“No fear of failure.”
By the way, it is okay for kids to be scared sh!tless of making mistakes at the start of the week in practice but by the end of the week/game time they know they can do no wrong.
Reminds me of a scene from the great movie Whiplash…
Paraphrased: Do you ever worry that you ran off the next Charlie Parker.
No man…if the kid could have been run off by that, he never would have been the next Charlie Parker.
Since 9/11, our society has undergone a cultural shift which attempts to embrace the "every man an operator" paradigm of America's special operations forces that have led the fight against terrorists the world over.
So we've had current and former operators being asked to speak to business moguls, coaches, little old ladies leading book groups, and weekend warrior prepper types on Youtube about everything from how to conquer fear to how load out a go bag from 3 hours to 3 days. Special operations is a cottage industry in America's business and media climate.
The fundamental tenant of something like the Navy SEALs is that fear paralyzes and so one must not really fear failure. On a football team, a given task (snapping the football, blocking a given dude, accepting a handoff) should not induce fear because fear will interrupt the action of it being done repeatedly and well under stress. The primary source of fear on a football team would be the anxiety/motivation is the competition with peers to maintain ones spot in the pecking order, not to necessarily fear running 100 laps or listening to an old man yell because you jumped offsides.
Personally I find it hilarious that many on this board embraced the fact that NU over the years has take part in this operator industry and exposed the men to these military teaching. They mostly assume it must be fire and brimstone. But then we turn around and have threads like these where we say the philosophy is soft, without realizing where it comes from. (It was also a catch phrase in Jerry Rice's book, so there is that too).