Tag Archives: sports integrity

Honesty and Honor

The following post is an excerpt from Raising Athletic Royalty NOW available through most online retailers!

Click Here to Order

 Raising Athletic Royalty Cover-3 FINAL

HONESTY & HONOR

 

“SHOW HONOR AND RESPECT FOR THE LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE SPORT. THEY WILL SERVE YOU FOR A LIFE TIME.”

 

“Some parents get so caught up in the glory of one upping their neighbors, family, and friends that they embellish the time and effort their child is truly putting into their development.”

 

“PARENTS THAT PURPOSELY DECEIVE THEIR CHILD’S COACH AND TRAINER ABOUT THEIR CHILD’S ACTUAL TRAINING EFFORTS ARE DAMAGING THEIR CHILD’S SELF-CONFIDENCE AND STUNTING THEIR GROWTH.”

 

“Be wary of the coach and/or sports academy that purposefully keeps athletes away from competition as long as possible…Without measurable developmental results, there is no accountability.”

 

“BEING HONEST WITH ONESELF IS THE KEY TO CONFIDENCE.”

 

“Be honest about your work ethic, perseverance, attitude, and commitment.”

 

“CLASSY ATHLETES THANK THE COACHES, THE REFEREES AND THE FACILITY STAFF AFTER EACH EVENT.”

 

 

 

 

Responsibility and Accountability

The following post is an excerpt from Emotional Aptitude in Sports NOW available through most on-line retailers!  Click Here to Order

 ea-in-sports4a_final

Responsibility and Accountability

 

In athletic competition, accountability is twofold.
It’s not only what we choose to do but what we choose not to do.

 

Coaching an athlete isn’t only about teaching the techniques of the sport. It also involves motivating athletes to drop their “conditions.”  These are their creative excuses for not training the way they should be training. It’s their escape mechanism. Competitors of all ages use the excuse of injury, time restraints or simple arrogance for not training properly. It’s their way of liberating themselves from responsibilities.

In our continuing observational study, I asked Evan and Jarrod about some of the creative excuses they’ve used for not training properly. Here’s what they came up with:

  • “I would go for my run today but it’s raining outside.”
  • “I would train but my friends are coming over tonight.”
  • “I can’t work out before school because there’s no time.”

Another common creative excuse is blaming others. Here’s what the twins have to say about the blame game:

  • “My teacher gave me too much homework this week and so I can’t train today.”
  • “It’s not my fault I can’t train, my trainer worked me too hard and now I’m injured.”
  • “I can’t play points again today after practice because I’m hanging out with my friends.”

 

SOLUTION #10: Stop Defending Old Bad Habits

When athletes stop avoiding the work and begin to rise to the occasion an emotional break through takes place and confidence is born. Daily accountability separates the dreamers from the doers. I’ve found that some athletes have to be trained to stop defending their old comfortable bad habits. If they’re still defending them, they have no motivation to quit them. It takes honesty and courage to walk away from self-destructive, unproductive behavior. What is stopping most of us from incredible success is the unwillingness to drop the old, bad habits.

Click Here to Order