Charlottesville, Virginia
June 26, 2020
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From today's "UVA Today."
Every week, while sports media members are hard at work filling out their Top 25 ballots, University of Virginia football head coach Bronco Mendenhall pores over his own rankings.
At the top of his poll you wonât find the Hoos, Clemson University, the University of Alabama or any of the top college teams.
Instead, youâll find âGood to Great, âThe Power of Full Engagementâ and âHow Will You Measure Your Life?â
They are among a wide array of non-fiction books that Mendenhall cherishes and considers vital to the way he is building the UVA program and leading his players, both on and off the field.
âItâs one of my favorite things to do,â Mendenhall said. âI close my door to my office and I just start scrolling the shelves and putting them in order. I sit back and look at them and see if that reflects where my current priorities and needs and desires and intent [are], and then I go ahead and do it again the next week.â
Mendenhall ranks the books in his library according to the impact theyâve had on him.
âAnything on the shelf has value,â Mendenhall said. âIf it doesnât add value, it doesnât make the shelf.â
Mendenhallâs goal is to read 150 pages each day. Some days he gets there, some days he doesnât. It just depends on what time of year it is and how busy he is.
Mendenhall said reading, much like exercise, is a form of ârenewal.â
âIf I donât exercise at a certain heart rate for a certain length of time, the solace and peace that abides in me doesnât last long enough,â he said. âSo, for me, itâs about the 150-page mark.â
Mendenhall said he reads about 50 books a year.
âIâm not professing that Iâm setting some kind of world record, but it is just frequently part of the conversation [within the program],â Mendenhall said. âSometimes the players roll their eyes. Theyâre like, âHeâs talking about that book again,â but they expect it and kind of laugh and joke about it.
âBut I think itâs also helpful to them because if theyâre interested, they can get the book themselves. I love that â when they can take control and address issues that they have questions about.â
Books in Mendenhallâs office are lined up in the order of the impact they have had on him. (Photo by Jim Daves, UVA Athletics)
The floor-to-ceiling shelves at Mendenhallâs home are reserved for books about his Mormon faith, while the ones at his McCue Center office are designated for books he believes can put him in the best position to help his players.
Mendenhall frequently tinkers with his rankings. He has what he refers to as a âfiltering and retainingâ process. âIf I donât think theyâve had significance or werenât completely relevant to me, then I give them away to someone I think would have interest in them,â he said.
This often includes players, staff members and even UVA coaches from other sports whom he has befriended.
âHeâs always recommending a book or referencing a book,â UVA linebacker Charles Snowden said. âWhen you walk in his office, it might as well be a library with all the books he has on the shelves. Heâs definitely very passionate about them.â
Mendenhall said one of his âfoundationalâ books is âThe Power of Full Engagement,â which centers on managing your energy, not your time.
At last check, Mendenhall was re-reading two of his all-time favorites, âForged in Crisisâ and âGritâ â which focus on resiliency â and was about to delve into âThe Last Cowboys,â âFactfulnessâ and âThe Originals.â
âItâs hard for me to have a conversation without saying, âYou know what I just read âŚ,ââ Mendenhall said.
Mendenhallâs love for books took root at Brigham Young University, just after he was promoted from assistant to head coach. Running the whole program was a very different than planning a blitz package, and Mendenhall realized that there was a lot to learn in order to guide players through their college experiences and get them to be âthe best versions of themselves.â
A large percentage of players at BYU were married, which led to Mendenhall reading books on marriage counseling.
Over time, he had a laundry list of other subjects that he knew even less about â depression, sleep disorders, anxiety, dietary issues.
But thatâs when something funny happened.
âAs I studied some of these other topics, I actually found that I liked them more than football,â Mendenhall said. âAnd I became more engaged with these other things. I loved that I was able to help and counsel and nurture and help develop young people, which really uncovered my passion. It wasnât really coaching football anymore.
âWhat I learned was that I was passionate about the development of young people. And so all of my reading then shifted to how broad of a curriculum could I construct that would give me a chance to be able to be helpful to the young men that came in my program.â
âFor you to really extract and draw the content from the pages, it has to be complete immersion to go deep enough. And I think when you do that, it quiets the world.â - BRONCO MENDENHALL
The novel âThe Power of One,â by Australian author Bryce Courtenay, is the book that had its first big effect on Mendenhall. Its main theme is that difficult challenges in life donât determine destiny or outcome.
âI loved that idea,â Mendenhall said. âIt was empowering.
âWe have a say in determining outcomes in so many areas of our life. I think itâs an easy default to just default to circumstances. Circumstances certainly do influence, but there have been so many examples of just miraculous character that have been forged through these fierce challenges by people standing in defiance of the challenges and deciding that they are going to make it in some unique or amazing way. That book shaped a foundational philosophy in that way.â
During team meetings, which have continued during the COVID-19 pandemic via videoconferencing, Mendenhall has a segment called âThe Best Day Everâ in which team chaplain George Morris goes over one of the programâs 14 guiding principles.
