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The AS&K Sports MSD

The 10 Mental Skills: INTERNAL DRIVE


What is INTERNAL DRIVE?

Internal drive refers to an athlete’s beliefs about their personal control over the events that affect their lives. Athletes with a strong internal drive believe they can overcome setbacks or obstacles with a good plan and sufficient effort. They believe the setback is only temporary or the obstacle will interfere briefly. They believe that their success is due to their skills and hard work and failures and setbacks can be avoided by hard work.




10 MENTAL SKILLS


TOOLS


ROLE





MOST RELATED SKILLS

INTERPRETING THE INTERNAL DRIVE SCORE ON THE MSA

Athletes with a strong Internal Drive believe that they have a great deal of control over the events affect their lives. When athletes with a strong Internal Drive experience a setback or obstacle they believe they can overcome it and they take action to do so. The setback or obstacle does not interfere with other plans or activities. They believe the setback is only temporary or the obstacle will interfere briefly. Athletes with a strong Internal Drive believe that their success is due to their skills and hard work and failures and setbacks can be avoided by hard work.

WHAT CAN INFLUENCE THE INTERNAL DRIVE SCORE?

Internal drive is enhanced by Satisfaction and Task Confidence. Internal drive increases level of Effort, Leadership, Goal Setting, and Goal Implementation. Internal Drive is diminished by low scores on Self-Worth and low Task Confidence.


TIPS FOR ATHLETES

Do you have a strong Internal Drive? Is your Internal Drive MSA score high or low? In what situations is the score high and in what situations is it low? What are your Internal Drive BITEs (behaviors, images, thoughts, emotions)? Are they different in different situations?

  1. Make a list of your Internal Drive BITEs especially those that occur in the face of frustrations, obstacles, and setbacks. Identify which ones are positive and helpful for building a sense of personal control over events and which are not helpful.
  2. Do you blame others, other players, coaches, equipment, weather or other external causes when you make a mistake or perform less well than you can? If you do your BITEs are about external control of your performance and your internal drive is low.

TIPS FOR COACHES

What drives your athletes to succeed? Are they strongly affected by setbacks that affect performance? Do they blame themselves for setbacks? Are you a good role model for strong Internal Drive?

  1. Note tendencies in your athlete to blame others for his or her mistakes, losses, frustrations, obstacles, or setbacks. Without making statements that diminish the athlete’s character, ability, or self-worth, redirect the conversation to ways in which the athlete can positively influence events.
  2. Help your athletes understand and come to believe that most mistakes, losses, frustrations, obstacles, or setbacks can be most effectively managed by focusing on positive actions (BITEs) the athlete can take that are under their control. Focus on what can be learned from the mistakes, losses, frustrations, obstacles, or setbacks. Consider setting or adjusting goals based on the mistakes, losses, frustrations, obstacles, or setbacks.

TIPS FOR PARENTS

Does your athlete have a strong Internal Drive? Is his or her Internal Drive MSA score high or low? In what situations is the score high and in what situations is it low? How are your athlete’s Internal Drive BITEs different in the different situations, if at all?

  1. Working with your athlete’s cooperation and consent, make a list of your athlete’s Internal Drive BITEs especially those that occur in the face of frustrations, obstacles, and setbacks. Identify which ones are positive and helpful for building a sense of personal control over events and which are not helpful.
  2. Note tendencies in your athlete to diminish the credit she/he deserves for success. Find opportunities to discuss when your athlete performed well, made a good play, performed well in the clutch, etc. Describe specific actions, behaviors, and reasons (BITEs) why your athlete was responsible for his/her own success. Ask your athlete to describe in his/her own words what he/she did well that caused their success. If you have videos of your athlete they can be used effectively in this manner. The discussion must be sincere, accurate, and believable to you and your athlete.


ATHLETES

What drives you to succeed? Is your drive diminished by a setback or obstacle? Does your Internal Drive vary across different situations?

COACHES

What affects my athletes' drives to succeed? Are they strongly affected by setbacks that affect performance? How do I model a healthy Internal Drive?

PARENTS

How can I nurture a healthy Internal drive in my son/daughter? Do I emphasize the actions, behaviors and reasons that my athlete succeeded?