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Make sure your football coaching mentally prepares you for the second half!
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| Guest post by: jimmy petruzzi |
Article Overview: Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) is the process of creating models of excellence. Modelling is the complex activity of capturing in a learnable transferable code the differences that make a difference between an excellent performer and an average performer, between an excellent athlete and an average one, a person who is motivated to get the best out of themselves in training and one who is not. NLP, then, is the process of identifying, coding and transferring precisely those differences in a learnable form to the interested participants and companies to allow significant upgrading of their performance to levels of excellence. Results in sport depend crucially on your ability to use your mind effectively. Many elite athletes say the mental aspects of sport make the difference between being a champion or not.
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Free Download - Make sure your football coaching mentally prepares you for the second half! By jimmy petruzzi |
Make sure your football coaching mentally prepares you for the second half!
Make sure your football coaching mentally prepares you for the second half!
One of the things that should be taught in any football coaching is that the
half-time period in a match is not just about refuelling and physical therapy.
It’s also an absolutely crucial time for the coach and team to gather their
thoughts and prepare mentally for the challenges of the second half. And,
according to Jim Petruzzi, the importance of effective communication is hard to
overestimate
Looking back to half-time in the 2005 European Champions League final, with
Liverpool 3-0 down to AC Milan, according to his Liverpool
colleagues, captain Steven Gerrard was in a state of disbelief and was ready to
concede defeat. Afterwards, all he could remember of half-time was the manager
getting his pen out, writing down the changes he wanted on the board and
telling the team to try and get an early goal, as that could make the
opposition nervous. But Gerrard said that, to be honest, he just couldn’t
concentrate. There were all sorts of things going through his head. He just sat
there with his head in his hands. He really thought it was over.
The half-time period in a game tends to create an emotional experience
amongst the players and the coach. A full review might take place a day or two
after the game, which can be generally analysed free of the emotional reactions
associated with the game itself. However, at half-time the outcome of the game
is yet to be decided. The interval is only around 15 minutes in duration, and
is the only direct opportunity the coach will have to speak to all the players
and to influence the second-half performance and result.
The half-time team talk will, of course, depend on the score and the coach’s
perspective of the match. It is also important to note other variable factors,
such as the context of the game – eg is it a cup match in which the loser gets
knocked out? Is it a league game and what are the league positions of the teams
contesting the game? Is one team an overwhelming favourite to win the game? Is
the team winning but not performing well?
Football, in particular, is a game with many psychological demands, such as
confidence, motivation and concentration, and these demands can be influenced
by the situation in the game at half-time. For example, if a team is winning
3-0 and performing very well, it will go into the half-time break with a
different psychological perspective from that of the team that is losing.
However, if the same team is winning 2-0, and just before the half-time break
the losing team score and make it 2-1, the psychological perspective of both
teams would be different; the losing team would gain renewed optimism by
scoring the late goal, and the team conceding the goal may become frustrated! Half-time
is also psychologically important because it’s the first time in the game that
the players have an opportunity to reflect consciously for a sustained period
on the game.
The coach’s role at half-time
The main goal of the coach during the half-time interval is to influence
positively the second-half performance as much as possible. The coach may give
the players feedback on how they are performing individually or collectively as
a team, and discuss technical, tactical and physical aspects of the game,
including formations, styles of play, changing tempos and pitch conditions.
A key element of a successful half-time talk is communication. This is a
two-way process that consists of giving and receiving information. Coaches can
learn a lot about the development of the game at half-time by listening and
asking the members of the team questions to prompt a two-way discussion.
However, while coaches are typically good at talking, being in charge and
giving instructions, they are often poor listeners.
It is also important to note that communication is not only verbal. As early
as the late 1960s, research in communication had indicated that non-verbal
behaviour (ie body language) plays an important role in communication(1-3).
Researchers have determined that just 7% of what we communicate is the result
of the words that we use or the content of our communication; 38% of our
communication to others is a result of our verbal behaviour, which includes
tone of voice, timbre, tempo and volume; and 55% of our communication to others
is a result of our non-verbal communication, our body posture, breathing, skin
colour and our movement.
Leadership styles
The leadership style also has a major influence on the effectiveness of a
half-time team talk. There are several types of leadership styles, including
‘authoritarian’, ‘democratic’ and ‘laissez-faire’ (see box, page 6). It is
possible for coaches to use different methods in different situations, and it’s
important to note that personality types, cultural behaviour and other factors
also contribute to coaching styles.
Some coaches display a combination of the different leadership traits,
whereas others favour one style in particular. A good coach will adapt his or
her leadership style to expectations, knowledge, experience and group members.
For example, if a group is hostile, the leader may prefer to adopt an
autocratic style. If the group is friendly the leader may choose a more
democratic, person-centred style. Problems can arise if strategies for
preparation used by the leader do not match the group expectations of the team.
Psychology of half-time substitutions
As with other factors in a match, like scoring a goal or a poor refereeing
decision, the psychology of a second-half substitution can change the tactical
aspect of the game and give an insight to what the manager’s state of mind may
be. For example, if a team is winning 2-0 at half-time and the manager of the
winning team substitutes an attacking player with a defensive player, this
could be perceived as being a negative tactic, and possibly that the manager
doesn’t have confidence in the team to carry on playing the same style; or as a
statement by the manager saying ‘we are going to hang on to our 2-0 lead, rather
than seize the initiative and extend the scoreline’.
Earlier this year, England
rugby union coach Andy Robinson came in for criticism for replacing captain
Martin Corry during their 18-12 Six Nations defeat to Scotland. Brian
Moore (ex-England player, now working as a sports commentator) commented: ‘I
don’t think you should ever take your captain off, unless there is an injury;
it’s a huge psychological blow once your captain is substituted.’
