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There
is scant literature where the connection of sport psychology and boxing
intertwine, practically (Schinke,
2004). And yet, many are the adages from boxers, where
the focus is clearly psychological. Mike Tyson proposed "that everybody
has a plan until they are hit". What Tyson meant (we believe) is
that no one had a plan for him (i.e., his bad intentions). Similarly,
the legendary boxing coach Cus D'Amato (Mike Tyson's coach early on) believed
that "fights are won and lost in the head". We are inclined
to agree with the aforementioned athlete and coach. We have found that
outcomes are heavily bound to athlete management and athlete psychology,
both in content and the philosophy that content is couched in. Boxing
is a sport where wins and losses are twofold: they are garnered physiologically
and also psychologically (Schinke, 2007).
Though physiological and psychological considerations intersect, the focus
in this submission is primarily on the psychological and managerial aspects
of athlete preparation. Herein, it is proposed that the outcome of a bout,
which reflects in a large part how the athlete is prepared, can shorten
and lengthen a professional boxer's career. So much so that if the athlete
wins or loses, and there is an understanding of why the outcome unfolded
as it did, hope can be built, leading to increased effort directed effectively
toward performance enhancement and excellence (see Rettew & Reivich,
1995;
Seligman, 1991).
Conversely, if the athlete is prepared with an unstructured or loosely
structured organization, and without a deep understanding of what to expect,
or if effective planning is abandoned, the consequence is (eventually,
if not sooner) diminished output, leading to sub-par performance (see
Botterill, 2005).
In keeping with the present overarching instalment of combative sport,
our contribution (a submission authored by a sport psychology consultant
and world championship boxing coach) is intended as a catalytic work,
framed for researchers and practitioners (see Martens, 1987),
built upon the authors' lived experiences. Emphasized is the contextual
world of professional boxing, though only at a particularly high and visible
level. Within this submission, the authors (a sport psychology consultant
and a boxing coach) relay based upon our experiences in the field how
we would prefer to prepare athletes for world title bouts. The description
is a composite of bits and pieces of what our team has integrated, garnered
through previous title bouts and a variety of athletes. Following is our
view of how mental readiness and performance can (and should) happen for
a critical match, where the intent is to deliver the athlete to the first
bell fully prepared, confident, and thus able to perform at his potential.
The structure of the paper is sequential in that it begins before the
proposition of the bout, and then progresses onward through final preparation,
the walk to the ring, the touching of gloves, and the first bell. Finally,
it should be recognized that the views expressed herein are the authors,
and that others might have equally effective approaches to world title
bout preparation. Further, it should be noted that the aspects addressed
are only a glimpse of a larger plan, where realistically, there are more
details than can be deconstructed into one short manuscript.
The
athlete before the offer
There is surely a wide variety of ways that athletes, in collaboration
with their management team, accept and decline bouts. However, the organization
surrounding each athlete often includes the coach, strength and condition
coach, general manager, owners, and the sport psychology consultant. Combined,
the team works extensively with each athlete as he moves through the rankings,
always seeking out bouts that reinforce the development of the athlete,
meaning his technical development and also his confidence. The development
of either aspect without the other is necessary, though insufficient if
the goal is to prepare the athlete for a competently executed world title
bout. Every bout leading to the ultimate bout is another step toward the
ultimate encounter that will ensue (i.e., the title bout). When the world
title bout offer finally arrives, it is hoped that the athlete has gained
a considerable knowledge of what is required in his lead up (typically
10-12 weeks) to the performance. Knowledge is more than a matter of guess
work, and it is steeped in previous pre-bout preparations, bouts experiences,
and post-bout debriefings. Even once the athlete is ranked in the top
15 of his division in the WBC, WBA, IBF, WBO, or with Ring, there are
always lessons identified from each bout. From post-bout debriefings athletes
are intended to gain the impression that their learning is dynamic, and
that they are progressing regardless of how high they are ranked globally.
Even when the athlete becomes a world titlist, and especially when titles
are defended, there is the need for the management group to push the athlete
forward, and for the athlete to engage in ongoing development regardless
of stature, performance record, and financial status.
