In 1997 two McDonald’s All-Americans stepped on Dukes’ campus. Shane Battier, was named the high school player of the year out of Detroit Country Day in Michigan. The other player was reigning Mr. Basketball of New York, Elton Brand. Both players eventually became National Players of the Year. Their paths to achievement, however, were quite different.
Elton Brand was an immediate impact player. Below are his statistics.
Elton Brand | Team Record | Points | Rebounds | Assists |
1997-‘98 | 32-4 | 13.4 | 7.3 | 0.5 |
1998-‘99 | 37-2 | 17.7 | 9.8 | 1.1 |
Following the 1998-’99 seasons Elton Brand was the National Player of the Year. He declared himself eligible for the NBA draft. He was the number one pick overall by the Chicago Bulls.
Shane Battier had a different path. The more accomplished high school player didn’t find immediate success. Here are his first two seasons.
Shane Battier | Team Record | Points | Rebounds | Assists |
1997-‘98 | 32-4 | 7.6 | 6.4 | 1.1 |
1998-‘99 | 37-2 | 9.1 | 4.9 | 1.5 |
Battier stayed at Duke for his junior and senior years. His production greatly increased. His senior concluded with being named National Player of the Year. In addition, the Blue Devils were crowned National Champs. Following the season, Battier was selected 6th overall in the NBA draft by the Miami Heat.
“Run Your Own Race”
Every year, Mike Krzyzewski, has the tough challenge of trying to get elite talent to work together toward team goals. Managing egos is a big part of his job. Athletes with elite talent and pedigree are accustomed to being the star. When they are surrounded by other stars they are often forced to take a lesser role. Also making this challenging is they observe other players excelling while they are struggling. To help combat the mental strain that often accompanies internal competition Coach K educates his athletes to “run their own race.”
“We tell each player that comes in each of you run your own race, and collectively we run a team race. If Shane Battier was running Elton Brand’s race he would have been disappointed. Kids come along different: some faster than stop. Some slower then fast; some fast and never stop. Don’t gauge yourself on how someone else is doing. Gauge yourself on how you are doing.”- Coach Mike Krzyzewski
Inner Space vs. Outer Space
I strongly encourage you to run your own race. If you haven’t figured it out yet, there will be things you can control and things you cannot; there will be an inner space and outer space. Your inner space consists of your effort, attitude, work-ethic, coach-ability; things within your control. Outer space, on the other hand, are things out of your control: playing time; what others are saying; friends and family; etc. If you choose to focus on the outer space, you are running the wrong race.
I cannot tell you how many times I’ve seen a first-year athlete step on campus and have a ton of success. Someone in their same class, for whatever reason, doesn’t have the same positive experience in that first year. Oftentimes it’s simply situational: the team has a need in the post; therefore, the 6’8 player gets an opportunity and the 5’10 guard doesn’t. Sometimes it’s physical and mental maturity. Other times, the coaching staff makes a mistake. Regardless of the reason, it doesn’t matter. The examples I listed are outer space items. They are not within the athlete’s control. Focusing, or obsessing, upon things that cannot be controlled are the demise of an athlete’s career.
Over time, the cream rises to the top. The freshman who has a ton of success in year one isn’t guaranteed the same success in subsequent years. In fact, it’s common for the person who finds instant success to get passed by players who had lesser roles earlier in their careers. The sooner the athlete realizes to focus on their inner space, things directly in their control, the more full-filling career they will experience.
Final Comparison:
Elton Brand finished his 17 year NBA Career in 2015-2016. During that time, he earned $169,229,324. He had an amazing career averaging 15.9ppg and 8.5 rebounds. He never won an NCAA or NBA Championship.
Shane Battier, retired after 13 seasons following the 2013-2014 season. His career earnings were $56,569,622. He averaged 8.6ppg and 4.2 rebounds while capturing an NCAA championship in 2001 and an NBA Championship in 2012.
Should Battier look at his career as a failure? He ONLY made 56 million in his career. Also, his stat line wasn’t nearly as impressive as Brand’s. What about Brand? Yes, he made a ton of money and had great statistics but he never won a championship. Aren’t great athletes remembered by rings?
“Comparison is the Thief of Joy”
Do you see how silly this sounds? Both men had amazing careers. Think about how often we get caught up in needless comparisons. “They live in a nicer neighborhood.” “Our kids are better behaved.” “Did you see where they vacationed?”
Why are we so worried about what others are doing? We spend an extraordinary amount of time comparing ourselves to others. This mindset limits us in many ways; it robs us of happiness.
This week, let’s make a commitment to run our own race. Focus on your inner space and not your outer space.
Mike
To watch Coach K describe “Running Your Own Race” watch this video from “What Drives Winning.”
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