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Motiv Girl
12-29-2010, 10:23 PM
One of the more common and frustrating problems for athletes and their coaches is to consistently perform better in practice than competitions. What causes this and what can be done to turn it around?The "practice athlete" as they sometimes call themselves are relaxed, confident and aggressive in practice. They have access to all of their skills and show great potential when their performance doesn't seem to count in their minds. However, the minute you stick them in a pressured situation, someone else takes over their body, completely changes their execution, messes up their mechanics and timing and totally ruins their performance.

On the surface it's pretty obvious where these problems come from. In practice, there's nothing at stake, you don't have to get it completely right and everyone tends to be far more relaxed. The "practice athlete" is always much more relaxed in practice than in competitions. Not only that, but he/she tends to not be thinking very much during the performance. As a consequence, the practice athlete 's focus of concentration is on all of the right things.



However, all of this changes once the game starts. The athlete suddenly attaches far too much importance to the outcome of the performance and tells him/herself that "now it really counts and I can't make mistakes!" As a consequence, the athlete begins to experience much too much physical and mental tension, most of it revolving around the outcome of the competition. He/she begins to think way too much and, in the process, loses control of his/her focus of concentration.

So it seems that the "practice athlete" needs to learn how to relax more under pressure. This is certainly true, but not at the heart of the matter. What really needs to change is the athlete's pre-and during performance focus of concentration. The athlete needs to learn to maintain the very same focus of concentration in games that he/she naturally maintains in practice. More specifically, the athlete needs to keep focused on the process of the performance (exactly what he/she is doing during practice) instead of on the outcome, (whether I'll win, lose or mess-up).

It's concentration which is the real culprit here. Focusing on outcome going into a competition is what generates the nervousness and over thinking that always disrupts optimum performance. Most bowlers focus on the process in practice rather than the outcome which is why they tend to do better there. So the trick is to teach the "practice athlete" how to maintain the very same concentration in games that they utilize in practice.

richc
12-31-2010, 02:08 PM
Excellent commentary!

There are a couple of articles on relaxing and reducing bowling tension in the BowlVersity section of bowlingball.com.

There have been many articles and books written to discuss these matters, and some authors are not bowling coaches but rather PHD's with sports "psych." backgrounds. Never can read and learn enough about self improvement.

One good shot at a time! A saying which has been around for years - decades. We hear it in golf and in bowling. Keys are: make a good start to one's approach, a good finish, and between focus on a selected target on the lane, on tempo, and on retaining good balance.

Keep it simple in competition. Do the hard work in practice and in competition, think only about the task in front of you and not about every little fundamental detail rehearsed in practice.

Trust is a must. Allow muscle memory to guide shot making. Confident players in competition focus on smart lane play and making good adjustments as they change lanes or change pairs of lanes. Select the best reacting ball to match the lane pattern, choose your target, and then focus on hitting the target and "make one good shot at a time."

You may find other comments sharing other ideas for relaxation? Most contributing comments make sense and may offer ideas which help other players? Prioritize and perform!

The Practice Athlete is half way home to being a Great Athlete - just need to trust the skills developed over time while in competition. The more times one performs in competition, the more familiar the competition pressures become and the better the athlete can cope.

Bowl in as many tournaments as possible and challenge yourself against the best competition you can find. You will find your performances will improve if you strive for becoming the best you can be.

Hope these comments help? They are intended in good faith.

HunterRunsIt
11-28-2011, 10:14 PM
Thank you for the article Im going to apply this at my competition on thursday and see how I preform. Im just going to relax and roll the ball.

OldBayAlex
01-03-2012, 09:58 PM
From Parker Bohn's Book, Bowling: How to Master the Game he mentions that instead of viewing nerves or pressure as a hurdle, he views it as a reward for the hard work and consistency he's put in his game.