WHEN WE LEARN EARLY IN LIFE TO PLAY HARD AND FAIR
Pic.:Amrita Jeurkar
This is my second Post, inspired by Satya Nadella. And, in this post, I wish to highlight on a very valuable insight he provides on leadership: The team spirit.
From whatever I
have read about Nadella, particularly his own confessions in interviews, I have
realized that Nadella has a very high sportsmanship spirit. It has come from his
passion for playing cricket. He says, “I think playing cricket taught me more
about working in teams and leadership that has stayed with me throughout my
career.”
It is incredibly
true. Anyone who learns to play a hard, competitive game – and play it fair –
in the grounds out there, knows how to play every game in life in the same
spirit. And, cricket demonstrates this truth so well… A strong team is one
which plays as a team… A team’s success lies in bringing out to the fore the complementary
strengths of each member of the team in the best form… The team’s captain draws
his strength from it… Yes, a team which doesn’t play as a team, crashes. The
leader is, always, as good as his team… even though it is believed to be the
other way around…
Recently, in his farewell speech at Wankade
stadium, Sachin Tendulkar had appealed to all of us that, in life, when young,
we all should learn to play at least one competitive game… Because, as he put
it, what we learn in the playing ground - playing a hard-and-fairly-fought
match - we will never be able to learn anywhere else.
The mindset of
every good sportsman is to ‘win’… For that, he learns to play hard, and play
fair… And, the amazing thing about that mindset is that he knows one of the two
players can only win and the other has to lose… So, when the inevitable
happens, how he reacts to the outcome of the game indicates how good sportsman
he is…
In life – as in
games we play outside in the fields – we win some, we lose some…
A true sportsman
goes home tucking more wins in his bag than losses… And, I think, that’s a very
re-assuring truth about life…
And, yes, there
is that ultimate hallmark of sportsmanship:
“Being magnanimous
in your victory; being graceful in your defeat.”
Both, a good cricket-team
and a good corporate-team, play their games guided by the same principle…
Satya Nadella’s confession is an apt testimony to
this.
GERALD C’CUNHA
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-- Umesh D'Sa