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The Extra Mile

By Ed Slezinger, 07/13/18, 10:00AM PDT

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A Message from Coach Sledge

Islanders - Go The Extra Mile!
 
The extra mile is a lonely place, but it is the only path to greatness. There are no fans lining that mile. No cameras. No bright lights. No praise.
 
Most of your teammates won’t join you there, because your dreams belong to you, not them. Many of your “friends” will tell you that you are wasting your time, because how could they know how badly you want it? They have no idea. Your coaches and parents may inspire you, but they can’t do the reps. Only you can.
 
It’s easy to say “I want to be a D1 college athlete” or “I want to be a pro,” because the “dream” is free. But the hustle, that will cost you. What are you willing to pay? How long are you willing to work, to struggle? Are you willing to experience the pain, the disappointment, and go toe-to-toe with failure? Do you have the will and mental fortitude to overcome setbacks and failure? That is what it will take to achieve your dream.
 
When Steph Curry, Point Guard Golden State Warriors, had to change his shot technique in high school, do you think his friends cared how late he stayed up practicing? How many of his friends were willing to show up an hour early to practice, or stay after, waiting for him to swish five straight free throws before calling it a day? When does your practice begin? When are you satisfied enough to call it quits for the day?
 
When two time world and Olympic Decathlon Champion Ashton Eaton takes to the track, he isn’t the favorite because he was born an elite track star (just look at his first pole vault). He made a decision. He decided to become a decathlete and he refuses to let anyone work harder than him. Are you outworking everyone you compete against?
 
Michael Phelps could have stopped at 19 gold medals, but he wanted more, and he wanted them bad enough to be at the pool day after day at 4am. “I can’t remember the last day I didn’t train,” he said. Can you?
 
No one would have blamed Heather Dorniden for quitting when she fell flat on her face with one lap to go in the 2008 Big10 - 600m Championship, but she got back up and finished. She hadn’t run so many extra miles simply to give up. Have you?
 
Greatness require sacrifice.  You must embrace the struggle.  You embrace it when it makes you smile.  You must embrace it equally when it makes you cry. You must embrace it when it tears your heart out, and makes you question everything you’ve done and given.  You must embrace it because you are on that lonely journey to the top.
 
The struggle is a privilege. You have the privilege of working your tail off when everyone else has called it a day. You are in the stadium. You are on the field. You are spending yourself on a worthy cause. At best, you may become a champion. At worst, said President Teddy Roosevelt, “At least you will fail while daring greatly, so your place will never be among those timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.”
 
Go the extra mile. Be great, even in defeat!  Islanders 2018, go the extra mile, overcome adversity and failure, achieve greatness. You have it in you!!