Jason Whitlock: "We Owe Jerry Jones (And Jimmy The Greek) An Apology"

TheBigOne

Master Tittay Poster
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Why guys like Jones can't be human
Jason Whitlock

Updated Apr 15, 2010 1:48 PM ET
You can’t blame athletes/celebrities for building walls between themselves and all of us. Not after what we just did to Cowboys owner Jerry Jones.

I blame us, the so-called mainstream media, far more than the young men who took advantage of Jones’ drunkenness, whipped out a cellphone camera and tape-recorded Jones talking a little (spit) and far more than the editors of Deadspin.com who aired the video.

We, the mainstream media, committed the real crime. We took the video seriously. The Dallas Morning News wondered whether commissioner Roger Goodell would take action against Jones for doing what men and women having been doing inside drinking establishments since the beginning of time. Sports talk radio took Jones’ good-natured, Bill Parcells trash talk way out of context. And, of course, the Worldwide Leader used the Jones video as fresh meat for its 24-hour, dumbed-down debate grinder.

And you wonder why athletes don’t want to give us access and view us as a threat?

We don’t have a sense of humor. We don’t allow athletes/celebrities to be human. We think airing two sides of a one-sided debate is sound, fair journalism. Common sense almost never rules our day.

We have on-air time to fill and columns to write. We need fodder, good guys and bad guys, things that require very little thought.

Jerry Jones did not do or say one thing wrong. Not one. He engaged some fans in common, sports-bar trash talk. It’s unfortunate the fans chose to secretly tape-record Jones, but they were probably drunk too. Deadspin makes no secret of the fact that it has zero interest in fairness or placing its exploitive stories in any sort of proper context.

The fans and Deadspin stayed in character.

It was our reaction that was unfair to Jones. We’re supposed to be mature and fair. We should’ve looked at the video, laughed and moved on. If it had to be discussed, we should’ve explained to viewers/listeners/readers that clearly Jones was just trash-talking Parcells the way Larry Bird might bait Magic Johnson on the basketball court.

Yes, Jones is a billionaire NFL owner. But in his head, he’s still an Arkansas football player. He’s a regular guy. He gets liquored up and talks crazy.

“Bill’s not worth a s---. I love him,” Jones said.

It’s not hard for me to translate Jones’ meaning.

Drunk or sober, I’ve had a lifelong love affair with the word “motherf----er.” It’s a term of endearment the way I use it.

“That’s my motherf-----er right there.”

“That motherf-----er is crazy, y’all.”

If I’ve never called you a “motherf----er” -- man or woman -- it’s probably a sign I have no respect for you. If I’ve never cracked a joke at your expense, it means I don’t like you.

Jerry Jones strikes me as that kind of guy. He and Parcells may not be best friends. But I don’t have any doubt Jones respects the hell out of Parcells. That’s why he was comfortable pretending to bad-mouth Parcells.

Any idiot with common sense realizes that’s what Jones was doing.

As for Jones’ remark about how he wouldn’t draft Tim Tebow in the third round because the Cowboys “couldn’t get Tebow on the field,” well, that’s just Jones being honest. The Cowboys have a starting quarterback (Tony Romo) and Felix Jones when they want to run the wildcat.

Again, Jones didn’t do anything wrong. His mistake was engaging fans. And then we, the mainstream media, multiplied his mistake.

I don’t blame athletes/celebrities for building higher and higher walls.

This whole thing reminds me of the way we ran Jimmy The Greek out of a TV job because he had a few pops at a bar and offered a harmless, layman’s theory on why American black athletes were having success in certain sports.

I was just a kid when The Greek got screwed, but I was pissed then. Few people in the media had the courage to defend The Greek for saying what I’d heard in my father’s all-black tavern for years.

Sports celebrities get to be human when they’re off the clock. Had Jones made his comments about Parcells and Tebow during an actual interview, I would understand the hysteria. Had The Greek stated his unsophisticated opinion while doing “NFL Today,” I would’ve understood his firing.

But what is happening to Jones is an example of the classic “gotcha” journalism that Sarah “Gal Sharpton” Palin rails against when reading off her hands at Tea Party rallies. (Palin is the female Al Sharpton, a divisive force of nature who travels the country making millions of dollars stirring fear.)

We owe Jerry Jones an apology and all sports fans an honest explanation of why athletes/celebrities have every right to avoid us.

E-mail Jason or follow him on Twitter. Media requests for Mr. Whitlock should be directed to Fox Sports PR.
 
Dude is batting 50% on this one. On Jerry he could be correct. but on Jimmy the Greek, he does not get a pass, and neither does Jimmy. To paraphrase Jimmy the Greek, athletic prowess of the black athlete stemmed from the pairing of selective slaves to yield big strong bucks. Problem is ain't no fucking slave master was thinking about no fucking NFL,NBA or track and field for that matter. Second, the African genetic prowess as it relates to athletics is GOD GIVEN! Jimmy the Greek just ran off at the mouth what a lot of CAC's believe. What was next? the successful smart black athletes are the result of the slave masters' mixed race kids who passed on intellectual gifts to their descendants? GTHFOHWTBS!!!:angry:
 
Whitlock's right and wrong. As far as Jerry Jones and the press running with a bullshit story he's right. As far as Jimmy the Greek's comments, I have never heard that type BS from anyone black. Plus there's nothing divisive about Al Sharpton he's always been up front about what he about. As for Palin comments are not necessary.

Whitlock is one of those type dudes you sometimes want to strangle and at others he seems to be on point. He's hard to figure.
 
