“England job plain sailing for a sea dog”
Daily Mail, 23 January
1998
By Peter Jackson
England will go into the Five Nations next month fortified by their own
high-powered management consultant as proof that they mean business as never
before.
Clive Woodward’s secret signing in his pursuit of professional
excellence can be identified today as Humphrey Walters, a 56-year-old
Devonian with a newly-acquired track record for practising what he
preaches in treacherously heavy going.
Anxious to leave no stone unturned in his crusade
to win the World Cup, England’s enlightened coach has extended his management
team by hiring one of the country’s leading experts in teamwork,
motivation and leadership.
Walters takes up his new appointment fresh from risking
life and limb every day for 10 months, as a competitor
in Chay Blyth’s Round-the-World
yacht race, not inappropriate for someone named after an admiral of
Sir Francis Drake’s fleet.
He said: ‘I wanted to put my money where my mouth is, to find
out what leadership and teamwork are really about when they are critical
to your daily survival. I needed the street-cred which comes with life-and-death
situations.’
He has written a book about it, Global Challenge,
full of experiences such as rescuing the skipper
swept overboard during the ‘Shrieking
Sixties’ off Cape Horn. Comparatively speaking, the Five Nations
ought to be plain sailing.
“Trainer takes different
track”
The Times, 19 June 1995
By Barry Pickthall
Humphrey Walters, managing director of the MaST management training organisation,
looks down at one of the BT Global Challenge yachts from the controls of his
helicopter. Mr Walters is preparing to take part in a 30,000-mile round-the-world
race on board one of the yachts. He said: “I am particularly interested
in high performance. I want to put myself in a tough environment to remind myself
of the dynamics of success and failure.
“Flying high tests managerial
mettle”
The
Sunday Times, 12 June 1994
By Godfrey Golzen
A 10-minute lesson in how to fly a helicopter brought senior managers
a valuable reminder of the problems faced by their colleagues.
When the top executives of KP foods, the international food giant, got
together for the noon break during a management development programme, they were
unexpectedly faced with a challenge outside their normal experience.
On other days they had relaxed by playing doubles at tennis or badminton.
This time, Humphrey Walters, managing director of Management and Skills
Training (MaST), which was running the course, told them they would
each be given a 10-minute lesson on how to fly a helicopter, then be
taken up in it and asked to take over…
Walters notes: “Senior managers can be quite impatient with those
who aren’t as quick on the uptake as they are. The idea of suddenly
asking them to fly a helicopter is what gives them the experience of
what it’s like to learn a new skill – one which may not
come naturally. It reintroduced them to a feeling they may have forgotten – the
uncertainty and the fears of failure that come with tackling a task
you’ve never done before.
“Woodward advice for Robinson”
SportingLife.com, 4
October 2004
Sir Clive Woodward insists it will be vital
for Andy Robinson, his successor as England coach, to think creatively
and embrace influences
from outside the sporting arena if he is to move the team forward.
"Sport can learn a lot from business. A coach could go
and get a top business guru to come in and get some ideas on
how to operate more effectively in managing people," Woodward
told the Press Association.
"The England team has got to change now, it has to move
forward very quickly and he has got to be responsible for that
change.
"Don't just look at other sports for change, look at businesses
as well."
As England coach Woodward once travelled to Israel after being
told about research being done into the characteristics of leadership,
he employed Humphrey Walters, an organisational consultant, and
carted the squad off for a session with the Royal Marines.
In his new book, 'Winning!', Woodward analyses the science behind
England's success, the obsessive attention to preparation and
the influences from outside the rugby and sporting spheres.
"Hopefully you could read the book as a businessman and
any sports coach will get something out of it," he said.
"Humphrey Walters was excellent with ideas that are so
obvious but because you have been involved in rugby all your
life you miss them.
"It is something you must not be scared the moment you
don't have that there is a danger you become very samey, and
that is a danger in sports coaching."
It is with the likes of Walters' input that Woodward believes
he can show Graham Henry, now with New Zealand, just how to prepare
a victorious Lions squad next summer.
Woodward has laid the blame for the Lions' 2001 series defeat
in Australia firmly at Henry's door, largely because of the squad's
poor off-field organisation.
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