
Rugby
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The most dangerous trap for a coach is thinking leadership is a clean job. It isn’t. Rugby coaching lives in the arena: the training ground when energy is flat, the change room when emotions run high, and game day when every decision gets judged in real time. That’s why we come back to Theodore Roosevelt’s “The Man in the Arena,” a short piece of language that hits hardest when you need it most.
We listen to the poem and then pull out three takeaways built for coaches, captains, and anyone responsible for standards. First, team culture is built by action, not commentary. Posters and speeches don’t set the tone, what you walk past does. Second, mistakes are part of leadership. You will pick the wrong team sometimes. You will miss a moment. The question is whether you can own it, adjust, and keep showing up, because that response builds trust faster than perfection ever will.
Third, critics don’t carry consequences. Sideline noise, parent opinions, and social media “experts” can be loud, but they don’t hold the group together after a loss. We talk about staying anchored to the performance environment you can control: behaviors, clarity, relationships, and process. If you lead people under pressure, this one is for you. Subscribe, share it with a coach who needs the reminder, leave a review, and tell us: what does “being in the arena” look like in your world?
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