One of the principles that Mendenhall has instituted in the program is âThe Power of Choice,â which he derived from âThe Power of One.â
In the sessions, Mendenhall frequently interjects with a point from something heâs currently reading that ties into what Morris is discussing.
Before last season, believing that leadership, even more so than in previous seasons, was going to be a key element to the teamâs success, Mendenhall had the team read âThe Captain Class,â a book by Sam Walker that examines why successful sports teams throughout history were able to succeed.
The hypotheses is that it isnât coaches, but the team captains who play the biggest role in success.
âIt was centered around what traits great leaders have,â said Snowden, who was elected a team co-captain for the coming season. âIt talked about Carles Puyol, a defender on Barcelona soccer who wasnât by any means the greatest player on their teams, but he was the greatest leader, and it kind of talked about what we should look for in leaders.â
When Mendenhall first took over at UVA, heâd receive some quizzical looks during team meetings.
âThis idea of the head coach bringing in different books every day and quoting from slides and literature on PowerPoints â I think they thought it might have been more like an English class,â he said.
âReally, it doesnât seem like a football meeting â and thatâs my intent. Iâm much more guided by kind of the John Wooden, maybe Tony Dungy approach, of being cerebral and teaching rather than the supersized TV version of what entertaining coaches look like. And so there was an adjustment there.â
Mendenhall said one of first players who grasped what he was trying to do was former linebacker Malcolm Cook.
From there, players began coming to his office with questions about things he had mentioned from his reading.
Now, Mendenhall said, players often leave his office with books from his shelf, with an agreement to reconvene and discuss them later.
âItâs really become cultural,â Mendenhall said. âI think itâs permeated pretty widely and deeply. Itâs becoming a lifestyle for our players.â
Mendenhall says he has been guided by the leadership approach that was used to great success by former UCLA basketball coaching legend John Wooden. (Photo by Fred Breedon)
Mendenhall re-reads the books that have been most meaningful.
In the spring, he was doing so with Elie Wieselâs memoir âNight,â about Auschwitz, and âThe Long Walkâ by SĹawomir Rawicz, about the authorâs escape from a Soviet labor camp in 1941.
On his shelf, Mendenhall always has about a dozen new books lined up that he is hoping to get to.
Mendenhall said there is often a ripple effect that dictates what he will choose to read next.
âA lot of it goes to purpose, then application, purpose then application,â he explained. âTheyâre all kind of related and can change spots in the rankings based on whatâs relevant in the moment.â
On occasion, usually in the summer, Mendenhall dips into fiction â mostly âcowboy-related,â he said. His favorite author is the late Western novelist and short story writer Louis LâAmour.
Prior to arriving at UVA, Mendenhall tried his own hand as an author, collaborating on âRunning Into the Wind.â
Interestingly, Mendenhall said writing wasnât something he was passionate about. He said he did it because he wanted to show that there was a different way to run a college football program.
âThe wind of college football seems to be driving toward commercialization and entertainment and professionalism and ego and money and all that,â said Mendenhall, who this spring became one of the first coaches in the country to cancel spring practices in the face of the pandemic, before schools were mandated to. âIâve tried to run as hard as I can the other way â to focus on human development and amateur sport and the value of education and who these kids will become through this experience.
âThere arenât many running in that direction, and so I really became engaged about the purpose.â
For now, it appears Mendenhall will be sticking to reading books, not writing them.
In examining what has become one of his lifeâs passions, Mendenhall said what he enjoys most is the engagement that is required.
âFor you to really extract and draw the content from the pages, it has to be complete immersion to go deep enough,â he said. âAnd I think when you do that, it quiets the world. And I think it engages imagination, and I think itâs captivating. And I think for those moments when youâre immersed in the pages, thereâs a connection and a focus that promotes this human development that is just so engaging.
âOne of the reasons weâre on the planet is to become the best versions of ourselves. ⌠I just love the interaction between the pages where it requires effort â not just to sit and watch. I think the fulfillment that comes from learning from the printed page is maybe what is so captivating, at least to me.â
Mendenhallâs Top 10 (as of April 2)
âGood to Great,â by Jim Collins.
âThe Power of Full Engagement,â by Jim Loehr and Tony Schwartz.
âHow Will You Measure Your Life,â by Clayton Christensen.
âTeaching As Leadership,â by Steven Farr.
âTalent Is Overrated,â by Geoff Colvin.
âManâs Search for Meaning,â by Viktor Frankl.
âWooden on Leadership,â by John Wooden.
âGrit,â by Angela Duckworth.
âMindset,â by Carol Dweck.
âLegacy,â by James Kerr.
I flipped the photo of his bookcase to make the book titles easier to read.
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