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Slumpbusting
- A Coaches Guide
STEP
ONE
RULE OUT THE PHYSICAL
Before you assume that a slump is mental, you have to rule out the physical
or technical factors that might be causing it. If I'm not hitting, is there
something wrong with my stance, grip or swing mechanics. If I consistently
commit errors is there something skill-wise wrong with my fielding
technique. Don't assume you have a head case until you're sure the physical
part of performance is ruled out!
STEP TWO
IS THE SLUMP RELATED TO SOMETHING GOING ON OFF THE FIELD? Sometimes ball
players get into a slump because they are preoccupied or distracted by
family or personal problems/pressures. Sometimes a slump is one of the only
ways an athlete can cope with too many performance pressures. The athlete
may not even be aware that this is the case as the problem is going on just
out of consciousness. Also, as a coach, you might want to take a look at
your own behavior in relation to the athlete. Sometimes slumps are directly
related to how the coach deals with the ball player.
STEP THREE
DEVELOP AWARENESS OF THE SLUMP AS A DIRECT RESULT OF "FAULTY MENTAL
STRATEGIES"
Slumps are most often self-maintained by what the athlete says to
him/herself Just before an at-bat or play in the field. As a coach you want
to find out how the athlete sets themselves up by discovering their
preperformance self-talk, imagery and focus.
STEP FOUR
NORMALIZE AND REFRAME THE SLUMP
Slumps and failure in this sport are normal. To be successful you must learn
to deal with and master failure. A bad game or two does not cause the slump.
The slump is a direct result of what the player says to themselves about
their failures. Help your athletes reframe the meaning of those bad games as
what they need to do to have the good ones. Failure gets you closer to
success if you learn from them and then forget them.
STEP FIVE
CHALLENGE FAULTY BELIEFS
The slumping ballplayer has stopped believing in themselves. If left
unchecked these negative beliefs will continue to keep them stunk. As a
coach you have to help the athlete restore this belief. Catch them doing
things right. Help them remember their successes (the slumping athlete
develops "amnesia" for their good games). Confront their
negativity and challenge their can't. Let them know in as many ways as
possible that you haven't lost your belief in them.
STEP SIX
RESTORE CORRECTIVE IMAGERY
A slumping athlete has a tendency to always "see" what he/she
doesn't want to happen instead of what they want to have happen. Help your
athletes' "change the channel" and begin to focus on making that
play, getting that hit instead on what they are afraid of. The more internal
practice of the right images, the more chance the ball player will have of
quickly snapping out of the performance difficulties.
STEP SEVEN
RESTORE PROPER CONCENTRATION
Yogi Berra once said, "A full mind is an empty bat." The slumping
athlete thinks too much and focuses in his/her head. When you're on, you're
not thinking and instead, you're on automatic, focusing on the ball and just
reacting. It's the faulty focus that's the main cause of the slump and that
prevents the ball player from just trusting and letting the hits happen.
Being too conscious causes the athlete to try too hard. Help refocus the
athlete and distract their conscious mind from the at-bat or play.
STEP EIGHT
TEACH THE "HERE & NOW" RULE
When you play well you're mentally in the "here & now". The
slumping ball player is in the past, thinking about mistakes and failures,
or in the future entertaining the "what-ifs". Or they are in the
wrong mental place, worrying about you and their playing time or focusing on
the umps or rowdy fans. Teach your athletes how to recognize when they leave
the "here and now" of the performance, and to quickly get
themselves back.
STEP NINE
REPROGRAM THOUGHTS/DEVELOP SELF-CONFIDENCE
The slumping athlete maintains a lot of inner negativity. They are
continually down on themselves. Their negativity is part of the overall
problem. Help them work on changing their "mental diet". Help get
them off all that "mental junk food" ("I stink", "I
always", "I'll never" etc.). Do not collude with their
negativity. Remember G.I.G.O., Garbage In, Garbage Out.
STEP TEN
TEACH STRESS CONTROL TECHNIQUES
The ballplayers who gets themselves stuck in a slump have trouble
staying calm in the clutch. Their nervousness gets in their way of relaxing
and performing to their potential. Teach them how to control their breathing
and muscle tension and you'll help them snap that slump. STEP ELEVEN ACT AS
IF Have your athletes who are stuck, "act as if" they are not.
Acting as if has to do with how the athlete carries him/herself. It refers
to their posture. Watch a ball player who's slumping and you'll see it in
their face, shoulders, head and step. As a "fall back position"
teach your athletes to act as if by carrying themselves like a winner on the
outside, regardless of how they may feel on the inside.
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