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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Sports Psychology Articles

How Does Attitude Impact Performance?

Quick Summary:

  • Your attitude directly impacts your performance by affecting your resilience, focus, effort, and actions during competition.
  • A negative attitude makes it harder to bounce back from mistakes, stay locked in, and put yourself in positions to succeed.
  • Attitude is driven by your thinking—not the situation—meaning the same moment can produce very different performances.
  • A positive attitude improves focus, confidence, and effort, helping athletes play better and more consistently.
  • The most effective way to improve attitude is by changing your thinking, especially after mistakes, tough calls, or when things aren’t going your way.
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Setting Goals for Practices & Games

Quick Summary:

  • Goals give athletes clear intent, direction, and focus during both practices and games.
  • The most effective goals are process-based (controllable), not outcome-based.
  • Long-term goals provide motivation, but daily practice and game goals should focus on improvement and performance.
  • Two key questions guide goal-setting: What will help me improve? What will help me play my best?
  • Clear, controllable goals improve practice quality and help athletes perform more consistently in games.
  • Process-focused goals reduce anxiety, keep athletes present, and support confident performances.
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Three Pillars to Becoming a More Consistent Athlete

Quick Summary:

  • Consistency comes from mindset, not results—repeat the same confident, present-focused mentality each game.
  • Weekly physical preparation and extra skill work reduce worry and build trust in your abilities.
  • Mental preparation tools like visualization, self-talk, and pre-game routines create a reliable game-day mindset.
  • Consistency depends on how you respond to mistakes—reset quickly instead of letting errors snowball.
  • Respond to bad games with learning, not overthinking; avoid unnecessary mechanical changes driven by fear.
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Is it Okay to Feel Nervous Before Games?

Quick Summary:

  • Nervousness before games is normal and can even boost performance, but it becomes harmful when it leads to anxiety or timid play
  • “Playing nervous” happens when fear of mistakes, worry about others, or outcome-focused thinking changes your style of play.
  • Accepting nervousness is the first step—fighting the feeling creates more anxiety and tighter, more fearful performances.
  • Staying present is key to overcoming nervousness; focus on breathing, controllable objectives, visual cues, or simple self-talk.
  • You can feel nervous and still play aggressive, confident, and free by accepting the feeling and redirecting your attention to the moment.
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Mindset Shift to Play Better in Games

Quick Summary:

  • Shifting your focus from yourself to helping the team win reduces anxiety, fear, and self-doubt.
  • Self-consciousness and overthinking often fuel performance issues like the yips and fear of mistakes.
  • A high school catcher overcame the yips by unintentionally focusing fully on supporting his struggling pitcher.
  • A college basketball player improved her performance by ignoring field goal percentage and prioritizing team impact.
  • Focusing on teammates and team success helps you play more freely, naturally, and without overthinking.
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Using Preparation to Reduce Anxiety in Sports

Quick Summary:

  • Anxiety often comes from fear, doubt, and trying to control results, so preparation helps reduce it.
  • Strong physical practice builds trust in your skills and lowers the need to stress about outcomes.
  • Mental prep during the week—visualization and mindfulness—builds confidence and keeps you present.
  • A pregame routine the night before and morning of competition helps you feel calm and ready.
  • Having an in-game strategy (like the ABCs: Accept, Breathe, Change your thinking) allows you to manage anxiety when it appears.
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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!