Dude is batting 50% on this one. On Jerry he could be correct. but on Jimmy the Greek, he does not get a pass, and neither does Jimmy. To paraphrase Jimmy the Greek, athletic prowess of the black athlete stemmed from the pairing of selective slaves to yield big strong bucks. Problem is ain't no fucking slave master was thinking about no fucking NFL,NBA or track and field for that matter. Second, the African genetic prowess as it relates to athletics is GOD GIVEN! Jimmy the Greek just ran off at the mouth what a lot of CAC's believe. What was next? the successful smart black athletes are the result of the slave masters' mixed race kids who passed on intellectual gifts to their descendants? GTHFOHWTBS!!!:angry:

Is Jimmy the Greek wrong for what he said? I don't know really, but I will tell you this. He did have a point. Pairing of slaves did happen to some degree. And best believe if 2 physically strong human beings are paired together, the child will more likely be strong. I always hear people say some people physiques are due to genetics. Here is a good example for you how come the most sculpted athletes are the black males of America. No male on the planet is strong as the American or Jamaican black male. You don't see Africans with our physiques and they are the original blacks. If I was to pair 2 highly intelligent people together, I will bet their child will be highly intelligent. Notice all your fastest sprinters come from the Western Region of the world. The only problem I have with Jimmy the Greek was his comments invites other comments that could disturb people.

Genetics is the reason why I tell my friends to be careful who they date or marry. If a female or male had a parent or both parents with some type of psychotic behavior, the child would be likely to have that problem also. So at the end of the day slavery has played an effect on us athletically than most people realize, just as it plays a part in us psychologically.
 
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Is Jimmy the Greek wrong for what he said? I don't know really, but I will tell you this. He did have a point. Pairing of slaves did happen to some degree. And best believe if 2 physically strong human beings are paired together, the child will more likely be strong. I always hear people say some people physiques are due to genetics. Here is a good example for you how come the most sculpted athletes are the black males of America. No male on the planet is strong as the American or Jamaican black male. You don't see Africans with our physiques and they are the original blacks. If I was to pair 2 highly intelligent people together, I will bet their child will be highly intelligent. Notice all your fastest sprinters come from the Western Region of the world. The only problem I have with Jimmy the Greek was his comments invites other comments that could disturb people.

Genetics is the reason why I tell my friends to be careful who they date or marry. If a female or male had a parent or both parents with some type of psychotic behavior, the child would be likely to have that problem also. So at the end of the day slavery has played an effect on us athletically than most people realize, just as it plays a part in us psychologically.

well said..........
 
Is Jimmy the Greek wrong for what he said? I don't know really, but I will tell you this. He did have a point. Pairing of slaves did happen to some degree. And best believe if 2 physically strong human beings are paired together, the child will more likely be strong. I always hear people say some people physiques are due to genetics. Here is a good example for you how come the most sculpted athletes are the black males of America. No male on the planet is strong as the American or Jamaican black male. You don't see Africans with our physiques and they are the original blacks. If I was to pair 2 highly intelligent people together, I will bet their child will be highly intelligent. Notice all your fastest sprinters come from the Western Region of the world. The only problem I have with Jimmy the Greek was his comments invites other comments that could disturb people.

Genetics is the reason why I tell my friends to be careful who they date or marry. If a female or male had a parent or both parents with some type of psychotic behavior, the child would be likely to have that problem also. So at the end of the day slavery has played an effect on us athletically than most people realize, just as it plays a part in us psychologically.



Man, I think genetics dumbed you down, j/k.

What nonsense is this?

2 intellectual parents most likely have life skillset that is different to 2 athlete parents.

Kids feed off of expectations.

The environment and expectations placed on kids determine what they become not that genetic bullshit.....
 
Is Jimmy the Greek wrong for what he said? I don't know really, but I will tell you this. He did have a point. Pairing of slaves did happen to some degree. And best believe if 2 physically strong human beings are paired together, the child will more likely be strong. I always hear people say some people physiques are due to genetics. Here is a good example for you how come the most sculpted athletes are the black males of America. No male on the planet is strong as the American or Jamaican black male. You don't see Africans with our physiques and they are the original blacks. If I was to pair 2 highly intelligent people together, I will bet their child will be highly intelligent. Notice all your fastest sprinters come from the Western Region of the world. The only problem I have with Jimmy the Greek was his comments invites other comments that could disturb people.

Genetics is the reason why I tell my friends to be careful who they date or marry. If a female or male had a parent or both parents with some type of psychotic behavior, the child would be likely to have that problem also. So at the end of the day slavery has played an effect on us athletically than most people realize, just as it plays a part in us psychologically.

Get this Bell Curve bullshit thinking out of here. The late, great Stephan Jay Gould ripped that notion to shreds in the '90s.

gould2.jpg
 
Is Jimmy the Greek wrong for what he said? I don't know really, but I will tell you this. He did have a point. Pairing of slaves did happen to some degree. And best believe if 2 physically strong human beings are paired together, the child will more likely be strong. I always hear people say some people physiques are due to genetics. Here is a good example for you how come the most sculpted athletes are the black males of America. No male on the planet is strong as the American or Jamaican black male. You don't see Africans with our physiques and they are the original blacks. If I was to pair 2 highly intelligent people together, I will bet their child will be highly intelligent. Notice all your fastest sprinters come from the Western Region of the world. The only problem I have with Jimmy the Greek was his comments invites other comments that could disturb people.

