cncmin
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... does anyone know how athletes calm nerves when gearing up for big games, or when the opposing team goes on big runs? Just curious. Sports are as much mental as physical, and it seems that the Gophers play too hard often. They overpursue on defense leading to open 3's and open dribble penetrations; they miss open shots that they'd normally hit; when nerves are high passing isn't as sharp.
You'd think that a polished D-1 level athlete would be able to stay away from nerves; and for the most part, they seem to handle it better than say, your typical high school or intramural level team. But look at what happened to Purdue (vs. Duke). Those guys were as geeked as any team I've seen in the past couple of years. They were so geeked that they couldn't do anything right. I recall a Gopher 1st round tourney game some years back against St. Louis that they only had 3 points through the first 10 minutes...
Upsets happen not because of physical prowess, they happen because the better team chokes. Were we really worse than Illinois in all 3 games last year or did that nasty ongoing losing streak have a lot to do with the results? What can be done to put nerves to rest such that the better team wins?
How does Bostick get out of his funk? How do the Gophers keep from losing a lead when an inferior team goes on a big run and everything seems to go wrong? How does Brommer start the season 3-15 from the foul line for Iowa, including shanking the front end of a game-tying 1-and-1 set? I'm sure if any of you knew all the answers to these, you'd be very rich, but any suggestions?
You'd think that a polished D-1 level athlete would be able to stay away from nerves; and for the most part, they seem to handle it better than say, your typical high school or intramural level team. But look at what happened to Purdue (vs. Duke). Those guys were as geeked as any team I've seen in the past couple of years. They were so geeked that they couldn't do anything right. I recall a Gopher 1st round tourney game some years back against St. Louis that they only had 3 points through the first 10 minutes...
Upsets happen not because of physical prowess, they happen because the better team chokes. Were we really worse than Illinois in all 3 games last year or did that nasty ongoing losing streak have a lot to do with the results? What can be done to put nerves to rest such that the better team wins?
How does Bostick get out of his funk? How do the Gophers keep from losing a lead when an inferior team goes on a big run and everything seems to go wrong? How does Brommer start the season 3-15 from the foul line for Iowa, including shanking the front end of a game-tying 1-and-1 set? I'm sure if any of you knew all the answers to these, you'd be very rich, but any suggestions?