The criteria in deciding who to take off depends on the context of the
match, and there are many tactical factors that could influence whether a
player should be substituted, and who to bring on at half-time. However,
substituting your captain when he or she may not be playing well can have a
massive impact on the team’s mental state. It may, for example, have a negative
effect, producing the belief in the team that the coach is panicking. It can
also be a good idea to bring on a substitute who regularly performs well
against the opposition you are playing – this may induce panic in the opposing
team.
Sometimes a team’s performance isn’t always reflected in the scoreline. If
the team is playing well and goes into the interval losing against the run of
play, is it worth keeping faith in the team to carry on performing well in the
second half and hoping that the breaks will come, or does the manager make
changes and risk disrupting the flow of the game thereby affecting the team’s
performance?
Using neuro-linguistic programming in half-time psychology
Essentially, neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is the study of excellence
in how we think, how we behave and how we communicate. It provides a series of
techniques, skills and methodologies that can be used to create strategies to
enable us to fulfil our potential in all areas of our lives. The brain not only
controls the application of skills and strategic movements, but it also affects
actual body movements that people used to consider automatic. NLP can help
sportsmen and women to gain control over what many consider to be ‘automatic’
functions of our own neurology. Research has shown that imagining an event can
produce the same effect on structures in the brain as performing that event in
reality!
For example, research carried out at the University of Chicago
into visualisation in basketballers divided a number of people into three
groups(4). Each was tested shooting a number of penalty shots in basketball.
The groups were then given different instructions:
- Group 1 did not practise penalty shots for 30 days;
- Group 2 practised shots every day for 30 days;
- Group 3 practised shots only in their mind (visualisation) for 30 days.
- Group 1 showed no improvement at all (as expected);
- Group 2 showed a 24% improvement (not especially satisfactory given that they had been practising with the ball for one month);
- Group 3 improved by 23% (impressive considering they had not even seen a ball for 30 days!).
NLP can be applied at half-time in a number of different ways, just by using the principle of positive instruction. Stating what you want rather than what you don’t want can have a powerful positive effect on the mind, but many coaches still tell players what they don’t want, producing negative thoughts.
‘When you shoot don’t miss the target’ might be the instruction from the coach to player, but would it not be better to instruct the player when he shoots to hit the target? If somebody asks you not to think of the colour black, what immediately comes to mind? The very thing you were asked not to think of! Phrases such as ‘don’t foul’, ‘don’t lose the ball’, ‘don’t lose the game’ can all be replaced by more positive instructions.
Here are some half-time techniques that can be used in sequence to create the right state of mind for the coach and the players. These techniques are ‘dissociation’, ‘reframing’ and ‘anchoring’. They are aimed at creating a logical state of mind for the coach at half-time and getting the players to go out into the second half in peak mental state to achieve their desired outcome.
Dissociation
Dissociation is about recreating a past experience from the perspective of an onlooker or observer. This means that the person does not re-experience the original emotion but instead experiences the detached emotions of an ‘observer’. This enables the coach to think logically and not emotionally. The technique of dissociation is useful just before half-time, so the coach can think logically and not emotionally when delivering the half-time team talk.
Reframing
Reframing is the process of shifting the nature of the problem. It is the process of changing a negative statement into a positive one by changing the frame of reference used to interpret the experience. If all meaning is context dependent, changing the context will change the meaning.
Depending on the situation at the end of the first half, we can decide from what perspective we want to go out in the second half. A perfect example of a reframe was in the 2005 European Champions League final when Liverpool’s manager Rafa Benítez urged his players to ‘go out and score the first goal and see what happens from there’. If he had said ‘go out and score three goals’ the size of the task may have been too great. Another possible reframe is when a team comes in losing; the coach can reframe the situation by asking them to wipe the first half from their minds and just focus on winning the second half.
Anchoring
An anchor is a stimulus that creates a response either in you or in another person. When an individual is at the peak of an experience during an intense emotional state, an applied specific stimulus can establish a neurological link between the emotional state and the stimulus. Anchoring can occur naturally or be set up intentionally and can assist in gaining access to past states and linking the past state to the present and future. Anchors can be used by both coaches and players to produce a state of mind or mood needed for a given situation.
References
1. J Counselling Psych 1967; 31:248-52
2. European J Social Psych 1970; 1:385-402
3. RL Birdwhistle (1970) Kinesics and Context, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
4. J Curriculum Studies 1985; 18:197-209
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About the Author: jimmy petruzzi RSS for jimmy's articles - Visit jimmy's website Jimmy Petruzzi has worked in many countries with successful people and businesses including premiership football teams, top athletes, politicians, entrepreneurs and stars of the small screen, helping them to achieve peak performance in all aspects of their lives. Jim trains many of the top champions in the world of Sport based in the UK, and abroad, and has implemented many of his unique and breakthrough concepts in athletic performance. Jim works with elite sports performers including, among others, Premiership footballers and teams, some of the teams and individuals from teams Jim has worked with are Crystal Palace F.C, Queens Park Rangers F.C, Bury F.C, he has also worked with individuals from teams such as Manchester United, Manchester City, Wigan, Fulham, to name a few, he has assisted to prepare international teams for major tournaments such s the soccer world cup also trained rugby players, European Tour golfers, World and Olympic medallists, international athletes, cricket players, tennis players, professional football and sporting teams and establishments. Click here to visit jimmy's website Make sure your football coaching mentally prepares you for the second half |
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