
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On this episode of #RiseAndGrind, Glenn Lundy kicks off a brand-new series called “Game Day Plan”—and it starts with a simple observation: the playing field is often equal, but the results aren’t. From freezing temps in Lexington (real feel -11) to watching his kids shred a hill on baking sheets, Glenn uses the chaos of winter as the perfect setup for the real lesson: instability destroys performance.
Using the NFL as the metaphor, Glenn breaks down why elite teams win year after year without having “the best player” at every position—because they don’t hope to win… they engineer the win. The difference between average and elite isn’t talent, hustle, or ambition. It’s structured execution of a plan every single day.
If you’ve been living off a wish list, this episode is your wake-up call: discipline creates freedom, planning creates power, and greatness must be designed. Glenn even shares what his personal daily game plan looks like—and why the Morning 5 is more than motivation… it’s a play call.
Because you can’t drift into a championship.
By gm3xOn this episode of #RiseAndGrind, Glenn Lundy kicks off a brand-new series called “Game Day Plan”—and it starts with a simple observation: the playing field is often equal, but the results aren’t. From freezing temps in Lexington (real feel -11) to watching his kids shred a hill on baking sheets, Glenn uses the chaos of winter as the perfect setup for the real lesson: instability destroys performance.
Using the NFL as the metaphor, Glenn breaks down why elite teams win year after year without having “the best player” at every position—because they don’t hope to win… they engineer the win. The difference between average and elite isn’t talent, hustle, or ambition. It’s structured execution of a plan every single day.
If you’ve been living off a wish list, this episode is your wake-up call: discipline creates freedom, planning creates power, and greatness must be designed. Glenn even shares what his personal daily game plan looks like—and why the Morning 5 is more than motivation… it’s a play call.
Because you can’t drift into a championship.