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Miracle Case Study

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Case 1: Miracle Case Study

Coach Herb Brooks is an exemplary leader who was decisive to the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team winning the gold medal. In this movie, Kurt Russell plays Herb Brooks, the US team coach whose hard-nosed approach turns a group of undisciplined college players into an extraordinary and inspiring hockey team. Coach Brooks uses many characteristics that describe his approach to leadership. First characteristic would be that Brooks was very inspiring which is a positive characteristic and is consistent with TLC’s characteristics of exemplary leaders. Coach Brooks inspires confidence in his team by presenting a convincing game plan for beating the Soviets by showing the U.S. team complete faith that they can beat them. Brooks has a very inspiring speech before the Russian game by saying “if we play them ten times they might wine nine. But not this game. Not tonight. Tonight we are the greatest hockey team in the world!.” The U.S. team was very inspired and regardless of how intimidating the rival team was, Coach Brooks was able to carry his group of players all the way to Gold Medal. Other characteristics that describe Brooks are intelligent, determined, and very ambitious. Coach proves at the end of the movie that he was indeed intelligent and that his game plan was credible all along. He didn’t have many believers initially, but he sure proved the world wrong. Coach Brooks is not your typical coach; he uses many different approaches to build his team by making his down decisions and using different tactics to inspire his team to Olympic goal.
Coach showed he was an exemplary leader by ‘challenging the process’. He did this by insisting he make the key decisions on his own. In the movie, Coach Brooks did not consult with the committee when selecting the final players. It was common for committees to make the final decision of selecting national players, but Coach Brooks was hard-nosed and went ahead with the process himself. He selected players that he knew would work in a team system rather than simply selecting the best individual players. Coach Brooks used the ‘enabling others” approach to do exactly that by saying “I’m not looking for the best players, I’m looking for the right ones.” He was able to use strengths of the players to make a strong and cohesive team. It took some time and practice but as the Olympics games started, Coach was able to ‘inspire a shared vision’ and spark the players by ‘encouraging the heart’. Coach used tactics that I would not have thought a great leader would use such as starting a fight at half time and calling one of his players a “candy ass”. This pumped up the player who was bruised and came back in to the game and played with emotion to eventually win the game. Coach Brooks knew how to inspire and encourage his team to play better than the opposing teams. If I were a hockey player, I would want Coach Brooks to be my coach because he knows how to push the players to excellence and for them to perform at 110% instead of 99%. He has a unique approach to the game and knows how to get players that once hated each other to play together as a team. This is shown in a scene where Coach Brooks works his players so hard that they don’t have time to hate each other. He also encourages them to let go of old rivalries and become a team. One of the most powerful scenes in the movie is when Brooks makes his team do sprints over and over again after a poor performance. As the players are falling down and throwing up on the ice, and trainers pleaded for Brooks to stop the sprints, one of the players finally spoke up and said that he played for the United States of America. This illustrated a shift in attitude on the team; they weren’t individuals from different colleges anymore, they were one team playing for the U.S.A. and striving to win a gold medal. This is the type of leadership that I admire in coaches. Coach Brooks shows that he cares by even sacrificing his relationship with his wife. Coach Brooks shows that he is very dedicated through out the movie by even sacrificing his relationship with his kids. I also admire the wife’s courage to stay and support her husband through the whole Olympics practices and games. It must have been very difficult for her, but he understood the type of stress Brooks was under. There were times in the movie where Coach Brooks may have been rude to his wife, but that was from great stress from the game plan he was managing with the hockey team. This shows the reality of mangers and leaders who work in high stress environments. It is important to not bring in work into family but sometimes it is unavoidable. Although I have not had a coach like Brooks when I played soccer and baseball, I can relate this type of leader to my own Father. My father has always been a hard-nosed and strict person. He would get me and my brother to practice on our days off and to study hard during summer when we didn’t have school. We never really understood why our Father was so strict and ‘mean’. I didn’t realize until I finished college that all along my Father was making us into responsible and intelligent men. He never really expressed his feelings to us as Father when we were younger but we just understood what he was doing for us and I respect him for that.
In conclusion, I feel Coach Brooks is a great leader even though he may have used some techniques that are not favored. Brooks showed that different leadership styles are appropriate in different situations and can lead to accomplishing goals and beating the odds. Furthermore, Coach Brooks taught me that a leader must show that he or she believes in the team, and in each individual. Brooks was very consisting through out the movie, showing everyone that he was confident in his team. The following speech shows just how much confidence he had in the team, “You were born to be hockey players, every one of you, and you were meant to be here tonight. This is your time. Their time is done. It’s over. I’m sick and tired of hearing about what a great hockey team the Soviets have. Screw ‘em. This is your time. Now go out there and take it!” He made sure that players believed in themselves and in the team. Brooks and the U.S. Olympic team of the 1980’s showed to the world that it pays to give your best, no matter what outcome is predicted. For my self-development the take away I have from Coach Brooks is always aim high at goals, and not to give up easily on others. This is a positive take away because their can always be a way to inspire an individual and a team to accomplish a task that may be against all odds. Additionally, “challenging the process” is something that I need to work on. Coach Brooks knew how to ignore the resistance and to implement changes and game plans that was consistent with his own vision. That is something that I would need to practice by thinking outside of the box and not always going with the norm. Sure, this may be risky because it may cause some bad relationships with peers, but this risk can have a huge reward such as the Olympic gold.

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