I remember reading a story about someone in the military talking about leadership. He said that during training, he was never the guy who won the races. He was never the quickest or strongest, yet he was made the leader for the group by the people in charge. He said he questioned them about it thinking that he didn't earn it because he was never the best at anything. He wondered how others would look up to him or how the soldiers that always came in 1st would feel about being overlooked. They told him that a good leader isn't the guy who always comes in 1st, but the guy who tries to help the people coming in last.
I think this philosophy applies to sports as well. McDavid and Draisaitl are guys that always want to be first in the race no matter what, team be damned. McDavid would rather score 150 points playing with the best players, rather than helping the less talented players double their production. You can see it by the look of disdain and stink eyes they give other on the team when they get scored on.
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"A pessimist thinks things can't get any worse. An optimist knows they can."
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