The greatest efforts in sports came when the mind is as still as a glass lake.

Concentration is not staring hard at something. It is not trying to concentrate.

Winning is overcoming obstacles to reach a goal, but the value in winning is only as great as the value of the goal reached.

Coaching is unlocking a person's potential to maximize their own performance. It is helping them to learn rather than teaching them.

Like one's own children, golf has an uncanny way of endearing itself to us while at the same time evoking every weakness of mind and character, no matter how well hidden.

The word coach comes from the old English word coach, which was a vehicle, a carriage that took royalty or very important people from where they were to where they wanted to go. That's really what a coach is. He or she tries to create a vehicle that will help you get where you're going, not where the coach wants you to go.

Both Arthur Ashe and Billie Jean King used these phrases ("playing out of one's mind," or "over one's head") to describe their performances while winning tghe finals at Wimbledon in 1975. . . . The player loses himself in the action, continually breaki g the false limits placed on is potential. Awareness becomes acutely heightened, while analysis, anxiety and self-conscious thought are compoletly forgotten. Enjoyment is at a peak - pure and unspoiled.

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