How to Build Game-Day Confidence and Perform Freely Under Pressure

Quick Summary: How to Build Game-Day Confidence
  • Game-day confidence is not about hype or guarantees. It is about trusting yourself and staying present under pressure.
  • Preparation alone does not guarantee confidence if fear, anxiety, or negative thinking take over during competition.
  • Confidence drops when attention shifts to outcomes, consequences, and what others think.
  • Building game-day confidence requires setting controllable standards like effort, relaxation, and reset speed.
  • Encouraging self-talk and quick mental resets help you recover after mistakes and stay composed.
  • True confidence allows you to play freely, focus on controllables, and trust your preparation instead of chasing certainty.

Game-day confidence isn’t about hyping yourself up. It isn’t about convincing yourself you’re the best player on the field. And it definitely isn’t about guaranteeing that you’re going to dominate.

Game-day confidence is about trust.

It’s about being relaxed, present, and free when you compete.

If you’ve been playing well in practice but struggling during competition, that trust can feel very difficult to generate. And when confidence drops on game day, most athletes immediately assume they just need more preparation.

But that’s rarely the real issue.

In this article, I’m going to explain:

  • Why game-day confidence breaks down
  • Why preparation alone is not enough
  • What real confidence actually is
  • The three pillars that build true game-day confidence
  • How structured mental performance coaching strengthens confidence week by week

This article supports my main confidence guide: How to Build Confidence in Sports

If you haven’t read that yet, start there for a broader framework. What we’re doing here is zooming in specifically on game-day confidence.

Why Game-Day Confidence Breaks Down

Most athletes are told, “Confidence comes from preparation.”

And yes, preparation matters.

If you are underprepared physically, you will struggle to feel confident.

But what happens when you are prepared?

What happens when you train hard, put in the reps, and still show up on game day feeling doubt?

That tells us something important.

The issue is not what’s missing. The issue is what’s present.

When I work with athletes one-on-one, I rarely see a lack of preparation as the main problem. Instead, I see:

  • Fear of failure
  • Performance anxiety
  • Outcome-based thinking
  • Negative self-talk
  • Pressure from expectations

During games, these mental challenges overshadow preparation.

And when fear rises, attention shifts.

Instead of thinking about execution, athletes think about:

  • What if I mess up?
  • What if I fail?
  • What will people think?
  • What if coach pulls me?

The more you fear messing up, the more timid you play.

The more anxious you are, the less present you are.

And if you are not present, you cannot trust yourself.

Why Preparation Alone Doesn’t Guarantee Confidence

Preparation builds potential. It does not automatically build trust.

Trust is built when your mind allows you to access your preparation without interference.

If fear, anxiety, or negative thinking are present during competition, they block access to your skills.

You can be physically ready but mentally restricted. This is why so many athletes say: “I don’t know what happens. I just play different in games.”

It’s not that your skills disappear. It’s that fear changes your focus.

And confidence is heavily influenced by focus.

If your focus is on outcomes and consequences, confidence will drop. If your focus is on controllables and presence, confidence will rise.

What Real Game-Day Confidence Actually Is

Game-day confidence is not:

  • Certainty of success
  • Guaranteeing perfect performance
  • Believing you’re the greatest player alive
  • Eliminating all nerves

True confidence is:

  • Trust in your preparation
  • Ability to let go of outcomes
  • Willingness to play freely
  • Staying present under pressure
  • Being relaxed and focused at the same time

In practice, athletes often say they feel more confident. But when we examine why, it’s not because they believe they’ll execute perfectly.

It’s because they aren’t worried about consequences. They are more relaxed. They are more present. There is less fear attached to mistakes.

Game-day confidence is not about increasing certainty.

It is about decreasing fear.

That is a critical shift.

The Three Pillars of Building Game-Day Confidence

To build game-day confidence, we must intentionally shift attention away from outcomes and toward controllables.

Here are the three pillars that make that possible.

Pillar 1: Set Controllable Standards

When confidence drops, athletes start focusing on: “Don’t mess up.”

That is not controllable. You cannot control whether you miss a shot.

You cannot control every outcome.

But you can control:

  • Your effort
  • Your breathing
  • Your body language
  • Your reset speed
  • Your focus
  • Your level of relaxation

One baseball player I work with made a huge shift when he stopped chasing assurance and instead focused on being relaxed. His new standard became, “I want to stay relaxed at all times.”

Because that was controllable, his attention shifted away from outcomes. And because he stayed more relaxed, he performed better.

When you change what is important to you during competition, your confidence changes.

Instead of trying to guarantee results, set standards around:

  • Be present.
  • Be relaxed.
  • Give full effort.
  • Reset quickly.

