When players choke, it usually does not happen at a random time. It happens when they have been playing well.
They are up a break. They are serving for the set. They have match point. The finish line is suddenly near, and something changes. In the most obvious cases, the player starts playing differently right away — they get tentative, tighter, or rushed. In less obvious cases, you mainly see it in the result. A double fault. An unforced error in a regular baseline rally. A missed approach shot. And suddenly it is love-40.
So what is actually happening? Because the opponent has not suddenly changed. It is still the same court, the same match, the same player, the same strokes. What has changed is the score, what that score means to the player, and the internal environment now created by that meaning.
That is where choking begins.
What breaks down
is not technique
A lot of the time, what breaks down first is not technique itself. It is the mindfulness skills that were quietly supporting the player all along. Attention starts going somewhere else. Instead of staying with what mattered throughout the match, attention now starts getting pulled by thoughts, sensations, and emotions. Thoughts about winning. Thoughts about losing. Thoughts about what this result would mean. Sensations of tightness, urgency, pressure, or fear. Emotions that suddenly have much more charge because the opportunity feels real now.
And once those processes begin pulling attention strongly enough, performance changes. The player may not even notice that their attention is no longer where it was a few games earlier. They may not realize that they are no longer paying attention to the same cues that were helping them play well the whole match. Or they may notice it, but not have the ability to work with it well enough in that moment.
Step through the full sequence below — this is what is actually happening inside a player who is about to choke.
That is why the same player can look stable at 3-all and then look completely different at 5-4 serving for the match. The external situation has barely changed. The internal meaning of the situation has changed dramatically. And that internal meaning now starts affecting where attention goes, what the player notices, how much aversion they have to what they are feeling, and how cleanly they are still able to make decisions.
Why these moments
are so hard to train
The most intense choking moments usually do not happen very often. They may only happen in exactly those rare situations that matter a great deal personally — the first time serving for a big win, the first semifinal of an important tournament, the first time a player has a real chance to beat someone they have never beaten before.
And that creates an additional challenge. If the player only gets that exact level of nervousness or tightness in very rare moments, then their chance to practice allowing those thoughts and sensations at that intensity is also rare. So training this usually has to happen in two ways.
First, the player needs to train the underlying mindfulness skills consistently, so the baseline gets stronger. Their attention becomes steadier. Their noticing becomes more precise. They get lost in thought less easily or for less time. Their ability to allow unpleasant sensations improves. All of that matters, because when the big moment comes, they will not be starting from zero. This connects directly to why knowing what to do is not the same as being able to do it — the skill has to be built before the moment arrives.
Training in
meaningful moments
The second side is that the player also needs to practice specifically in situations that resemble the problem. One way is what my teacher, Shinzen Young, calls situation practice. That means the player finds themselves in a meaningful moment — maybe in training, maybe in a practice set, maybe in a less intense version of the same kind of pressure — and instead of treating that as a problem, they recognize it as the exact moment to train.
Now the pressure is no longer just something happening to them. It becomes the training opportunity. They notice the thoughts. They notice the sensations. They notice the urge to rush, tighten, force, or protect. And they work on staying with the right attentional task while allowing the internal discomfort to be there. That is a golden moment for training.
The other version is self-created pressure practice. This is when the player intentionally creates something that brings up similar thoughts and sensations for the purpose of learning how to work with them better. Maybe they create a score situation on purpose. Maybe they add consequence. Maybe they simulate serving for the set. But this kind of practice should be voluntary. If it is forced from the outside, it can easily backfire. The whole point is that the player is willingly entering the discomfort in order to train their relationship to it. That is very different from just being overwhelmed.
This is also where understanding what actually breaks down under pressure becomes practically important — because you cannot train your way out of something you have not precisely diagnosed.
How choking
starts to change
You do not just tell the player, "Be braver next time." You do not just tell them, "Trust your game." And you do not just hope that experience alone will solve it.
You train the skills. You strengthen the baseline. You practice in meaningful situations. You create pressure deliberately and voluntarily when appropriate. And you help the player learn, little by little, that these high-pressure moments are not just tests. They are also chances to build the exact capacities that those moments require.
That is how choking starts to change. Not because the player never feels pressure again. But because when the big moment comes, the inner system does not get reorganized as completely as it used to.
If you are a competitive player serious about developing the mental side of the game with the same structure as technical and physical training, apply to work together.
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