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Sunday, July 27, 2008

Padraig Harrington's New Confidence


Even though Tiger Woods was not in the field at the British Open last week, Padraig Harrington proved that he deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as the elite golfers of the world. Despite having a nagging wrist injury that nearly forced him to withdraw from the field, Harrington put together four stellar rounds to win by four shots over Ian Poulter. His win at Royal Birkdale not only netted him $1.49 million but it also vaulted him to number three in the latest World Golf Rankings, behind only Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.
During the entire week, Harrington appeared cool and confident as though he expected to win the Open Championship all along. He also showed no signs of pain from his wrist and obviously didn’t play like it was hurting him. Perhaps being in pain helped Padraig Harrington more than it hurt him. After winning last year’s Open Championship, there was tremendous pressure placed on Harrington to repeat especially with Tiger Woods no longer being in the field. Also, because he is from Ireland, Harrington faced a tremendous amount of media coverage during the week which also added to the pressure of the tournament. Because of the pressure from the media and from himself, Harrington was under an incredible amount of stress which is the last thing a person needs when playing a difficult golf course.
However, the lowered expectations from being hurt likely allowed Harrington to relax and slow down, two keys to reducing stress under pressure situations. Another major aspect of coping with stress is the belief that your skill level is in line with what you are trying to accomplish. If doubt is in a person’s consciousness at any point, there performance will suffer with any task whether it is a difficult task at work to a tough test coming up at school. Simply, if a person believes they can accomplish something, the brain responds in a way that makes it much more likely to get the task done. With Tiger Woods not being in the field, Harrington likely had a greater belief in himself which allowed for his optimal performance to be carried out during the course of the week.
Harrington had two major things going for him at Royal Birkdale: a greater belief in his abilities and a higher level of relaxation as a result of lowered expectations from his wrist injury. Athletes throughout the years have been able to overcome injury or illness to put up a great performance. Willis Reed limping onto the court before Game 7 of the 1970 Finals with a torn thigh muscle to help the Knicks past the Lakers for the title. Michael Jordan overcoming flu-like symptoms in game 5 of the ’97 Finals to torch Utah for 38 points en route to his fifth title. Most recently, Tiger Woods dominating the field at Torrey Pines to win the U.S. Open despite having a torn ACL and stress fracture in his leg. As long as injured athletes believe they can play, the expectations are reduced which allows them to relax and play their best.
At Royal Birkdale, Harrington looked confident and relaxed and took home the Claret Jug easily. Perhaps the greater confidence he has developed from two straight Open titles and being ranked third in the world will translate to greater success in the American Majors. His first test comes August 7th at Oakland Hills with the PGA Championship. This time he will likely be the favorite for the first time in his career at a major championship.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Ichiro's Performance Secret


Even though the Mariners are suffering through a season in the cellar of the American League west, they still have a bright spot at the top of their lineup. This season, Ichiro continues to be a magician at the plate, batting .304 and ranking third in the AL in runs scored despite playing for the Mariners who haven’t exactly been an offensive juggernaut this season. In only six plus seasons, Ichiro has racked up an incredible 1,715 hits. Add that to his 1,278 hits in six Japanese League seasons and Ichiro is nearing 3,000 hits for his major league career.
What makes Ichiro so incredible is his ability to use his hands to serve the pitch to all fields on a consistent basis. Even when Ichiro is fooled by a pitch, he maintains the ability to put the pitch in play with his quick hands. This allows him to see the pitch longer which is part of the explanation for his .346 batting average against lefties over the past three years.
The amazing thing about the hands is that the cerebral cortex in the brain devotes much more space to the hands, meaning that they are more sensitive to brain commands than any other part of the body. Using electroencephalography, or EEG techniques, neurologists have found that the part of the brain that controls the hands is as big as the arm and chest combined. This means that by learning to utilize the hands to work the way in which they are capable could be extremely advantageous, especially in a sport like baseball and golf.
While many athletes work at adding speed and strength, the key to mastering sports may lie in the only thing that makes contact with the ball. Yet it is rare to hear about people doing exercises to develop their hand coordination. Everything the body does is a natural reaction to how the hands are behaving.
The next time you watch the Mariners notice the way Ichiro’s hands handle the bat through the strike zone. His hands lead the way and his coordination allows him to make adjustments while the pitch is in his wheelhouse. His hands respond to the pitch in the same way Tiger Woods’ hands handle the downswing. Since the hands are so sensitive to triggers from the brain, it doesn’t take much for the hands to be manipulated during the swing.
If athletes learn to train their hands in ways that respond to the brain, they could quickly become better at whatever they are playing. As Ichiro has proven, training the hands to respond the way you want will lead to performance that is much higher than the average athlete.

