By: MR Dowling
Most leadership books talk about what great leaders do. This one asks something more uncomfortable, and more interesting: what kind of relationship does a leader need to build before any of that actually matters? Dr. Christian Marcolli has spent more than two decades inside the rooms where extraordinary performance gets made, coaching global CEOs, world-class athletes, and the kinds of professionals who already operate at a level most people only read about, and Winning Match is his most concentrated articulation yet of what he has learned in those rooms. It arrives not as a collection of management principles but as a genuine rethinking of what leadership is actually for.
Reading this book produces a specific kind of productive restlessness. You find yourself mentally reviewing your own professional relationships, the ones where something clicked and performance lifted in ways that surprised everyone, and the ones where talent was present but somehow never fully ignited, and you start to see the patterns Marcolli is describing in your own experience. That recognition is one of the most valuable things a leadership book can offer, and Winning Match delivers it consistently enough that you keep stopping to think rather than just reading forward. It engages you as a practitioner rather than a student, which makes the whole experience feel considerably more alive.
The central idea, that the most powerful thing a leader can do is create the precise conditions in which a Game Changer can become themselves fully, sounds deceptively simple until Marcolli begins unpacking what it actually requires. It requires a quality of attention that most organizational cultures actively discourage. It requires trust-building that moves at the speed of the relationship rather than the speed of the quarterly cycle. And it requires the particular kind of leadership courage that looks, from the outside, like letting go of control. Marcolli draws these themes from both the boardroom and the world of elite sport with a fluency that reflects genuine immersion in both environments, and the result is a framework that feels applicable across every context where one person is responsible for helping another reach their ceiling.
His writing style is direct and warm without ever becoming motivational in the hollow sense of that word. He writes like someone who has sat across from enough genuinely exceptional people to have stopped being impressed by surface indicators of talent and started being curious about what actually separates the people who fulfill their potential from the ones who don’t. The personal stories he shares, including his own journey from professional footballer to trusted advisor for some of the world’s most demanding leaders, give the book a texture and credibility that purely theoretical frameworks consistently lack. The foreword from Severin Lüthi, a client of Dr. Marcolli and the man who coached Roger Federer across decades of extraordinary achievement, sets the tone perfectly and earns its place as more than a celebrity endorsement.
Winning Match is the kind of leadership book that changes what you notice. After reading it you start seeing the Winning Match dynamic everywhere, in the relationships that produce remarkable things and in the ones that quietly suppress them. For any leader who has ever sensed that their most talented people had more in them than was currently coming out, this book offers not just an explanation but a genuinely actionable path forward. That combination is rarer than it should be and worth seeking out.
For leaders who have sensed that their most talented people had more to give without being able to name what was missing, Marcolli’s book puts language to that feeling and points toward a practical response.
The book is available worldwide through major online booksellers, including Amazon.











