Here’s the practical roadmap athletes and families can follow.
Step 1: Build Automaticity Through Repetition
Dr. Tarter uses a powerful analogy:
Remember learning to drive?
At first, everything required conscious effort:
- Where’s the brake?
- How hard do I press?
- When do I signal?
Now? It’s automatic.
Elite performance works the same way.
Through:
- Repeated physical practice
- Scenario-based reps
- Film review
- Correction and feedback
Skills move from conscious processing → automatic execution.
Why does this matter?
Because when stress rises, cognitive bandwidth shrinks.
Automatic skills survive.
Untrained skills collapse.
Pro Tip: Game film is gold. Watching mistakes and correcting them builds neural refinement that holds under pressure.
Step 2: Mental Rehearsal Before the Event
Stress builds before competition.
That’s normal.
The key is channeling that buildup productively.
Athletes should mentally rehearse:
- Specific play scenarios
- Their positional responsibilities
- “What if” situations
- Recovery from mistakes
Instead of saying:
“I hope I don’t mess up.”
Shift to:
“If X happens, here’s my response.”
This builds:
- Confidence
- Predictability
- Faster reaction times
- Reduced distraction
Mental rehearsal reduces the novelty of pressure.
And novelty fuels anxiety.
Step 3: Focus on Task, Not Emotion (In-Game Reset)
During the game, one rule dominates:
Return to task.
Not:
- “Why did I miss that?”
- “Coach is mad.”
- “Everyone saw that mistake.”
But:
- “What’s my assignment right now?”
Dr. Tarter emphasizes:
The best athletes recover quickly from error.
If a goalie gives up a goal…
If a DB gets burned…
If a shooter misses a clutch attempt…
The difference-maker isn’t perfection.
It’s speed of emotional recovery.
The longer emotion lingers, the more it compounds.
The faster attention returns to task, the more stable performance becomes.