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" ... Don Mattingly’s four-year tenure as manager of the Marlins could be coming to an end at the conclusion of the season. With an expiring contract given to him by the previous ownership group, look for the new leadership of the Marlins to explore different options as they embark upon the next phase of rebuilding. In Mattingly’s case, this could be the last time we see him managing a major league ball club. There is a clear preference in hiring analytical wunderkinds who are outstanding communicators and intimately understand the psyche of modern-day ball players. ... "
" ... Like the definition of entrepreneur, the common definition of innovation is increasingly connected to the high-tech world — those Silicon Valley wunderkinds. ... "
" ... Most of the stories we tell tend to be stories about people at young ages who are wunderkinds. It’s the most popular story to tell. But it only makes everyone else feel more alone. And more of a failure. <laughs.> ... "
" ... We got a lot of things right out of the gate. First, timing. A generation ago, the Bill Gates and Michael Dell types were the exception. But over the past decade, wunderkinds became the rule: Digital natives had the vision and tools to disrupt pretty much every industry, and funders lined up to write billion-dollar checks to entrepreneurs not yet old enough to rent a car. Second, our process enabled us to evaluate thousands of nominees in an apples-to-apples way, and by bringing in legends from each industry as outside judges, the list carried extra validity. It clicked. ... "
" ... When I was a grad student at the University of Minnesota, a cadre of brilliant young macroeconomists was searching for evidence that the 25% unemployment rate during the Great Depression was a phantom. In the ultra-rational models of these economic wunderkinds, involuntary unemployment couldn't happen. The problem must have been that people weren't willing to work at then-prevailing wages. New York Times columnist Paul Krugman calls this theory the "Great Vacation." ... "