US Army Paratroopers – the “Golden Knights”

I was recently at a baseball game in Chicago between the White Sox and the Texas Rangers. The scoreboard showed temperatures reaching 103 degrees so it was a hot one. Braving the heat and carrying all of their gear the “Golden Knights” jumped in to deliver the baseball for the first pitch. I have seen these guys jump before but in a much larger, open-ended stadium, and in much cooler temperatures. So, I was quite impressed with their maneuverability in the air and landing accuracy on the field. Here is a video and some pictures taken with my iPhone. It is hard to see but the dots in the second image are close to a dozen jumpers.

US Army Golden Knights

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Force of Habit: How Stephen Strasburg and Tommy John Surgery Relate to Business Leaders

I recently read an article in ESPN the Magazine (04/02/2012) about Washington Nationals Pitcher, Stephen Strasburg, among others who have had Tommy John surgery.  The surgery was required due to a tear in the elbow.  The author, Lindsay Berra, investigated what causes so many injuries and how it has impacted the game of baseball in terms of games lost by injured pitchers as well as the monetary loss of pitchers sitting on the shelf unable to play the game.

Most of us can think of at least one other pitcher, besides Tommy John, who has had the surgery: Kerry Wood, A.J. Burnett, C.J. Wilson, and Christ Carpenter are some recent pitchers mentioned in the article.  It has become so common, and the surgery so successful, that when the injury occurs teams count on those pitchers to return to full strength in about 18 months’ time.  They do not typically worry about how much money they are wasting, and better yet, how they could work to prevent these injuries.

Why do they typically occur?  The two common factors mentioned by Berra are overuse of a pitchers arm, and poor form in their pitching stride.  “To throw a baseball properly, a pitcher must get into the right position at the right time with the right succession of movements, like dominoes falling.”  Greg Maddux is a provided example of someone who utilized technology to prolong their career.  Nolan Ryan even mentions using anything available to improve his motions to prolong his career.  Both pitchers had long, largly injury free, hall of fame worthy careers that lasted into their 40’s.

Lindsay Berra goes on to discuss how there are pitching coaches still stuck in their outdated thoughts of how they coach a pitcher.  In the major leagues the thought is, if it isn’t broken and the pitcher is winning games, don’t fix it.  Berra mentions that some of these coaches seem to refuse to accept technology as a tool for improving a pitchers form.

Technology exists that can record a pitchers motions and a trained specialist can review that motion and provide recommended solutions for the pitcher to correct those unnatural motions.  There are better ways and coaches still refuse to adapt to use them, even though they can save them time and money on the use of a pitcher.

What does this have to do with business?  A lot actually.  This is a perfect example of a common occurrence in the business world.  How many bosses, or even clients, have you worked with whose thought process seems so archaic?  How many projects have you been on that were perceived to be running smoothly with positive results only to see unexpected problems occur that derailed the project?  These are the bosses that refuse to change due to the force of existing habits, the comfort of what they already know.

Risk management can be a major issue often overlooked.  There is not always a proper assessment of potential risks, such as failed technology or unfortunate budget cuts.  Perhaps the risk is the customer demands a change to a project’s requirements but your development organization does not have a process or plan in place for such sudden circumstances.  Maybe there is new technology out there that could help you to do your job much better, but your boss or client does not want to fund new equipment.  Maybe you were unknowingly provided the wrong piece of technology for the job and you later discover, only after the project has run off course, that there was something more suitable that could have prevented the whole disaster.

There are several scenarios I could write about, but the point is that it can be frustrating to work on a project that only after problems occur do you realize there were better options.  Pitchers want to pitch so they won’t stop to question their coach, just as project employees won’t always question their boss’ tactics if things are currently running smoothly.

Baseball, like so many project organizations, could benefit from being more proactive.  The solution to continue with the old school way is only a short term fix.  The end result could potentially end a baseball career or a project.  A proactive and continued effort from the start could save the team or a company millions of dollars, as well as the lost time to injury or project risks.

Pitchers and coaches could use technology to improve the pitchers form, what could a project team do?  Project teams could reexamine the development model they are using; perhaps the old stove pipe model could finally be laid to rest.  This could lead to the use of process improvement efforts where current processes are reviewed and improved along with proper policing to ensure process is followed.

Pitchers who welcomed change, like Greg Maddux and Nolan Ryan (lets mention 42 year old Mariano Rivera and 49 year old Jamie Moyer as well), found ways to remain effective and successful for a long period of time and their names will stand the test of time in the baseball annals.  We could include Tommy John as well for being the namesake of the surgery that prolonged his career.

