8 05, 2015

The Ultimate Price of Our Hyper-Achievement Culture

By | May 8th, 2015|Categories: Parenting|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

A truly tragic story of Madison Holleran, a U. of Penn student and track athlete, who committed suicide in early 2014. On the surface, she was a happy, and successful young woman. But inside there was turmoil. It reminds me of Sarah Devens, another star student-athlete, this time at Dartmouth (I wonder if the fact that [...]

28 04, 2015

5 Reasons Athletes Don’t Do Mental Training

By | April 28th, 2015|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Over the many years that I've been working in the field of sport psychology, I have championed the benefits of mental training for sports to thousands of athletes. This work has ranged from talks to junior programs to ongoing consulting with individual athletes and teams. As many of you know from my dozens of articles [...]

27 04, 2015

Make Mental Training a Priority in the Off-season

By | April 27th, 2015|Categories: Ski Racing|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

This article is a challenge for you to take an essential, yet often neglected, piece of the ski racing success puzzle and make it a priority during the off-season. Let me elaborate in three ways. First, I speak to racers, coaches, and parents around world about the psychology of ski racing. Whenever I get the [...]

31 03, 2015

Even the Best Struggle Mentally

By | March 31st, 2015|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Here's a great article about Rafael Nadal in which he describes struggling mentally this year on the pro tennis tour. Roger Federer also discusses his mental difficulties. For most people, it's hard to imagine that such such gifted and experienced athletes who have had so much success in their careers could, for example, lose confidence and get [...]

20 01, 2015

Compete Like You Practice or Practice Like You Compete?

By | January 20th, 2015|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |1 Comment

One of the first questions that I ask athletes and coaches I work with is: Should you compete like you practice or practice like you compete? By far, the most frequent response is: You should compete like you practice. This answer seems perfectly reasonable if you think about it. When you practice, you’re relaxed, feel [...]

1 12, 2014

3 Goals for Playing Your Best on Game Day

By | December 1st, 2014|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , |2 Comments

Defining success in sports is a difficult task. When I ask most athletes and coaches how they define success, it is usually in terms of results, whether wins, rankings, or times. Though, admittedly, results are the ultimate determinant of success, I have found that a preoccupation with them can both interfere with achieving those results [...]

24 11, 2014

3 Goals for Skiing Your Best on Race Day

By | November 24th, 2014|Categories: Ski Racing|Tags: , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Defining success in ski racing is a difficult task. When I ask most racers and coaches how they define success, it is usually in terms of results, whether place, points, rankings, or qualifying quotas. Though, admittedly, results are the ultimate determinant of success, I have found that a preoccupation with them can both interfere with achieving those results and can produce feelings of disappointment and frustration (or worse). One problem is that focusing on results can actually prevent you from getting the results you want for two reasons. First, if you’re focusing on results before a race, you’re not focusing on what you need to do to get those results. Second, focusing on results, specifically, the possibility of bad results, is what causes you to get nervous before races which will only hurt your skiing. Another problem with ski racing is that your efforts don’t always lead directly to the results you want because you can’t control everything in a race. In other words, “S&%# Happens” in ski racing that can derail your best efforts. To help demonstrate this point, let’s compare success and failure in our sport to success and failure in school. Let’s say you have an exam coming up. If you study hard and are well prepared, assuming the test is fair, the chances of your doing well are very high, say, over 95%. Why? Because there are few external variables that can prevent you from doing well.

21 11, 2014

3 Essential Mindsets for Athletic Success

By | November 21st, 2014|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

In this article, I’m going to talk about “mindset,” which I consider to be an essential contributor to athletic success and a mental area that has only come to light in my work with elite athletes during the past three years. This topic is also where professional and Olympic athletes offer wonderful examples in which [...]

17 10, 2014

Be the Best Ski Racing Parent You Can Be: A Review

By | October 17th, 2014|Categories: Ski Racing|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , |0 Comments

Hey parents, are you ready for another roller coaster ride called a winter of ski racing ? Racers aren’t the only members of the ski racing community who experience the intense ups and downs of our sport; their parents do too. The fact is that it’s hard being a ski racing parent. You invest your heart, [...]

10 08, 2014

Why Isn’t Mental Training Treated the Same as Physical and Technical Training?

By | August 10th, 2014|Categories: Sports|Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , |3 Comments

Not long ago, I completed what has turned out to be a three-week international tour of sport psychology. During my trips, I have worked with athletes and coaches from the U.S., Australia, Sweden, Switzerland, and Russia in Argentina, California, Oregon, and Switzerland. One question that has emerged during my travels involves the role of mental preparation in athletic development. But before I get to that question, let me provide some back story. Whenever I speak to athletes and coaches, I ask them how important the mind is to sport success. With few exceptions, the response is that the mind is as or more important than the physical and technical side of sports. I am obviously biased given my work in sport psychology, so I won’t take a position on which I believe is more important. But I will say that the mind is an essential piece of the sport performance puzzle. Consider the top-10 athletes, male or female, in any sport. Are they all gifted? Yes. Are they all in exceptional physical condition? Yes. Are they all technically sound? Yes. Do they all have the best equipment? Yes. So, on game day, what separates the best from those who are close, but can’t quite get to the top? All of these other factors being equal, it must be what goes on in their minds.