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Category Archives: Sports

Olympic Edition: Mastering The Pressure

25 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by Matt in Sports

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Yes, it’s that time of (two) year(s) again, the time when the world rejoices in peace and harmony, celebrating the human spirit with the grandest of all athletic competitions.  Or something like that.

Yes, it’s the Olympics.  When for two weeks I become a fanatic about badminton and speed track cycling and water polo and weight lifting and equestrian.  When we get moments like Jason Lezak’s swim on the last leg of the 4×100 Freestyle relay at the 2008 games — one of the greatest sporting events I’ve ever seen (check out Bud Greenspan’s terrific segment on it here).

Here is the famous photo of Phelps celebrating after that relay win, plus the full squad below (Lezak is on the far right):

Even though the opening ceremonies aren’t until Friday, competition in the 2012 London games began today.

Which leads me to a fascinating article I’ve been saving from last month in the Washington Post called “Michael Phelps has mastered the psychology of speed“.  I think the title is a misnomer — it’s really about the mental components that any high performing athlete (or any high performer generally) draw upon in competitive situations to handle incredible amounts of pressure.

Here’s a feel for what the athletes face:  “‘The pressure at the Olympic Games is really, really, really overwhelming, even if you are incredibly experienced,’ said Natalie Coughlin, a two-time Olympian who has won 11 Olympic medals. ‘The feeling of walking onto the pool deck, standing behind the blocks knowing the race that you’ve prepared for the last four years, or the past decade, [that] everything is going to culminate in that 58 seconds or so, it’s quite stressful.'”

Those who excel in these conditions typically have one of two mental aptitudes:

1) Offensive: “An unyielding desire for victory and superiority… This allows an athlete to use the energy surges or adrenaline produced from high-pressure situations to enhance concentration, strength and execution — rather than to produce nervousness, panic, muscle tightening or over-exertion.”

2) Defensive: “A resilience that allows an athlete to roll with unforeseen circumstances such as a bad lane assignment, [or] a poor night’s sleep.”

What makes Phelps exceptional, according to US Olympic Committee Sport Psychologist Sean McCann is that he has both.  At the 2008 games, “’I was super-laid back,’ Phelps said. ‘I was super-calm. .  . . I was obviously ready for something that nobody had ever done before . . . and nobody was going to step in my way, nobody was going to get me off track. I was . . . focused on what I needed to do, and I was going to get the job done.’”

While it may be that some people have Offensive and/or Defensive aptitudes in abundance compared to everyone else, I do think both are skills that each of us can develop with practice in order to address pressures in our lives.  We may never reach Olympian levels, but we can definitely improve — and my guess is that learning a Defensive aptitude (i.e. resilience) is easier.  Let me know if you agree/disagree.

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A Giant “Hells Yeah”

07 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by Matt in Sports

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Out of respect for my Patsy friends, I waited a day to post this. Feels good.

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Super Bowl Edition: Top 3 Questions

05 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by Matt in Sports

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Well, the big day is finally here.  A rematch of the classic Giants-Patriots Super Bowl of four years ago — hopefully the game is just as good (with the same result).

In equally big news, after culling through gobs of fan mail with questions galore, Historicalness.com has selected three of the most popular reader inquiries and set our crack research team to neither sleep nor eat until they’ve come back with answers.  Thankfully for us (and for them) their work is complete and the Q&A can begin.

Question #1: Which team should I root for?

Well, this is Historicalness.com, so the team’s historical strength is obviously the measure that matters most.  The clear winner is: the Giants.

The Giants joined the league in 1925.  The Patsies didn’t join until 1970.

The Giants’ storied history includes 18 hall of famers.  The Patsies have only 4.

The Giants have 7 league championships.  The Patsies have 3.

And the list goes on…

Question #2: Where does the name “Super Bowl” come from?

Good question.  In 1970, the two rival football leagues, the NFL and AFL, merged.  Lamar Hunt, who owned the AFL’s Kansas City Chiefs, coined the term in reference to the newly created championship game between the top two teams in each league.  The “Super Bowl” name became official in the new league’s third season.

Question #3: Why does Belichick only wear hoodies?

Perhaps the best question of all.  But there are certain things in the cosmos that even Historicalness.com can’t answer.

Go Jinties.

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