Didn't have a good reason to read/listed to this one, kind of fell into my lap after listening to Success is a Choice. This one has better content in my opinion, but still sense it's a bit of a cash grab after Pitino won the national championship with Louisville -- I can't hold it against him, personally. Similar to Success is a Choice, it's mostly advice on framing your day to day life to set yourself up for success, intermixed with Rick's anecdotes about coaching and his own successes.
The four most memorable parts of my listen:
1. There's a specific section on phone usage and social media - how it is an extremely powerful distraction and largely does not provide meaning to our lives. Pitino and Crawford wrote this book in 2013 and this part sounded like it could have been written yesterday. So 10+ years on it is even more of an issue for a greater portion of the global population. This section helped me reframe my relationship with my phone for at least a couple days; the problem, as always, is making lasting change.
2. The idea of a "One-Day Contract" for each day of your life is useful and something I want to adopt. Even if it's just taking time at night to write down 2-3 of the most important things to accomplish the next day, I think that's a strong starting point to achieving satisfaction every day.
3. I surprisingly found myself getting a little emotional when Rick recounted the moment Kevin Ware broke his leg in the Elite Eight against Duke. That moment really did spur an amazing sequence of events for Louisville. I remember watching that game and the following ones in the Kappa Sig frat house. Good times.
4. The narrator on this audiobook is comically bad. I couldn't get the image of a John Goodman villain out of my head, particularly the one from O Brother, Where Art Thou? But more so than a distracting accent, I can't believe the editors allowed the butchering of pronunciations this narrator committed. John "WOO-den," "Georgie" Dieng, "LOO-EE-ville," and more. Absolutely insane. The narrator and the editors who gave the green light should be ashamed. Even Ricky P deserves some blame here. Rick should re-record both of his books himself as soon as he retires from coaching.