Another great video, fellas. A few years ago, I started a note in my phone called “Moments that made me feel good about myself.” As they’ve happened, I write them down. Then, especially if I’m struggling with my internal narrative / confidence, I refer to the list. It allows me to recollect how I felt in those moments and I feel driven again.
that edit with Skip saying LeBron doesn't have a clutch gene, fading into the buzzer beater against Toronto, is ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT. and I'll be replaying it a lot
I really don't think it came natural to him the way it did for like Lillard, Jordan, Bird. I don't remember those guys missing game winners. LeBron and Kobe had growing pains. I wouldn't say either came into the league clutch. Kobe once airballed 3 three pointers in a playoff game. LeBron wasn't very clutch when he started. Vanished in his first two finals. I just think it's unfair that people treat LeBron as unclutch and Kobe as clutch. Neither started out clutch and both became pretty clutch.
@@user-dc7um4pr3f because most people define clutch by hitting jumpshots at the buzzer. Lebrons clutch are his game changing moments, making impact when needed the most. Its not always about making shots
@@jthree331 same can be said with kobe's detroit and dallas series or MJ's early 90s. We talking about clutch gene we dont have to cherry pick their worst performance to discard their attribute
5:45 The most shocking and contradictory thing is that we find SO normal to say horrible things about ourselves "why do i even try?", "this gonna go so wrong, it's me that it's doing after all", "i just mess up everything", "i'm worthless", "i'm so stupid!!" but we see as outraging to compliment ourselves, i think is because this self loathing pattern is so ingrained in our brain that is hard to feel authentic when we're good to ourselves, we don't actually believe in us. And WORSE society pushes us to think like this!!! My sister thinks i'm arrogant ("narcisist", "psycopath" or whatever the buzzword of the moment) just because i say i'm smart, smarter than him or her at a certain thing, or that i'm good at something or did well want to feel proud about it. Like we should always diminish our accomplishments so that we project an acceptable Persona to the world (while our individuality, our true self, is repressed and suffer). 6:13 Yeah, Nathaniel Brand talks about how this Sellf-belief MUST be rooted in reality, is FUNDAMENTAL, otherwise is not Self-steem at all, is just self delusion. But there's another catch, negativity can also be empty of evidence, is the famous anxiety and paranoia. So it's a two edged sword, and i think we're much more incline to the second than the first. And one the things that makes good self talk difficult for most people (myself definitely included) it's the lack of evidence, substance. In my experience i'm much more prone to negativity because most of my life was basically a huge failure, when i look back i only see defeat so i'm prone to expect more defeat, since is all that i know.
Love this video - especially the part about writing down accomplishments as a reminder. I think the Rockets shooting woes also had to do with their legs being shot after defending the Warriors’ elite talent, but 27 misses in a row probably means it was a combination of both. 😅
Before watching the entire video as a lifelong Supersonics fan I’d just like to thank you for beginning the video with the shot from Dame. OKC knows where they can go, what to do with themselves and where they can stick it.
Love the video I played basketball growing up & personally, if a game was tied I never felt ANY pressure taking those shots growing up. I miss & we go into overtime, I make it & we win. It’s all upside. And if I’m losing & need a shot to tie or win, I just wouldn’t let it affect me. If we lose, we lose, but I want to win & believe in my ability to make that happen. It’s not the end of the world if you miss it, it sucks & you may even remember it forever, but it’ll drive you. As for any professional athletes, I firmly believe that you don’t get there without borderline narcissistic confidence. There are stories where Deshawn Stevenson believed he was better than Michael Jordan. Now we as fans all know that it’s not true, but there’s so many people in life that tell you “you’re not good enough”. To make it that far, you have to believe “I am good enough. I might have to work more, but I AM good enough.” Obviously it gets harder as there’s a larger & larger audience, but if you believe in yourself more than they doubt you, you’ll make it through it.