The
world title opportunity
Though the reader might anticipate that every world title bout opportunity
is the same, meaning that all are accepted quickly, signed, and prepared
for, there are a number of considerations that happen at the point of
being offered the opportunity. From the moment a client is ranked among
the top 15 athletes in his division, there is the possibility that a call
can happen at any time, offering the athlete an opportunity to compete
against the existing world champion. When the athlete has just progressed
to the top 15 in the rankings, it varies with each athlete whether an
offer should be accepted. When an athlete prematurely accepts a bout opportunity,
and then subsequently loses the bout in a manner where the loss diminishes
confidence in his abilities, it is challenging to restore such an athlete
to his pre-bout confidence. Consequently, management groups are meant
to work closely with the athlete, and they are there to help guide (and
in some cases protect) the athlete from challenges that are proposed prematurely
or too late in the athlete's career. There are also cases we have encountered
where less experienced athletes, meaning relative newcomers to the world
rankings, are able to progress more quickly up the ranks, leading to an
earlier acceptance of a world title bout (one where our client is not
the mandatory challenger in the division). The critical point for a young
athlete is to ensure that knowledge and confidence are built to the point
where the athlete is prepared for the challenge of a world title bout.
Before that point, it is simply too early to accept even the most enticing
of offers. Finally, there are also athletes who require ever-challenging
bouts so that each bout is designed to retain the athlete's attention
on career progression. Not all athletes are built up for the critical
bout with the same brevity, nor methodology. Underpinning effective decisions
is the implicit understanding that success requires thoughtful preparation,
and also timing.
Accepting the world title bout
When a world title bout is accepted, which varies from a matter of a few
hours to several days following the offer, the management team is brought
together to structure the preparation plan. The first question considered
is who exactly will work with the athlete. For example, not every athlete
employs the same coach, and not all athletes seek out the same strength
and conditioning coach. Next we consider the question of where the athlete
should train when striking his training camp. Some athletes have remained
in their home city of Montreal, Canada because they are relatively disciplined,
and also because they have family commitments (i.e. several are married
and with children). For those athletes who remain in their home city,
the goal is to ensure that the preparation structure is extensive, and
that the typical daily distractions are managed while the athlete and
coach narrow their focus progressively on the opponent, in relation to
the bout. Others we work with are single, or they tend to be distracted
while in their home city, or both concerns at once. For such athletes,
we have always considered where the training camp should be in relation
to the athlete. For some athletes requiring a relocated training camp,
simply by relocating we have solved the potential distractions that happen
as a result of media and entourage demands. For others, we consider relocating
to a secluded spot away from any urban setting so as to focus entirely
on the bout (in one such case it was the mountains of Columbia, in another
it was the countryside of New York state, USA, in a third it was an urban
setting in another country). The general goal through a designated location
is to develop the necessary structure and ambiance required for the athlete
and coach to prepare for the bout. All told, the location is a critical
part of each athlete's preparation, and clearly not all athletes follow
the same formula. The goal in effective training camp location is to account
for and partial out the identified physical distractions, while also ensuring
that the athlete enjoys the training camp experience. Conversely, if the
athlete becomes disenfranchised with the training camp location part way
through the process, the flux associated with unhappiness and potential
change can erode confidence via the disruption of what was initially a
coherent structure.
Studying
the opponent
Many coaches and athletes watch video footage of their opponents in advance
of a critical bout. The extent to which our athletes study their opponents
has become progressively more detailed. Initially, the focus was on the
boxing style of the opponent, meaning (1) whether he is a south paw or
orthodox boxer, (2) whether he is a puncher or counter puncher, (3) what
the opponent's typical punches are and how often they are thrown, and
(4) what he does at specific points in time during each round of a bout.
You cannot gain the patterns we look for by simply viewing one bout repeatedly
on a website. Like all athletes, our athletes evolve with time, so patterns
are sought across bouts with particular attention to the most recent bouts.
Beyond the generic points we have considered above, we try to learn about
the athlete we are facing. The goal through such education is to learn
as much about the opponent as we possibly can. For example, we follow
(very closely) the opponent's press conferences. From press conferences
one might learn the types (and also the extent of) pressures the opponent
is placing upon himself through declarations and predictions. Additionally,
we consider how the athlete typically enters the arena, including his
choice of music, level of confidence, how he enters the ring, and what
he does before and during the point where he touches gloves with previous
opponents. A few months ago, we worked with an athlete who fought for
the WBC Super Middleweight Title. His opponent (in previous bouts) entered
the ring and bumped into the opponents, thus distracting the intended
athletes, all the while asserting his domination of the ring before the
first bell. In preparation our athlete was aware of the opponent's pattern,
thus enhancing his confidence through an appreciation of what was to come.
We also tend to study how the opponent functions in the corner from one
round to the next. If the athlete does not listen carefully to information
in early rounds, that becomes an opportunity to frustrate the athlete
early on, assuming that he will be non-communicative with his corner if
things go wrong early on. If on the other hand, the athlete becomes less
attentive in the latter rounds, therein rests another opportunity. Through
a careful analysis of the opponent, the athlete and the coach gain an
understanding of what to expect from the opposition - the best prediction
of an opponent's behaviour is his past behaviour.
