How mindfulness training quietly gives elite athletes an edge – Sportsnet.ca

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“It’s the moment, man. It’s the moment. You gotta get in the moment and stay in it. Just stay in the moment.” — Michael Jordan

In an enduring scene from the ultimate episode of The Last Dance, Michael Jordan is fresh off victory and still in the flow. The greatest basketball player is decked out in a tilted ballcap and crisp T-shirt, both commemorating the Chicago Bulls’ second three-peat, as he sits joyfully at a grand piano inside his Salt Lake City hotel suite, encircled by cameras and lights and hangers-on.

He puffs a cigar.

He laughs.

He tinkles the ivories.

He shares a message and a secret: “It’s in the moment.”

“Michael Jordan absolutely had formal ongoing mindfulness training,” says Dr. Amy Saltzman, a mindfulness coach who has worked with scores of elite amateur and professional athletes and author of A Still Quiet Place for Athletes: Mindfulness Skills for Achieving Peak Performance and Finding Flow in Sports and Life.

“The Bulls and the Lakers and the teams that were coached by Phil Jackson absolutely practised mindfulness, and it was taught by my friend George Mumford. It was ongoing training for the entire team.”

Speaking over the phone from California, Dr. Saltzman, a holistic physician and former gymnast herself, rattles off a list of teams and athletes who have incorporated meditation into their training and felt the benefits. There’s the Golden State Warriors, coached by Jackson disciple Steve Kerr. Pete Carroll’s Seattle Seahawks. Derek Jeter. Kobe Bryant. Tim Lincecum. The 2016 curse-curing Chicago Cubs. Tennis champs Novak Djokovic and Bianca Andreescu, who, after upsetting Serena Williams for the U.S. Open crown, dropped this jewel: “At this level everyone knows how to play tennis. The thing that separates the best from the rest is just the mindset.”

Knowing my beat is the NHL, Dr. Saltzman highlights a Barry Trotz philosophy that guided his 2018 Washington Capitals to the Stanley Cup.

“Coach Trotz says, ‘One game, one minute, one puck at a time.’ So that’s the practice of being in the moment,” Dr. Saltzman says.

“For a long time, teams didn’t have formal strength and conditioning coaches. Now, you’d be hard pressed to find a team that doesn’t have a specific strength and conditioning coach. We can think about mindfulness as strength and conditioning of the mind and the heart, meaning your emotional responses to things.”

Toronto Maple Leafs winger Zach Hyman perks up when I raise the subject. He’s never been asked about it, how quieting the mind helps in the noisiest arenas.

“I actually took a meditation class in college. They offered it. It was pretty interesting,” says Hyman, whose father also finds benefit from stillness. “Especially in today’s society, where we’re always on our phones and have access to any information we want. To be able to get away and separate yourself from the online world, I think is very important for how it relates to my game. Something I do find very helpful, especially before games, is visualization and just kind of visualizing plays and scenarios that can happen in the game, so that your mind is kind of pre-preparing.”

Dr. Saltzman alludes to the way Wayne Gretzky imagined the rhythms of hockey: “Know not only where the puck is going to be but where your teammate’s going to be and where your opponent’s going to be. There are actually practices you can do to widen the lens of your attention, and also narrow your attention.”

Alex Killorn has enjoyed his greatest individual season (26 goals, 49 points in 68 games) at age 30. The Tampa Bay Lightning winger partially credits his newfound meditation practice for the improvement, a routine he incorporated after Bolts psychologist Ryan Hamilton recommend he read Tools of Titans: The Tactics, Routines and Habits of Billionaires, Icons, and World-Class Performers, by Tim Ferriss.

“He basically interviewed the most successful businesspeople, athletes, everything in the world,” Killorn said on a recent Spittin’ Chiclets episode. “Eighty per cent of them meditated. So, I started doing it last year. It just keeps you balanced. I remember when I used to score, I used to get so happy; when I had three bad games, I’d get so down on myself. And now I’m just kind of like: I score? Whatever. I don’t? Like, just play well.”

For 10 minutes a day, Killorn would to fire up his Headspace meditation app, focus on his breathing and be present.

“I didn’t have terrible anxiety, but I had trouble sleeping a lot, especially after games. I would do it before I go to sleep. It just helps you. I’d sleep a lot better,” Killorn explained. “Guys will give you a hard time, but I think it helps.”

Richard Deitsch and Donnovan Bennett host a podcast about how COVID-19 is impacting sports around the world. They talk to experts, athletes and personalities, offering a window into the lives of people we normally root for in entirely different ways.