Absolutely love this one! This video touched on the most important aspects of positive thinking. The fact that it can help, but shouldn't be phony or forced is one big point that goes overlooked very often. I always like to tell myself that, although i am not ''good'' at something, I can train myself to be good at it if I choose to because I did that multiple times with different things. It's easy for us to say ''Im just not good at that'' but that won't help us to get better at it. We should be honest to ourselves, but also push ourselves to be the best version of ourselves. Allow yourself to make mistakes, allow yourself to grow train and practice. Just know that you will get there if you realy want it. I believe that this is one of the most important lessons in live in general and I know that this way of thinking helped me to grow a lot over the past years. This Video reminded me of that. So thank you for this Video !
I'd be curious what his thoughts are on what I'll call "drill sergeant" self talk. Not necessarily like "you can't do this," but more like "do another rep fatty."
That's a discipline mindset it forces you to push past your limits, hence being able to always push past limits as an athlete and not letting it stop you
That was AWESOME!!!! You nailed it, completely, and i really needed this video now. But i missed the Doc speaking more because his advices were easily the best part. And i'm glad that i knew much of the things that was being talked, show that i'm in the right path. I think my previous comments were much more about myself, just me ruminating and digesting thoughts, than realized, i just needed to "make the unconscious conscious", develop those ideas.
9:27 In Charles Defense he DOES talk about this internal source in his (great) video on Don Draper. 9:30 And body language is actually important, if i'm feeling really powerless (which happens often nowadays) i tend to look down, be hump and sluggish, this just makes worse (i've come to term with this). So trying to maintain a good posture, look straight and in the eyes of people, and even dressing well can actually be huge in maintaing your mental stability. Of course this is more like the herbs, S&P and even the sauce not the pasta. (there's a PHENOMENAL video titled "how a camera tells a story" and it's about the Joker interrogation in Dark Knight, on how he is framed as powerless [and even jokes about it] but actually is the one in complete control, even in the jail, unarmed and with heavily armed cops brimming the place, and against the goddam Batman. Because he OWNS the information! He has things that they want so they can't get rid him and he knows the ways out, even better, i think he trust his abilities to create something out of nowhere, that's his biggest strength ["i just did what i do best"]. That's what makes him a "dog chasing cars" not that he never plans but that he's a Master tactician, more than a strategist).
9:28 Power posing actually is internally motivated. If you watch Amy Cuddy’s Ted Talk you’ll realize that power posing is not about signaling your dominance to others or anything like that but rather scientists have found that holding power poses for two minutes before let’s say a job interview will make you feel confident
Awesome vid, love the honest and detailed approach. I’ve definitely seen the benefits of building true self-confidence out of awareness, but I also have questions/don’t understand the opposite(negative thoughts). For example in my first couple years of lifting I would motivate myself with neg. criticism and it made me work harder. Could anyone answer every effect of neg. thoughts, can they be motivators?, are they always bad? Thx.
Maybe this might help. I've heard yes you have to be afraid of taking risks. But you have to be more afraid of what life would look like if you took no risks at all. The fear of not being what you must be must motivate you to become just that. That in itself is negative talk. Like, "c'mon, you can't be weak forever. Now lift dammit"
I think negative emotions like vanity or fear can be good motivators until you take them too far. Working out because you hate how skinny/fat you look is fine, but going on crazy diets that leave you with no energy or throwing up meals is going too far
1. In the long term after continuous negativity you are so depressed about it that you give up (and you have also forced yourself to be so focused on this negative area that other once positive areas of your life are now also negative). 2. You get positive results in the long term and now you have no more motivation. 3. You are stressing yourself out in the short term so you aren't thinking or performing well
Negativity could be motivating for some people. But the problem is, when things aren't going as you thought they would, you'll feel like giving up. Or you'll get desperate and do stupid things (or get scammed)
Definately the correct self talk is important to making great plays or creating awesome moments but having such moments already happened to you only motivates you more as it gives you even more cofidence, its a repeating loop
The clutch gene does exist. I know because I have it. It doesn’t even make sense to me - the higher the stakes, the better my performance. I was a free throw shooting champion in middle school and I ALWAYS shot better in competitions than in practice. Now I’m an actor and I ALWAYS audition better than I prep for auditions. It doesn’t makes no sense to me but that’s how it is with me. I can take no credit for it. It’s just how I’ve always been.
