Why winners win newsweek




















What is it that separates winners from losers? The pat answer is that, in sports at least, winners simply have certain things that mortals don't—as one might conclude from watching the suddenly indefatigable Novak Djokovic, the Wimbledon and Australian Open champion, who has lost exactly once in his first 49 matches this year. But fitness doesn't tell the full story.

They interfere with the raw expression of talent less. And to do that, first they win the war against fear, against doubt, against insecurity—which are no minor victories. Defined that way, winning becomes translatable into areas beyond the physical: chess, spelling bees, the corporate world, even combat. You can't go forever down that road, of course.

The breadth of our colloquial definition for winning —the fact that we use the same word for being handed an Oscar as for successfully prosecuting a war—means that there is no single gene for victory across all fields, no cerebral on-off switch that turns also-rans into champions.

But neuroscientists, psychologists, and other researchers are beginning to better understand the highly interdisciplinary concept of winning, finding surprising links between brain chemistry, social theory, and even economics, which together give new insight into why some people come out on top again and again. One area being disrupted relates to dominance, a decent laboratory stand-in for winning. Scientists have long thought that dominance is largely determined by testosterone: the more you have, the more likely you are to prevail, and not just on the playing field.

Testosterone is desirable in the boardroom, in the courthouse, and in other scenarios that reward risk and bold action. Twenty-five years ago, scientists proved the hormone's role in winning streaks: a win gives you a jolt of T, which gives you an edge in your next competition, which gives you more T, and so on, in a virtuous sex-hormone feedback loop.

Last August, though, researchers at the University of Texas and Columbia found that testosterone is helpful only when regulated by small amounts of another hormone called cortisol.

What's more, for those with a lot of cortisol in their blood, high levels of testosterone may actually impede winning. Across Columbia's campus, professors at the business school are putting this dominance science into practice, swabbing saliva samples from M. Each subject is then given a prescription to get the two steroids into ideal balance: eat whole grains and cut out coffee to lower the cortisol; hit the weight room and take vitamin B to raise testosterone.

Just before a crucial confrontation, standing in a certain "power pose" can calibrate the hormones temporarily. The ideal leader, says Prof. Paul Ingram, is "calm, but with an urge towards dominance.

It's true for both men and women, and in theory it all adds up to winning a contract, winning a promotion, winning the quarter. New science like this illuminates winners of the past. It's a peek inside the bloodstream of perhaps the most thrilling competitor to ever eviscerate his opponents at a pensive task: Bobby Fischer, the chess champion. There was something of a sadism to the way he approached it. As the match approached, Fischer hemmed and hawed and would not show up, issuing increasingly bizarre demands and exasperating his foe before play had even begun.

Fischer always, always opened with his king's pawn; it was the only configuration Spassky had prepared for, and in this uncharted territory the Russian was helpless. The find proves that the media, in collusion with the Clinton campaign, have planned for a Hillary victory all along. The above-displayed image is real. However, this image does not prove that the media was rigging the election for Hillary Clinton.

In anticipation of the election outcome, two Newsweek -branded special commemorative publication covers were readied — one featuring Donald Trump and the other Hillary Clinton:. But Topix made a business decision to only print the Clinton version ahead of time given that she is almost universally favored to win the election. If Trump wins, the Clinton copies will be trashed and the Trump version will be rushed to the printing presses — a simple business calculation, Romando said.

Those locker room T-shirts are the ones you saw the Patriots wearing after the Super Bowl, and that you can buy right away at the stadium. The winning numbers were 5, 14, 24, 25 and 27 with the Mega Ball 14 and the Megaplier 3x, according to the Mega Millions website.

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