0

Your Cart is Empty

  • Sport Psych Wednesday with Brian Alexander - Surviving the “Cut” Mentally

    March 11, 2016 3 min read

    Each season at every level, water polo athletes are faced with a selection process that will determine

    the future of their development. At the club level, athletes are chosen to the A, B, or C age group teams.

    At the high school level, there are varsity and junior varsity team tryouts. At the collegiate level, there

    are team tryouts. At the national team level, there are selection team tryouts. Every level is essentially

    the same with different formats for team selection.

    Tryouts even continue after teams have been created as well. As teams form, coaches have decision

    points to make on who to start, who to substitute into games at appropriate times, and which players to

    reserve for practice duties only. There is always a “cut” that requires a consistently high level of

    performance and coaches approval to survive. It is always there and never goes away.

     

    Great players don’t see the “cut” they look beyond it. The problems athletes face are not the actual

    “cut” or times when the coaches select the team. The problems they face are the types of expectations

    and motivations before the tryout process even begins. There is a saying in sport psychology circles that

    rings truer for this scenario than almost every other.

    “Control the controllables!”

    Making the “cut” for team selection or playing time is a goal that does motivate and drive action for

    people to an extent, but the type of extrinsic motivation for these goals make success too superficial to

    have long lasting impact on the satisfaction the players experience. What’s next for the athlete that

    makes the team and accomplishes their goal? Another important aspect in terms of controlling what’s

    controllable is the fact that coaches and competing athletes actions are completely outside of one’s

    control. How do you measure your progress toward realizing your potential if your goal is only to make a

    team or outplay an opponent? Usually you end up playing to the level of your opponent or your coach’s

    Surviving the “cut” is about more than what your competition or coaches say or do. It’s about doing

    more than what’s expected on a constant and continual basis. Push the boundaries of your own

    potential in an effort to find out how great you can actually become in your position and on your team.

    Work-ethic, commitment in and out of the pool, determination through all challenges to excel, and

    unwavering belief in a level of potential you have never experienced will lead you through the “cut” to

    the other side as a champion. If you prepare as a champion, compete and perform as a champion, and

    then respond to results as a champion, you will continue to move forward as a champion.

    Commit to doing more than what’s expected from coaches, parents, media, and competition. Prepare to

    be at your best before tryouts and practices with performance goals focused on process. Look for the

    learning opportunities from every result and ask questions of people who have more experience and

    knowledge than you in order to listen with the intent of gaining self-awareness and being positively.

    If you are interested in one on one mental skills coaching or for team building, you can contact Brian Alexander via email: Alexander.brian3@gmail.com or at www.athletementalskillscoach.com. Also follow him on Twitter @BA_POS_MINDon Facebook (Athlete Mental Skills Coach) and LinkedIn.

    Leave a comment

    Comments will be approved before showing up.