Eric Musselman reports:
There's an old saying:
"To lead people, walk beside them."
That's a good description of how 76-year-old Steelers owner and Hall of Fame member Dan Rooney leads.
After all, as described in this NY Times article, how many owners of a professional team...
-- Walks to his team's home games, including passing under a highway overpass?
-- Flies on the team charter, where he sits on the non-reclining row next to the bathroom?
-- Eats lunch in the team cafeteria with Steelers employees and players?
-- Invites players into his office to nap on the sofa?
-- Lives in a modest house across the street from an abandoned lot and a Wendy's fast-food restaurant?“Some owners treat you like a rental property,” said defensive end Nick Eason, who has played in Denver and in Cleveland . “They have some maintenance guy to take care of it, they just come by to check on it, they look and they leave. Mr. Rooney comes around, he always sticks his hand out to you. ‘Hey, Nick’— and I’m like, he knows my name?”
Nose tackle Casey Hampton said: “A lot of owners, this is a hobby, but for him, this is his business, what he does. He’s here, shakes your hand, talks to you every day. Every day.”
According to this article, "strong safety Troy Polamalu said he treats all the players as his equal, “from Hines Ward to a free-agent rookie."The Steelers family encompasses not only the current team but past players as well. “You come back, and you’re still a part of here,” Ward said. “We know the history of the team. Not only do we represent ourselves but all the players who wore the black and gold before us.”
The former linebacker Andy Russell, who played for the Steelers for 13 years, said: “Here I’ve been out of the game over 30 years, and they jump up and come over and shake my hand and tell me how pleased they are to see me. You know, I’m thrilled to see them. It’s a brotherhood.”
Mr. Rooney takes no credit for the "brotherhood," saying that the team's culture has been cultivated over a number of years.
"It started with my father," he said. "He gave me the values. He treated players, coaches, general staff as people. He was concerned about them."
This author contends that the "culture now permeates the entire organization — a sort of ego-free zone in which players and coaches can occasionally seem as if they’re competing for a Nobel prize in humility.""We don’t care who gets the credit, and all we want to do is win. It’s very important that a team come together, that they develop respect for each other — you can call it love."
3 comments:
OK, so now you make me feel like it won't be so bad if the Cards get beat. Hard to be bitter toward an organization like this Nonetheless, go Cards!.
I simply must take this opportunity to comment again about our experience with the Rooney family, Zach. Hope you don't mind. When Tom Rooney first asked my daughter Emily to be his representative in our county, we had no clue who he was - or his family of origin. He never exploited it. All we knew was that he was running for U.S. Congress in the seat that Mark Foley had once held before his fall, and we wanted to see a conservative back in that seat. After someone pointed Emily out to him at a political gathering in the park, Tom Rooney told Emily to read his website and examine his positions on the issues, and if she thought she could support him, to give him a call. It was weeks before we put 2 and 2 together and realized who he was. We live rather modestly here on Pollywog Creek. We are neither affluent or particularly influential. Tom Rooney could have offered that position to someone with both affluence and influence in our community, but he took a huge risk and offered it (as well as others like I mentioned below) to my 17 year old daughter. Throughout the campaign, he was incredibly humble. A real gentleman. A man who loves his family and desires to continue to serve his country. He was a JAG officer and West Point professor, and now he serves our district in the U.S. Congress. He is not a politician - but he ran for congress out of a sense of duty, a character trait that I once heard him attribute to his grandfather, Art Rooney.
Dan Rooney apparently possesses very admirable leadership skills and runs an excellent organization - unfortunately he also supported Obama. =/
Carolina owner Jerry Richardson is another such guy. Great to see stand-up owners in a day when the Jerry Joneses of the world get all the headlines.
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