Capitals starter Braden Holtby is a big proponent. Montreal’s Jordan Weal mediates before every game. Senators defenceman Nick Paul uses the practices to free himself from the self-induced stress of making a mistake on ice. Vancouver’s Sven Baertschi opened up to colleague Iain MacIntyre at training camp about how daily mindfulness sessions of 10 to 45 minutes dragged him out of a dark pit of anxiety.

“As humans, we spend so much time in the future and the past. We worry. We think ahead. We look backwards. But we’re never in the right now. We forget to enjoy the moment,” Baertschi said. “You go into a quiet room and go through certain body scans and just sit there and focus on breathing. That really puts you in that present moment, and that’s when your brain functions the best. In sports, people call it the zone.”

At the elite athletic level — where everyone is fit, everyone is technically skilled, and everyone is eating right — a sharp, worry-free mind can provide a competitive advantage.

“We know what makes the difference is our mental, emotional capabilities. But then we don’t necessarily build that into our training. We don’t train our minds and our hearts the way we train our bodies. That said, I would say more and more athletes are starting to understand the value of that and the need for that,” Dr. Saltzman says.

“What if these amateur athletes can learn these skills before they got to a professional team? And in a way, it might help them get to a professional team.”

Advanced mindfulness skills can take an athlete beyond awareness of breath, of thoughts and emotions. Applied properly, they can help an athlete know when to push through the physical pain of training or stop; how to deal with pre-competition nerves; how to maintain your love for the game; how to be a true teammate; how to quit dwelling on mistakes; and how to hasten a stint on the IR.

“There is some data to show that mindfulness (a) decreases injury and (b) enhances rehab,” Dr. Saltzman states. “I think [mindfulness] is actually becoming more of a fixture.”

Jealousy among teammates, coping with a benching or a demotion in playing time, butting heads with the coach, responding to a ref’s blown call — mindfulness skills can quicken a reset and lead to a more positive response.

“So, it’s not just listening to the practices. It’s how do I apply it in the heat of the moment, in the run of play? Maybe there’s defeating self-talk. Or maybe you’re busy comparing yourself to a teammate or a competitor rather than actually focused on your event. Or you’re distracted by an argument you had with your boyfriend or girlfriend or something else going on in your outside life rather than literally having your head in the game,” Dr. Saltzman says.

“As important as the sports part is, what’s more important to me is that the same skills that we learned through mindfulness in sports can be applied to the rest of our lives.”

The pandemic and its inherent restrictions on training have wrought new challenges for the athlete’s mind, but Dr. Satlzman is encouraging her clients to spin quarantine into an opportunity.

“Some are anxious. Some are depressed. Some are rediscovering their true love of their sport. Some of them are able to train pretty much normally,” says Dr. Saltzman, who has been offering free online sessions and short courses for athletes searching for flow while stuck at home.

“It’s a great time to cross-train. It’s a great time to rehab your injuries. It’s an awesome time to develop your mental, emotional game, which is what I’m encouraging people to do.”

For more information on mindfulness in sport, please visit Dr. Amy Salzman’s website here.



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WHO ends hydroxychloroquine study

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The World Health Organization has ended its hydroxychloroquine study | George Frey/AFP via Getty Images

The decision was made on the basis of data from a UK trial.

The World Health Organization is stopping its trial of the hyped drug hydroxychloroquine, it announced Wednesday.

The decision was made on the basis of data from a large, randomized U.K. trial of the drug as well as the data available to the WHO through its own Solidarity trial, said Ana Maria Henao Restrepo, head of the WHO’s research and development group.

The decision to remove the drug from its Solidarity trial came following several events, Restrepo noted. A review of the evidence suggested there was “no apparent beneficial effect of hydroxychloroquine” to treat COVID-19. In addition, the results coming out of the U.K. last Friday indicated that there was no apparent effect on mortality or ventilation during a hospital stay. Finally, there was the Solidarity trial’s own evidence.

This news comes after the WHO paused enrolling patients following findings from a now-retracted study in the Lancet that had indicated that there was an increased risk of heart problems and death in COVID-19 patients who used chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine. The WHO then restarted the trial following a safety review.

In Europe, the hype around the drug originated in France, where a small, non-randomized trial under doctor Didier Raoult claimed to have promising results. U.S. President Donald Trump is also a supporter and has claimed he is taking it to prevent the disease.



