Max G

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Max G

Max G

@gartnermax

A good coach can change your game; a GREAT COACH can change your life

Calgary Se unió Nisan 2013
1.5K Siguiendo2K Seguidores
Max G
Max G@gartnermax·
This 👇
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg

Two things can be true at once: 1. Outcomes matter. They may have financial repercussions and lead to new and better opportunities. 2. The top of the mountain is narrow. All the life is on the sides. The best way to climb a mountain is to care deeply and to do it with good people. Something I’ve found time and time again in my nearly two decades coaching, researching, writing, and reporting on excellence: Outcomes matter. They absolutely do. But a few years down the road, nobody sits around and reflects on the score. What people remember is the hard work, lessons learned, experiences, and most of all, the relationships forged along the way. “The wins and losses are all crap...All those wins or losses they fade away but those relationships stick with you forever and that's where the self-esteem and the self-satisfaction comes." — Gregg Popovich, the winningest coach in basketball history. The best coaches are not just in the business of developing performers. They are also in the business of developing people. This is not some let’s all hold hands and sing Kumbaya talk. This is reality. This is the mindset and practice of nearly all the greatest coaches across fields. Research shows the best way to get the most out of people—as a coach, as a teammate, as a parent—is to have high expectations, tell the truth, and do it on a foundation of deep caring and support. It’s the combination of these qualities that makes for great performance. Excellent coaching means: Caring deeply. Paying attention. Repeated practice. Learning from failure. Staying curious. Steadfast dedication. Getting close. Showing up, again and again and again. Which is to say that excellent coaching looks a lot like love.

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Vala Afshar
Vala Afshar@ValaAfshar·
Admirable traits of strong leadership: 1. Humility - a beginner’s mindset that is open to new ideas and less judgmental. A mindset free of prejudice. A quiet mind that values actions and impact above words. 2. Honestly - radical transparency with grace and dignity. The ability to give feedback without causing resentment is a superpower. The ability to admit mistakes quickly and to ask for forgiveness. And a willingness to show vulnerability. 3. Self-awareness (situational awareness) - reading the room and balancing one’s contributions to ensure a value exchange that benefits all. Knowing when to speak and when to listen. Knowing that given a choice of being clever or kind, being kind is right choice. It is balancing ambition with value. 4. Sense of humor - do not take yourself too seriously and stay accessible. Show passion and ambition but not at a cost to others. Make people comfortable and at ease. Laugh loudly but welcome humor with open arms. But not at the expense to others. Happy people smile more. 5. Active listening (hear the unsaid and listen with your eyes) - if you are waiting for a pause, so that you can speak, you are not truly listening. And the most important part of listening is the ability to hear the unsaid. Sometimes the best way to support and help others is to give your undivided attention. 6. Interest in others (empathy) - be interesting first. The goal is to leave people better than when you found them. Everyone you meet knows more about something than you do. Care more about the people around you. This is my definition of servant leadership. 7. Generosity (giving) - the coolest people I know are unselfishly generous with their time and knowledge. Give more than you take. And give without expecting a get. The strongest leaders give more than they take. Takers may end up with more, but givers sleep better at night. 8. Intellectual curiosity -learn to search for the grounded truth. And be willing to change your mind when the facts and the truth contradicts your prior beliefs. The strongest leaders are lifelong students. And also lifelong teachers. Start with 4 word: what do you think? 9. Good manners - be nice and polite to all. This may be life’s biggest hack. Say ‘thank you’ and ‘please’ more. Hold doors a bit longer. Do not interrupt people. Do not brag. Do not shout or speak poorly of others. Be a good person, but do not waste time trying to prove it. 10. No sense or entitlement - the world does not owe you a thing. The best people that I know are not chasing compliments or validation. Learn to fight for your happiness and do it with dignity, optimism and grace. Fall in love with the work, not the praise. 11. Positioning for shared success - In a celebration, lead from the back. In a crisis, lead from the front. In the company of someone that has a better idea, follow first. Leadership is all about positioning and standing in the right places. 12. Legacy of servant leadership - The best leaders leave everything and everyone better than when they found them. You will be remembered by how often you helped others achieve their goals. 13. Grit and persistence - Some things are hard to teach: sense of urgency, critical thinking, creativity, customer empathy, team commitment, humility, unselfish giving, judgement, grace and dignity, positivity, optimism, bias towards results, active listening; Strong leaders teach the hard stuff.
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Max G
Max G@gartnermax·
@abi_strate You go Abi 👊 impressive jump 👏🏻
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Devin Heroux
Devin Heroux@Devin_Heroux·
GOLD FOR CANADA 🇨🇦 CHAMPIONSHIP RECORD Christopher Morales-Williams wins world indoor championship 400m gold in a championship record time of 44.76. A spectacular performance by the 21-year-old Canadian.
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CBC Olympics
CBC Olympics@CBCOlympics·
Canada’s Eli Bouchard claims his first snowboard slopestyle World Cup win 🇨🇦🏆 The Lac-Beauport, Que., native scored 81.11 on his first run to secure the victory in Flachau, Austria Presented by @volvocarcanada, Proud Partner of Canada Snowboard
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Ben Steiner
Ben Steiner@BenSteiner00·
PM Mark Carney says that the federal government will increase funding for national team athletes, following Olympic and Paralympic outcry. “We'll do it right… We want [athletes] to know that we value them, they're important,” Carney said — cbc.ca/news/politics/…
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Devin Heroux
Devin Heroux@Devin_Heroux·
CANADA 🇨🇦 FOR THE WIN THE CANADIAN WHEELCHAIR CURLING TEAM HAS WON GOLD. THEY ARE PARALYMPIC CHAMPIONS. THEY WENT UNDEFEATED. CANADA DEFEATS CHINA IN A THRILLER.
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Devin Heroux
Devin Heroux@Devin_Heroux·
It’s hard not to be emotional about what this Canadian wheelchair curling team just accomplished. Paralympic history by completing the first undefeated round robin. They’ve worked so hard for this. Two wins away from gold now.
Devin Heroux tweet mediaDevin Heroux tweet mediaDevin Heroux tweet mediaDevin Heroux tweet media
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CBC Sports
CBC Sports@cbcsports·
Proud moment for Kalle Eriksson's dad, Lasse 🥹🥈
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Devin Heroux
Devin Heroux@Devin_Heroux·
SILVER FOR CANADA 🇨🇦 KALLE ERICSSON AND SIERRA SMITH WIN CANADA’S MEDAL AT THE PARALYMPICS In his Paralympic debut, Kalle Ericsson alongside his guide Sierra Smith wins silver in the men’s visually impaired downhill event. A great start for the Canadians in Cortina.
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Canada Strong 🇨🇦 🍁
Thank you friends from Europe for the congratulations of Canada ranking 1st in both the World's Most Loved Country and in International Reputation! We are delighted and feel proud, fortunate & blessed to be Canadians! 🇨🇦 x.com/i/status/20295…
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Elisa Mosini 🇪🇺🇮🇹@MosiniElisa

