I recently finished reading “Moneyball”, the national bestselling book about baseball by Michael Lewis.  I am always amazed when I mention the book to my baseball fan friends.  It is always, “Oh, that’s the Billy Beane book.”  They seem to think the book was written by Billy Beane, the visionary general manager of the Oakland A’s or, if not written by him, was written about him.

The fact is that “Moneyball” is no more about Billy Beane than “The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire” is about Nero or “The DaVinci Code” is about Jesus Christ.  Major characters, yes.  But not the real focus of the story.

The fact is that the real story of “Moneyball” is captured in its subtitle, “The art of winning an unfair game”.  At its essence, it’s about finding ways to succeed when challenged by circumstances.

To set the scene, “Moneyball” positions baseball as an “unfair game” because Major League Baseball teams, dependent on the size of their market, have vastly different resources (budgets to spend on players’ salaries).  Small market teams like the A’s are constrained to very limited salaries while big market teams like the Yankees can spend almost whatever they want to acquire the best and most expensive players.  How then can any small market team even hope to succeed when faced with this, seemingly overwhelming challenge?

“Moneyball” proposes that it can be done - indeed was done by the A’s under the direction of Billy Beane – by adopting Challenger Brand behavior.

What was this Challenger Brand behavior specifically demonstrated in “Moneyball”?

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