In June 2008, the headline announced that the reign of Brett Favre had come to an end, and “a new dawn has approached the Green Bay Packers” as “an unproven new starter in Aaron Rodgers” would take the spot quarterback Favre had held from 1992 to 2007, a period during which Green Bay won a Super Bowl and Favre laid the groundwork for a call from the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Rodgers would have “huge shoes to fill” and the best he could hope for, the pundits said, was not to try to imitate Favre and instead establish his own brand of leadership. Rodgers did just that by bringing another Super Bowl to the loyal fans of Packers Nation, earning numerous All Pro honors like his predecessor and ensuring a call from the Hall when he becomes eligible. After last season ended, Rodgers left the Packers and headed to the New York Jets.
This weekend, it was déjà vu all over again as the Pack registered a win in the first game of the season beating the Chicago Bears 38-20, while debuting Jordan Love as the quarterback who would fill Rodger’s supposedly unfillable shoes. Love stepped up admirably, going 15-of-27 for 245 yards and three touchdowns. So poised and effective was Love that one writer suggested, “Forget about Aaron Rodgers. He wasn’t missed Sunday.”
Ouch!
What was overlooked in the responses to this latest changing of the Green Bay guard is how well the Packers tend to manage these sorts of transitions—how seamlessly and, well, how they seem almost to be planning it that way.
Oh, wait… they do plan it that way!
At a time when the vast majority of professional sports teams, including the NBA, MLB and NFL, have a reactive approach to developing talent, the Packers have shown great wisdom in taking the long view by acquiring and developing talent before they need it to step on the field and lead. Rodgers was the backup quarterback to Favre for several years, and Love followed suit by backing up Rodgers for a similar number of years.
If Love has anything even close to the kind of career his two predecessors had, we will be looking at a 45-year span—nearly a half century—of steady, remarkable leadership under the Green Bay center, all managed by three quarterbacks. Green Bay doesn’t wait for things to turn sour and then scramble in the offseason to throw gobs of money at their problems by buying expensive talent. They develop it from the inside.
It’s less sexy to focus on internal development than to give a way-too-early starting job to a top pick. But there’s a problem with this reactive approach: you force your shiny new acquisition to come out of the gates like Secretariat, which puts a lot of pressure on even the best.
A case in point this weekend was the Indianapolis Colt’s Anthony Richardson, who technically should be in college but answered the siren call to professional football. The Colts drafted him because they felt they had to have him after a disappointing 2022-23 season; but they gave him little time to learn the professional game. Richardson appears to be a huge talent and acquitted himself well against the Jacksonville Jaguars this weekend, although he threw an interception that ended any chance of his team coming back to win. Then he left the game injured.
Yes, it’s just one game, but the lessons cannot be denied. Business leaders know that acquiring talent is always one of their top priorities, so put your talented people in a position to succeed by thinking longer term. This includes:
- Taking the time and effort to create a culture of mentoring and learning that encourages teammates to take the long view of greatness. I mean, how bad can it be to devote a year or two or three to learning everything about your industry, your team and your craft from a future Hall of Fame performer?
- Making everyone on the team feel like they’ve contributed to a win or loss. Legendary Duke basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski used to organize the bus/plane seating chart for away games to mix managers and players together, reinforcing his conviction that it is teams rather than individual stars who win games.
- Celebrating collaboration and information sharing. During crunch time, San Francisco 49ers backup quarterback Steve Young (future Hall of Famer) used to confer with starter Joe Montana (future Hall of Famer) with an intensity that made you think Young was his coach rather than understudy. Sure, Young couldn’t wait for his chance to lead, but he didn’t have to wait for the chance to lead with the clipboard.
- Giving the understudy a shot. Once, when Rodgers was out with COVID, Love got to play a game. The Packers lost but got an important glimpse of what Rodgers’ backup could do—especially his poise under pressure—which made the transition to starter smoother. Maybe you don’t give your backup marketing manager the $5 million presentation, but what about a speaking part in the $500,000 one?
Green Bay fans love to chant, “The Pack is Back!” But I would suggest, “The Pack is stacked… with talent!” They never really left. And that’s a pretty good place to be today.
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