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Comedian Chris D’Elia accused of sexual harassment, ‘predatory’ behavior

Comedian Chris D’Elia has been accused of sexual harassment and “predatory” behavior. (Photo: Michael S. Schwartz/Getty Images)

Chris D’Elia is being accused of sexually harassing multiple women, including some underage girls.

The 40-year-old comedian, who appears on Netflix’s show You and has a special for the streaming service, was accused on social media of sexually harassing multiple women. There are accusations he tried to meet up with some of them for sex or asked for nude photos, as well as other “grooming” claims. His behavior was described by one accuser as “predatory.”

D’Elia has not publicly addressed the claims. Yahoo Entertainment reached out to his last listed publicist, who said they parted ways when the coronavirus pandemic hit. She did not provide contact info for his new rep. Yahoo Entertainment has also reached out to his manager and will update this story if there is a response.

The accusations came about after a woman named Simoné Rossi wrote on Twitter that she “still can’t believe Netflix cast” D’Elia “as the pedophile” in Season 2 of You. “Like the literal irony.”

In the long thread, which quickly went viral, she went on to share screenshots of conversations —which began in 2014, when she says she was 16 — in which she claims the divorcee asked for nudes.

And, Rossi claimed, as the DMs continued into the next year, he was “grooming” her. However, she noted that she was “never physically [molested],” which she attributed to the fact that she started dating someone her own age around that time.

She said her feelings over what happened have changed over the years, leading to her speaking out.

She also claimed she was not the only one, which resulted in other allegations being made against D’Elia.

Several other women shared stories about D’Elia contacting them when they were underage. The account @SheRatesDogs has been compiling them, including several from unidentified women.

Abby Grills publicly claimed D’Elias direct messaged her when she was 17, sharing screenshots of the conversation.

Other women shared stories publicly as well, including Toronto comic & TV writer Olivia Stadler. She said she was 21 when they connected on Twitter and D’Elia asked her to hang out. She was excited to meet her role model, but prior to meeting, he changed the venue, trying to get her to come to his hotel room. She declined.

Comedian Emma Arnold was warned not to send him nudes because “he made them into memes” and showed them “to other male comics at shows.”

Comedian/actress/writer Leah Knauer said D’Elia asked for nudes when she was 19. They did meet up and she described him “predatory” and “scary.”

Netflix has not yet responded to Yahoo Entertainment’s request asking about whether D’Elia will remain part of the You cast and if his special with continue streaming.

Read more from Yahoo Entertainment:



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VCs express concern in cut of higher education budget

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ISLAMABAD – Vice Chancellors (VCs) of all public sector universities have expressed their strong concern of the recent cuts imposed

by the Finance Ministry on the budget of higher education.

The universities head passed a resolution, after Vice Chancellors Committee meeting held online, stating that Pakistani universities are already under enormous financial stress because of the squeezing of their budgets since last three years.            Currently, the COVID-19 crisis has further exacerbated the situation, both by increasing costs, and by reducing the inflows of tuition fees.

The Vice Chancellors appealed to the Prime Minister, the Education Minister, and the Special Assistant to the Prime Minister for Finance to immediately reverse the cuts, and enhance the higher education budget to the levels needed by universities, said a news release issued by HEC her on Tuesday.

The resolution emphasized that future of the country depends critically on the future of education, especially higher education. If the funding cuts are not reversed, few universities will not be able to survive. It will force few universities to raise tuition fees at a time when students are unable and unwilling to pay regular tuition because of the virus pandemic.

The VCs urged Chairman HEC to arrange a meeting of a delegation of Vice Chancellors to call upon the prime minister to apprise him of the difficulties faced by universities because of the repeated budget cuts over the last three years.

The Vice Chancellors also expressed their unequivocal opposition to the actions of some elements to change legal provisions and undermine the autonomy of universities, especially draft changes in the Punjab Universities (Amendment) Act, 2020.

Nowhere the world has improved quality of education without full autonomy of universities, they said.



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Watch it again: Ramaphosa addresses the nation on measures to manage the spread of Covid-19 – The Mail & Guardian

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The President’s address follows a number of meetings of the Cabinet, the National Coronavirus Command Council and the Presidential Coordinating Council

The post Watch it again: Ramaphosa addresses the nation on measures to manage the spread of Covid-19 appeared first on The Mail & Guardian.

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LIVESTREAM: Ramaphosa addresses the nation on measures to manage the spread of Covid-19 – The Mail & Guardian

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The President’s address follows a number of meetings of the Cabinet, the National Coronavirus Command Council and the Presidential Coordinating Council

The post LIVESTREAM: Ramaphosa addresses the nation on measures to manage the spread of Covid-19 appeared first on The Mail & Guardian.

