Source: Jeffrey Beall.

Who doesn't love watching a master of his craft do his thing on the biggest stage?

Watching Peyton Manning carve up the New England defense reminded me of MJ in his prime driving to the basket and hungry to take the big shot. Or, Buffet buying companies.

There's always something to be learned from these virtuosos.

Greatness
The art and science of being great at something, whether it's football or investing, involves transferrable skills. It's part talent (what you're born with) and part busting your ass (what you do with it). And does anybody question how hard Manning has worked and how focused he's been in pursuit of his profession, being an NFL quarterback?

I'll have to admit, I was never much of a Manning fan when he played college ball. In fact, as University of Georgia alum, I hated him.

Respecting greatness
But if you value hard work, putting in the hours, and becoming the best at what you do, you've got to love this guy. He works as hard now as he ever did, and he makes those around him better. Just ask the Denver Broncos wide receiving corps.

In the midst of many brash talking, show-me-the-money, resting-on-your-laurels players in the NFL, it's nice to find a guy who gets it. He made the most of his college experience for four years, got drafted No. 1, played like a champion at Indy, faced a career-threatening injury, worked his way back, was let go by the team he loved and played for his whole career, kept working, got beat by a "Hail Mary" pass in last year's playoffs, had a historic year in 2013, and now gets to the Super Bowl by going 32 for 43, with 400 yards, two touchdowns, and no picks.

Hello, greatness!

Learning from greatness
And that talent and work ethic is how many great companies operate. So when you buy investments, buy companies, not just great short-term numbers or hype.

Here's a great lesson from Manning that applies to businesses and investments: Sometimes No. 1 draft picks and market leaders do outperform everybody else.

Yes, Manning was drafted No. 1. So were JaMarcus Russell, David Carr, and Tim Couch. But here's the point. He's still No. 1, the best quarterback in the NFL, and he's 37 years old. That's 15 years less one, when he was out with the neck injury.

High-performing stocks
So, which stocks have performed as well as Manning over the long haul? Fellow Fool contributor John Maxfield wrote an article in September of 2013, which ranked the top three performers since 1980 based on compound annual growth rate (CAGR). Some of these may surprise you.

  • Eaton Vance: 25.2%
  • The Gap: (Old Navy, Banana Republic) 24%
  • L Brands: (Victoria's Secret, Bath and Body Works) 22.9%

Of course, Wal-Mart (WMT 1.02%) and Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A 0.99%) also made the high-performance list at sixth and 15th, respectively.

Great businesses, like great quarterbacks, don't perform well for a just a few years, but for their entire careers. So in a sense, Eaton Vance has been the Peyton Manning of the investment world since 1980.

A better comparison
No, actually the comparison is more apt for Wal-Mart or Berkshire, since we expected those companies to be on the list, and they were. Just like Manning, picked No. 1, who remains -- 16 years later -- the best quarterback in the League.

The best signal caller in the investing world, Warren Buffett, the "Oracle of Omaha," has been on the top of his game for 50-plus years at Berkshire.

So when you consider investments, think in terms of whole careers, decades and multi-year periods. Don't get so focused on the "next big thing" or the "one-year wonders" that you miss the proven winners, like Wal-Mart and Berkshire, that do it year-in and year-out, decade after decade.