Managers who are progressive and welcome change, whom are not afraid of failure, and resist the temptation to slip into a comfort zone, are the leaders who will remain relevant for longer periods of time in the always changing world of technology and project development.

Past innovators like Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, John D. Rockefeller, Conrad Hilton, Henry Ford, Ray Kroc, and the late Steve Jobs, to current leaders like Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, Richard Branson, Phil Knight, and Jeff Bezos.  They all took risks and accepted change in their culture without knowing the true outcome until it happened.

While they may be outside the scope of what you strive for, if you want to avoid the blow to the elbow and remain relevant, as well as show you can save your project time and money, avoid the comfort zone.  Avoid the force of habit.

Alex Rodriguez Admits Steroids Use…Who Is Next?

Written for the BleacherReport.com.

90267_crop_340x234Alex Rodriguez, baseball’s current biggest star, has now admitted to using steroids.  A-Rod was a part of a list of 104 players who tested positive during a survey test in 2003 that was supposed to remain confidential, but somehow leaked Rodriguez’s name.

So who are the other 103 players? Would they be surprises? Or is there no such thing as a surprise anymore? Was steroids more common than we ever lead to believe?

There are a few players we could put on that list, and they are players who found themselves in the Mitchell Report.  Players like former Yankees Jason Giambi and Roger Clemens. Andy Pettitte may have been on that list as well.

It has leaked that Barry Bonds, whether he knew or not, has tested positive for steroids. Miguel Tejada, and Eric Gagné made it into the report as did Benito Santiago and Gary Sheffield who both had ties to steroids back in 2003. Randy Velarde admitted guilt.

For Gagné, he was at his best around 2002-2004, and has since had a severe drop off in performance since then.

There could be well over 100 names listed here that could be on that 2003 list.  What makes it disturbing about the list of 104 is that it was only a sample of players in the league, it was not everyone in the league.

Though a lot were tested, 1,198 total, how many who were not tested would have tested positive?

It is important, now that A-Rod has admitted guilt. As much as we wanted him to remain clean his entire career, so many wanted him to fail. So what does this mean for him? What does this mean to the validity of the Mitchell Report that could not use that list of 104?

I think even more damaging would be if Derek Jeter, Greg Maddux, Pedro Martinez, Albert Pujols, or even Curt Schilling ended up testing positive. Could some of the “good guys” be covering up their guilt, or have been lucky enough not to test positive? The bag is long out of the hat. Anything is possible, right?

New York Yankees: 2009 Preseason Analysis and Predictions

Written for the BleacherReport.com.

90267_crop_340x234This century has not provided much luck for the Yankees, that is by their standards.  A lot of teams would dream of making the post-season as much as they have. 2009 has a whole new look and feel to it, and that puts a big “?” on it. What will the 2009 New York Yankees be this year?

The Yankees coming into 2009 have shuffled their roster, which includes the losses of Bobby Abreu, Ivan Rodriguez, Carl Povano, Wilson Betemit, Jason Giambi, Mike Mussina, oh, and their home—The Cathedral is officially retired.

The Yankees did add some big names to the roster: Nick Swisher, A.J. Burnett, CC Sabathia, Mark Teixeira, and a new $1.3 billion Yankee Stadium. Plus Andy Pettitte, Damaso Marte, and Xavier Nady are back; and Chien-Ming Wang and Jorge Posada return from an injury plagued 2008.

Here are a few key questions the Yankees need to answer or look past to overtake the Rays and Red Sox to get back to the playoffs and contend for a ring.

 

1. How will the Yankees fare in the new stadium?

Babe Ruth left a huge legacy with how he opened the ol’ Cathedral.  That place was loaded with so much tradition and history and the Yankees will look to carry that magic to their new home.  The Yankees must not pressure themselves to re-create that lure.

 

2.  How will the new members mesh on and off the field?

A new cast of stars arrive bringing a lot of change to the Bronx. Sabathia must take control of the rotation just as he did when he arrived in Milwaukee.

The Yankees lacked that knockout pitcher the past few years. With Pettitte falling off a bit and Moose gone, Burnett will need to be that strong No. 2 he was with the Blue Jays. 

Teixeira chose the biggest stage of them all. He must continue to steadily improve at the plate as he has the past few years, and provide consistent defense the Yankees lacked at 1st base. 

