We Should Want Excellence, Not Perfection, From Our Athletes
There is a very fringe minority who have been upset with an ailing Bryce Harper not running fast enough down 1st base in a Phillies win. In a perfect world, maybe he would have risked his ailing back, but this is real life. What we should demand from our sports figures is excellence, because perfection is a set up for guaranteed failure.
The people who ripped the very durable Jimmy Rollins for example years ago were wrong. He did what he had to do to be available and won a World Series and MVP because of it.
There is a thing that certain fans and media members do to make sure that they can destroy people. They set a bar so high that is impossible to reach, and then when the athletes don’t reach them, they pounce.
Bryce Harper is an excellent baseball player that has provided clutch moments here in Philadelphia. He isn’t perfect and right now he is dealing with a balky back. He has reached every reasonable expectation. If you are upset with Bryce Harper, the odds are you are the problem and not him.
Don’t Criticize Excellence In The Pursuit of Perfection
Everyone has a bad day sometimes, even the all-time greats. Lebron James has the most playoff buzzer-beaters in NBA history. A large group of fans say he isn’t clutch. Again, the issue isn’t Lebron, the issue is those who put the unrealistic expectations upon him. Excellence is the bar, not perfection.
That doesn’t mean that we should part with accountability. Howie Roseman for example leaving the Eagles’ defense so poorly stocked last year is something to be critical of. Ripping Howie Roseman for 1 bad draft pick wouldn’t be.
An excellent draft might only net 4 starters out of 8 picks. Even if a GM is amazing, he will miss on a free agent from time to time.
Tobias Harris did steal money in the postseason this year. The Flyers organization is headed in the right direction, but it’s shameful how far they fell. Castellanos hasn’t been good enough so far this year. There are real things to worry about. Why waste time with foolishness?
We must decide how we want to conduct ourselves. Do we want excellence, or do we want perfection? If you want something impossible, then you should keep it to yourself.