The moment isn’t too big if you know that you’re capable. This is what’s supposed to happen. It’s a self confidence problem. If you know, you know. It can’t be taught. Your eyes get a little wider. Your heart slows down. You get tunnel vision. You’re locked in, focused. If your palms get sweaty. Everything is a distraction to you at that moment, it’s all over for you.
The part about being able to talk big and have the means to back up really rings true in MJ and Kobe's case, their work ethic being so unmatched no doubt gave them such a huge boost of confidence when the big moments came
Man 1 in 72,000 chance of the Rockets missing all of those three pointers in that fashion. That's totally wild honestly. I don't mean this as like a trash talking thing. I had no dog in that fight really. That said, this is why we play the game honestly. The analytics are cool to an extent, but sometimes teams really do do the impossible. Good and bad. I mean McGrady scored 13 in 33 seconds. That's completely insane and the likelihood of that has to be so low. Just amazing to watch this sport and see how special these moments really are statistically. These really are like superhuman athletes. The things they're able to do mentally and physically are so unlikely and they're only able to do it because they aren't thinking about it. Very "never tell me the odds" Han Solo kind of thing hahah.
Anytime I play pick up basketball I'm closer and everybody knows it. I never think about it. The focus level different for me. But I guess it makes sense since sometimes I'm so confident on myself that some people call me delusional. Some people are born like that I believe.
The rockets going 0/27 claim is funny and technically true but harden did make a three during that stretch but the refs waived it off because he got fouled ‘before the shooting motion’ (despite it clearly being during the shooting motion)
This is a great video with a great message but consider fewer cuts, especially in between seeing your guest on your laptop and then cutting to their face. (but you do fix this in the final moments) In general cuts are disruptive, and for a lot of content on Goal Guys, you want people to sit with the idea so I think it's at odds with your message.
I’m an athlete who play basketball and when I’m at my best I feel like in my mind I’m not thinking at all or telling myself anything so how could I apply this to myself !
Idk why but on my basketball team I usually start of cold and miss my shots but I'm just so clutch and make big shots down the game and take the last shot idk why I just consistently hit fade aways
I love how in the end, you still have to work hard in order to obtain that confidence, so it shows that mental strength is also unattainable without sacrifice
Headed over to the podcast of this doc. In one of the episodes he talks to a guy and says "you're bla, you're an alpha male...". Is being an alpha male a concept that this doc has defined somewhere?
Athletes are amusing which sometimes does not reflect real life since I know some that are better than professionals but do not complete due to the many hoops one has to go though and finances they need to accomplish it, but some just don't care to deal with it and do it for self. As for the video of making it count does not sound statistically logical which most fail. Sports are over hyped which is why the original Olympic stopped it.
They probably mean them having self doubt or negativity towards themselves they would stop them from doing something dangerous such as trying to kill an animal that was to strong for them
I dont agree with this old school mentality of a clutch gene or that "killer instinct" crap. Great players will show up in big moments and many times journeymen can be clutch.
Just my two cents before watching: I feel like a lot of this has to do with how you react to pressure. You either get in your head and defeat yourself or you embrace the chance and give it your all knowing you could fail but will do your best to avoid that.
Another great video, fellas. A few years ago, I started a note in my phone called “Moments that made me feel good about myself.” As they’ve happened, I write them down. Then, especially if I’m struggling with my internal narrative / confidence, I refer to the list. It allows me to recollect how I felt in those moments and I feel driven again.
im doing this now
That’s amazing
Beautiful, I will also try this
Thank You for that I’ll be doing this now
Thanks for sharing, sounds like something I can try and implement in same form or another
“Am I striving toward success or avoiding failure?” Great question
that edit with Skip saying LeBron doesn't have a clutch gene, fading into the buzzer beater against Toronto, is ABSOLUTELY BRILLIANT. and I'll be replaying it a lot
I really don't think it came natural to him the way it did for like Lillard, Jordan, Bird. I don't remember those guys missing game winners.
