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Podcast Short: Holding Two Truths

In this short episode of Beyond Coaching, Rob and Dustin sit in a tension that every competitive leader feels but few articulate clearly.

Winning matters. It always has. The time, preparation, and emotional investment are real. Losses still sting—even years removed from the sideline. Rob admits that as an Athletic Director, he still goes home frustrated after tough losses. Caring deeply about outcomes doesn’t disappear just because your role changes.

At the same time, some of the most meaningful Growth in athletics happens in seasons of struggle.

Hard years often expose blind spots. They reveal leadership gaps. They force Clarity around culture, accountability, and fit. Dustin reflects on a season that felt like a train wreck—high talent, poor retention, misalignment—and how that year shaped him more than the historic season that followed.

The conversation explores several key questions:

  • Can you pursue winning relentlessly while still recognizing that growth often comes through losing?

  • How do you avoid “loser talk” while still naming real progress?

  • What’s the difference between adversity that builds a program and dysfunction that erodes it?

  • Why do younger coaches sometimes struggle to bounce back from hard seasons?

  • How does emotional constancy become a competitive advantage?

They discuss the discipline of perspective—remembering you are never as good or as bad as you think you are—and why leadership in the valley often matters more than leadership on the mountaintop.

Rob Ramseyer Dr. Rob Ramseyer

Dr. Rob Ramseyer is the Co-Founder of the Impactful Coaching Project and Vice President of Athletics and Strategic Expansion at Friends University, overseeing 24 teams and serving on the President’s Cabinet. Under his leadership, the department has achieved significant success across all areas, earning him honors such as the KCAC Director of the Year and the NACDA Athletic Director of the Year. He resides in Wichita, KS, with his wife, Charlie, and their four children.

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