He has indeed created a great personnel system:
https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/4482291/2023/05/16/harrison-butker-chiefs-nfl-faith/ (not sure if this is behind a paywall as it is essentially an Athletic article)
Some quotes from the article:
- “I’m trying to find the smallest things that make a difference.”
- He eats five gluten-free meals a day, spaced every three hours
- Butker even eats a meal of steak and rice at halftime of his games. When the Chiefs are traveling, the team chef, through their operations director, tells the hotel chef what Butker wants to eat and when. The hotel chef then prepares meal packets for the kicker, including one for halftime and another for the plane ride home.
- Butker is a favorite of Chiefs strength coaches because of his dedication to the weight room. His form is so perfect, he can be their example.
- He loves watching tape, too, which also makes him an outlier among his kicking peers. “I’ve never heard of a kicker who watches so much tape,” Toub says.
- Butker watches so much that the Chiefs’ video crew has assigned him his own cubicle in their department. He sits at a desk working the remotes for two monitors while Winchester and punter/holder Tommy Townsend watch from a couch behind him.
- At practices and games, he sometimes packs a Thermapen to check the air temperature, which can affect the PSI of footballs.
- “He’s probably the hardest-working kid I’ve ever had the opportunity to play with,” Winchester says. “He just never stops working on his craft, and he is so in-depth and detailed. I’ve never been around anybody like him."
- Butker was an industrial engineering major in college and is an industrial engineer of a kicker.
Every elite player I've ever seen and read about in every sport (Peyton Manning, Tom Brady, Lebron James, Michael Jordan, Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Greg Maddux, Shohei Ohtani, etc) has had a system, and all were willing to go above and beyond their peers to gain that extra half percent for an advantage. It's not a secret what it takes to become good or great, it's the willingness to sacrifice your time and do the work that separates the great ones. I can imagine it gets even more difficult once you have millions in your bank account and don't really need to work as hard.
Kudos to Butker. He's one of those we always say, "Wait until he doesn't have to focus on school and GT's classes...he's going to blossom." He was VERY good at GT, now he's an elite level kicker at the NFL level.