Tag Archives: teamwork

All the Kids Can Play

Before I was eight, all the neighbors would come and call on my Dad to come out to play, either touch football or softball. He would say “after dinner” but more importantly, he said “everyone gets to play.”

While we kids were always competitive with each other, at school and in the workplace one thing sticks with me the most: teamwork.

You’re only as good as your team. If you hire inferior people to make you feel more important, you should lose. The better the team, the better you are, who cares if someone is smarter than you or another has better ideas.

A few years ago I watched the first Top Chef Masters when the masters had to choose sous-chefs. During the few moments allowed for menu planning, there were two styles at play, one that invited collaboration, camaraderie and a buy-in for success, and one a top-down brigade style. Guess who won? Teamwork.

I married my husband because I knew he was ethical, moral and a good judge of character. I knew he’d be a team-builder and that he is, as well as a mentor to younger folks. He is brilliant, I mean it, and loves to meet and work with people he believes are smarter and more talented in certain areas. It challenges him and makes him better at what he does.

On the other side, his mother believes I should be on the ground helping to bring down his balloon. She doesn’t know that I’m up there looking at the ground below and seeing new landscapes with him. This lifetime partnership is sealed because as he is very tall, he can reach things in cabinets over the refrigerator, and I can look for things he needs from under counters.

He grew up on a dairy farm in the middle of nowhere. I grew up in a house nearby a dairy in the middle of nowhere. My sister and I had a softball team with our two buddies from 1/4 mile away. Tons of ghost men and we played every day. If kids can create ghost players, then all the kids can play.

I’ve run teams and volunteers for a lifetime and what I can tell you is is that all the kids can play. Thank you for teaching me that, Dad. I always thank my team and you’re first as you’ve been there for me forever. Dee

Oh, Marcel

I’ve been a devotee of Top Chef since its beginning. Even though Central time placed it an hour later and Mountain time placed it two hours later. I don’t stay up until midnight on a weekday (or weekend) so usually have to find it on a re-run.

Tonight Marcel lost. I’d like to say he lost for his addiction to “foams” but alas, he did not. He was dealt a good hand in winning the quickfire and given a team to choose. I don’t know whether he just looked for who hated him the least or what his selection criteria. Despite the expected foam, the most egregious fault of Marcel is that he doesn’t like people, doesn’t relate to them and can’t fathom a way to herd these cats into submission. So he gave up and tried to show off his own dishes.

A team leader leads. Mostly by example, so there was no there, there. People think they can go all the way on their own (and Hung did by refusing to help anyone even though they’d helped him). That tactic doesn’t work in life or work, perhaps only on a show where people want to win money.

I can’t imagine doing anything spectacular without teamwork and have had teams around me my entire life. I was not the best gymnast in high school but my peers voted me captain two years in a row. And I had words with a team-mate leagues above us who competed and wanted to leave. I told her that we were all there to cheer for her, so the team would cheer others in this competition. She was on the team and not above us, and would be there for everyone or I’d cut her from the team immediately. She saw my way and thanked me for it afterwards, well, a while afterwards.

Everyone sees movies where chefs are yelling and creating havoc in the kitchen. I do that in my own kitchen, when the dog smells meat. I do believe that any successful chef needs teamwork in the kitchen and people who respect him/her. If a chef has five restaurants, where is he/she all the time? If you can’t trust your team, you can’t leave the kitchen for an evening, a week’s vacation or to have other restaurants that carry your name.

Top Chef All-Stars was right to send Marcel home because even at age 30, he still doesn’t have a clue how to be a team player or how to lead a team. By winning a quick fire challenge he got the big one that there was no way he could win. Keep cooking! Dee