How to Stop Choking Under Pressure in Sports
Every athlete has experienced it. The moment that mattered most, your body would not cooperate. The free throw clanged off the rim. The serve floated long. The putt stopped two inches short. You knew exactly what to do, you have done it a thousand times in practice, and somehow in the moment that counted, you could not do it.
That is choking under pressure, and it is one of the most studied phenomena in performance psychology. It is also one of the most fixable.
What Is Choking, Really?
Choking is not a character flaw. It is not weakness. It is a specific neurological breakdown that happens when conscious thought interferes with automatic execution. The leading scientific explanation is called explicit monitoring theory.
Here is the basic idea. Skills you have practiced thousands of times are stored in implicit memory. Your body executes them without conscious thought. But under pressure, your conscious mind starts paying attention to what your body is doing. Suddenly you are thinking about your grip, your follow-through, your breathing, all the things that worked perfectly when you were not thinking about them. The conscious monitoring disrupts the automatic execution, and performance drops.
This is why a putt feels easy in your living room and impossible on the 18th green. The skill is the same. The pressure changes how your brain is processing the action.
Why Do the Most Talented Athletes Choke Most Often?
It seems counterintuitive, but more skilled athletes are often more vulnerable to choking. The reason comes back to explicit monitoring theory. The more automatic a skill is, the more disruptive conscious attention becomes when it gets reintroduced.
A beginner is consciously thinking through every movement anyway. There is nothing automatic to disrupt. An expert has years of muscle memory to fall back on, but the moment they start consciously monitoring that muscle memory, the entire system breaks down.
This is why you see elite athletes miss simple shots in clutch moments. The shot is not the problem. The brain temporarily switching from automatic to manual is the problem.
How Do Pre-Performance Routines Prevent Choking?
The single most reliable way to prevent choking is a strong pre-performance routine. A pre-performance routine is a consistent sequence of physical and mental actions you perform before every key execution. The free throw routine. The serve toss. The setup before a putt.
Routines work because they keep your conscious mind occupied with familiar, controlled actions instead of letting it drift into self-monitoring. When your routine is the same in practice and in the championship, your brain treats the moment as familiar instead of threatening. The pressure does not disappear, but its disruptive effect on execution is significantly reduced.
Three Techniques for Resetting Under Pressure
First is the breath reset. A single, intentional, slow exhale before execution. It does two things at once. It downshifts your nervous system, and it gives your conscious mind something to focus on other than the outcome.
Second is the cue word. A short, simple, action-focused word you say to yourself before execution. Words like "smooth," "simple," "trust," or "free." The cue word redirects attention away from outcome thinking and back to the process of execution.
Third is the external focus shift. Instead of focusing internally on your body or your technique, focus externally on a target. The back of the rim. The seam of the ball. The corner of the service box. External focus has been shown in research to preserve automatic execution under pressure better than internal focus does.
Practice Mental Performance the Same Way You Practice Physical Skills
The biggest mistake athletes make is treating mental performance as something they will figure out in the moment. Mental skills are exactly that, skills. They require repetition under conditions that mimic the real environment.
That means deliberately creating pressure in practice. Adding consequences to drills. Practicing with people watching. Simulating game scenarios with real stakes attached. The goal is to expose yourself to the kind of pressure that triggers self-monitoring, and to practice your routines and reset techniques in that environment so they hold up when it matters.
When You Need More Than Self-Practice
Choking is fixable, but most athletes need a structured process to actually fix it. That is what mental performance coaching does. It diagnoses where your specific breakdown is happening, builds a routine and reset toolkit tailored to your sport, and creates a plan for pressure-testing it before competition.
If choking has been a recurring pattern for you, book a free intro call to talk through what is happening, or learn more about ongoing support through the Performance Membership.
Ready to Build Your Mental Game?
Work 1 on 1 with Jorie Hall to develop personalized strategies that help you perform your best under pressure. Start with a free intro call, or explore coaching tailored to your sport: tennis, golf, basketball, swimming, and soccer.