The first key addition this off-season, Nick Swisher, may prove to be most crucial. Swisher must maintain his intensity while accepting a bench role and covering multiple positions this season.

 

3. Will Posada and Wang return to their old forms after an injury plagued 2008?

Posada is the man behind the plate. He must prove he is healthy and re-assume his leadership role.  If he doesn’t, this could be his final season in the Bronx. 

Wang had a serious injury last year. With the pitching additions, Wang can come in as the No. 3 starter and not have the pressure to be the staff’s ace.  However, a strong return is pivotal to the Yankees success in 2009.

 

4. Cano and Cabrera, are you going to bring your bats this year?

Patience is gone for Melky Cabrera. He must capitalize on his opportunities at the plate or he is trade bait.  With the loss of Abreu, and Damon and Matsui aging, Melky needs to bring his bat.

If he doesn’t, the Yanks will count on Brett Gardner, Nick Swisher, or even hot prospects such as Austin Jackson. 

Cano’s bat is needed.  He is still a great, young player with a lot of years left. The Yankees offensive numbers dipped last year, and his bat was one reason why. If he remembers his bat, Cano can still be mentioned in the same breathe as Jeter, Posada, Pettitte, and Rivera.

 

5. What personality will the bullpen take the shape of for 2009?

Joba and his Joba Rules are a starter so the bullpen can’t rely on him.  Like 2008, the Yankees expect another great, lights-out season from Rivera. 

Last year the pitching staff became an Abbott and Costello joke. Who was on the mound at any given time? Marte needs to step it up the most. He was a huge addition mid-season last year. The staff needs to stay healthy and hold the game for Rivera.

Jose Veras, Edwar Ramirez, Dan Griese, Brian Bruney, Alfredo Aceves, Jonathan Albaladejo, Humberto Sanchez, who wants the ball?

 

6. Will the bench be strong this year?

Swisher will fill a big role this season. The Yankees also need a strong season behind the plate from Jose Molina, or they will call up young prospect Francisco Cervelli, who missed 2008 with an injury. 

With Betemit gone, Cody Ransom will need to fill the go-to role he covered so well. Melky, already under the gun, must provide a spark off the bench. 

Juan Miranda, who had a great season in the Arizona Fall League, will be a key young player rounding out the bench.

From the mound, Phil Hughes, Alfredo Aceves, and Ian Kennedy will need to be ready this year when the big arms need a rest or get injured. 

Hughes and Kennedy were busts last year and will be mid-season trade bait if they don’t produce when they get the ball.

 

7. Could the Yankees make any more moves before April?

Rumors are swirling that Swisher or Nady could be traded before April.  Melky could be on the block, and the Yankees now have a bit of a surplus at pitching.  The Yankees could make one or two more moves before the season starts.

Manny is still out there, as is Adam Dunn and former Yankee Bobby Abreu. Manny especially, would help solidify the outfield.

The Yankees are rumored to be in pursuit of defensive phenom, 2B Orlando Hudson, who is coming off of an injury filled 2008. His signing could diminish Cano’s time, especially if he doesn’t perform at the plate.  Regardless, he would be a great defensive addition.

 

8. They built it, now will the bats come?

Melky, Cano, and Posada must bounce back at the plate.  The Yanks need bigger bats and more clutch hits. The Yankees traditionally are a power hitting team with a lot of patience at the plate. The Yankees need to show up and open this park with a bang, which brings me back to the first question. They can’t fall to the pressure of the new park.

 

9. Once they read it, how will Torre’s book impact the Yankees?

Hopefully no impact at all, except to a certain player not mentioned yet, who needs to be more clutch. The only major uproar came from none other than former Yankee big mouth, David Wells. 

It’s a small issue right now, but I guarantee you at the start of spring training, the media will bombard the Yankees with questions regarding the book. Ignore those questions and let’s play baseball!

 

10. Lion or Lamb?  Will the real A-Rod please stand up!

The final question can be about none other than Alex Rodriguez. The Yankees signed many top free agents this year, yet the leagues’ highest paid player still has the biggest questions.

You can always count on A-Rod to put up his gaudy, garbage numbers year after year.  The problem if those numbers are never at clutch times to win crucial games, and the big hits never seem to come in the playoffs. A-Rod has been a sheep in the postseason for the Yankees and Torre has called you out. 