Genetics is the reason why I tell my friends to be careful who they date or marry. If a female or male had a parent or both parents with some type of psychotic behavior, the child would be likely to have that problem also. So at the end of the day slavery has played an effect on us athletically than most people realize, just as it plays a part in us psychologically.

:smh:

Pro-eugenics coonery.
 
Peace,

"This whole thing reminds me of the way we ran Jimmy The Greek out of a TV job because he had a few pops at a bar and offered a harmless, layman’s theory on why American black athletes were having success in certain sports. I was just a kid when The Greek got screwed, but I was pissed then. Few people in the media had the courage to defend The Greek for saying what I’d heard in my father’s all-black tavern for years."

:smh: at a black man who can't differentiate between brothers in a bar talking shit and a white man with media pull perpetuating racist beliefs about black people.

The only problem with this "harmless, layman's theory" is that it is a byproduct of racism, pseudoscience and stupidity. In his attempt to capture some sort of contrarian title, Whitlock's lips have become permanently affixed to the white man's ass.
 
Everybody here in dallas could give a shit about what jerry said, he was drunk but accurate. Espn and tim mcmahon were upset because he insulted the "great" bill parcells, but jerry is the coolest owner in all of sports and this was just a lame attempt to attack him. Jimmy the greek on the other hand fucked up when he said we weren't qualified for manager positions meaning our tiny negro brains can't handle it:smh::smh::smh:
 
Anyone who doesn't believe that human characteristics and traits can be bred has absolutely no understanding of genetics.

Of course it is not exact, but the study of genetics is the study of probability.

Is it not true that two tall persons breeding are more likely to have tall offspring???

Is it not true that two short people breeding are more likely to have short offspring???

How many times have you seen a man and woman with coarse tight kinky hair produce a child with fine straight hair?....never. And if they did you would be looking at daddy like...."damn bro, you sure that's yours?"

And why is it even something to get upset about???
 
Anyone who doesn't believe that human characteristics and traits can be bred has absolutely no understanding of genetics.

Of course it is not exact, but the study of genetics is the study of probability.

Is it not true that two tall persons breeding are more likely to have tall offspring???

Is it not true that two short people breeding are more likely to have short offspring???

How many times have you seen a man and woman with coarse tight kinky hair produce a child with fine straight hair?....never. And if they did you would be looking at daddy like...."damn bro, you sure that's yours?"

And why is it even something to get upset about???

Peace,

Physical characteristics? Of course. But talk of "breeding" humans and the like comes dangerously close to supporting eugenics, bruh. And given the history of this country, it's also not the wisest thing for a white man to be talking publicly of pairing off slaves.
 
Peace,

Physical characteristics? Of course. But talk of "breeding" humans and the like comes dangerously close to supporting eugenics, bruh. And given the history of this country, it's also not the wisest thing for a white man to be talking publicly of pairing off slaves.

Maybe it is not wise, but was it not fact? And just because one understands the science, doesn't mean they support the practice. But as a matter of fact, one must understand the science to even make an educated decision on whether they support the application of the science or not.

That is what slave masters did....they bought and sold us as chattel. And yes, some males were bought based on their physical characteristics with the intent of fucking and producing offspring with similar characteristics.
 

Maybe it is not wise, but was it not fact? And just because one understands the science, doesn't mean they support the practice. But as a matter of fact, one must understand the science to even make an educated decision on whether they support the application of the science or not.

That is what slave masters did....they bought and sold us as chattel. And yes, some males were bought based on their physical characteristics with the intent of fucking and producing offspring with similar characteristics.

Peace,

Let me ask you this. Do the following comments sound like science to you?

"The black is a better athlete to begin with because he's been bred to be that way — because of his high thighs and big thighs that goes up into his back, and they can jump higher and run faster because of their bigger thighs. This goes back all the way to the Civil War when during the slave trading, the owner — the slave owner would breed his big black to his big woman so that he could have a big black kid."
 
Peace,

Let me ask you this. Do the following comments sound like science to you?

"The black is a better athlete to begin with because he's been bred to be that way — because of his high thighs and big thighs that goes up into his back, and they can jump higher and run faster because of their bigger thighs. This goes back all the way to the Civil War when during the slave trading, the owner — the slave owner would breed his big black to his big woman so that he could have a big black kid."

It is not stated in a scientific way, but the theory it is base on is true.

Let's find what we agree on. Do you believe that slave masters paired slaves for the purpose of producing stronger, healthier slaves?
 

It is not stated in a scientific way, but the theory it is base on is true.

Let's find what we agree on. Do you believe that slave masters paired slaves for the purpose of producing stronger, healthier slaves?

Peace,

Of course, bruh. I also already agreed with you about the fact that physical characteristics can be passed down. But to attribute black athletic superiority to slave breeding is ridiculous. Particularly given the fact that most of us have a much more complex genetic history than we care to acknowledge.
 
Peace,

There's a pretty dramatic difference between Josiah Henson and the "Uncle Tom" character of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel. When cats refer to other cats as "Uncle Tom," they're referencing the character in the book, not the abolitionist (even though the book was "based" on him).

The problem is alot of people say the word and don't know the meaning behind it.
 
I've heard black people say that shit before I heard Jimmy The Greeks comments. It wasn't comparable to Al Campanis comments IMO, but that's the way it seemed to be portrayed.

I can play basketball and grew up playing it, but I sure as hell don't have a 40 inch vert

I was most offended by the Palin/Sharpton comparison. Al has done some good and is necessary, plus he's not stupid.

