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Joe Montana, perhaps the greatest quarterback in NFL history, in his last season as a professional, when he was playing for Kansas City, would spend two hours a day every day at the same little practice field at Menlo College near San Francisco. I would work with him on basic fundamentals that would bore a high schooler to death. Joe had four Super
... See moreBill Walsh, Steve Jamison, Craig Walsh • The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership
He knew his place, but he became a big part of the culture there, because he made sure things were fair and honest. He was a man of his word and expected the same of others.
James Andrew Miller • Powerhouse: The Untold Story of Hollywood's Creative Artists Agency
Be fair. The 49ers treated people right. I believe your value system is as important to success as your expertise.
Bill Walsh, Steve Jamison, Craig Walsh • The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership

He learned how to find the spaces between the fielders.
Neumeier Marty • ZAG: The #1 Strategy of High-Performance Brands
With McKelvey, who had remained a lifelong friend, it was a little different. McKelvey was an outstanding rebounder who understood postitioning and timing. I was enormously helped by visualizing his moves, but again I was constrained because what I was really doing was imitating, not creating.
David Falkner • Russell Rules: 11 Lessons on Leadership from the Twentieth Century's Greatest Winner
monster waves, operated for his first three years with the quite remarkable cover of “surfie,” a globe-trotting beach boy looking for the perfect point break. He was one of the first foreigners