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Tim Ferriss · 2026-01-14 · 1h 44m

Steve Young — From Super Bowl MVP to Managing Billions

NFL MVP Steve Young on conquering victimhood and anxiety, mastering transitions, and building a 30-year private equity career.

Steve Young — From Super Bowl MVP to Managing Billions
The guest

Steve Young — Hall of Fame NFL quarterback and 1990s league MVP for the San Francisco 49ers, who earned a law degree at BYU during off-seasons and went on to co-found and run the private equity firm HGGC for nearly 30 years.

The gist

Steve Young sits down with Tim Ferriss for a far-ranging conversation focused on the psychological, emotional, and spiritual sides of performance rather than football tactics. He recounts the pivotal plane ride with author Stephen Covey that pulled him out of depression by exposing how he had cast himself as a victim, and the later diagnosis of undiagnosed childhood separation anxiety that reframed his lifelong struggles. Young explains what separates great quarterbacks from good ones (processing speed and a genetic calm under adrenaline), how he physically relearned to throw a football at BYU, and why he pursued a law degree as his father's '80% plan.' The back half explores his unlikely transition into Silicon Valley venture and private equity through relationships with figures like Doug Leone and Larry Sonsini, his 30-year partnership with Rich Lawson at HGGC, and the universal cost of staying stuck in transition. He closes on faith, his book The Law of Love, and the idea that purely transactional relationships inevitably rot.

Big reveals

  • Young describes hitting a depressive low mid-season with the 49ers, flying to Salt Lake City to see his brother, and telling him he didn't know how he would make it to Christmas.
  • On the flight back, Young happened to sit next to author Stephen Covey, who after listening told him the 49ers platform might be the greatest he'd ever seen and challenged him to stop playing the victim and 'be about it.'
  • The off-season after that conversation, Young was named NFL MVP, which he frames as proof of the transformation from victimhood to authorship.
  • Years later, after sleepless nights, Young pulled aside team physician Dr. Reggie (James Clint/Reggie), who teared up and revealed his own clinical anxiety; Young was then tested and scored 9 of 10 on an assessment for undiagnosed childhood separation anxiety as an adult.
  • Young reveals he had to physically relearn how to throw a football at BYU, discovering he was spinning the ball out of his hand rather than using arm tension, an unlock he compares to discovering fire.
  • A BYU coach told Young 'I don't coach lefties' and moved him to defense as a safety; a new coach, Ted Tolner, fixed his mechanics and within two weeks of spring ball he won the quarterback job.
  • Young explains how he and a 'lunch group' of 49ers traded locker-room access to Sand Hill Road venture capitalists like Doug Leone in exchange for venture investing access during the dot-com boom.
  • Young details how HGGC got its name: originally Huntsman Gay Global Capital, but John Huntsman never joined after a 2008 Leon Black/Apollo deal collapsed into a billion-dollar lawsuit, and Bob Gay later left for full-time church service.

Things worth remembering

  • Young pursued a law degree at BYU over seven off-seasons, framed by his father as the '80% plan' versus the under-1% dream of being a pro quarterback.
  • During his law studies, Young's team went to three Super Bowls; he would jump on a Delta plane after the parade down Market Street and be in class the next morning facing the Socratic method.
  • Young's great-great-grandfather was Brigham Young.
  • Young and partner Rich Lawson have been partners since 1997, nearly 30 years, with Lawson leaving a Morgan Stanley banking job to become CEO of their startup Found.com.
  • Young argues college performance is a famously poor predictor of NFL quarterback success because of the leap in speed and athleticism that overwhelms most players' processing.
  • Young still personally signs Steve Young jerseys and helmets, paid in memorabilia, to fund golf tournaments for his Forever Young Foundation.
  • Roger Staubach, whose poster hung on young Young's wall, became a friend and advised him to 'run away' from football, saying the game will never leave you but you need to leave it.
  • Young describes 'boy scout theology' as performative, merit-badge religion that produces good works but cannot sustain durable relationships because it is transactional.
  • Young describes The Law of Love (his book, sent to Tim by Greg McKeown of Essentialism) as the universal principle that to see the full measure of something you must lose self-interest.
  • Coach Bill Walsh told the 49ers every year that they would win because of shared experiences and an element of love for each other, which Young credits as foundational.

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