Sean Swarner Redefines the Impossible

 

Sean Swarner’s story of healing, hope, and triumph reflects the essence of Sport Fuels Life.  Enjoy this incredible and inspiring conversation. 

Get ready to be inspired

Sean talks about how to motivate yourself, overcome your personal conflict, and reach your personal Everest.

With only one functioning lung, a prognosis of fourteen days to live, and being in a medically-induced coma for a year, Sean Swarner is the first cancer survivor to stand on top of the world… Mt. Everest. Sean has broken through defined human limitations in order to redefine the way the world views success.

To learn more about Sean, visit his website at www.seanswarner.com.

Facebook:  @sean.swarner |  Instagram: @seanswarner |    Twitter:  @seanswarner

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How Coaches Inspire and are Inspired:  Learn from All Star Coaches

What can all coaches learn from an all-star panel of baseball coaches?  The answer is simple—a great deal.  That was our conclusion after reviewing the highlight reel from last year’s virtual baseball clinic.  If you are interested in the power and potential of relationships, team culture, leadership, character and competing, comprehensive player development and more—this one is for you. 

 

Tips for Creating Winning Team Cultures

Secrets to Coaching Success

Relationships with Players & Coaching Staff

How to Build Mentally Tough Athletes & How to Handle Adversity & Failure

Jeff Johnson (AD And Head Coach Chipola College), Billy Godwin (UNCG Head Coach), Jeff Petty (Canes Head Coach), Mike Fox (UNC Retired Head Coach), & Gary Gilmore (Coastal Carolina Head Coach)

Olympic Medalist, Cancer Survivor, and Businesswoman Shannon Miller Shares Instructive Highlights from her Fascinating Life

 

Join us at Sport Fuels Life as we sit down with legendary gymnast and cancer survivor Shannon Miller. This conversation is one you do not want to miss. Shannon explains the mindset of an Olympian athlete, cancer survivor, and successful businesswoman.  

Shannon Miller won a record breaking seven Olympic medals and nine World Championships.  She is also the second leading American gymnast overall, male or female. She was inducted into the U.S Olympic Hall of Fame as an individual in 2006 and as a team in 2008. 

Shannon started her love affair with gymnastics at the age of 5. By age 11, she had won her first major competition and by age 13 she was winning world titles in the vault, beam, floor exercise and the uneven bars.  She was known for her versatility and being able to compete at the highest level in multiple events.  

Shannon graduated from the University of Houston with a degree in business administration and later obtained her law degree from Boston College. She established the Shannon Miller Foundation which seeks to end childhood obesity. She speaks publicly on subjects such as having a Gold Medal Mindset, healthy lifestyles, and surviving cancer. 

Shannon’s inspiring biography, It’s Not About Perfect: Competing for My Country and Fighting for My Life, discusses her gymnastics career and her battle with ovarian cancer. 

To learn more about Shannon, visit her website at www.shannonmiller.com.  

Facebook: @ShannonMillerOfficial |Instagram: @shannonmiller96 |Twitter:  @shannonmiller96

Well Known Author and Coach Allistair McCaw Says Your Choices Will Determine Your Success

 

Join us at Sport Fuels Life as we talk with Allistair McCaw, motivational speaker, bestselling author, athlete, coach, and consultant, who daily lives the principles of his latest bestselling book, Champion Minded. He uses the acronym (HIP) as a reminder to demonstrate a helpful, inspiring, and positive attitude.  His tools are extraordinarily helpful in athletics and all aspects of life.

To learn more about Allistair you can visit his website at www.allistairmccaw.com.  All of his books are available on Amazon.

Instagram:  bechampionminded.  Twitter:  @AllistairMcCaw.  Facebook:  Allistairmccawpage

Olympic Gold Medalist Wrestler Rulon Gardner Also Excels at Overcoming Adversity

Don’t miss out as Sport Fuels Life gets up close and personal with Rulon Gardner, Olympic Gold Medalist wrestler. Gardner, a native of Afton, Wyoming is the last of nine children. He credits his strength from working on the family dairy farm. 

