![]() Most coaches would agree that there is no one road map to success. Tiger Woods started golf when he was 3, won his first professional event at the age of 21, and honed his skills for 18 years before reaching the elite level in his sport. Most elite level golfers will tell you it it takes closer to 20,000 hours until you reach a level of competence to be considered elite in golf. ![]() However, the consensus at the conference was that it doesn't really work. In many ways, it has created a culture of hour counting coaches and some international sports federations have actually built their programs around it. The rule essentially says that in order to become an expert in any field, you need to work for at least 10,000 hours at that endeavor. One of the topics that came up was the 10,000-hour rule popularized by Malcolm Gladwell’s book Outliers. ![]() It brought together hundreds of Coaches, Players, General Managers and Performance Experts from around the world. Last week in New York City was the Leaders in Performance Conference. ![]()
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