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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.Meyers-Briggs is pseudoscience, no doubt. But there's definitely a lot to think about in relation to it. I think INTJ makes a lot of sense for both coaches and GMs.
Generally, people who aren't "N" types are completely unwilling to adapt or accept new information. These are the people who worship tradition as time leaves them behind--Jeff Fisher.
Obviously, you want to be a Thinker rather than a Feeler as a coach. J vs P is a matter of organization, and introverts probably have more time to spend honing their craft, so the other parts of it check out as well.
It's not like astrology where you can read any result and figure how it applies to you. It can certainly work that way if you approach it stupidly without understanding the meaning of each trait, but otherwise, it's a cool way of categorizing the way people think, even if it's not scientfic.
Since we're all saying our types: INFJ
I've taken the damn thing so many times I can't count. I usually come out INTJ, but have come out INFJ and INF...S? Is Sensing one of the choices where the "Judging" in "J" goes?
A lot of questions about whether you end up in the kitchen at parties, that sort of thing... Feh. I don't want to go to the goddam party in the first place. You're asking a guy who's in his 50s and is barely gregarious enough to qualify as a shut-in where he wants to be in a party... anyway.
Insofar as the personality inventory makes sense... well, it would make a lot of sense for an INTJ to be a good Belichick-style coach. A "player's coach" would probably be an "E"... that happy but not so often successful group beloved by players because he feel like he is one of them and understands their challenges in getting the job done... I also suppose we could say the "Feeling" **** McPhereson displayed some personality inventory tendencies when he went around hugging every member of a losing team (and those guys were probably like "Stranger Danger! Bad Touch! Get this guy off me!")
So I can agree with the premise but want to reserve my right to say that Meyers Briggs is far more limited in its applications than personnel departments everywhere say.
"It describes a person who tends to turn inward mentally. Introverts sometimes avoid large groups of people, feeling more energized by time alone."
That's the definition of an introvert. So someone who seeks to be in, and speak in from of large groups of people as a way of life are pretty much by definition not introverts unless you twist the definition of introvert so far that it means the same as extroverts.
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