That is confidence you can build.

Pillar 2: Use Encouraging, Performance-Focused Thinking

Positive thinking does not mean pretending you are the greatest. It means thinking in ways that support performance.

Instead of:

  • “I hope I don’t mess up.”
  • “I don’t feel ready.”
  • “I can’t mess this up.”

Shift to:

  • “I trust my preparation.”
  • “Stay present.”
  • “Be relaxed.”
  • “Focus on what I can control.”

Encouraging thinking keeps you grounded. It keeps your attention in the moment. And presence builds confidence.

If negative self-talk is something you struggle with, I recommend reading: How to Stop Negative Self-Talk in Sports

Because confidence and self-talk are deeply connected.

Pillar 3: Have a Reset System in Place

Confidence is not built by avoiding mistakes. It is built by responding well to them.

Mistakes will happen. Bad calls will happen. Pressure will increase. Without a reset, those moments spiral into doubt.

A simple reset system includes:

  1. Deep breath

  2. Short release statement (“Let it go.”)

  3. Refocus on the controllable standard

Example: “Let that go. Deep breath. Just be relaxed.”

Every reset is an opportunity to rebuild confidence in the moment.

If you want a deeper breakdown of resetting during games, read: How to Mentally Reset During Games

The Trap of Chasing Confidence

There is a trap athletes fall into where they think confidence means, “I know I’m going to dominate.”

That is unrealistic.

Confidence is not certainty. Confidence is permission. Permission to play freely. Permission to be present. Permission to trust your preparation.

If you chase guarantees, you will feel frustrated. If you chase presence, confidence grows naturally.

How Mental Performance Coaching Builds Game-Day Confidence

The strategy above is powerful. But it is general.

If you truly want to build lasting game-day confidence, you need a personalized system.

Inside my structured 12-week one-on-one mental performance coaching program, we:

  • Identify your specific confidence barriers
  • Break down your fear patterns
  • Address performance anxiety
  • Restructure your self-talk
  • Build personalized controllable standards
  • Develop a reset strategy tailored to your sport

We begin with a detailed mental performance assessment. From there, I create a custom mental game plan. We will meet weekly over Zoom or FaceTime, and between sessions, you receive ongoing support and accountability.

If you’re interested in learning more: Mental Performance Coaching for Athletes

Final Thoughts

If you are physically prepared, then game-day confidence is not about doing more reps.

It is about shifting attention.

  • Be present.
  • Set controllable standards.
  • Encourage yourself effectively.
  • Reset quickly.

Confidence gives you permission to trust yourself.

And when you trust yourself, you play freely.

Contact Success Starts Within Today

Please contact us to learn more about mental coaching and to see how it can improve your mental game and increase your performance. Complete the form below, call (919) 914-0234 or schedule an introductory coaching call here.

What Athletes & Parents Say About Working 1-on-1 With Eli

Athletes across multiple sports and competitive levels have used my 12-week 1-on-1 mental performance coaching program to strengthen confidence, improve focus, and perform more consistently under pressure.

“It’s been immensely helpful having a voice aside from coaches or parents. Our athlete feels like Eli is on their team.”
— Eliza B.

“Nothing I tried stuck until I worked 1-on-1 with Eli. Now I stay in the moment, reset after mistakes, and compete with a calmer mindset.”
— Sandra H.

“Working with Eli has been one of the best decisions we’ve made. The mental tools for handling pressure, building confidence, and bouncing back have been invaluable.”
— Santo M.

If you’re ready to work directly with me as your personal mental performance coach, schedule a free introductory call above.

Eli Straw

Eli is a sport psychology consultant and mental game coach who works 1-1 with athletes to help them improve their mental skills and overcome any mental barriers keeping them from performing their best. He has an M.S. in psychology and his mission is to help athletes and performers reach their goals through the use of sport psychology & mental training.

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Mental Training Courses

Learn more about our main mental training courses for athletes: The Confident Competitor Academy,  and The Mentally Tough Kid Course.

The Confident Competitor Academy  is a 6-week program where you will learn proven strategies to reduce fear of failure and sports performance anxiety during games. It’s time to stop letting fear and anxiety hold you back.

The Mentally Tough Kid course will teach your young athlete tools & techniques to increase self-confidence, improve focus, manage mistakes, increase motivation, and build mental toughness.

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Master Your Mental Game With One-On-One Coaching

Get one-on-one mental performance coaching to help break through mental barriers and become the athlete you’re meant to be!

Master Your Mental Game With One-On-One Coaching

Get one-on-one mental performance coaching to help break through mental barriers and become the athlete you’re meant to be!