While I have always felt strongly that you cannot impose leadership from the top down, under the right, spontaneous circumstance, it can bubble up from below and carry a willing partner to transcendent heights. When UVA won the national championship in 2011, we were not nearly as talented a team as many that had come before. Midway through the season we lost our best defenseman to injury, dismissed our two most talented players and took two hard, consecutive conference losses. It was a season about to spiral out of control. In the midst of those circumstances, a young man who simply refused to be discouraged, walked into my office and calmly notified me, “I know that was hard for you (the dismissals), we are ready to go.”
Bray Malphrus was not always a great leader in our program. Earlier in his career he was more interested in his own interpretation of the universe. By his senior year, however, he became much more invested in the welfare of the people around him and, of the team. He had not always been a great leader, but he became one. His transformation provides an encouraging and inspired lesson, and you are likely not surprised to hear that he became a decorated Army Ranger.
I have mentioned fearlessness as one of the primary characteristics of exceptional leadership. It is more about fearlessness, rather than confidence. Fearlessness is more of an instinct, confidence can be an acquired taste. It often comes later or reluctantly to someone who lives/competes/succeeds in a challenging environment. But, fearlessness is that little kid who ran right into the tree chasing that pop up, the one to whom it would simply never occur not to take the open shot with the game on the line, the one whose body language is always exclaiming “watch me, this is how we roll” and who was willing to “choose up the teams.” Fearlessness stands up in front of the team and sets an uncompromising agenda and then, walks in to the coach’s office with the same conviction. Fearlessness takes his standards to the edge of unreasonableness but, without going over the line.
The second characteristic of exceptional leadership is selflessness. This is explicitly not about being unselfish. All great athletes are competitively selfish. They want the ball, they unintentionally crave the dramatic, deciding moment and we applaud this instinct but, the leaders are unyielding about their own role with regards to the welfare of the team. They consistently demonstrate a willingness to do whatever it takes in order to create the conditions for success. Tim Whiteley, Virginia Class of 1996, never hesitated to play primarily in his offhand to facilitate an attack unit generally recognized as one of the game’s best ever, and led Virginia to three consecutive semifinal appearances. Tim’s selflessness may have been the team’s lynchpin for success and come at the cost of his legacy alongside his two Hall of Fame line mates (Doug Knight and Michael Watson).