Playing in the Box: A Practical Guide for Helping Athletes Develop Their Mental Game
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About this ebook
The truth is, physical training is only one part of any athlete's game. The mental game is just as important, yet in young athletes, mindset is almost never a focus in development and practice—and it's costing them results.
In Playing in the Box, renowned sports psychologist Dr. Pete Temple describes how young athletes can use simple mental exercises to relax, improve, and achieve their goals on and off the field or court. If you've ever struggled in competition, Dr. Temple's practical approach will help you develop confidence, drive, and resilience, so you can bounce back from setbacks, relax when the game gets tense, and reach your full potential.
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Book preview
Playing in the Box - Dr. Pete Temple
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cover.jpg]>
Copyright © 2019 Pete Temple
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5445-1278-5
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My parents, Dick and Nancy, for putting a loving foundation under my feet.
My sister, Patti, for leading the way and being my pathfinder.
My children, Mady and Pace, for inspiring me and making life fun.
My wife and best friend, Paige, for believing in me and making life beautiful.
This book would not exist if not for you.
Acknowledgments:
My coaches, who gave me a passion for sports.
My teammates, who shared that passion with me.
My athletes, who keep that passion alive.
Philippians 4:13
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Contents
Introduction: The Unbalanced Athlete
1. The Complete Athlete
2. Confidence
3. Mindset
4. Emotions
5. Resilience
6. Drive
7. The Mental Toolbox
Worksheets
1. Self-Awareness
2. Confidence Equation
3. Confidence Equation
4. Say It, Believe It, Be It!
5. Personal Game Plan
6. Performance Breathing
7. Resilience Technique
8. Resilience Technique
9. Drive: Getting Where You Want to Go
10. Drive: Getting Where You Want to Go
11. Intentional Practice
12. Mental Imagery
13. Performance Playlists
14. Mental and Emotional Stamina
15. Play Grounded
Postscript: To Parents and Coaches
About the Author
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Introduction
1. The Unbalanced Athlete
When I played Little League back in the late seventies, we rode our bikes to practice, or our parents dropped us off at the town baseball field. A few parents would hang around and watch, but most either left to go to work or run errands.
Our coach was usually a young guy who’d played baseball in high school, and he had all the expertise we needed. Most of us knew how to catch and hit, and the coach would show us how to backhand a grounder or pivot at second base for a double play. He would hit grounders for the infielders and fly balls for the outfielders, and that was practice. We played twelve to fifteen games a year, and our seasons ended in early August, so families could take vacations. When fall came, we played football.
Thirty years later, my son started Little League. And I quickly realized things had changed.
I was one of five coaches for my son’s team. None of the players rode their bikes to practice because they had too much to carry, such as bats and equipment bags with their names stitched onTO them. The dads built a custom batting cage so the coaches could give regular hitting instruction. In addition, some kids had private hitting coaches and pitching coaches.
My son’s team had a fifty-game schedule. Half of those games were out of town, and some of them were out of state. Many of the parents would stay to watch practice, and the games were huge events. Families brought lawn chairs, canopies, and coolers, settling in for three hours of watching twelve-year-olds play baseball.
Not only was this atmosphere more intense than any I’d experienced as a Little Leaguer, but the kids themselves were different. They were fitter and stronger than my teammates and I had been. The kids on my son’s team hydrated
with Gatorade and ate protein bars. Their physical and technical skills were way beyond those of the twelve-year-olds of my day. Many of them had been to baseball camps, and some played year-round or for more than one team. The players’ and parents’ commitment to the sport was far more significant than it had been in my day.
During the last thirty years, other youth sports have changed in the same way. Many young swimmers train twice a day, putting in ten-thousand-meter workouts and pulling on expensive, high-tech racing suits for big meets. Young basketball players are playing year-round on travel or AAU teams, developing blinding on-court speed, and ankle-snapping crossover dribbles that make college coaches drool.
Whatever the sport, today’s young athletes’ focus on their physical and technical development has elevated the quality of their overall play. But it’s also elevated the expectations these athletes face. And that increased pressure has exposed a gaping hole in these athletes’ training: their mental preparation.
We can train high school athletes to throw a vicious slider or run a mile in under five minutes, but we don’t do enough to help them cope with the mental and emotional aspects of competing at a high level under the pressure of all their elite coaching and training. The result is that a lot of young athletes, despite their incredible skills and fitness, struggle to excel at and enjoy the sports for which they train so hard.
