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Eye of the tiger or fox of the fairway?

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Have you ever watched the world’s finest golfer blast the ball effortlessly from a tee, then follow his crisp iron shot at the pin with a perfect putt and think “he really needs to jack up his game”? Of course you don’t, but he does, even when he is about to win the 2001 Masters and have all four Major trophies sitting on his mantelpiece at the same time. This is Tiger Woods – the fox of the fairway. Why a fox? He is cunning, bright, curious and he reacts with his environment. The New York Times once described foxes as “the most beautiful and interesting animals to observe”.

The common fox in Europe has reddish fur with black patches behind the ears and a light tip to its brush-like tail Underneath, it sports a white waistcoat and dark leggings. Including the tail, the animal is just over a metre long. It is a small but beautiful wild dog, the eyes having a watchful gleam quite different to a domesticated dog. The whole demeanour of the animal is one of alertness, as if it would be up and off at the first sign of danger.

Beautiful – yes; but interesting? Foxes have many dens, sometimes called earths, within their territory. They use them to their best advantage because dens give them options. Foxes normally choose the most secure den in which to give birth to and nurture their young, but they maintain the other dens in case the secure one is put at risk. They are continually foraging for new sources of food and eat almost anything – rodents, rabbits, birds and insects as well as fruit and berries in season. They are highly adaptable to different terrains, ranging from dense forests to cultivated farmland. In fact, they can adapt easily to urban environments and change their eating habits accordingly. Scavenging from refuse bins is an urban pastime. They are so resourceful that the landed gentry in England find them fun to hunt; but maybe not for much longer if the politicians have their way. Foxes have extraordinarily sensitive noses that can pick up an interesting scent a mile off. Even the spiky exterior of the humble hedgehog can’t protect it from a hungry fox.

Which brings us to hedgehogs. They, on the other hand, live in one burrow all their lives. For them a single home is their security – nice and warm and cosy, and generally quite big. Hedgehogs hibernate during winter, effectively cutting themselves off from the outside world. They have plump little bodies with very short legs that hardly raise them from the ground. They are all of thirty centimetres long, covered with sharp, greyish brown spikes and blessed with a pig-like snout. Unlike foxes, hedgehogs like to live where there is certainty in the availability of food. Their favourite fare includes insects, but they are also partial to snails and slugs, which are slow enough for them to catch. Hedgehogs are generally non-confrontational. Whereas foxes will readily enter a fight, hedgehogs prefer to roll up in a ball and use their protective spikes to deter any challenge, especially from foxes. Nevertheless, foxes are carnivorous and are not unknown to make a tasty meal of sleepy hedgehogs. And gypsies have been known to bake them in a covering of clay.

Foxes? Hedgehogs? What have these got to do with golf? And more importantly, what can we learn from distinguishing between them? This book attempts to uncover the mind of a fox. What makes someone a fox? How does a fox manoeuvre not only through the game of business, but also through the game of life? In order to gain an insight into the versatile mind of the fox, we need to compare it to the stiffer persona of the staid hedgehog.

In brief, a hedgehog is a person who believes that life revolves around one big idea, one ultimate truth and that if only we can get at that idea or truth, everything else will come right. Once programmed or hooked on an idea, or even worse an ideology, a hedgehog cannot shake it off. Alternatives are irrelevant. As opposed to searching for a hypothesis which most closely fits the facts, a hedgehog will shoehorn the facts into something which will support his ideology, however much the arguments have to be distorted.

A fox, in contrast to a hedgehog, is someone who believes that life is all about knowing many things. Foxes are people who embrace uncertainty and believe that experience – doing things – is an essential source of knowledge. Action sorts out the sheep from the goats! Moreover, like good golfers know that an excellent sub-par round is only built up one shot at a time, foxes depend upon an incremental approach to change the status quo. Life very rarely confronts you with life-changing experiences. Rather, the transformation of your prospects is the result of many small steps taken one at a time, with little knowledge in advance of what the next step will be until it presents itself. Hence, foxes understand that it is a waste of time trying to delineate an exact path into the long-term future. Crossroads upon crossroads upon crossroads await you. You take the turning you like at the time, and you never look over your shoulder. Consequently, while hedgehogs like to bury themselves in certainty and cloister themselves from disruptive influences, foxes enthusiastically forage for new ideas and explore new routes in the quest of developing a wider range of options for nourishment. In pursuing this course, foxes rely as much on intuition and imagination as they do on their reason and senses. James Dyson, a well-known and very foxy British inventor, puts his success down to his obsession for detail and never-say-die approach to problem-solving: “Once you begin to break down a problem into little bits and tackle each one you find a solution.” Voilà – he has completely redesigned the vacuum cleaner, the wheelbarrow and the washing machine and is worth £500 million.

Returning to the world of golf, how would a hedgehog like golfer differ from Tiger Woods? Firstly, he would have a pre-tournament press conference at which he would expand at great length on his vision and strategic plan for the event. If conditions during the tournament were exactly as predicted in his plan and he played the course exactly as he had anticipated, he might win it. But if the weather was different, the course tougher, and things did not go according to plan, he would end up with a series of lousy scores and his name way down the list. He might even call a post-tournament conference to complain how things totally beyond his control had led to his demise: for example, the state of the greens, the newness of his clubs or the unruly nature of the spectators. Hedgehogs can be bad losers cum laude!

Resilience is where Tiger has such an advantage over his fellow competitors, and permits him to win by such large margins in tournaments. For the reality is that things seldom go according to plan for any player, however consistent he is; and Tiger is more consistent than most. Where Tiger puts clear blue water between himself and the rest of the field is his ability to turn adversity into opportunity. When he hits a wayward shot, his powers of recovery are sublime. If his drive ends up behind a tree, he can hook or slice his iron shot so that the ball bends in flight and lands on the green. From “unplayable” lies just off the putting surface, he invents a chip shot which leaves his ball centimetres from the hole. He holes long putts when he needs to. He can stop a shot in mid-swing when he hears the inopportune click of a spectator’s camera shutter.

Tiger has the strength, the touch and the imagination to be the champion. In addition, he possesses the vital characteristic of BMT or big match temperament. None of these qualities is spontaneously acquired. Admittedly, in Tiger’s case, he always had the potential; his father spotted it at the age of three. However, his current prowess has arisen from years of preparation, hard physical training and focus. He can make those minor adjustments to his game which are crucial to his victories precisely because, more than any other mortal on earth, he has achieved mastery over what he can control – his shot-making. He has the flexibility because he has the focus. This may sound contradictory! Nevertheless, we are going to show you later in the book that focusing one’s energy is a prerequisite for the capacity to manoeuvre out of difficult situations.

The mind of a fox

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