Darius137 wrote:Jewish Ninja wrote:Darius137 wrote:I know a lot of the people I had on my side did not understand half the rules because they just showed up that day. For future games, I'd recommend a better briefing before the game covering the rules, instead of just the safety.
Dan, the whole point of giving us the rules ahead of time, was so we didn't have to sit there for 20 minutes going over what we should have ALREADY KNOWN. If your unwilling/unable to read up on some very simple rules about a game your spending your day and money on, why bother showing up?
I personally liked not having to go over the rules again. It seemed to create a lot of confusion for players with the BM (identifying what side they are on), but again, a quick read through the rules would have solved all these problems before they ever happened.
A lot of people didn't understand, but the way games are set up, it's usually the guy who shows up with 2 mags and a woodland top and jeans who has more trouble adapting to the game's intricacies rather than the guy who shows up with the plate carrier and working radio.
This is not a discussion for me of why we lost, but how we can get a better game experience from a host.
Dan,
I get what you're saying. You're recommending a rules briefing from the event host to ensure everyone is on the same page. I think your solution is a case of "good intentions, poor execution."
The event host can't bear all the responsibility of how the game turns out. Rick and Bill created everything to include the rule book. What needs to happen from there is some individual accountability and leader accountability.
For those lacking the individual accountability we have leaders. EDG had our own mini brief that went over safety, sportsmanship, and we highlighted a couple of key rules from the rule book. In looking back I should have included more in the brief. Next time I will. From there I challenged and empowered my SLs to police their own squads and ensure their players followed the rules.
You are right, a brief of the rules before the game is needed. (Good intention) My suggestion for you is next time publish your own team timeline for before the game to include your commander's brief. Next show up on time to ensure you meet your own standard. Then brief your team as a whole and take some responsibility as a seasoned vet in this community to ensure those lost souls know what right looks like. Don't point the finger at the host to do it. (poor execution.) You do it. (Good execution) You can't expect the younger players to exhibit personal accountability and responsibility if you don't.
Remember....YOU are responsible for everything your team does or fails to do. When you agree to lead, you agree to accept the responsibility for all the bad outcomes of your players. If anything good happens it is because of your subordinate leaders.
P6
Hmmm. During the proof reading of my post I realized that I've heard a lot of these principles before. It seems to me the organization that taught me these principles is the same organization you are in Dan. All we need to do is carry them over from one aspect of our life to the other.
Great leaders are almost always great simplifiers, who can cut through argument, debate and doubt, to offer a solution everybody can understand.
Colin Powell