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Fooled By The Result

Win the game, the match or the race and everything is great.
Lose the game, match or race and it is a disaster, everything is bad. In my 41
years of coaching and a few years before that as an athlete I have seen this
time and again. Panic after a lose, smug satisfaction after a win, regardless of how well the players performed. For some reason coaches and teams just don’t seem to understand
that you have to look beyond the score. Sometimes victories can disguise huge
deficiencies and fool you into thinking things are better than they are. The
1998 US Men’s World Cup soccer team was a great example of this. Victories over
Brazil and then Belgium in Europe were blown out of proportion and distorted
the perspective the coaches and the media. I saw this first hand working with
this team. We were not preparing for the World Cup as much as we were focusing
on winning less meaningful matches that ultimately hurt the development of the
team and distorted the selection process of the players. Conversely loses can
be blown out of proportion unless they are thoroughly analyzed in the context
of the whole season and the plan. The essential element here is to always learn
from performance. The competition performance is the most essential feedback tool there is,
after all that is what the goal of training is. So have a context for
performance evaluation from a physical preparation, tactical and strategic
perspective that is part of a systematic plan. This is what the great coach’s
and athletes do, they have a perspective that allows them to objectively
evaluate competitive performance and learn from it and adjust accordingly. A
good sound plan lends context and perspective. Each competition result provides incremental progress
toward the ultimate goal.

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2 Comments
  1. In every competition, there are always a winner and a loser..be a winner is a victory. There is always a lesson when you lose the games and that is to improve more on the next competition.

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  2. Unfortunately at many levels, the motto seems to be, “winning justifies everything”. Luckily for UCLA, John Wooden knew better and focused on the process and the details. The outcome was based on how his team performed to their abilities, not the score of the game.

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