Three Gears Working Together
When I talk about the complete athlete,
I am referring to someone who has the highly developed physical, technical, and mental tools they need to succeed. Every successful athlete has those three gears—the physical, technical, and mental—and those three gears turn simultaneously. Each gear helps the other two turn more smoothly, and when each gear is contributing, the athletic process seems almost effortless. Think OF Steph Curry darting down an open lane to drop in a floater over his defender. He makes it look so easy.
However, if one of those gears stalls, the other two also get stuck.
As a sports psychologist, I’ve worked with dozens of young players who have excellent technical and physical skills they’ve spent years developing. Their parents have also made significant investments of time, money, and emotional support. During practice, these young athletes can fly around the court or casually line one curveball after another to the gap in center. But during games, something happens. They become tentative. They miss shots they never miss in practice. They get angry and lose confidence. They’re unsure how to react in situations they’ve dealt with hundreds of times during training.
These athletes come to me in frustration. Boys and girls. They’ve spent so much time training and practicing that their expectations of themselves and the expectations of their parents, coaches, and teammates combine to put tremendous pressure on them.
I try to help these athletes find a better balance between their three gears. Most of the time, it’s the mental gear that’s slowing them down, and I help them understand the fundamental components of that mental gear, and how they can strengthen those components. Our goal is to build strong mental mechanics—the thought processes and habits that keep their mental gear sound and reliable. When these athletes can develop their mental game in this way, their cognitive, physical, and technical gears can turn in unison again.
This book will help you develop your mental gear. You’ll learn techniques for handling pressure, controlling your emotions, moving past your mistakes, and building a frame of mind that allows you to excel at and love your sport again. A well-developed mental gear allows you to deploy your technical and physical abilities at the highest level. In addition to preparing you to compete, a finely tuned mental gear helps you overcome the inevitable challenges and setbacks that are part of sports. You want your mental gear to be just as fit, fast, and graceful as your other two gears.
If you become an Olympian or qualify for the PGA Tour, there are all kinds of mental-skill coaches available to you. That’s great. But why should you wait until you’ve already made it
to address your mental gear? Wouldn’t you prefer to start developing some of the mental skills at an earlier age, when it could do you a lot of good?
The Importance of Mental Training
I enjoy having athletes as clients. They are disciplined and motivated, and when we work on their mental game, they often see quick results. However, it wasn’t until my own kids started playing sports—and I could see just how advanced the physical and technical training had become—that I realized that society isn’t being systematic about the way we’re working with young athletes. We give them terrific tools for learning technical skills and increasing their physical abilities, but we do nothing about the mental aspects of sports. We just let them figure those out on their own. For that reason, I hope coaches and parents will also read this book and understand that our young athletes need more than training and coaching to succeed.
Yogi Berra was once quoted saying, Baseball is 90 percent mental. The other half is physical.
While Yogi’s math was faulty, his perceptions weren’t: in sports, mental preparation is paramount. Coaches and parents talk about it all the time, but most don’t fully understand it or know how to teach it. There is also a stigma around it. If your kid can’t hit a curveball, you have no qualms about hiring a hitting coach to help them. But if your kid doesn’t do well in high-pressure situations, it’s a sign of weakness. This simply isn’t the case. The athletes I work with don’t have personality flaws or suffer from psychological instability; they come to see me so they can become better, just as they go to the batting cages so their coach can fine-tune their swing.
Every athlete is different. Some players are easygoing and roll with the punches, while others are intense and blow up when they fail. I’ve worked with many athletes who have said at the outset of our work together, Dr. Pete, I know I freak out when something doesn’t go right on the court, but that’s just the way I am.
I usually tell them, Well, that’s the way you are now, but we can work at that so it’s not the way you continue to be.
Out of Sync
Pretend for a moment you’re a basketball player. Every day you practice your jump shot from the corner beyond the three-point line. An assistant coach works with you, throwing every type of pass imaginable—a perfect bounce pass one time or a hard line drive the next. It doesn’t matter. You catch, square up, elevate, and release, catch, square up, elevate, and release. Every day you work on getting two hands on the ball, squaring up to the hoop, elevating, and releasing the ball. Catch, square, elevate, release. You practice over and over until