Everybody here in dallas could give a shit about what jerry said, he was drunk but accurate. Espn and tim mcmahon were upset because he insulted the "great" bill parcells, but jerry is the coolest owner in all of sports and this was just a lame attempt to attack him. Jimmy the greek on the other hand fucked up when he said we weren't qualified for manager positions meaning our tiny negro brains can't handle it:smh::smh::smh:

I thought it was more him insulting the "great" tim tebow :rolleyes:

The Bill Parcells/Jerry feud could have been some shit they hopped on for more stories though. Luckily Jerry called him up and squashed it.

This is how TMZ and blogs has changed sports.
 
Peace,

Of course, bruh. I also already agreed with you about the fact that physical characteristics can be passed down. But to attribute black athletic superiority to slave breeding is ridiculous. Particularly given the fact that most of us have a much more complex genetic history than we care to acknowledge.

I just don't see why that is so much of a jump....

if for over 200 years we were paired to maximize our physical characteristics, then it follows that those characteristics continue in us....

especially since it was only within the last 30 years or so that we began procreating outside of our race in any significant numbers.

It is just that now those physical characteristics are used to make millions instead of carry bags of cotton and tobacco.


Just my two cents...peace...I'm out
 
Peace,

Of course, bruh. I also already agreed with you about the fact that physical characteristics can be passed down. But to attribute black athletic superiority to slave breeding is ridiculous. Particularly given the fact that most of us have a much more complex genetic history than we care to acknowledge.

c/s. It's a back-handed compliment. Black athletes are praised for their natural born talents. But white players are more likely to be described as hard-working and intelligent. It's not often we see those attributes reversed, or have a black player considered intelligent and a great athlete.
 
Man, I think genetics dumbed you down, j/k.

What nonsense is this?

2 intellectual parents most likely have life skillset that is different to 2 athlete parents.

Kids feed off of expectations.

The environment and expectations placed on kids determine what they become not that genetic bullshit.....

Get this Bell Curve bullshit thinking out of here. The late, great Stephan Jay Gould ripped that notion to shreds in the '90s.

gould2.jpg


:smh:

Pro-eugenics coonery.

Call me a coon. Call me an idoit. Call me a fool. I feel confident in my analysis. I've read enough about to confirm my theory. I guess you guys would throw out the fact that if 2 tall people have kids their kids wouldn't likely be tall.

Ill call me a coon all you want. I will bet my work outside of this board helping black folks outweigh any of your efforts. At the end of the day you are a message board poster and the buck stops there for you. Fortunately I can't say the same for myself.
 
Call me a coon. Call me an idoit. Call me a fool. I feel confident in my analysis. I've read enough about to confirm my theory. I guess you guys would throw out the fact that if 2 tall people have kids their kids wouldn't likely be tall.

Ill call me a coon all you want. I will bet my work outside of this board helping black folks outweigh any of your efforts. At the end of the day you are a message board poster and the buck stops there for you. Fortunately I can't say the same for myself.
You're a fool.
First of all there is no factual basis for the assertion that many (if any) slaves were bred for various physical attributes. Secondly, strength is not a genetic feature. Propensity for muscle fiber type is a genetic trait but what humans become is dependent on genes and environment. It is not a given that 2 strong people would produce a strong child. The whole idea of that is stupid. A lot more goes into whether or not a person is strong than genetics- most of it is not dependent on genetics beyond a certain basic healythy physiological standpoint.
Two tall people don't automatically have tall offspring dipshit. It requires active genes and environment. Illness in great grandparents, grandparents, parents, offspring as well as other environmental features like diet play a major role in that. Your great grand parenits play a role in whether or not you will die of heart disease all based on genes activated through their eating well or not, being sick or not decades ago.

Beyond all that there was no slavery eugenics program cultivating a master black race of athletes.
Post your data backing up your assertions that anything to do with slavery makes us better athletes. I don't give a fuck if you suck Jesse Jackson's dick in between working at homeless shelters you are an asshole and a moron who attempts to lend credibility to baseless assertions made by racists to explain away the hardwork of black athletes as some sort of unavoidable gift. The fact that you don't see or don't care about the motivations behind such false accusations shows us the type of coon morons we have supposedly "helping" our own.

At the end of the day you're right on this board talking shit too so stfu and log off or come with facts and logic or get exposed as an intellectually vapid fake talented tenth ass fraud nigga.
 

I just don't see why that is so much of a jump....

if for over 200 years we were paired to maximize our physical characteristics, then it follows that those characteristics continue in us....

especially since it was only within the last 30 years or so that we began procreating outside of our race in any significant numbers.

It is just that now those physical characteristics are used to make millions instead of carry bags of cotton and tobacco.


Just my two cents...peace...I'm out
What 200yr eugenics program have you been reading about?

