You Can’t Control Luck, But You Can Increase The Odds

The Accidental Blogger Departmental Memo
Issue Date: April 09, 2025
Memo No.: 042
Subject:  You Can’t Control Luck, But You Can Increase The Odds
Read Time: 5 minutes

Baseball season is here again, and I can’t help but feel a wave of nostalgia.

Some of my best childhood memories were made with a game on in the background—whether it was backyard wiffle ball, crackerjacks, or just the sound of the announcers humming in the house. 

Baseball wasn’t just a sport—it was a rhythm. 

A reminder that things take time. 

That even the best hitters strike out sometimes. 

And that showing up, day after day, matters.

And then there’s Nolan Ryan.

A legend. A machine. A man who pitched for 27 seasons and still had enough in the tank at 46 years old to do this

Ventura charging Nolan Ryan

Yep, that’s 46-year-old Nolan Ryan putting 26-year-old Robin Ventura in a headlock like it was just another Tuesday.

💥 Half his age, twice the fire.

The man didn’t just have skill—he had stamina, strategy, and systems that kept him in the game longer than almost anyone else.

And that? Is exactly what creators need to build their own legacy.

📋 Weekly Highlights

Tip of the Week: Focus on becoming consistent, not viral.

 Legacy is built in the reps.

So what can Nolan’s training teach us as creators?

Let’s dig in.
 
1. The Work Happens Between the Starts

Nolan Ryan once said:

“I’ve always believed that if you put in the work, the results will come.”

And he meant it. He didn’t just roll up on game day and hope for the best—he trained like a machine on the off days.

As a creator? Your blog post is just the surface. The real magic happens in your systems:

Planning what you’ll write

Batching when you’ve got momentum

Outlining so you’re not staring at a blinking cursor

Repurposing so one post does the heavy lifting for days

This is your behind-the-scenes training. Don’t skip leg day.

2. Play the Long Game

Nolan Ryan pitched for 27 seasons.

He didn’t burn out, he evolved. He adjusted his routine, leaned into smart recovery, and kept going—well into his 40s.

That’s your cue:

Don’t build content for a season—build it for the long haul

Let your strategy grow with you

Rest when you need to. Then come back and hit publish again

Spoiler: sustainable > sprinting.

3. Take Big Swings

Nolan Ryan had the most strikeouts in MLB history—and also the most walks.

Translation: he took the shot, even if it didn’t always land. And that’s why he owns the records.

Every post, podcast, or offer won’t be a homerun—and that’s okay.

The act of showing up is the win.

The takeaway: Stop waiting for perfect. Get more at-bats. It increases your luck surface… That’s how you build momentum.

💡 From Draft to Digital

🏋️‍♀️ 1. Start With Your Blog—That’s Your Mound

If Nolan Ryan had a game to play, he showed up on the pitcher’s mound. Every. Time.

For you? That’s your blog.

It’s not just a place to “post content”—it’s where your ideas take root.

It’s searchable, sharable, and strategic.

Before you turn a blog post into a Reel or a thread, you need the foundation.

Your blog is the starting line—not an afterthought.

Master your blog first.

Everything else flows from there.

📝 2. Create a Simple Repeatable Workflow

This doesn’t need to be fancy. Just consistent.

Try something like:

Monday: Outline

Tuesday: Draft

Wednesday: Edit + publish

Thursday: Repurpose

Friday: Share + engage

Adjust for your schedule, but commit to a rhythm you can maintain.

🔁 3. Build a Mini Flywheel From One Post

Once published, run it through your rep circuit:

Turn the intro into a tweet or hook

Turn the conclusion into a caption or CTA

Clip a section for a Reel

Pull a quote for an email

Save it to your vault for later updates

Each post becomes a training session that feeds future content.

⚙️ 4. Track What’s Working (and Tweak the Rest)

Don’t build blind. After a month or two, review:

What was easiest to create?

What actually resonated?

Where did you feel friction?

Use that insight to fine-tune your process—not overhaul it. You’re building endurance, not chasing perfection.

Remember: Systems don’t start perfect. They’re shaped by showing up.

Your first few reps will be messy. But messy reps count. Keep going.

🎉 Happy Accidents Worth Sharing


At 44, Nolan Ryan threw his seventh no-hitter.

It wasn’t luck—it was the result of years of building stamina, strength, and belief.

So if you think you’re too late, too tired, or too unsure… just remember: sometimes your greatest win comes after your biggest doubt.

🌀 How Creators Can Relate To Nolan Ryan’s Flywheel

What Creators can learn from Nolan Ryan

📌 The Creator Takeaway

Nolan Ryan didn’t just throw heat—he built a career that kept going because he had the discipline, systems, and mindset to outlast the hype.

If you’re a creator, here’s the real talk:

You don’t need to go viral.

You don’t need to be everywhere.

You just need a rhythm that works, content with purpose, and the guts to keep evolving.

Nolan didn’t build a legacy by sprinting. He built it by showing up, adapting, and letting his work speak for itself.

So take the swing.

Trust the reps.

And don’t count yourself out just because your game doesn’t look like everyone else’s.

📬 Your Assignment

Run a “Training Day Audit” this week:

Do you have a system behind your content—or just vibes and caffeine?

Do you set aside time for creative warm-ups (drafting, journaling, idea capture)?

Are you building endurance—or hoping for last-minute inspiration to save the day?

🎨 Creative Corner

You don’t need to have it all figured out. You just need to start moving.

Nolan Ryan didn’t throw no-hitters every game—he built a legacy one pitch at a time.

Same goes for your content.

One post. One idea. One action.

That’s how you get through the messy middle and into momentum.

So if this week feels a little wobbly, remember: motion beats magic.

You’re not behind—you’re building.

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