LeBron and Kobe had growing pains. I wouldn't say either came into the league clutch. Kobe once airballed 3 three pointers in a playoff game. LeBron wasn't very clutch when he started. Vanished in his first two finals. I just think it's unfair that people treat LeBron as unclutch and Kobe as clutch. Neither started out clutch and both became pretty clutch.
@@user-dc7um4pr3f because most people define clutch by hitting jumpshots at the buzzer. Lebrons clutch are his game changing moments, making impact when needed the most. Its not always about making shots
Lol
@@jvostudio go back and watch the 2011 finals, it’s a stain on LeBrons legacy, this is what they mean about the clutch gene
@@jthree331 same can be said with kobe's detroit and dallas series or MJ's early 90s. We talking about clutch gene we dont have to cherry pick their worst performance to discard their attribute
5:45 The most shocking and contradictory thing is that we find SO normal to say horrible things about ourselves "why do i even try?", "this gonna go so wrong, it's me that it's doing after all", "i just mess up everything", "i'm worthless", "i'm so stupid!!" but we see as outraging to compliment ourselves, i think is because this self loathing pattern is so ingrained in our brain that is hard to feel authentic when we're good to ourselves, we don't actually believe in us.
And WORSE society pushes us to think like this!!! My sister thinks i'm arrogant ("narcisist", "psycopath" or whatever the buzzword of the moment) just because i say i'm smart, smarter than him or her at a certain thing, or that i'm good at something or did well want to feel proud about it. Like we should always diminish our accomplishments so that we project an acceptable Persona to the world (while our individuality, our true self, is repressed and suffer).
6:13 Yeah, Nathaniel Brand talks about how this Sellf-belief MUST be rooted in reality, is FUNDAMENTAL, otherwise is not Self-steem at all, is just self delusion. But there's another catch, negativity can also be empty of evidence, is the famous anxiety and paranoia. So it's a two edged sword, and i think we're much more incline to the second than the first.
And one the things that makes good self talk difficult for most people (myself definitely included) it's the lack of evidence, substance. In my experience i'm much more prone to negativity because most of my life was basically a huge failure, when i look back i only see defeat so i'm prone to expect more defeat, since is all that i know.
Love this video - especially the part about writing down accomplishments as a reminder. I think the Rockets shooting woes also had to do with their legs being shot after defending the Warriors’ elite talent, but 27 misses in a row probably means it was a combination of both. 😅
Awesome video, sheds light on the mentality of top athletes
Before watching the entire video as a lifelong Supersonics fan I’d just like to thank you for beginning the video with the shot from Dame. OKC knows where they can go, what to do with themselves and where they can stick it.
Y'all will be forever butthurt?
@@jaylen_1370 to be fair imagine your team gets moved from your city and you hear it's going to oklahoma lmao
Love the video
I played basketball growing up & personally, if a game was tied I never felt ANY pressure taking those shots growing up. I miss & we go into overtime, I make it & we win. It’s all upside.
And if I’m losing & need a shot to tie or win, I just wouldn’t let it affect me. If we lose, we lose, but I want to win & believe in my ability to make that happen. It’s not the end of the world if you miss it, it sucks & you may even remember it forever, but it’ll drive you.
As for any professional athletes, I firmly believe that you don’t get there without borderline narcissistic confidence. There are stories where Deshawn Stevenson believed he was better than Michael Jordan. Now we as fans all know that it’s not true, but there’s so many people in life that tell you “you’re not good enough”. To make it that far, you have to believe “I am good enough. I might have to work more, but I AM good enough.”
