Trophies
and titles are not won in committee rooms and we know from the
experience of other countries that professional organisation and modern
administration is the key to success in the country.
But
will our administrators ever learn from the mistakes of the past. I am
constantly reminded of the fact that our administrators still
lack the ability to fully grasp a situation.
Not
wanting to put players under undue pressure is a phrase that is so
commonly used by coaches or managers that at times I like to think that maybe that
is the only excuse they can think of given their limited exposure.
Correct goal setting does not, however, imply a blinkered approach.
While describing the technique of archery in Eugen Herrigel's classic Zen and the Art of Archery,
the Zen master states: “The more obstinately you try to learn how to
shoot the arrow for the sake of hitting the goal, the less you will
succeed in the one and the further the other will recede.”
This is the best way to achieve your goal—a dissociated state of awareness.
Winning is secondary. What matters is whether you are aware of your goal and how you are going to achieve it.
That is my advice to future managers of team sports in the country.
Ask
any psychologist and he will tell you that the mind is a strange
machine. It records everything that ever happened in your life and
stores all the images for posterity.
And
this storehouse provides the sportsperson mental strength and a
positive frame of mind. To play well, you must visualize all the
positive games you have played before the big day.
This
conditions the reflexes to react accordingly. Imagery allows the player
to practice and prepare for events and eventualities he can never
expect to train for in reality.
Too often these individuals have thrived despite of the system or relied on a chance encounter with an exceptional coach.
We
can no longer rely on chance and goodwill. We need to learn the lessons
of our competitor nations and have the most professional system for
talent development and support of excellence.
It is virtually impossible to give tips on the state of sporting nirvana, as it were.
But
the definition that probably comes closest can be found in these words
of Herrigel’s Zen master: “You can learn from an ordinary bamboo leaf
what ought to happen. It bends lower and lower under the weight of snow.
Suddenly the snow slips to the ground without the leaf having
stirred... So, indeed, it is: when the tension is fulfilled, the shot
must fall, it must fall from the archer like snow from a bamboo leaf,
before he even thinks of it.”