Edge: Leadership Secrets from Footballs’s Top Thinkers
Ben Lyttleton
What is talent? How do you get the best out of yourself? What are the secrets of leadership?In Edge, Ben Lyttleton gets unprecedented access to some of the world’s top football clubs to discover their innovative methods for developing talent – and reveals how we can use them in our everyday lives. Elite teams now look for an edge by improving the intangible skills of their players ‘above the shoulder’. Liverpool’s approach to talent will make you more creative. Chelsea’s culture will improve your resilience. Didier Deschamps will improve your leadership skills. Xavi Hernandez will help you make better decisions. But how?Football is the most hot-housed, intense, financially profitable talent factory on the planet. It’s time we woke up to the lessons it can provide.We all want to have an edge. This is your chance to find one…
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COPYRIGHT (#uda7496f0-5138-58d1-8827-e271220e3ac8)
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First published by HarperCollinsPublishers 2017
SECOND EDITION
© Ben Lyttleton 2017
Cover layout design by Steve Leard
Cover photograph © Shutterstock
Athletic Club de Bilbao plaque poem © Kirmen Uribe
Exploratory Behaviour Frequency charts © G. Jordet, J. Bloomfield & J. Heijmerikx
A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library
Ben Lyttleton asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
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Source ISBN: 9780008226398
Ebook Edition © September 2017 ISBN: 9780008225889
Version: 2018-02-05
DEDICATION (#uda7496f0-5138-58d1-8827-e271220e3ac8)
To ABC, with love
CONTENTS
Cover (#u48c04900-a9b4-50aa-9bb4-5b65b024d271)
Title Page (#ue54ddf90-0ff4-567b-966b-3da866c77904)
Copyright (#u59649c1f-3b21-53f1-a34c-10f6338ac97c)
Dedication (#u2baf8159-2dee-5648-919b-d17511934705)
Prologue (#u53663b52-cec3-5611-9777-45451ba3bb98)
1 Cohesion (#ud119be59-0520-541a-bd83-bead45e3653b)
2 Adaptability (#u3b966dab-9104-5316-8bb4-07e5344d44bd)
3 Decision-Making (#litres_trial_promo)
4 Resilience (#litres_trial_promo)
5 Creativity (#litres_trial_promo)
Epilogue (#litres_trial_promo)
Notes (#litres_trial_promo)
Bibliography (#litres_trial_promo)
Acknowledgements (#litres_trial_promo)
Index (#litres_trial_promo)
About the Author (#litres_trial_promo)
About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo)
PROLOGUE (#uda7496f0-5138-58d1-8827-e271220e3ac8)
As soon as I took the call, I knew it was a great idea. It was summer 2014 and I had just spoken to Marcus Christenson, Football Editor at the Guardian newspaper. His plan was to tap into the football expertise of his global network and publish a piece called ‘Next Generation’. It would identify the top 60 players around the world aged 17 or below.
The feature would run every year, and readers would be able to track previously listed players and check on their progress. It was also quite brave, because if, in three years, say, 55 of the 60 players named had dropped out of football, no one would look too clever.
He asked me to come up with two players who were based in France. I have always been enchanted by French football and have written extensively about the game there. But I did not know all that much about the next generation, and when it came to that age group, it was more like the generation after next.
I called up some of my contacts in the French game and they helped me draw up a shortlist of five names. I had to narrow it down. I looked at video footage of the players but that didn’t help; they all played in different positions anyway. So I went back to Marcus and asked what he wanted. Was it the most talented players? Or the ones most likely to make it? He wanted both: basically, a feature that would become an annual celebration of the Guardian’s football knowledge pool. ‘We just want to get it right,’ he said.
This made me think. Would the most talented players be the ones most likely to make it? I asked a friend, a Premier League scout whose speciality was spotting youth-team players in northern France. ‘Not at all,’ he replied. He was looking for players who influence games, whatever their position. This is not just a matter of technique or skill; it’s about working off the ball, and how they react to losing the ball.
So what is he looking for? ‘Resilience,’ he said. Most scouts focus on the six seconds after a player loses the ball to check for reaction, but my friend keeps an eye on them for ten minutes. One youngster missed a chance to score and spent the rest of the half shaking his head and hitting his thigh in disgust with himself. He was crossed off the list. ‘He was nervous when he next got the ball and he won’t grow out of that.’