Obviously it gets harder as there’s a larger & larger audience, but if you believe in yourself more than they doubt you, you’ll make it through it.
Cool story bro
@@T.Sullivan I feel sad for you
The variety of content this channel puts out is awesome.
Absolutely love this one! This video touched on the most important aspects of positive thinking. The fact that it can help, but shouldn't be phony or forced is one big point that goes overlooked very often. I always like to tell myself that, although i am not ''good'' at something, I can train myself to be good at it if I choose to because I did that multiple times with different things.
It's easy for us to say ''Im just not good at that'' but that won't help us to get better at it. We should be honest to ourselves, but also push ourselves to be the best version of ourselves. Allow yourself to make mistakes, allow yourself to grow train and practice. Just know that you will get there if you realy want it. I believe that this is one of the most important lessons in live in general and I know that this way of thinking helped me to grow a lot over the past years. This Video reminded me of that. So thank you for this Video !
beautiful message:))
I'd be curious what his thoughts are on what I'll call "drill sergeant" self talk. Not necessarily like "you can't do this," but more like "do another rep fatty."
That's a discipline mindset it forces you to push past your limits, hence being able to always push past limits as an athlete and not letting it stop you
That was AWESOME!!!! You nailed it, completely, and i really needed this video now. But i missed the Doc speaking more because his advices were easily the best part.
And i'm glad that i knew much of the things that was being talked, show that i'm in the right path. I think my previous comments were much more about myself, just me ruminating and digesting thoughts, than realized, i just needed to "make the unconscious conscious", develop those ideas.
also the clutch is also the move or play that the player/athlete always practice, hence the confidence
9:27 In Charles Defense he DOES talk about this internal source in his (great) video on Don Draper.
9:30 And body language is actually important, if i'm feeling really powerless (which happens often nowadays) i tend to look down, be hump and sluggish, this just makes worse (i've come to term with this). So trying to maintain a good posture, look straight and in the eyes of people, and even dressing well can actually be huge in maintaing your mental stability. Of course this is more like the herbs, S&P and even the sauce not the pasta.
(there's a PHENOMENAL video titled "how a camera tells a story" and it's about the Joker interrogation in Dark Knight, on how he is framed as powerless [and even jokes about it] but actually is the one in complete control, even in the jail, unarmed and with heavily armed cops brimming the place, and against the goddam Batman. Because he OWNS the information! He has things that they want so they can't get rid him and he knows the ways out, even better, i think he trust his abilities to create something out of nowhere, that's his biggest strength ["i just did what i do best"]. That's what makes him a "dog chasing cars" not that he never plans but that he's a Master tactician, more than a strategist).
9:28 Power posing actually is internally motivated. If you watch Amy Cuddy’s Ted Talk you’ll realize that power posing is not about signaling your dominance to others or anything like that but rather scientists have found that holding power poses for two minutes before let’s say a job interview will make you feel confident
Awesome vid, love the honest and detailed approach. I’ve definitely seen the benefits of building true self-confidence out of awareness, but I also have questions/don’t understand the opposite(negative thoughts). For example in my first couple years of lifting I would motivate myself with neg. criticism and it made me work harder. Could anyone answer every effect of neg. thoughts, can they be motivators?, are they always bad? Thx.
