Extol Sports July 2017 | Page 29

S SHAQUILLE O’NEAL was one of the great pro basketball players of his generation, a giant force in the middle, a powerful scorer and rebounder. But he could barely hit half of his free throw attempts. Greg Norman, generally regarded as the No. 1 golfer in the world in the 1980s and ’90s, had a maddening string of Sunday collapses after leading major tournaments through the first three rounds – most famously blowing a six-stroke lead in the final round of the 1996 Masters. Jim Thorpe, a century ago acknowledged as “the world’s greatest athlete,” saw his professional baseball career scuttled by his inability to hit the curveball. Often, these odd blips in an athlete’s performance are written off as “he just can’t . . .” Maybe the athlete himself accepts that “I’m just not good at it.” And, if the athlete is otherwise good enough at most other aspects of his game, this one particular weakness is acknowledged, almost in acceptance mode, as “well, nobody’s perfect.” But why could Tim Duncan, another big man of similar stature to O’Neal, hit his free throws at a much higher percentage? Why could Jack Nicklaus gobble up the fourth rounds of major tournaments when Norman so often failed? TOO OFTEN, WE EXPECT IMMEDIATE SUCCESS, WITHOUT PREPARATION, PRACTICE OR TRAINING. VANESSA SHANNON, DIRECTOR OF MENTAL PERFORMANCE AT NORTON SPORTS HEALTH, SUGGESTS AN ALTERNATE ROUTE TO ASSURING ACHIEVEMENT. Why could Honus Wagner, on the surface a far less athletic-looking contemporary, hit curveballs with the success that eluded Thorpe? “The inability to perform, even among otherwise-gifted individuals, is an insidious problem,” said Dr. Vanessa Shannon, director of mental performance at Norton Sports Health. “But it’s largely misunderstood, especially by the individuals themselves.” Norton Sports Health is a department of specialists within Norton Healthcare who are trained and certified in dealing with sports- related injuries and conditions. Shannon (who also holds the same title with the University of Louisville athletics department) has a Ph.D. in sport psychology. The athletes she works with, both at Norton and at UofL, are not dealing with fractures of bones. They’re dealing with fractures of confidence. Most athletes, she said, take exactly the wrong approach to poor performance. (The same could be said for most anyone in any walk of life.) “On a basic level, the way that we think affects the way that we feel and act,” Shannon said. “My job is to help athletes determine what things to think about, and how they need to feel in order to perform their best.” Take the case of O’Neal, so futile a free throw shooter that other teams adopted the “Hack-a- Shaq” defense to foul him before he could get his shots up. He hit his field goal attempts – when he was contested, jostled, pushed, blocked and obstructed – at better than 58 percent. But standing alone at the free throw line, taking his time with nobody’s hand in his face, he shot under 53 percent. How much bigger a force he could have been if he’d made opposing teams pay for fouling him. “A player struggling with his free throw shots – or any other aspect of his game – will start to think, ‘I’m just not good at it. I don’t do it well,’ ” said Shannon. “That’s a fixed way of thinking that will likely make him feel anxious and nervous, and therefore even less effective. “Whereas, if he were able to say to himself, ‘I’m not a great free throw shooter yet, I still need to work on my free throws,’ it will give him the perception of feeling in control, of feeling autonomous and competent.” Shannon points out that free throw shooting is not a genetic trait nor an inherent skill, it’s something you learn and develop over time. “So, I would argue that people who say they’re not good free throw shooters haven’t worked at it enough. Technique can be changed and performance can be improved.” She said that other people passing it all off as “he’s just not a good free throw shooter” allows the athlete himself to have the mindset that gets him out of an uncomfortable situation. “People play into stereotypes about themselves: ‘I’m not a good free throw shooter, I’m uncomfortable shooting them, but I’m super good at other things.’ It’s way more comfortable for people to focus 27