Why Self-Motivation Won’t Help an Athlete Go from Good to Great

Why Self-Motivation Won’t Help an Athlete Go from Good to Great

 Self-motivation is the holy grail of success in sports, particularly for young athletes. Nearly all elite athletes have self-motivation. However, for less mature athletes who still rely on external motivation from coaches and parents, self-motivation often comes and goes with the wind.

Therefore, as a parent or coach it’s easy to think that self-motivation is the missing ingredient an athlete needs to jump levels from good to great when they are still maturing. However, although self-motivation is an important ingredient, it’s not the most important ingredient for jumping levels. In other words, self-motivation alone is not enough when it doesn’t proceed several other key ingredients.

Among those other key ingredients there are 5 in particular that are necessary before self-motivation becomes the penultimate factor:

  1. Mastery of the fundamentals.
  2. Maximizing an athlete’s strengths using a growth mindset.
  3. Minimizing the impact of an athlete’s weaknesses.
  4. A supportive environment.
  5. A coach who understands and facilitates solo practice and deliberate practice.

So, here is the takeaway I want to leave with parents and coaches of athletes. When an athlete is still not fully self-motivated on a day-to-day basis, don’t let this be the excuse for why they aren’t improving. Instead, evaluate what you can do to enhance these other 5 ingredients, then take advantage of every opportunity you can find in these areas. If you do this, over time self-motivation will take care of itself as the athlete continues to mature.

Recent Articles From Coach Chris

Subscribe for Updates

Subscribe to our mindset coaching blog to get insights from Coach Chris on parenting athletes, coaching, and teaching athletes mental skills. Absolutely no spam and we will never share your email address.