Maintaining
Competitive Focus
Part 1: Developing Your Focus Muscles |
FOCUS. It’s one of the critical ingredients
in athletic success. Professional
athletes with whom I have spoken who made the transition from college sports
have all said pretty much the same thing – “At this (professional) level you
can’t afford to lose focus for a moment. In college you could always get back
into things, but in the pros you lose your focus and your opponent is going to
take advantage of it.”
against Kentucky back in 1992 – without which Duke would not have advanced to the Final Four … Duke would not have then won the National Championship for a second consecutive year … and Laettner might not have been named the Player of the Year.
Flash back three years to Laettner’s
freshman season. Already a blue chip
player and past McDonald’s All American, Laettner and his team were up against
the University of
Arizona Wildcats , led by
Laettner’s future NBA colleague Sean Elliot, playing in front of thousands in Madison Square Garden
in New York City ,
and a national TV audience of millions. It was a close game. Arizona
was up by two with seconds to go when Laettner was fouled. He stepped up to the foul line with a chance
to tie the score. He bounced the ball a
couple of times, then readied for the shot.
It closed in on the rim … and then (slow motion here if this was a
movie!!!) rimmed out. Laettner took his second shot … and missed that one as well.
What was going through Laettner’s mind as
he stood there on the foul line. “If I
make these shots we can still pull of the win…”??? “I MUST make these shot…” ??? “I CANNOT let my teammates down…”??? Whatever it was, Laettner’s focus was likely
NOT on the task of sinking those free throws, but on the consequences of his
succeeding or failing
Chances are – in one variation or another –
you’ve been where Christian Laettner was.
In this series – we will be looking at some
of the typical challenges to your focus, exactly what focus consists of, and
how you can stay focused – or regain focus when you have become distracted.
WHAT IS THE KEY
TO STAYING FOCUSED? A huge part of my conversations with bigs ends up on this
subject, as they tell me of the things that take them OUT of their focus. Ninety per cent (or more) of the time, their concern
is to regain focus when they have has lost it.
One of the things I most commonly hear from
athletes is that when they make a mistake, have a bad shot, etc, they get
annoyed and it takes them out of their focus. Just the other day, I received an
email from a post player telling me about a recent event when a missed
defensive assignment led to shouts from his coach on the sidelines, leading to
a missed shot on the other end of the court as he was focusing on his coach’s
words (and thoughts of being benched).
Anytime an athlete makes a mistake or
misses an assignment, it is always going to present a challenge to his
focus. Like anything else, an athlete’s
focus will go up and down in the course of a game. So most of the time, the
problem is to re-set your focus when it is starting to slip.
This has been the case with a tennis player
I have been working with, the number two player on his school’s roster. Every time a shot went long or into the net,
he would become annoyed. He would allow that feeling to stay with him, eating away
at his confidence, so that he was thinking about almost any- thing except
having his head in the next point.
While making fewer mistakes is one way to
deal with this situation, there is no such thing as an athlete who NEVER makes
a mistake, so that is – at best – a very partial solution. Furthermore, an athlete who plays to avoid
making mistakes is not likely to improve; his play will often be tentative,
rarely bold or aggressive.
Consider the attitude that helped tennis
player Lindsay Davenport to win the 1998 U.S. Open:
I didn’t want to just be out there
getting the ball
back in. I was going to go all out - even if I made
60 unforced errors. I didn’t want to leave
anything on the court.
back in. I was going to go all out - even if I made
60 unforced errors. I didn’t want to leave
anything on the court.
One of the things that I had been working
on with this athlete was how to keep things simple – both on and off the
court. For example, he found that if,
during practice, he decided to give his attention to one part of his game
exclusively, he was less concerned with making mistakes in other aspects. So if, for example, he was focusing on his
backhand, or coming to the net, then he was more “forgiving” of himself with
respect to mistakes made in other parts of his game. Furthermore, he found that by focusing on one
aspect of his game, he would find himself making improvements in that aspect,
and would notice a “spillover” effect so that the incremental confidence he
began to feel would lead to stronger play and fewer mistakes in other parts of
his game in that same practice.
So I asked him to complete the following
sentence: “I don’t care if I make mistakes as long as…”
Here is what he came up with (after I told
him that a good answer would not be “as long as my opponent makes more
mistakes!”)… “I don’t care if I make mistakes as long as I can keep my focus.”
In other words, a mistake does not need to
be an occasion to get off track.
If anything I suggested to him that making
a mistake could be an opportunity to actually strengthen his focus “muscles”,
in a way that would not be likely if he were not making any mistakes.
Consider, after all, how we build muscle in
the gym. When we lift weights, we are
actually breaking down muscle tissue.
Afterwards, when the tissue repairs itself, it comes back stronger than
before. It is, after all, called
“resistance” training. If we think of
focus in the same way, then when we subject our focus to resistance (such as in
making mistakes, becoming annoyed and “losing” our focus – but then working to
quickly regain it) we are building the “focus muscles,” making them stronger
than before. The key, then, is in the
“working to quickly regain it”.
This involves consciously deciding to put
all non-relevant thoughts out of mind.
Being annoyed at a mistake is understandable; we all experience
that. But the more quickly you tell
yourself to re-focus, the more effective you will be in competition.
Consider the example given by skier Bonnie
St. John Deane, silver medal winner in the 1984 Paralympics slalom. She noted that
In my first run of
the slalom I was ahead, but then I fell down and had to get up to complete the
race. In fact, the woman who won the
gold medal also fell down. I knew from previous races that I could ski faster
than her. But what won the gold medal
for her was that she got up faster than I did after falling down. I learned that everybody falls down – but
Olympic athletes get up faster, and gold medalists get up the fastest of all.
Substitute “regain focus” for “getting up”,
and you get the point.
NBA Hall of Famer Karl Malone once said
that if you’re not willing to make mistakes you are never really going to
improve as a player. The more you are willing to develop an
attitude that instead of letting the mistakes get the best of you, they can
become opportunities to improve your ability to stay focused – the more
competitive you are likely to become.
"The more I focus, the less I worry about pressure"
-- Nick Price, winner of the 1994 U.S. Open and PGA Championship
(c) 2017 by Dr. Mitch Smith
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