Who’s the most loved and trusted country with the best global reputation? Source: Reputation Institute 1st - Canada 🇨🇦 2nd - Norway 🇳🇴 3rd - Sweden 🇸🇪 Out of the top 20 countries, 15 are European Congrats to our Canadian friends, totally deserved! 🍁 worldatlas.com/articles/best-…

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Max G
Max G@gartnermax·
RT @CBCOlympics: Canada’s Arnaud Gaudet captures his second World Cup medal of the season with bronze 🇨🇦🥉 The Montcalm, Que., native finis…
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Jason Dorland, OLY
Jason Dorland, OLY@JasonDorland·
Every two years, the Olympics become the world’s most compelling reminder that sport is THE metaphor for life. True, it’s entertainment—edge-of-your-seat drama, national pride, highlight reels, and moments that have you texting your friends. But it’s also something deeper: it’s a masterclass in being human under pressure. Because behind every moment of Olympic success is a truth we all recognize. 1) Dreams are free, but the price of living them is paid in the dark. We love the big moments—the podium, the anthem, the emotion—but the real story is the ordinary days—early mornings, small gains, boring reps, unglamorous preparation, and the quiet decision to keep showing up. Hey, life works the same way—the results people admire are almost always built on habits nobody sees. 2) Confidence isn’t a feeling; it’s a practice that’s built. Olympians don’t wait to “feel ready”; they train their readiness and build routines that create steadiness when nerves show up. How that plays out in our own lives is that confidence is often just keeping promises to ourselves, doing the next right thing, focusing on the controllables, or learning to perform while “feeling” Imperfect. 3) Failure is part of the job description. Every athlete you admire has lost—often publicly, painfully, and repeatedly. The Olympics remind us that falling isn’t the problem—staying down is. What changes everything is learning how to recover faster, reflect honestly, adjust the plan, and return with courage and humility. 4) Effective strategy matters as much as grit—I love this one! We romanticize “toughness,” but the best performers are also smart as hell; they study patterns, make mid-race adjustments, manage energy, and know when to push and when to reset. That’s a powerful life lesson—effort without strategy quickly leads to exhaustion. 5) Kindness isn’t weakness—it’s strength under control. Coventry’s words land because they highlight something we don’t celebrate enough: that bravery and kindness hold hands. In sport, the great ones compete fiercely while respecting their competitors. In life, it’s the same—we can hold high standards without losing our humanity. 6) The real win is who you become along the journey. Medals are earned in moments, but character is built over years. The Olympics invite a bigger question than “Did I win?”—more like, “Did I become someone I’m proud of in the pursuit?” And maybe that’s the point—chase big dreams, with a big heart, and get back up and keep moving forward together. So as we saw with these Games, maybe we let them do what they’re meant to do—not just entertain us… but call us forward to become our best selves. #yourmindsetmatters #lovefirst #HealthyHighPerformance #Olympics #Resilience #Leadership #Synergy
Jason Dorland, OLY tweet media
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Martin Goulet
Martin Goulet@mgouletcoach·
Very interesting Medals per capita Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026 medalspercapita.com
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Al MacInnis
Al MacInnis@AMacInnis2·
As my old coach Bob Johnson would say “ What a great day for Hockey”Congratulations to USA hockey on winning Gold. Canada was the stronger team over the last two periods but that’s exactly why sports are so incredible and unpredictable. Is there a better spectator sport matchup than two arch rivals battling for gold ?
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Team Canada
Team Canada@TeamCanada·
Joy, courage, heart and Olympic moments that will stay with us 🥰 Team Canada delivered them at Milano Cortina 2026. 🇨🇦 olympic.ca/2026/02/22/hea…
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Team Canada
Team Canada@TeamCanada·
Final medal count for Team Canada. 🇨🇦 Proud until the very last moment. ❤️
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Max G
Max G@gartnermax·
If you are a coach please read this… Reframing pressure as opportunity. JUST PLAY as a mantra People don’t care how much you know, until they know how much you CARE Great piece @stevemagness 👇
Steve Magness@stevemagness

