Playing the Game First

When you play any kind of game, be it during the training stage or during the actual game itself, you need to play the game first. When you start out playing the game in your mind, you can visualize what is going to happen before it does. You can see all kinds of different possibilities for the game, and all manner of different ways the game can end up going. When you play this way, the game becomes downright easy for you to win.

Winning any kind of event comes down to more than just physical conditioning. It ultimately comes down to what’s in your mind. How you think about the game, and what you think about pertaining to the game, are ultimately what will determine how successful you are in any kind of athletic pursuit. As the old saying goes, thoughts are things. When you play the game in your head first, victory is all but assured from the beginning. You want it the most, and you most thoroughly imagine winning. From there, you just have to actually do it.

Playing the game in your head before you play it on the field or the court might sound like just something people do when they’re sitting on a mat in the lotus position- food for flakes, basically. But every study that has ever been done on visualization confirms that its effects are extremely real. In fact, when a person “practices” in their mind, they are shown to improve at a given activity almost as much as people who practice in real life do. When you practice winning, winning will become your most powerful habit.

Creating a Cohesive Game Plan

Teams are only as strong as their weakest link and the last thing a coach wants is to be the weakest like in his or her team. Therefore, creating a cohesive game plan that stresses the strengths of a coaches team is the most effective way to prepare and have a team ready for whatever the competition has. Everyone has watched a game with a team of stars who looks like they are out there for themselves while the coach tries frantically to piece them all back together. Each opponent must be prepared for differently because no team is the same. Here are a few tips to creating a winning game plan.

Creating a Cohesive Game Plan

1. Know Thyself and Opponent- In the Art of War, one of the first rules is that if someone does not know themselves and their opponent they will surely fail. This is true for sports as well. Simply knowing another teams strengths and weaknesses is only half the battle, but knowing what a coaches team can do as well, will ensure that the game plan not only stresses one teams strengths but plays them against the other teams weaknesses.

2. Start Early- Preparing early and often is the most effective way to ensure a good showing. Giving athletes the chance to understand and comprehend an opponents style of play or strengths will help them to succeed. The coach cannot simply study the opponent and expect to move players around like chess pieces. The players must also be able to understand why certain tactics are working or not.

3. React- Sometimes the best game plan is to scrap the old game plan and react to whatever the opponent is doing. Being fluid and adaptable as coach is just as important as it is for players.

Creative a good game plan means looking at both sides of the competition and reacting to whatever happens. Coaches who refuse to adapt usually end up losing their jobs.