Owning Your Impact

Eric Reveno is the James Gaither Associate Head Coach of Men’s Basketball at Stanford University. This is a post from his Linked-In site, and we love a great sports analogy at CSz.

The Plus/Minus Mindset: Owning Your Impact:

A couple of years ago, the NCAA added the “plus/minus” stat to the college basketball box score. It was a nod to analytics pioneers like Dean Oliver and Ken Pomeroy, who showed that traditional stats like points, rebounds, and assists don’t tell the whole story.

But let’s be clear: plus/minus is a flawed metric in small sample sizes. At halftime, you might see “+4” for the starting point guard and “-7” for another player, and it feels definitive. Yet, as Ken Pomeroy aptly explains (
https://lnkd.in/grh54W_Q), context is everything.

Heck, even at 58 years old, if I hit the floor with the right lineup, I might end up with a great plus/minus.

So, should we ditch it? I thought so—until last week.

Stanford Head Coach Kyle Smith reframed it entirely for our team. He shared how, as a kid, his dad told him:

“Your job is to make sure your team outscores the opponent while you’re in the game. Whether you’re down four when you check in or up one, when you check out your role is to have changed the score in your team’s favor. Simple as that.”

Coach Smith wasn’t advocating for the stat itself but for the mindset it represents.

Our job as teammates is simple: take responsibility for the outcomes. Line up, compete, and own it.

Life—just like basketball—isn’t fair. You’ll get credit for things you didn’t do and blamed for things you couldn’t control. But you still have to control what you can: your focus, your effort, and how you help the team succeed.

Here’s the truth: great teammates make teams better.

They solve problems, adapt, bring energy, and elevate everyone around them. They may not always show up in the box score, but their impact is undeniable. They’re called winners.

As coaches, we often talk about players who make us look good. They take solid strategies and make them great.

That’s what the plus/minus mindset demands: focus, skill, understanding, selflessness, and effort. It’s about showing up every minute to give the team what it needs.

So, whether on the court or in life, the question remains: Are you a plus?

Eric Reveno’s Linked In page, with a lot of great thinking on teams: https://www.linkedin.com/in/eric-reveno-3b5a985/

Sitting With Uncertainty

Professor, researcher and CSz Philadelphia improviser Dannagal Goldthwaite Young joins the Hidden Brain Podcast on a brilliant exploration of uncertainty vs certainty, and how these traits may divide or unite us.

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/sitting-with-uncertainty/id1028908750?i=1000671334611

Rick Steadman on the ComedySportz Podcast

Our new owner (as of January 1, 2025), Rick began as a founding member of CSz Spokane, would go on to perform on the CSz Los Angeles roster for nearly two decades—including serving as their Education Director and Rec League Coach—and become the Artistic Director of CSz Seattle. In today’s episode we have the distinct honor of not only examining Rick’s extensive improv and acting career, but we get to hear both his experience taking an improv class with Alan Arkin, as well as Rick’s authentic vs. ComedySportz German-accent.

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/episode-39-rick-rock-steady-steadman/id1493584575?i=1000675324223

This was recorded before our public announcement of Rick taking over at CSz Portland.