During one such match, I found myself down to an opponent I believed I shouldn't ever lose to (I'll save a discussion on that poor mentality for another day). As was often the case for me at this stage in my playing career, I lost my temper. For me, this involved a lot of yelling at myself, slapping my racket against the net cord, the occasional throwing of the racket (off-hand and open face so I wouldn't break it), and much like Denis Shapovalov, I sometimes found myself taking my anger out on a tennis ball.
My sportsmanship in that loss was bad enough that my parents "encouraged" me to apologize to my victor and his parents. Honestly, it was embarrassing.
But the next week, while competing against another school, a coach I had never met before pulled me aside to offer me some advice. He said he had watched me the week before and that he thought I was a talented player. But he asked me if I understood how my emotional tirades were really affecting the outcomes of my matches.
Nope, hadn't even thought about it.
I simply thought it was a momentary expression of frustration that would allow me to get out my anger and help me start focusing on playing better. This coach, however, made one main point: my emotional outbursts gave my opponents confidence because they knew they had me on the ropes.
That was quite literally a game-changer.
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Here I am picking up my first singles win, but that's a story for another day. |
I hate losing. Always have, and always will. And as soon as the dots were connected and the correlation between my emotions and my losing was made, I changed. That day I won my first "official" singles match, and I give a lot of credit to this mental change.
Here is the lesson I learned: very few of us in this world are like John McEnroe. He used his temper to propel him to be one of the greatest players this sport has ever seen. More of us are like me, where our tempers get in the way of our success. It's bad sportsmanship, it harms us, and it helps our opponents.
Hopefully we can all learn this lesson before we're forced to learn it the hard way.
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