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Ayesha Takia opens up about being bullied in film industry

Image Source : AYESHA TAKIA/ INSTAGRAM

Ayesha Takia made her debut with 2004’s Taarzan: The Wonder Car

In the wake of actor Sushant Singh Rajput’s death, actor Ayesha Takia has claimed that she was subjected to workplace bullying and asked fans to reach out to their dear ones if they have gone through a similar experience. Rajput was found dead in his Bandra apartment on Sunday. His demise has prompted many actors to open up about navigating the film industry which is infamous for favouring its own and shunning the outsiders who brave through apparent bullying within Bollywood circles.

Takia made her debut with 2004’s “Taarzan: The Wonder Car” and went on to star in films such as “Socha Na Tha”, “Salaam-e-Ishq”, “Sunday” and “Wanted”. “Having personally been through many incidents of trolling and workplace bullying. I wish to spread the word about this and I want you to speak up, please, if someone is making you feel less, small or worthless,” she said without taking any name.

The 34-year-old actor has been away from films since 2011’s “Mod”, which reunited her with director Nagesh Kukunoor with whom she collaborated on critically-acclaimed films like “Dor” and “8 x 10 Tasveer”.

“Please know that you are incredible and unique. You are meant to be here and fight for what you deserve. You are bright and different, you must not let them win. Please speak to someone. Reach out,” Takia wrote on Tuesday.

The actor said it may seem difficult, but if someone is being troubled, they will eventually find people who will listen and understand what they are going through. “We need this world to be a kind place for our future generations and for their sake we must make sure that love and kindness lead the way. Pls be nice to people, be kind and sensitive because you have no idea how fragile or what hardship someone is going through (sic),” she captioned the post titled ‘What is Bullying?’.

According to an official, Mumbai Police found out during the probe that Rajput, 34, was under medication for depression. 

Fight against Coronavirus: Full coverage



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Civil rights groups urge companies to pause ad spending on Facebook

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FILE PHOTO: The logo of Facebook is seen in Davos, Switzerland Januar 20, 2020. Picture taken January 20, 2020. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann

(Reuters) – Several U.S. civil rights groups have called upon some of the world’s largest companies to pause advertising on Facebook Inc, saying the social network is not doing enough to stop hate speech on its platform.

The groups, which include the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), on Wednesday launched here a “#StopHateforProfit” campaign that calls for halting advertising on the social network in July.

“The campaign is a response to Facebook’s long history of allowing racist, violent and verifiably false content to run rampant on its platform,” the groups said.

In a newspaper ad that urges large corporate advertisers to “send Facebook a powerful message”, the groups said: “Your profits will never be worth promoting hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism and violence.”

Facebook did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The death of African American George Floyd at the hands of police last month triggered widespread protests and prompted several large corporations to re-examine issues around diversity and racial inequality.

The world’s largest social network has already come under fire over Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg’s decision not to challenge inflammatory posts by U.S. President Donald Trump on the ongoing protests against police brutality and racial discrimination in the United States.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Tuesday advertisers should use their leverage to hold social media companies accountable. Pelosi was speaking at an online forum about COVID-19 social media misinformation.

The rights groups also include Sleeping Giants, Color Of Change, Free Press and Common Sense.

Reporting by Ayanti Bera in Bengaluru; additonal reporting by Ellizabeth Culliford; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty

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Rory McIlroy rejects Sunday concerns and says European stars should go to USA to solve world ranking problems

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If there’s a case mounting against Rory McIlroy’s final round displays, it’s not one that interests the world number one.

e had been just three shots off the pace after three days at the Charles Schwab Challenge last week but could only card a disappointing four over par 74 on Sunday, slipping into a tie for 32nd and finishing nine shots behind winner Daniel Berger.

It was the third time in four outings that McIlroy, when in contention, has shot an over par final round.

Former world number one Nick Faldo had criticised the Northern Irishman for not having a ‘Plan B’ to gather together an unravelling round, after a bad start soon got worse and left him six over at the turn on Sunday.

The honest McIlroy wrote off Faldo’s quotes, made during last week’s televised coverage, as filling air time.

“I get the position Nick’s put in with commentary where you just have to say something,” he said. “I’ve learned very quickly out here that you don’t take anything personally and you just move on.”

Rather, as he prepares to continue the quest for a first victory since November at the RBC Heritage this week, McIlroy’s adamant any recent Sunday woes have not formed a pattern worth space in his mindset.