He wants to be paid as the games greatest.  Well to do that, and to be mentioned in the same breathe as the greatest Yankees like DiMaggio, Mantle, Gehrig, Bernie, Yogi, Reggie, Maris, Posada, Mattingly, Ruth, and Jeter, you need to bring home the Yankees something that has eluded them since your arrival, and that is a World Series Championship.

 

Yankees 2009 Season Outlook

The Yankees made a lot of good moves and greatly improved their playoff chances.  The bad side is the Rays, who made very few moves, return a young, World Series caliber team nearly intact (minus Rocco Baldelli, plus Pat Burrell). 

The Red Sox didn’t slouch too much either.  They brought in Baldelli, Brad Wilkerson, Brad Penny, and John Smoltz and have a logjam in their starting rotation.

It is going to be very close. I think the Rays will drop off this season, a sophomore slump per say after their fairytale year last year. The Red Sox will take the East unless their bats fail in a Manny-less lineup, especially if Big Papi isn’t healthy. 

The Yankees will bounce back and grab the wild card spot this year.A trip to the World Series will once again come down to the winner of the ALCS between the Yankees and Red Sox. The winner will square off in the Fall Classic against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Top 10: Most Hated Athletes: Could There Be a Few Surprises?

Written for the BleacherReport.com.

90267_crop_340x234If I could, every athlete who makes more than I do would make this list. What percentage of athletes appreciate their salaries and the people who help pay for them? For what it’s worth, here is my personal Top 10 list of athletes I hate, or just simply can’t stand and would love to see them disappear.

10. David Beckham – This choice is purely out of jealously. He has a hot wife, he is loaded, and he can do pretty much whatever he wants. At the same time, he plays in a sport no one cares about in the US, so he can avoid some of the attention guys like LeBron James and Brett Favre get.

9. Alex Rodriguez – Another year, another year without a ring. Derek Jeter has World Series rings, you don’t. Understand that. Until you do win one, there is no reason for you to make the money you do. See what you have done? You have set bad examples for Mark Teixeira who now makes more money than someone without a ring should make. Manny might be a lame duck in the dugout, but he has rings, and he can carry a team to a championship. What can you do besides ruin yours and Madonna’s marriages?

8. Pacman Jones – Sorry buddy, I won’t call you Adam. You don’t deserve what you want. You are a waste of talent and money. I hope the NFL bans you for life. Some people just don’t get it and you are one of them.

7. Sean Avery – I almost forgot the NHL existed, but thank you Sean Avery for reminding me hockey is still around. Your idiot antics like unleashing a torrent of obscenities at a fan and sharing with us that other players get your sloppy seconds, you are truly a class act. I guess at this point, the NHL will take whatever media attention it can get.

6. Barry Bonds – You are old. No one likes you. No one ever liked you.

5. Michelle Wie – Not many more female athletes can be any more bothersome. You are not a man. You will never play well on the men’s PGA tour. You have sucked so bad against your own gender that you had to take your act to Q school just to play this year. You are not even attractive. I do not want to see you in the news anymore. Do us all a favor and hang it up. You are never too young to switch careers.

4. Roger Clemens – I loved you when you played with the Yankees. You were one of the greatest pitchers in the history of baseball, regardless of whether you juiced or not. But come on man, you are guilty! Stop living this lie before it gets you in a lot more trouble. Your legacy is already tarnished. The facts are mounting up against you and you continue to deny everything thrown at you. Just accept you did wrong and everyone will forgive you like they did for your former teammates Andy Pettitte and Jason Giambi.

3. Andy Roddick – What a waste of talent!? Has he won anything important besides the Legg Mason Classic? Roddick turned down the 2008 Olympics to defend his title there. Where is his patriotism? He did win a US Open, but he is still highly overrated in my book. I think his greatest achievement was dating Mandy Moore.

2. Stephon Marbury – I am a Knicks fan. Need I say more? This man epitomizes what is wrong with sports and the salaries athletes receive. Marbury right now is being paid $21 million to do nothing but show up at away games to distract his teammates. When he is asked to play, something hurts. When he wants to play, he is considered too big of a distraction. Then when he decides it is OK to play again he does not get along with his teammates or the coach does not have him in his plans for the team.

And my most hated athlete is…

1. Terrell Owens – He always has the right words for the media after the game that everything is always OK with he and his teammates, yet between games TO hates the world, he is depressed, he doesn’t get the ball enough, and he is jealous Tony Romo dates Jessica Simpson. He has put up great stats in his career, but does he not get why his teams never win championships? I am sure TO appears on most people’s top 10 hate lists.

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