An NBA Champion’s Advice on Being a Top Teammate | Shane Battier | TED

6,726 views

2025-04-07 ・ TED


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An NBA Champion’s Advice on Being a Top Teammate | Shane Battier | TED

6,726 views ・ 2025-04-07

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:04
What if I could tell you that the biggest impact that you can make
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happens outside the spotlight?
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Not by sitting at the head of the table or leading the parade.
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What if I told you that you could influence an entire symphony
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without ever picking up the conductor's wand?
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Or, in my case, what if I told you
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you could have the most powerful change in a basketball game,
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not when the ball is in your hands but by what you do when it’s not?
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Is that an absurd question to ask?
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You see, on the road to the NBA,
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where I was a starter
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for the back-to-back world champion Miami Heat, just down the road --
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(Cheers and applause)
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Yes.
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(Applause)
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Do you know how many hours I practiced?
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Thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands of hours.
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I'd make Malcolm Gladwell blush
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with all the practice I had with the basketball.
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I spent 1,000 hours dribbling the basketball, passing the basketball,
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shooting the basketball.
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I wanted to become one with that pumpkin.
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But, you know, when I played as a starter with LeBron James and Dwyane Wade,
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Chris Bosh, Ray Allen, all Hall of Famers,
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do you know how often I actually touched the ball?
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Two percent of the time.
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Two.
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So it begs the question,
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what did I do in the other 98 percent of the time,
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when I didn’t have the ball,
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to justify starting on the best team in the world,
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playing at the highest level on the planet Earth?
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That's a crazy question. What did I do?
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02:01
Well to understand that, you have to go back to when I grew up.
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I grew up in a small town outside of Detroit,
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and I had the pleasure of being a misfit.
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Everywhere I looked.
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I was the only kid in town that had a Black dad and a white mom.
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I had patches on my jeans.
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When it rained, my roof leaked.
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I had to carry a birth certificate with me to every Little League game.
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You know why? Because I was so tall,
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no one believed I was the age I said I was.
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I was a misfit in every way
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at a time when I just wanted to fit in.
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I grew up mixed, poor and tall.
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But during the chaotic beauty of playground time on recess
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when I was in first and second grade,
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that was my time playing basketball.
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Football, sandlot baseball.
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Kick the can, dodgeball.
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Ghost in the graveyard.
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To me, those weren't just games.
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Those were opportunities to belong.
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And that's when I learned the most powerful lesson in my life,
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the power of "we" over "me."
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The power of "we" over "me."
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And I realized, during these games, when I helped my friends win,
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I wasn't the mixed kid.
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I wasn't the poor kid, I wasn't the freakishly tall kid.
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I was just a teammate.
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I belonged.
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And so I became obsessed with: “How can I help my friends win?
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How can I help my friends look good?”
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For love.
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I was seeking love.
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When's the last time ...
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you had to win in the name of being loved?
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And that became the entire hallmark of my basketball career,
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ironically, what I learned in kindergarten, on the playground.
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And I took that with me through my entire NBA career,
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through two final fours at Duke University,
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a national championship,
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two NBA titles, just down the road here in Miami.
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I was obsessed with what can I do to help my friends and my team win.
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And let me tell you, it wasn't always glorious.
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I wasn’t a big scorer, alright?
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I didn't have 50-point games.
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But I was like the LeBron James of diving on the ball,
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diving on the floor for loose balls.
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I wasn't a fancy dribbler like Dwyane Wade.
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But what I was, I was like the Steph Curry of running back on defense.
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I wasn't a crazy passer,
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but I was a solid inbound passer in end-of-game situations.
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Now those are not sexy plays at all, OK?
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Those are not plays that make someone run into the team store and say,
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"Battier leads our team in floor burns.
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I want his jersey."
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Those are the plays that I made in the 98 percent of the time
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that I didn't have the ball in my hands,
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that impacted winning.
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In fact, I impacted winning at such a high level that when I retired,
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I saw a stat about my career.
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And on the teams that I played for in my career,
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when I was on the floor,
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we consistently outscored the opponent by five points a game
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versus when I was on the bench.
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OK, that puts me, in the last three decades,
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the last 30 years,
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in the top 97th percentile of every player that played in the NBA ...
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right next to guys like Tracy McGrady
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and the late, great Kobe Bryant.
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Now if you ask the average NBA fan,
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they'd say there's no way that Battier should be with T-Mac and Kobe.
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But there I was, for my impact.
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You see, it's all about the unseen ...
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the immeasurable, the intangible that matters.
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See today we are driven by so many what I call “spotlight metrics.”
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We’re always chasing grade point average and salary,
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and, you know, we're concerned about the cost of the purse that we carry
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or the car that we drive.
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We're concerned about likes, mentions, follows, reposts.
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Right? Yes. Nod your head.
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Yes we’re all guilty.
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Well those are all what I call “spotlight metrics.”
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They happen when the light's on us.
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But those factors, those figures, they miss the most important thing.
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How do we elevate others?
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Michael Lewis wrote a great profile on me called “The No-Stats All-Star,”
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about how my impact on the basketball court
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went far beyond the box score.
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You know what the crux of that was?
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I lived to make the small plays for others.
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So how does that work in the real life?
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Simple, small, out-of-the-spotlight actions, like mentoring a young person,
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helping them on their journey.
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Something as simple as bending over and picking up a piece of trash
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and putting it into the garbage,
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so that everyone can enjoy the natural beauty of a park.
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It might be lending a shoulder or an ear to a colleague, a friend
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or a family member that's going through a tough time.
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You see, those are unbelievably powerful actions.
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They will never show up in any scorecard, any scoreboard, right?
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But those are the winning plays that we have to make,
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that create championship teams, whatever your team is.
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And so when you're doing that, you are not just participating.
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Right? You have a huge role in winning.
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And that's the fun part.
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We all want to win.
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And so my friends at the Butler University business school
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wanted to find people like me,
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who lived to elevate others across industries.
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And what they found was that,
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in every winning team and across industries,
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there were teams rife with people who lived to elevate others.
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And they named this -- I didn't come up with this --
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they called it the “Battier effect.”
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And the Battier effect is very simple.
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It's asking yourself the question, every single day,
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"How can I make others better?
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What am I doing to increase the collective potential of the group around me?
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My business, my family, my friends?"
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Right?
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Because the irony of this is when you elevate others,
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that is how you create legacy for yourself.
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People want to be around you and say, “There’s something about you,
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but whatever you’re connected to just wins.”
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And isn't that the fun part of all this?
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So as we go back to our normal lives after the TED Talk tonight
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and hear all of our inspiring speakers,
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I want you to ask yourself,
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"What am I doing in my 98 percent outside the spotlight?
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How am I spending my time, my energy, my talents ...
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to elevate others?"
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Because if you do that,
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you will realize it is not about being the star,
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but the value is in being the glue guy, the glue girl,
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the glue person that makes it all work,
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and you win together.
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And it's an amazing feeling.
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So my friends, that is how you change outcomes.
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That is how you change lives.
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And that is how you create legacy.
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Thank you.
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(Cheers and applause)
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Thank you.
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(Cheers and applause)
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