Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Rox in Their Heads

Well, the best team won the World Series.

Maybe they had more talent, maybe not.

They certainly had better energy.

I don't mean they were more pumped up, more Richard
Simmons-like energy. I mean they had better focus and flow
and resilience and flexibility and power -- energy-wise.

As I've said, the keys to success include: 1) Be aware of
your emotions 2) Be able to marshall your emotions in
service of your goal 3) Be able to recognize and relate
effectively to the emotions of your teammates.

The Red Sox did a great job with those.

I like to say that E-motion means Energy in motion.

When you feel emotions, energy is flowing through your
system. Is that good? Bad?

It depends. (When you deal in psychology, the answer to
almost every question is "it depends.)

It depends on the three items above -- can you recognize
them, use them in service of your goal (as opposed to being
used BY them or hijacked by them), and relate effectively
to the emotions and individual styles of your teammates?

If so, you're a good "emotional athlete."

So the Red Sox were superior Emotional Athletes.

They could take a punch (in the form of a 3 or 2 run HR by
Colorado), they could hold their center/hold their power as
the Colorado fans went wild trying to break them.

The Rox fans' lightning bolts simply bounced off the force
field the Bosox created around them.

As a mental game coach, it was a delight to see, although
as fan I would have enjoyed seeing things come back to
Fenway.

Everything I saw and read about the Red Sox was right on
from a mental/emotional game standpoint.

The whole Manny thing ("It's not the end of the world") was
perfect.

That upset a lot of people, but that's our culture. It
upset a lot of people that would have played like the
Indians when the chips were down -- tight, like, well, it
WAS the end of the world.

The Bosox kept saying in the interviews "we're playing one
game, one pitch at a time." Everyone KNOWS they should do
that, but very few DO it.

That's why when the players actually do it, they use those
words. They can't think of any other way to say it because
that's REALLY what they're doing.

Few players, and even fewer TEAMS actually play one pitch
at a time.

Lastly, all the quotes in the paper talk about how Francona
"created an atmosphere where we were free to play loose,"
or something to that effect.

Coaching is largely about creating an environment where
players are freed up to play great, as opposed to playing
to avoid mistakes.

So my hat off to the Red Sox for a well deserved
championship.

Tom
Dr. Tom Hanson

p.s. Want that great feeling after a season like you saw in
the Boston uniforms? Choose your weapon here to get
started: http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/Products.html

p.s. Please be sure to read an email from me tomorrow -- I
may have a very short term offer for you to get the best
"how to create great individual and team energy so you can
win your own championship" program for baseball and
softball I've ever seen.

p.p.s. http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/bootcamp.html

Friday, October 26, 2007

Audio Tips for Playing with Confidence

I got a call today from Bob -- a softball player who's really gotten into the mental game.

I recorded the call because I wanted to be able to pass on what he's learned from applying stuff from Confidence Conditioning for Baseball.

I wasn't disappointed, and am happy to let you listen in here...

http://www.baseballconfidence.com/baseball_audio.html

The Rockies need to up their game this weekend. I have no doubt they can, given what they've accomplished in the last month.

But, if you know any Rockies, pass on this recording of Bob, it's got some gems.

Tom
Dr. Tom Hanson

p.s. You can get the program he's talking about for no charge if you join the Baseball Confidence Gym for just one month. The CD for November will be an in-depth interview with Kent Stock, the coach depicted in the new move, "The Final Season." It's being called the "Hoosiers" of baseball. Great, dramatic story. He'll tell us the inside scoop on how he did it.

http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/Join.html

Thursday, October 18, 2007

The Emotional Athlete

It is just me, or are the sports pages dripping a lot of
emotion this morning?

Start with C.C. Sabathia: "unexpectedly ineffective" is how
the page describes him in two play off games.

His manager, Eric Wedge, says: "With C.C. I know that he
feels like he needs to do more, and hopefully he won't feel
like that tonight. All he needs to do is just go out there
and be himself and pitch the way he's capable."

Have you ever seen a player TRY TOO HARD at your level of
play?

Then there's Manny Ramirez.

"We're just here to have fun and play the games and that's
it," said the all-time post-season HR leader (meaning, he
plays well and often in the post-season).

Reacting to questions about his home plate reaction to his
HR the other night:

"I'm just trying to go have fun. If somebody strikes me out
and shows me up, that's part of the game, I love that. I
like that. I like to compete and when people strike me out
and show me up, it's all good. It's not a hard feeling."

Then there was FSU football coach Bobby Bowden saying that
his 1987 decision to go for two after a late touchdown. A
choice that prooved costly. "I think about it, but it
doesn't haunt me," he says.

And another football player talking about how his "gut was
tied in knots."

---------- SIDEBAR

Did you notice that Leo Mazzone was a genius at Atlanta as
pitching coach, and got fired from Baltimore?

Something also tells me there's more than one person out
there that could be successful as the Yankees manager.

END SIDEBAR ----------

Sports doesn't demand that you just be a physical athlete.

It demands that you be an "emotional athlete."

By that I mean you have emotional strength, emotional
flexibility, emotional endurance, emotional balance,
emotional resilience, and emotional intelligence.

You need to be able to recognize your own emotions, channel
them into service of your goals, and, to be a good
teammate, be aware of others' emotions.

That's what enables you to "just be yourself" and "have
fun" no matter how big the stage.

Homework for today... Simply notice the role emotions play
in your decisions and actions today.

One of my teachers, Julio Olalla, defines emotion as a
"predisposition for action."

We read about actions in the paper, and watch them on
SportsCenter, but emotions are actually leading the way.

Be on the lookout for them today.

Tom
Dr. Tom Hanson

p.s. I'm in the process of completing the manual for my
Mental Training Camp. The manual will be an All-Star team
of "emotional athleticism" exercises. It will be a
step-by-step for turning you or your players into emotional
all-stars.

Most players (and coaches and parents)are emotionally out
of shape.

As a result, they can't take a punch (the aren't
emotionally resilient), they lack flexibility (so they pull
emotional hamstrings), they're not balanced (so they try
too hard in big situations).

Remember when Don Zimmer charged Pedro? Pedro was
emotionally balanced, Zim wasn't.

Face plant for Zim.

Don't get your face planted. Learn to be an emotional
all-star at this camp.

http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/bootcamp.html

p.p.s. At least get started with one of the programs at
http://www.BaseballConfidence.com/Products.html