Cmon man. :smh:

The same time and care that goes into making scientists and authors goes into mastering anything including football and basketball. Remove the emphasis on the intellectual from a group and you may possibly have more people within that group focused on becoming experts in more physical areas. Some groups have genetic traits that allow them to excel in certain sports - oxygen processing my north east africans expressed in champion runners, but there is no genetic basis for any superiority of black americans as athletes and there damn sure aint no 17th-21st century eugenics program. There is however a racially biased society that only/primarily allowed for the social advance of African Americans in certain fields such as entertainment and sports and for the perpetuation of stereotypes involving those two fields.
 
c/s. It's a back-handed compliment. Black athletes are praised for their natural born talents. But white players are more likely to be described as hard-working and intelligent. It's not often we see those attributes reversed, or have a black player considered intelligent and a great athlete.
that is the heart of it
this argument states that blacks cannot help but be athletically gifted totally ignoring the years of work and dedication involved in perfecting true skill

None of the true genetic features that some famous athletes possess will nurture themselves. Having the best fast twitch muscle fibers will not make you Jesse Owens or Carl Lewis. Having the biggest bones in your hands and strongest torso will not make you a Jack Johnson or Muhammad Ali. Being intelligent or having the correct aptitude will not make you a grandmaster at chess.





something to shut this bullshit down said:
The Making of an Expert
New research shows that outstanding performance is the product of years of deliberate practice and coaching, not of any innate talent or skill.
by K. Anders Ericsson, Michael J. Prietula, and Edward T. Cokely
Thirty years ago, two Hungarian educators, László and Klara Polgár, decided to challenge the popular assumption that women don’t succeed in areas requiring spatial thinking, such as chess. They wanted to make a point about the power of education. The Polgárs homeschooled their three daughters, and as part of their education the girls started playing chess with their parents at a very young age. Their systematic training and daily practice paid off. By 2000, all three daughters had been ranked in the top ten female players in the world. The youngest, Judit, had become a grand master at age 15, breaking the previous record for the youngest person to earn that title, held by Bobby Fischer, by a month. Today Judit is one of the world’s top players and has defeated almost all the best male players.
It’s not only assumptions about gender differences in expertise that have started to crumble. Back in 1985, Benjamin Bloom, a professor of education at the University of Chicago, published a landmark book, Developing Talent in Young People, which examined the critical factors that contribute to talent. He took a deep retrospective look at the childhoods of 120 elite performers who had won international competitions or awards in fields ranging from music and the arts to mathematics and neurology. Surprisingly, Bloom’s work found no early indicators that could have predicted the virtuosos’ success. Subsequent research indicating that there is no correlation between IQ and expert performance in fields such as chess, music, sports, and medicine has borne out his findings. The only innate differences that turn out to be significant—and they matter primarily in sports—are height and body size.
So what does correlate with success? One thing emerges very clearly from Bloom’s work: All the superb performers he investigated had practiced intensively, had studied with devoted teachers, and had been supported enthusiastically by their families throughout their developing years. Later research building on Bloom’s pioneering study revealed that the amount and quality of practice were key factors in the level of expertise people achieved. Consistently and overwhelmingly, the evidence showed that experts are always made, not born. These conclusions are based on rigorous research that looked at exceptional performance using scientific methods that are verifiable and reproducible. Most of these studies were compiled in The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance, published last year by Cambridge University Press and edited by K. Anders Ericsson, one of the authors of this article. The 900-page-plus handbook includes contributions from more than 100 leading scientists who have studied expertise and top performance in a wide variety of domains: surgery, acting, chess, writing, computer programming, ballet, music, aviation, firefighting, and many others.
The journey to truly superior performance is neither for the faint of heart nor for the impatient. The development of genuine expertise requires struggle, sacrifice, and honest, often painful self-assessment. There are no shortcuts. It will take you at least a decade to achieve expertise, and you will need to invest that time wisely, by engaging in “deliberate” practice—practice that focuses on tasks beyond your current level of competence and comfort. You will need a well-informed coach not only to guide you through deliberate practice but also to help you learn how to coach yourself. Above all, if you want to achieve top performance as a manager and a leader, you’ve got to forget the folklore about genius that makes many people think they cannot take a scientific approach to developing expertise. We are here to help you explode those myths.
Let’s begin our story with a little wine.
What Is an Expert?
In 1976, a fascinating event referred to as the “Judgment of Paris” took place. An English-owned wineshop in Paris organized a blind tasting in which nine French wine experts rated French and California wines—ten whites and ten reds. The results shocked the wine world: California wines received the highest scores from the panel. Even more surprising, during the tasting the experts often mistook the American wines for French wines and vice versa.
Two assumptions were challenged that day. The first was the hitherto unquestioned superiority of French wines over American ones. But it was the challenge to the second—the assumption that the judges genuinely possessed elite knowledge of wine—that was more interesting and revolutionary. The tasting suggested that the alleged wine experts were no more accurate in distinguishing wines under blind test conditions than regular wine drinkers—a fact later confirmed by our laboratory tests.
Current research has revealed many other fields where there is no scientific evidence that supposed expertise leads to superior performance. One study showed that psychotherapists with advanced degrees and decades of experience aren’t reliably more successful in their treatment of randomly assigned patients than novice therapists with just three months of training are. There are even examples of expertise seeming to decline with experience. The longer physicians have been out of training, for example, the less able they are to identify unusual diseases of the lungs or heart. Because they encounter these illnesses so rarely, doctors quickly forget their characteristic features and have difficulty diagnosing them. Performance picks up only after the doctors undergo a refresher course.
How, then, can you tell when you’re dealing with a genuine expert? Real expertise must pass three tests. First, it must lead to performance that is consistently superior to that of the expert’s peers. Second, real expertise produces concrete results. Brain surgeons, for example, not only must be skillful with their scalpels but also must have successful outcomes with their patients. A chess player must be able to win matches in tournaments. Finally, true expertise can be replicated and measured in the lab. As the British scientist Lord Kelvin stated, “If you can not measure it, you can not improve it.”
Things to Look Out for When Judging Expertise
Skill in some fields, such as sports, is easy to measure. Competitions are standardized so that everyone competes in a similar environment. All competitors have the same start and finish lines, so that everyone can agree on who came in first. That standardization permits comparisons among individuals over time, and it’s certainly possible in business as well. In the early days of Wal-Mart, for instance, Sam Walton arranged competitions among store managers to identify those whose stores had the highest profitability. Each store in the Nordstrom clothing chain posts rankings of its salespeople, based on their sales per hour, for each pay period.
Nonetheless, it often can be difficult to measure expert performance—for example, in projects that take months or even years to complete and to which dozens of individuals may contribute. Expert leadership is similarly difficult to assess. Most leadership challenges are highly complex and specific to a given company, which makes it hard to compare performance across companies and situations. That doesn’t mean, though, that scientists should throw up their hands and stop trying to measure performance. One methodology we use to deal with these challenges is to take a representative situation and reproduce it in the laboratory. For example, we present emergency room nurses with scenarios that simulate life-threatening situations. Afterward, we compare the nurses’ responses in the lab with actual outcomes in the real world. We have found that performance in simulations in medicine, chess, and sports closely correlates with objective measurements of expert performance, such as a chess player’s track record in winning matches.