Maybe this might help. I've heard yes you have to be afraid of taking risks. But you have to be more afraid of what life would look like if you took no risks at all. The fear of not being what you must be must motivate you to become just that. That in itself is negative talk. Like, "c'mon, you can't be weak forever. Now lift dammit"
I think negative emotions like vanity or fear can be good motivators until you take them too far. Working out because you hate how skinny/fat you look is fine, but going on crazy diets that leave you with no energy or throwing up meals is going too far
1. In the long term after continuous negativity you are so depressed about it that you give up (and you have also forced yourself to be so focused on this negative area that other once positive areas of your life are now also negative). 2. You get positive results in the long term and now you have no more motivation. 3. You are stressing yourself out in the short term so you aren't thinking or performing well
Negativity could be motivating for some people. But the problem is, when things aren't going as you thought they would, you'll feel like giving up. Or you'll get desperate and do stupid things (or get scammed)
Definately the correct self talk is important to making great plays or creating awesome moments but having such moments already happened to you only motivates you more as it gives you even more cofidence, its a repeating loop
The clutch gene does exist. I know because I have it. It doesn’t even make sense to me - the higher the stakes, the better my performance. I was a free throw shooting champion in middle school and I ALWAYS shot better in competitions than in practice. Now I’m an actor and I ALWAYS audition better than I prep for auditions. It doesn’t makes no sense to me but that’s how it is with me. I can take no credit for it. It’s just how I’ve always been.
3:48 “what a tough night from Simmons”
Love this video. So many great insights!
Great informational video
1:44 I guess he wasn’t with them next Super Bowl because that would’ve been clutch
Ahhh great video and content!
Thanks guys :D
The moment isn’t too big if you know that you’re capable. This is what’s supposed to happen. It’s a self confidence problem. If you know, you know. It can’t be taught. Your eyes get a little wider. Your heart slows down. You get tunnel vision. You’re locked in, focused. If your palms get sweaty. Everything is a distraction to you at that moment, it’s all over for you.
such great info
The part about being able to talk big and have the means to back up really rings true in MJ and Kobe's case, their work ethic being so unmatched no doubt gave them such a huge boost of confidence when the big moments came
Man 1 in 72,000 chance of the Rockets missing all of those three pointers in that fashion. That's totally wild honestly.
I don't mean this as like a trash talking thing. I had no dog in that fight really. That said, this is why we play the game honestly. The analytics are cool to an extent, but sometimes teams really do do the impossible. Good and bad. I mean McGrady scored 13 in 33 seconds. That's completely insane and the likelihood of that has to be so low. Just amazing to watch this sport and see how special these moments really are statistically. These really are like superhuman athletes. The things they're able to do mentally and physically are so unlikely and they're only able to do it because they aren't thinking about it. Very "never tell me the odds" Han Solo kind of thing hahah.
Thanks for this video. Really need to hear this at the point of my life at the moment.
This was a great video to conclude everything I learned during this self love rabbit hole i was just in
I'm surprised you actually managed to get Brendan to say what he said at 6:40 lol.
I love u guys😣😣💙💙. This was so impactful
Great video, keep up the hard work!
I need to get that hoodie!! Asap
This was great!
"Confidence comes from what you say to yourself"
“Agueroooo, I swear you’ll never see anything like this”
Great video💯
Anytime I play pick up basketball I'm closer and everybody knows it. I never think about it. The focus level different for me. But I guess it makes sense since sometimes I'm so confident on myself that some people call me delusional. Some people are born like that I believe.
Fantastic video.
Great video! keep it up
great video
It’s in my genes
My ancestors were as cracked as I am
"Am I approaching success in life or am I avoiding failure?"
Great vid
Odd I find when I'm hard on myself or being negative in big moments for sports thats when I start to pop off
What’s the song in the beginning? I’ve heard it in a few other videos.
You can't deny that physiological changes impacts confidence though
The rockets going 0/27 claim is funny and technically true but harden did make a three during that stretch but the refs waived it off because he got fouled ‘before the shooting motion’ (despite it clearly being during the shooting motion)
10:38 🔥
6:40 you tell them Brendan
Dope video
This is a great video with a great message but consider fewer cuts, especially in between seeing your guest on your laptop and then cutting to their face. (but you do fix this in the final moments) In general cuts are disruptive, and for a lot of content on Goal Guys, you want people to sit with the idea so I think it's at odds with your message.
great vid, also what's the song from 0:25
It’s hyper focus. I can play poorly for 75-85% of a game. That last 15-25%, matters so much more to me.
