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3 Easy Ways to Make Healthy Habits Part of Your Team Culture

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April 9, 2025 | 3 minutes, 59 seconds read

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As a coach, are you thinking about helping your athletes form habits? It’s easy to be consumed by making it through the next practice or game, but in many cases, taking the time to focus on good habits can make your team run a lot smoother and lead to better results and performances.

Here, TrueSport Expert Kevin Chapman, PhD, clinical psychologist and founder of The Kentucky Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders, is sharing why habits are so important, along with a few easy ways to start making them part of your team's culture.

 

Why Habits Matter

"Having a healthy sport culture involves coaches normalizing a lot of habits that need to be normalized for young athletes, such as healthy eating habits, healthy sleep hygiene, healthy discussions of emotions, and even behavioral habits like showing up on time," says Chapman. "All of those things shape the culture of a program."

If you aren't emphasizing proper fueling, sleep, or training techniques to the team, you can't expect athletes to automatically be aware of them, he adds. Many young athletes aren't given these resources, and too often, coaches simply assume that their athletes instinctively have these healthy habits.

And remember, whether you're trying to pass on healthy habits or not, your athletes are learning from you. "For coaches, it's also so important to understand the type of influence and the level of privilege you have as a coach: You influence your athletes, even if you don't think you do. Athletes learn from the top down," says Chapman. "They're watching you and whether you realize it or not, they'll emulate what you're doing."

 

How to Establish Habits for Your Team

Start Early

"It's essential for a coach to establish habits within the team culture early, and weave them through daily activities such as practice, pre-game, and post-competition," says Chapman.

Whether it's a visualization exercise, a team pep talk, or a way of eating or hydrating, we often start adding new habits on the day of a competition, rather than starting those healthy habits months before. If visualization is a key game day technique for your team, every practice could begin with a two-minute visualization for that practice—establishing it as a cornerstone habit for the team and making the act of visualizing even more effective on game day. 
 

Focus On Regulating Emotions

Emotional regulation and being able to talk about emotions comfortably are both important habits when it comes to the success of an athlete, Chapman says. They can also be difficult habits to teach, since they require you as the coach to demonstrate what healthy emotional regulation looks like, be comfortable expressing emotion, and allow the athletes around you to share their feelings in a judgement-free space. "The best healthy habit a coach can bring to a team is the ability for athletes to be able to talk about emotional experiences, to share what they need and what they're concerned about, and for athletes to be able to find ways to hold each other accountable."

Chapman is a fan of pre-setting boundaries for how athletes respond to situations that may arise in sport, and here, he's sharing his favorite strategies that can easily become habits for your team.
 

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