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The Failures Aren’t the Price of the Success, They’re the Source of It

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I've missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I've lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I've been trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I've failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.

Michael Jordan

Source Verification:  ✅ VERIFIED PRIMARY — Direct Secondary Source
Citation: Nike. (1997). Michael Jordan’s Failure Commercial
Reference Link: Direct Video Link

  • Quote By: Michael Jordan
  • Author Type: Athletes & Sports Icons
  • Quote Theme: Success Quotes

The number of times you’ve been wrong is not a record against you, it’s the only way you find out what actually works.

WHAT THIS MEANS

A missed shot looks like proof that something is missing in the player. It isn’t a measurement of the player at all. It’s a measurement of one attempt, taken under real conditions, that didn’t land. Counting misses the way you’d count a flaw in a person turns ordinary information into a verdict.

The number 9,000 is not a confession. It’s a record of how many times someone kept testing what works against what doesn’t.

WHERE THIS SHOWS UP

  • The ball leaves your hand and you already know before it hits the rim. It’s off. Around you the gym goes quiet for half a second, that small dead air where everyone clocks the miss at the same time you do. You jog back down the court like nothing happened, because that’s what you’re supposed to do, but your jaw is tight.
  • At home that night you find the box score from the game. Your name, your minutes, your shooting line: 4 for 15. You stare at the 15 longer than the 4. You could fold the paper up and put it away. Instead you leave it on the counter, face up, where you’ll see it again in the morning.
  • Someone brings it up the next day anyway. A reporter, or a teammate, or just someone in the hallway who saw the box score too. They ask about the misses like they’re waiting for you to explain them away. You don’t. You say you’ll take the same shot again tomorrow if you’re open, and you mean it, and the number doesn’t shrink, it just stops being the only thing in the room.

RECOGNITION MOMENTS

#MissingTheShotEveryoneSawComing
#ReplayingTheLossAtNight
#AddingUpYourFailedAttempts

RECOGNITION STATES

#AshamedOfTheTally
#QuestioningIfYoureCutOut

DEEPEN THE PERSPECTIVE

Where Your Scoreboard Actually Lives
Ever wonder if you’re measuring progress by the wrong scoreboard entirely? “Happiness depends upon ourselves.” — ARISTOTLE

The Part Nobody Tallies
Those missed shots were quietly building something the scoreboard never showed. “It’s not about achieving the goal. It’s about who you have to become in order to achieve the goal. The juice is in the growth.” — TONY ROBBINS

A Quiet Challenge To The Count
What if tallying every past failure is actually getting in your way? “Remember that neither the future nor the past pains thee, but only the present…” — MARCUS AURELIUS

THE HIDDEN ASSUMPTION

Failure Disqualifies You. Most people read a long list of losses as evidence that someone isn’t built for the thing they keep failing at, when the list is actually evidence of how long they kept showing up to find out.

SHIFT

Some players stop taking the shot after enough misses pile up. Others keep taking it, and the only difference between them shows up in what happens after the ball misses the rim, not in whether it goes in.

WHAT THIS IS NOT SAYING

This isn’t a claim that failing often is itself a hidden sign of talent, as if the losses were secretly proof you were good all along. The misses didn’t make him good. Testing each miss against what he tried next is what did that. It’s an easy misread because the quote lists the number first and the success second, so the size of the number starts to feel like the cause.

 LIMITS & OBJECTIONS

 Not every loss is a data point worth collecting. Some are warnings telling you to stop.

That objection holds. A string of failures can mean the approach is wrong, or the situation itself is the problem, not your execution of it.

Treating every setback as fuel becomes a failure state when it turns into a reason to stay somewhere that’s actually causing harm: a job, a relationship, a path that keeps producing the same injury with no new information attached to it.

A player who keeps missing the same shot from the same spot, season after season, with no change in form or setup, isn’t collecting data either. He’s just repeating the same test and calling the result a coincidence each time.

USE THIS QUOTE FOR

#PostLossTeamHuddle
#SalesCallDebrief
#PerformanceReviewFollowingASetback
#AthleteRecruitingPitch 

 

If the losses are not the price of the wins but the source of them, the math behind every success story might run backward from how it's usually told.

Nine thousand missed shots. Almost three hundred losses. Twenty-six times with the game on the line and the ball in his hands, and twenty-six times it didn’t go in. Then: success. The story makes sense the way a coach’s pep talk makes sense. He kept missing. He kept going. Eventually the misses ran out and what was left was a champion.

It’s a satisfying shape because it matches how effort is supposed to work. You try, you fail, you adjust, you try again, and somewhere in that repetition the failures get burned off like fuel. What’s left is a champion. Under this reading, the 9,000 missed shots are the toll Jordan paid to reach six championships. A cost, survived on the way to something else.  The number is large because greatness is hard, and hard things demand a large toll.

