CityVP Manjit

5 years ago · 4 min. reading time · 0 ·

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The Fans Prayer

The Fans Prayer

THE FANS PRAYER

CityVP Manijit

Ali Anani asked me to expand on a couple of comments on the "Lucky Number 13" around comment #5 and #7 and expand around the theme of how great teams make luck and yet good teams count their unluck that prevents them from greatness.  The picture used for this buzz are not Tottenham fans, but Manchester United fans praying in a game that was played in the last few years as Manchester United have fallen from their greatness since the retirement of Sir Alex Ferguson.  Ferguson retired delivering Manchester United their 20th league title. 

Why do great teams prosper though examination of their games prove how much luck played in their success and teams dreaming of greatness never seem to cross the threshold to greatness and here I mean consistent greatness.  Leicester City had one great year where their team rode an absolutely lucky year when all the major teams were in transition, except for Tottenham Hotspur and given that luck, how did Tottenham fail to capitalize on that opportunity with a better team?

Fans of great teams note their 12th Player, which is the fans while fans of good teams may end up psychologically effecting the team.  Ali Anani is correct in observing that this aspect of relationship between the game and people are applicable to business situations, they business is not a soccer, basketball, hockey or whatever sport that inspires an analogy or a comparison.

A prayer for success is a vain prayer and often leads to the completely opposite outcome.  In the match played today (13th January 2018) the fans of Tottenham could be seen praying deeply that their team will score.  When in a losing position, what is the psychological effect on a human being (no matter if they are meant to be professionals at what they do) to see their fans praying to a higher power.  Not only can this add pressure and stress to those players but the very act of seeing their fans praying means they are no longer believing in them.   So it is that chances that would have the fans rejoicing are chances missed due to self-inflicted behaviour.

When the great players of former great Manchester United players were questioned after the game, all of them (the likes of Ryan Giggs and Teddy Sheringham) said the same thing.  The way United played today fits with what Sir Alex Ferguson taught them, to see the game through their fans eyes and recognize that those fans would chop off their own hands if it meant helping the team towards glory game after game.  The United of old were represented on the field of play at Wembley Stadium today because David de Gea was a young goalkeeper that SIr Alex Ferguson entrusted to be the keeper, realizing that de Gea had massive shoes to fill following in the footsteps of legendary United goalkeepers.

That perspective was fully in the psyche of David de Gea as he became a projection of "unbeatable".  That projection would have registered subconsciously with the Tottenham players as the thought starts to creep in that either it is not their day or that they are undergoing the same psychological effects that have effected every other Tottenham team for decades upon decades.



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Comments

CityVP Manjit

5 years ago #3

#5
It was a great performance from de Gea for sure, but it also showed a lack of finishing finesse from this Spurs team, a character we see with Manchester City when they are at their ruthless best. No matter how many waves of attack there were, de Gea caught the sorcery of Sir Alex Ferguson, who came down to the training field to provide motivational team talk, and an inspired de Gea created United's luck. Sometimes no matter what a team does there is an expression which haunts that team "that it is not their night", It is an expression of resignation and defeat even though the will is turned on at 100% - most significant memory of that was England's failure to score the winning goal against what Brian Clough had called the Polish "clown" goalkeeper - the rest was history https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vi9vZCo215w England were not unlucky because they met a great goalkeeper on that night, they were guilty of hubris and even the great Brian Clough added his voice to the creation of this forlorn drama. I was 12 years old when I watched that match unfold - to say that we finished watching that match frustrated and befuddled is an understatement, even now I wonder what went missing with England not being at the 1974 World Cup Finals. The era of unluck culminated 3 years later when Brian Clough at the height of his powers was turned down by the FA to be England's manager - so talk about transforming luck into unluck in that singular decision of being afraid of an innovator and rebel.

CityVP Manjit

5 years ago #2

#1
I would say"great teams (in sports and business alike) transform their unluck into luck, they take situations where many of us would only see surrender, defeat or loss and utilize those very same factors to create something entirely new, which people then describe as lucky. That is ultimately how we make our own luck. Sometimes in the process of the unlucky moment that only is registered in our memory when it remains as that, but when the unlucky moment is the basis of a lucky transformation, we only remember the luck, not what transformed that luck. As an example from the world of soccer, we need to go back to why the teams managed by Sir Alex Ferguson won so many league titles with ever changing team personnel. United fans got used to the habit Ferguson instilled in his players of playing every second of the game. As a consequence United became famous for rescuing points in the dying minutes of a game. Yet what happened when the fiercest rival Manchester City scored in the last minute to make one of their classic encounters 3-3. Did Sir Alex Ferguson think they were unlucky to lose the lead with seconds of normal time left? He may have expressed disappointment, but such is the habit he had of instilling a mindset that affected the game. Let's go back to that match and see the winning goal from Michael Owen in the 6th minute of injury time - when the linesman had flagged that there would be 4 minutes of injury time. Notice what the commentator is saying as and after Owen scored "Where did all this added time come from?" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_ln3cYHsi4 Where it came from is the psychology that Ferguson played because his mastery of the human mind extended to the officials also. Mark Hughes manager of Manchester City is now forever known as the unlucky manager - and here Ferguson turned unluck into luck - but that is not what defines greatness, what defines greatness is the measure of countless moments of transformation like this.

CityVP Manjit

5 years ago #1

#1
I would say"great teams (in sports and business alike) transform their unluck into luck, they take situations where many of us would only see surrender, defeat or loss and utilize those very same factors to create something entirely new, which people then describe as lucky. That is ultimately how we make our own luck. Sometimes in the process of the unlucky moment that only is registered in our memory when it remains as that, but when the unlucky moment is the basis of a lucky transformation, we only remember the luck, not what transformed that luck. In an example with Tottenham, Harry Kane was loaned out 9 times and at Norwich an unlucky spell with them and Spurs failure to buy a recognized striker in the transfer window meant that they "had to" bring back Harry Kane as cover. Who was unlucky - Norwich who only played him twice or Tottenham who on getting unlucky with buying a recognized striker had to bring back the young man. That young man is now being priced by Spurs at $300 million. Deli Alli a lifetime Liverpool supporter was turned down by Liverpool, that led to MK Dons accept a 5 million pound offer from Spurs. Deli Alli must have felt unlucky being rejected by his boyhood team, but now he must feel lucky that he joined Spurs and played for a manager who is well known for playing young players and giving the chance to youth team players. Then there is the Gareth Bale Story just to underline the role of luck https://www.theguardian.com/football/2018/sep/28/tottenham-gareth-bale-lucky-mauricio-pochettino-real-madrid

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