You should talk about your Tom cruise gene
I’m an athlete who play basketball and when I’m at my best I feel like in my mind I’m not thinking at all or telling myself anything so how could I apply this to myself !
Wow.
This was a really good video
Idk why but on my basketball team I usually start of cold and miss my shots but I'm just so clutch and make big shots down the game and take the last shot idk why I just consistently hit fade aways
Stop lying. And no one cares
Oh yes, Dame, Jordan, and Bobby fucking Zamora.
I try these exercises and the work quiet good
It’s not loud?
Music at the beginning?
Hey cam, Do you guys have some literature about this topic?
Simmons isn't a good example he can't shoot even if he had a clutch gene😂😂
Simmons couldn't hit the broad side of a barn from 3 feet away.
Thank you for the advice Tom Cruise 🙏🏻
He do look like him 😹
Same thing as marines in war. It’s muscle memory that’s why we go through all of that training.
Im not that good at english can somebody please say what are the steps that i should do now to get confident
Ya born w it or it develops & it’s confidence ..
Great video. Maybe I can have some confidence now¿? :)
ya i got a clutch factor of 80% in warzone and apex
This is what i know clutch people don't think what if they miss they shot they are not afraid to miss shot
I love how in the end, you still have to work hard in order to obtain that confidence, so it shows that mental strength is also unattainable without sacrifice
this is cool and all but when I'm kicking ass my internal dialogue is usually completely mute
Hoodie 🔥
Headed over to the podcast of this doc. In one of the episodes he talks to a guy and says "you're bla, you're an alpha male...". Is being an alpha male a concept that this doc has defined somewhere?
Watched this and Made Kawhi cry
I have a serious question
Is it okay to self criticize yourself sometimes ??
Felix Baumgartner. Throw some respect on that man’s name.
Had to come here after Real Madrid’s consecutive comebacks. The club is literally the personification of clutch
Kd had self confident taking that shot cause he knows he’s got curry and klay to bail him.
Athletes are amusing which sometimes does not reflect real life since I know some that are better than professionals but do not complete due to the many hoops one has to go though and finances they need to accomplish it, but some just don't care to deal with it and do it for self.
As for the video of making it count does not sound statistically logical which most fail. Sports are over hyped which is why the original Olympic stopped it.
What? And your friends aren’t better than pros. I promise
Ben Simmons needs to watch this lol
Still trying to make clutch happen …
Lost me at the Hunter gatherer part lmaoo
They probably mean them having self doubt or negativity towards themselves they would stop them from doing something dangerous such as trying to kill an animal that was to strong for them
Can you break down the science of being trash? Cause that’s the boat I’m in
I dont agree with this old school mentality of a clutch gene or that "killer instinct" crap. Great players will show up in big moments and many times journeymen can be clutch.
Those phrases are typically use to praise clutch players or the players who have a lot of clutch shots. Like giving a badge for an achievement.
When I feel at my best, it feels like there's a tiny Ric Flair in me
I swear he looks like Ricky Gervais. I wonder are they related.
Ben Simmons lol
Man Dame is so clutch that he hits shots, gets overhyped and loses badly lol. Overhyped joke
@CalNotNice fr. Bullshit. 🤣🤣Most overhyped player of all time
@CalNotNice kyrie got robbed smh
It's funny the skip on lebron clip because lebron is the clutchest in nba history
Just my two cents before watching: I feel like a lot of this has to do with how you react to pressure. You either get in your head and defeat yourself or you embrace the chance and give it your all knowing you could fail but will do your best to avoid that.
Jesus died for our sins so that we can go to heaven. He payed our price. Put your trust in Jesus Christ and he will grant you the gift of heaven. 💯
The one thing steph curry is COMPLETELY devoid of.
Get him out ur head bro, he’s living rent free
Someone send this to James Harden
Hence Russell Westbrook this season.
Cristiano the greatest clutch athlete of all time
Great video but using Dame as the example is not the smartest choice 😂
thanks brad pitt!
What would this nerd know ??