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308 Confidence In Ability: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

Release Date: 03/06/2026

312 Dr John Perry: How Sport Coaches Influence Mental Toughness show art 312 Dr John Perry: How Sport Coaches Influence Mental Toughness

Demystifying Mental Toughness

To end a recent series on the coach-athlete relationship, in this bonus episode of the Demystifying Mental Toughness Podcast, David Charlton is joined by Dr John Perry, Head of Department of PE and Sports Sciences at the University of Limerick, researcher, former coach and performance analyst, to explore how coaches can better support athletes through the lens of mental toughness. The conversation explores why coaches have such a powerful influence on athletes’ habits and environments, how agency and behavioural standards can strengthen control, and why confidence should come from within...

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311 Learning Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently  show art 311 Learning Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

In this episode David concludes the eight-part series exploring the coach–athlete relationship by focusing on a powerful concept within the Challenge pillar of the 4Cs model of Mental Toughness, learning orientation.  Learning orientation reflects how willing athletes and coaches are to reflect on mistakes, setbacks and difficult experiences in order to improve. Without this mindset, progress in sport can stall and with it, challenges become powerful opportunities for development. David explores a common dynamic where a coach has a high learning orientation but the athlete struggles...

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Demystifying Mental Toughness

Description Today, David Charlton explores another dynamic within the coach–athlete relationship: differences in risk orientation (a sub-measure of Mental Toughness).  He discusses a common scenario in sport,  a coach who prefers structure, routine and predictability working alongside an athlete who thrives on experimentation, creativity and challenge.  While structured environments can provide stability and clarity, athletes high in risk orientation often crave variety, stimulation and opportunities to explore different solutions. When these two approaches collide, tension...

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309 Interpersonal Confidence: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently  show art 309 Interpersonal Confidence: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

In this episode of the Demystifying Mental Toughness Podcast, David Charlton explores an often overlooked aspect of confidence in sport, interpersonal confidence. He discussed a common dynamic seen in sporting environments: a coach with very high interpersonal confidence working alongside an athlete who struggles to speak up.  Highly confident coaches often communicate clearly and persuasively. They lead conversations, provide direction and bring strong conviction to their coaching. Yet when this confidence dominates the interaction, quieter athletes can become increasingly passive,...

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308 Confidence In Ability: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently show art 308 Confidence In Ability: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

Today, David Charlton explores a powerful but often misunderstood dynamic in sport: the highly confident coach working with an athlete who lacks confidence in their ability. At first glance, this combination might appear positive. A confident leader should inspire belief and clarity. However, when the balance isn't right, the relationship can unintentionally increase anxiety, self‑doubt and disengagement for the athlete. Drawing on Albert Bandura’s concept of self‑efficacy and Sophia Jowett’s 3+1 Cs coach–athlete relationship model (closeness, commitment, complementarity and...

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307 Achievement Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently show art 307 Achievement Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

In part 4 of this mini-series, David Charlton explores a challenging but common sport dynamic: the high achievement-oriented athlete working with a low achievement-oriented coach. The athlete is organised, early, diligent, and constantly looking for ways to improvetechnical work, gym work, extras, metrics, and a “leave no stone unturned” mindset.  But the coach may appear distracted, rushed, inconsistent, late, or disorganised and may find structured goal-setting and CPD stressful. When those worlds don’t align, athletes can feel unsupported, unwanted, and even inadequate,...

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306 Goal Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently show art 306 Goal Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

In this episode (part 3) of Demystifying Mental Toughness, David Charlton continues his solo series exploring the 4Cs of Mental Toughness through the coach–athlete relationship lens. The focus this week is Commitment, specifically Goal Orientation, and a common challenge in sport: the mismatch between a highly goal-oriented coach and an athlete who feels overwhelmed, anxious or uncomfortable when targets are discussed. While goal-driven coaches bring structure, clarity and high standards, some athletes experience goals as pressure rather than motivation. Fear of judgement, developing...

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305 Emotional Control: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently show art 305 Emotional Control: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

In this episode of Demystifying Mental Toughness, David Charlton continues in part two of his solo series exploring the 4Cs of Mental Toughness through the coach–athlete relationship lens. The focus this week is Emotional Control and a common but misunderstood dynamic in sport: the emotionally reactive coach and the calm, composed athlete. While passion and intensity are often seen as leadership qualities, strong emotional reactions, sarcasm or outcome-focused language can unintentionally create a fear-based environment.  When athletes feel judged or humiliated, the brain’s threat...

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304 Life Control: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently show art 304 Life Control: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Demystifying Mental Toughness

In this episode of Demystifying Mental Toughness, David begins a new eight-part solo series exploring how mental toughness shapes the coach–athlete relationship in sport. Today’s focus is Life Control — a part of mental toughness that influences whether people feel able to shape what happens to them, or whether life simply “happens” to them. David explores one of the most common and frustrating mismatches in sport: the high life-control coach and the low life-control athlete.  High-life control coaches are driven, organised and solution-focused. They believe effort changes...

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Demystifying Mental Toughness

In part 2, David Charlton is again joined by Doug Strycharczyk from AQR International to explore how mental toughness shapes the way we make decisions especially when information is incomplete and pressure is high. Doug explains that confidence is not just about believing in your skills, but also about having the interpersonal confidence to work with others, challenge ideas, and avoid the trap of groupthink. In teams and organisations, those with higher interpersonal confidence are more likely to think divergently, question assumptions, and protect ethical decision-making rather than simply...

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More Episodes

Today, David Charlton explores a powerful but often misunderstood dynamic in sport: the highly confident coach working with an athlete who lacks confidence in their ability.

At first glance, this combination might appear positive. A confident leader should inspire belief and clarity. However, when the balance isn't right, the relationship can unintentionally increase anxiety, self
doubt and disengagement for the athlete.

Drawing on Albert Bandura
s concept of selfefficacy and Sophia Jowetts 3+1 Cs coachathlete relationship model (closeness, commitment, complementarity and coorientation), David explains why perception inside the relationship is crucial.

Low
confidence athletes often interpret blunt feedback or high standards as confirmation that they are not good enough. Without awareness, confident coaching can therefore widen the psychological gap rather than close it.

David shares practical ways coaches can adapt their approach to create psychologically safe environments where confidence can grow. From shifting towards process goals and asking better questions, to recognising quiet athletes and building ownership, this episode offers practical strategies for coaches who want to support athletes more effectively.

Ultimately, great coaching combines high standards with empathy, awareness and strong relationships so athletes feel safe to try, safe to fail and supported to learn.

>> Key Takeaways

·         Confidence from a coach doesn’t automatically create confidence in an athlete, without awareness it can increase anxiety.

·         Low selfefficacy athletes often interpret criticism as proof they dont belong, which can lead to avoidance and disengagement.

·         Strong coach–athlete relationships built on trust, communication and psychological safety help confidence grow.

If you enjoyed this episode, check out the other parts of this mini-series on the coach-athlete relationship and it’s connection with Mental Toughness:

Ep307 - Achievement Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Ep306 - Goal Orientation: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Ep305 – Emotional Control: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Ep304 – David Charlton - Life Control: When Coaches and Athletes Think Differently

Connect with David Charlton

·         Sign Up To The Mental Edge

·         Join David @ The Sports Psychology Hub

·         LinkedIn