Thursday, August 21, 2025

Urban Legend - E, R, O

Urban Meyer, former football coach at Florida and Ohio State had a key principle E + R = O

Event plus Response equals Outcome.

This graphic discusses crafting response.

Your response translates 'theory' into 'practice'. Starting competitive volleyball younger teaches players not only 'how to play' but 'how to win'.

Winning means execution in close games, focus, attention to detail, and resilience the ability to maintain equilibrium in crunch time. As a player, find ways to maximize your performance. 

Lagniappe. Henrik Weisinger and J.P. Pawliw-Fry’s Performing Under Pressure argues that the biggest difference between winners and almost-winners isn’t raw talent, but the ability to deliver consistently in high-stakes moments. They offer a framework for reducing “pressure distortion” so performance doesn’t degrade when the game is on the line. Here are five to six key points that align with your theme of winning close games with less performance slippage:


1. Pressure Is a Perception, Not an External Force

The authors stress that pressure is not “out there” in the situation—it’s how we interpret the situation. Two players can face the same free throw with two seconds left, but one experiences debilitating stress while the other sees opportunity. Reframing pressure moments as chances to excel helps prevent performance collapse.


2. Separate Confidence from Outcomes

They emphasize “confidence by design.” Instead of tying confidence to winning or losing, athletes (and leaders) should build it from preparation, controllable behaviors, and self-reminders of past competence. This creates steadiness, so even in a losing streak or tight game, players can still perform without spiraling into self-doubt.


3. “Less Is More” Thinking in Pressure Moments

Under stress, people often add—talk more, move faster, complicate decisions. The book argues that success under pressure comes from subtraction: simplifying focus, reducing unnecessary motions, and sticking to core habits. For athletes, that means trusting training rather than forcing brilliance.


4. Small Rituals Anchor Big Moments

Pre-shot routines, breathing techniques, and even brief “reset cues” (like Nadal’s tics or a volleyball player’s deep breath at the service line) serve as anchors. Rituals create a sense of control in chaos, allowing the body to execute with less interference from anxiety.


5. Pressure Is Social—Don’t Go It Alone

One key finding is that strong relationships and trust reduce the isolating effect of pressure. Teammates who feel supported perform better in crunch time, because pressure feels shared. In close games, a team that maintains connectedness is less likely to fracture under stress.


6. Practice “Pressure Training”

The book advocates simulating pressure in practice—timed drills, public accountability, or reward/penalty systems. This helps players experience stress in a controlled environment, so actual game pressure feels more familiar and less overwhelming.


Takeaway for Close Games:
The margin of victory often comes down to which team experiences less performance drop-off under stress. By reframing pressure, anchoring with rituals, simplifying execution, and reinforcing team trust, players can keep their edge while opponents degrade.

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