Testing methodologies can be devised for creative professions such as art and writing, too. Researchers have studied differences among individual visual artists, for instance, by having them produce drawings of the same set of objects. With the artists’ identities concealed, these drawings were evaluated by art judges, whose ratings clearly agreed on the artists’ proficiency, especially in regard to technical aspects of drawing. Other researchers have designed objective tasks to measure the superior perceptual skills of artists without the help of judges.
Practice Deliberately
To people who have never reached a national or international level of competition, it may appear that excellence is simply the result of practicing daily for years or even decades. However, living in a cave does not make you a geologist. Not all practice makes perfect. You need a particular kind of practice—deliberate practice—to develop expertise. When most people practice, they focus on the things they already know how to do. Deliberate practice is different. It entails considerable, specific, and sustained efforts to do something you can’t do well—or even at all. Research across domains shows that it is only by working at what you can’t do that you turn into the expert you want to become.
To illustrate this point, let’s imagine you are learning to play golf for the first time. In the early phases, you try to understand the basic strokes and focus on avoiding gross mistakes (like driving the ball into another player). You practice on the putting green, hit balls at a driving range, and play rounds with others who are most likely novices like you. In a surprisingly short time (perhaps 50 hours), you will develop better control and your game will improve. From then on, you will work on your skills by driving and putting more balls and engaging in more games, until your strokes become automatic: You’ll think less about each shot and play more from intuition. Your golf game now is a social outing, in which you occasionally concentrate on your shot. From this point on, additional time on the course will not substantially improve your performance, which may remain at the same level for decades.
Why does this happen? You don’t improve because when you are playing a game, you get only a single chance to make a shot from any given location. You don’t get to figure out how you can correct mistakes. If you were allowed to take five to ten shots from the exact same location on the course, you would get more feedback on your technique and start to adjust your playing style to improve your control. In fact, professionals often take multiple shots from the same location when they train and when they check out a course before a tournament.
This kind of deliberate practice can be adapted to developing business and leadership expertise. The classic example is the case method taught by many business schools, which presents students with real-life situations that require action. Because the eventual outcomes of those situations are known, the students can immediately judge the merits of their proposed solutions. In this way, they can practice making decisions ten to 20 times a week. War games serve a similar training function at military academies. Officers can analyze the trainees’ responses in simulated combat and provide an instant evaluation. Such mock military operations sharpen leadership skills with deliberate practice that lets trainees explore uncharted areas.
Let’s take a closer look at how deliberate practice might work for leadership. You often hear that a key element of leadership and management is charisma, which is true. Being a leader frequently requires standing in front of your employees, your peers, or your board of directors and attempting to convince them of one thing or another, especially in times of crisis. A surprising number of executives believe that charisma is innate and cannot be learned. Yet if they were acting in a play with the help of a director and a coach, most of them would be able to come across as considerably more charismatic, especially over time. In fact, working with a leading drama school, we have developed a set of acting exercises for managers and leaders that are designed to increase their powers of charm and persuasion. Executives who do these exercises have shown remarkable improvement. So charisma can be learned through deliberate practice. Bear in mind that even Winston Churchill, one of the most charismatic figures of the twentieth century, practiced his oratory style in front of a mirror.
Genuine experts not only practice deliberately but also think deliberately. The golfer Ben Hogan once explained, “While I am practicing I am also trying to develop my powers of concentration. I never just walk up and hit the ball.” Hogan would decide in advance where he wanted the ball to go and how to get it there. We actually track this kind of thought process in our research. We present expert performers with a scenario and ask them to think aloud as they work their way through it. Chess players, for example, will describe how they spend five to ten minutes exploring all the possibilities for their next move, thinking through the consequences of each and planning out the sequence of moves that might follow it. We’ve observed that when a course of action doesn’t work out as expected, the expert players will go back to their prior analysis to assess where they went wrong and how to avoid future errors. They continually work to eliminate their weaknesses.
Deliberate practice involves two kinds of learning: improving the skills you already have and extending the reach and range of your skills. The enormous concentration required to undertake these twin tasks limits the amount of time you can spend doing them. The famous violinist Nathan Milstein wrote: “Practice as much as you feel you can accomplish with concentration. Once when I became concerned because others around me practiced all day long, I asked [my mentor] Professor Auer how many hours I should practice, and he said, ‘It really doesn’t matter how long. If you practice with your fingers, no amount is enough. If you practice with your head, two hours is plenty.’”
It is interesting to note that across a wide range of experts, including athletes, novelists, and musicians, very few appear to be able to engage in more than four or five hours of high concentration and deliberate practice at a time. In fact, most expert teachers and scientists set aside only a couple of hours a day, typically in the morning, for their most demanding mental activities, such as writing about new ideas. While this may seem like a relatively small investment, it is two hours a day more than most executives and managers devote to building their skills, since the majority of their time is consumed by meetings and day-to-day concerns. This difference adds up to some 700 hours more a year, or about 7,000 hours more a decade. Think about what you could accomplish if you devoted two hours a day to deliberate practice.
It’s very easy to neglect deliberate practice. Experts who reach a high level of performance often find themselves responding automatically to specific situations and may come to rely exclusively on their intuition. This leads to difficulties when they deal with atypical or rare cases, because they’ve lost the ability to analyze a situation and work through the right response. Experts may not recognize this creeping intuition bias, of course, because there is no penalty until they encounter a situation in which a habitual response fails and maybe even causes damage. Older professionals with a great deal of experience are particularly prone to falling into this trap, but it’s certainly not inevitable. Research has shown that musicians over 60 years old who continue deliberate practice for about ten hours a week can match the speed and technical skills of 20-year-old expert musicians when tested on their ability to play a piece of unfamiliar music.
Moving outside your traditional comfort zone of achievement requires substantial motivation and sacrifice, but it’s a necessary discipline. As the golf champion Sam Snead once put it, “It is only human nature to want to practice what you can already do well, since it’s a hell of a lot less work and a hell of a lot more fun.” Only when you can see that deliberate practice is the most effective means to the desired end—becoming the best in your field—will you commit to excellence. Snead, who died in 2002, held the record for winning the most PGA Tour events and was famous for having one of the most beautiful swings in the sport. Deliberate practice was a key to his success. “Practice puts brains in your muscles,” he said.
Take the Time You Need
By now it will be clear that it takes time to become an expert. Our research shows that even the most gifted performers need a minimum of ten years (or 10,000 hours) of intense training before they win international competitions. In some fields the apprenticeship is longer: It now takes most elite musicians 15 to 25 years of steady practice, on average, before they succeed at the international level.
