Article

Trying Too Hard on The Track

Topic: SportsBy Dr. Patrick J. CohnPublished Recently added

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 1,349 legacy views

Do you perform relaxed and tension-free in a practice but then race tense or scared in races or national events? This is a big sign that your mindset breakdowns when you go from practice to race situations.

Why would your mind get in the way when you think the race really counts or is important to you? This could be from several reasons - fear of failure, tension, doubt, or self-intimidation. In many cases, the pressure you put on your own racing can cause arm pump because you are no longer able to race relaxed and tension-free like you did in practice!

But the good news is that you can learn to control your mind and use it to help you race your best. n
Trying too hard is the number one mental breakdown that will cause you to ride tense on the track. What would cause you to stress your muscles if you are in good physical shape? My answer would be mental tension, which then causes physical tension in your arms, shoulders, and hands.

If you have tension on the track (mental or physical), your muscles are not working together, they are fighting each other.

In the practice you do every week, no one knows what you did and no comparisons are made to other racers, so it is easier to ride up to your ability.

In competition, it's a different story. You badly want to do well for your family, friends, and sponsors. This can cause a lot of pressure for some racers to excel. "I need to impress the manufacturers so I can get sponsorship," you think to yourself.

The reality is that you want to do well for everyone involved, including yourself! However, this state of mind often causes you to try too hard, tense up, and even get arm pump. You must approach each race with a relaxed and carefree mindset, just like you do in practice.

Article author

About the Author

Want to learn simple, proven mental toughness skills that you can apply to competition? Grab my free online mental training newsletter, Sports Insights Magazine - for athletes, coaches, and sports parents:nhttp://www.peaksports.com/free_newsletter.php n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dr. Patrick Cohn is a master mental game coach who work with professional and amateur athletes, sports parents, and teams of all levels. Visit http://www.peaksports.com for more information.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

TIME FOR A NEW SURGE—OF PATRIOTISMn We joke about political pork. We laugh at the Defense Department paying $600 for a toilet seat. We tolerate the confused craziness of the farm subsidy program. Forty years ago, former Illinois Republican Senator Everett Dirksen said, “A billion ...

Related piece

Article

True or False: I have no real need to get anywhere when I run; I enjoy running for hours only to end up in the same place I started. True or False: Any sport in which people have been known to literally die of exhaustion while participating is just the kind of sport I’ve been looking for. True or False: I’m interested in finding out exactly how many muscles I have in my legs. True or False: I’ve been sleeping way too much, so I’ve been looking for something to take up a few hours on my Saturday mornings.

Related piece

Article

Sports Wisdom (Or, Why We Watch the Games) Why do we watch sports, other than to see who wins? Political and baseball author George Will gave one outstanding response: “Sports serve society by providing vivid examples of excellence.” Sports are a 21st century version of ...

Related piece

Article

Now that the off-season has officially come to an end and I am getting back to regularly scheduled programming, I thought it appropriate to talk about training in the cold. Thankfully, I live in Northern California, where what I consider ‘cold’ weather may be thought of more as chilly or crisp in somewhere like New York or Michigan, and maybe even balmy to my friends in Canada. But… I will admit I am a bit of a pansy when it comes to cold. I hate being cold! If I lived somewhere else, I think I would hibernate for at least a few months.

Related piece