How to succeed on the field when you don't have enough talent
It's possible you may not need as much talent as you thought to become a success on the cricket pitch:
"The trait we commonly call talent is highly overrated. Or, put another way, expert performers - whether in memory or surgery, ballet or computer programming - are nearly always made, not born."
What Anders Ericsson, a psychology professor at Florida State University, is saying is that we could all have more potential than we realise. We are just not going about reaching that potential in the right way.
So if you love cricket and want to succeed you may do better by just changing your approach to success.
- Know the law of 10,000. Work for 10,000 hours on anything and you will master it, cricket included. That's a powerful motivator no matter what your natural talent may be. Of course you need the right sort of practice and a good slice of self motivation to get there (10 years or so).
- Set realistic targets. 10 years is a long time. Make your targets more realistic and achievable and use them as stepping stones on the journey to logging those hours. You can have goals for days, weeks, months and even seasons.
- Find a good coach. Ericsson also thinks we need constant feedback to realise our potential. A good coach, mentor or even senior player who can guide you through the bad times and pat your back in the good is invaluable, but then you already knew that really didn't you?
Genetic potential will always limit us eventually. Not every player can be a Botham or Tendulkar. We can get further than we though possible though and that is a triumph of mental strength of the physical.
As a player not gifted with the best talents on the pitch that makes me happy I can achieve more!
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Comments
Good to know about this, thanks for self development
tracy
my pleasure tracy
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I recently read this quote from sachin tendulakar 'everybody tries hard. Those who succeed are the ones who try a bit harder.'
I am a not so good cricketer, but I totally disagree with you when you say not EVERYONE can become Botham or TENDULKAR. Although you are right, but you said this taking talent as your viewpoint. I don't believe in godgifted ability AT ALL. Yes its right, that not everyone will become Tendulkar or Kumble because not everyone is so deidcated and hardworking, TALENT HAS NO ROLE TO PLAY, its all about hard-work, dedication, commitment.
But see my pathetic condition, I play under-13 and during my holdays I even practised for 10-11 hours a day but still those wide balls, fulltoss and loose deliverys don't leave me. Other bowlers who don't even work so hard are way better than me, but whatever happens, I will not ever believe in natural talent- it is just foolish and rubbish.
I was off-spinner from start and till the end the more harder I worked the more worse my bowling got, I became totally hopeless, but now I am a leg-spinner and now my hardwork have started to pay off. I am selected for state level day night match. And I know that if I continue this I will sucseed. I never ever care about the non-sense word- TALENT.
Genetic potential will NEVER NEVER NEVER NEVER limit us in any case. (until you are handicapped)
I agree with amav.
Also, I read an interesting read related to this. have a look:
http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/10/30/839179...
right amav its probably unfortunate that we use only 5% of our brain powers talent has no link to it if everyone uses his full mind he will possibly "astound himself"