BOUNCE The myth of talent and the power of practice, by Matthew Syed
The book reviewed notable sports men/women achievements and the impacts of training, hard work and focus over every other factor. The true value of the book is found in its dissection of the dangers of the ‘talent myth” rather it re-emphasizes the age long message; success is possible for all of us, but it comes with hard work and self belief rather than innate ability.
The book is divided into three parts
namely:
v The talent myth,
v Paradoxes of the mind
v Deep reflections.
The talent myth: The author Matthew Syed, used his achievements in table tennis
sport to illustrate how success can be achieved through hard works, staying
around people of like minds and with a conducive environment. Matthew lived on
a street – Silverdale that produced more outstanding table tennis players than
the rest of Great Britain. Silverdale road was the well-spring of English table
tennis: a ping-pong Mecca that seemed to defy explanations or belief.
The success of Silverdale Road was about
the coming together of factors, beguilingly similar to those that have from
time to time, elevated other tiny areas on our planet into the sporting
ascendancy (Spartak in Moscow for example created more top-twenty women players
between 2005 and 2007 than the whole of the US. Silverdale street had the
following just to mention a little: Jimmy Stokes (England Junior Championship),
Paul Savins (Junior International Championship), Paul Andrew (top national
player), Sue Collier (England Schools Champion), The Syeds –Andrew and Matthew
(Andrew, Matthews brother became one of the most successful junior players in
the history of British table tennis, winning three national titles before
retiring due to injury. Karen Witt – She won countless junior titles, the
national senior title and prestigious commonwealth championship and dozens of
others.
So what is special about the area or street? Success has much to do with
where we come from. There are hidden advantages and extraordinary opportunities
and cultural legacies that allow them to learn and work hard and make sense of
the world in ways others cannot.
However the abiding presumption of modern
society is that natural talents determine success and failures. The metaphor we
use to describe outstanding achievers encourage this way of thinking. Roger Federer for
example has been said to have (tennis encoded in his DNA).
Tiger Woods is said to have been “born to play golf”. Top performers subscribe to this way of thinking too. Diego Maradona once
claimed he was born with football skill in his feet. But after the
survey by Ericsson, he discovered a paradigm shift in the way excellence is
understood, and that
it practice and not talent that makes excellence. The difference between expert
and normal adults is the life-long persistence of deliberate effort to improve
performance. There is absolutely no evidence of a “fast track” for high
achievers. Just like Jack
Nicklaus, the most successful golfer of all time succinctly puts it “nobody –
but nobody – has ever become really proficient at golf without practice,
without doing a lot of thinking and then hitting a lot of shots. It
isn’t so much a lack of talents; it’s a lack of being able to repeat good shots
consistently that frustrates most players and the only answer to that that is
‘practice’.
The myth of the child prodigy: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was a sensation in the 18th century Europe.
At age six, he was enchanting members of the aristocracy with his
skills on the piano, at the age of five had produced many
works before his
tenth birthday. Pretty impressive stuff for a boy in short trousers.
He was called the timeless genius of history greatest composers. Surely this
man should be born with sublime abilities; he had scarcely even lived ten thousand hours by
the time he was getting to grips with piano and his early compositions.
But that is not the whole story. Mozart early
life revealed more details. Mozart’s father was of course Leopold Mozart –
a famous composer and performer in his own right. He was also a domineering
parent who started his son on a programme of intensive training in composition
and performance at age three. Leopold was well qualified for his role as little
Mozart’s teacher by more than just his own eminence, he was deeply accomplished
as a child trainer. His authoritative book on violin instruction, published the
same year, Mozart was born remained influential for decades. So from the
earliest age, Mozart
was receiving heavy instruction from an expert teacher who lived with him.
Mozart had
clocked up an eye-watery 3,500 hours of practice even before his sixth birthday.
Seen in this context, Mozart’s achievement suddenly seem rather different, he
no longer looks like a musician zapped with special powers that enabled him to
circumvent practice. He looks like somebody who embodies the rigors of
practice. He set out on the road to excellence very early in life, but now we
can see why.
Child prodigies amaze us because we compare
them not with other performers who have practiced for the same length of time,
but with children of the same age who have not dedicated their lives in the
same way. Had the six years old Mozart been compared with
musician who had clocked up 3,500 hours of practice, rather than with other
children of the same age, he would not have seemed exceptional at all.
When Tiger Woods became the youngest ever
winner of the US masters golf champion in 1997 he was hailed by many experts as
the most naturally gifted golfer to play the game. This was understood given
his audacious strokes. But dig down into his past, and an entirely different
explanation reveals itself and once again its starts with a highly motivated
father. He started his son at what he himself describes as an “unthinkably early age” before he
could even walk or talk.