Though there are historical examples of people who attained an international level of expertise at an early age, it’s also true that, in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, people could reach world-class levels more quickly. In most fields, the bar of performance has risen steadily since that time. For instance, amateur marathon runners and high school swimmers today frequently better the times of Olympic gold medalists from the early twentieth century. Increasingly stiff competition now makes it almost impossible to beat the ten-year rule. One notable exception, Bobby Fischer, did manage to become a chess grand master in just nine years, but it is likely that he did so by spending more time practicing each year.
Many people are naive about how long it takes to become an expert. Leo Tolstoy once observed that people often told him they didn’t know whether or not they could write a novel because they hadn’t tried—as if they only had to make a single attempt to discover their natural ability to write. Similarly, the authors of many self-help books appear to assume that their readers are essentially ready for success and simply need to take a few more easy steps to overcome great hurdles. Popular lore is full of stories about unknown athletes, writers, and artists who become famous overnight, seemingly because of innate talent—they’re “naturals,” people say. However, when examining the developmental histories of experts, we unfailingly discover that they spent a lot of time in training and preparation. Sam Snead, who’d been called “the best natural player ever,” told Golf Digest, “People always said I had a natural swing. They thought I wasn’t a hard worker. But when I was young, I’d play and practice all day, then practice more at night by my car’s headlights. My hands bled. Nobody worked harder at golf than I did.”
Not only do you have to be prepared to invest time in becoming an expert, but you have to start early—at least in some fields. Your ability to attain expert performance is clearly constrained if you have fewer opportunities to engage in deliberate practice, and this is far from a trivial constraint. Once, after giving a talk, K. Anders Ericsson was asked by a member of the audience whether he or any other person could win an Olympic medal if he began training at a mature age. Nowadays, Ericsson replied, it would be virtually impossible for anyone to win an individual medal without a training history comparable with that of today’s elite performers, nearly all of whom started very early. Many children simply do not get the opportunity, for whatever reason, to work with the best teachers and to engage in the sort of deliberate practice that they need to reach the Olympic level in a sport.
Find Coaches and Mentors
Arguably the most famous violin teacher of all time, Ivan Galamian, made the point that budding maestros do not engage in deliberate practice spontaneously: “If we analyze the development of the well-known artists, we see that in almost every case the success of their entire career was dependent on the quality of their practicing. In practically every case, the practicing was constantly supervised either by the teacher or an assistant to the teacher.”
Research on world-class performers has confirmed Galamian’s observation. It also has shown that future experts need different kinds of teachers at different stages of their development. In the beginning, most are coached by local teachers, people who can give generously of their time and praise. Later on, however, it is essential that performers seek out more-advanced teachers to keep improving their skills. Eventually, all top performers work closely with teachers who have themselves reached international levels of achievement.
Having expert coaches makes a difference in a variety of ways. To start with, they can help you accelerate your learning process. The thirteenth-century philosopher and scientist Roger Bacon argued that it would be impossible to master mathematics in less than 30 years. And yet today individuals can master frameworks as complex as calculus in their teens. The difference is that scholars have since organized the material in such a way that it is much more accessible. Students of mathematics no longer have to climb Everest by themselves; they can follow a guide up a well-trodden path.
The development of expertise requires coaches who are capable of giving constructive, even painful, feedback. Real experts are extremely motivated students who seek out such feedback. They’re also skilled at understanding when and if a coach’s advice doesn’t work for them. The elite performers we studied knew what they were doing right and concentrated on what they were doing wrong. They deliberately picked unsentimental coaches who would challenge them and drive them to higher levels of performance. The best coaches also identify aspects of your performance that will need to be improved at your next level of skill. If a coach pushes you too fast, too hard, you will only be frustrated and may even be tempted to give up trying to improve at all.
Relying on a coach has its limits, however. Statistics show that radiologists correctly diagnose breast cancer from X-rays about 70% of the time. Typically, young radiologists learn the skill of interpreting X-rays by working alongside an “expert.” So it’s hardly surprising that the success rate has stuck at 70% for a long time. Imagine how much better radiology might get if radiologists practiced instead by making diagnostic judgments using X-rays in a library of old verified cases, where they could immediately determine their accuracy. We’re seeing these kinds of techniques used more often in training. There is an emerging market in elaborate simulations that can give professionals, especially in medicine and aviation, a safe way to deliberately practice with appropriate feedback.
So what happens when you become an Olympic gold medalist, or an international chess master, or a CEO? Ideally, as your expertise increased, your coach will have helped you become more and more independent, so that you are able to set your own development plans. Like good parents who encourage their children to leave the nest, good coaches help their students learn how to rely on an “inner coach.” Self-coaching can be done in any field. Expert surgeons, for example, are not concerned with a patient’s postoperative status alone. They will study any unanticipated events that took place during the surgery, to try to figure out how mistakes or misjudgments can be avoided in the future.
Benjamin Franklin provides one of the best examples of motivated self-coaching. When he wanted to learn to write eloquently and persuasively, he began to study his favorite articles from a popular British publication, the Spectator. Days after he’d read an article he particularly enjoyed, he would try to reconstruct it from memory in his own words. Then he would compare it with the original, so he could discover and correct his faults. He also worked to improve his sense of language by translating the articles into rhyming verse and then from verse back into prose. Similarly, famous painters sometimes attempt to reproduce the paintings of other masters.
Anyone can apply these same methods on the job. Say you have someone in your company who is a masterly communicator, and you learn that he is going to give a talk to a unit that will be laying off workers. Sit down and write your own speech, and then compare his actual speech with what you wrote. Observe the reactions to his talk and imagine what the reactions would be to yours. Each time you can generate by yourself decisions, interactions, or speeches that match those of people who excel, you move one step closer to reaching the level of an expert performer.
• • •
Before practice, opportunity, and luck can combine to create expertise, the would-be expert needs to demythologize the achievement of top-level performance, because the notion that genius is born, not made, is deeply ingrained. It’s perhaps most perfectly exemplified in the person of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who is typically presented as a child prodigy with exceptional innate musical genius. Nobody questions that Mozart’s achievements were extraordinary compared with those of his contemporaries. What’s often forgotten, however, is that his development was equally exceptional for his time. His musical tutelage started before he was four years old, and his father, also a skilled composer, was a famous music teacher and had written one of the first books on violin instruction. Like other world-class performers, Mozart was not born an expert—he became one.
WRITTEN BY
K. Anders Ericsson (ericsson@psy.fsu.edu) is the Conradi Eminent Scholar of Psychology at Florida State University, in Tallahassee. Michael J. Prietula (prietula@bus.emory.edu) is a professor at the Goizueta Business School at Emory University, in Atlanta, and visiting research scholar at the Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, in Pensacola, Florida. Edward T. Cokely (cokely@mpib-berlin.mpg.de) is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, in Berlin.


