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From the Yips to Starting Lineup: How One Freshman Overcame Mental Paralysis

From the Yips to Starting Lineup: How One Freshman Overcame Mental Paralysis

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Game Changers: Athlete Edition - Episode with Josie Owen-Kren (Part 2) Show Description In Part 2 of our powerful conversation with Michigan soccer player Josie Owen-Kren, hosts Julie Jones and Kortney Harmon dive deeper into the mental challenges of college athletics. From overcoming "the yips" to learning how to communicate with different coaching styles, Josie shares how she transformed from a tentative freshman into a confident starter. This episode explores the crucial skills of adaptation, communication, and finding your voice while still being coachable - lessons that extend far beyond the soccer field. Episode Highlights The Mental Game: Overcoming "The Yips" Josie opens up about experiencing what she calls "the yips" - a period where she couldn't connect a simple pass for four straight days. This happened because she was so focused on not making mistakes that she actually made everything worse. The Pressure Cooker: "I have four days to prove that I can play. So I didn't want to do anything wrong. So now I'm trying not to do everything wrong and I'm actually doing everything wrong because I'm trying not to do it wrong." The Breaking Point: Even simple decisions like playing the ball backward to her center backs or goalkeeper became impossible. She was so mentally locked up that she would only play forward - directly to the opposing team. The Power of Letting Go The turning point came when Josie made a controversial decision that actually saved her mental game: she temporarily stopped listening to her coaches. Finding Her Game Again: "I kind of stopped listening to my coaches for a minute... I was like, I'm just gonna play my game. I started doing that and started enjoying soccer again." This wasn't rebellion - it was about quieting the mental noise and getting back to her natural instincts before slowly incorporating coaching feedback. Translating Coach Speak into Player Action Working with Julie, Josie learned how to take coaching instructions and translate them into her own language and movement patterns, rather than trying to completely change her game. The Key Insight: "It was more of, like, almost taking what she says and turning it into, what am I good at? And how do I apply it to what I'm already good at?" Communication Across Different Coaching Styles Josie had to learn to communicate with Brian, a male assistant coach whose harsh, direct style was completely different from what she was used to. The lesson? Coaches won't change their communication style for you - you have to figure out how to work with them. The Reality Check: "Any time he said something, it was hard for me to take it in because I didn't quite understand what he was saying. The way he said it wasn't how I would have received it." The Spring Turnaround: From Uncertainty to Starting Despite feeling confident going into spring meetings, Josie received lukewarm feedback from coaches who still weren't sure about her abilities. But instead of getting discouraged, she used this as motivation. The Meeting That Stung: Her coaches said her confidence was up but she was still indecisive, and they needed to "see how the games go." The Breakthrough Moment: In her second spring game against Notre Dame, Josie not only started but received Player of the Game honors from her captains. She started every game after that. Coach's Surprise: "You know, like, I kind of just threw you in there to see how you would react. And you hung with everyone. Like, you played great. Like, nobody was expecting it." Rediscovering the Joy of Playing A crucial element in Josie's transformation was remembering why she loved soccer in the first place. Back to Basics: When they did 1v1 defending drills (something she loved from her club days), Josie found her zone again: "I just loved it. So there was like a few practices where we do 1v1. So I was just like in my zone. I was loving it." Julie's Insight: "When fun goes away, it's work. And you didn't go there to work soccer. You went there to play soccer." Key Takeaways for Athletes Mental Performance Lessons: Overthinking kills performance - Sometimes you need to quiet the mental chatter and trust your instinctsIt's okay to step back temporarily - Taking a break from trying to please everyone can help you find yourself againRediscover your love for the game - When pressure mounts, remember why you started playing Communication Skills: Coaches won't change for you - Learn to adapt to different communication stylesTranslate feedback into your language - Don't try to completely change who you are as a playerBuild relationships gradually - Understanding different personalities takes time Resilience Building: Prepare for things to go wrong - Even successful freshmen face unexpected challengesEveryone struggles - You're not alone in questioning yourself during freshman yearAcademic preparation matters - Strong study habits from club/high school will serve you well The Academic Success Factor Josie shares how her club...
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