Nicholas Sachs knows the object of the games is to throw — and roll — strikes. He knows how hitting .300 in baseball is great but rolling a 300 in bowling is greater still. He also knows that striking out or dropping it in the gutter is only a failure if you let it be. Transform that disappointment into a lesson learned? Then someday you can lead the pack developing technology to help people live their best lives. It’s what he’s done since coming to ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ, first in cardiac rhythm management and now in neuromodulation. Let’s get to know him.
You’d describe your childhood as …ÌýI grew up outside of a small town in the Midwest. We didn’t live on a farm, but we lived among them.ÌýWe spent summers riding bikes and playing baseball and winters building snow forts. Our family was also really into bowling, so we spent our weekends at the bowling alley. Each year we’d pile into the back of my parents’ station wagon and drive across the country to compete in tournaments.
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