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Matt Vaartstra University of Idaho Edited from Damon Burton. MENTAL PLANS: Developing Mental Toughness Thru Systematic Planning. What is mental toughness?. DEFINING MENTAL TOUGHNESS.
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Matt Vaartstra University of Idaho Edited from Damon Burton MENTAL PLANS: Developing Mental Toughness Thru Systematic Planning
DEFININGMENTAL TOUGHNESS • Playing your best in any situation, even when you encounter problems, hassles, adversity, or failure.
When is mental toughness at a premium?
SITUATIONS DEMANDING MENTAL TOUGHNESS • Playing on the road in front of a hostile crowd • Fighting illness or injuries • Suffering through a slump or losing streak • Confronting adverse playing conditions • Against difficult opponents • During really important competitions • When the situation is critical or the game is on the line
BENEFITS OF MENTAL PLANS • Create a Flow mindset • Enhance performance quality • Increase performance consistency • Promote mental toughness to deal with adversity
CREATING & MAINTAINING THE IDEAL MINDSET In-the-Zone • confident • focus intently on key process cues • keep thoughts positive and limited • maintain poise and control arousal • execute automatically and “let it happen” Choking • diffident, stressed, and anxious • distracted or focused on outcome and product • let thoughts get negative and intrusive • lose poise and get overaroused • try to control performance and “make it happen”
THE FLOW MINDSET • Unshakably confident • Totally focused on key performance cues • Optimally aroused or “psyched up” • Motivated to push your limits • Poised with a positive mental attitude • Performing automatically
How do we create the Flow Mindset in practice and competition necessary to promote mental toughness?
CREATING MENTAL TOUGHNESS • Develop mental plans to deal with any situation • Work your plans to perform your best under any circumstances
MENTAL PLANS • Systematic mental strategies to help athletes perform their best by attaining,maintaining, and regaining a Flow Mindset.
TYPES OF MENTAL PLANS • Mental Preparation Plans • Mental Performance Plans • Mental Recovery Plans
Mental Preparation Plans attain Flow mindset Optimal Performance Mental Recovery Plans regain Flow mindset Mental Performance Plans maintain Flow mindset
PRIMARY MENTAL PLAN STRATEGY • One plan for both practice and competition • Make practice more like competition • Make competition more like practice
MENTAL PLAN OBJECTIVES • Attain a Flow Mindset (FM) • Maintain that FM during practice and competition • Regain your FM if you lose composure
What are . . . Mental Preparation Plans and how do they work?
PURPOSE OF MENTAL PREPARATION PLANS • To promote optimal performance by utilizing a structured personal mental warm-up routine that creates a Flow Mindset
What are . . . Mental Performance Plans and how do they work?
PURPOSE OF MENTAL PERFORMANCE PLANS • To promote optimal performance by helping athletes maintain their Flow Mindset throughout practice and competition to achieve their goals.
PERFORMANCE PLAN ALTERNATIVES Standard plans Backup plans
STANDARD MENTAL PERFORMANCE PLANS • Goals you want to accomplish if everything goes perfectly • Action plans for focusing on and achieving goals
BACKUP MENTAL PERFORMANCE PLANS • Plan for dealing with obstacles and roadblocks to stay in a FM and remain focused on achieving your goals • Plan for performing well by overcoming problems or things that go wrong.
3 TYPES OF MENTAL PERFORMANCE PLANS • Competitive plans or routines • Pre-performance or between-performance routines • Interactive sports
STANDARD RACE PLAN FOR 1500 METER RUNNER • Chunk 1500-meter race into 3-7 meaningful parts (e.g., start, first 400 meters, middle part of race, & last 400 meters) • Develop goals and action plans for achieving them during each race segment • Identify cue words that trigger correct focus during each race segment (e.g., race start-- “explode & push,” “let it flow!”)
