How Tiger Woods Uses Pressure to Succeed at US Open
Most athletes would agree that “pressure” does not help you perform better. However, some athletes handle pressure positively than others, and use it to win. After winning the 2008 US Open Tiger Woods said that pressure and feeling nervous is a good thing. How you personally interpret pressure makes all the difference in the world.
Some athletes love the challenge of scoring a goal with one minute left in the game or needing to sink a free throw to win. However, other athletes tighten up, get anxious, and worry too much about losing a game when their backs are against the wall and they feel under pressure. To learn how to stay relaxed under pressure, snag a copy of “The Relaxed Athlete.”
Learn more about how Tiger Woods performs his best under pressure>>
Some athletes love the challenge of scoring a goal with one minute left in the game or needing to sink a free throw to win. However, other athletes tighten up, get anxious, and worry too much about losing a game when their backs are against the wall and they feel under pressure. To learn how to stay relaxed under pressure, snag a copy of “The Relaxed Athlete.”
Learn more about how Tiger Woods performs his best under pressure>>
Labels: Performing well under pressure, pregame anxiety, sports psychology, The Relaxed Athlete
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