Monday, June 23, 2014
Ninth Games for NZ team psychologist
Massey University sport psychologist Dr Gary Hermansson is working towards handing over the reins as the New Zealand
team psychologist after almost twenty years tuning the minds of New Zealand’s top athletes at the Commonwealth and
Olympic Games.
The 73 year-old Professor Emeritus will be mentoring potential successors at next month’s Commonwealth Games in Glasgow,
Scotland, as part of a succession plan that is looking towards the 2016 Rio Olympics.
High Performance Sport New Zealand and the New Zealand Olympic Committee have jointly advertised a new position of
Psychology Manager. Dr Hermansson says this job will ensure that the over-arching role he has performed at nine
consecutive Games (four Olympics and four Commonwealth Games) is maintained and advanced in the future.
“For me this is a significant development as it represents a recognition of the importance of the mental dimension in
performance at the top level, and promises a steady development of the field.”
Since first taking the post at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur, he has seen the field of sport psychology
soar in significance among elite athletes.
“There has been a distinct shift from sport psychology being seen as problem-oriented – that is, something you make use
of when you have performance problems – to opportunity-oriented – that is, something that requires increasing attention
as you progress to higher levels in sport,” he says.
Dr Hermansson believes athletes are under more pressure than ever before with the globalisation of top-level sport,
increased media scrutiny, sponsorship opportunities and funding structures based on strict performance outcomes.
“The rewards for success and the consequences for failure create a growing pressure squeeze on athletes and coaches. It
is not that athletes are less mentally tough, but more that the pressures are greater and, as a consequence, the
intensity is heightened.
“There is tremendous pressure to deliver in the way of medals, trophies and championships. This means that athletes and
coaches carry into competition the challenge of winning whilst also not letting that outcome expectation get in the way
of performance,” he says.
A Massey University video where Dr Hermansson talked about training the mind to overcome those expectations was endorsed
by United States basketball mega-star Kobe Bryant who reposted it to his millions of Facebook followers. The Los Angeles
Lakers star met with Dr Hermansson at the 2012 London Olympics and received a copy of his latest book Going Mental in Sport.
“The opportunity to meet him in person at the Games was certainly a buzz. However, what has mattered most are the
numerous personal and private acknowledgements from the many athletes I have worked with who have made it clear that our
work together made a difference,” Dr Hermansson says.
The seasoned sport psychologist and counsellor plans to put those 30 years of memories into a new book, In the Company of Champions, which will include his experiences working with the New Zealand cricket and equestrian teams. The former Manawatu and
Wellington no.8/lock also has his own professional sports career to draw from. He’s played over 100 first-class rugby
games including Wellington’s famous victories over South Africa (1965) and the British Lions (1966).
ENDS