Thursday, September 27, 2012

The Importance of An Athlete's Attitude



Having the Proper Attitude

  1. More athletes fail through faulty mental attitudes than in any other way.
  2. Attitudes are habits of thinking. You have it within your power to develop the habit of thinking thoughts that will result in a winning attitude.
  3. The foundation for the proper attitude consists of developing the habit of thinking positive thoughts.
  4. Tell yourself constantly that you can do something, and you will. Tell yourself you can’t, and your subconscious mind will find a way for you not to do it.
  5. A desire to win and a desire to prepare to win are important ingredients of a winning attitude.
  6. Before you can scale the heights of athletic greatness, you must first learn to control yourself from within. Be your own master. Control your emotions.
  7. An athlete with a good attitude is coachable. He welcomes criticism, constantly seeks to learn, and avoids criticizing his coach or teammates.
  8. True success depends on teamwork, and the winning attitude puts the good of the team ahead of anything else.
  9. Whether or not you create a winning attitude is entirely up to you—but nothing is more important to you on your road to the winner’s circle.


Jim Tressel - The Winners Manual

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Your Attitude is Your Choice



Your Attitude Is a Choice -  Attitude is not a formula we can put under a microscope and make it work every time to help us win every game. We’re still going to lose from time to time. We’re still going to get upset. But because our attitude is a choice, I think if we work hard on our objectives and practice our fundamentals, at the end of the day we’ll probably be pleased with our number of wins. That’s what I’d like to get across, because I believe it’s true.

The older our players get, the more they realize that it’s their choice what they’re feeling, what they’re thinking, and what approach they’re going to take to life. We find that the younger or less-mature players have less of a handle on their attitude and are more reactionary—they’re more susceptible to the events of their lives. They’ll say things like, “I dropped the ball and Coach hates me; I’m never getting in the game again.” Or they’ll focus on the referee and a bad call or on anything else that doesn’t go their way. In the classroom, it’s a professor they think doesn’t like football players.

Attitude is not something that comes by instinct. It has to be practiced over and over or relearned over and over. The more our players study and practice this fundamental, the more they believe they can decide how they feel. They realize they have power over their attitude. Their coach doesn’t have that power. Neither does the referee or their professor. How they approach their attitude is their choice.

We have to choose to have a good attitude. And we have to keep reminding ourselves, in the midst of newspaper publicity or things other people are saying, that we are going to be in charge of how we think. That’s a powerful principle in the life of a football player, a trash collector, a pastor, a dad, a stay-at-home mom, or someone who works in an office.

Tressel, Jim (2008-07-15). The Winners Manual

Friday, September 14, 2012

Four Characteristics of Championship Teams

Four Characteristics of Championship Teams

Championship Teams have an Agreed Upon Goal - When talking with a championship team, they have a common goal  - or a series of them.   Win this game - Win District - Win State.   There is a clear direction which dictates decisions each day, each practice and each game.  Will this help us win?  Is this what is best for tonight - does it help us to the goal of District and State?  These goals are shared by the team and coaches.    Now there are secondary individual goals - faster running, strong, more carries - sacks - fumbles recovered, etc. - but these are all secondary to the overall Team Goal.

Championship Teams Believe and By-in to Their Leadership - There must be unity between players and Coaches.   Coaches set the tone and direction, players should so believe in their Coaches that they will charge ahead.   There are going to be times when the player doesn't understand why/what the Coach has asked the team to do - but he has to decide whether to trust the Coach and follow or not.   Championship teams follow their Coaches.

Championship Teams have Unselfish Players - This goes back to a Team Goal - but is more difficult for a High School Player.   Let me explain - my son is a running back (among many other things) for his team.  As a Daddy - I think the only time he shouldn't run the ball is when they pass it to him!  (grin)  Isn't that what is best for my son?   But the question is, "Is that what is best for the Team Goal?" And that answer is undeniably NO.   So what is best for my son - is not what is best for the Team.  That is tough on me as a Daddy at times.   There are times when I have to remind myself - and my son - that it is team first - and we choose to trust the Coaches to get us to accomplish the Team Goals.   Just one more thing: Dads - don't harm your son by undermining your Coaches.  Teach them to trust his leadership.  He will be a better player and a better man in the long run for it.

Championship Teams have Each Others Backs - In every game there is going to be failure - plays that go bad.   Fumbles, missed tackles, penalties, interceptions are all part of the game.   When those happen, championship teams pick each other up.  Sure there are times when a player needs to be challenged to improve - but during the game players need to pick one another up - encourage each other - have each others backs.   That is what a team is all about.  When we win - we win together.   If we lose - we lose as a team.