The Winning Mindset Titelbild

The Winning Mindset

The Winning Mindset

Von: Chris Mullins & Jeff Moyer
Jetzt kostenlos hören, ohne Abo

Nur 0,99 € pro Monat für die ersten 3 Monate

Danach 9.95 € pro Monat. Bedingungen gelten.

Über diesen Titel

The Winning Mindset is for empowering athletes, parents, and coaches to excel in sports and life. We focus on building mental toughness, positive attitudes, and promoting personal growth through shared insights and motivational content.

© 2025 The Winning Mindset
Beziehungen Elternschaft & Familienleben Fitness, Diät & Ernährung Gymnastik & Fitness Hygiene & gesundes Leben
  • Back In The Game
    Jan 7 2026

    Send us a text

    The mics are on again and we’re kicking off season two with the reason we started: helping families and teams find the sweet spot where joy and discipline can actually live together. After a six‑month break filled with showcases, travel, and youth football playoffs, we sit down to reset the mission, share what we learned, and get real about coaching, parenting, and culture without the clichés.

    We dig into the toughest tightrope of all: coaching your own kid. What does it mean to be a parent first and a coach second when the emotions are highest in the car ride home? We share the “hat rule” that prevents blowups, the quiet heartbreak of missing your child’s best moments while coaching everyone else, and small, repeatable habits that protect trust. Then we wade into the multi‑sport vs early specialization debate with lived examples. Some kids need variety to stay fresh and avoid burnout. Others are wired to go deep on one thing and thrive. We lay out practical signals to watch—curiosity, energy, resilience—so you can adjust without breaking momentum.

    Team changes and roles come up too. We talk about presenting unbiased facts to your child, letting them lead big decisions, and pushing for role clarity with coaches before frustration hardens into stories that aren’t true. Overcommunication reduces frustration, and culture shows up in the details: how families talk at home, how coaches set expectations, and how leaders handle conflict when nobody’s paycheck is on the line. We even zoom out to college football, pulling lessons from system‑driven programs—standards, consistency, ownership—that scale to youth teams and Saturday mornings.

    Season two is built for coaches, parents, and former athletes who want practical tools and honest conversation. If you care about growth, grit, and keeping sports fun without losing the edge, you’re in the right place. Press play, share this with a friend who needs a fresh perspective, and leave a review to help us reach more families this season.

    Support the show

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Std. und 5 Min.
  • The Do's and Don'ts of Modern Baseball
    Jul 16 2025

    Send us a text

    Baseball isn't just changing—it's transforming before our eyes. But are all these changes for the better?

    Former MLB player Jeff Fry doesn't hold back as he takes us on a journey through baseball's evolution, from his own unlikely path to the major leagues to the troubling trends he sees in today's game. Growing up in a town of just 2,000 people in eastern Oklahoma, Fry defied the odds to forge a remarkable 15-year professional career, including nine seasons in the big leagues. His story begins with 15 consecutive hits in a summer baseball tournament and culminates in a major league career that most thought impossible.

    The conversation quickly shifts to what's working in baseball today—and what isn't. Fry admires the incredible athletic talent in today's game but questions why so many gifted athletes hit .230 while celebrations for routine plays grow increasingly elaborate. "Back in the day, home run hitters hit around .300... now it seems accepted to swing for the fences and slug," he explains, pointing to how analytics departments have redefined success at the expense of entertainment value.

    Parents and coaches will find particular value in Fry's passionate advocacy for youth development. He stresses that 10-year-olds shouldn't be getting "rattled" on baseball fields and recommends keeping kids in Little League until age 12 before transitioning to more competitive environments. His advice for parents after games? Simply say "I love watching you play" instead of critiquing performance on the drive home.

    Whether you're a coach, parent, player or just a fan concerned about baseball's direction, this candid conversation delivers powerful insights about preserving the game's core values while embracing necessary evolution. Fry leaves us with timeless wisdom: "Believe in yourself, outwork the competition, and if you want it bad enough, you can achieve anything in life."

    Support the show

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Std. und 8 Min.
  • Every Setback Is a Setup for Something Greater: Nate Anderson's Journey
    Jun 3 2025

    Send us a text

    From the brink of having no college options to leading Kennesaw State in stolen bases, Nate Anderson's baseball journey defies conventional paths and inspires anyone facing seemingly insurmountable obstacles.

    When COVID-19 abruptly ended his high school senior season after just four games, Anderson received devastating news – the University of New Orleans was rescinding his scholarship offer. With nowhere to play, he focused on controlling what he could control: training daily, reaching out to any college connection, and trusting that his path would become clear.

    That faith led him to Gardner-Webb University, where he joined their developmental team and turned heads with his relentless hustle. "I'm gonna run the crap out of these bases," Anderson recalls of his mindset. This determination earned him a spot on their Division I team before eventually transferring to Kennesaw State to be closer to home.

    His journey took another painful turn when he suffered a torn hip labrum and UCL thumb injury, requiring two surgeries within months. Rather than withdrawing during recovery, Anderson transformed into a student-coach, mentoring younger players and gaining fresh perspective on the game. His comeback season proved remarkable – leading the team with 26 stolen bases and delivering clutch moments, including a memorable grand slam against Liberty.

    Throughout our conversation, Anderson reveals wisdom beyond his years, particularly about handling baseball's inevitable slumps: "Your ability and talent has taken you this far... it's not your swing, it's not because you didn't put your right shoe on first before your left shoe." This mental approach – focusing on process rather than results – served him through countless challenges.

    Whether you're a baseball player, coach, or someone navigating life's unexpected curveballs, Anderson's story reminds us that sometimes the most difficult detours reveal our true character and prepare us for greater opportunities ahead. Subscribe now to hear more conversations with athletes and leaders who demonstrate what it truly means to have a winning mindset.

    Support the show

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Std. und 2 Min.
Noch keine Rezensionen vorhanden