Link to article:
http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.h..._issueid=BR0707&articleID=R0707J&pageNumber=1

Reprint: R0707J
July-August 2007

Some cats in here are just misinformed, while others are empty headed bitch niggas quick to accept fraudulent arguments made by racists because they don't care enough to think the shit through.


(that article is for sale by harvard business review but i have the pdf and word version of it if anyone is interested- you can find it via google too with a little effort)
 
that is the heart of it
this argument states that blacks cannot help but be athletically gifted totally ignoring the years of work and dedication involved in perfecting true skill

None of the true genetic features that some famous athletes possess will nurture themselves. Having the best fast twitch muscle fibers will not make you Jesse Owens or Carl Lewis. Having the biggest bones in your hands and strongest torso will not make you a Jack Johnson or Muhammad Ali. Being intelligent or having the correct aptitude will not make you a grandmaster at chess.







Some cats in here are just misinformed, while others are empty headed bitch niggas quick to accept fraudulent arguments made by racists because they don't care enough to think the shit through.


(that article is for sale by harvard business review but i have the pdf and word version of it if anyone is interested- you can find it via google too with a little effort)



Good drop Makk.

The fact that some will believe Michael Jordan just walked on a court and did his thing is so foolish. It washes away the hard work and dedication the man put in, the type applied by a scientist that would lead him to a Nobel Prize.

As you said the socialization of this country perpetuates stereotypes and so a lot of young black men "feel" that the way out of they current environment is sports & entertainment.

As a black immigrant I consistently out perform and am way above my Asian colleagues, the ones that whites feel have a high IQ. same thing with my other African colleagues.

A lot of the shit is environment, in my original contry the way out of poverty is education. therefore there is a very strong drive to become educated. As a result we don't make a big deal about high school graduation, undergrad graduation until maybe Postgrad and that still depends on the parent.....

The fact that African Americans can discount African achievements as not belonging to them maens that that bred for physical shit can soak into their psyche.


50 000 yrs of intellectual achievement >>>> 300 years of physical slavery

Which traits do you think would dominate for you eugenics folks?



:cool:
 
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