The
final week
The final week prior to the bout is critical from a tactical vantage,
and in fact all that remains within the final week is a careful management
of the athlete. My teammates and I have found that bouts are won and lost
in the final week. Professional boxing is sport, though it is also entertainment.
With the demands posed through media requests, the athlete and his staff
are asked for predictions, and they are also exposed to some of the pre-bout
banter. Such demands can prove distracting, and the exchanges can heighten
the stress load well beyond where it should be, meaning beyond the focus
on skill execution, and the months and years leading up to the monumental
bout. Adding to the challenges for hometown advantaged athletes are the
possible expectations of winning in front of home fans and of being favoured.
For the athlete visiting the opponent's home country and city, there are
questions pertaining to a lack of familiarity of media demands, weigh-in
procedures, foods, and also a lack of general support from the host city.
The critical focus for our team is to capitalize on the advantages we
encounter through locale. For example, when travelling out of country,
we often keep a low profile, share very little of our immediate plans,
and during exchanges with the media we relay the message (to the opposition)
that the pressure is upon the host athlete. When the bout is in our host
city, the benefits include knowing the media, engaging in final preparation
in a familiar environment, and being able to control the demands surrounding
the bout.
Additionally, the final week is intended as a briefing period for the
athlete and his coaching staff. There are typically several video sessions
structured into the week, with some of the sessions targeting reminders
of what to exploit and also guard against from the opponent. Video footage
of our athletes, beyond the footage of opponents, is also integrated into
their final week at least twice. The focus on our athlete's footage addresses
strengths and memorable moments from previous bouts where particular punches
and combinations were employed with athletes of similar style, speed,
and overall calibre. All told, the intent through final week video sessions
is to employ short sessions of 15 minutes maximum at the beginning of
a briefing session, with the footage followed up with pad work and final
sparring where the briefed skills are once more pressed into action, thus
reinforcing the tactical message for the bout. The intent is to polish
up and entrench strategies that have been developed over the course of
the training camp.
Finally, there is the weigh-in. Weigh-ins and press conferences are intended
as precursors, where there is some foreshadowing of what is to follow
in the bout itself. We have found that much can be learned about our own
athletes and also the opponent's team, coming from the exchanges. For
example, leading up to a recent bout, our athlete's opponent was being
predicted as an early bout victor due to stoppage. The athlete had a record
where nearly 90% of his bouts ended in stoppages, and his intent was also
to stop our athlete, and subsequently earn the vacant WBC title. During
the weigh-in, which is always done in a highly public setting, the two
athletes faced off for the cameras, and the opponent starting speaking
in our athlete's ear, intending to get under our athlete's skin. Our athlete
was prepared for the opponent's tactics, as those tactics matched with
the adversary's previous weigh-ins. Consequently, when the two athletes
met and the exchange happened, our athlete asked his opponent to hold
eye contact as opposed to speaking (without eye contact) into his ear.
The moment was captured by the media, and the exchange ended with the
opponent breaking off the stare, thus relinquishing superiority in the
moment. The week before a world title bout is filled with such moments,
and each exchange is a tactical move that fortifies or erodes at months
of hard earned physical preparation.
Walking
to the ring and touching gloves
When the lights dim and the music starts, the athlete is walked to the
ring by his coaching staff and entourage. The anticipation is at fever's
pitch, typically with 15,000 fans or more cheering or booing. One of the
authors worked with a world champion where in advance of the bout there
was a walk through a grand stage, with 40 musicians, singers, and dancers.
The experience was uplifting for the athlete, though also extensive and
time consuming. We have also encountered one experience where an athlete
walked to the ring in a foreign country and fans began spitting on him.
The experience was so unnerving for the athlete that more recently we
seek out footage of how previous opponents in the same arena are typically
treated. The walk to the ring is understood well in advance, and the factors
we account for is how long the walk will take, what to expect from the
audience, how long will the athlete be waiting in the ring from entry
until the touching of gloves, and what tactics he might expect from the
opponent. The intent is to remove the pre-bout mystique, as it is well
documented that understanding one's environment (the opponent within)
contributes to effective onsite adaptation (see Schinke et al., 2008).
With a full appreciation of what to expect, the athlete is ready to touch
gloves, apply the strategy he has internalized, and consequently deliver
a performance that builds further confidence and an enhanced record.
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