Sunday, March 24, 2019

Lucky



You hear about lucky ducks (not lucky chicken unless it's a parody though there are probably lucky duck chickens living free range into old age). Some people have their lucky charms but I’m late for any luck of the Irish analogies. There’s also the luck of the draw that happens when cracking packs. 

Most of the time it takes a combination of a sharp eye and luck to find what I’m looking for. That’s exactly what happened when the phone caught my eye in Tuukka Rask's 2018-19 Upper Deck Compendium Blue card.

This the first in what will be a short series of hockey players with phones.  There’s no cryin’ in baseball (well maybe a little) and there’s definitely little phoning in hockey.

I started the draft for this post last December (when I included this card in my Top Reads of 2018 post). I got the card from comc (they show a stock photo and I think it's part of some e-pack program they have). Here’s the back:




A few months later I’d forgotten about my draft and I was on vacation.

I walked by a little lending library and glanced at a book called Capital Gaines Smart Things I Learned Doing Stupid Stuff. The title combined with the cover’s Dennis Quaid look-alike convinced me to grab it.


I was told Chip’s from one of those fix-it house shows. Based on his book, he seems like a solid guy. One thing stood out: “I’ve never been one to give luck much credit, but you got your hands on this book for one reason or another, so let’s just assume this happened for a reason.”

The reason was sheer luck (combined with a catchy title and photo).

Someone put the book there. Nobody else grabbed it before I took that specific path on my walk. It was just like finding a card you didn't expect to uncover.



Turns out Chip's book is more of a self-help book. Regardless of how you feel about those, there's a notable chapter about baseball that's worth reading. 

Chip was extremely focused on playing pro ball. The odds are tough and he was cut from the team in his college sophomore year. But through determination and hard work he found success elsewhere


Some people have a tough time admitting luck as if it somehow negates their hard work. Dilbert's Scott Adams believes you always discover luck in the mix when drilling into success stories

I’m in the luck + hard work = success campMy theory is luck's everywhere: your parents and their genetic make-up, whether you encounter life impacting health issues and so on.

There are players like Roberto Clemente, who was unlucky at a juncture in his life that led to his death. Others like ’75 rookies Brett and Yount were lucky to have avoided career ending injuries. Combined with their skill, the results were long, successful careers.

Some believe everything’s been decided. Maybe. But when it was decided, that’s when luck occurred (and now is when you're experiencing it). 

I'm grateful for the lucky things in my life because I've had my fair share of unlucky. Was coming across a hockey phone card and inspired by luck?

I think so.

I dropped the book off back to the library so luck could strike again for another unwitting person.