Please select your home edition
Edition
Henri-Lloyd Dynamic Range

Collective purpose and the Team USA dynamics

by Dean Brenner Team Leader US Olympic Sailing Team on 14 Aug 2008
Dean Brenner US Sailing Olympic Team http://olympics.ussailing.org/Olympics.htm
I think there is something very interesting going on here in Qingdao, and it's not happening on the water. Sure, the racing is great and the experience is intense. But I'm talking about what is happening off the water within our Team USA. If you were here in Qingdao and if you looked closely at how our team is interacting with each other off the water, I think you would clearly see what I see.

There is a great camaraderie on the US team. There is a strong support network and you see athletes supporting and taking an interest in other athletes. I see them sitting together in the evening and doing internet together. I see them sitting together in the dining hall, all in one big group. I see them watching movies together in each other's rooms at night, and when I walk down our hall in the evening, sometimes more than half the doors are open.

Keep in mind two things... this team is in a highly stressful environment, and they have been together 24-7 for more than three weeks already. Considering those circumstances, it would not have surprised me if they had started to splinter into smaller groups or if doors were constantly closed. But that's not what is happening. On their off days, I see sailors who did not sail that day still come down to the boat park to help those who did race put their boats on dolleys and to provide a pat on the back. I see them taking an interest in each other's performance. In fact, during the day we almost always have all the sailors not racing sitting with me and the rest of our staff watching the racing on TV and out our windows on Course A.

Why does this matter? Why am I writing about this? Well, on one hand, it's just nice to see people getting along. It's always more enjoyable to be in a positive environment. But that's only a tiny part of the story. The much more important part of the story is that, whether these athletes realize it or not, they are lifting each other's performance levels. They are all contributing to a collective, positive environment that can, repeat can, cause a group's performance to exceed the sum of its parts.


Having a great group dynamic is not the only key to success. In fact, without sailing skills, proper fitness, and good and reliable equipment, the best team dynamic in the world won't help you race better. But when you have world-class sailing skills (which this team does), and proper fitness (which this team does) and great equipment (which this team does), then a great team dynamic can be, possibly, a variable that can put you over the top.

I think this is a lesson for all of us, and one I am sure I will come back to in a later post. But as I watch this team succeed on the water - and incidentally, there are some who have told me that yesterday was the most successful single-day performance in the history of Olympic Sailing.. 6 race wins in 11 races - I am beginning to think that their collective interest in each other is having an impact on all of them.

I am beginning to think that without even realizing it, they are raising each other's performance levels by being supportive, enjoying each others' company, and caring about more than just themselves.

There is still so much time left here in Qingdao, and I could easily be thinking something very different in a day or two. But Team USA is sailing well, and I think, when this whole thing is over, we may want to look back and examine some things like this.

Anyway... yesterday was a great day. But yesterday is over, and it's time to think about today. Lots of racing today. Lasers, Radials, Ynglings, Finns, 49ers and Boards all go today. Day off for 470s, and Tornados and Stars have a practice race. Today is a big day. But then again, it is the Olympics, and every day is a big day!

/www.ussailing.org

V-DRY-XSea Sure 2025Maritimo S Series

Related Articles

AST and B&G extend high-performing partnership
Continuing a collaboration that has been critical to the success of the team AST has announced the renewal of its long-term partnership with B&G, the world's leading sailing navigation and instrument specialists, continuing a collaboration that has been critical to the success of the team over the past eight years.
Posted today at 6:55 am
18ft Skiffs: Queensland 18 footer history
Decades of successful ideas and achievement Queensland's revival over recent seasons, which resulted in a two-pronged attack by experienced and young teams in new skiffs at the 2025 Giltinan world championship
Posted today at 6:46 am
Marine Auctions: Special July Online Auction
The bidding will end on Tuesday 22 July at 2pm AEST The alternative way of selling any type of vessel or marine asset with proven and successful results.
Posted today at 4:03 am
Transpac 2025 underway
Sixteen boats hit the line for the first start, departing LA for Hawaii Sixteen boats hit the line for the first start of three in the 2025 Transpac. Next stop: Hawaii.
Posted today at 1:13 am
GKSS Match Cup Sweden & Nordea Women's Trophy D2
A challenging southerly breeze and short three-lap course put teams to task A challenging southerly breeze and short three-lap course put teams to task on the second day of racing at the GKSS Match Cup Sweden and Nordea Women's Trophy in Marstrand, Sweden.
Posted on 1 Jul
Admiral's Cup 2025 | Interview with the CYCA Team
A highly experienced team for the revived Admiral's Cup regatta from July 17 The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia is fielding a highly experienced team for the revived Admiral's Cup regatta that will be run from Cowes on the Isle of Wight in the UK, from 17th July 2025.
Posted on 1 Jul
Australian Hobie Cat Nationals entries rolling in
With at least three World Champions already entered, the racing is sure to be exciting too! There is excitement in the air for the Pitts Design and Construction 53rd Australian Hobie Cat National Championships.
Posted on 1 Jul
Rolex TP52 Worlds in Cascais - Practice Day
Will Platoon Aviation's big breeze, big pressure experience prove key to their fourth world title? Of the three past and present world championship winning crews which completed their final practice today in typically muscular 25 knot breezes and big waves out of Cascais, Portugal it was Harm Müller-Spreer's Platoon Aviation which showed best today.
Posted on 1 Jul
Some thoughts on provisioning for distance sailing
A new perspective on provisioning and time spent at sea One of the great joys of distance racing unfurls the moment that the dock lines are untied. Suddenly, the myriad packing lists that inevitably define most trip-planning efforts become about as relevant as a tax return from eight years ago.
Posted on 1 Jul
LA28 sailing venue decision driven by politicians
The LA28 Olympic "dinghy" events will be sailed alongside a working container port. The decision to stage the Los Angeles "dinghy" events alongside a working container port appears to have been a determination by local politicians.
Posted on 1 Jul