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posted by cmn32480 on Monday August 14 2017, @10:12AM   Printer-friendly
from the he'll-never-make-it-to-Carnegie-Hall dept.

The Atlantic has an article on Dan McLaughlin, the "average guy" who spent six thousand hours working on becoming a professional golfer

Seven-plus years ago, aged 30 and unsure even of which hand to grip a golf club in, McLaughlin quit his job as a commercial photographer, took in lodgers to cover the mortgage, husbanded his savings for green fees, and set out to make the PGA Tour, home to the world's elite golfers.

He created a catchily named blog to document his quest, and in short order the Dan Plan commanded magazines spreads and TV spots. Along the way, it drew an avid community of followers riveted by the spectacle of a regular Joe living out an everyman fantasy. No less captivated: a salon of leading figures from the science of learning and human performance.

What could you achieve if you committed to something completely, all-in, no excuses? How far could you go? For five years, McLaughlin cast everything else aside—career, money, even relationships—to put this to the test. But then his back gave out. He pushed himself to the limit and still came up short.

The article follows Dan's attempt to follow the idea, popularised in Malcolm Gladwell's book Outliers, that 10,000 hours of practice is the main factor in developing any skill to world class expertise.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 14 2017, @03:26PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 14 2017, @03:26PM (#553713)

    At first I thought you were using luck in the sense of connecting with the right people to sponsor you, work on your team, etc. There are many excellent race drivers that just don't get noticed for whatever combination of bad luck and circumstance. Also, there is very little room at the top (in all pro sports).

    Dale Earnhardt's final accident was fatal, but it's possible that with better safety equipment (available at that time) he could have survived. More details are in this article, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HANS_device [wikipedia.org]

  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Monday August 14 2017, @05:09PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Monday August 14 2017, @05:09PM (#553762)

    At first I thought you were using luck in the sense of connecting with the right people to sponsor you, work on your team, etc.

    I filed that under "Opportunity", which Dale Earnhardt had in spades because his dad was a race car driver too.

    But I was referring more for the luck he had in not getting killed when he was a nobody. Most NASCAR drivers spent time on dirt tracks and regional circuits in obscurity prior to joining the "big leagues", and could get killed on those tracks without ever making it to the top-tier races through no fault of their own. Same story in football: A few high school players are killed each year through no fault of their own, and occasionally a college player dies in training or in games.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.