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Developing Athletic Intelligence:
How to Outperform the Competition, and how you can support your athlete!
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Developing skills, and physical training are often emphasized, cultivating athletic intelligence is just as essential for elite performance.
Athletic intelligence is rooted in mental performance and sport psychology, combining decision-making, adaptability, managing thoughts & emotions, and strategic thinking—all critical for success in sports and life.
What is Athletic Intelligence?
Athletic intelligence may seem complex, but it is the combination of three essential types of intelligence.
1. Performance Intelligence (Preparation & Routines)
The physical, mental, and cognitive preparation and routines an athlete uses to get ready to perform.
Why it matters: Getting ready to perform helps athletes lock in and stay consistently elite physically, mentally, and their thinking skills.
Key benefits:
Develop pre-performance routines for consistency and sticking to “the process”.
Preparation enhances confidence.
Training body and mind to perform automatically under pressure.
Uses mental visualization and planning to anticipate different scenarios.
2. Competitive Intelligence (Strategy & Self-Awareness)
Being self-aware to know your strengths (Self-Awareness) and leverage them against your opponent while understanding opponents' tendencies and weaknesses to exploit them (Strategy).
Why it matters: Elite performance isn’t just about execution—it’s about gaining a tactical advantage. You do this by understanding your own capabilities and using them to your advantage.
Key benefits:
Leverage strengths against opponents' weaknesses.
Anticipate and adapt to competitors’ tendencies.
Develops strategic game plans.
Manage thoughts and emotions under stress and pressure.
3. Mental Intelligence (Psychological Mastery)
Mental intelligence is all the mental skills and concepts that feed your mental game. Skills such as managing thoughts, emotions, mindset, focus, concentration, mental agility, and psychological flexibility.
Why it matters: Ensures athletes manage pressure, stress, thoughts and emotions while staying focused when it matters most.
Key benefits:
Regulate emotions to stay composed under pressure.
Maintains focus and concentration in high-stress or pressure situations.
Demonstrate mental agility to adapt to errors, mistakes, or setbacks.
Builds psychological flexibility for quick recovery from mistakes.
Mastering all three types of intelligence ensures that athletes train effectively, outthink their competition, and stay composed under pressure, leading to consistent elite performance.
How Parents Can Support Athletic Intelligence
Parents play a vital role in helping their athletes develop these three forms of intelligence. Here’s how you can foster these skills:
1. Encourage Reflective Learning
Ask open-ended questions after games or practices such as: “What decisions worked well today? What could you do differently next time”?
Encourage them to watch games/performances and analyze what is happening, as well as to learn from mistakes. They need to watch and analyze the play, not highlights or short clips. You learn how the play develops by watching full games/matches.
2. Promote Emotional Regulation
Remind and encourage them to use breath work techniques such as box breathing (inhale 4 seconds, hold 4 seconds, exhale 4 seconds, hold 4 seconds), or the 15 second breath (inhale for 6 seconds, hold for 2 seconds, breath out for 7 seconds).
Model emotional resilience yourself by staying calm and constructive, even after a tough game.
3. Reinforce Strategic Thinking
If you are going to discuss the game with them, ask about patterns they saw, what they feel are their opponents strengths, and weaknesses.
Encourage pre-game visualization, where they mentally rehearse potential scenarios and plan responses. If they know their opponents strengths and weaknesses they can visualize how to deal with these.
4. Support a Growth Mindset
Praise effort and learning rather than outcomes. Remind them that effort beats talent when talent doesn’t work!!
Normalize setbacks as part of the learning process and celebrate resilience. Remind them that sport teaches us about failure and you fail more than you succeed.
Athletic intelligence isn’t just about what happens on the field of play; it’s about empowering athletes to think critically, have a mindset to adapt, and perform at their best under pressure. Your support as a parent makes all the difference.
Action Plan: Strengthening Athletic Intelligence
This week’s action plan includes questions that develop athletic intelligence.
Daily Highlights - Ask: “What was one thing that went well in practice or competition today?”
Learning Moments - Ask: “What challenges did you face today, how did you take action, and what did you learn from them?”
Goal Setting Ask: “What is your daily goal for today, or what are your daily goals”?
We encourage athletes to set three goals a day. One in their sport, one in school (if applicable), and one somewhere else in life.
Follow-Up Reflective Questions
The questions above will get your athlete thinking and talking in a way that encourages developing their athletic intelligence. Once they are more open to talking about these types of questions you can dive deeper in to additional reflective questions such as:
About Decision-Making:
Ask: “What was one decision you made during the game that you’re proud of, and why?”
Ask: “Was there a moment when you felt unsure? What would you do differently next time?”
About Managing Thoughts & Emotions:
Ask: “How did you handle your thoughts and emotions today during tough moments?”
Ask: “What helped you stay calm and focused, or what might help next time?”
About Growth and Learning:
Ask: “What’s one thing you learned about yourself as an athlete today?”
Ask: “What’s a skill or strategy you want to work on next week?”
About Team Dynamics:
Ask: “How did you contribute to your team’s success today?”
Ask: “What’s one way you could support your teammates even better next time?”
By consistently asking these questions, you help your athlete develop self-awareness, enhance decision-making, improve emotional regulation, reinforcing and building their athletic intelligence in the areas of performance intelligence, competitive intelligence, and mental intelligence.
Resource of the Week
If sport is more mental than physical than training athletic intelligence that why do we train the physical more than the mental?
This week’s resource to help your athlete learn to think, reflect and ask questions is the F365 Pocket Coach.
With over 1500 and counting expert-vetted resources and strategies at your fingertips, the Pocket Performance Coach is your trusted companion to develop athletic intelligence through questions and self-reflection.
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