What sports taught me about winning in finance
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Sara Naison-Tarajano’s sports background shaped her Wall Street career at Goldman Sachs.
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Tennis and a defining moment in basketball taught her resilience and how to deal with pressure.
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Naison-Tarajano also said a growth mindset and discomfort are keys to career success in finance.
Sara Naison-Tarajano is a Goldman Sachs partner who says her rise on Wall Street was shaped by her years playing competitive sports — starting with a defining moment when she was nearly benched from her youth basketball team for being the only girl.
“We won the city championships and another team tried to kick me out of the league,” Naison-Tarajano told Business Insider, adding: “It was very confusing.”
This was pre-TikTok, but the story went viral in its own 1980s way: It was covered extensively in New York-area newspapers like The New York Times and Newsday. Naison-Tarajano said it was also featured in a three-minute Sesame Street segment.
“It was a big thing, and I was little, I was in fifth grade,” she told Business Insider.
Today, Naison-Tarajano is a partner and 26-year veteran at Goldman Sachs. She says sports have helped shape her career, which has spanned investment banking, derivatives, and now private wealth management. She talked to Business Insider about how what she learned from playing tennis and basketball, and fighting for her right to play with the boys, helped carve the path to Wall Street.
Naison-Tarajano was big into sports like tennis and basketball growing up, thanks in part to her father.
“He felt that it was really important that his daughter have confidence and strength, and he really viewed sports as an incredible outlet for that,” she said.
When Naison-Tarajano was 11 (then Naison-Phillips), she was just starting her third year playing on a basketball team made up of kids from Park Slope, Brooklyn. She happened to be the only girl on the team and in the league.
Her team had won the city championship, and when it came time to play the next season, the team they had beaten refused to play against them unless Naison-Phillips was sidelined. The opposing team’s coach told The Times he was “not sure she deserves to be playing,” and the league considered barring her, the paper reported.
Naison-Tarajano ultimately prevailed in part because her teammates refused to play without her.
“The fact that they said they wouldn’t play without me made me feel supported and gave me the confidence to stand up for myself and other girls,” Niason-Tarajano recalled in an interview with Business Insider. “My parents were also incredibly supportive and stood up for me.”

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