Sports Thoughts
By Wayne Goldsmith Three important messages: * You already know exactly how to look after an athlete - you do it every day. * The advice you give your team applies, word for word, to you. * Stop being their coach for a moment and become a member of your own squad. One of the great things about the last few years is that more and more people are talking openly about coaches’ health, coaches’ wellbeing, coaches’ mental health. Coaching and stress. Coaching and burnout. It’s brilliant that we’re finally talking about it so openly. But I’ve thought about this for a while - what does it actually mean for a coach on the ground? Because there’s so much out there. Hydration and diet. Sleep. Being sun smart if you’re outdoors in a hot climate. Some genuinely brilliant people freely sharing genuinely good information. And as a coach educator, I kept asking myself: how do I help coaches pull all of this into something simple? Something manageable? A way to think about their own health and wellbeing that doesn’t mean wading through 400 YouTube videos trying to work out what applies to them. Here’s the best way I’ve found to look at it. Become a non-playing member of your own team: Think of yourself as a non-playing member of your team. A non-competing member of your squad. Someone in your group who isn’t doing the sport or training for it - just a member of your own team. Why would I say that? Because think for a moment about the advice you give your athletes. The advice you already give every day is the advice you need: Picture it. Start of the season. Your whole squad in one room - your footballers, your swimmers, your tennis players, your rugby team. And you say, “Right. I’m going to talk to you about how to take care of yourselves.” What do you tell them? You tell them to get plenty of sleep. Go to bed early, get good quality rest. You tell them to hydrate through the day. Sure, a coffee now and again depending on their age - but plenty of clean water. You tell them to eat the right foods as much as they can. If they’re older, you tell them to manage their alcohol, especially around training and competition. You tell them to look after their mental health - to do some relaxation, some meditation, to protect their headspace. You tell them that as much as they love their sport, they should have another passion too. Something else that fills them up. And you tell them to make time for family and friends - for the people they love and who love them. As You Coach - So Shall Ye Live: Every single piece of that advice - the advice you give your athletes without even thinking - applies directly to you. To your coaching. To your career. To your life. There’s a lot out there about welfare and wellbeing, and it’s all valuable and the smart people talking about it are making the whole industry better. The more we talk about it, the better. But if you had to pull it all together into one idea, it’s this. Stop for a moment. Think about the advice you’d give your team, your athletes, even their parents, about looking after themselves - physically, mentally, emotionally, socially. And apply exactly the same standards to yourself. Summary: Think of yourself not as their coach - but as a non-playing, non-swimming, non-competing member of your own team. Then apply to yourself the very principles you already teach so well to everyone else. You’re the most experienced athlete in your own squad. You know exactly what to do. You’ve just never pointed the advice at yourself. So join your own team!!! And take care of yourself, coach. If this is the kind of coaching that makes you think, I write one like it every week. Free. Three Practical Applications For Your Coaching: * Write yourself into your own team talk. Next time you give your athletes the start-of-season wellbeing chat, write it down - and then read it back as if it were written for you. Sleep, food, water, rest, balance, people you love. Score yourself honestly against your own advice. * Pick the one you’d nag an athlete about. There’s one item on that list you’d pull an athlete aside for if they were neglecting it - the late nights, the skipped meals, the no-days-off. That’s almost certainly the one you’re neglecting yourself. Start there. * Have a passion that isn’t coaching. You tell your athletes to have another love outside their sport. Take your own advice. The guitar, the cooking, the walk, the people - the thing that fills you up when you’re not on the pool deck. Protect it like you’d protect a training session. Thanks for reading, listening and watching. Wayne Know a coach who's running on empty? Send this to them. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit waynegoldsmith.substack.com/subscribe [https://waynegoldsmith.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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