What the NFL Taught Me About Why Talented Organizations Stall
The most talented team doesn't always win
I came into the NFL undrafted. No draft-day phone call, no guaranteed roster spot, no signing bonus doing the talking for me. Four seasons later, I'd seen enough locker rooms to learn something that has shaped every conversation I've had with leaders since.
The most talented team on paper doesn't always win. Not in football. Not in business.
If talent were the whole story, you could rank every roster by the scouting reports and call the season. But anyone who has spent time inside a high-performing organization knows it doesn't work that way. There are loaded teams that underperform and overlooked teams that go further than anyone expected. The gap between those two outcomes is almost never a talent gap.
It's a capacity gap.
The word the locker room taught me
In the locker room, you can feel capacity before you can measure it. Two players with the same physical gifts, the same playbook, the same reps — and one of them keeps climbing while the other plateaus or comes apart. The difference shows up under pressure, in the fourth quarter, in the moment after a mistake, in how a guy carries himself when the season gets long.
What I was watching, though I didn't have the language for it yet, was capacity. The ability to hold weight — pressure, responsibility, adversity, expectation — and keep performing, keep leading, keep showing up as yourself.
Talent gets you drafted. Capacity is what lets you last.
Years later, working with organizations like the San Francisco 49ers, the Minnesota Vikings, the ACC, and Growing Leaders, I kept seeing the same pattern off the field that I'd felt on it. The team had the people. The people had the skill. And still, something stalled. Not because anyone lacked ability, but because the organization's capacity to carry what it was being asked to carry hadn't caught up to its ambition.
Capacity is the leading indicator
Here's the thesis I want to build this whole series on, because it reframes how you read your own organization:
Capacity is the leading indicator.
Revenue is a lagging indicator. Turnover is a lagging indicator. A culture problem that finally boils over into a resignation, a scandal, or a missed number — that's the box score. By the time it shows up there, the real story already happened weeks or months earlier, in capacity.
Performance, conduct, and retention all trace back to the same root. When people have the capacity to carry their role, they perform, they make good decisions under pressure, and they stay. When capacity runs short, you see it first as small things — friction, inconsistency, your best people quietly checking out — long before it ever reaches a spreadsheet.
The leaders who win the long game learn to read capacity the way a great coach reads a locker room. Not by waiting for the scoreboard, but by paying attention to the leading signal while there's still time to do something about it.
Two halves of the same work
This matters to me because I've spent the last several years building around exactly this idea, and it splits cleanly into two halves.
The first half is measuring capacity — making something you used to only feel in a locker room visible, specific, and trackable. That's the work of Unlock The Champion: a free Capacity Audit and the Made for More Framework, built on five areas — Identity, Alignment, Capacity, Execution, and Legacy. It gives a person or a team an honest baseline. (Penn State's own Dr. Omar X. Easy, Assistant Athletics Director, has endorsed this capacity work — which means a lot coming from inside Happy Valley.)
The second half is building capacity once you can see it — the deeper, human, in-the-room work of strengthening an organization so it can carry more. That's Live Prosperous, the resilience consultancy I co-founded with Bobby Morgan, built on a framework we call Built for the Storm. I'll go deep on that side in the pieces ahead.
For today, I only want you to sit with the measuring half. You can't build on a baseline you've never taken.
Start where every champion starts — honestly
Every athlete I respected had one thing in common: they were honest about where they actually were. Not where the highlight reel said. Not where the contract said. Where they actually were — so they could build from solid ground.
That's the invitation I'll leave you with as this series begins. Before we talk about how organizations build capacity, get an honest read on your own. It takes a few minutes, it's free, and there's no booking, no call, no pitch on the other side — just a baseline.
Want your own baseline? Take the free Capacity Audit at unlockthechampion.com/audit.
In the next piece, I'll show you what it looks like when an organization decides to build on that baseline — and why the teams that do it pull away from the ones that don't.
We are. We are honest about where we stand. That's where champions start.