Saturday 17 February 2024

Performance Progression of a Player

 

I spoke to one parent in a recent tournament Kiera had participated in. We shared various topics including club trainings which he emphasised to explore various academies instead of reliant on one. The old adage came to mind, “familiarity breeds contempt…” I had been an advocate of this since my boys were playing competitively in their junior days. To give them fresh perspective in training, they always have training diversity with variety of coaches at different academies.

He continued to share, as a player develops further to higher levels, trainings should be complimented with regular sparring and competitions to actualise what they have trained. Some don’t see it that way but he seemed to be a firm believer of this and opined that the mentality of a player during training is different than when they are in a match with a stake at hand. When there is a small wager to spice up the match and usually this will bring up the intensity and quality of the match than they normally would during training. Tournaments with cash winnings often spur players into competitive mentality and precisely the reason why I wanted Kiera to participate in private tournaments periodically.

Its not so much for the cash winnings although it is nice to have, instead it is part of her training process or a check point if you will, to gauge where about she has progressed in the field of competition. Whenever there is a good challenge (win or lose), I would record it on video and analyse it. Her shortcomings will be highlighted and brought to the attention of her coaches to address specific areas in her game that needed correction and improvements.

Secondly, the private tournaments were intended as a precursor, preparation and readiness before a major tournament. It is akin to a trial exam as it were, a rehearsal and familiarization of the actual major tournament. This run-in was intended to aid her movement coordination, give confidence and hopefully assist to overcome her anxieties, fears and doubts as the major tournament draws near.   

Therefore, the result of these private tournaments may be secondary. Instead, the focus is to build up her form and peak her at the right time, or at least an attempt to this effect. Therefore, at times she has to learn to accept her losses first so as this could induce her to reset herself in the next coming tournament psychologically and make a comeback. What we certainly do not want is to peak too early and her form goes downhill from here.

For the third part, I have conceptualize a typical players’ performance progression in a graph below.


This graph depicts a progression of performance over time, represented by the blue curve line. As long as a player trains consistently over time (without interruption of injury or long layoffs), the player’s performance progression should develop in the way of the blue line. I have identified three levels of relative progression as represented by three rectangular boxes ie. elementary, intermediate and advance levels respectively. In each of the levels, a player’s actual performance will experience ups and downs as I call it “Range of Performance” and the range should oscillate along the blue line.

There is a possibility of overlap in each range of performance too, but for illustration purposes here, a player with a distinct level of performance should not deviate too much from the respective rectangular boxes. It is therefore imperative for a player/coach/manager to understand how to manage a player’s form within the respective rectangle and to work the player close to the blue line if not higher during tournament periods.

The other part which is equally important succeeding to this is to plan a players’s yearly calendar using the concept of periodization. That will be in another article (if I can find the time to write again.)


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