WobblyStroke
Well-known member
Regarding your nerves and performing under pressure, this is the main reason the Iversons and McCreadies of the world think practice is way overrated...because it cannot develop this aspect of your mental game and simulate the conditions you need to deal with. Dealing with pressure and nerves is its own skillset and can really only be developed in match play.
Things like negative thoughts floating into your head as you are down over a shot...shoot anyway...Miss. Can only happen so many times before you develop the discipline to get up off the shot and clear your mind and start your routine over again (a routine that can become rock solid in practice). Even if not a negative thought but rather a "omg I'm actually gonna beat this guy" as you are down on a money ball...get up and reset.
Developing breathing techniques and ways to reduce physiological arousal is also very important. This was actually my biggest strength in competition and I have Yoga and meditation practices to thank for it. What is not often understood by many is that emotions have corresponding breath patterns and breath patterns have corresponding brain wave states. They are interconnected and by controlling the one we can def control--breath--we can influence the others and really settle the nerves. It isn't necessarily that energy drops, but it becomes more focus and actually makes you sharper. As one famous golfer said, "it's not about getting rid of the butterflies in your stomach, it's about getting them to fly in formation". This is massively important as the relationship between physiological arousal (caused by stress of competition or otherwise) and performance are known to be related in this fashion....
In practice, unless you find challenging drills or placement pool setups, and mix things up, you will mostly end up on the far left of the curve (why some days are more productive than others). In competition, we can find ourselves on the right side of the curve.
Luckily, a lot of good research has been done on this and a lot of very useful techniques have been developed and widely shared for getting into that peak performance arousal level... whether we are talking about psyching ourselves up and raising energy in a practice environment, or calming nerves and reducing stress in the heat of competition. Since you are reading mental game books, I'm sure you've come across a few of these strategies. Use them and they will help you actually reproduce your practice level game in matches.
Things like negative thoughts floating into your head as you are down over a shot...shoot anyway...Miss. Can only happen so many times before you develop the discipline to get up off the shot and clear your mind and start your routine over again (a routine that can become rock solid in practice). Even if not a negative thought but rather a "omg I'm actually gonna beat this guy" as you are down on a money ball...get up and reset.
Developing breathing techniques and ways to reduce physiological arousal is also very important. This was actually my biggest strength in competition and I have Yoga and meditation practices to thank for it. What is not often understood by many is that emotions have corresponding breath patterns and breath patterns have corresponding brain wave states. They are interconnected and by controlling the one we can def control--breath--we can influence the others and really settle the nerves. It isn't necessarily that energy drops, but it becomes more focus and actually makes you sharper. As one famous golfer said, "it's not about getting rid of the butterflies in your stomach, it's about getting them to fly in formation". This is massively important as the relationship between physiological arousal (caused by stress of competition or otherwise) and performance are known to be related in this fashion....
In practice, unless you find challenging drills or placement pool setups, and mix things up, you will mostly end up on the far left of the curve (why some days are more productive than others). In competition, we can find ourselves on the right side of the curve.
Luckily, a lot of good research has been done on this and a lot of very useful techniques have been developed and widely shared for getting into that peak performance arousal level... whether we are talking about psyching ourselves up and raising energy in a practice environment, or calming nerves and reducing stress in the heat of competition. Since you are reading mental game books, I'm sure you've come across a few of these strategies. Use them and they will help you actually reproduce your practice level game in matches.