Tom Seaver’s lessons for every aspiring professional

I know that holding up sports figures as role models is fraught with peril, but you could do a whole lot worse than emulating my childhood sports hero, even (especially) in your career:

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In my practice, I work with executives and companies that are seeking ways to improve their performance and effectiveness.  The sources I use in my work can be found in my experiences, my post-graduate work, my training as an executive coach, and numerous research studies, articles and modern management books. 

But honestly, Tom Seaver provided some simple and clear examples of professional behavior for all of us:

  • Intimately know your competitors’ strengths & weaknesses before taking the field.
  • Objectively evaluate your own performance and make adjustments.
  • Highlight the value in the contribution of your teammates.
  • Arrive early, rested and prepared for your days’ work.
  • Constantly evaluate / moderate your own emotional state during the game.
  • Grade yourself critically on consistency and form.
  • Focus on your game and your performance overall.
  • Talk about performance.  Always.
  • Show respect for your competitors – especially the greats.
  • Be happy with your achievements, but really cut loose and celebrate when the whole team wins.

Yesterday we lost Tom Seaver at the age of 75.  As a kid growing up in the early 70s in a NY suburb, Tom Seaver was everything to me and my friends.  We read every article we could find about him in newspapers, magazines and books and fought for number 41 on every baseball team we played on (I only got it twice).  When he pitched, we watched him on television, and on rare and very special occasions, saw him play in person.

It is clear that he had some God-given natural gifts (he often spoke of being grateful for his talent), but it was his focus, work-ethic and habits that turned him into one of the best and most consistent performers of all time. 

I had a few friends who respected him but felt he was “aloof” in interviews and later as a commentator.  I always looked at it differently.  I like to think that Tom was always preoccupied with performance and with excellence. 

Rest in Peace, Tom Seaver. 

Thank you for being one of my best teachers growing up, even though neither of us knew it at the time.