Pat Riley On The Remarkable Power of Getting 1% Better: Step 1: Taking Their Number
Pat Riley On The Remarkable Power of Getting 1% Better: Step 1: Taking Their Number
Pat Riley On The Remarkable Power of Getting 1% Better: Step 1: Taking Their Number
1% Better
This article is an excerpt from Atomic Habits, my New York Times bestselling book.
In 1986, the Los Angeles Lakers had one of the most talented basketball teams ever assembled, but
they are rarely remembered that way. The team started the 1985–1986 NBA season with an astounding
29–5 record. “The pundits were saying that we might be the best team in the history of basketball,”
head coach Pat Riley said after the season. Surprisingly, the Lakers stumbled in the 1986 playoffs and
suffered a season-ending defeat in the Western Conference Finals. The “best team in the history of
basketball” didn’t even play for the NBA championship.
After that blow, Riley was tired of hearing about how much talent his players had and about how much
promise his team held. He didn’t want to see flashes of brilliance followed by a gradual fade in
performance. He wanted the Lakers to play up to their potential, night after night. In the summer of
1986, he created a plan to do exactly that, a system that he called the Career Best Effort program or
CBE.