Wimbledon’s Winning Mindset – Lessons for Business
Wimbledon’s Winning Mindset – Lessons for Business
Published by Gbaf News
Posted on June 25, 2015

Published by Gbaf News
Posted on June 25, 2015

There are few tournaments as mentally demanding as Wimbledon, where a global audience watches transfixed as highly tuned athletes push their minds and bodies to the limit. In split seconds, points are won and lost and careers are defined.
Jeremy Snape, a former England cricketer and managing director of sport and business psychologists Sporting Edge (www.sportingedge.com), highlights the psychological pressure Wimbledon stars, such as Andy Murray, have to deal with and their lessons for managers, executives and business owners dealing with business pressures.
Jeremy Snape said: “Whether we are in business or sport, every one of us has a psychological breaking point under pressure. One of the reasons we find sporting events like Wimbledon so fascinating is wondering whether the athletes will be able to handle the pressure.
“The individual sports like tennis distill these psychological demands down further, making Wimbledon’s Centre Court a crucible of pressure.”
For the amazing feats of concentration and endurance, not to mention skill that you see in Wimbledon the athletes have spent huge amounts of time preparing their mind – not just their bodies. In business, the expectation of winning and hitting deadlines can make the pressures just the same. Here are tips to help you deliver your best game:
You could do the same whether it’s a sales call, a trade or a difficult conversation with a peer, prepare well and then focus on a flawless execution and the rest will take care of itself.

Jeremy Snape
One of the best things that you can do to prepare is to simulate high pressure situations so you get accustomed to them. In Sporting Edge’s research into top athletes Boris Becker, the former number one tennis player and Wimbledon great, highlighted that “Novak Djokovic practices the high pressure moments, not on finals day but quietly in the outside courts way ahead of the big game. Those moments shouldn’t be a surprise, you need to practice your concentration to handle the pressure.”
Sporting Edge also interviewed former British number one tennis player Annabel Croft who said: “confidence is everything. If you don’t have confidence then you don’t have any belief in your ability. Confidence comes from an ability to draw upon your training and everything you’ve done in practise and repetitive nature so that you come through in a performance when it matters and its actually just believing in yourself at the most crucial times.”
About Sporting Edge (www.sportingedge.com)
Sporting Edge is a high performance training company that bridges the gap between sport, research and business. Founded in 2005 by former England Cricketer Jeremy Snape.
Our innovative approach to corporate learning is powered by our digital ‘Performance Zone’ a library of exclusive interviews with elite champions and their coaches. We fuse these exclusive insights with practical tools from performance psychology to deliver business results.