The Olympics’ Mental Games



OLYMPICSFor decades after the first  sports psychology lab was established in 1920 in Germany, mental  coaches have been the water boys of sports science, viewed by  their colleagues as not quite good enough to make the  first-string team.

That has changed. Virtually every top professional team and  elite athlete has a psychologist on speed dial for help  conquering the yips – when stress makes crucial muscles jerk and  ruins, say, an archery shot – marshal the power of  visualization, or just muster the confidence that can mean the  difference between medaling or just muddling through.

But a more important reason for the improved reputation of  sports psychology is the solid science demonstrating the effect  of the mental game on athletic performance.
A 2011 study, for instance, examined U.S. National  Basketball Association players’ free throws. Their success rate  is 6 to 9 percentage points lower when their team trails by a  point or two with 15 seconds or less left on the clock.  Researchers at Oregon State University reported the findings in  the Journal of Sports Economics.
When free throws can mean the difference between a win and a  loss – that is, when it’s clutch time – the resulting stress  makes many players choke.

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