Why Visualization Doesn’t Work for Girls Hockey Players

I never felt that quiet pre-game visualization worked particularly well for myself (as a player) or my athletes (as a coach).  It always felt a little too much like meditation for me, and instead of helping to get me ready to hit the ice, I felt more like having a nap.

Instead, I like to use one particular mental performance strategy with my players that is a little more active. I have found it to be extremely effective for getting players focused on what they bring to the table and keeping them focused when they are having a tough game or are in the dreaded “slump”.

“Calling Card” Exercise

To create a personal “calling card”, you write down 3 strengths that you can commit to bringing to the team each and every time you hit the ice. This “calling cards” will help you focus on your personal strengths and re-focus when you are struggling. It allows you to clearly identify your role on the team and will give you a sense of accountability and responsibility to both yourself and your teammates.

It is so important that every player has a physical calling card. The simple act of writing these points down makes them more concrete and real and it also gives you something that you can refer back to at any time. Once you have created the card, you must hold themselves accountable to those key qualities you have identified. You must do everything you possible can to make sure that you never fail at ‘delivering’ on those promises to both yourself and your teammates.   Bottom line: these are the qualities that you must embrace in order for you to succeed as an individual and for your team to succeed as a whole.

Now just because you have identified your role today, it doesn’t mean that you are forever bound to the exact points you have written down on the card forever.  For example, you may start out the season as a fourth liner who sees no time on specialty teams and end up as a second liner who plays the penalty kill a few months later.  Obviously, your role would change as the season progressed, and you would alter your “calling card” to reflect those changes. 

What’s on your calling card? What are 3 strengths of your game that you can commit to delivering each and every time you step out on the ice? There is no right or wrong answer – you just have to make sure that you ACT on the strengths that you identified and COMMIT to getting it done every day.

~ Coach Kim


As Seen On