Beijing Blast Number One - Five really dumb things most athletes heading to Beijing would have done in the past six months
By Wayne Goldsmith | In Beijing Blast
Lots of athletes go to the Olympics - very, very few come back with a medal.
Why?
Lack of Talent? Unlikely.
Poor Skill? Possibly.
The wrong parents, i.e. Genetics? Could be.
But the reason most of them don’t win a medal is that they made five dumb mistakes in the past six months.
Dumb mistake number one: They changed too many things between the time they got selected and the Games.
This is without doubt the number one - the dumbest of the dumb. Athletes spend ten years getting to the top, finally get there, win selection into the Olympic team and then change a heap of the things that got them there in the first place: different equipment, more supplements, new training program, different taper and peaking routine, new haircut……you name it: they change it.
The smartest athletes - the ones who will win medals in Beijing - are those who “tweaked” their preparation in a few targeted, strategic areas but retained 99% of their pre-selection Trials program.
Dumb mistake number two: They put too much pressure on themselves.
In most sports, the rules of the sport are the same all over the world at every level of elite competition. In many cases - e.g. swimming, track and field, fencing, table tennis, martial arts and others - even the competitive environment is the same size and dimensions where ever you compete. So the only difference between the competitive environment in Beijing and that of other places around the world is that athletes perceive it is different. They put unnecessary pressure on themselves by making more of the Olympic competition environment than they need to.
It’s just another day - another competition - another event.
Put a wooden beam 10 cms wide and 5 metres long on the ground. Walk on it from one end to the other.
Easy.
Now put that beam 500 metres in the air and walk along it from end to end.
Easy????? No way. Why? It’s the same task. You have the same skills. You have proven you can do it.
It’s your perception and fear of the environment that makes it difficult.
And that’s why “putting pressure on themselves” is dumb mistake number 2.
Dumb mistake number three: They lost balance and perspective.
Another silly thing to do. Athletes get selected in the Olympic team and start focusing every second, every thought, every molecule into preparation for the Games. They give up work. They move overseas for an extended training camp - away from friends, family, home and support. They stop having days off training. They stop finding time for social activities and fun.
As a result, everything that was normal and kept them grounded and balanced is put aside and they create an unbalanced, high stress, abnormal preparation environment - one that is bound to fail.
Dumb mistake number four: They took too much time off after selection trials.
Dumb and Dumber. The only common factor in all successful Olympic campaigns is consistent hard work in preparation. Many athletes treat making the team as an end in itself and spend a month celebrating, doing media, ringing everyone they have known since they were five years old and generally having a great time. Problem is, they not only lose valuable preparation time during their celebrations but it may take weeks or even months to get back to where they were before the Olympic selection process.
Dumb mistake number five: Listening to people who have been there.
This comment in itself probably sounds a bit dumb, but listening to people who have been to Olympics before and taking their advice about what’s right for you - is really dumb.
The essence of greatness is uniqueness - it’s difference - it’s being yourself. Too many athletes go to an Olympics and run the race or play the game of someone else.
They listened to someone who said, “you must do this at the Olympics” and “you must never do that at the Olympics” and as a result followed advice that was great……..for someone else.
Do it your way. The great ones have been the athletes who did it differently - who did it their way.
Be one of them!
Wayne Goldsmith
July 31, 2008
Tags: Athletics, Baseball, Basketball, Beijing Olympic Games, Boxing, Cycling, Diving, Equestrian, Football, Hockey, Olympics, Rowing, Softball, Swimming, Track and Field, Triathlon, Wrestling
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