Came across this post in the coaching forum and thought it good enough to share:
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Winning matters. If you are a competitor you want to win. You should hurt a little when you lose. To tell your players that winning or losing does not matter is fundamentally untrue.
Never deny the importance of winning.
But, do not over emphasize it.
What matters more than winning is playing the best you can. As a player you cannot control whether you win or lose. There are 21 other players on the field at the same time as you who can have as much impact. There is the referee. There are the playing conditions.
You have little to no control over the other 21 players, the referee or the conditions. You can control how you play. If you play your best and lose, you should hold your head up. If you play with less than your best and win, you should take no personal joy in the outcome. Be happy for your teammates, but recognize that you missed the mark.
We all make mistakes. Mistakes that stem from a lack of ability or knowledge are not something to castigate ourselves over unless we have failed to practice and had a chance to master the ability or knowledge and failed to take the opportunity.
If the mistake stems from trying our best, but our best was not good enough, perhaps because we tried something we were learning but had not mastered, then we should be proud. Recognize the mistake, work to correct it, but also know the greater mistake would have been not to have tried.
Wining matters. It is one reason we play. Another reason we play is to challenge ourselves and that reason matters more. If we meet the challenge we won a battle that matters more than who won than the game.
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Winning matters. If you are a competitor you want to win. You should hurt a little when you lose. To tell your players that winning or losing does not matter is fundamentally untrue.
Never deny the importance of winning.
But, do not over emphasize it.
What matters more than winning is playing the best you can. As a player you cannot control whether you win or lose. There are 21 other players on the field at the same time as you who can have as much impact. There is the referee. There are the playing conditions.
You have little to no control over the other 21 players, the referee or the conditions. You can control how you play. If you play your best and lose, you should hold your head up. If you play with less than your best and win, you should take no personal joy in the outcome. Be happy for your teammates, but recognize that you missed the mark.
We all make mistakes. Mistakes that stem from a lack of ability or knowledge are not something to castigate ourselves over unless we have failed to practice and had a chance to master the ability or knowledge and failed to take the opportunity.
If the mistake stems from trying our best, but our best was not good enough, perhaps because we tried something we were learning but had not mastered, then we should be proud. Recognize the mistake, work to correct it, but also know the greater mistake would have been not to have tried.
Wining matters. It is one reason we play. Another reason we play is to challenge ourselves and that reason matters more. If we meet the challenge we won a battle that matters more than who won than the game.
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