04/24/2026
One bad game doesn’t define you.
It’s easy to let one moment, one swing, or one play start to shape how you see yourself as an athlete. But confidence isn’t built on perfect performances…it’s built on how you respond when things don’t go your way.
Every athlete, at every level, has games they’d like back. What separates them isn’t talent. It’s perspective.
Here’s something simple to try after a tough game:
Take a few minutes and write down:
• One thing you did well
• One thing you can improve
• One thing you’re going to focus on next time
That’s it.
This keeps your mind moving forward instead of getting stuck in what already happened.
For parents — this is where your role matters most. The conversation after a tough game doesn’t need to be about fixing everything. Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is remind your athlete that they are more than a single performance.
Confidence grows when athletes feel supported, not judged.
Bad games happen. Strong athletes are built in how they move through them.
— Coach Katelyn Ross