To get good at coming through under pressure, you have to be
realistic with yourself, and know what your capabilities are—your strong points
and your weak points. A good self-analysis is the place to start. Drawing
confidence when you need it plays into the mental game that’s part of any
professional sport. Confidence comes from knowing or thinking you can do it, no
matter what the situation is. From roping and competing since I was a little
kid, and watching and analyzing ropers at all different levels, I’ve noticed
different characteristics that either help or hinder people. This all becomes
most critical in pressure situations.

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Preparation and work ethic play a big part in your success or
failure. In any sport, the great athletes not only possess a high level of
ability, but also have a high regard for work ethic. They work very hard at
refining those special abilities. Working hard and knowing you’re prepared to do
the job is a major part of drawing confidence in pressure situations.
There are two ends of the spectrum, even among the group of
ropers that has the ability and has also put in the time and effort. There are
people who have to work on their confidence, and there are people who are
naturally upbeat and extremely confident. The ropers who are confident don’t
have to work on that part. The people who aren’t naturally confident have to
find a way to ride in the box with confidence just the same. One way or another,
you have to be confident when you ride in there.
In the book "The Inner Game of Tennis," there was an interesting
point made that our reactions and natural abilities are best able to fire and
function on basically a clear, confident state of mind. For me, I have to work
on being calm and making my mind and muscles loose and at ease, in order to
allow my reactionary functions to fire like they’ve been trained to fire.
In the practice pen, it’s easy to make good runs. It’s harder to
duplicate those runs in pressure situations, because you’re apt to be more
tight. Your mind has more to think about in competitive situations, and it can
take you over into the area where it starts to affect your ability to react.
Some ropers tend to over-analzye when they compete, which can hinder your
performance.
There has to be a foundation. You need to build yourself up. Most
people do it by coming up through the ranks, so to speak. They start out junior
rodeoing and jackpotting, then amateur rodeoing, then the pros. You keep
progressing in stages, getting better partners, climbing up the ladder and
building toward having more opportunities to win. The pressure keeps getting
greater, but the ability to handle that pressure needs to be part of the
progression. Learning to deal with your emotions, stay calm and maximize your
potential by allowing yourself to react so you don’t get in your own way is
important.
Once you get to a certain level of ability, it becomes a mental
game. To be able to win, you have to learn how to control that part of the game.
You have to realize how the brain and the body function. They function best on a
clear mind and confidence, when you’re prepared and ready to compete, but
relaxed enough for your reaction to fire correctly. Otherwise, your mind gets in
your way.