How a Mental Reset Can Improve Your Game

What’s the best way to turn your performance around?

Every athlete experiences rough spots or slumps, which causes periods of under performance. 

Many times, those athletes get in trouble when they focus on their most recent disappointing results.

Many athletes fall into the trap of being mentally “nearsighted.” That is, they are consumed by their recent bad results or low level of play. They tend to expect their lack of production or effectiveness to continue in the near future.

For example, a baseball player who struck out three times in their last game may expect to strike out several times in the next game.

Or a soccer player who played poorly in the first half of a game may also expect to make more mistakes in the second half.

Here is the problem with negative expectations. If you expect negative results, it will change the way you approach a game. You may give up shots that you would typically take. 

If you expect negative results, you may not prepare the same way for the next game. You might play less aggressively. The result will be that you will underperform again.

How can you break out of performance ruts? The answer is to reset mentally.

A mental reset is no different than resetting your cell phone to improve the performance of your device. A smartphone can become cluttered with unwanted apps and dangerous malware. A reset to your smartphone frees up storage space, eliminates potential threats, and speeds up the processing time.

Likewise, a mental reset for athletes clears your headspace, eliminates destructive thoughts, and helps speed up your decision-making in competitions. Resetting is like a mental timeout where you can refocus and recharge.

New York Jets quarterback and 2021 first-round pick Zach Wilson has struggled with basic throws during the 2022 season. Wilson’s lack of production resulted in the Jets benching him in Week 12.

Jet’s head coach Robert Saleh believes that Wilson needs a slight reset to get his play back on track.

SALEH: “The biggest thing with Zach is the young man needs a reset. His decision-making has been fine, his practice habits have been fine. But there are some basic, fundamental things that have gotten really out of whack for him. And this is just an opportunity for him to sit back, focus on those things, find a way to reconnect to all the different things that we fell in love with during the draft process.”

Resetting can help you clear your mind, objectively evaluate your play and readjust your mindset to perform at your peak again.

Sometimes, you need a hard reset, such as taking a few days off. Other times, a soft reset during a competition will be effective.

Resetting during a competition can be implemented during a timeout or between plays. Take a deep breath, use the cue word “reset,” and refocus your attention on the present. 

You can also go back to videos of when you were performing well and see yourself performing with the same confidence and focus in your next competition.


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Relaxed Athlete

The Relaxed Athlete

You can possess all the physical talent in the world, the best equipment money can buy, and train harder or longer than anyone else in your sport or on your team, but if self-doubt enters your mind prior to competition, you simply will not realize your true potential in sports.

The Relaxed Athlete” audio and workbook program teaches you mental strategies to develop a focused and confident pregame routine for a poised and relaxed mindset. Learn how to get your mind right by overcoming pregame anxiety and worry.

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