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danjel - Those aren't really examples of bad teamwork (where a team work together to achieve something), they're examples of someone being a bad team player (putting themself first). I'm not sure if that's due to team chemistry.
Chris is right, I think. The problem here is how we're defining chemistry. You're saying it's putting a team first (which, IMHO, has nothing to do with how much people like each other and everything to do with professionalism), and I'm saying it's about a team gaining tangible benefits from how well they get on and work together.
Last edited by emysdk; 05-16-2006 at 09:28 AM.
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