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Showing posts with label professional. Show all posts
Showing posts with label professional. Show all posts

Sunday, September 24, 2017

Teaching and Learning Body Languages is Vital


Body Language is the biggest visual act that can scare or attract an athlete and a coach in the play of sports.

What do I mean by "body language" you ask?

Body language would be described as the way people read others by the posture and movement of the body.

Perfecting this requires you to show that you aren't fatigued from the beginning and the ending of gameplay. This becomes completely mental to your opponents questioning why this individual still have that capacity to continue for such a period of time and not break. This will intimidate opponents into thinking they can't keep up with you and make coaches feel they should avoid an individual.

Body Languages that visually depicts your state of mind (it works vice-versa).

Eyes: Stare down opponents. The act of looking away can symbolize intimidation. They're also your keys to finding tendencies of your opponent(s)

Conditioning: Avoid resting hands on your waistline or above your head, and taking a knee or squatting. Run from beginning to end of a play. A dead period should be a constant jog. Don't the constant condition build and you become immune to feeling like it's hurting you instead.

Posture: Your athletic position or posture should always be the same. Scouting in film sessions can depict when an individual reaches the fatigue state by studying postures. Also, studying can reveal predictive traits of your own or opponent(s) traits. 

These are all keys to getting an edge on your opponents to know when you can take advantage of a situation. Practice endurance and body reading with teammates or film session. Coaches, teach this to your athletes to create an elite group of individuals that will help become a more structured and sound team. Putting out a film of a relentless individual(s) will make opponents fear and question if they can keep up with the pace. 

Remember you have to win in every aspect of the game to best great. Learn to use any and every of your resources.




Monday, February 20, 2017

Cheats to Get an Athletic Scholarship and Without Athleticism

Do you need some tips to becoming a collegiate athlete? Want to become the top performer for your team? Want to have your college paid in full? Whether you're in high school or walk onto the team of choice, we will give you tips and recourses you need to succeed. Physically and mentally you'll have to prepare yourself to be good at what you do.


Eyes/Hands

"Eyes are the key", you always hear it. Whether you are driving, walking, or reading your eyes with play an essential role in making sure you can execute a task. Knowing where to place them, when and what to read. Your eyes will make you right. Hands are in correlation due to the eyes lead seeing everything they will be used for known as hand-eye coordination. 

Feet

Good footwork will be key for having exceptional balance and positioning. These attributes will help you outwork your opponents majority of the time. The will increase recovery time from errors and  

Hips

Learn to use your hips well. With great hip movement will help you properly adjust, move, and rotate into position. With contact sport, this really critical when playing in positioning sport that requires quick movements and a huge factor in golf. 

Attitude/Smarts

The last and final cheat is to be mentally competitive and smart. Always have a winner attitude. Don't let stats or the name bring your level of play down. Think of yourself as to biggest person on the playing field and want to to get better than the person that stands in front of you. Also be intelligent of the playing field. Being able to analyze and predict opponents next moves can make up for missing athletic skills. Appearance shouldn't be pursued, performance is more beneficial to being seen as a good player than celebrations.


Being successful in all these areas will most likely get you a scholarship or, even better, a starting/playing position. Some collegiate players aren't good athletes but still performed good enough to get noticed and picked up. In other words, you don't have to be superhuman for an athletic scholarship but physically and mentally sound can get you a cut of the pie.