“I wouldn’t say that Sundays this year have been disappointing,” he insisted.

“(The Arnold Palmer Invitational at) Bay Hill, I would say was disappointing, and obviously last week, but that was just more annoying. I played crap. That was really it.

“It wasn’t as if it was anything to do with the position I was in.

“I remember everyone kept asking me about Fridays six years ago in 2014 when I had bad Fridays. I don’t think it’s this thing.

“I try to go out there every day and shoot the best score I can, and the best score I could shoot on Sunday was 74. Hopefully, tomorrow I go out and try my best and shoot something a bit lower than that.

“So, no, I’m not worried about anything.”

It’s perhaps easy to see why the world’s top golfer isn’t remotely concerned. His disappointing finish last week ended an impressive run of seven consecutive top five finishes, dating back to August last year.

It was that consistency that brought McIlroy back to the top of the world rankings for the first time since 2015.

After a pause during the sporting shutdown, those rankings are how live once again, despite the USA’s PGA Tour being the only one of the world’s major tours back in action.

That has left European Tour regulars like Matt Fitzpatrick questioning the fairness of the decision, as inactive players like Lee Westwood and Eddie Pepperell have already begun to slip down the list.

The need for a two-week quarantine for any British golfers travelling across the Atlantic, in either direction, has provided further complications to players who want to get back into tournament action but McIlroy has little sympathy.

“If I were in their shoes and I was asked to come over to the States and quarantine for two weeks before these tournaments, I would have done that,” he said.

“If you really care about your career and care about moving forward, you should be here, I think. Last week was 70 World Ranking points for the winner, this week 74.

“I get there are different variables and families involved, but we all have the means to rent a very nice house in a gated community in Florida. It’s not a hardship for two weeks to come over and quarantine.

“You can bring your family with you. We all have the means to do that.

“I honestly don’t understand the guys complaining because there is a solution to it. You can come over here and do what needs to be done.”

Arguably the most talked about golfer on the PGA Tour’s return last week was American Bryson DeChambeau.

Nicknamed the ‘Mad Scientist’ due to his fact-based approach to the game, De Chambeau put on 20 pounds of muscle during the coronavirus shutdown in a bid to gain distance.

On immediate evidence, it worked as he topped last week’s field on average driving distance at over 340 yards.

Interesting as it all is, it’s not an approach McIlroy will be attempting to mimic.

“It’s impressive what he’s doing,” admitted the Holywood golfer, who played alongside DeChambeau in the final round at Colonial CC.

“He’s big. He’s got a conviction and he’s following it. He’s always thought outside the box and thought a little differently to most people. He’s really put his mind at wanting to get longer, and he’s definitely done that.

“He hit one into the wind on 11. I hit a really good one and hit it 313 yards. He must have flew my ball by 40 yards. He hit it 354 into the wind. It was crazy. It was nuts. It’s unbelievable.

“But I actually feel my best when I’m lighter. I feel more supple. I feel like I get a little more speed. I was probably at my lightest at the start of the season. I remember weighing myself at Torrey Pines on the Sunday morning before going out to the final round, and I was like 155 pounds (11 stone). I think that’s half of Bryson now.”

McIlroy tees off tomorrow’s opening round at 12.40pm (BST), playing alongside Rickie Fowler and CT Pan on the Harbour Town Golf Links.

World number 49 Graeme McDowell, who missed the cut last week, gets his round under way at 6.16pm, one group behind Open Champion Shane Lowry.

Belfast Telegraph

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Kristen Stewart To Play Princess Diana In New Biopic

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Actress Kristen Stewart will play Princess Diana in “Spencer,” an upcoming biographical film set to begin production early next year.

The film’s story will be set over a three-day period in the early 1990s when the Princess of Wales realized her marriage to Prince Charles wasn’t working, Deadline reported.

The couple separated in 1992, before getting divorced in 1996. The princess died one year later in a car crash in Paris.

Although Stewart is American, director Pablo Larraín, who directed Natalie Portman in “Jackie,” thinks the former “Twilight” star has the qualities necessary to play one of the most famous women of the last 50 years.

“To do this well, you need something very important in film, which is mystery,” he told Deadline. “Kristen can be many things, and she can be very mysterious and very fragile and ultimately very strong as well, which is what we need.

“The combination of those elements made me think of her. The way she responded to the script and how she is approaching the character, it’s very beautiful to see. I think she’s going to do something stunning and intriguing at the same time. She is this force of nature.”

No word on who will play Prince Charles or Queen Elizabeth.



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