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MindFit Sports Wars

Podcast de Daniel Jacobsen

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Every championship run has a story. Every dynasty has an enemy. And every rivalry that defined a sport was decided not just by talent — but by what happened between the ears.MindFit Sports Wars is a narrative sports podcast that goes deep inside the greatest battles in sports history, the rivalries, the dynasties, the underdogs who refused to quit. Season by season, we pull back the curtain on the psychology, pressure, and mental warfare behind the moments that made legends.Hosted by mental performance coach Daniel Jacobsen, each season dives into one epic sports story through cinematic storytelling, the kind that makes you feel like you were there. But we don't just tell you what happened. We tell you why, the mindset shifts, the mental breakdowns, the identity battles that determined who won and who went home.Season 1: The CleanerThe Bad Boy Detroit Pistons vs. the Chicago Bulls. Three brutal years. One inevitable champion. And the psychological war that forged Michael Jordan into the greatest of all time.New seasons coming. New wars. New legends.Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.

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5 episodios

Portada del episodio S1E5 "The Dynasty": What the Detroit Pistons Built Without Knowing It

S1E5 "The Dynasty": What the Detroit Pistons Built Without Knowing It

June 12, 1991. The Forum in Inglewood. Michael Jordan is sitting on the floor of the locker room, holding the championship trophy like a child holding a blanket, crying, with his father James Jordan kneeling beside him. After seven years in the NBA, after three straight playoff losses to the Detroit Pistons, Jordan is finally a champion. But this season finale isn't about the trophy. It's about what the Pistons built without knowing it. This is the final episode of Season 1: The Making of Michael Jordan, The Cleaner. We unpack Tim Grover's Cooler, Closer, and Cleaner framework and why Jordan was the ultimate Cleaner: built, not born. We lay out the lessons the Bad Boy Pistons taught Michael Jordan. That your greatest strength is your greatest vulnerability. That adversity isn't the obstacle but the curriculum. That emotional control is a competitive weapon. And we follow the ripple effect: Chuck Daly resigning to coach the 1992 Dream Team, the Pistons' core dispersing, and the arrival of George Mumford, the mindfulness teacher Phil Jackson hired in 1993 who taught the Bulls to meditate and became the godfather of mental performance training in professional basketball. Every athlete who has ever done a body scan in the locker room is standing on a foundation Detroit poured between 1988 and 1991. The mental performance lesson, and the heart of this whole show: the thing that seems like it's destroying you might actually be the thing that's building you. The Pistons thought they were stopping Michael Jordan. They were training him. So here's the question Coach Dan leaves you with. What's your Detroit? What's the rival you can't beat, the challenge you can't crack? Because that's not your enemy. That's your teacher. CHAPTERS - Cold open: the trophy and James Jordan - The truth about the Pistons: the Cleaner framework - The lessons - The ripple effect: the Dream Team and George Mumford - The legacy: what's your Detroit? KEY SOURCES The Last Dance (ESPN/Netflix, 2020) • Tim Grover, "Relentless" (2013) • George Mumford & Phil Jackson, "The Mindful Athlete" (2015) • Tricycle Magazine • UPI Archives • Wikipedia, 1991 NBA Finals • Basketball-Reference Hosted and narrated by Coach Dan, founder of MindFit Academy, a mental performance training program for coaches and parents of high school athletes. For mental performance training for your team or your own game, visit MindFitAcademy.com. This is the Season 1 finale. Season 2, The Impossible Season, tells the story of the 2025 Indiana Hoosiers. It's coming soon. Follow MindFit Sports Wars wherever you listen so you don't miss it. Want more sport psychology for your team and athletes: https://www.skool.com/mindfit  00:00 sports wars S1 E5 03:44 ACT 2: The Truth About the Pistons 05:53 ACT 3: The Five Lessons 10:11 ACT 4: The Ripple Effect 17:52 ACT 5: The Legacy Want more MindFit Sport Psychology?  Good news.  We have a free community made for you: https://www.skool.com/mindfit

21 de may de 2026 - 22 min
Portada del episodio S1E4: "The Sweep" The Day the Bad Boy Pistons Walked Off the Court