Team USA just won its first Olympic hockey gold in 46 years. On February 22. The exact anniversary of the Miracle on Ice. Forget the storybook narrative for a second. What happened today is a masterclass in what performance science teaches us about pressure, identity, and legacy. Consider the pressure this team was under. They walked into today carrying 46 years of near misses. The US hadn't won Olympic gold since 1980. They lost the gold medal game in 2002 and 2010...both times to Canada. Last year at the 4 Nations tournament, Canada beat them in overtime. That loss was still raw. The 1980 hero, Mike Eruzione, was in the building. He told the players before the game: "It's just a hockey game." It wasn't. And everyone knew it. Canada outshot the US 41-26. They dominated the second and third periods. Nathan MacKinnon missed an open net. Macklin Celebrini had a breakaway and couldn't convert. Devon Toews had Hellebuyck beaten and somehow the puck stayed out. Then Charlie McAvoy cleared a puck off the goal line with his glove. This was not a dominant performance. It was a team surviving enormous pressure and refusing to break. That distinction matters. How does a team perform under that kind of weight? It starts with the environment the coach creates. Mike Sullivan is now the only American-born coach to win multiple Stanley Cups AND Olympic gold. When he took over the Pittsburgh Penguins in 2015, the team was loaded with talent — Crosby, Malkin, Letang — and completely broken. His description: "There was a dark cloud over the locker room." His first move wasn't a new system or a motivational speech. It was a reframe. He told the team: "There are certain things in life we can control and certain things we can't. We needed to focus on the things that we could control and not dedicate any cognitive resources or worry to things we couldn't control." The team adopted a two-word motto: "Just play." Six months later, they won the Stanley Cup. Tonight, he helped USA do it again on the biggest stage in the world. Sullivan builds what he calls a "safe zone for learning." His video review sessions are explicitly NOT about blame. "We don't want a player walking into our video room on eggshells worried about 'Am I going to be in the film? Is Coach going to yell at me?' It's a game of mistakes. Our responsibility is to learn from them." His guiding principle from his college coach: "Before players want to know what you know, they want to know that you care." It's the difference between compliance and buy-in. Buy-in wins championships. Research backs up Sullivan. Fear-based environments don't produce peak performance. Especially when pressure is already high... They produce anxiety, risk-aversion, and choking. When people feel psychologically safe — when they know mistakes won't be weaponized against them — they take smarter risks, recover faster from errors, and perform better under pressure. We could see it in how Sullivan framed this moment in the weeks before the game. "What an incredible opportunity we have in front of us." Not a burden or expectation...Opportunity. He took the unusual step for a hockey team and kept the team in the Olympic Village instead of a hotel. His reasoning: "The Village is part of the experience." The Hughes brothers roomed together. The Tkachuk brothers roomed together. He didn't try to ignore or isolate them from the pressure. He was embedding them in it, together. And then there's the guy who scored the goal. Jack Hughes came into the Olympics injured, underperforming, slotted on the fourth line. Sullivan moved him up mid-tournament because, as he put it, "We thought by moving him and getting him more ice time, he could impact the game more." Hughes's response: "I believe in myself more than anyone. Wherever I was slotted coming into this thing, I knew I was going to play well." A coach who believed in him when results said otherwise. A player who believed in himself when the lineup said otherwise. Then two teeth got cracked in half by a high stick in the third period. And he scored the golden goal anyway. Everyone's going to remember this as the night the US ended a 46-year drought. On the anniversary. In overtime. Against Canada. But the real lesson is quieter than that. The environment you create determines the performance you get. A safe zone for learning. A focus on controllables. Relationships built on care, not fear. Pressure reframed as opportunity. That's what it looks like when a team is ready, with the right environment and support to tackle the ghosts of history. They built a culture where a team could survive 41 shots and a kid with two broken teeth could score the biggest goal of his life. The 1980 Miracle was about belief overcoming talent. Today was different. Today was talent, preparation, identity, and 46 years of accumulated hunger arriving at the same moment. -Steve

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