, woulda, shoulda’ will do to help.

And so it is in life and business. We can say ‘coulda, woulda, shoulda’ all day long about everything and everyone. But it won’t matter. Excuses and recriminations won’t help you. Learn from the past, be better prepared for the future, but give your here and now the courtesy of your complete attention.

Today can close the door on the failures of yesterday and open the doors that lead to the success of tomorrow. Today wants all of you to itself, and rightly so. Get out there, make the most of it. Not everything will go to plan, but hey, that really is life! And you know, sometimes, when plans go awry it can turn out for the best.

Thanks for stopping by.

PS – If you find your plans consistently come to nothing, maybe take a look at your plans. Go through them with a friend (or an Acquire coach!) to get a different perspective. It’s a good thing to have a plan but give yourself a fighting chance to start with :)

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Not life or death. It’s more important than that….!

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

Apologies, the danger of multi-tasking strikes again…. Saved as a draft instead of being published nearly 2 weeks ago!

Whilst watching the BBC football pundits review a World Cup match the other evening I was struck by the intensity of the debate and it reminded me of the famous Bill Shankly quote:

“Football is not just a matter of life and death. It’s much more important than that.”

And there was me thinking it’s only football….!

Fortunately, very few of us have lives depending on our daily business decisions but wouldn’t it be great to be as passionate as the pundits? There’s a school of thought that says that to be truly passionate about our business endeavours, our business goals must be in line with not only our personal aims and ambitions but also our core values.

Are we in a position to have a business life that maps on to our personal goals? And our values? Do we know what our goals and values are?

When these things are out of kilter it helps to explain some of the ups and downs and time spent in the doldrums which affect us so often. The bursts of unsustained enthusiasm, the easy distraction from our paths. All could be explained by the lack of cohesion between goals and values.

More than a little food for thought. I could go on about coaching stuff at this point, but I won’t. I’m going to think on it a while. Why not do the same? Let me know if you have any profound thoughts!

Thanks for stopping by.

PS – There really is something to be said for doing what you love….

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Things go wrong. It’s how you react that counts…

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

For those of following the 2010 FIFA World Cup, you may be in the same position as me. Which is disappointed. After lots of build-up the first match took place and it didn’t turn out as expected. There are lots of us in the same boat as the dreams of players, coaches and fans were snatched from them by the better teams.

For England, there were two things that went wrong as early as their opening match. The first point was of course the result itself. 1-1 in game they were expected to win. For England to progress to the knock-out stages they needed to now start winning matches and if they wanted to win their group they really had to start scoring goals. With those requirements came additional pressures.

The second point is that the England goalkeeper, Rob Green, made a howler of a mistake that could haunt him forever if he allows it to. A mundane shot requiring the sort of save he would normally make with his eyes close ended up in the net after he failed to simply get his hands behind the ball. An error a schoolboy would be disappointed with. To make matters worse, his error was watching by millions of people across the globe.

The disappointment for me was that Rob Green didn’t get a chance to make amends for his mistake. I’m sure he was champing at the bit to get back on the pitch ( at least I hope he was). He didn’t get to play another match, so we have to hope that he accepts that none of us can change what has gone before.

So, what did England do in response to these early set-backs? What did they learn to enable them to improve and pick up their performance? We’ll never know how good they could have been because they did the opposite of what we all expected them to do. We expected the team to come out fighting and to show its mettle. However they didn’t. They went in to their shells and played like poor imitations of the players we know them to be.

I suspect there will be many for whom this will be their last World Cup. What a shame that they didn’t grasp the nettle of opportunity and assert their collective brilliance.

For the rest of us, as we get on with the important stuff of every day life and business, we should remember that what is done it done. We are where we are. How we choose to go forward is what counts.

Once again, it’s how we execute which is so vitally important. Review yesterday, plan for tomorrow, make it happen today.

Thanks for stopping by and if I can help you with anything in your business or career, please get in touch.

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