S1E4: "The Sweep" The Day the Bad Boy Pistons Walked Off the Court

May 27, 1991. The Palace of Auburn Hills. Seven-point-nine seconds left on the clock, Chicago Bulls up 115-94, the series 3-0. And one by one, the Detroit Pistons stand up and walk off the court — no handshakes, no acknowledgment, straight to the tunnel. The greatest rivalry of the NBA's golden era ends with the Bad Boys refusing to watch the final curtain fall. This is Episode 4 of Season 1: The Making of Michael Jordan, The Cleaner. We break down the 1991 Eastern Conference Finals possession by possession — the six minutes of Game 1 when everyone in the building realized the Jordan Rules were dead, the triangle offense moving the ball before the double team could arrive, Chuck Daly leaning forward in the coaching box watching an offense he'd never seen. We follow the Pistons' last desperate move — turning Game 2 into a brawl the Bulls simply refused to join — and into the silent visitors' locker room where Isiah Thomas had nothing left to say. And we tell the full story of Joe Dumars: the man from Natchitoches, Louisiana, the 1989 Finals MVP, the defender Michael Jordan called the best he ever faced — and why he was one of only three Pistons who stayed on the floor to shake hands. The mental performance lesson in this episode: the walk-off wasn't toughness. It was the collapse of a psychological identity. For three years the Pistons' entire self-concept was built on making opponents crack. When Jordan stopped cracking — when he walked to the free-throw line instead of swinging back — they had nothing left. This is what happens when a team's only weapon is fear, and the target stops being afraid. CHAPTERS  — Cold open: 7.9 seconds and the walk-off — Game 1: the rules fail — The collapse: Games 2 and 3 — The walk-off and the story of Joe Dumars  — The meaning: the collapse of an identity KEY SOURCES The Last Dance (ESPN/Netflix, 2020) • ESPN 30 for 30: "Bad Boys" (2014) • Basketball Network — John Salley interview • NBA.com Legends profile of Joe Dumars • GiveMeSport • CBS Sports • Basketball-Reference Hosted and narrated by Coach Dan, founder of MindFit Academy — mental performance training for coaches and parents of high school athletes. For mental performance training for your team or your own game, visit MindFitAcademy.com. Follow MindFit Sports Wars wherever you listen to podcasts. New episodes every week. For More Sport Psychology: https://www.skool.com/mindfit   Want more MindFit Sport Psychology?  Good news.  We have a free community made for you: https://www.skool.com/mindfit

20 de may de 2026 - 16 min
Portada del episodio S1E3: "The Dark Side" How Michael Jordan Rebuilt His Body and Mind

S1E3: "The Dark Side" How Michael Jordan Rebuilt His Body and Mind

A trainer with holes in his socks shows up at Michael Jordan's door. Thirty days later, the most talented player alive is rebuilding himself from the smallest muscles up and Phil Jackson is installing a Zen offense designed to break the Jordan Rules. For mental performance training for your team or your own game, visit https://www.skool.com/mindfit  This is Episode 3 of Season 1: The Making of Michael Jordan, The Cleaner. After three straight playoff losses to the Bad Boy Pistons, Jordan goes to war on himself. We go inside the Breakfast Club, the 5 AM training sessions where you didn't eat unless you finished the workout, and Grover's radical micro-stability methods that no NBA trainer in 1989 even had a vocabulary for. We trace Phil Jackson's unlikely path from the Pine Ridge Reservation and Lakota warrior philosophy to the triangle offense, the system Tex Winter spent forty years waiting to run at the highest level. And we land on the transformation that mattered most: Jordan learning emotional control, the moment he stopped fighting back and the Detroit Pistons realized they'd lost the one weapon that ever worked. The mental performance lesson in this episode: physiological resetting, the deliberate skill of flushing the nervous system between possessions so the last play can't hijack the next one. Plus an early look at George Mumford, the mindfulness teacher Phil Jackson would later bring in to make this a daily discipline. By the end of this episode, Michael Jordan is fifteen pounds heavier, carrying a cold quiet focus, and the Chicago Bulls are about to meet the Pistons one more time. KEY SOURCES The Last Dance (ESPN/Netflix, 2020) • Tim Grover, "Relentless" (2013) • Phil Jackson, "Sacred Hoops" (1995) • Indian Country Today • CBS Sports • CNBC • Stack.com • Basketball-Reference Hosted and narrated by Coach Dan, founder of MindFit Academy, mental performance training for coaches and parents of high school athletes. For mental performance training for your team or your own game, visit https://www.skool.com/mindfit  Follow MindFit Sports Wars wherever you listen to podcasts. New episodes every week. Want more MindFit Sport Psychology?  Good news.  We have a free community made for you: https://www.skool.com/mindfit

14 de may de 2026 - 19 min
Portada del episodio S1E2: "The Jordan Rules" Three Years of War