Monday, July 14, 2008

The death and birth of Josh Hamilton


On Monday night in Yankee Stadium, Josh Hamilton made yet another gigantic statement to the rest of the world with his record-breaking first round in the Home Run Derby. After being the first overall selection in the 1999 MLB draft by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Hamilton succumbed to a drug and alcohol problem that sent his life spiraling in the wrong direction. Over a four year period, Hamilton was suspended four times for drug violations and eventually was suspended for good by Commissioner Bud Selig. After cleaning up his life, Hamilton was reinstated in 2006 and has shocked many baseball experts with his meteoric rise to the top.
After a great 2007 for the Cincinnati Reds which included constant ribbing from opposing fans about his past drug use, Hamilton is the leading MVP candidate in the American League for the Texas Rangers. With 95 RBIs at the all-star break, Hamilton is on pace for one of the best seasons of the past 10 years. With his unbelievable performance on Monday Night in New York, Hamilton told the world that he was on top of the baseball world to stay. What surprised many viewers was the fact that Hamilton appeared to be a light-hearted kid that could have been the neighbor boy next door, not the drug-riddled thug that many critics labeled him during his years fighting his addiction. The thing that people don’t realize is that drug addictions, especially those to stimulants like cocaine and heroin, take over a person’s brain and often leaves the person helpless. Understanding what cocaine and heroin do to the brain will make a person better understand how incredible Josh Hamilton’s comeback has been.
In a normally functioning human brain, neurotransmitters are constantly firing to keep the brain on even grounds and to allow people’s cognitive abilities to function on a normal level. The main pleasure pathway in the brain contains large levels of dopamine transporters that, when triggered, provide people with a feeling of euphoria throughout their body. When cocaine is introduced into the brain, it binds with the dopamine transporters causing the transporter to stop functioning and creates a build-up of dopamine in the synaptic cleft where the reward circuit exists. Using cocaine results in extreme pleasure that people can’t normally feel when the brain is working properly.
Prolonged exposure to cocaine causes the need for more dopamine in the synaptic cleft in order for the person to simply feel normal. The answer to the need for more dopamine in the brain is either for the person to use even more cocaine or to suffer the consequences of withdrawal. When an addict cuts free from cocaine, the brain is so deregulated that it often results in severe depression and research has shown that the brain’s reward center may never be the same after the use of cocaine. All of this seems to occur as a natural reaction from the body which gives you a sense of how difficult it would be to quit using. With other addictions such as cigarettes and marijuana, people can often will themselves to quit because the brain isn’t being altered. With cocaine, the brain becomes so deregulated that addicts are pulled toward cocaine by their natural instincts to fulfill the reward center, which makes it that much tougher to quit.
Not only was Josh Hamilton not fulfilling his baseball dreams, his addiction was causing his brain to react in ways that likely made his life a living hell. Once a person reaches that point in an addiction where they are no longer able to understand pleasure, death usually becomes the next destination. Now, Josh Hamilton is clean and fulfilling everyone’s dream of what he would be when he was the top pick in 1999.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Rafael Nadal's Courage Under Pressure



