Golf Psychology of Champions How To Stay On Top After A Great Performance
Golf Psychology of Champions How To Stay On Top After A Great Performance
The Golf Psychology of Champions: How To Stay On Top After A Great Performance
Today's golf psychology tip comes from a question I got last week:
"Lisa regarding a tournament I have this weekend, I am feeling awfully nervous.
Last year during the same tournament, I came in 6th place. I was amongst some pretty advanced athletes. So now I am feeling like I should do about the same or better this time. The pressure is really getting to me.
What if I don't do well? What if I come in last? Will the same people I met up with last time expect me to better? Since I have already proven myself, do I have to prove it again? I don't know how to shake this feeling. My stomach hurts."
--Alison
Alison's question is a great one. "Now that I've proven myself once, how do I stay on top?"
Problem is, it's the wrong question.
The question that leads to greatness and consistency is, "What do I care about improving in my performance that, if I accomplish it, will keep me on top?"
Alison is anxious because she is 100% focused on:
1. Winning
2. What people think
3. Her ranking
But she can't control any of these things. And she knows it. So she's gone into panic mode.
The way out is for Alison to find a goal for her tournament she GENUINELY cares about that is under her control.
What in your golf game do you want to learn? Improve? Fix?
Jim Furyk, 2003 US Open Champion in golf, took awhile to answer this question for himself. For years Furyk used to slice the ball.
His Dad wanted Furyk to improve his alignment by first laying his club down parallel to his target. This would help Furyk keep his shoulders parallel and aligned to the target.
But Furyk was lazy and stubborn and refused. He just kept hitting the ball, trying to get a good outcome.
Finally Furyk got fed up with being inconsistent.
He started carrying rulers around in his bag, putting them down parallel to his target line every time. That made Furyk practice his alignment on every swing. Now he's a consistent ball striker. And his confidence is consistent too.
Here at the Courage to Win we call that a Right Focus.
A terrific Right Focus will help you be mentally tough so you can move away from your pressure and win, time after time.
Remember it's easy to transform your results if you're willing to learn the proper golf psychology for winning under pressure.
In fact most golfers are crippling their mental toughness without even knowing it.
Here's why: because the golf psychology they are using is incomplete...and if you don't know about the missing pieces hoarded by superstars, you will not win under pressure no matter how hard you try.
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