S1E2: "The Jordan Rules" Three Years of War

The 1989 Eastern Conference Finals. Game 3. The Bulls are down eleven in the fourth quarter at Chicago Stadium and the building is starting to empty. Then Michael Jordan decides he will not lose this game. Pull-up jumpers. Drives through triple teams. Free throws. When the buzzer sounds, Jordan has 46 points. Bulls 99, Pistons 97. The crowd erupts like a bomb went off. It doesn't matter. The Pistons win the series in six. Jordan's masterpiece becomes the cruelest kind of proof, even his best isn't good enough. This is Episode 2 of Season 1: The Making of Michael Jordan, The Cleaner. We go inside Chuck Daly's film room as the Pistons turn the Jordan Rules into a research project, every percentage a clue, every pattern a weapon. We trace the genius of the strategy that nobody talks about: the Jordan Rules weren't designed to stop Jordan from scoring. They were designed to make Jordan the only one scoring. A psychological trap dressed up as a defensive scheme. Then we follow Detroit through their 1989 sweep of the Lakers, Joe Dumars's Finals MVP run, and into the brutal seven-game 1990 Eastern Conference Finals — including Game 7 and Scottie Pippen's migraine so severe his teammate Stacey King watched him in tears in the locker room and Pippen later went in for a brain scan thinking he was dying. The Pistons win 93 to 74. Jordan plays one against five and scores 31. And in the silent Bulls locker room afterward, James Jordan visits his son. The conversation isn't recorded. But what Michael does in the months after tells you everything. The mental performance lesson in this episode: competitive identity foreclosure — when an athlete fuses their self-worth so completely with one trait that any threat to that trait feels like a threat to the self. The Pistons didn't have to break Jordan's body. They had to break his identity. And for three years, it worked. The fix would require Jordan to confront the hardest question of his career: can the greatest individual player in basketball history learn to stop being an individual? KEY SOURCES Sam Smith, "The Jordan Rules" (Simon & Schuster, 1991) • ESPN 30 for 30: "Bad Boys" (2014) • The Last Dance (ESPN/Netflix, 2020) • Brendan Malone interview, NBC Sports Chicago • Chicago Sun-Times — Stacey King interview on Pippen's migraine • Basketball-Reference • Sports Illustrated archives • NBA.com Legends profile of Joe Dumars Hosted and narrated by Coach Dan, founder of MindFit Academy — mental performance training for coaches and parents of high school athletes. For mental performance training for your team or your own game, visit MindFitAcademy.com. Follow MindFit Sports Wars wherever you listen to podcasts. New episodes every week. Michael Jordan, Chicago Bulls, Detroit Pistons, Scottie Pippen, Joe Dumars, Phil Jackson, 1989 NBA Playoffs, 1990 NBA Playoffs, Jordan Rules, mental toughness, championship mindset, narrative sports podcast, MindFit Sports Wars Want more MindFit Sport Psychology?  Good news.  We have a free community made for you: https://www.skool.com/mindfit

4 de may de 2026 - 16 min
Portada del episodio S1E1: "Motor City" How Michael Jordan Met the Bad Boy Pistons

S1E1: "Motor City" How Michael Jordan Met the Bad Boy Pistons

Welcome to MindFit Sports Wars, the untold psychology behind sports' greatest rivalries. Season 1: The Making of Michael Jordan, The Cleaner. March 4, 1987. The Pontiac Silverdome. Michael Jordan drops 61 points on the Detroit Pistons. In their building. On their floor. In the visiting locker room, Jordan is calm, 61 is just basketball to him. But down the hall, Pistons head coach Chuck Daly is standing in front of his team, and he's not angry. He's thinking. Because Chuck Daly knows something nobody else in the NBA has figured out yet. Michael Jordan isn't a problem you can solve with better defense. He's a problem you have to break. This is the origin story of the rivalry that built basketball's first modern dynasty. Episode 1 traces Detroit's collapse from auto capital to underdog city, the arrival of Chuck Daly and the architecting of the Bad Boys — Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer, Rick Mahorn, Joe Dumars, and the wild card, Dennis Rodman. We follow Michael Jordan's rise from a five-foot-ten sophomore on the Laney High JV team to the most electrifying player on the planet by his third NBA season. And we land on the moment Detroit's coaching staff sits down in a darkened film room on Easter Sunday 1988 and begins designing the system that will change the course of basketball history: the Jordan Rules. The mental performance lesson in this episode: how a defensive scheme can become a psychological weapon — and how a champion's greatest strength can be turned into the very thing that holds him back. The Pistons didn't just guard Michael Jordan. They studied him. They built a research project disguised as a defense. And for three straight years, it worked. KEY SOURCES Sam Smith, "The Jordan Rules" (Simon & Schuster, 1991) • ESPN 30 for 30: "Bad Boys" (2014) • Brendan Malone interview, NBC Sports Chicago • Sports Illustrated archives • Basketball-Reference.com Hosted and narrated by Coach Dan, founder of MindFit Academy — mental performance training for coaches and parents of high school athletes. For mental performance training for your team or your own game, visit MindFitAcademy.com. Follow MindFit Sports Wars wherever you listen to podcasts. New episodes every week. Want more MindFit Sport Psychology?  Good news.  We have a free community made for you: https://www.skool.com/mindfit

28 de abr de 2026 - 13 min
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Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
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