A university coach recently described to me how a parent had invited a
mental peak performance instructor to work with four select athletes.
The coach was concerned that the seminar had been closed to the majority
of the team, and wondered what impact this would have on the team.
Based
on what he described, I told him that any program directed solely at
young athletes would have a marginal impact. Most of the information
would be lost in about 48 hours, simply because the most important
component of education was missing for the athletes—the coaches.
Only
working with the young athletes is generally ineffective. In my nearly
20 years of experience in this field, I’ve been frustrated by this time
and again. The reason is twofold:
1) Coaches need to reinforce the concepts and strategies that are being taught, and,
2)
Coaches need to have their own set of leadership strategies that will
develop their coaching skill-set and set the tone (of the Zone.)
Elite
athletes need coaches to be working on the same page as they are. For
example, I teach athletes very effective ways of visualizing, and it is
important for the coach to reinforce it. I also teach athletes how to
overcome the effects of negative people, but experience tells me that
immature athletes find it very difficult to overcome a negative coach.
So, whether we are speaking of game skills or mental skills, coaches are
crucial in the learning process. They need to own the coaching Zone so
that they can emotionally carry the team.
Whether you are a
coach, team leader, trainer, manager or water boy, high performance
strategies can play a huge role in keeping your team in the Zone. Even
parents have been known to sit in on my high performance training
sessions, as initially encouraged by an Olympic Development Team Coach
in Pennsylvania.
As a high performance trainer, once I get an
athlete to buy into the high performance program, their change in
performance is usually amazing. And when I get the coach to buy in, the
end result is pure magic. Working with only the athlete is akin to
building a structure without a foundation. By including the coach—and
giving them specific strategies—I can develop an assistant who will
reinforce the strategies for me when my workshop is over.
So, if
you are a parent or coach seeking a high performance trainer, it is a
good policy to ask: Who will you include in the workshop? And what
strategies will we be learning to support our young athletes? Because
we want to own the Zone, too!
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