Rulon is no stranger to adversity and has used his struggles to fuel him towards success. Academically, he struggled with a learning disability throughout his academic career. Physically, he suffered from an arrow’s puncturing his abdomen during an elementary school show-and-tell. In 1990, Rulon lost his first child due to a tragic car accident. In 2002, he nearly died in a snowmobile accident leaving him with an amputated toe and dislocated wrist. In 2007, he survived an airplane crash that forced him to swim an hour in 44 degrees Fahrenheit to reach shore. So, it goes without saying, “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” has been the backbone to his life story. 

As if surviving the previous challenges was not impressive enough, Rulon went on to win the NJCAA National Heavyweight Wrestling Championship. While at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, he finished fourth in the 275-pound weight class, where he earned All-American honors. Rulon then took his success to another level as he defeated Aleksandr Karelin at the 2000 Summer Olympics. At that time, Karelin had not been defeated for 13 years. Rulon began to soar after that victory. In 2001, he became a World Champion and the first American to win a World and Olympic gold title in Greco-Roman wrestling. Even with an amputated toe and dislocated wrist, Rulon still won the U.S. Olympic trials for his weight class, which led him to be able to compete in the 2004 Summer Olympics.  After playing, he went on to be an analyst for NBC Sports. He now teaches and instructs high school athletes and has become a distinguished speaker on the national level.  He strives daily to impact the lives of his team members.   

Join us as we marvel at his resiliency and determination to succeed. Through his perseverance and ability to focus on the positives, he has laid the groundwork for coaches, athletes, and fans to reach their goals and gain insight from his experiences. Listen in as he explains how positive affirmation builds confidence. His belief in heart, devotion, perspective, technique, and belief in yourself are the things you can’t measure that are critical to success. 

 

Thoughts on Mental Toughness and Building Resilience by Collegiate Swimmer Anna Shumate

Mental toughness can be compared to finding fuel on an empty tank. Often, athletes compete with the best intentions and with a plan for exactly what they want to accomplish. As we all know, sometimes (okay, often) things don’t go as planned in sports. This can cause a loss of focus, confidence, and performance. Based on my experience as a collegiate swimmer, I have found that three things I can do mentally ahead of competition help me when the unexpected happens.

1. Understand that not everything will go as planned. An athlete must anticipate that a competition could go many ways. Instead of planning for everything to go perfectly, plan for every situation. You want to have a coping response for each of those things.

2. Realize this takes patience and resilience plus trial and error. Success is about being able to overcome failure and see each moment as an opportunity to learn and grow.  It takes vulnerability and being honest with your feelings and fears to grow.

3. Recall times when you overcame seemingly impossible odds.  You did once (or twice or three times) so you can do it again!

As much as I had success in my career swimming at N.C. State, I had just as much, if not more, failure. My freshman year competing in college is a good example. Out of high school, I was a sprinter. I focused mainly on the 50-yard and 100-yard races. As soon as I started training in my freshman year of college, my coach wanted to put me in the 200-yard race. It may not seem like a huge difference, but mentally, I was struggling.

I raced the 200 at every dual meet and failed each time. After each meet, I would then review race videos with my coach to develop a new strategy. I did this all season but had no real success in this event. When championship season came, it was time to finally put all fears aside and race the 200 for real. Before the meet, I reminded myself of all the times that I swam the race and all the hard training that I had endured for this specific event.

I knew I was physically capable of going fast, so why was I letting my thoughts get in the way? I swam the race and surprised myself. I swam a personal best time and was able to score points for my team. My time was not spectacular, but the results built my confidence for the rest of the meet and for the rest of my collegiate career. 

I believe the reason that I was failing throughout the dual-meet season was simply that I was afraid of failure. I was overanalyzing every aspect of my race and was not trusting my capabilities. The number one takeaway from my freshman year, and swimming career in general, is to trust the process and myself. I would not have reached my goals in swimming without failing and learning from that failure.

I have learned that the road to success is never marked by perfection but by the ability to overcome adversity. Your talent and physical strength are important, but what matters even more is your related mental toughness.  Do you have a story on mental toughness you would like to share with the readers of Sport Fuels Life?  Please contact us at marketing@teamconnection.com so we can highlight what you’ve experienced and learned.