“Joe Montana’s leadership was grounded in this key characteristic: Despite the fact that he was the starting quarterback, with all of the trappings that come with that position, he never played favorites or believed that a person’s reputation, status, or credentials entitled him to special treatment. When you worked with Joe, you were treated as an equal. There were no stars in the Montana system, including Joe Montana. That corny old cliché, ‘One for all and all for one,’ could have been written with him in mind.”

~Bill Walsh (Legendary coach and author)

Similar Posts

Leadership Lessons: Brazilian Soccer Players

Brazilian soccer players train in desperate conditions. Their fields are bumpy, and the conditions are far from ideal, but this is done intentionally. So why the archaic conditions?

Is Your Setback an Inconvenience or a Divine Opportunity?

A human majority has never weakened God’s purposes. No election has ever thwarted His plans!

Outreach to children displaced by domestic violence

A 6-yr old boy displaced due to domestic violence wishes for a LeapFrog and its device learning games for Christmas.