This is how almost everyone is taught to think about skill. There’s a quiet ledger running underneath any pursuit: hours put in on one side, competence earned on the other. Failure sits on the input side of that ledger, success on the output side, and the relationship between them is supposed to be subtraction. You lose the failure. You keep the success. The 26 missed game-winners are not supposed to still be part of the player who eventually made one.

But the ledger has a gap in it. If failure is just the price paid for success, then a player with fewer failures should reach the same success faster, more efficiently, with less waste. Nobody who has actually built a skill believes this. The relationship between the missed shots and the made ones isn’t subtraction. Something else is happening in that gap, and it’s not visible from the “price paid” framing at all.

Look at what the misses actually contained. A missed shot under playoff pressure tells you something a made shot never will: exactly how your hands behave when the stakes are real, exactly which part of your mechanics breaks down first, exactly what the defender does in the final half-second. A made shot only confirms that something worked. A missed shot is the only place that information about what didn’t work, and why, actually lives.

Twenty-six missed game-winners are not twenty-six failed attempts at the same shot. They’re twenty-six different versions of pressure, each one logged somewhere the next attempt can draw on. The 300 losses carry the same data at a larger scale: entire games’ worth of defensive matchups and fourth-quarter execution, failing in slightly different configurations each time.

The Information Only Loss Can Produce

A win can’t teach you this. When the shot goes in, the feedback stops. The body and the decision that produced the result get stamped “correct,” and the question of what would have happened under slightly different pressure never gets asked. Success closes the inquiry; failure is the only event that forces it to stay open. This is why a player who wins everything early sometimes plateaus, while a player who loses constantly in their formative years sometimes becomes unusually hard to beat later: the second player was forced to keep generating information the first player’s early success let them skip.

This is also why the assumption is so hard to see as an assumption in the first place. From inside a skilled pursuit, failure doesn’t feel like data. It feels like proof that you’re not good enough yet. The 9,000 misses don’t announce themselves as input; they announce themselves as discouragement. The frame and the feeling point in opposite directions, and the feeling is louder.

So the belief that failure is merely the cost of success isn’t a mistake anyone is making carelessly. It’s the natural conclusion of what failure feels like from inside the moment it’s happening, before there’s any later success to look back from.

It persists for a reason beyond just how it feels, too. Treating failure as a tolerable cost is what makes it possible to keep showing up after a loss at all. If every missed shot were processed in real time as essential information rather than as a personal shortfall, that would require a kind of detachment most people don’t have access to mid-bad-night. The cost-framing is protective: it lets you write off the miss, file it under “part of the price,” and walk back onto the court tomorrow without relitigating your worth as a player. Nobody could function moving through 9,000 misses if each one demanded to be metabolized as a lesson in real time. 

Where The Protection Turns Against Itself

But that same protective story is also what keeps the information trapped. If a missed shot is filed away as merely the toll for eventual success, there’s no reason to go back and extract what it actually contained. The cost-framing lets you survive the loss, but it also lets you skip the part where the loss teaches you anything specific. The player who treats every miss as just dues being paid can keep playing indefinitely without ever closing the gap between what went wrong and what to do differently.

Meanwhile the player whose 9,000 misses are doing something other than accumulating as cost ends up somewhere different. Not because they failed less because failure was doing something other than just costing them something.

This is the part the original story skips. It isn’t that Jordan succeeded despite 9,000 misses. The relationship has to be tighter than “despite.” Something about how those misses functioned is bound up in why the makes started arriving at the rate they did.

A version of his career with only 3,000 misses isn’t a faster route to the same six championships. It’s a different player, one who reached whatever ceiling exists short of where he ended up. The volume of failure wasn’t separate from the outcome. It was feeding it.

The accurate version isn’t that success happens despite a record of failure. It’s that the record of failure is the mechanism producing the record of success, because failure is the only event in a skilled pursuit that generates information a win cannot. The two numbers in the quote aren’t opposing columns on a ledger. They’re the same process, measured at two different points: the raw material going in, and what eventually comes out the other side once enough of it has accumulated. Nine thousand misses don’t get subtracted from the six championships. They’re not separable from them at all.

This changes what a long losing stretch in any pursuit actually means while it’s happening. Someone deep in a string of failures, watching the ratio tilt further away from success than they expected, is not watching evidence that they’re falling behind some hidden schedule where the failures should already have burned off. They’re watching the only process that was ever going to produce the eventual result, running at the only speed it runs. The 300 losses weren’t an obstacle Jordan’s championships happened in spite of. They were where the championships were actually being built, one piece of information at a time, long before there was anything to call success yet.

GO DEEPER

Why Getting Knocked Down Is The Job
Turns out the struggle itself isn’t a warning sign, it’s just what mastering anything feels like.

The Move Nobody Else Makes For You
Showing up repeatedly only counts if you’re the one doing the showing up, not waiting on it.

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