- Commentary
- Team Concept
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- I discovered
something this week that I thought I would share. If you
remember back some weeks ago Deputy Chief Paul Anderson
made a comparison to the New England Patriots and the
"Desire to win".
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- This week I
think it is only appropriate to look at the "team
concept" approach and how it does not seem to work
as well in the fire service.
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- I say that
it does not work well particularly during the
non-emergency times. I have not heard of departments that
are having major problems at fires but in the down
station time there are conflicts.
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- Let's make
sure we have our comparisons correct by using this
baseline:
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- The city
manager would be compared to the owner.
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- The head
coach would be the fire chief.
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- Other
coaches would be division or battalion chiefs.
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- Squad or
team captains would be the fire service equivalent of
captains and lieutenants.
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- A football
team has several "squads" or teams within the
organization such as offense, defense, special teams etc.
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- OK so here
goes the thought process using the Patriots as our
analogy.
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- * Do you win
the Super bowl by sitting around the locker room
criticizing Coach Bellicheck and Bob Kraft?
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- * Do the
special teams and squads come together as one or do they
operate as four separate shifts or groups?
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- * How many
people get to call the plays? Does everyone get a shot or
do certain persons make decisions that everyone must play
by?
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- * Do you
think Drew Bledsoe was happy he did not get to play? Did
he continue to function as a good team member?
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- * There were
members of the Patriots team that did not play at all,
yet they are still as much champions because they also
are members of the team. If a member of your team does a
good thing it reflects on all, it a member does a bad
thing it also reflects on all.
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- * The team
concept and the overall goal must be kept in perspective
each and everyday at every practice (read this as
training) and at every meeting. Failure to promote the
overall good and team concept of the mission will lead to
failure every time.
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- How many
teams are in your fire department and how many do you
belong to?
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- Different
groups or working shifts
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- Union member
ship
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- Volunteer or
call active members vs.: associate members of the
organization
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- Different
stations or substations that do things a certain way
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- Management
or middle management officers such as lieutenants and
captains
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- All of these
sub teams must exist and do exist in every fire
department organization, the real question is are they
always playing on the same team?
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- The answer
is a simple one. No they are not, and in human nature
they won't unless someone at some level steps up to the
plate and reminds everyone of what the team concept is
and how to reach the overall goal.
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- That's a
tough thing to do, and you must be vigilant because you
will have to do it all the time, but it is a noble and
worthwhile role.
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- What will
you do now coach?