When the epic Wimbledon Final between Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer concluded, many people were wondering whether they had just witnessed the greatest tennis match in history. Even though Rafael Nadal won the first two sets and looked like he was on his way to a tiebreak victory in the fourth set, Federer fought back in a way that only great champions can. After winning the past five Wimbledon championships, Federer looked as though he would make it six. However, Nadal did something remarkable, overcoming nerves and darkness to defeat perhaps the best grass court tennis player of all time.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/blog/index?entryID=3475793&name=bodo_peter
While most tennis experts were wondering whether they had seen history, I was thinking about the match in a much different way. After Federer forced a fifth set, it appeared that it would be next to impossible for Nadal to squeak out a win. After all, Federer had never lost at Wimbledon and Nadal only seemed to have luck against him on the slow clay courts of Roland Garros in Paris. However, as Nadal did on Sunday, some people learn how to overcome mental fatigue and learn to perform their best under pressure.
The cognitive model theory in psychology, popularized by Aaron Beck, states that a person’s core beliefs become automatic thoughts later in life, that tend to pop up during everyday life in response to certain situations. Often times, these automatic thoughts are learned during a child’s social development, meaning that parents often have a large role on how their children behave as adults. This is part of the reason Tiger Woods has become extremely mentally tough in situations where most people would fold. As a child, Tiger Woods was taught things by his father that made his learn to block out distractions and focus on what needed to be done. The same can be said about Nadal, who learned to play his free-swinging style from his father under extreme circumstances.
When people have compulsive disorders, such as OCD, they are often treated through the means of classical conditioning and habituation. This process allows people to become more comfortable with what bothers them by presenting stimuli and eliminating the person’s escape response. When people learn to confront distractions at an early age, it is often much easier for the reaction to become automatic as they get older. For example, it is much easier for children to get over their fears than adults because they don’t rely as heavily on their escape response.
Woods and Nadal were presented with negative stimuli while competing at an early age which made them better prepared for difficult situations later in life. The key is to make your mind respond to abnormal situations in an automatic way. This response becomes easier for the body to employ when it has been habituated to receiving the stimulus. As Nadal showed, the pressure of the Wimbledon final didn’t bother him in the way that it would for most young players. He was able to block out all of the distractions and concentrate on the game he was confident in. The result was a win over the greatest grass court player of the modern era and a place in the history books.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Tyson Gay and Jeremy Wariner: Conquering Pressure


Over the course of the past week, hundreds of the best American track and field stars have come to Historic Hayward Field in search of the Olympic dream at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials. Living within walking distance of Hayward Field has given me a chance to see the best athletes up close and personal and has allowed me to see their preparation in the search for the ultimate goal. Although track and field has grown tremendously since the days of Steve Prefontaine and even Edwin Moses, athletes still must face the pressure of years of preparation going into one race that determines whether or not they are going to Beijing.
As Jeremy Wariner, the world’s fastest man in the 400 meters and the defending gold medalist was entering the blocks for his first preliminary race, I saw something in his demeanor that truly surprised. Sitting no more than ten feet away from his position in lane 8, I noticed his hands trembling as he took a drink from his water bottle. Even though Wariner is often viewed as cocky, he was displaying nerves that happen to everyone. The thing is that most people seem to believe athletes are immune to pressure and that nothing fazes them. However, Wariner showed that even the best athletes in the world feel the pressure when so much is on the line. Especially in track and field, where four years of training go into a few races for a chance to compete in the Olympics, the room for error is obsolete.
Later in the day, Tyson Gay was warming up underneath the west grandstand before the 100 meter final featuring the eight fastest men in America. As he went through his normal preparation, he couldn’t stop rolling his neck and shaking his legs. However, as soon as he stepped on the track, his focus and concentration were on display. As he settled into the block, he looked as though he couldn’t have been less nervous or more poised for the race. As he crossed the finish line in 9.68 seconds, the fastest ever recorded for a human under any condition, he looked as though he expected it to happen. The nervous energy he displayed when the cameras weren’t on him was nonexistent once he stepped onto the track.
Both of these athletes’ pre-race antics show that nervousness is something that happens to anyone, no matter if you’re a world-class athlete preparing for the Olympics or a student preparing for a big presentation. The thing that world class athletes do better than anyone is turn their nervous energy into adrenaline that helps them in their competition. Research has shown when epinephrine, the neurotransmitter precursor to adrenaline, is released into the bloodstream, muscle cells are activated according to how much epinephrine is released. Therefore, it can be assumed that the more nervous a person is before a big event, the more their muscles will be able to work for them.
This phenomenon is the reason why people often feel like their muscles could explode when they become nervous or find themselves in an altercation. Also, the secretion of epinephrine allows the body to concentrate more intently on the task at hand. Although the nervousness seems to be an unwelcome occurrence for most people, it is important to remember that it is simply the human body’s natural response to a big moment.
The next time you may experience a moment where your hands are trembling, simply remember that Jeremy Wariner and Tyson Gay experience the same feelings. The important thing to remember when the pressure is overwhelming is that the feeling will actually help you do a better job. Wariner proved this to be true by coasting to a first place finish while Gay only shattered all expectations by running faster than anyone in history.