Early practice is vital so that
performances became totally ingrained and flow from the subconscious. Tiger was given a golf club at
charismas – five days before his first birthday – and at eighteen months had
his first golf outing. He couldn’t yet count to five, but little
Tiger already knew a par 5 from par 4. By the age of two years and eight months
Woods was familiar with bunker play and by his third year, he has developed his
pre-shot routine. At two years Woods entered his first pitch and putt
tournament at the Navy Golf Course in Cypress, California. He could already hit
the ball eighty yards with his 2.5Woods and pitched accurately from
40yards. At 4years
Tiger began training under a professional. Tiger won his first national major
tournament at age 13. By his mid-teens, Woods had clocked ten thousand hours of
dedicated practice like Mozart and the rest is history.
The Williams sisters; both multiple grand slam
winners in tennis also held up the testaments of excellence through training
and practice. The same story goes for David Beckham; he would take a football to the
local park in east London as a young child and kick it from precisely same spot
for hours upon hours and the result is evident.
The arduous logic of sporting success has
perhaps been most eloquently articulated by Andre Agassi. Reliving his early
years in tennis in his autobiography, he wrote “my father says that if I hit 2,500 balls each day, I
will hit 17,500 balls each week and at the end of one year, I will have hit
nearly one million balls. He believes in math. Numbers, he says don’t lie. A
child who hits one million balls each year will be unbeatable.
The Hungarian Sisters
Laszlo Polgar believes that gifted or
talented child does not have unusual genes, but rather, unusual upbringings. They have compressed thousands of hours of practice into small
period between birth and adolescence, and that is why they have become world
class. Polgar tried hard to sell his ideas in but could not in Hungary at the
time cold war was at its height. Realizing that the only way to vindicate his
theory was to test it on his own future children. Polgar spent hours trying to
decide on the specific area in which he would groom his children for excellence
and he settled for Chess game. Why Chess? Because it’s objective, and based on
performance.
Polgar gave birth to three girls - Susan,
Sofia and Judit. Polgar read so much about Chess and
he devoted many hours a day to chess even before their fourth birthday,
he did so jovially, making great play of the drama of the game, and over time
the children became hooked. All his girls entered the local competition
at age 5 and all became grandmasters!
Susan
At age twelve, Susan won the world title for girls under
sixteen, less than two years later, she became the
top-rated female player in the world. She later became the first woman player in history to reach
the status of grandmaster. By the end of her career, she had won the world
championship for women on four occasions and five chess Olympiads and remains
the only person in history male or female to win the chess triple crown (the
rapid, blitz, and classical world championships.
Sofia
She won the under-eleven Hungarian championship for girls at age five. She would go on to win the gold medal for girls at the world under
fourteen championships in 1986 and numerous gold medals in chess Olympiads and
other prestigious championships. But her most extraordinary achievement was the
"miracle in Rome" where she won eight straight games in the
magistrate in Roma against many of the greatest male players, including
the grandmasters Alexander Chernin, Semon Palatnik, and Yuri Razuvaev. One
chess expert wrote, "the odds against such occurrence must be billions to
one”.
Judit
After succession of record-breaking
victories in her early teens, Judit won the world under - twelve championships
in Romania. It was
the first time in history a girl won an overall (open to both men and women) world
championship.
Three years later at the age of fifteen years and four
months, she became the youngest-ever grandmaster - male or female in history.
She has been number one chess player in the world for well over a decade,
excluding a brief period when she was taken off the list due to inactivity when
she gave birth to her first son in 2004 (to be replaced at the top of the list
by her older sister, Susan).
Over the course of her career, she has had victories over almost
every top player in the world, including Garry Kasparov, Anatoly Karpov, and
Viswananathan Anand (combined).
What do all these tell us? It tells us
that if you want to bend it like Beckham or fade it like
Tiger, you have to work like crazy regardless of your genes, background, creed
or colour. There is no
short cut. Purposeful practice is about striving for what is just out of reach
and not quite making it, it is about grappling with tasks beyond current
limitations and falling short again and again and trying again and again until
excellence is attained. Excellence is about stepping outside the comfort zone,
training with a spirit of Endeavor and accepting the inevitability of trials
and tribulations. Progress is built, in effect upon the
foundations of necessary failure. That is the essential paradox of expert
performer.
The difference between Brazil and the rest
of the world in football does not lay in economics and certainly not in
genetics but in turbo-charged learning - in the thousands of Futsal
pitches that pepper the nation like gold dust. What is futsal? Futsal is soccer played in
a very closed or tiny space that compels you to perfect the artistry of
football because of the smaller space and honing of skills which makes playing
in a bigger space a child's play, according to Ronaldo De
Lima, 3- time World Footballer of the year.
As officers, we should be inspired to be the best in our chosen fields,
as no one is born with any innate skill or knowledge. We can all
become experts in whatever we do if we hunger for knowledge through reading,
training, mentoring, hard work, personal self developments, and passion for
whatever we do.
Culled from Bounce by Matthew Syed
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