Henriksen and Burkardt talk sports psychology at Mainzer roundtable

Henriksen and Burkardt talk sports psychology at Mainzer roundtable

By Peter Weis@PeterVicey
At a panel-discussion talk in front of 400 local students at the MEWA Arena, FSV Mainz 05 head-coach Bo Henriksen and FSV striker Jonathan Burkardt discussed the importance of sports psychology in cultivating the proper competitive footballing mentality. 

The two FSV actors both admitted that they employed sports psychologists to help them with their jobs. Burkardt also spoke on the need to avoid social media. Discussing the current state of the team, Henriksen concluded matters on an optimistic note.

Bo Henriksen breaks out the tactics board during a Bundesliga fixture against VfB Stuttgart on match-day two. The FSV trainer generally likes to emphasize that tactics aren’t nearly important as general motivation in football. Henriksen has repeatedly emphasized that he doesn’t want his players “thinking too much”. Photo: Alexander Hassenstein, Getty Images 

 

“Mental strength” served as the topic of discussion at a FSV Mainz 05 club-sponsored event at the MEWA Arena on Wednesday evening. Joined byNLZ sports psychologist Konstantin Kuhlmann, FSV Mainz 05 trainer Bo Henriksen and striker Jonathan Burkardt were among those on the panel to talk about the psychology of sports at a lecture attended by some 400 local students. 

Henriksen – who has drawn some criticism for being more of a motivator than a tactician recently in the local press – didn’t shy away from defining his role as that of primarily being a “mental coach” for his team. The Danish trainer noted in a recent post-match interview that he didn’t want his players “thinking too much”. The 49-year-old doubled down.

”I have only one job: to give the guys positive energy and to free them mentally,” Henriksen said,  “They can’t think too much. Only then will they know exactly what to do on the pitch.”

Burkardt agreed.

“Tactics and things like that come after cultivating the right mental attitude,” Burkardt said, “If you have that, it’s hard for others to beat you.” 

Both Burkardt and Henriksen spoke more on the “mentality” issue. Henriksen flatly admitted that he himself employed a sports psychologist to help him out in his job. Burkardt spoke on the need to avoid social media. 

“If you use social media, a great deal of stimuli enters you subconscious,” Burkardt said, “That doesn’t help you prepare for the next game. I want to shield myself from that.”

“Some of my [German national team colleagues] also reported problems in this regard,” Burkardt continued, “They complain about the comments they received. It affects everyone.” 

When it came time to discuss the state of the team’s slow start this season, both FSV actors conveyed optimism about the outlook this year. Despite what was widely regarded to be a very poor performance against Leipzig over the weekend, Henriksen and Burkardt told fans expressing their concern during the Q & A session that all would eventually be well. 

“A few players have left and a few new ones have arrived,” Henriksen said, “That means it’s a new group that has to create a new culture and new relationships. We’re looking for the flow and will find it. I’m feeling fantastic.” 

 




Source From: Bundesliga News in English

Source link

Exit mobile version