Excellence is the gradual result of always striving to do better.
Meaning of the quote
To be excellent at something, you need to keep trying your best and working hard to improve. It takes time and practice, but if you never give up and always strive to do better, you can gradually become better and better at whatever you're trying to do.
About Pat Riley
Pat Riley is a legendary figure in the NBA, known for his success as a player, coach, and executive. He has won five NBA championships as a head coach, including four with the Los Angeles Lakers’ Showtime era in the 1980s and one with the Miami Heat in 2006. Riley is the first North American sports figure to win a championship in various roles, and he is regarded as one of the greatest NBA figures of all time.
More quotes from Pat Riley
You can never have enough talent.
American basketball player, coach and executive
People who create 20% of the results will begin believing they deserve 80% of the rewards.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Public life is regarded as the crown of a career, and to young men it is the worthiest ambition. Politics is still the greatest and the most honorable adventure.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Each Warrior wants to leave the mark of his will, his signature, on important acts he touches. This is not the voice of ego but of the human spirit, rising up and declaring that it has something to contribute to the solution of the hardest problems, no matter how vexing!
American basketball player, coach and executive
A particular shot or way of moving the ball can be a player’s personal signature, but efficiency of performance is what wins the game for the team.
American basketball player, coach and executive
When a great team loses through complacency, it will constantly search for new and more intricate explanations to explain away defeat.
American basketball player, coach and executive
You have to defeat a great players aura more than his game.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Giving yourself permission to lose guarantees a loss.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Look for your choices, pick the best one, then go with it.
American basketball player, coach and executive
There can only be one state of mind as you approach any profound test; total concentration, a spirit of togetherness, and strength.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Great effort springs naturally from great attitude.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Being a part of success is more important than being personally indispensable.
American basketball player, coach and executive
You have no choices about how you lose, but you do have a choice about how you come back and prepare to win again.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Excellence is the gradual result of always striving to do better.
American basketball player, coach and executive
If you have a positive attitude and constantly strive to give your best effort, eventually you will overcome your immediate problems and find you are ready for greater challenges.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Don’t let other people tell you what you want.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Management must speak with one voice. When it doesn’t management itself becomes a peripheral opponent to the team’s mission.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Being ready isn’t enough; you have to be prepared for a promotion or any other significant change.
American basketball player, coach and executive
A champion needs a motivation above and beyond winning.
American basketball player, coach and executive
There’s always the motivation of wanting to win. Everybody has that. But a champion needs, in his attitude, a motivation above and beyond winning.
American basketball player, coach and executive
To have long term success as a coach or in any position of leadership, you have to be obsessed in some way.
American basketball player, coach and executive
Discipline is not a nasty word.
American basketball player, coach and executive
There’s no such thing as coulda, shoulda, or woulda. If you shoulda and coulda, you woulda done it.
American basketball player, coach and executive
The Ten Commandments were not a suggestion.
American basketball player, coach and executive