This is REALLY good.
Being a DAWG is about COMPETING no matter the failure that came the play before.
Having a mindset and plan and understanding of how you will deal with inevitable failures.
In other words. How do you handle ๐
พ๏ธ-4๏ธโฃ is more important than those days when everyone is praising you.
I had a conversation with a Power 4 college coach whoโs been doing this for 25 years.
We were talking about the mentality of high school players during the recruiting process.
Hereโs what he told me:
โWhat these kids donโt realize isโฆ
I donโt care how many followers you have.
I donโt care how many home runs you hit in travel ball.
I donโt care how many offers you have.
I donโt care about your ranking.
I donโt care how hard you can hit a ball.
I donโt care about your metrics.
The only thing I care about is this:
Are you going to produce in between those white lines when we play this season?โ
Then he said something else that hit:
โTheyโve been so protected that the first time they fail, they quitโฆ or they transfer.โ
And hereโs the part that matters.
The biggest development mistake I see?
Players donโt plan for failure.
They plan for success.
They visualize success.
They expect success.
But they donโt prepare for 0-4.
They donโt prepare for getting booed.
They donโt prepare for sitting the bench.
They donโt prepare for struggling for 3 weeks.
So when it happens โ and it will โ they panic.
Instead of executing a pre-made plan, they try to create one while emotional.
That never works.
Failure is coming.
The question is:
Did you already decide how youโre going to handle it?