If at all there was any doubt left on the 'Leadership acumen' of Shane Warne, it was erased in theis Rocker of a match! Even after Rajasthan Royals started losing wickets, Shane Warne ensured that the entire team got the Bigger Picture right and kept the momentum on, not chosing to be defensive a la Tendulkar or Jayasurya.
By making a massive total, Shane Warne beat Sehwag at his own gameplan, giving him enough jitters to unnerve him.
More observations welcome to make this a good case study!
From India, Delhi
By making a massive total, Shane Warne beat Sehwag at his own gameplan, giving him enough jitters to unnerve him.
More observations welcome to make this a good case study!
From India, Delhi
Yor are absolutely right its is an excellent example of team work...where Share warne as a leader has capitalized on the strength of his team mates,motivated them and more important than that brought them together as a unit ..........
abhishek
From India, Delhi
abhishek
From India, Delhi
After the thrillling final, its more evident - if there was one person who made the difference to Rajathan Royals, it was the superb leadership under pressure by Shane Warne,
Its not difficult to see what all would have gone into his quest to be a Succesful leader, especially in the multicultural environment of IPL.
- He lead by example.
- He built self-confidence of the team players.
- Instead of banking on the Proven Players, he identified talent and trained, motivated this talent to perform.
-He made effective use of his Resources Allotted to him.
- He got into the skin of each and every player of his team.
- He kept himself aware of the situation at every stage to be able to make quick decisions.
-He displayed trust in the abilities of his players and also gained the trust of all his players.
- He took every match as a fresh challenge and refused to be drawn into complacency.
From India, Delhi
Its not difficult to see what all would have gone into his quest to be a Succesful leader, especially in the multicultural environment of IPL.
- He lead by example.
- He built self-confidence of the team players.
- Instead of banking on the Proven Players, he identified talent and trained, motivated this talent to perform.
-He made effective use of his Resources Allotted to him.
- He got into the skin of each and every player of his team.
- He kept himself aware of the situation at every stage to be able to make quick decisions.
-He displayed trust in the abilities of his players and also gained the trust of all his players.
- He took every match as a fresh challenge and refused to be drawn into complacency.
From India, Delhi
Just came across a great video of Shane Warne on youtube
YouTube - Best of Shane Warne
Wonder if someone could make one from the IPL series, captaining the Rajasthan Royals...that would be fantastic
From India, Delhi
YouTube - Best of Shane Warne
Wonder if someone could make one from the IPL series, captaining the Rajasthan Royals...that would be fantastic
From India, Delhi
We are all capable of doing something and that is exactly the reason why we are doing what we are asked to. But to haul it all up as a collective effort takes the vision, compassion and level headedness of a great leader.
Soon after moving to Jaipur, Shane Warne wrote a paper which would serve as the vision for the Rajasthan Royals over the next 44 days. Warne's plan culminated in success as the Indian Premier League's least expensive franchise edged the Chennai Super Kings in the final.
Even before the tournament started, Shane Warne was studying his team. When Warne had presented his vision paper to every individual he had given a tag of responsibility to each player. He prepared actual documents for each of his players underlining what their roles will be. In the paper titled 'What's My Role' :-
- Shane Watson, who is not even in the national side, had a three point agenda with details on his fielding position and ways he should be motivating the other fielders.
- Yusuf's read "The Statement Maker". Yusuf Pathan's task was: "1. Be aggressive, dominate the start of the innings. Play with freedom, take 'em [bowlers] on. 2. [Bowl] Stump-to-stump off-spin. 3. Field in the ring early on and in the deep later." The lconic man from Baroda lived up to his billing and made the most telling statement when it mattered.
In a way, Shane Warne had a very thorough project plan in place.
A great leader, as Shane Warne remarkably exhibited throughout this series, is not someone superior to you. A great leader is rather someone who helps you understand your abilities, instils in you a passion to win, and cheers you up even in the worst adversities.
From India, Delhi
Soon after moving to Jaipur, Shane Warne wrote a paper which would serve as the vision for the Rajasthan Royals over the next 44 days. Warne's plan culminated in success as the Indian Premier League's least expensive franchise edged the Chennai Super Kings in the final.
Even before the tournament started, Shane Warne was studying his team. When Warne had presented his vision paper to every individual he had given a tag of responsibility to each player. He prepared actual documents for each of his players underlining what their roles will be. In the paper titled 'What's My Role' :-
- Shane Watson, who is not even in the national side, had a three point agenda with details on his fielding position and ways he should be motivating the other fielders.
- Yusuf's read "The Statement Maker". Yusuf Pathan's task was: "1. Be aggressive, dominate the start of the innings. Play with freedom, take 'em [bowlers] on. 2. [Bowl] Stump-to-stump off-spin. 3. Field in the ring early on and in the deep later." The lconic man from Baroda lived up to his billing and made the most telling statement when it mattered.
In a way, Shane Warne had a very thorough project plan in place.
A great leader, as Shane Warne remarkably exhibited throughout this series, is not someone superior to you. A great leader is rather someone who helps you understand your abilities, instils in you a passion to win, and cheers you up even in the worst adversities.
From India, Delhi
Shane Warne has really proved to the world cricket that any thing is possible if you can be a good leader. IPL tournament presented an opportunity of a lifetime for players from local and international sides to play together as a single team. Shane Warne's team didnot contain big names in Cricket. What he did was something which is really inspiring. He had a vision about the entire IPL, clear road map to achieve his goal, made sure that every individual is been given a unique role to play, provided constant mentoring, support and above all had trusted his team members. Its important to stay calm and prove your mettle rather than to be aggressive and achieve nothing. Hats off Shane Warne and team for the spectacular show.....
From India, Mumbai
From India, Mumbai
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