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Game Change

Do elite athletes really make elite employees?

Sports, we tend to assume, offer a sharp-edged reflection of business life in microcosm — leadership under pressure, the winning mentality, valuable lessons drawn from loss. It’s all there. Just kick back with a beer and a pizza and watch your pathway to workplace success unfold on game day. Well, it turns out that the connections are often far more nuanced than we might have presumed. Do elite athletes really make elite employees? What’s the connection between Swedish pragmatics in soccer and a thriving startup culture? Have you factored in the difference between “wicked” and “kind” environments (and what does that even mean)? We investigate all of these pivotal tangents, and much more, in this Big Think special collection of essays, interviews, and curated book excerpts. Forget everything you’ve been told about the synergies between sports and business. It’s time to rewrite the rules.

Blue background with the words "Game Change" in white, surrounded by strategic game symbols and graphs in the background.
Presented by
John Templeton Foundation
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Presidents who take power in a time when Americans are feeling disillusioned, or in some way defeated must be naturally good at restoring American sense of self-confidence.
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“It is an important part of the story that America had . . . that you had a period preceding those wars of enormous success � both relative prosperity at […]
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Rubell says there are three types of restaurants, and she loves them all.
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“The two-party system is really a one-party system,” Kucinich says.
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Tilghman thinks this age will be remembered as the second gilded age. She thinks we will be seen as people who distributed all of the wealth into so few hands.
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Thurman’s advice is, that even in the midst of life’s gloom and doom, we should try to, “figure out how to understand things to be so joyful, that even if […]
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Am I part of the problem, or part of the solution?
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More and more people, Freston says, are becoming masters of their own destinies.
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Just look at Mao’s Great Leap Forward.
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Freston, on the world’s greatest challenge.
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Freston says there is plenty of responsibility to go around.
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Special education and public responsibility.
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When you read the newspaper or watch the news, what issues stand out for you?
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Freston recalls the anti-Americanism of the Vietnam era.