PURPOSE OF PRE-PERFORMANCE ROUTINES • Pre-performance routines (PPR’s) create consistent, high-level performance on repetitive, self-paced tasks such as free throw shooting, serving in tennis or volleyball, kicking in football, or all shots in golf, archery and shooting. • PPRs promote FM, particularly focus, confidence, and trust so performance becomes better and more consistent. • Consistent pre-performance routines are effective because they allow athletes to trust their bodies and execute with greater automaticity.
PRE-PERFORMANCE ROUTINE COMPONENTS • Relax your body and remove unwanted tension • Adjust your arousal to its optimal level • Utilize a “confidence cue” • Create a positive, stress-free and productive mental attitude using a “thought cue” • Use multisensory imagery to experience successful performance • Execute automatically using “feeling cues”
TOM AMBERRY FREE THROW PRESHOT ROUTINE Step 1 – relax your arms and legs by taking several deep knee bends while clinching fists and shaking them out and set feet square to the free throw line. Step 2 – bounce the ball 3 times using the inflation hole as a focus cue while bouncing the ball deliberately. Step 3 – put your thumb in the channel with your index finger pointing at the inflation hole while boosting confidence by imagining the perfect shot.
TOM AMBERRY FREE THROW PRESHOT ROUTINE Step 4 – elbow in the shot pocket while imagining perfect touch and feel throughout the shot. Step 5 – use an initiation cue such as cocking your wrist to automatically initiate the shot by bending your knees while keeping your eyes on the target. Step 6 – repeat cue word “nothing but net.” Step 7 – execute automatically, following thru completely with “your hand in the cookie jar.”
BETWEEN-PERFORMANCE ROUTINES For sports where there are regular breaks in the action (e.g., tennis, volleyball, football, shooting, archery, field events in track, etc). Goal is to employ a 3-step process to ensure that the down time between plays, points or trials is used productively deal with previous performance and effectively prepare for upcoming performance.
3 STEPS FOR BETWEEN-PERFORMANCE ROUTINES Step 1: React – develop a composed reaction to previous good or bad performance to remain emotionally stable. Step 2: Relax and Reflect – learn from previous performance without dwelling on mistakes. Step 3: Refocus and Ready – cue a pre-performance routine to refocus on the task at hand and get ready to perform automatically.
STANDARD INTERACTIVE SPORT PERFORMANCE PLAN • Beginning of each quarter or half • End of each quarter or half • Against the press (situational) • After a run of points
BACKUP INTERACTIVE SPORT PERFORMANCE PLAN • When officials make a bad call • When opposing fans become rowdy • Following a turnover or major mistake • When the coach yells at you • When opponents get a run of 3 or more baskets
What are . . . Mental Recovery Plans and how do they work?
PURPOSE OF MENTAL RECOVERY PLANS • To help athletes regain their Flow Mindset during practice and competition when they totally lose their composure.
WHEN YOU MAY NEED MENTAL RECOVERY PLANS • Prevent hassles • Non-ideal conditions • One-sided and/or poor officiating • Physical or illegal play • Poor early performance or critical mistake • Subpar overall performance
MENTAL RECOVERY STRATEGIES • Initiation cue (e.g., clap your hands) • Relax physically • Identify new goals • Counter negative thoughts and develop a constructive perspective • Image new objectives • Trust body’s ability to execute automatically
IMPLEMENTING MENTAL PLANS • Write out each plan in as much detail as possible. • Use imagery to rehearse each plan. • Try out plan in practice and refine. • Employ plans in low-stress competition.
IMPLEMENTING MENTAL PLANS • Evaluate plans’ effectiveness to develop, maintain, and regain Flow Mindset before & during competition. • Refine and extend plans based on evaluation. 7. Continue using, evaluating and refining plans until satisfied.
EVALUATING MENTAL PLANS • Did you stay focused on your process and performance goals? • Did you develop and maintain a Flow Mindset? • “State in which you perform best rather than feel best or most comfortable”
ULTIMATE IMPACT OF FLOW MINDSET • Put mind on automatic pilot • DON’T THINK! -- JUST REACT! • Play In-The-Moment.